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

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

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

i"

•

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

' ·

•

e
VOL XXIX

NO. 182 .

.

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

.

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.

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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,
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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.
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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.
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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.

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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
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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.

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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.

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2--Thc Daily Sentinel. Mi~dleport-Pumerny . 0 ., Wl•lne!~tlay .•Jan. :1, 1ir79

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- ~-The Daily Sentinel,

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i..··Edito·
r
ial
opinio~s .~
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COMMENTARY

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- Ft~ebruary

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By JOHN NELSON
AP Sports Writer
The Biu@ Devils ,of Duke
aren't No. · I in the college
basketball poll anymore, but
now they are· playing like it
again, two games too late .
Forward Gene Banks and
center
Mike Gminski
_provided the spark for Duke
. Tuesday night in a 77-59
· victory over Davidson . It was
a spark that was missing over
the weekend when th e Rlue

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The Alger1ari success1on

.

Now It ts AlgcnH1Stum.
·
· .
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·
,
With
the
death
of
President
Houari
Boumediene,
the
.
Nortti
·
·
11.11 •
African
country
fa
res
a
c
hallenge
that
has
defeated
many
··
•.
~1uergs .
.1-~llartha Angle and
another revolutionary state: an orderly transfer of power.•
·
Robert Walters
Bownedierle, the austere·soldier-son of a poor fanner, held ·
•
unquestioned power through 13 of the 16 years since Algeria
wrenched its independence from France. What Algeria is to- ·:
day is iargelybisshaping. Aitdtbatis:
.
February
A firmly Moslem society corrunitted to the building of an in-Feb. 1 '- Colwnbus and
digenous variety of socialism.
'' Southern Ohio Electric Co.
A hardliner in the Arab cause against Israel whose effective · '
By Martha Angle and Rolji?rt Wallers
workers turned off street
military
efforts are directed westward, against. neighbOring
WASHINGTON (NEA ) -There's no better illustration of the lights in
conservation
and Arab Morocco.
hard times currently faced by the country's nuclear power in- measure.
The possessor of ari army equipped by the Soviet Union in -~
dustry than its lith hour&lt;&gt;scape from the !fisgrace of not !W'kFeb. 2 - Robert Wingett
·
which
commands are given in the language of the former col- -;
ing a single domestic sale throughout 1978 ...
was named Syracuse VIllage
onial power, France ..
On December 20, only II days before the end o! the year, the administrator.
A frequent supporter of the Soviet linein worJd affairs and
Cmnmonwealth Edison Co. of Chicago aMounced that it had
Feb. 3 - .A Federal agency
agreed to purchase fro!T\ the Westinghouse Eleclric Corp. a ACTION grant of $23,447 was
standard-hearer for Third World independence from all forms
-of colonialism, political and economic, which 'is energetically :.
oair of 1,150 megawatt nuclear generating units.
granted the Meigs Cowtty
· Although nuclear power is not without major liabilities - CoWJcil on Aging for its RSVP
expanding its own economic ties with the West.
.
. ·
r.otably long-tenn safety risks and nwnerous unresolved pro- program.
· In short, a paradox of a cowttryjn many respects, but one in ,
blems at the ''back end" of the fuel cycle -it Is far superior to
-· which pragmatism tends to be the chief policy determinant
Felt.' 4 - An Ice · jam
ether fuels in one crucial aspect ' Its st~kingiy low cost.
. developed at the · Racine
and which has been for the last decade in its domestic politics
No two companies have more effectively demonstrated Locks and Dam: Eighteen
an exceptionally •stable element of the developing world,
these economics than Westinghouse, a Pittsburgh-based firm athletes were inducted into
where such stability is not the rule.
·
,
· that is the nation's largest producer of nuclear generating the Meigs High athletic haD
Who is to repiace Bownediene is only the first of several .
tmits, and Commonwealth Edison, which used nuclear power of fame.
questions in the cballenge now facing Algeria. There is a na- _
more than any other utility in the country.
tiona! constitution. And there is an official political party, the
Feb. 5- Losses were set at
Commonwealth Edison now relies on nuclear power to pro- $6,000 in a fire at the Jack
National Liberation Front, which the constitution empowers to ;,de almost 42 percent of its generating capacity. The two new Hart home, Bunker Hill
name a president.
units, to be constructed about 130 miles west of Chicago near Road. ·
But the actual choice almost certainly will be made where .
the Mississippi River town of Savanna, Ill., will increase that
Feb. 6- Diana Eberts was
.I real power lies, in the Council of Revolution, comprised of the
figure to about 65 percent.
named Meigs Extension
f\ surviving members of the group of 25 officers who engineered .
The utility company's nuclear-powered plants supply elec- Service- Agent,
home
the !965 coup in which Boum!ldiene came to power. There are .
tricity at 1.33 cents per kiiowatt•hour (k)"h), compared with economics.
only eight members now and' other than Foreign Minister
2. 41 cents per kwh for coal-fired generating stations.
Feb. 7 - Phil Kelly Willi
-Abdelaziz Bouteflika, they are not well known to the outside
A report recently issued by the Senate Governmental Affairs named a new direclor of the
world or the Algerian public.
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Committee, based on data provided to state regulatory com- Pomeroy National 13ank.
A larger question is whether Bownediene's successor can fill
missions by power companies throughout the nation, indicates
Feb. 8 - John Riebel was
the Boumediene role. The late occupant created a presidency . ,
that similar economies are being achieved in other states.
given a onJ!-year contraet as
tailored to his personality and strengths. That power in the
In North Carolina, the Duke Power Co. is generating elec- Eastern Local Superinhands of a different persQnality could have very different con(
tricity from its nuclear plants at a cost of less than 31 cents per tendent.
sequences.
In the Soviet Union, for one revolutionary example,
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million British thermal wtits (Btu,), compared with more than
Feb. 9 - Nancy Reed and
~orutormg a leadership role shaped to a Lenin had particlllariy gruesome
$1.37 per million Btu for coal-fired ruants and almost $2.76 per Grace Eich, co-chairpersons,
·
consequences when assumed by 8 Stalin.
million Btu for oil-fired generating stations.
rolled the heart fwtd drive
All
ibis
is
of
interest
beyond
Algeria.
The
country
bas
:
Miller ·
In South Carolina, the Carolina Power &amp; Ught Co. reports into aetton.
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economic and geographic significance. It occupies a ch k of .
costs of less than 39 cents per million Btu for nuclear power, .
In August ol laat year, I appears so willing to
Feb. 10 - Meiga Local
North and West Africa, the Saharan heartland, and a str tegic
$1 .31 per million Btu when coal is used and more than $2.83 per students began to feel the expressed in thill colwnn my jeopardize?. Wlutt about the
stretch of the Mediterranean coast to which NAT com- ,
million Btu when oil is the fuel.
energy crunch as restrictions serious concern about the so- countless rriasses on the
manders are particularly sensitive. The post-Bo ediene :
The major corporations that ·manufacture nuclear on bulldlng usage went into called normalization of mainland who are denied the
leadership, by choice or to divert attention from oubles at generating equipment have too long s~bordinated economy as effect.
relations with Communist prerogatives ' of
selfhome, could be tempted to inflame the 3-year-&lt;Jl desert. war ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) a selling point, preferring to rely instead on a "you need us
Feb. 11 - The Gailia - China. I questioned then and 1 deternlination by a sup- Fear that too much property with Morocco, an additional aggravation of w · h the world ·
more than we need you" approach.
.Meigs Fraternal Order of question now why the Ad· pressive Marxist govern- . collld go wttaxed in Ohio has has absolutely no need.
That haughty sales pitch usually comes in the form of a Police presented Middleport ministration wants to ment? At this very moment, prompted one group to call
Although not in the same league as Saudi Ara ·a, Algeria is
threat that "you're gonna freeze in the dark" by 1985, 2000 or Police Chief J. J. Cremeljlls recognize the Peoples' while we are in the process of for permanent monitoring of a major oil producer. The United States is its m important
some other year in the not too distant future if the public with a gift in recognition of Republic of China at the establishing relations with property tax exemptions.
trading partner, importing both oil and increasing
· ies •
refuses to embrace nuclear power as its salvation.
his JWOrk with young people of expense of breaking our Communist cliina, they are
.
More than 14 percent of aU of natural gas.
Westinghouse bas produced its share of such dire pr'edic- the eonimunlty.
treaties
and actively proll!oting .Com- rea) property in Ohio was tax
existing
Others than Algerians, thus, have considerable at stake in •,
tions, but it also is attempting to take a more reasoned llpFeb. 12 - A strike at diplomatic relations with our munlst domination in other exempt last year. The Ohio the Algerian succession, There are some encouraging ex- :
proach in promoting the cost benefits of nuclear power.
Midwest Steel Corp. in staunch ally, the Republic of parts of the world. In neigh- Public Expenditure Council amples of revolutionary regimes transrerring power :
"We can't permit ourselves to overcorrunit to any one fuel in Pomeroy moved into· its 13th Taiwan.
boring Cambodia they are says the state should assume smoothly. Egypt managed its power transfer from Gamai •
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any one section of the country," says one comfl'nY executive, week.
And why are we letting providing military and the costs of a tax recheck pro- Nasser to Anwar Sadat with minimal complications. Current· :
calling for a "balanced mix" of fuel sources. Another official
Feb. 14 - Meigs Com· Peking dictate tb£ tenns of technical support t'o the· gram that currently is ly, Kenya in.East Africa seems to be keeping its semisuggests that "we should be looking at aU the alternatives."
missioners purchased a new this so~Ued normalization? ·harshly totalitarian govern- federally funded, but in democratic balance following the passing of Jomo Keynatta.
The price of uranium, the principal fuel for nuclear power garbage packer.
It is the Red Chinese that so nient of the Kyhmer Rouge, a danger of loSing its backing in
On the other hand, the venerably revolutionary Soviet Union
station, has increased very subatantially in recent years. But
Feb. 15 -Saturday classes eagerly want to estab~ government which has been March.
has
yet to demonstrate that it can pull off a power shift without
_
the prices of other fuels have soared higher and faster. "
were scheduled for the diplomatic relations with us. widely criticized by the world
in some degree. And in tbe People'fi Republic of China,
crisis
"The council feels that the
Petroleum costs have skyrocketed ever since. the OPEC Southern Local School A look at the ledger of pluses community for allegedly exempt real property the succession struggles that began years ago, while Mao Tse- ::
cartel began to Rex its muscles five years ago. Congressional District to make up lost time. and minuses shows the Red ·slaughtering miilions of its recheck program deserves.to twtg and Chou En-iai were still on the scene, may not yet be :'
action decontrolling the price of natural gas will produce - Feb. 17- Most of Pomeroy Chinese with everything to citizens. •
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be extended and would like to settled.
similar increases for that fuel in the coming years.
was without water at one gain and liitle, if anything, to · We talk of the- trade ad· see a permanent recheck
Seizing power and consolidating it in a revolutionary state ,.;
Coal remains relatively cheap, but it's no longer a bargain time or another when a water lose. The United States on the vantages lo be gained by program established to are one thing. Establishing a system for transferring that
fuel because of the federally-mandated installation of flue gas main broke. causing th~ ­ other 'hand, gains very tittle · opening up a new market of ensure that all questionable power effectively to succeeding generations of leaders without ···
desuHurization systems or "scrubbers'' to prevent higlH!uHur Breezy · Heights reservoir' to while losing a lot. Most 900 million people to real property exemptions disrupting the state is altogethei- another.
coal from contaminating the atmosphere when burned.
go dry.
significant is our loss of American products. ·In the actually do qualify for tax
The history of much of the rest of the world in that respect ·_·; ·
The nuclear power industry probably would make more
Feb. 18 - Another two credibility in the world short term these . might be exemptions," Charles A. makes the achievements of the United states two centuries ·:
friends - and more sales - if it abandoned its heavy-handed inches increase of snow feU community. We have long substantial, but m the long Calhoun, the council's ago look all the more impressive.
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scare tactics and talked sensibly about the bargain it can offer and continued through the been looked to as the leader of .term, l fear we. will be executive director, wrote in a
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to everyone who pays an eleclric bill.
night.
. the free world, the nation on providing them the tools of newsletter.
Feb; 20 - It became ap- which other nations could · technology which will permit
The recheck program, curparent that classes would hang their hopes, the country · theni to appreciably hasten rently fwtded through the
have to be cancelled at Metgs in which other countries the deve~QPmen\ of their vast Federal
Comprehensive
High Schooi1f mandatory 50 collld place their trust'. Our military potenU(il. ·
Employment Training Act,
. percent power reductions stature as such . will suffer · Assistant to the President bas resulted in exempt real
materialized.
.
severely .as a result of these for National Security·A(fairs, . property being ordered back
Feb. 22 _;_ Post office bours dealings. How can we expect ~igniew Brzezinski, talks of on the tax roils in several
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
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became cu.rtalled due to the other nations to have con· playing our. China ,card, of cowtties, he said.
energy crisis.
.
fidence in the United States positioning qutselves so as to
Calhoun
quoted
Feb. 33 - Ohio Power after they see us so willing to capitalize on the long stand- Department
of
Tax
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asked cU819IDers to cutback write off our good .friend ing . Sino-Soviet unrest .that Equalization officials as Rt&gt;lil'f from
others are developing ::
elsewhere.
COLUMBUS, Ohio .(AP) - The road from Columbus to 25 percent on the use of Taiwan for the. questionable. ·exists. In my judgm~nt, it is saying more than $300,000 in
purpose of. establishing rather naive to thmk .that exempt real property .rin~ing- in c·ar
The Oregon group have ;:
Capitol Hill and back again was marred by scandal, but fresh· power.
Feb. 25 - Fred Crow ex· diplomatic relations with the when push come~ \o shove be- valuation has been put back .
man Rep. Wayne Hays says he's glad to be back in political
reported good results by us- : :
harness and ready to tackle even the lowliest committee post preased hopes of restoring the Peoples' Republic of China - tween world powers that we on tax rolls under the
DEAR DR. LAMB _ Can ing a bearing aid in patients ; .
former Pomeroy High School a country long bent on sub- can hope to. neutralize either program, although none of you give me some informa- who have hearing Joss :;
in the Ohio General Assembly. ·
Hays, sworn in to the state Legislature Tufllday, resigned with all!ffilli contributions. verting everything we stand of the dommant Commumst the larger urban counties tion regarding ringing or buz- associated with ringing in the ' !
· .·
powers
through
such were included in the recheck . . zing in the right ear' It's not ear. The improved hearing of .:
from Congress in 1976 after serving 28 years. Hla resignation The - Southern Tornado for.
Basketb&amp;U team advanced to
The President talks of maneuvering.
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was sparked by his affair with Elizabeth Ray.
'1-A check of tax records a contiguous ringing. It is normal sounds · appears lo : · "
human rights as being the
The Administration' s shows more than $7.2 billion mostly present when I'm ly- mask the ringing sensation . . :
"I told'the speaker to put me on any committee he couldn't district tournament play. ·
Feb. 26 - A part of former backbone of his foreign actions with respect to in real property valuation ing down. I had an annual In a high percentage of pa- : i ,
get anybody else to serve on," said Hays, who once chaired the
House Administration C&lt;lllmittee and the Democratic Con- West Main St., under the policy. What about the rights Angola, to Panama, to Cuba, was exempted from tuation physical ;md as~ed my doctor tien&gt;ts, but not all, 'this will : o
gressional Campaign Conunittee. "I hope to do a _good job for Pomeroy-Mason bridge, was of 17 millloo Taiwanese he and now to Red •China, in Ohio during the 1978 tax about it. He said that at my pr~~~[;~\~fhas aillo studied.
closed due to a gasoline leak.
suggest a policy of retrench- eollection year- an increase age of 59 it might be hardenthe people who sent me here-what we all hope to do."
ment. It appears we would
Feb . 27 - Middleport
·
dn
the use of artificial sound : ·
of
84.6
percent
over
the
past
ingof
the
arteries.
He
di
't
with
a
device
called
a
tinnitus
,
:
appease
than 10 years. During the same seem concerned .
NEW YORK (AP) -The byline won't change, but syndi- council 4-2 approved a first Massar and Dick Campbell rather
cated coiwnnist Sylvia PcrterColllna is '!OW Mrs. James Fox. reading of an ordinance for were honored by the displease our adversaries.
period, taliBble real property
My cholesterol, blood masker. It is worn jllli!: like a :
The couple was married in a clvU ceremony here Tuel!day. increase penalty for overtime Pomeroy Chamber of What next? Are we going to values increased by 73.5 pr ess ure
and other hearingaidandthesoundthis ·i
Commerce. Sheriff Jim yielil to deinands of Fidel percent.
The bride's column about finance and coniumer econcmlcs parking at meter.
measurements were ail O.K. .produces is adjusted in rela- •:
Feb. 28 - George Hob- Proffitt's Department con- Castro to surrender our naval
appears in more than 400 newspapers nationwide under the
"The constantly mounting I believe that I read in your tionship to the range of .:
stetter,
a vice president, filcated some $60,000 worth of base at Guantanamo?
name Sylvia Porter.
•
tide of real property tax ex- colwnn once that there isn't sounds that are annoying to . ;
It ;5· time the American
Her husband, a former vice president of Chase Manhatta,n retired from the Pomeroy marijuana In Scipio Townemptions in Ohio arises much that can be done. Is the patient.
:
'shlp.
National
Bank.
George
people
ask inoce. of their directly
Bank and former national president of the Public Relations
from
the that right? That was some
The noise that is generated :government. It is time we combination of constitutional months ago before I had this. is not in the range of sounds ; ; ·
Society of .fJnerica, is chalrjnan of Fox Public Relations Inc.
demand ,of the
Ad- provisions supported by Orcoulditbehelped?
' for
ordinary speech . . :
and a dlrectqr ofUniprim,S.A., of Brussels, Belgium.
ministration that the free legislative enactments and
·DEAR READER _ You Therefore; it doesn't affect ; •
The bride is ·the widow of G. Sumner Colllna, who was generworld's interests arowtd the modified further through probably did read that in my hearing a spoken voice. ':,
al promotion director of Hearst NewJipapers, at the time of his
globe be advanced not decisions of the Ohio colwnn. It was quite some These devices are used for ; '
death in 1977.
surrendered.
Supreme Court," Calhoun time ago. This was the situa- patientswho do not have any.;.~
wrote'.
lion until' recently. Now there associated hearing loss. · ·;
RICHMOND, Va. ( AP) -John Warner of Virginia enters the
U.S. Senate today with a 24-hour jwnp in seniority over 1001e of
The net result of Ute liber- are some things that can be
Some . patients have the :~
aiization ot the laws is that drine which sa~m to at least' ringing of· the ear only at ' ··
his freslunan colleagues:
· .
taxpayers are required to pay relieve the symptoms of night when they, try 'to sleep. ~ :
The former Navy secretary repeated the oath· of .office
Tuesday morning, his hand on a lllbie held by his beaming
proportionately higher taxes ringing and noiSt:s in the e.a rs. .Some of these patients get : ;
mo:oAILVRF.NTINF.r .
to .operate gove(nm~ntai
Of course, it's nil'e.to find relief by using an FM radio ;.
.wife, actress· Elizabeth Taylor.
.
·
The swearing~n came a day ahead of scheduled cerempnles
"~~~}~~-f.·
· services, he said.
oitt whatiscausingthisl'Ondi- and setting the dial' so that it ·'
MF.JnS.MA!lllN ARF.A
"It. should be poil!ted out, . lion first. In ·s'ome ipstances,: --is not on any one station. The ;
in W&amp;!hihgt.On because retiring Sen. Wllll8m Scott Jr., R-Va.',
honored 'traditlon by resigning a day early.
•
Rmtt;,~~~1~f[.'.rru . -·
however, that in many in· the ear is just simply plugged noise tluitis ~enerated in bet- :•
· Warner was'&gt;seiected by.state GOP leaden to be the Se.n att
rul~ i~&lt;hed .t ••ll~ •·Xl 'tpt .~t!u •hu ·. Stances r~l Pr_
operty tax ex·· . w~th witx and the conditiori ween · stations is then ·
t" _,,.. 01!'" v" 11 '' r!'""'""'' · emptions . are. beneficial to can be relieved promptly. In ·amplified by turning up the :·
nominee l!fier f~!!l' . State Republican Jllalnnap Richard
c'umr)O mv·M••IIh•w• hn ,- hr•· ·
Ill
·
· ·
·
·
volume. This· extra · soimd •,
Obenshain died in an Aug. 2 airplane crash. ,Obenahain had
rt•mf ·S1 :. -P• oellt•n·~ · Ohl•• .asfr.11. · . ~xpayers · and · local other mstances, .the cause of
nu~ilws.~. (lfrll·•-.. r~un!· -~·): ?151'&gt;_ · governments, "·Calhoun said'. .the bUzzirlg is never known. seems to IT)ask the d.isconcer~ :
heat Warner fer the nomination at the party convention in
F'...li!• in ••t P.hundl!~l-. 1 57·
· 1 · : . are
th
, - ··U1 ·t hese mstanleS
.
, t h at tt'.ngsound'•thee
june. · ·
. · · .·
·
: ~•'r•mii · · ·1m-t~ 1 iu.~tlli-!t' "l~tl id ' 111'- . ''E
·. ~amp es
_ ~. It~
.
.,.. . '•r·andpro
~
. -•'.. .
'
r ••;,..,., ... ""\" '
.. · ·. · · . :'
goyerni'neri~&amp;l .and priva!e lreatl)1ent 'is difficult and in . vtdes relief for sotn&lt;: patients.:'.
. ~" 1 1'"'" t; '""''''1""'P .t''f'(P''"· · · factllties·in Ohio that-provide tlie past it used lo ·iit; impossi- ~ · ·l am sendihg_ you The ·
. MoscOW 1A.P)-'-- Black'aotlviat An8ela Davil hal told the
~~~'~7U;i ~!::.~~~vt·~~r~~~~~;~4J·~~~- . jotM(and·' CfJiltr\bUte to ··the_ ble. _.. ~ ·. · :· ·
·
· . J:Ieal~. L~tter· ~~her 12-lo,·;·. Soviet:News .Ageric)l Tass that Alne!'lcan raclsta are cam·
1 11 ~·R'•~~
~
r~·rlniun_
n•k,..
::
~-~tv•:t•'(,
OVerall
~conoffiY
9f
an.
area."
Now
ttiere
are
devices
that.
· on.., -~mlit~ •. Ringmg Of The ~
palgnirle:ag~ntlhe· ~oint _ed..Ca~~ ~-~ of different·
l'' ' ''l'll'l'\l; lt•r•·&lt;~vtli1HIJI• · '" '~'~ICo; t M.·• .
'
:
·
.
. Ears Other readers who v.~o.;l'h· R~-\-fnt;,r-Hntii•·- \I: IM·rr.•'an:l• !•-".The ·cowtcil. a ·non-profit ean be used that, crea~e· 1:1 • , •• •• . ·
:
. .
· . . . .. .
.
nationafitles.
~&lt;~' ·r'I'I.H ' . t'nl l• •·u il n hl~· O.w mnr111~. · agency that watChes publiC· noise that masks the buzzing. want thts Issue . can send 50 ~
Mll. Davis, who is visiting Russia the,invltatlon of female
, 11:111 h1 ~:hw :_
11111lh.,v:, .
expenditures , found .that of Tlle co
, nul
·•·t 1-on . you are
•
cents with a long, stamped, •.
cosmonaut Valentina Nlkolaye¥a-Tere.hkova, wu quoted by
o~~1.,,_t,,.
.-1·,1r . ~ - 11 ' · !':1x mm1th •. ·
.
'
' " :.o ·r• ... , "'"""'' " '"'
the $7.2 billion in tax exempt !lescribing is called Unnitus. self-addressed envelope for '
Taas as saying "when the children Puerto Rican and Indian.s
"He's had too mvch football .. The pnly thing
• · ·~· \d u- r • _~_,,., 011 ' ' '!•!' ~i~ ' 11'' 1' 1h·
property valuatiOn last year 1 \ tinnitus clinic has been ll."Sendfthi
Your request to me
in ;
try to exerciae their conatitutlonal rights, they are
•that might snap him ovt of it is the voice of
~ 1 , t!!' " . il oto •o• lllo &gt;H\1! ''• ~~ ~J)(I
p()
0
5 n':wspaper' · · ·
''"
1
....
-,
,ptl
•nl
'
~''~"~'
1111 hu!•"' ~~·nd :·~
69.3
percent
is
governmental
t•stttbhsht...»d
Hl
the·
Umverstly
care
. persewte4 ..."
.
HOWI.fd Cose/1. "
.
'
,.
property.
;,( Orel!(on Medical &amp;hool and Box 1551, Radio City Station, .
.,.,,,,."'··•·' '"''
Tass sAid Ms. Davis anivedin MoBCOW on New Year's Eve. ·
New York, NY. 10019.
.•

news

revi,~wed

Such. a har!!'ain

a

Report

By GEORGE STRODE

AP Spor18 Writer
·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hugh Hindman, Ohio State's
athletic director, has the perfect coach in mind to replace
the fired Woody Hayes.
But he' s dealing only in
generalities, not specific
names .
"The new man should be a
very aggre$Sive recruiler,
have high morals, a high
work capacity, the public and
the university's confidence
ahd real feeling for the
student athlete," Hindman
·told a news conference
Tuesday.
"We'd like someone as

. .

young as possible. Coachingis a very difficult position. It
requires some youth with tbe
work schedule," said the
Buckeyes' athletic leader.
So what man fits all of that?
Hindman may know - · but
he's not talking pul!.lidy.
"I won't name anybody
wttil the new coach is named.
There will be no press
confer~nces until the final
one. · 'Gentlemen,

services, has been charged
by Ohio State- President
Harold
Enarson
with
conducting a national search
to find Hayes' successor.
Hayes, for 28 seasons the
Buckeyes' mentor, was fired
Saturday by Hmdman, just
hours after the volatile coach
slugged a Clemson player
during a 17-15 Gator Bowl
defeat.
.
Nester and Hindman head
a search committee that also
includes the school's four
athletic cowtCilmen and three
assistant athletic directors.
Hindman
said
the
conunittee will conduct a
preliminary screening of all
the applicants and that then
an undetermined number of
finalists would be brought to
the campus for interviews.
The committee will then
recommend Hayes'

you're

wasting your time on
specula'tion," Hindman told
the media jammed into a
room in St. John Arena.
Hindman, along with
William
Nester,
vice
for
student
president

Ehar~n

successor to

in what

the president terms "the
earliest feasible time."
Hindman refuses to
measure a deadline in terms
of days or weeks _to hire the
Big Ten school's 20th head
coach. "There is a possibility
we will seek certain
coaches," he sajd.
The Ohio State athletic
director refused to speculate
about Lou Holtz, ' the
Arkansas coach considered
the No. 1 candidate. "I'm not
going into that," said

..

'

'

~ .

Davidson

In the only other games in-

volving ranked teams
Tuesday night, No. 8 North
Carolina State defeated
Appalachian State 58-50 and
St Joseph's, Pa.~ upset No. J2
Georgetown 37-36. ·
N.C. State waged a see-«aw
ljattle with Appalachian State
and the Wolfpack didn 't take
the lead for good until
midway through the second
half.

..

-

N.C. State, 9-2, hit nine of 10 ·
foul shots, several each by
Clyde Austin and Donnie Per,kins, in the final I: 22 to salt
the game away . Austin
wound up with 15 pomt.s and
Perkins had 14 . Renaldo
Lawrence led Appaliichian
S~te with 16 pomts.
St. Joseph's successfully
employed a stall to edge
Georgetown, now 9-2, which
lost for the fir st time in 21

STANDINGS
Nat ional.
Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
~
W. L. Pet. GB
Washington 25 12 676

Phila .
New Jer sey
New York

22 11 .667
17 16 .515 6
19 20 .487 7

13 31 .362 10 1/2
Central Divis1on
San An toni o 22 15 595
Houston
19 15 .559' 11!2

Boston

Allanta

19 18 .514 3

Cleveland
14 22 .389 7 1.- 2
New Orl ea ns 13 25 .342 9 112
Detro1 t
12 25 .324 l

Western Conference
Midwest Divi ston
Kans . C1ty
20 15 .571
Denver-48 19 486
Chicago
15 ' 22 .405
Mdw .
16 24 .-400
Indiana
11 24 .31-4
Pa ci fic Division
Phoenix
25 14 .641
Sea ttl e
23 13 .639
Los Ang.
23 15 .605
Portland
18 17 .514

Golden 51

t

games at home After a 20-20
tie at halftime, St. Joseph's
took its biggest lead, 24-20,
'
with -18 minutes left.
!an Hubbard 's layup with
57 seconds left provided the
final margin of victory after
St. Joseph's held the ball foj;
more than thre€ nunutes.
Norm Black led St. Joseph's ·
with 12 points, "hile Craig
Shelton of George~&gt;wn led aU

:·

scorers with 13 points . .

SPORTS
The Daily Sentinel

3
6
6'12
9
1/ 2

l'h
'5

19 18 .514 5

San Diego
19 21 .475 6', 2
Tuesday 's Games
Phoen1x 114, New York 102
Washmgton 109. Ch1cago 86
Milwaukee 116, Cleve land

· The AP top Twenty

Midwest _
~
De Pa u l 77, Georgia Tech
Mo - Kan sas City 93,
M issouri 83
St. Lou1s 53, Cincmnali 51. ot
Southwest
Houston Bapl1 st 80 Rober t
Morri s 59
Texas
Chris l 1an
10 6 .
Roosevel t U 64
Far West
Hawaii 66. New Me~ico 64
E . M on tana 55. Sei:lttle
Pacif1c 50
Nev -Reno 90, Souther n Il l
Edwardsv il le 66
N . Ar izona 79, W• s Stevens
Point 64
Pepperdine' 95 , Har11ard 63

"The Associated Press
The Top Twenly teams tn
The Associated Press' final
col lege football poll , wit h
fir st-place voles 1n paren these s, season records and
total point s. Points based on

10 . 19 . 18 . t7 . 16 . 15 . 14. 13 .
12 ·11 - 10 9-B- 7-6-5 - 4 - 3 -

2 . 1
I. Alabama

IJ8) (lt -101 1,317

113

.2 SoU thern Ca l
New Orleans 109, Los
(191 t11-1 01 des
Angeles 105
3.
Oklahoma
Denver 99, Kan sas C1 ty 97
(11) (11 -1OJ 1.251
Sa n Di ego 137, Detroit 11\1
4. PennSiale 11 1 1-01 1,168
Sea ttle 109, Portland 11 9
5 Mt ch iga n
(10-2-0)
989
Wednesday 's Games
6 Clemson
(1 1-1 0) 950
Ind iana at ilwaukee
7. Noi re Dame 19-3 O)
9t4
Ka nsas Ci ty at Denver
19-3 0) 865
Detroi t at Golden State .... 8. Nebraska
9. Texas
19-3 0) 706
Boston a t Seal I l,e
10 . Hous lon
19-3-0I 698
Thursday 's Games
11. Arkansas
(9 -2-1
689
NeW York at Cleve land c
12 ...1.11\ichlgan State
.,_
New Jer sey at New Or leans
..
18-3-0) 525
· S.an Diego a t Kansas City
13 Pucdu e
19-2-1) 493

Regi s 103. NM H•ghlands

14. UCLA

Pro Hockey
By The Associated Press
Nattonal Hockey League
"' Campbell Conference
Patnck Oivt sto n
w I t pis gf ga
N. Y ls\pnders

25 4 7 .57 175 97

N. Y. Rang er s

20 13 4 44 151 124
19 13 6 44 12B 111

Atlantu
20 . 16 3 43 158 142
Smythe Dtvtsion

Chi cago

(8-3-1)

15 Missouri

59

Wa shin gton St. 64. U of Idaho

51

12 16 7 31 107 129

Vancouver 13 22 3 29 11 6 152

Col orado 8 25 6 22 110 163
Sl. LouiS · 8 27 5 11 11 6 186

16. Georg ia
17 , Siantord

Webe r Sta te 66. Ca l S1ate-

Norlhridg e 52

487

(8 4 O)

Tri-County
Sport

434

(9-2-1)
18-4-0)

312
306

18. N. Carolina State

19-3-0)
19 Texas A&amp;M 18-4-0)
10. Maryland
19-3-0)

2t4
.128
11 2

Shop

Others r ece i v ing votes ,
l i s ted alphabeti _c a l ly :
Arizona State, Aubur n, Ball
Sta te, Bngham Young , Darl mouth ,
East
Ca r o l 1na ,
Florida Stale, Georgia Tech,
Iowa Sta te, -L ou1Sianc;~ State,
Navy, Ohio State, Pitt sburgh ,
Tul sa , Washingl on.

., Wales C:onference

Adam s DIVISion
24 6 7 55 159 115
Tor onto
17 16 6 40 131 12 4

Boston

Buffalo

Tuesday's College
.• Ba sketball Scores
Th e Associated Press

15 13 9 39 t23 118

Minn esota 14 18 3 31 11 2 124

Norris Divi Si on
2h 6 5 S7 155

90

15 15 7 37 133 129
15 15 6 36 136 120
8 20 11 27 117 140
a 2~ 7 23 110 171

Tuesday 's Games "~
New York Islan ders 9 .
Vancouver 0
Soviet Win~s d, Phil adelphia 4, exhi b i tion
Colorado 4, St . L6uis 2
Wednesday's Games '
Mont r ea I at N ew Yo rk
Rang ers
Los Angeles at Wash1ngfon
Vancouver a t P1ttsburgh
Atlanta at Toronto
Boston at Chicag o
St. Louis at M innesota
Thursday's Games
New York Islanders at
Philadelphi a
L os Angel es. at M ontreal
Ch icago at Buffa lo

79

U . San D1 ego 84, Man ches ter

r

Phll a

•

East

Ea st Ca rolina 76, lana 75
Fairf1 eld 98, Sou ther n Con - .
necticut 62

• Fi shing Tackl e
and Rod s
and Ree ls
• Gun s and
Re load11ig
• Ba II Glov es
Camping
Equipm en t
e ·Archer y
• Indoor Gam es
• We
hav e Gift
Certiftcates

South

Birmi ngham - Sou th ern 97 ,
Colu mbus, Ga . 74
Central Florida 76. Columbia

601MainSt .
Pt . Pl e a sa nt. W. Va .

Duke 77, Dav idson 59
Gramb ling 60, Jackson Sf 59,

VISA'

74
ot

Acros s rrom Lourf house

Mercer 75, Campbell 50

Midd le Te nn . 98, N C. Ashevil le 61
N Carolina St. 58, App
alachian St. 50
St Joseph's ( Pa ) 37, George -

' '

PHONE
675-2988
Open Sunday 1- p m -6 p . m .
• Monday thru Sa tu rday

town 36
Tenn Tem p i~ 101 , Taylor 75
Tulane 80, Colqafe 75

9.- ,..- . ,., 8 p .m .

World Hockey
Association
- w I -1 pis gf

$

ga
Quebec - · 19 11 4 42 135 117
New En~larid
18 10 6 42 150 120

Cincmna fl 16 17 d 36 132 134

Edmont on 17 15 0 34 124 114

•
ONLY

Winnipeg 14 13 5 33 136 119
Birmi ngham
·

14 1a 3 31 m 136
x Ind ia napolis
5 18 2 12 78 130

SHEET

x - suspended operat ions
Tuesday's Game
Team WHA 4, Moscow
Dynam o 2
Today 's Games
f\lo games ~c h edu led
Th.yrsday's Game
M oscow Dynamo vs Team
WHA, at Edmon fon

-PRE-CUT STUDS
2"x4"x8' ·

ONLY

,,

•i

PARTICAL

.-

BOARD
4'x8' SHEETS
'

at

•

'

•

No. 1

•

.

.99

·

,

them easv shots ."

PIITSBURGH (AP) - If
" H we play the type of baD
talk count ed instead of we did against Denver, we
action, Sunday's American can't be beat. It doesn't
Football Conference title maHer who we p lay,"
game between the Houston counters Steeler Wide
Oilers and the Pittsburgh receiver John Stallworth. .
••Nothmg personal, .but
Steelers might be in the
second quarter by now . · ·
we're gonna whomp the heck
As soon as the two teams out .of them," predicts Oiler
advanced 'in the National defensive end Jim Young.
·Football Leaue playoffs with
"Our attitude is, 'We 're not
weekend victory, the banter going to be denied ,"' .says
began about which one would Pittsburgh center M1ke Webwin Sunday's •game and ·ster.
travel to the Super Bowl.
''I feel we're a better
"We're the better team," ' team , ' '
repeats
Oiler
crows Oiler defensive end cornerback Willie Alexander.
EiVUl Bethea. "We're gomg . "1 think our only problem
to win. There's no doubt' would be i[ we would stop
about it ... I'll guarantee it ourselves," says Pittsburgh
with a capital 'G,"' he says. running back Franco Harris.

HICKORY

-

•

better," Foster said, pointing
to Banks' and Gminski's
dorpination of the boards. " I
thought this was good
experience for us. We made
the adj ustment to theit
slowdown without giving

()ilers feel they
have best team

MUSHROOM
OR
TAN BARK

4

,

aggressiveness was much

BUY' NOW
AND $AVE!

8 rrv's World

1

Blue Devils went on a 12-2
lear .to take a 21}.15 lead with
4: 16 left before mtermission.
"I
thou ght
our

Pills
......................................................................
~
.........
LosAng.
•
Detroit
Wash

.

0:.

••
r~ps

Montreal

,i

'

Hindman.
Other leading candidates
figure tO be these former
Hayes' players and .coaching
lieutenants : Bo Rein of. North
Carolina State, Jim Young of
Purdue, Gary Moeller of
lllinois, Dave McCI3in of
Wisconsin, Earle Bruce · of
Iowa State and Rudy
Hubbard of Florida A&amp;M.

HEALTH

in the news

t

keep the game gomg for 40
minutes and wanted to attac~
the basket better than we
have in the last two games."
~nks scored 18 points and
had seven rebounds and
Gminski added 13 points and
nine rebounds. Guard Jim
Spanarkel had 15 points for
Duke.
John Gerdy had.28 points to
lead Davidson, which led
much of the fir~t hnIf until the

'

·is sought

Names. •••

'

Devils lost on consecutive
Now ranked fifth in The
nights in the ECAC Holiday . Associated •Press poll, )}uke
Festival to Ohio State and St. played wtth a second-ltalf
John's,
N.Y.,
after intensity it did now show in
squandering huge leads.
the Holiday Festival in New
Davidson, playing a slow- York.
down game, trailed only 26-19
"in the second haH, we
at the baH. But with Banks didn't want to hold the ball
and , Gminski
playing and get them (Davidson) out
aggressive, tough basketbaD, of their zone," said Duke
Duke, . now 7-2, padded the Coach Bill Foster. "We collld
lead to as many as 24 points In hav.e done that with a seventhe second half. , ·
point lead. but we wanted to

• By Clarence

&lt;

-

.o:..Wt•&lt;hl~"duy. Jan . 3. 1979

Hindman says OSU ·s earching
for young, .aggressive coach

Pennanent

.Washington· .

Middl eport-Pomeroy

..

Duke bounces hack,

.•••''

Donald F.Graff

:-*****************************.****************.

_-

•

·.

EACH

•

,,

..

I

.5~ I
'A?'

I
.I
I
I
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·~:~;-'· ....'""'""""'"·~··''Alaha:ina

srno_ rts World . HERSCHEL~ISSENSON
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent

It was college iootb&amp;ll's last gasp of the season -millions of ·
hOliday-idled buffs.glued to their TV sets, the screen clogged
with marching ·bailds, skimpily attired . majorettes; cleated
Jegious banging hehnets against fragUe flesh.
.
High hysteria and bitter disappointments. HerQes and goats
- enough to go around. Here's a bleary-eyed look-back at the
weeken~'s college bowl madness:
.
.
.
HERO: Joe Paterno, the professorial coach of Penn ~tate
who saw his national title hopes dashed by a stubborn Alabama
14-7 in the Sugar Bowl. No alibis, he said,. " We were (lulplayed
and· oufCoached."
""'
GOAT: Woodr Hayes of Ohio State, who never learned tbe
art of losing gracefully. To him, football always has been a
war. Players are pawns oo the field, to be pushed and manipu·
Ia ted toward a single goal - "wlrining isn't everything, it's the .
ooly thing." Like his idol, General Patton, who slapped an
invalid soldier in a hospital b,ed, old Woody ended his career in
disrepute by slugging a Clemson player guilty of intercepting a
pass that seal.ed al7-15 victory in the Gator Bowl.
Q9UBLE-HORNED GOAT : Broadcasters Keith Jackson
and Ara Parseghian of ABC, who "didn't see a thing" although
the Hayes incident was visible to the world on tbeir screen and
monitors. ConfuSed fans !)ad to wait untll the next day to find
o~t what really happened.
.
·HEROES: Alabama's defensive back Don M;cN!!BI, who
thwarted a sure Penn State score by smashing Scott Filzkee
out of bounds on the 1 yard line in a one-in-a-million defensive
play, and linebacker Barry Krauss, who stopped the Lions' two
subsequent smashes at the goal from the 1. This was a game
woo in the trenches -and Bear Bryant's head.
GOAT: Paterno's board of strategy that failed to notice an
extra man on the field when a shanked Alabama punt went out
of bounds on tbe Tide 20 late in the game - the mental error
nullifying a Penn State chance to tie or wiin the game.
HERO : Billy Siins, Oklahoma, a driving, squirmihg dervish,
who measured up to his Reisman Trophy credentials bY
hammering out 134 yards and two touchdowns in the Sooners'
31-24 triumph over Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. "The best
runner I've se.en in college all year," said 0 .J. Simpson.
GOAT: Coach Bill Yeoman of Houston, who ordered hts
team to go for a fll'st down on 4th-and-one instead of punting
with the ball ori Houston's 29 and 35 seconds to play. The
strategy backfired, allowiing Notre Dame to rally for a lastsecond touchdown and an unbelievable 3!&gt;-34 comeback victory
in the Cotton BowL
HERO: Joe Unis, Notre Dame placekicker, who, after a bad
snap ruined a conversion early in the game, kicked the extra
point- not once, but twice - that gave the Irish their last tick
triumph. " I didn't have time to think about being nervous,"
acknowledged Unis.
..
GOAT : Head linesman Gilbert Marchman, who failed to call
a fumble when Southern California's Charles White cougbed
up the ballbe!ore·crossing the goal line for the touchdown that
fma)ly decided the Trojans'I?.IO victory over Michigan in the
Rose BowL TV reruns showed White clearly lost the ball short
of the goal and umpire Don Mason signalled fumble, but the
TJ) call stuck. This tainted touchdown won for the Trojans but
may have cost them ihe No. 1 ran~ing in the postbowl polls.
. HERO: Steve Dils, Stanford, the Season's No. 1 passer with
2,943 yards, turned three Georgia fumbles and a short punt into
25 points in a six minute, 13-second span for a comeback 25-22
triumph in the Bluebollnet Bowl.
·
GOAT: The NCAA, which lacks the wisdom to see that
college football cries for-&amp;.1/"stseason playoff system to determine a national champion.
_
'
HEROES: Those armchair quarterbacks who refused to
budge or blink during the holiday bowl marathon and now !ll'e
"getting the red out" for the National Football Le~gue playoffs.
and Super Bowl coming up. A rare breed who dies hard.

Spartan~

riaiDed AP .· grid c;hampi~tt

first.pla~

By

-.

votes and 1,285 .dropped from sixth to eighth
AP Spor:ts Writer
points, Oklahoma received .uf\er bowing to the Sooners in
The Crimsori Tide of Ala- the remaining 11 first.place the Orange Bowl rematch.
bama
conquerors · of · votes and 1,251 points TheCornhuskers received 865
previ~usly unbeaten Penn following ·.a 31-24 . triumph points . .
State in the Sugar Bowl, over Nebraska in the Orange , The Texas LonghornS, who
avenged last season's Bowl.
lost out on the national chamdi$appointing runnerup finish
Alabama, Southern Cal and pionship a year· ago , when
and was named college foot- Oklahoma all trailed- lop- .they lost to Notre·Elame in the
ball's national champion for rated Penn State in the final ---cotton Bowl, 'climbed from ·
1918 today by The Associated regularseason poll. But the · 14th to ninth place with 706
Press,
Nittany Lions slipped from points followiilg a 4:HI rout of
In a tight three-way race first J\lace to fourth with 1,168 Maryland in. the Sun Bowl.
with Southern California and points _after Alabama e~ded
Houston, ninth in the .final
0 k I a hom a
AIa bam a their 19-game winning streak. regular-season poll, rounded
Michigan held onto fif.th out the Top Ten with 698
received 38 flrst-place votes
and 1,317 of a possible 1;360 place with 989 points despite points.
·
points from a nationwide its loss. in the Rose Bowl.
The Second Ten consisted
panel of 68 sports writers and- Clemson moved up . from of Arkansas, Michigan State,
broadcasters. .
sev_enth to sixth with 950 Purdue , UCLA, Missouri ,
Alabama defeated Pe'hn points foc a 17-15 dJ'Cision Georgia, · Stanford, North
Stale 14-7 Monday and over Ohio State in the Gator Carolina State, Texas A&amp;M
thereby captured the national Bowl. Notre Dame's defend- and Maryland.
The filial regular«ason
championship it thought it ing national champions
should have won a year ago . finished seventh this time Second Ten was Georgia,
when the Crimson Tide with 914 points. The Fighting Michigan State, Maryland,
wound up behind Notre Dame . Irish jumped from loth place Texas, UCLA, Pittsburgh,
in a controversial finish.
by edging Houston 35-34 in the Purdue, Missouri, Iowa State
Southern Cal, which Cotl\&gt;n .Bowl.
and Ohio State.
defeated Michigan· 17-10 in
Nebraska, the only team to
Stanford, which was
the Rose Bowl, received 19 beat Oklahoma thiS season . ·ranked three times early in

.Ohio Sportlight

:Ala_ .-:

theseasi&gt;n,reappeared in the
The nadonal championship teams - .Notre Dallie,
Top Twenty by defeating capped a lengthy ctXlleback bama, j\rkansas: Texas and
Georgia 2~-22 in the ·· 'for Alabama, which was ·Pem ·State - all had 11-1
Bluebonnet Bowl. North ranked No.1 in the preseason · records. At the end of the ·
Carclina State, which was poll and also for the first two regular season, Texas
ranked 20th for ooe week weeks of the season, but 1ost No. 1, followed by Oklah&lt;ma,
early in.the campaign, majle its third game 24-14 to Alabania, Pem .State and
it back in with a ~17 triwnph Southern Cal and eventually -' Notre Dame.
•
over · Pitt in the Tangerine dropped as low as eighth
The Fighting Irish trounced
Bowi.AndTexasA&amp;M, which place. The Crimson Tide )lad Texas 38-10 in the Cottm
was ·as higl\ as No. 6 in been ranked second behind Bowl and vaulted .over
October bul had not been Penn State for the final three everyone to the national
ranked for the final seven weeks of
season.' ',
championship, drawing a
vt'eeks of the season, got back - A year
the top, five bitter outcry .from Alabama.
in with a 23-)2 triumph· over
Iowa State ""in the Hall of
Fame Bowl. Pitt, Ohio State
and Iowa State all dropped
out of the ratlkings . .
The
1978 . national
championship
was
Alabama's fourth, all under
A MESSAGE
Coach Bear Bryant. The
Criffison Tide won national
FROM THE PEOPLE OF I
honors in 1961, 1964 and 1965.
Alabama, Southern Cal,
Oklahoma, Pem State and
We are beginning a new year,. ·
Clemson all finished with one
The 1979th year since the Christ
setback as no team rilade it
was born in Bethlehem. Will '
through the bowls ·with a
this year be any better than. the
perfect record.
other 1978 · years ' that have
passed? If they are better d!lys,,
you and I and God will h;IVe tq J
work together. to make them ..
better. let us determine. now,
to make this the, best year ever
for all people by giving our best
to the Master in all ways. Each
one . going 11ut to win one for
Christ,
each one helpi.ng
another along life's way , can
make a difference.

-.as ~
,,
.. • ;

the

depend greatly on holdover Syracuse and must play both Michigan, the defending Big
Michi_g an
State
and Ten C&lt;K:hampions.
talent.
And he 'll find 11 of 22 regulars returning, five on offense
and six from the defense.
Only two of the top 12
rushers will depart. The first
The replacement f&lt;r fired two passers return as do the
'
In pursuance of Law, I, George M. Collins, Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio, in complllmce with revWoody Hayes will find ample, leading seven scorers. Three
ised Code No. 323.08 of State of Ohio; do hereby give notice of the Rates of Taxation for the Tax
if-not overpowering, l]latt!rlal of the first five receivers go
Year of 1978. Rates expressed in dollars and cents on each one thousand dollars·-tax valuation.
.
returning from the te~ that as do five of the fll'st seven
finished fourth in tbe Big. Ten, tacklers from 1978.
,
1
lost to Clemson in the Gator
Unquestionably, the
I
Bowl and had a· 7-4-1 record. biggest graduation Jos,s will
' l.
be AllAmerican linebacker
TOWNSIDPS
' : [.
I
Tom
Cousineau,
the
school's
One thing is certain: .
all-ti'me
champion
tackler
Recruiting a . good opening
.SCHOOL DISTRICTS
class will be difficult for tbe. and the plliar of Ohio State's
defense.
The
6-foot-3,
22(·
new man, simply because be
joins the talent hunt so late · pound son of an Ohio high
: ;,
school coach accumulated 2'0
AND CORPORATIONS
this season.
"
hits in 11 regular season
games.
"The timing's terrible for
Other ke'y defenders
BEDFORD
recruiting," admitted Ohio
departing
are
ends
Paul
Ross
Meigs Local S. D. __ " _ 4.30 1.70 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
1.00 32.80 .01391230
State athletic director."Hugh
Eastern
Local
S.
D.'
___
4.30
middle
and
Kelton
Dansler,
1.70
32.00
.10
.40
.10
.20
1.
0
1.00 40.80 .08805076
Hindman after firing Hayes
'
after the coach's Gator Bowl guard Mark Sullivan and
CHESTER
tackle Byron Cato. AU of lhe
Eastern Local S. D. ___ 4.30 2.50 32.00 .10 .40 .10 .20. 1.00
-outburst.
1.00 41.60 ' .09050098 '
defensive backfield starters
' Meigs Local S. D. ____ 4.30 2.50 24 00 ..10 .40 .10 .20 1.00 --'
1.00
33.60 .01871099
Therefor~,
the
20th return, headed by sophomore
I
COLmffiiA
Buckeyes' coach.may have to safety Vince Skillings, who
Alexander
S.
D.
--4.
30
,
1:70
29.00
.10
.40
.10
.20
1.00
2.40
1.00 40.20 .21375707
had six interceptions.
The offensive line will be
LEBANON
shredded. Finishing their caEastern Local S. .D. __ _ 4.30 2. 70 32.00 .10 AO .10 .20 1.00
1.00 41.80 .09342116
reers were tight end Jimmy
Southern Local S. D. __ 4.30 2.70 36.90 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
1.00 40,70 ' .1001889~
Moore, split end Rod Gerald,
LETART
tackle
Joe
Robinson,
Southern Local S. D. __ 4.30 2.70 30.90 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
1.00 40.70 .09752626
messenger guards Jim
'
OLIVE
Savoca and Ernie Andria and
'
.
" Eastern Local S.D. ___ 4.30 2.10 32.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
1.00 41.80 .09026456
ning the jlochester Classic sissippi State, Kansas and center Tim Vogler .
But
returnipg
are
,
allwith convincing victories Maryland completed the
ORANGE
C&lt;)Dference guard Ken Fritz
Eastern LocalS. D. ___ 4.30 2.50 32.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
over
Dartmouth
and weekly rankings. ·
1.00 41.60 .08997838
and
promising sophomore
Niagara.
Mississippi State, 8-0, is a
RUTLA:ND
illinois, still undefeated at newcomer to the poll, while tackle Keith Ferguson. ·
Meigs Local S. 'D. ____ 4.30 2.30 24.oo .io AO .10 .2o 1.00
The offensive backfield ·
1.0~ 33.40 .01800563
I:HI and in fourth place, got Maryland returns to the Top
Rutland
Village - - ---- 4.30 1.00 24.00 .10 .40 )0 .20 1.00
G.
50
should
be
the
team's
No.
I
1.00
37.60 .02700915
four ·first-place votes. 1SU, Twenty with a record of 11-2.
.
strength
in
1979
with
only
tailSALEM
ranked seventh, received
Nevada-Las Vegas,
Meigs Local S.·D. _____ 4.30 1.70 24.00 .10' : .40 ..10 20 l.Ofl
three and 'Duke, UCLA and runnerup to Temple in the back Ron Springs, oft injured
1.00 32.80
North Carolina State got one Las Vegas Classic, and in hls ·senior season, gone.
SALISBURY
each fir the top spot.
.. Syracuse fell from the Springs was sec~nd in
Meigs Lo cul S.D. _____ 4.30 1.70 . 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
1.00 32.80 ' .01391242
behind junior
Duke, a double loser in the ratings. Syracuse won its rushing
Middleport Village __ ... 4.30 .20 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00 j'
6.20 1.00 37.50 .01!419414
fullback
Paul
Campbell
last
·
ECAC Holiday Festival, only game of the week, 82-72
Ppmeroy Village c _____ 4.30 .20 ' 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 . 1.00 .
5.80 1.00 37.10 .02376285
year. .
dropped fromJ~ for the over Illinois State.
4
SCIPIO
Calvin Murray and Ricky
first li!Jle'slflce the preseason ·
Meigs Local S. D. ____ 4-30 2.40 24.00 • .10 .40 .10 .20 LOO
Johnson
are
solid
·'
1.00 33.50 .Ot 86S87 4
poll. The Blue Devils
replacements
for
Springs.
SUTI'ON
•
received 757 paints, good for
One of them likely will join
Southern Local S. D. __ 4.30 2.10 30.90 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
fifth place . UCLA , 75-72
1.00 40.10 .()9556673
quarterback AFt Schlichter
'Racine Village _______ 4.30 .60 . 30.90 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
which lost to Stanford in its
. Tuesday's
10.10
1.00
48.70 .09751088
and flanker Doug Donley in
Syracuse Village _____ 4.30 .60 30.90 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
Sports Transac1ions
conference opener, fell . to
5.30 1.00 43.90 ' .09807414
the first team backfield:
The Associated Press
sixth. with 741.
SUTI'ON
.
Basketball
The new inan shotild drool
Rolll)ding out the Top Ten
Meigs
Local
S.
D. ____ _ 4,.30 2.10 24.00 .10 . .40 .10 .20 1.00
National Basketball
over Schlichter's potential.
1.001 33.20 . 01~76502
were LSU with 728 points,
· Association
As
a
freshman,
the
strongChicago Bulls - Act ivated
North CarollM State with 609,.
Real Estate t axes which ~ave not bee!' paid at the dose of each collection carry .a J,enalty of ten
Kentucky with 584 and Texas Sco tt May, forward. Waived armed quarterback piled up
Stev~ Sheppard, forward .
1,565 total yards in 11 regular
per cent. T~xes may be pa1d at the off1ce Of the county treasurer or by maiL p,Jease bring your
A&amp;M with 404 points,
.
· College
season games. He threw a
. last tax receipt· and if you pay by mail be sure to locate your property by taxing district and enlndilina .State again leads
Central State - Fired
close stamped self addressed,envelope.
school
record
20
the Second Ten. .The Maurice Hunt, head football
iriterceptions, but experience
Sycamores, who blasted coach .
Always exam_ine your tax receipt to see that it covers all your property, Office -Hours 9:00A.M:
Morehead State - Named
should
lower those-tul'llovers:
Morris
Harvey
99-63, Steve · Loney offensive
to 4:00P.M. da~ly except Saturd ay when office closes at Noon. Ta&lt; Books will open December 20
The 1979 schedule will be no
to Januf ry 20, 1979.
'
•
received 387 points. ..
coordinator. Van Hollaway
Georgetown, Michigan, Ar· defensive coo rdinator , and picnic . Ohio State faces nonconference opponents UCLA,
John Fr itsch offens ive line
kansas, Long Beach State, coach
.
·
Washington State and
Louisville. Marquette, MisBy GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)'So how much talent will Ohio
Stale's new football coach inherit? .

By JUDY liocKAui:.
was designated the first
Al•claled Preia ·Writer National Recreational Trail
U1TLE ROCJi:, Ark. (AP) .. in Arkansas by . the
..._ It took Mother Nature 300 Department of Interior.
mUUon years of erostoo and
The foot traU winds 8,448
weathering to produce the feet through a panorama of
rocks that'· make up Sugar vegetation and sandstone
.Loaf MOWltain.
formations to a flat~pped
It's ooly lx!en about a peak.
since · hikers
There, at the tum of the
century
diacovered the riiolDltaln's century, farmer
Fate
'irild and rugged beauty, and Winfrey planted an orchard
less than a decaae since the which gave way to lush
~ar Loaf Mountain Trail vegetation when the orchard

•

~ ,~~

•••

·.

.

$-}Sg

2% MILK.;
••••••••••••• v~~·•••
'

HISTO!I-IC BUCKET
WEST LAYFAYETTE ,
Inc. (AP) -- Tht Old Oaken
Bucket is in the possessloo of
Purdue for at least another
year, thaliks to its 'IM victory
over Indlana on Nov. 25.
The Bucket ia the symbol of
. '
football supremacy between
the two Indiana schools and
gpes back to !'925 when
alumni group5 from both
Texas became a state in Purdue and Indiana met in
1646 and seceded I~ years joint conclave -and decided_it
later with the rest of the . would be a fitting prize.
'South. It petitioned for
The bucket was actually
1866·, taken from the Old Bruner
readmission
in
promising an anti-slavery farm between Kent and
constitution.
Hanover in southern Indiana.

~~&lt;~
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BACON
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PRINGLIS TWIN PAK~ .............................. 79'
WALDORF'IDILET TISSUE ...................4 flit . 79'
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SNOW DRIFT SH0RTNING .... ,.... : ......... _
.. ,.. 'l.69
SJARKIST TUNA ............................. ~:~.~~-. 69'
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Each of these Bdllertrsed •tams tS
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•n ~ch Kroger Store, e 11cept It
TOTAL SAT ISFACTION
apec•liu ll'( noted In th11 aa. If we ao
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the southwestern foothills of
the Ozark; Mountains, · 70
miles north of LitUe Rock in
Van Buren county.
It iS open .year-round, and
attracts an ~verage of 30,000
visitors each year."

-"'

JOWL

SUNDAYS

J

now a popular recreation
spot.
"TI\e view from the top of
th e moun.tain is splendid. You
can see almost all the lake,"
Masters said.
Newspaper clippings
indicate that the mountain
was a popular climbing
attraction for
family
picni_ckers for many years,
but ravines made it difficult
to climb, Masters said.
"Now we have developP.d
walkways, steps and a
bridge, so a person without an
extreme physica ·l
impalrment can traverse it."
The mountain iS located in

·] p

'

LIVER PUDDING ••• .'••••• ~-~~~~ 99~

•

level, are red cedar trees,
stunted in growth . by low
nutrition, and twisted by the
wind into grotesque forms .
"What. makes Sugar Loaf
unique is a mountain of that
magnitude being completely
surrounded by water, accessible only by water,"
explained Jesse Masters, of
the Corps of Engineers at .
Little Rock .
11 wasn 't always so.
Sugar Loaf , became an
island ~ 1961 when the LitUe
Red River was dsmmed to.
provid.e hydroelectric power
and flood control. The dam
created Greers Ferry Lake,

-

.....
'•
,...

••
••
t•••

drainage system, so the hlker
'
""n take the trail ev:en after a
he~vy· rainfall.
.
.
Near the · top of the
mountain the trail dlvides,
with one fork following the
. was abandoned.
The trail to the top of the south slope, and'' the other
mountain-island was built in . taking hikers. aroiUid the
two pi18ses by the Little Rock north •face , where vertical
District of the U.S. ¥mY fractures up to 100 feet deep
CorpS of Engineers. One traU · scar the sandstone.
that goes directly to the • Scattered among the pine
mountaintOp was builL in scrub oak wid black oak tree~
11'66. Another, encircling the are the · less common
top of. ~e 250-acre mountain, dogwood, black locust, black
gum and overcup oak.
was fmished in 1969. ·
. Benches aliJ!Ig the trail give
Atop the mountain,' 540 feet
the hiker a chance- to rest. . above · the normal lake level
~ roots provide a natural and 1.001 feet above the sea

Rates of Taxation· for 1978

•

PHEBE'S STOR.E
Thursday, Jan. 4 through Jan . 6
We Gladly Accept Fed. Faoa stamp•
Mondoy thru Fri4•Y ·
t:OOiil7:00
Saturday 9' 00·9•00
CLOSEO .

·

· -'"
··-

·

AP outdoorsman

,Catsup

Qti77 c

·.t.tortJL
~~u~t.~
c~Y
AVONDALE
MACARONI&amp; CHEESE

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Boneless Bottom
Round Roast ............ lb.

.

I
I

SAVE
30c

99

..
I
I

12

~=

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D .A INSPECTED

Mixed
Fryer Parts ....... lb.
·2-LB . ROll. , .$2.58.

•

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast ........ lb.

Gunnoe's . ,

•

19

I
I
I

: . $po

On 2lbs.

I

I
I

Country Sausage

: SAVE

I

1
1

liMIT IIUC WITH COUPON lAD 11 5U IODIIIO!Ill'tJACNISI
(IICIUOI&lt;C THIS ITIMI
~

Of

I
I
I·
I

I.

l ·lb.
Roll

OF

I

liMIT! LIS. WITH COUPON liD 17.50 IDOITIONIL PURCNISE
illCLUOINC THIS ITEM I

12

I

~=

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
White· Bread .. .. .......
Sugar ........
.
ONI
Oil

99

OLD c;AROLINA

Sliced
.
db.
Baeon ...... ..........

Grade A

'

79

c

$)00
On 4
lunches ·

liMtf 4 IUNCHIS WITH COUPIIN IND I I ID IODITlONIL PUICHISE
illClUOtNG THIS ITEM )
,

I
I

e

I
I
I

I
I
I
I

...............................
•

Larg .Eggs ........ Dot.

Pkg.

Rinso .
Detergent ....... .

..

I
'
I

I
I

Broccoli ·

SAVE

I

lAG PLEASE

LIMIT

KROGER

I
I

Fresh
I
I
I
I
I

Domino

1 •

5th &amp; Pearl

V~llev Bell

,.

!-~~

~The

Buckeyes
have
11
regulars
.
•
returning for '79 campaign

BRAUNscHWEIGER ••••••••1 ~~.7 g~

•

.~ ~ ~

The Meigs Tire Center, InC. '

take ,~ver top
spot 1n AP cage ratings

··By JIM O'CONNEU.
Associated Press Writer
Michigan State, winner of
the Far West Classic, took
advantage oflosses by the iop
three teams in last . week's
poll to move into first place in
The Associated Press weekly
college basketball poll.
The Spartans, ranked
fourth last week, defeated
Washl'rigton State, Oregon
. State and Big Ten rival
Indiana on the way to the Far
West title. Those triwnphs,
coupled with two losses by
Duke and one each. by Notre
Dame and UCLA, enabled
Michigan State to collect 31
first-place votes and 969
points.
The top eight teams in this
week's poll each received at
least one first.place vote
'from the nationwide pa~l of
· sports
writers
and
broadcasters.
Notre Dame held on to sec'
ond place, receiving seven
firstplace votes and 878 points
despite [Is 81-76' loss to
Kentucky.
North Carolina moved from
fifth place to third after win-

·;,.__

5-n-..Daily Sentincl,ll1ld~port-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday , Jan . 3; 1979

OF

LiMIT ONl COUPO N Pfll fAMily
. . . . . llllll .C lll l ll llt,WIIIDI IIU ' Il l'
IIIMCT T1 Uf\lua.flllll I I IIC.IL l Ull

12

' '

~

1&gt;eliww~tm S~ecit~~
AVAilABlE AT STORES WITH Dill ONLY
HOT FOODS AVAilABli11AM ·7PM
FRESH MADE

Glazed
Donuts

BOTTLES, MTN. DEW

D~et

Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

u.s. !)10 . 1 '

Kuund White

r 9.t~

Potatoes ·

49·

CAPTAIN 'S CHOICE

Buck• t •0 •F'IS.h....
SLICE~,IO~ED

MILD MEDIUM

Yellow
•

n1ons.·..

('

.

f ·PI• c•• Of

IDH•r Frl Fl1h .
l ·lb . coloSiow
And 11H•uh

,,,.,_.,

$499
$299

.Snuthf1eld Ham ......·.... ,.. ,.. . lb.
French Crea~ Cheese Cake ea!l99

i

'

�,.

,.•
, I

•

'"

6- The Daily Sentinel. Middleporl'Pmneo·oy; t&gt; .. Wedne.&lt;day, Jan.:!. 1979

Charlie Brown .· just an ordinary guy
" YClRK : all about.
EW
·'Charl'c Brown ·suffers,
because he is a caricature of
the ordinary person." Schulz
explains. "Most of us are
. much rnor¢ acquainted with.
losing than. we are with
winning. Winning is great but
it isn't funny.' While one
person is a happy wi nn er 1

'

is his ability to gently ca tch
our channs ·and follies so
aptly that we can only laugh
Peanuts is above all an
Ameri can crealiol)- and one

reason it is now published in
24 foreign countries and has

&gt;cen th e su bject of a.n

Marcinko and Mrs. Carol
Au!\. Mo·'· Marcinko alsowon ·
the dour pri~e . A Wynken,
Blinken _and Nod theme was
car ried out in the dec.ora·
iions. While cake with pink
and blue booties was served
alnng with .sandwif•hp~ mints

.,'

Stalna ker . Amy llegar, J.
nuts, and punch .
Attending the shower were Margie Blake, Betty ~ani, f•
Lois Clelland, Elsie Cross, L.eola Keck, Leona stewa~ 1 I
Winnie Marcinko, Isa belle Richard Warner, Gladys Ar-., ~
Wehrung ., Jean Wri1ght , tis, Mary Artis, " Barbara .
Karen Roush, Be ulah Maxey, 'Gilland, and Ela _Jane ,,.
Wilma .Tillis; and Kathy McDaniel.1

that it is read as an ex·
pression of · the American
character ...

'

the Li ons and_their ladies at
the Meigs Inn , 6:30p. m.
Entertainment will follow
the dinner along with a talk

The 30tli anniversary of the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Cl ub will be celebrated Friday evening with a dinner for

Samettme
n'ext year?

~ny expe&lt;.1 atHIIL' by ym.. ·
'hJJ!h-iey pre-Christmas pare. ·
This lev.el of antidpation
pradically ensures a drastic
-PEAR Dit BI.AKER ..., letdown.
'nlank heaven Christmas is
To help you understand
QV!ll'! It is our family's most · more about this common
4e!Jressing hollW.y.
reaction to innated expeeta·~ Every yelll" our celebration tlons , I am !ltmdinJ! you a
starlli O¥\luslfine. The weeks copy of my · new hotline , •
leading ,up to the big day are · " Fighting
Depression."
~ic but fun ) I&amp; . we run other readers can order
arouitd buying presents, sen- ·t-opies · by sending 50 cent.s .
d\nK cards, decorating the and, -a stamped, se lf·
bouse and baking cakes and addressed envelope to me. in
. cqbkles. .
care of (his newspaper, P.O.
• Even Christmas Eve is fun BOx ~ 15 , Radio City Station ,
JJt:cause we always go carol- New York, N.Y.IOOI9.
ing with our church and then - Furthermore, you fuight
stop by llom~'s house for look dosely. at your gift~iving pradices.
.
refreshn)ents .
•
Spirit~! are sUD high when
How about' wailing until
the chllilren awaken us . on later in the morning to begin•
- Christmas morning at 6
And then having everyone
o'clock. Wegatheraroundthe else wait while one person
t_ree an~ my husband holds opens and _l!&lt;!rplres a present]
the chi!Ciren at bay while. l · Even • more_ satisfying,
make coffee.
perhaps, might be creating a
Then ,they lio wild with the new ritual of opening single
P.resents. MQ!lths of planning , gifts · on the nights before
and shopping are over in 20 Christmas.
minutes. Even after we have
You mentioned going carol·
cleanet) upJ he mess, it is only ing with your church group.
7:30.
But you didil't write about
I spend the. rest of the dsy any rellgio.us celebration on
in the kitchen preparing din- · Christmas itself.
ner, which we eat in mid·
Has Santa, rather than
afternoon. Just like the- Christ, become the main
presents, dhmer is over In character of the day? Some
record time. I Clean up and families have stopped giving
we usually watch television gifts on Christffills, instead
until it's time for bed.
working on some joint project
I can(t believe we will go for the needy. There are
through' the same thing next many ways to put the spirit
year. Is there a way to make back into Christmas .
·
It all less depreaslng?
How about writing a family
.DEAR. READER - Your history for next · year's
family needs to take a good, ChrislJniis . project? What a
hard look at its Christmas wonderful present that would
traditions. Wby be iniserable be for everyone .
r,ear aftel"j year when a few
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
cllanges \could alleviate the of Uois newspaper, P.O.
problern81
Box.475, Radio City Station,
' Do not be slaves to.habit. New ' York , N.Y. 10019 .
Start by making of list of your Volume of mail prohibits per·
old tnuiiUons. Then begin to sonal replies, but questions of
think about changes. _
general interest will be
You llllil be building up toO. discussed in future i.-olurnns .
much excitement and too

I1

I

Club.to _observe anniversary

Li~ns

The cast's self-conscio us

Ka!lHl Blaker PhD.

Ri;r;er. Sending Iliff " v.·Pn• .To

iS

lns.ers. using funny stor-ies to

CHOICES

r

1

there may be a hundred
&lt;'o nsole lhernsel9es."
'l.t th e heart of Schulz;s art

Carol A~lt honored by shower
Ms. ·Ja nice Evans and Mrs. ·
Nancy Broderick hosted a .
layette shpwer honoring Mrs.
Carol Ault, Lincoln Hill ,
Pomeroy, recently.
Games were played with
prizes J;:o in~ to Mrs. Winn ie

al ourselves.

t.:.'Chibition at the [A) uvre

by James C. Butcher, District
13 K governor. Awards will be
given for ·membership and
perfect attendance. Several

f'[
I•)

l •

distingOJished guests expect
to be present., Uons are to
turn in their "tkkets I by
Wednesdayy night.'
I

1-'
~~

'I
'"
ih

' ~ ' l'i

•• 1. ••

)')

.

'

POLLY"$ POINTERS

&amp;v.s~ .

, • ·Pqlly Cramer
Try vinegar

on tope morl&lt;s

~RNSHOME

Michael May has returned
to La fayette, La . after spen·
_ding several ctays here
visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce May, and other
relatives. A 1978 gradaute of
Marietta ·College, Michael is
a petroleum engineer witfi
the Tennico Oil Co. at
Lafayette.

d ean and

smelli ng

~ wee!

since it is washed every

tirnt.~

STE.f.K HOUS:E

I wash ;, load of dishes. MRS . J .E.W.
DEAR POLLY '- That odd
DEAR POLLY - Do you
pl astic
have any suggesti'ons about foam -bac ked
.placemal
can
be
cut
into a
o·emoving masking tape from
number
of
circles
or
.sq'uarcs
windows' I find that after the
ta pe is off marks are left on to se r ve · as bevt! r age
the glass that I cannot gel off. coaste rs. · ·
To remove labels from
- KAREN
,.
DF:AR POLLY .J. J am one glass jars rub the l ~beis
of those who try to copserve liberally wiUo dis hwashing lienergy by hanging my wash quid , let !~em sta nd fur half
outsi de to dry. As I take tMm an hour and then the labels
out of Ihe washer (hang them will . come off easily. on plastic -hangers and then VALERIE
DEAR POLLY - I often
put them on the line to· dry .
This eliminates clothespin find it difficult to tell the front
marks and it is very easy to from the back of a fou r- or
remove !he hangers from the six-gored skirt t hat is rruode
line a nd put them right in the with an elastic wai stband, so
·closet. No more folding. If it I always sew a s mllll piece of
is windy I put one clothespin seam tape or lace in the·back.
over the top of each hanger.- This also helps with pants
that have an elastic waistEDNA
DE AR POLLY'- I ke-ep the band. - BE RNICE
DEAR PbLJ.Y - When fr vpad that I scrub pots with on
ing
chicken cut the bottom of
th e lop shelf of my
a
large
grocery bag about
tli shwash~r . It is always
four inches up and you have a
disposable pan to use for
·
Grandchildren
nouring the chicken. Next cut
·
open the cut-off top of the bag
home or Ch nstmas_ and have a throw away drain.
All but four grandchildren 1.laves both lime and money. in the family of Mr. and Mrs. EMMA
Conrad Ohlinger were home
Polly will send you one of
·
her ·. s igned thank -y ou
forChristmas.
Here for the celebration newspaper coupon clippers If
were Mr. and Mrs. Michael she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in ,
Ohlinger, Mic~el, II, Julie, her ·colwnn. Write POLLY 'S
.and A!lgie, ·Albany,; Mr; and · POINTBRS in care of thi s
Mts. Ed Ac~rd, Heath ; Sgt
Wllli:!Jh M. Ohlinger and newspaper,.
. daughter, ·naleen, Abalene,
Texas ; Mr. and Mrs. 'EdGoza rt, Pomeroy, Naomi and
Kathryn .Ohlinger , Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Ohlinger's mother,
Mrs. Helen Miller, Mid·
dleport.

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

HEARTY HOME
Uiiiw .AKfASJS~ ~

AWAY FROM HOME.

I

CLEARANCE
20% - 30% '. 40% -50%
Of,f

RECENT VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Williams recently visited in '
Dayton with Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Williams, Scott and
Brandi. While _there they lit·
tended the Browns-Bengals
game . Over Christmas vac·
lion-Steve and Kenda flew to"
Bakersfield, Calif. to visit
Mr. and Mrs. Mike--Williams
and son, Michael. While there
they went to Magic Mountain,
Knot ts . Berry Fa r m ,
Disneyland, Pismo Beach,
and Morro Bay.
·

Includes Sportswear, Sweaters, Lingerie,
Blouses, Evening Gowns.
SHORT COCKTAIL DRESSES
PARTY. TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS

'19.79 SALE
.
"

DRESSES FROM s52 &amp; UP - s19.79 OFF
UNDERs52 SAVE 20% OFF
LARGE StocK ro SELECT FROM.

LB.

PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER BELPRE 4~3-7212 .

"Where only lhe besllood is good enough"
\

.

.

CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK

99¢

LB. $}19

LB.

., SIRLOIN STEAK

LB. $}89

FINE ASSORTMENT

I

·,

OF STORE SLICED
· LUNCH MEATS

LB.

$} 29

LB $189

.

CUBE STEAK . LB.

BONELESS

•

1.8

CENTER"CUT RIB

$

'

PORK CHOPS...~;.~l
GUNOE
..

. -$} 29

SAUSAGE
CR.SPY SERVE

49

LB.

•••••••

.

.

BACON.............. ~·; .8

-$

U~DA CHOICE .

19

ARM, ROAST......!!..1

USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

-I

-

-

· SIRLOIN TIP . ·
$}89 RUMP ROAST

CHUCK

R.C. COlA

\

'J

2%

':

'"
_;:.;·

J'AMIL~ 1GATHF..R~G

.: ''A•flmiJ.l~~ring was
-·bltd at 11M! t.c:;;e of Mr. and"
" Mn. l!hl1 ~Inger, Phil and
"' l.aun~ m Clrlatmas Eve

.

·:: followlnll

program at the

,::_1lrtlerlirlle ,United
- ~\i.

•.

Methodist

"'" At~ ONin«er home were

--

L '1J'

'•r .,

.'

CAKE MIXES........5 · SUPPERS....... ~~~~.~.}
CO UPON

COU P ON
-

COUP ON

. CHAMP

FLAVORITE

CORONET

SUGAR

TOilET TISSUE

5LB.
BAG

Mr. and Mrs. l':haries Warth
·David, Durrin and Amy, Mr:
and Mrs. Mike 'Evans and
children, Alicia, Cindy, Ryan
and Matthew, Portland ; Mr.
and Mrs. Don Ht!nnel and Ar-·
tie, Annie and F.d Sissnn.
Mrs. F'.dilh SiSl&gt;on, and Mrs .
Bernk-e Evans. .
1. ·
.

~ BANQUET BUFFET

DUNCAN HINES

gge·

8 ROLL
PAK

$·119
. .

WI(

Limit 1 pe r Customer
Good on ly ~ t Powell's
res .,ian. 6, 1979

Lim it 1 per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Jan. 6, 1979

•
'

9
.MILK ...... ;;~.~} 5

cottage
Cheese:·.gg¢
1

SUGAR ......... .'~·.. ./

u.

.

'

BORDEN'S

•.. J&gt;o'Ail-(or Even Some) of the 'I11IngS for You That the Labels
• , ,Say They Do. " The authors are Jonathan ~or, M.D. and
~~- ~-:.r · and the . _12.95 book published by Harpe~ and
.

-

BORDEN'S

-to -uty Aida," whose sub-title reads, " And Everything You
.-:Twant To ltJ!ow About Them and Whether There's Anything
:na.i-e 'l'hat'li.Hurt You and M~ of All Whether They Really

-.

Plus"bx &amp; depOsit

STEAK.~!~·:-..

3 LB.BAG

-· ~and creams.
.::c'llic~m~~~ended reading:· "Dr. Zizmor's.Brand-Narne Guide

8~0L 99~

.

APPLES .•............. 5.

f'ERSONAL tp !'Wondering" : I'm not a beauty coiWTUlist-but I
.ean leU you diU: good old pure petrolewn jelly, that comes in a
.:.i!F and Ia !lbkl just about everywhere, does as much, if not ·
~.for dry lkin than do the most expensive moisturizing lo-

,,

.

RED DELICIOUS

whQ ftgure a few' quarters saved Ia a goOd idea In these inflatkclary times.
And I'd rate her considerably higher than I would her
110et!py neighbor! -H.

•

SJ·09

·-:·

I'd think abe probably has a lot of.company In other women

8 A~ · AND 'PM

,_

.

DEARAMAZE;D:

'THE DAILY
SENTINEL
BETWEEN
'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0. ·
..
PRICES GOOD THROUGH JANUARY 6, 1979

. •What do you think about a woman (my neighbor ) who is so
chintzy •bf•pulls out aU the dirt and trash in disposable
vacuum cleaner bags and used the bags again? -AMAZED

PH. 992-2156
.

I

our

CHUCK
I

l

0~ MOREREAD'£RHOAX?
rrSURESMELL'ILIXE'SOAP'!
DEARHELEN.
.
I'm ready for the big bridge.
My hublnd and [ and
social I!J"OIIP Wj!nlto'l"fexico on a
thr~y ~end, the l!us'!lands to fiah,\Ylves to shop by day ;
-andaf'nlght we all partied.
The aecond m4!1'111ng, alter my husband left early, I was call. lid from the ahtrr er by a knock on the door. Thinking it was one
of the Wives, I ojiened it clad only In a loose towel.
. lnateid I came face to face with the most beautiful hunk of
M~ male you've ever seen: His name plate said "Jose,"
and he had the wrong rooni.for a breakfaSt tray, but then our
eyes met ...
; I canceled out with the"oi!fer woman, called Jose and asked
him to bring me up a Bloody Mary. Needless to say, it was a
teniflc experience.
·
· Alter we returned home my husband confessed that one of
their ' 1fiahing' f days was spent in a Mexican 'brothel where he
caught VD: H~ had to tell me.as he thought I might be infected
too. I let him carry all the guilt, although our lnfecUon might
flave come frvm Jose.
We were both treated and cured.
' Which might have ended the situation except that I think l
am pregnant,-and I'm not sure wbo Ia the father.
Should I tell my hll8band about Jose?
Will the VD effect the fetus?
Shoilld I teD the wives that.their men look a holiday from
fishing?- UNSURE IN SAN FERNANDO VAU.J!:Y
DEARUNS~:
.
Tw!e in tomorrow for the continuing saga of what t~ey're up
loinC.tUfornla'sSanFernandoValley.
'
,
; Jlllt In 1:818 you aren't bucking for a sale to "Soap,"l'll tell
you that in early d~ion of VD, the fetus is cured when the '
mother Ia su~ully treated.
,
'·
·
, On the oCher questlo111: follow your conscience. (And if
you're mowing me, examine same!) -fl. ,.
,

DEARHEr)EN:

AREA
.

.

:·:·

.

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED.
FOR
POMEROY o.. &amp;
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Sunday 10 am-10. pm

BONELESS ·
$}39
.
C
HUCK
ROAST
••••••.••
l!·...
.
~!:. US. • ·.•By Helen Bottel11J

.

\ l

Mon.-Sat 8. am-10 pm ·

r'ii;I;;;'IM; "'I

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT."·
.',.- - --....-----!

Store Hours:

.

.

.GROUND
BEEF·

The east wind of the Orient
was hot air. Eliphaz gave us
a most inelegant but expres·
sive saying still used in some
circles.
"Sbould a wise man utter
vain knowledge, and fill his
belly with the east wind?"
· -Job 15: 2

HOURS - MON., WED., THURS., FRI. - 10-8
TUES., SAT. - 10-5:·30.
SUN. - 12-5:30.

I

At Bob Evans Ste-ak House, w~
serve a lot more than steak. We have
hotcakes, fried mush, hot bakeci
biscuits ; fresh farm eggs, and all the',
good things that go with Bob Evans
Farms cou~tryf[_esh Sausage. · ·
Sostopon inonyourwaytowork.
And do it right for breakfast.

fi

~~~\
_JI[llsl..
•.,_
y,Q .
~ STOREWIDE .~

30%

•

''

•

.. '

'

DOG FOOD
25 LB.
BAG

$269 roc
·

Limit 1 per Cu stomer
Good only at Powell's
OHer E ·
Jan. 6, 1979

19

~U PON

GOLD MEDAL

. ,·, FLOUR

49¢ 1 -:

REGUlAR OR SELF RISING
HB.
BAG " -

. W

Limit 1 per Custom e1 ·
Good only a I Po we II' s
OHer E:t pire
6, 1979

(;~:

· _
· .
. · ·

�,.

'

.

Annual Christmas
·r ;:;:;;;;~;··;;s;;; ·1r-s:~i:;l
Calendar ', dinner enjoyed

8- The DailySenti nd, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., W ~'l!nesdHy. ,Ja n. :1. 1~7n

,,,, By Hugh A. Mulligan
engra ved. People tO&lt;Iay ar~'·
AP Special . orrespmdent so Jacking in imagination .
'
.
What else s)lould I have
RIDGEFIElD, Coop. (AP)
Mr. and . Mrs. Marvin
WEDNESDAY
- Promise her anything, but done? Or, as Cyrus Vance
GIHS&lt;'O
hosted the an nual
give her a bi!Sin wr~nch .
tells the National Security
POMEROY LODGE 164,
party of. Modern
Ch1·istmas
It 's what She wanted 'for CounciL befcre boarding the F&amp;A]d , regular meeting, 7,30
Poultry
and
Modern Supply
Christmas, so I gave it to her . . diplomatic shuttle ' Let's this evening at templ e; all
and
friends on Dec.
employes
master masons invited.
"Gift wrap it, will you?" 1 explore the alternatives.
18
HI
the
Holiday Inn,
LADIES
AUXILIARY
of
instructed the kid down at the
From way back in October,
there was nme. She had her Middleport F ire Department Gall ipoli s.
hardware store.
The group was entertained
He looked at me like I had heart set on a basin wrench. at fire station, 7:30 p.m . this
b~·
Dave and l ~isett 's Magic
just stepped off Battlestar You see the adult education evening with Bessie Darst,
Galactica. He was temporary program ih our town offers Euvetta Bechlle and Helen
Christmas help and for a. ·everything
from Byers as hostesses.
PARTY HELD
minute there I could sense.he conversatior!al Russian and
Tii'URSDAY
A
Christmas
party and gift
hesitated between call.fug the Restoration drama to belly
E;VANGE LINE CHAPTER exchange preceded a Chri~t­
manager and going across dal)cing and Japanese flower 172, Order ·of lhc Eastern
the street to Ute Town Hail to arranging . My wife look .star, 7:30 Thursday at the mas program held at the
Syracus e Pre s byterian
see if the patrol car was in the plumbing.
Middleport Masonic-Temple. Church.
driveway. Or maybe getting · She was the only womaJI in
Attending the party were
BETHEL Ladies 'Aid 1
the health officer.
the class, but she hung in
Adams, teacher, Kinn
Carol
,
Instead, bemg one of those there. Or should I say, took p.m., with Mrs. James Da~is.
A&lt;lams,
Todd Adams, Bnan
know-it-all college kids in the plunge? She said Sh~ was
Connolly , 'Greg Nease;
frizzy' hair and tortoiseshell sick and tired of forking over
bifocals , he resorted to a check for 60 bucks Snowdens entertain Tammy Theiss , Tammy
Wolfe, Katie Crow, teacher,
sarcasm.
•everytime a dude with a
Eleanor
McKelvey, teacher,
"And the pesticide, you flashlight and a Wrench want
Mrs. Roy Snowden enter·
Marvin
McKelvey,
Michael
want me to gift wrap that down into our ·b&amp;semeot.
tained -Gi t her Rutland hom'e
and
Jay
McKelvey,
.Chastity
too?"
Now a whole new world has on Sunday before Chri stmas
wit h a family dinnel' and par· and Candy Jacks, Leigh Anne
"No," I put him in his opened up fcr us.
and Amy Beth Redovian, Lori
place, which was back in the
We use to sit · around at ty .
Attending were Mr. and Crow, Shelly Connolly, An·
fertilizer section, "I'll eat night in front of the fireplace
that here. Butlei me have a talking about the new pope or Mr·s. · Carroll Snowden and drea Theiss, Mildred Pierce,
Ann ette , . Janice· Lawson, Charl otte
gift card: l want to put my high mortgage rates or daug ht e l' ,
wife's name on it."
•jimmy Carter's anti-inflation G&lt;~lljpol is ; Gbry Snowden, Nease, Virginia Burke,
"The pesticide?"
policies 'or sometimes even Marsha ll Univ~ rsily student ; teacher, Jody Gibson, Dale
"No, Ute basin wrench ." the poetry of Emily Oc'!lra Atkins / Barboursville, Gibson, David Lawson, Diana
I guess they're still talking Dickinson «r the novels of W. Va.; Mr. ·~ nd Mrs. Steve Nease, Tina Pierce and C. T.
ab9ut me down at · t~e Francois Mauriac of which Sn owden ~nd son, Mike, Mr.' Chapman.
and Mrs : Larry Snowden,
hardware store as that nut we are both fond .
case who came in and had a
'Now we sit around talking Cincinnati ; Mr. and M~.
basin wrench gift wrapped · about dry fields, leaching Charles . Simpkins, Charla ·
for his wife for Chris!mas. fields, J-joints, U-traps and an d Meli ssa, .Chu cki e Sim·
pkins, ColUJ11bus: Mr. and
Too bad l didn't t.a'ke it next shut-off valves.
Mrs. Bruce MJJy, Rutland:
dOor to the jeweler. to h•v• it
Michael May, 1\afayette,'J,a .:
Mr and Mrs. Gregory Me·
cAtll, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
James Ca rpenter and son,
Jay, Reedsville: and Homer
Parker, Rutland.
The Chrismas party of the group's visit to the county
Mr. and Mrs. Simpkins and
Reedsville U.M.W. was held home . A Bible quii was held
family spent the week here
at th home of Mrs. Dolly and prizes were .awarded.
Reed with Mrs. Sue Reed as New secret pal names for the wi.th Mrs. Snowden.

.l!

Russell Radcliff, Golda Gillian. In the background, Pearl Proffitt.

·

Show following ·dinner. Gifts
we r e exc ha n ge d a nd
employess of _Modern Supply
were presented gift.« by Mr.
an.d Mrs. Glasgo.
·
Att ending wen• Mr. lmd
Mrs. Thereon johnson, ·Mr .
and Mrs. Orville Rhodes, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Wood , Mr.
and Mrs . Paul f,awrcnce,
Mrs. Phyllis Ritchie and
Joyce Ritchie, .all of Radne :
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Musser,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Moore, Waverly ; Mr .
and Mrs. James Weber,
Jack son: Mr. and Mrs.
Waller l~ykin s , B.eaver, and
Mr. and Mrs. Rob&lt;irt Slone,
Ewin!((on.

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ASSISTANTS -Shown assisting with the Racine Satellite Senior Nutrition Program
aod Christmas dmner are, I to r, Sharon Icenhower, Edna Knopp Mattie Lawrence Letha
· Proffitt,.Inez Wickline and Paul Smith. Not piclllfed : Josephine Smith, Laura Byer;, Eula
{Proffitt, Linda Evans.
.

'

vocal numbers by Eula
Proffitt ; re.adings by Senior
Citizens, and a Christmas
card exchange.
At the conclusion of the
program, Santa. paid a surprise visit and presented each
with a ~andy cane. Christmas
cookies and Kool-Aitl were
vided and served in the
urcb . dining room by
J ephine Smith prior to
participants' boarding the
vans · for their return trip
home.
One man 's comment was:
"This prog ram does me so
much good. My wife and I
KANSAS CITY, Mo . (AP)
cannot read anymoro, she is
Patrick Crowe cannot
hardly able to cook, and we
how and when he came
recall
· TeH chers of the classes giv· are too old to drive. We enjoy
to
the
realization that to
talking with others so we
in ~ recitations are Beverly
remain
a
teacher he had to go
Will and Laura Ohlinger, know what is going on around
,.into
business
so he could
nurser·y: and Joyce Davis, us. It sure beats sitting at
make
a
living
.
beginners. The Morni.flg home, feeling . lonely and .
"TO become a teacher,"
Glori es ta ught by Mrs. depressed.''
Crowe
said, "took patience,
Frankie. Hunnel presented a
•
brains,
.
willingness to learn,
pla ylet , "Th e Christmas
work,
some inspiration,
hard
Story", while the junior high
motivation
and .. deter·
class did a program with ormination.
To
stay
in teaching
nmnehts.
·
required
additional
income."
Headings and carols were
Now,
Crowe
is
so
successful
included in the program by
at both, he has written a book
the choir with duel« by Mrs.
for other teachers about it,
Hunnel and Jenni e Wa11h and
"How to ·Teach School and
Dale Davis and Phil Ohl·
Make a Living at the Same
inger . A visit from S::wta with
Time,"
published this faD in
t reC:~ ts climaxed the :)e rviee.
hardcover and paperback.
The idea came about a year ·
ago .from his students at
Mason Personals
Rockhurst High SchOol,
A New Year's Eve watch
where
be
teaches
party was held at the home of
mathematics. He
was
Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson and discussing a class text at Ute
daughters, Miriam, Melanie,
time. "Why don 't you write a
Marcia and Mary Alice with
book, Mr. Crowe?" one of
the following attending, Mr.
them asked. He quipped in
and Mrs. Russell Capehart,
return "The only thing I know
Mr. and ,Mrs. Harold ,R. Fry,
enough
to write a book about
TURNS.EIGHT- Sbella
New Haven; Dennis Wolf,
is how to teach school and
DLane Hendricks, daughter make a living at the same
Middleport :· Angie Hood,
of
Mr .. and Mrs. William
Mason, and Ladonna Ben·
time."
(Pete)
, Hendricks,
nett, Clifton.
The suggestion took root,
Pomeroy, celebrated her
Mrs. ~ Richardson ·is
and last Christmas vacation
eighth birthday recently
spending the holidays with
Crowe sat down to write. He
.
wlth famlly and frleuds al
'her daughter and son-in-law,
has been a teacher 20 years.
her home. Guesls attending
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Metcalf
"I gue5s for a number of
were served ice cream, years I had the fantasy that I
and family in Cincinnati, 0 .
pot.a'Co1iblps, beverage and
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Me·
could live on a teacher's
a · Santa Claus cake salary, .apd I. sort of had a
Daniel, C. R. and. Christine
spent New Year's Day with decorated by her aunt,
fantasy that some day I'd get
Mrs. Brenda Jeffers.
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
some · fantastic job offer."
Presenting gilts to the
Curti s McDaniel , Sr. in
CrliWt.:: s t:~.u.i . '111en came
honored guest were her marriage and three children.
Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Me· parents and brother,
A car wash was his first
Daniel spent the holida ys , Travis, grandparents, Mr. venture, and bw has since
and Mrs. Ross Stewart,
. visiting Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
branched out from Christmas
Jr.; great-grandmother,
McDaniel and family in Pt.
tree lot§ to more car washes.
M.,s. Guy Priddy; Mrs.
Pleasant: Mr. and Mrs. Stan
He says that .his yearly in·
Kelly
Stewart and Jason,
Saunders and family in
come puts him in the lop 10
Mike Stewart, Chris and 'percent of American earners.
Columbus; Mr . and . Mrs.
Jared,
Mrs. Darlene· '.'That's anyone making over
James Loyd and faf9 ilY ai
Bartrum,
Mrs. Brenda
, Nashport , 0.
$30.000 a year," he said.
Jeffers, Ryan and Missy,
In his book, the math
Mrs. Becky Teaford,
teacher . r eco WltS his own
Sherry and Angie, Mrs.
In 1945, the Arab League
bu siness experiences, and
Kay
Fredericks, Chrlstin,
· announced a boycott of goods
gives
fellow
teachers
Jackie, Judy and Cylinda.
made by Jews in Palestine .
Lawrence and Inez Wickline
who were assisted in 'serving
by Edna Knopp , Letha
Proffitt, Sharon Icenhower,
Sylvia Byers, Josephine
Smith and Paul Smith. Table
centerprieces were made by
David Brewer . ... The after
dinner program consisted·of:
group singing accompanied
by Linda Adams at the piano;

Fifty-five Senior Citizens
enjoyed a Christmas dinner
held at the Racine Satellite
Senior Nuirition f'; rograin
Site located in ohe Re·
Organized , Church of Jesus
Christ of 1,1\tter Day Saints on
Dec. 21.
.
A dinner consisting of
turkey and all the trimmings
wa s prepared by Mattie

Christmas celebration
features recitations
Christmas Eve at the
Enterpri se United Methodist
Church was celebrated with
red lali 'lll.., bv the children, a
. playle: ,, . ihe junior high
rla.s~.
·11
a prog ram of
music by t. · r.: huir.

Twins born
Mr . Hnd Mrs. Ri ck Smith
rTerri Robin ) of Middleport
are HFmounl'ing the birth of
lhcir identic(!! twin sons, bOrn
on Dec. 22.
Ricky Joe. Jr1 was born at
2:43 a .m. and wei ghed five
pounds and was 18 inches
long. Randy Scott was born at
3:02 a .m. and weighed fi ve
pounds. five ounces and was

19 inches long.

Maternal grandmother is
Mrs. Bessie Hendricks, Mid dleport. Maternal greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Neva
Gory and Mrs. Wanda Dennis, both of Columbu s.
Paternal grandpa r enlli are
Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
Smith, Middleport , and pater·
nal great-grandparent.« are
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Smith
of Ra cine and MrS. E lizabeth
.Johnson , Columbus.

.\
GUESTS
Christmas Eve guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Reed,
Pomeroy, were F red and
Eleanor Crow , Carson Crow,
Mr. a nd Mrs . Thereon
· Johnsor;&gt;, Freda ·Hartinger.
I.A!on R . Meadows, Jr ., Tom,
Bruce, and Paul Reed.
PARENTS
WITHOUT PARTNERS
The Gallipolis Chapter of
Parents Without Partners
\ will meet for coffee and
WscUSSiJlll Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the ho!lle of Jack Gill,
330 Third Avenue, . Gallipolis.

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HOLIDAY GUESTS
Holiday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Werry were Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Werry, Bran·
don and Ryan, Belpre; Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Werry, Jimmy,
Randy and Ri cky , Racine ;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Werry ,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Steve .Price , dau ghter ,
Stephanie; Pomeroy ; and Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs, Jr .,
New Haven.

Holiday guests
Holiday drnner guests of
Mrs. Thelma Grueser , ,Plum
St .. Pomeroy were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Grueser and Sheila
Kay, 'lltld Pam Hurlocker,
Homer : Mr. and Mrs. Butch
Russell \md Tarnmy Lynn ,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Hud, on and Lori , Five
Points ; Davi d Grueser,
Cheshire-: Jake . Holman.
Ral'i ne. and Melanie Kav.
f.lenn , Rodney, and Misie
Grue~er .

Other holiday visitiors
were Mr. and Mrs . . Robert
Hawley, and Amy Beth.
Cheshire : a nd Rolli e
Hmnsl&lt;•y and .Jay. Pomeroy .
:some ~u. uoo 1cebergs are
created in the No rthern
· Hemisphere each year, with
90 percent of them coming·
from glaciers -on the west
coast of Greenland. ·

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Douglas W. Littl e, son of
Maxine a nd Bill Little,
~ radua te d from Obi o State
University, College of f,aw,
on Dec. 9.
Married to the former Con·
nie Radford, Jlc is a 1972
graduate of Meigs ,High
School. Attending his graduation in addition to his parents
were Mr. and. Mrs. Rollin
Radford and daughters , &amp;lily
and Judy, and two aunts,
Wilma P~rker and Mrs.
Peggy Thomas.

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60" KNITS
54" WOOL BLENDS
45" POLYESTER COTTON BLENDS

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Start As Low As '1995

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FRENCH CITY JUMBO FRANKS ........·~~-~1.49
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NESTEA.......·.................. !~~. 52.29
INSTANT
5 oz. Armour
VI ETTA SAUSAGE~-•·' .................... 2/97'

10•;, oz . Campbell's

CHICKEN STA-RSOUP..~ .......... ~ .......... 2!57$
14V. oz .

JENO'S PIZZA MIX...... ~ .........~ ...... ~ ..~o.x.

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LIBBY'S PUMPKIN•••••••••••••••••••• ~······~-:~. 49'

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Teacher says own business
needed to make ends meet
sug gestions for finding,
financing and successfully
.operating busin esses as a
sideline.
In the introduction, Crowe
says, "This book is not a get·
rich .quick scheme. There are
only two ways to do that :
Inheri money · or marry
so
ne who has it." Crowe
di · neither.
e disco urages teachers
rom taking part-tinne jobs.
He encourages them to own
businesses within reasonable
financial limits which allow
them flexible hours for
operation and maintenance.
He, himSelf, has a business
partner.
Even with · his success at
business, Crowe says he has
never seriously considered
giving up teaching.
" Everybody will point out
the risks of .business to you, n
he adNise~ teachers, " and it 's
extremely easy to think of
reasons not to do things. But,
life's a risk. Take risks . Be
alive."

....

Douglas Little
graduates Dec. 9

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.
IIMstmasmade.
SeniorCitizens enjoy Ch
dinner at sattelite site here
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Christmas party held

co-hostess. A short business coming year were drawn.
Refreshments were served
session conducted by the
president, Mrs. Vivian bullet style using the Clirist·
Humphrey opened with The mas motif to the following
Lord's Prayer· in unison . guests . and members:
Secretary and treasurer Virginia Walton , Leona Ruth,
reports were made and bills Jodi Smith, Connie Bowma.,,
paid. A new member to the , Beverly Wigal, Angie Reed,
club Is Mrs. May Humphrey. Marlene Putman, and James
They were 32 shut-in calls Reed guests. AlsO to these
The program which members: Mrs. Sue Douglas,
included a candlelight ser· Mrs. Vivian Humphrey, Mrs.
vice entitled "Christ The Verna Rose, Mrs. Mamie
Light of the World" was Buckley, Mrs. Sue Reed, Mrs.
presented by devotional Niolet Satterfield, Mrs. Sandy
leader; Mrs. Sandy Cowdery. Cowdery, Mrs. Dorlha
Christmas carols were sung Riebel, Mrs. Pat Martin,
and the meeting was closed Mrs. Lorraine Wigal, Mrs.
with the song " 0 Come AU Ye Connie Rucker and Mrs.
Faithful" and prayer by Mrs. · Lillian Pickens.' Gifts )"ere
Dortha Riebel.
exchanged and secret pals
The home of Mrs. Reed was were revealed. Mrs. Riebel
denorated beautifully for '(he was awarded the door prize.
holiday season. Mrs. Mamie The next meeting is with Mrs.
Buckley reported on the Sue Douglas.

1~79

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ENJOY DINNER ,- Shown enjoying the Christmas dinner are, r to 1, Goldie Clendenin,

0 .. Wednesday , .Ja n. 3,

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�.11- The Daily Sentin~l ••Mlddleport-Pmneroy. d., WP!Inesday . J~n . :1. m~

Stone's ·case
amo.n g seven·
heard Tuesday

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schedule after rest

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KNOW YOUR CARRIER •.. Dawn Thomas, II, daughter
of Herman and .Virgiilia Thomas, Pomeroy, is a carrier for
the Daily Sentiilel'in the Pomeroy area. Dawn is a rifth grade
· student at Pomeroy Elementary. ·Her ho~bies are bike riding
and playing cassettes.
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ByiiROOKSJACKSON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter, refreshed
by his holiday vacation and
much · improved· !rom a
painful yearend bout with
hemot'fhoi~, is starting a
busy January schedule with a
trip to the Caribbean for a
four-nation summit con·
!erence.
press
White · House
secretary Jody Powell said
the president is meetjng with
stall members tollay · in
preparaiion lor the con·
ference with leaders !rom
Britain, France and West
,Germany on the island o!
Guadeloupe Jan. '5 and 6.
Carter will fly there Thurs·
'day and remain through Jan.

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Seven delendanis were
.fined and two others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
dieport Mayor Fred Hot!man
'Tuesday night.
Among those lined was
Ricky N. Stone, 19, Mid·
dleport, who was assessed $50
and costs on a charge o!
failing to have his vehicle '
under control.
Police. said ill 4 a.m ..
Sunday, Stone was the driver
· of a car on S. Third St. where
an accident occurred. Police
said Ston~'s car hit a parked
'Clir owned by Lois Taylor,
Middleport. The Taylor car
was shoved into another

Yotillg child
electrocuted

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The president plans to fly
from Washington to Atlanta
Jan. H to take part in
ceremonies marking what
would have been the 5oth
birthday of the Rev. Martin ·
Luther King Jr. He'll return
to Washington that same day,
Powell said.
Sometime the week o! Jan.
15 Carter will delive• his
State o! the Union address to
Congress. Powell said
Tuesday the exact date has
not been set, but he did say
Carter intends to deliver the
address in person.
The president has com·
pleted virtually all work on
an austere and already
controversial federal budget
which he will submit to
Congress Jan. 22, Powell
said.
·
Also, Carter has set up an
informal "task force" of staff
. members from the White
House and elsewhere in the
administration to lay ground·
·work for the Jait. 29 summit
meeting here with mainland
China's Vice Premier Teng
Hsiao-ping.
For a time there was a
possibility that cart·er also
would meet durmg Januarv
with Soviet leader Leonid
Brezlmev to sign a new
agreement to limit strategic
anns, but negotiations hit a
snag last month arid it isn't
known whether the docwnent
will be ready to sign this
month.
Powell said, "I don't know
of any timetable" for com·
pleting the strategic anns
limitation talks (SALT).
The press secretary said
Carter had returned from his
Christmas and New Year's
· vacation feeling well. Carter
canceled his Dec. 20 appoint·
ments and tool&lt; to bed lor a
day because of a painful case
of hemorrhoids.
·
But· now, Powell said, "he
seems to be feeling very
well." He said Carter had
' reswned jogging for ex~rclle
while at ·Camp David, where
he and Mrs. Carter spent'
several days in seclusion
. after gOing to Plitins, Ga., lor
Christmas.
Powell said Carter spent
'!Orne of the holidaY vacation

Some ArCti£ icebergs are
more than -lf-'balf-mile long
and reach 100 !eet into tlle air.

facial lacerations in the

accident.
Others lined Tuesday night
were Paul D. Mitchell, 23,
Langsville, $50 and costs,
dist urbing the peace, and $100
an~ costs, criminal mischief;
David L. Carpenter, 18, Long ·
Botto'm , 35 miles an hour in a ·
20 mile zone, $15 and co.sts;
Donald Lovett, 55, Mid·
dleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner; Buddy
McKinney, 61, Middleport,
three counts o! disorderly
manner with fin es of $25 and
costs and two fines of $50 and
costs; Sandra Tyree, 21,
Middleport, $25 and costs,
di sturbing the peace; Charles
Tyree, Jr., 21, Pomeroy, $25
and costs, disorderly man·

GALLIA COUNTY BASS BUSTERS CLUB - Officers and members o! the recentlyformed Gall1a County Bass Busters Club are, !irst row - Larry .Wilt, president; second row
-: Jerry Bradley, Nick Johnson , vice president; Jerry Rusk and Steve Owens. Third row Bill Hammond, Roy Williams and Charlie CaldwelL Rear - Lewis Smith, secretarytreasu~; NoFman Kelly and Herman Stephens.
.,

Gallia "Bass Busters

ntake plans for 1979
said the club hopes to make . be announced when school
the tournament an annual lets out for the swruner.
"ln addition to our youth
event , plus th is year, a youth
program,
we will be working
clinic' will be held be!ore'.. he
closely
with
State Game and
toumament,
···.,.
Continued Wilt: "We wiii"' Fish Personnel and elected
pass on all the fishing in· legislative o!!iclals lor the
formation we can to the youth improvement o! the sport of
of the cqmmunity. The date bass !ishing," Wilt conand location of the clinic will cluded.

K
nt
St
t
t
.
1
'
tt.
tt
.
t.
'
~~~c~es::~~~~ :~ b'::k . e
a e ria ge mg a en IOn
!ir~~s Monroe, 15, gave1 arti-

was pronounced dead at a
Senate Presiaent Oliver
The House was e:tpected 1o
Dallas hospital.
By ROBERT E. MILLER by the Legislature.
Ocasek,
D-Akron,
and
Holise
adjourn
for the week after a
Gov.
James
A.
Rhodes
and
Neighborhood residents
Associated Press Writer
joint
Speaker
Vernal
G.
Rille
Jr.,
session
today with the
more
than
tvw
dozen
former
· said the power line, glazed by
OOLI.IMBUS, Ohio (AP) D-New
Boston;
began
third,
Senate
for
more
ceremoolal
and
present
members
of
the
Dallas's worst ice storm in 30 Ohio 's newly reco nvened
duties.
two-year
terms
in
their
top
Ohio
National
Quard
are
deyear s, snapped Sunday LegiSlature will devote most
,
mornin g. They sa id th ef o!
its
attent ion
to fendants ill tll e action. It was leadership posts:
Both houses must publicly
Rep.
Corwin
M
.
Veteran
!iled
by
students
and
reported the d a nglihg-lin~ ocganizational matters in the
declare
official results o! the
Nixo
n,
R-Lebanon,
was
relatives
of
students
killed
or
several times, but it went-• .next week or so, but one item
Nov
.
7
election so the
o! substance - the Kent State wo undeli' in an anti-war installld in his !irs! term as
unrepaired.
governor
and other state
·
civil damages trial - is also demonstration on the Kent House Minority Leader . Sen.
officials
can
be sworn in Jan.
State University campus May P.aul E. Gillmor, R-Port
expected to get attention.
Clin ton, was reelecte d 8.
.
Senate Finance Chairman 4, 1970.
Althongh the trial in U.S. minority leader o! the Senate.
Harry
Meshel;
D·
In a historic note, Ocasek
Youngstown, co nfirmed District COurt in Cleveland
Rifle 's o!!ice said the lower
was
named to preside over
a
lready
is
'in
pro~ress,
Tuesday, as the 113th Gen.eral
chamber
will adjourn until
spokesman Cbet Ballew sa id ~· deputies were called to aid Assembly met for the first attorneys say proceedings the Senate, rather tha n next .week, while leaders
live or six demonstrators Beverly Hills police.
time, that an outo!-co urt could be halted if agreement resume his old role o! pon&lt;jer .co mmittee
major ity party leader.
were
arrested
for
The shah's sister, Princess settlement o! the suit remains is reached.
This prerogative had been assig nments and other
The
Senate
and
House
con·
investigation of various Ghams, owner of the house, possible.
business.
charges, including arson and and her .ailing 90-year-old. Last nlonth, the state Con- vened Tuesday for traditional the lieutenant governor's, but
As of Tuesday, Riffe had
1977
cons titutiona l
assault oo law officers.
mother, Tad] Ul Moluk, were trolling Board, on which ce re monia l ac t ivities 3 a
named
one committee chair·
The demonstrators carried inside the mansion during the Meshel is a ranking majority including swearing in o! the amend ment relieved the man, Rep. Myrl· H.
lieutenant
governor
o!
the
job
placards calling for the death melee.
Demo crat , rejected a 99 House members and 33 and calltd lor h.im to be given Shoemaker, !&gt;-Bourneville,
Qf Shah Mohammad Reza
The queen nwther came to proposal to settle the case for senators and forma l election
who will continue as head of • ·
Pahlavi and an end to u.s. Ca lifornia
last
week, $675,000, but some members o! previously designate d new duties by the governor tlle Fina nce Committee.
support o! his reign.
r~portedly lor , medical care. said it should be considered leaders o! the two chambers. and Legislature.
Several demon strator s
came near· to entering the
expensive home before about
300 protesters were forced
from the steep slopes aro\111d
the residence, herded down
the hilly streets and corraled
in a park.
The demonstrators were
then .released in groups o!
four or five -without incident.
An unknown number · of
protesters were hit by police
cars during the 45-minute
melee in an exclusive
residential area in the hills
above downtown Beverly
Hills.
Ballew said the protesters
were kno cked down by
sheriff's cars responding to a
report o! a female deputy
bein g dragged !rom her
patrol car. The deputy )\'as
unharmed and had not been
dragged O\lt of her car,
Ballew said.
Severa l policemen were
. When you take these coupons to your store prefer ri cher tasting coffee . Because Savarin
injured in the melee, none
fnstant and Savarin AFC are made from blends of
seriously.
you' ll instantly save 50C
"
· ·
At one point, dozens o!
the world's firtest coffee beans ,Beans that are deep
on Savarin®Instant
screaming demonstrators
roasted for a richer, heartier fl avor.
surged pl(st a large gate-and
and a9tomatically
battled with helmeted o!·
So go ahead and clip out the coupons. They'll
save another SOCon
firers in the driveway of the
leave you with agood
home before retreating amid
Savarin Automatic
taste in your mouth
clouds of tear gas, leaving
Filter Coffee.
behind a burning police car.
and some change
Which is good
The protesters started at
ih your pocket
least a dozen other !ires on
news for peop le-who
the hillsides around the
mansion, throwing placards
and dry brush into the !ires
while chanting "Death to the

Demonstrators set fires

URGES SHAH TO
LEAVE
LOS ANGELES (AP) - In
a major policy shift, the
United States js encouraging
the Shah of Iran to at least
temporarily leave his strifetorn ~untry while a Civilian
government i~ formed in an
effort to end the t urmoil, the
Los Angeles Times said
today.
While there has been no
public change in the U. S.
pollcy of support lor the shah,
American officials have
thrown their weight behind
an attempt by an opposition
leader, Dr. Shahpou'r
Bakhiiar, to !orm a · civilian .
government, the paper said.
It quoted UMamed sources .

parked car owned b)'c'Sieve ..
Lane. Damages to the Stone
and Taylor cars were heavy
and medium to the lane
vehicle.
The
Middleport
Emc,rgency Squad answered
a call to the scene, near the
Tom Rue Motor Co., · and
transported Eli Ebersbach,
Jr ... a passenger in the Stone
car to Ve,t ~rans Memorial
HospitaL Ebersbach su!!ered

DALLAS (AP) - An ~
year-old Dallas boy died
when he • grabbed a
dangli ng hi gh · voltage
power line that ne•gh·
bors sa id snapped two
da·ys earlier under a heavy
coat o! ice.
Barton Clark was knocked
to the ground Tuesday,
unable to release his grip on
the live 7,-iiOO.volt line until a ner.
F orfe iting bonds were
friend kicked the wire away
Members of the recently •
Christine H. Chandler, 34, !ormed Gallia County Bass
with his rubber boot.
" It boomed and made a big Bonita Springs, Fla., $350, Busters Club are making
blue !lame when it posted on a charge of driving plans lor the 1979 sea'iori. ·
happened," said Greg while intoxicated, and Judih
Formed·late last summer,
Monroe, 1( who had been L. Cowen, 27, Middleport, $28 the local group sponsored a
walking with the younger pqsted on a charge 'of youth tournament before the
. boy. "Russ (Greg's older speeding 41 miles an hour in a end of wann weather.
brother) was on the front 25 mile zone.
Larr y Wilt, president,
porch and he saw the !lame
over the top of a house and be
thought the house was on

reflecting on the coming di!!icult times with the
year, and also said Carter Con,gress" nonethel ess.
probabiy will be taking on Ca rt er expects opposition
relatively !ewer big and !rom various quarters as he.
controversial projects during attempts to hold down federal
lor
social
1979 than in the first two spendin g
years o! his administraiton. pro grams, increase military
"There probably will be a spending and gain Senate
less wide variety/ ' he said. rati!ication of the expected
But Powell added, "We're strateg ic arms ~greement ,
prepared for some very Powell said.

By LINDA DEUTSCH
Associated Press Writer
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
(AP) - Hundreds o! rockthrowing · demonsirators
chanting "Death to the shah"
besieged a hillside mansion
occupied by the mother alid
sister o! the Shah o! Iran,
torching two cars and setting
at least a dozen fires.
Neither ·the princess nor
her mother was injured. Los
Angeles police said Ia te
Tuesday night that the queen
mother was moved from the
house to an undisclosed
location under heavy escort
after the disturbance. The
whereabouts o! the princess
was not known .
Mina Azad, a spokeswoman
for the protesters: said tllere
would be more demon·
strations. · '' We're go·
. ing to demonstrate as long
as they (the sha.h's !amily)
are here. We're not going to
let them steal from the
Iranian people and then come
here and live in peace," she
said.
At least :is demoostrators
were injured, two seriously,
in the bloody confrontation
Tuesday,
as
chanting
Iranians and their supporter,'!
repeatedly tried to s~orm the
borne and were drive, .back
by police using clubs,: highpressure fire hoses and tear
gas.
Slteri!f's Depa rtment

•

shah."

''It was. like a combat
zone," said Bever)y Hills
Police Capt. Lee Tracy .
"Once they got to the front o!
the residence, they began
throwing rocks and sticks ar
o!!icers behind the gates. ·
They stormed the gate and
broke the lock and continued
throwing ntlssi!es at the
o!!icers. They turned over a
car in the driveway and set it
a!ire' arid became inore and
more violent. "
Some police' officers drew
their pistols during · the
disturbance, but no shots
were !ired. About 100 sheriff',

�..

.'

'

.

Apple G~ve

News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Everette
Parsons and son, Mary
GordooofLeon W.Va., Lester
Rhodes and Harley Hoschar
of Cottage ville, Connie
Morris, Helen Shick, Mrs.
Ted Wilfor d a nd daughter s of
Portland v.isited Mr. a nd Mrs.
Owen Anderson during the
holidays.
Christmas day guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill and
Dean were : Mr . and Mrs .
Darrell Norris and Tracy ;
Mr . and Mr s. Marshall
R oush Joey and rn•'"""'
' wOIf-~I -John Joe
Mrs. DollY
Shane ; Mr . and Mrs. Car
Wolfe Jr . a nd family of
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs . Cecil
R oseberry and Art Hill of
Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Roush
of Aurora, Ill. spent Saturday
till Wednes da y with his
b r other Mr . and Mrs .
Marshall Roush and family .
Mrs. Allee Balser spent
Chrisbnas eve and Christmas
d ay with Mr . and Mrs.
Lawrence Balser and family
a t Tupper Plains.
Mrs. Shirley Ables went to
Caoal Winchester Friday and
brought her daughter Vicki
Ables home for Christmas.
Other guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Ables were Butch Ables,
Paul Ables, Evelyn Swartz,
Mrs. Alice Balser.
'
Mr . a nd Mrs. Dorsa
Parsons were Christmas eve
guests of Mrs. Alia Wheeler.
Other guests of Mrs. Wheeler
during the Chrisbnas weekend were : Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Morris, Jason, Rachel 'and
E r in of Bowling Green, Mrs.
Frankie Foster, Leah and
Marnie of Delaware. They all
enjoyed the Christmas
program at the local Church
and held a gift el[&lt;;hange at
the Wheeler h~e Christmas

-···-r """t

eve.
Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
Russell, Mandy and Michael
vislted Mrs. Bertha Russell
Christmas day and Mr. and
s. Bob Veney . daughter
Mr
Christmas ave. All at
Wolfpin .
Mr. and Mrs. Stev&lt;! Hagey,
Stephanie and Brad, Robert
Russell of Wolfpen visited
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Rn•oolJ
.....,.x;

and family Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Venoy and
daughter visited the Russells

~Wednesday evening .

Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parson
were evening dinner guests'
Christmas day of Mr. and
Mrs . Gerald Wells and
daughters .at Galllpolls .

- Mrs. ~~e ~~tt, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Riffle and children
were Christmas day guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Jake Stitts.

4

Thursd•y. Jan .

.

•

12_:The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Wednesday, Jan. 3, 1979

.For Best Results ·Use Sentinel.Classifieds

,

ASTRO·GRAPH.

8:0()-T.,;y Orlando 3,1 5, Eight Is Enough 6,1 3; Jet

13- The Daily ,5entmel, Midtllepor l-Pomerny. u., We!l!lesttay , Jan. :1. 197n

OICK TRACY

'

fersons 8.10; Great Performances 20; Africans 33.

.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.

Bernice Bede Osol
WHt&lt; o ld ll'i tt l"n W h 11r&gt; l llb i' '. TON fORU-I"' rrk up b r yl
w ith h i nd~ ond y('llow · '~"~" ' " , ... to n d o rd SJSO.CXJ 37H ~! 4 (1
1-'honCJI 9&lt;rJ 76Htl

H G Hf

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1:; W"nl:o t il" lJIICit·r
( ';~~ h

Ch;u j.!&amp;'
I 25.

[I~

_!t l.tl ~
lti&lt;L.\ ~
titl.ll '

January 4. 1979
Th ts co mmg year you a re lik el y
to make some tmpo rt a nt bastc
c h anges tn yo w lt fe
Wh e n
th ese th tn g s occ ur. you ' ll dertve rn a1 or b~ n e l t l-s tn ea ch
tn s tance

1 ;J(l.

l Hfl

'""

.Ll!i

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,., ,u bt· chml-:l'd ut

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y C.t n l of Tlmnks uml

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ah ead lor you rn 1979 by send ·

tllJ.: llu'i NmnlH.·1 111 \&lt;L rt' uf rht• Sen-

tn g fo r y o u r c op y o f A s traGrap h Le tt er . Matt 50 cen t s fo r
each and a lo ng , s e l f ad dressed . st ampe d e n vel o pe

ltm•l

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\ll t~ h t Ill n•jt•et
JU'llult.il Till' Publt!-:hct· will nut l)l'
ll'SIHIIISib!t· fur lllill't" (J Ut ll Ulll' llll'\11 ,
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all stork 1n stor e 10 pe r -cenl

NOTICE
WANT-AD
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DEADLINES
,,
Muml&lt;n
Noun mt S.1tunla)

tlwu rntl&lt;l\
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4

Fl 11\a y a rJ t'I'II IH III

Appliances.

Th ro ug h th e he lp o f oth e rs.
tdeas you ' ve h ad for a long
tune ca n b e put to wo rk tn th e
way yo u e nvt sto n e d . Som e l htn g q utt e g ood co m es from
t ht s

----

tac kl e

SAL£ PRICES

Notices

GUN SHOOT . Ro c1ne Volunt eer
~I re Dept Ever y Saturday b 30
pm a t thelf b u il din g~ en Ba5hon
f act ory r hok e gun s on ly.

1deas

la rge In scope . Yo u' ll gel al l the
h e l p and c o o p e rati on yo u need
to rea l 1ze y o u r a1ms ,

CANCER (June 2t-July 22) Yo u BAILI:Y S
STO Rf .
3 31
now have th e all eg 1a nce o f N 2nd A ve . M 1d dlepor1 O h 1o
peo pl e w h o p rev tous l y have · w 11ibe closed Dec ?S ioJ on2
be e n e tthe r d lfh cuj t to see o r to
DUf TO m y retu rn to governm E&gt;n t
get 1n you r co rn er E xcept iona l
!il'r vtce I om no longer engog
garns can be made
'
ed o n pu bl1c occoun llng nor tax
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Knowlretur n pr epo ro t ton
edge you've acc um ulated wi ll
Roger
t uck eydoo
licensed
Publ ic Accoun t an t M1ddl e po rt
have an •ve nu e ol e&lt; pressron
O hiO
thai cou ld be qu rle prol itable .
Yo u ' re optt m tslt c e nough today
to use rl
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept, 22) A
pe rson "!l lh who m you have
strong lrie ndsh ip Ires will prove
to be a be nel rcral cha nnel and
brlog some thrng wo rthw hile

ins ptre th o 11 e at yo u r sid e

to

MARINE POWER CORPORATION

(01VISION OF CH~IS CRAn l{tDUSTRIES~

hils. an immed1ate openmg to,r ."n
experienced · accounting
clerk .wtrh
emphasis on handling account payabl_e s and
account receivables . Salary wtll be
. , commensurate with ex·p erience and ability.
Please· call or write: Marin(l Power
Corporation, Gallipolis,
4~631 or phone
446-4930.

9".

duel s Top p n ce lor 51onding
snW · 11mber Ca ll 992·59b5 or
Ken t Ha nby . I 44b-1:1570
Ol D f.U HNITURI: ice bo~ee s . br ass
beds 1r on beds. desk s, etc ,
com ple te househo lds Wr i te
MD M1 ller Rt. 4 . Pomeroy or
coli 'Y11

nw

O LD COI NS poc ket ~ot c h es .
d oss · n ngs, wedd mg bo nd s,
d1omond s G old or sil ve r Colt
Roger Wom_sl;.y 7 4 2 -'2~3 1 .
WANT TO buy old 45 a nd 78
p ho nograph
re co rd s
Co li
992-6370 or Contact Mort1 n Fu rnil ur e

CAS H FO R tunk cars Wrec ker

19th

4-JO.tl'-&lt; I

GOOD MI XI::D hoy A ller 5 coli
J.: ro nlo. Brodenck . r,q7 .7573
1r.r12 INTERNATI ON A l SA C::K HOF
Pho ne 949 204 2

- SNOW

'

fully insured
Free Est.
.
cau99i-2m
11 -3-l_mo"

'

I

l

Co.
Carpentry, E lectroca I,
Painting

Construction
.
.
Maintenance
" GIVE U!l&gt; A I to: 1

Reasonable

Pnces

.-·

-------Real Estate for Sale
- - - -- -- - - - -HOMI: SIH S for so lE&gt; I a cr e on d
up M 1dd l epo r! ne ar Rul lonrl
Cal l992· 748 1

THRH ~ ED R OO M !rom e ho m e 1n
M 1ddleport . Ca ll 997 3457

2 LOTS -

so· x 152' each .

paneling, full basement,
porches. close to school.
$27,300.DO ..
CAR WASH- Located on
51 .
Route .
Building ,
ground. all equipment. A
buying price at $15,()()().00
1'12 STORY FRAME Three bedrooms. natural

gas heat, lovely lot, part
basemen...t .

Asking

porches, work ·
shop. $9,500.00.
MIDDLE PORT - 1 story
frame, new kitchen, new

basement,

Pomeroy Landmark

-9-..:..

heating . carpeting , also

mobile home 10' x 45' ·
located on double lot.
$15,000.00.
NEWER MOBILE ·HOME
- 12' x 61' two bedrooms,
natural gas heat, located

FAHM fO R 5ol e House ') b ar ns
tr o1ler Lorge pond 10 a cr e s o r
87 onE' s 142·2566
Rt::Al f STA H LO AN S VA - N o
m o ne y
down
( e l1 g ib l ~
Vet erens) FH A As to w, os 3,..d own (al l non Ve tere ns and
general pub l1c ) To p ur chase
r eal es to !e o r rel 1nonce 30
VI:::A RS HRM S mH AN D MOR·
TGAGt CO . "17 f Sta te St .
A th e ns ~ P h o ne61 4 sq?-305 1
HOUS f
FOR
sol e
l oca t ion
M as on WV Fou r be droom spit I
leve l. built 1n l&lt;.1t ch e n w 1th
o ven range, garbag e d •sPosa l
a nd bar Fami l y room d tn mg
ro om who le house co rpel1ng
f ull s11e ba se ment Ce nt ra l 01r
a nd for ced 0 1r gos h'e o t A ll
dr apes plu s w oshE&gt; r and d rye r
Boc kyord ~ 10 It h1 gh ceda r
f enc e and cedar de cks fo r
p n vor y. Hea ted garage Close
to sc hool sto re po rk an d IE&gt; nm s
co ur t. Con tra ct Gary l G 1bbs
Ca ll Old 949-n46

on own · lot, unfurnished .

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
~ Phone 992-2181

-·

Auto Sales
19'10 CAMARO SS Good
t1 o n 4-speed 992-2362 .
- - 19 f7 OOOGI:
"! 42 -24 51

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condt

$700

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAl ESTATE -

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

WANT TO SELL 7 Call us

for an apprai sal and why
you should li st wtth us.
WANT TO BUY? Call us . If
we don't have it th en we ' ll

Associiltes

Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland
992-2259, 992-6191

tmd 1t for you .

a ul a bod i es buy scrap 1ro n bof·
me tal s
R1der's •
174 , Po rneroy

WANTED TO b uy old jew el ry
Co li 992 -5262 or w rt fe Kay
CeCil 87 S 2nd , M idd lepor t ,
OK '

-

- ---~- -...,---,-~ ·

Mobile Homes for Sale

----

1970 A m her sl 50 x i 27 BR
1970 Chomp1 on b0x l 2 2 BR
19b5 Generol bOx 12 2 BR
19DB PMC 57. 12 2 BR
1955 Prairi e Scho oner 28x8 1 BR
19/ 3 Royal Embo ssy68x14 3 BR
1959 Sta r 50x 10 2 BR
19 73 S1o r bUx ld 2 BR
19bt! Sta r bOx I 2 2 B_R
1970 Sy lva bOx 12 2 BR
1968 V•lloges b(hd 2? BR
190.4 W 1n dsor Slx l 02 BR
1970 K tr kwood 12xb0 3 BR

8&amp;S M OB il~
PT,

Pl ~AS ANT

.

HOM~ SAL~ S

W .VA .

.

.

1' 1 ACRt:: 12_,. )( 60 mobile home
ne a r Dex te r 992 -5858
1967 TO TAL H t CTI-tiC mob1le
hom e . furn 1shed . 3 bedr .
wa she r a nd dr';'fH A 1r con dt·
t1oned 1 lo,t . 210 ft . fro ntage .
512,000 Phone 74:2 -1826.

19 74 OLDS Cut!oss Supr e m e sto
.'1 on w~gon 9.92_- 7~03,

Young

of

Mote than 700 per110ns were
jailed in 1964 after ' 'free
speech" demoostratlons .at
the University of Callfornta .

TO ALL i&lt;INDS OF RUM
CAPER~ UJ HI~ DAY i

11-9·1 mo.

.

OHrTHEY 5 0TAWA~
lf&gt;J THE' II':. 60AT, ALL
RIGHT-- BUT THEY

AN'/ HOW-

HE AND ANOTHel':. SLOK&amp;
ONCe S'I'OLE A 9t!JEWELE() ~LPEN

5TilTUETTE FROM A~ ARCHAE'OL.OGICAL
Die IN TURKEY!

DID~' T FORESEE

THEIR ~HMTL'f
MteTI/116 WITH
ATTILAi

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
healed garage. This home Is nicely located in Portland
and PRICED FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500 . •
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy.
·
50 ACRES FREE GAS- Good l'h sfory house with full
basement . Lorge pond stocked with fish . Priced for
quick sale. $40,000.
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL- This may be your dream
home It has a"iarge kitchen with lots ot cabinets,

Service~

BR ADFORD
A ucl1 one er
Cori-t pi E&gt;te Serv •ce Phone q49 24S7
or 94q 2000 Ronne , O h 1o: ( n il
Brad for d

Hammond

stove: refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining

room with sliding glass doors . Large living room and
family room, and to finish this well-laid out home we
have live bedrooms, util ity room and garage. Very low
healing bill. Red barn-like storage building. Located
abouften m lnutes north of Pomeroy ius! off Rt . 1.
Asking $55,000.
JUST LISTED- SYRACUSE, good 2 bedroom home,
almost new kitchen cabinets, all nicely ' carpeted,
laundry room , all Insulated, natural gas heat, utility
building, 2 lots. $21,500.00.

bedrooms .

SEWING MACHINE Repair s sE&gt;r ·
v1re o il ma kes 992-7284 The
Fob n c
Sh op ,
P om e r o y
Autho med Singer Sol es ontl
Serv1n: II_Ve s hor p~n- S Ci s~or 5
f XCAVAT ING , dozer , loa der ond
backhoe w ork dump trucks
and lo -b oys tor h 1r e . w dl haul
f,ll d1 rt , to sotl , lim es tone ond
gro vel Ca ll Bob o r Roger Jef
fero; da y phone 9q'}, -7089 night
ph o~ e
~525 _or. ~1 _5~3~ _

We need large and small farms and many tvpes of
roperty .
•
p
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-2388
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE 949-2654

alter 5 P.M .
after 12 nocm .

E&gt;&lt;C A VA TING dozer . b ackh oe
and dttche r . Charl e s R Hat f ie ld , Ba ck
Hoe
Service
Hut la nd Ohto. Phone 742-2008
WILL do roofi ng co n strudt on
plum btng and heati ng N o tab
too Io r ge o r too sm a ll Ph one

7&lt;2-7348

OWNER M .UST SEL.l - The own (·r ot lh1'o
charming 1 story stone home in . Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fir)e
home for a low, low price of 520,000. There
are 2 bedrooms (1 is eKtra large), spacious
living room w -fireplace, formal dining, eat·
in kitchen, bath' w ·shower , garilge &amp; a king
sized yard. Good location on Mill St : Call the
Wi$eman Real Estate Aq~ncv, · Ga'llipolis ,
qq6-3643.

ORPHAN ANN IE

Print answer here :

4

~

~~~~¥~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t?
f

~ , of loud
• 105 Partner
Famous .
bwcherrust
11 Fastened
again
13 Ugandan
leade r ·
'==-r14 " My kingdom

-

WATER WHl d n \lin g W•lliom T
G tant 74'1 2879.

~~;t81

SAV.E ON
CARPETING

""

DRIVE A LlffiE

--------

BA THROOM S AND
Ki tchens
remod e led cer a mic t i le plum bing ca rpen try, and gene ro l
13 y e ar s ex ma tnten o nce
pe rl ':n ~e- 9_92: 3~8~ ____ _

I be leaving in a
week or so. Aver4'
Kind of
keep
an e4e
on
thinqs!

&amp;.
SAVE A LOT
All carpet installed willl
padding at no charge.
Expert Installation .

cance ll ed ? l ost your o perato rs
license? Phone 992 2 14 3,

Walt's
olanninq
another tnp!

'4.88.

sq, yd.
' S:up

•

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Cowering In Stock

.

__

Buy where you can come In

and see what you're getting
- GoOd Hlectlons--;.. Fully
stocked.

....,

AK C REGI STERI: D
pups 12 week s

Do be rman
o ld Good
_P~d19 r ~e_. 7_~2~?~ 2~ . ~ _

~1174~-2211

' TALK- TO
Wendell or Herb Grote
or Gone Smith

'

Yard Sale
IF YO U h ove o service to oil er
wont to buy or se ll so methmg.
oe look in g for work
or
wha teve r
you' ll gef r ~ s uh s
l os fe r wt th o Sent 1n el Wont Ad .
Call 991 -2 t 5b

~

i

.,

I

i

1

.

'

;;

.:t'M ~'fiN~ To
evoLve INTO A
LAND • PrltiEL~E.~,
BuT AL.\- -r'f.ll:

lfPtGH!$ ~E
PRIVATE! ·

.•
FURNlTURE i
RUTLAND

742-2211

VIRTUE

THROAT

' h&gt;:~lle no I' -· BE-H A VE '

Love. American Style 15. Hock ing Va ll ey
Bluegrass 20 ; Wild, Wild World ot An ima ls 33. ·
7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, Bonker s 6, Wa ltons B;
$100.000 Name Th at Tune 10; Nas hvi ll e On The
Roacl- 13 ; Dollv 15, Mac Nei l-Lehrer Reo6r t 20,33
8:00-Protect U F.O 3,15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13; Nova
20.33; Colleoe Basketball 10
8:30-What's Happening 6, 13; P lease Stand By B.
9 DO-Quincy 3,1 5, Barney Mil ler 6,13, Hawa ii Fl ve -0
B; Here To Ma ke Music 33 ,- Doc hess ot Duke St reet
20 .
9·30-Soap 6,1 3.
10:00-Davld Cassidy Man Unde rcover 3,15; Fam rly

!

he not
qo1nq

this

for - . "
15 Historical
stone
, 6 .,~,.._ 17 Toss
18 Row
'--'='-.....:::;__,__ _ _ 19 - t rice
(mstantly)
20
Exempted
-.yould
be more fun 23lnsect
24 Composer
· nottoqo
Harold
China!
25 Greek
island

6, 13 ; Barnaby Jones 8,10; Sneak P r ev1ews 33 ; News

feature
20.
I2 Same
Caiione
· prefix
10 :30-You Bet Your Life 20 ; Alto n Ochsner at 80 33
11:00-News 3, 6,8,10,13, 15; Di ck Cavett 20 . Lilias,
3 Eye patt
Yoga &amp; Yo u 33.
4 Maine symbol · •
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Sta rsky &amp; Hutch 6,13
5 Packed
Gunsmoke 8; ABC N&lt;'Ws 13; Movie " Do Ncr
Yes(erday 's Answer
6 Hllllgarian
Disturb" 10.
.;;u- ··
20 Depression 29 Greek island 12 :30-News 8; 11 40-.SWAT 6,13 .
composer
1:00---Tomorrow 3, 1 5o-News l J _,
21 Plains
32 Noted
7 Ike's
command
22 Mr. Hyde to
pos sum
Dr. J ekyll
33 Groucho's
8 Jumbo jet, e.g
Wecfucsd ay , Jan 3
- B. Drift·
HReverberate 23 More
verdant
wood
12 Douglas
25 " - Si BM" 34 Soviet news
vts-a-vts
LinC!Oin
27 East Ind•a n
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
cedar
16 Sky : Chinese

BRIDGE

Luckiest hand re-examined

to

••

... .

expensive
28 Never :
Ger .
29 Hardy
heroine
30 Go wrong
31 Lively n; olht. ll=+---4club : sl.
35 Attacked
37 Jot
38 Pancho
of tennts
39 shl~ld
40 Sub sentinel

... .

• 10 7 5 2
• 87
• 98 63

SOUTH
AK 96

¥ 64
• J 75
+ A432

Vuln erable . Neith er
Deale r : North
West
North Eas t South
. ,
Pass Pass
Dbi. '4+
Pass Pass
5+·
Pass
P ass
-.1-...1--L.....,...I 5•
1·3 6¥
Pass Pass Db I.
· DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It: Rdbl. Pass Pass 6 +
7
Pass Pass 7+
A X Y D L B A A X R
¥
Db
I.
Pass Pass Pass
1• LONGFELLOW
Opening lead : e K

••

While
OYXQBRHV

. EASY NOW WHILE
I r3RING 'ER
CLOSER TO
SHORE .

LJ U RH
BAXH,

WDT

.I C R W H R H

AJ E

QRORJURH,
ERQOV

. J H

. G A

~n

the subject of

Y luck, lier e is the ha nd that

wD T
BG J 0 R

S C R H H R T . R Q W H B X H . G J E W D
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : PROMISES THAT YOU MAK!j:, TO
YOURSELF ARE OFTEN UKE THE JAPANESE PLUM
TREE- THEY BEAR NO FRUIT.-FRANCES MARION
·
·
© 1978 King reatu.rea Sy ndicate. J" ..

Oswa ld Jacoby cons ider s lo
be his luckiest. It has been
discussed in this column
before, but IS . i~te res t i ng
enough for repe tition .
The g am e was rubber
brid ge. North was the late
C~arles Lockett of St. Lours ,
a !me conser vativ e playe r
The t1me the e arl y Thirties
West, a ver~ g ood player,
wa nte d to get to play the

GLORY BE .• I
EVEN NOTICED

.

Example: Velvet Rockers Reg. $19-9.95,

·NOW ONLY

..,.,
.
Housmg

Headquarters

.. ....... ·-·~····'·•····..... " ...

'9800

by ' s

• 97 6

+

hand a t a heart s lam and fe lt
sure th at unl ess h e r esort ed
to som e decepti v e t act1 cs h1s
opponen ts w ould sacnrice 1n

spa des So he do ubled J a co-

EAST

. ....

'

WJ NNIE

1-3

+ K QJ 1015

¥H QH 53
t A·K ~ 10 41

.
• Rultend
· '

All Rockers in Stock
going for wholesale and
below - We must sell
these to make room lor

NORTH
+ Q J B4 3
• 10 2

WEST

As Low As·

spect oli 7e
1n · v t ny l and
alumm um sidtng
Fo r free
es llmo l e!i . coli b l4 -367 01 28
Goll 1po lt s.

15

time!

Rubber Back Carpet

M &amp; M Hom e Improvement serv
1ng G o lhpo lts gnd o r eo We

OU E U ~

to ac t l1ke a

~;;;~v.:
by THOMAS JOSEPH
"'
~ ACROSS
41 " New Yorker "
:.......::...-=='= I Porter's
editor
" - of Fools" DOWN

WILL CARE for the e ldFrly in o u r
hom E' PhonE' q92 - 731 4
•

Jumbles BALMY
An swer Ho w no l

•

12 : 30-R yan 's Hope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec Co 20.
1·00-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Ch ildren 6, i3;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not F or Women
Only 15.
.
1·30- Days of Our Li ves 3,15; As The World Turns 8,1 0
2:00-Qne Life to Live 6,13.
2:30-Doctors 3, 15; Gui ding Lig ht 8.10.
3·00-Another Wor ld 3,15; Gene ra l Hospltal 6.13 . Lil ias
Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3:30,...Mash 8; Jo ker' s Wi ld 10; Dltk Cavett 20
4:00-MISter Cartoon 3; Holl ywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky P ig &amp; Fr iends 8; Sesam e St . 20,33:
Batman 10; Dmah 13
,
4:30-Bewitched 3, Gilligan's Is. 8, Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15 ·
5.00-Star Trek 3. Beverly Hillb illies 8; Mi ster Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer P yle, USMC 10;
E merenn cy One 13 ; Brady Bunch 15.
5 30-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; E lee Co. 20; Ma ry
Tyler Moore 10 ; Odd Coup le 15; Doctor Who 33.
6:0()-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; ABC News 6: Zoom 20;
Rebop 33
6:30-NBC News 3,l5; BC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CB S News 8.10: Over Easy 20.33.
7:0Q--Cross W1 t s 3, New lywed Ga m e 6,13, N ews 10,

~-----·

-

[ XIX J

(Answers tomorrow )

Jl.lmf?le Book No. 12, cont aining 110 pU;u les, ts available lor $1.75 postpa id
fromJumble ,clothls newspaper, 8ox 34, Norwood, N J .076 45 lncll.lde you r
name1 •ddress, zip code and make ch ec ks payable to Newsp.aperbook s

Services Offered

HOWEHY
A ND M A RT IN h co vati ng , sep ltc
s y stem!&gt; ,
dmer b ack hoe d u m p truck
l1meston e , gro ve l ,
b l o c ~top
pa1J1ng . Rt 143. Phon e 1 (b1 4)

bee n

·

..•

FOUND SCHNAUZE R ond Be a g l e
pupp1 es In Rutland . 742-2306 .

-

I

Yes te rd ay 's

NO DAMS AHEAD THAT I
KNOW OF ··· JUST A QUIET
llTT LE RIVER. , MOVIN' EASY
TOWARD A BIG5ER RIVER ...

Lost and Found

G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murph~
Assoclotos

...

t.l'~

lrli._______~l';.:o;,31o,·l;,;m;;,;,;;o_,
.

nat . gas furnace and

A WISE RENTER WILL
SAVE BY BUYING ONE
OF . THESE,
THE.N
COLLECT WHEN YOU
SHL IT ... GOET A
SELLING
PROBLEM,
CALL 992·3325.

t.tt "l

,, . . . . - - - - - " - - - - -

rooms , S bedrooms . 3

Now arrange the ctrcled liiters to
form th e surprtse answer as su ggested by th e above car1oon

I I rJ

Weekends

enclosed

baths, 2 tubs. central heat
and a1r, dining room and
modern kitchen. Spacious
place for • family . 5 to 6

I -1

ILJRBBUSI

Tyree Blvd., Racine, Ohio,
Phone 949'-2118 . Evening

?9'1

C o_l l 9'1 2 - ~7~bc

..

.'

CUBLEK

SALES REP. FOR
SUNDINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

3"25.

g,fo ,_S1_25_eo

'

America Al 1ve 15.

I.YINNF
10 I

.-

PETE SIMPSON

l: l WOOD SOWCRS Rt::P Aif(
Sweeper s toos l e1s trans oil
small ap plian ces . l aw n mowE&gt; r ,
ne:&lt; l to St at e H1 ghw a y Garaqe
on Hau te -; Phone (6 14 ) 9!.l5·

level lot near town. 529.500.
28 acres - Plenty of wood
for a stove. 2 baths with
tubs, dining room , bar In
the mpdern kitchen with
built - In appliances,
carpeting In al l except
kit..
central air and he1at. Want
$40.000. but owner says sell.
One year old.
FAMILY HOUSE 10

CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement and 2 baths . Nat. gas heat. approx. 1 acre
land and large ~torage building: Price $21,500.
TWOACRES-Abeautlful4 year old, 2 bedroom hqme
wrth large eat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement with TV room. Many
more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace . All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location . Will go quick for ps.ooo.

, '

LowerY

&amp; •

modern bath. nice birch
kitchen . double S. S. sink,

new

1..........0........

BORN LOSF.R

organs, Story &amp; Clark
Pianos. Sites &amp; Service .
t New &amp; Used). Service on
Current Sales .

A KC REG ISTfR ED Bo)(e r pupp1es ,
6 wE&gt;e k ~ o ld A n1ce ,Chm trno s

216 E : Second Street
INVESTMENT - Start
your own business and live
upstarrs in this bu ilding.
Wonderful location In town .
Want $25,000.
LARGE - 4 bedrooms, 2
baths. modern kitchen with
stove and dishwasher . Full
basement, garage, utility
l&gt;ulldlng and a lmost 2 acres
of land . ,48,500.
NICE HOME - Has 3

TYJET

11·3·1 mo.

RISING STAR Kenne l s Boorden g
and g room 1ng , a ll breeds.
Chesh ire 307 0792

dining room and laundry room . Also !tlmost new 2 car

.

PHONE 992-2772

Pets for Sale

JUST LISTED- IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good
w, story house, mostly carpeted with 4 bedrooms,

four ordtn ary wor ds

J&amp;l INSULATION
JIM KEESEE ·

tile
Free Estimate - all work
guaranteed
20 Yrs. Experience
Call : Tom Hoskins
949-2160
11-28-c

09 ~ - 7 33 1

one leMer to each sq uare to lo rm

••,...

INSUlATION
'6.50 per bag.

Roofing, guMers, new and
repair.
Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling

Business

Unsc ramble these tour Jumbles.

". '

CELlULOSE

AUTOMOBil e INSU RANCE

Eve. 992 -'2'149
Rodnev oown.ng , Broker
Bill Child s, Manager

19'11 CAMARO 350 a uto
PS,
PB
very good condi tiOn
b 14 378-6384

..
.....
._,
0

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; ROME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

THURSDAY, JANUAR Y 4, 1979
5 4~F ar m Re port 13; 5:50-.PTL Club - 13: 5 5sSunr ise Semester 10.
·
6:0()-PTl Club 15; 700 ~ lub 6.8.
6 : 2~ For Yo u.. Black Woma n 10. 6 30- Doclors on
Call 4
6 : 4~Morn l ng Repor t 3: 6:5()-Good Morning. West
Vi r ginia 13.
·
6: 5~Chuc k White Reports 10. News 13
7 ()()-Today 3,15, Good Morning Amer ica 61 13; CBS
News 8; Schoolles 10
7: ! ~ W eat h er .33
7.30-Famlly Affa ir 10, Stud io See 33.
8:0()-(apt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9.0()-Merv Griffin 3; Emergency One ·6; Hogan's
Heroes 8, Match Ga me 10; P hil Donah ue 13,15.
9:30- Brady Bunch 8; Hogan 's Heroes 10.
10 ·00-Card' Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Fam ily 8, iO; Dating Game 13.
i0 :30-Jeopardy 3,1 5• Magazi ne 8.10: Andy Gri ff ith 6,
$20,000 Pyram id 13.
11: 00-High Rollers 3,15; Ha ppy Days 6,13
II : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15: Fa m il y Feud 6,13; Love
of Life 8,10: Sesame St. 20.
11 : S ~CBS News 8; House Call 10
i 2, 00-Newscenter 3; News 6,i0, Midday Magazine i3;

lt\1\JNf )e}1J' ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~Ul~ ·
by Henn ArnoldandBoblee

.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

get up and open t"e door

ye!trs old , $65,000.

FISHER NAMED
CULVER CITY, Calif.
(AP) -Lucy Fisher has been
. named executive in charge of
&lt;:reative affairs for the
Motion Picture Division of
Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer Inc.

MI'-ID YOU, OLD CHAP, THI7
IS OFF 'THE RECORD - SVT
CAPTAIN MAKO'S SeE'N VP

'

700-15-'
537.36
700-15-' Ply Deep Lug
$42.45
Mounted &amp; Balanced Free
Phone 742-2328

KNOCKS , you stilt have to

OPPORTUNITY

De 1t now .
Ollr ce 9?1·2342

'

·Mrs. Phyllis
Middleport.

CAPT AlN F.ASY

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call992-7113
For Free Estlmatei

Radiator
Service
,,.....
............

PULLIN S EXC A VATI NG Compl et E&gt;
Serv1ce Phone 992-2478

WHEN

ser viC e Frye's. Rut land Ohm
742 -10B1
WE PICK up 1unk
mg 1unl-.. car s
te rt es a nd
Salv age, SH
991 5468

APPLIANtE II

.....

Phone 742-2D29 ·
11 ·16 c .

frame, natural gas heating.
4
bedrooms.
bath.

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

'

IIMia.tor to tt.

Experience and

Real- E s -tate
- for Sale
-

$11 ,000.00. Make an offer.
FOUR LOTS - Two -story

TIRE SALE

'

'

·.!. R.·Construction

t y p e , thr e e
carpeting,
AND seco nd cutt m g hoy • bedrooms ,

GUN CA8 1NI::T holds lO gun s two
'12 cali ber Rerntngtons w 1th
sc ope 247 3173

In

Woodstove. Oil Furnace
&amp; Fireplilce F l ues
Phone : 74 2-3110
Kim Whlfe, Proprietor

.....,,....·'••

EXPERlE

Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save 3D pd. to 5D pet.
on heating cost

Mod
oft E&gt;r

R an c h

S.l5 and S 85 bol E&gt; Tu ppe rs
Plam s Ohio 614-6b"/ -33bB

Know -How .

S~eclallzlng

Referenees Available

Hoy fo r sal e 949-2368

THE
SWEEP
century service wlttt

20th Century

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

HO U SE
lN
Mm ~ r s v 1 l lto
- b edroom, hvtn g room ktt cher1
b ot h on9 uh l1ty room N tr e l ul l
s11e bo~e m e nt 997 5!.l23

GRAVH Y TRACTOR and m o wer ,

-

Call

J&amp;L

men

ed

CHIP W O OD . Pol es mo w
slnve 10 mee l hrgh s tandards
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc . . d1a me tc r 10 o n largest end
$12 per ton Bun dled slob $1 0
211 Play on ly s ure lhmgs today .
per to n Dehve red to Oh10
Avord even calculate d nsks .
Po
ll et Co
Rt . 7. Pome roy
Yo u'll be very luc ky rf you
Q9'} 7tt89
o pe rat e within trad rtronal
gurd elines .
TtMB t:: R POMER OY Fo rest Pro

AlP AIR CLERK

ROOM lo&lt; 3

FIRfWOOD FOR sal e 247 2 19b or
141 1 190

·=_:- ~_ledto .lilly___

Don Bell came home
Saturday
from
Holzer
Medica] tO spend Christmas
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
a t home , and was returned to Smith of Middleport, Mr. and
the Center Tuesday for more Mrs. Jim Connolly;Shelly and
theraphy treatments . Brian of Syracuse, Mr. and
Spending Christmas with Mr. Mrs . Gary Roush · and
and Mrs. Bell were Mr . and children, Mrs. and Mrs. Greg
Mrs .
Bruce
Hart
of Cundiff .
Columbus. Other visiting Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox son
Bell were : Mr . and Mrs. David spent christmas with
Roger Chaney, Reedsville, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Harpold
Mr . and Mrs. John HID, Doug and family at Belpre.
Shawn and Terry Bell of
. Missy Rlfne is spending a
Morning Star, Mr. and Mrs. week with Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Turley son Kirk of Lester Roush.
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mrs. · Belva Fisher and
Morris, Clifford Hill and son children Bucky and Carol
Max Hill.
visited her parents Mr . and
Spending Christmas with Mrs. Wallis Stover Chrisbnas
Mr . and Mrs . Vernon day.
Donohue were : Mr. and Mrs.
Christmas day guests of
Lowe ll Burton , daughter Mrs. Pearl Norris were : Mr .
Sherrie of Columbus; Mr. and and Mrs . Grady Craig of
Mr s. Ro bert Harden of Hartford , Mr. and Mrs .
Marion, Mr . and Mrs . Herschel
Norris
son
Charles Winebrenner and Clarence.
family of Bellville.
Saturday evening the
Claren ce
Story
and family of Mrs. Eula Wolfe
daughter Rosalee' of Darwin, gathered at the home. of Mr.
Mr . a nd Mrs.
David and Mrs. ·Thomas Wolfe
Gloeckner and daughter Racine for their Christmas
Carrie were Christmas day · '"dinner . Fifty-three · gftbsts
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Erwin attended. All of Mrs. Wolfes
Gloeckner .
children were present except
Mr . and Mrs . Dav id Odessa Swart~ of Dixon, Ill.
Gloec kner we re Sunday Mrs. FaMie Roush of Letart,
guests of Russell Lockhart W.Va ., Mrs. Wolfes sister
and family at Parkersburg. also attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donohew
Mrs Eula Wolfe ~n Aaron
were Christmas day g~~ests of visited Mr . and Mrs. John
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Donohew at Ord Christmas eve at Letart
Belpre. Greg Donohew of W.Va .
Columbus visited Mr. and
Christmas day guests of
r.l,rs. Donohew on the week- Mr: and Mrs. Gerald Hayman
end .
and Keith were: Mr . andMrs.
Christma s day guests of Robert Hart' and children,
Mr. and Mrs . Lester Roush Mr . a nd
Mr s.
Allen
and fa m ily were : Mrs. Don Cunningham and children of
Riffle a nd chtldren of Racine , Mr . and Mrs. Gene
Wheeler s burg, Mr . and Mrs. • Jewell and children of Letart,
,RogerManuel andchildrenof W.Va. Ted Hayman and
.'Racine, Mr . and Mrs. Dick ldaughters of Westerville , .

JACKW.
CARSEY
· Mgr.
Phone992-2181

EUJ011r

G unsmoke 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie " Queen
Chr isti ana" 10.
~
12:30-News 8; 12 ·40-SWAT 6, 13 : 1:00-Tonnorrow 3;
1:so-News 13

4:00-Mi ster Cartoon 3; Hol lywood Sauares 15: Merv
Gr iffi n 6; Porky Plg 3.-F rien.:!s 8; Sesame St. 20,33,
Batma n 10; Dina h 13.
·
4:30- Bewitched 3; ; Gilli gan' s Is . B; Brady Bunch 10;
Pett icoat Junc tion 15.
5 ·DO-;-St~r Trek 3; Beverl y Hlllbi Illes 8: ·Mister Roger s'
Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10;
. Emergen cy One 13; Brady Bunch 15
. 5:30-News 6;' Sanford &amp; Son 8. Elec. Co . 20: Mary
Tyler Moore1.0; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who 33
, 6'o 00-N ews 3.,8.10,13, 15. ABC News 6, Zoom 20; Studio
See 33 .
6:30-NBC NeWs 3,15: ABC News 13, Carol Burnett &amp;
Fr iends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:00-Cros-s-Wits 3; NewlyWed Game 6,13; Sha Na Na
8; News 10. Love, Amerfc an Style 15 ; To Be Announced 20; Big Green Ma gazine 33.
7·30-Dolly 3: Match Game PM 6; Price Is Right 8;
The J udge 10; That's Holl ywood 13; Wrl d Kingdom
15: MacNeil Lehrer Report 20.33.

.

_____
_
For Rent

RUTLAND HAH DWAIU Ru tlan d
O h 1o New Year 's Inventory
Sol e All wood an d coo l stoves ,
el~ dn r and k eros en e h ea t ers.
too l bo xes , mechon 1cO I to ol s,
sor k et s et w r en ch a nd elect ri C
appltono!'s Drn sllca ll y red uc ·

PER SON TO li ve wi th Pld erl y cou·
pie m l e tart a rea . The coupl e
con do se lf Core but bu t need
someone to supe rv1se med tc 1ne
and meal s Fo r inl ormot 1o n
col i 989-28 19

Ta ke t im e to

stud y eve rylhrng ava;labl e to
yo u
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Yo ur two greatest a sset s are
prod•cl rv rly a nd th e abi lity to
gel along wrlh co-work e rs'. You

-·

INSURANCE: OPPO Rl UNITV .. 1 1n
d1v1 d uo ls who need up to S700
to $900 p er mon th Deli very
route or insura nce exper1en ce
helpf ul but no t necess ory
Please call 453 -Ub9b fo r op p!
f qun l O p por tun liy Co

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct . 23) Today
rs nch' wi th acce ptable alterna- •
liVes wh• re rmportan t matters
are conce r ned

z,.

FI~ S T

m to yo ur d ay .

.\

·

'

Don 't let a ch tmney fir e put
a damper on your life

Auto &amp;.Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
.Phone 992-5682

J' , o nes 1n Po mE&gt; roy SP.c ILJ rlerl
wooded or eo on top o f htll
O ve rl ook s n ver Wol er e lec
tn c ovotlo b le qq'J -388b '

- -- - --......---~---

G UN SH O O T. Raci ne Gu n Club
fv E&gt;ry Sun da y l pm J:octory
chok e g uns on ly

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Don ' t

0.

1964' ( Hf VHO l t l NOVA 7 d oo r 6
cy l au to P ~ Studd ed l nes
G ood o; hopa 304 T"I'J 51 01

4r m

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

'jp M

tn suqtd

St . Rt. 1241oward Rutland,

196"/ 1 , ton Fo rd p1cku p , 6 cyl
StO, $3SO 3"/B -6 3 44

_,

S ~pS~UIId

·

¥• mite off Rt. 7 by-pass on

Te l ev1S1on r e fr1geroto r
d le por t Co l i qq7 nqJ

lANDMARK

Suud ,t\

20)

GARAGE

Be st ofl er buy .;

!Cr/3 FOHD PICKUP Hanger l T
S l b()O 11fl 3 Po 11 11or Ven tura
Sl :JOO 1948 Plym outh Cou p e
5700 9&lt;n 0 190

S l~~ PIN G

POMEROY

Ttlt':id&lt;i v

ARIES (March 21-Apri119) Move

low mdPoqe
3354

WEDNESDAY . JANUARY 3, 1979

Yolir ·Headquarters For
Armstrong Ca~ting

~Ch.im ney

ROGER ,HYSELl

&lt;/ H ~

o ft . Th1s mea ns se llmg some cOUNTR Y MOBI L!: Home Po rk
m et cho ndise of c os! ~ o get
Ho u l e 33 . nor th of Pom e roy
your Chr 1Stmos gt ft s no.w Op e(l"
Lorge lot s Ca ll q97 f41q
!:1 q th r u Chrn:, lmos N o por kmg
:1 A ND 4 RM f u rn 1sheci and un
prob l ems
fur ru sh e d
ap l s
Phon e
PEA HAULER S ( 8 So les f q u1 p
99JI.5434
m ent now on sole o \1 m st ock
Wod •os a nd occesso rtes thr o ugh TWO Bto ROOM li.1t chen f ur m sh
cd . opt Ca ll befo re H om
Chn s t mos Ope n every day ew
q92 -118!.l
cept Sunday a nd M o n d o~
I:Ve n tng !i by
a ppo m tm e nt
f Ff A PT 111 M tdd lepo rt Su ttobte
P o rtl a n d .
O h1 o
Ph o ne
t o r onp Koy (pnl 94') 570'1
~ 4 J - 20b4
e ven mg s
PIGS FOR sole 94 9-1857 after 5
17 x bU mobde ho meneo r De x ter
997 -SBS"

1

'

Pho"f' 411 4 'JbO'I

RU TLAND HA ROWA IU:. 877 Main

St ·14'1 7255 We ho ve to make
room lor spn ng merr hond1se so

' b o ld ly tn ar e a s hav m g a di rect
bea n ng o n y o u r se l f mt e res ts ,
wo rk o r c ar e er L ad y Luck I S.
helptng yo u . You c a n ma~e
g rea.t stn des at th1 s tt me .

to

hoy Wdl del1ver 99'} 7201

n ~h l
a m · ads t h-l~ lllt• d uiJ·

Yo u r l tnanct al aspec t s a re . extr e m el y p ro m ts 1ng today, pa rti c ularly wh e re they p e rla tn to
s tl u atl o ns req ut rt n g n e g o tta l 10n
or adj ustment

heS ita n t

!

mi xed

'

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)

be

-

li.. . . ..

VOLK SW AGO N ~ lcm d o r rl
11 on ~
SH=&gt;U o r m o~ f' otff'f

l lli':l

PO '/ MHl ( URY MONHGO M X
Hr n u qhom 301 V H 4 do[1 r AM
f.M st('rf'O G ood 5hopc w 1th

-For
- -Sale
- - - -

Q UA LIT Y CONDITIO NED

Th,· P"i.1llhslwr h st• r\'t•s lht·

Tht s ts an oppo rt un e day to
disc uss an Im po rt a nt ma tt e r
yo u ve be e n r e lu c tan t to talk
ab Out to o n e Wi th w h o m you
ar e c lo se l y as soc iated . La y all
y o u r card s on th e tab l e

20-May

~J ill I Yanl sa lt;~

~n · at t t·plt'd unly w1
th l'liSh Wllh
u t tlt•r l ) t 't' lll d l ti l l-(t' £111 .ub tarr)l· •

to As tro-Gra ph, P 0 . Bo&lt; 489.
Rad ro Crly S lali on. N Y 1001 9
Be s ure to s pe e dy bt rlh s 1gn
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D·Feb. ,19)'

c. p o m fl l

AP PLI:: S FIT ZPATRI CK Or chard
Sta te Rt 689 Pho ne W dk e sv tlle
Obq 31"5

(' t•II[S jll. l Wl ll li $:1 00
f'm;h 111 a t i ~Jttm t'

uammum

ror kr r

fOietum chlo r id e, f('rtJ ii t e r , dog
l &lt;'ad and a ll types of sa lt b:
ce l sio r So!t Wo rks In c E Mo111
S l Po meroy 991 JB'lfl

l ol\( •

4

(April

-

lht• l 1 lu~·

A stde from yo u r pe r so n a l ambt
uons, yo u havE! e x tra th tngs
got ng for yo u today t h at are
li io; e ly to be in s ltgate d by o th e r s FJnd o ut more o f wha t 11e s

nr•rl

COAI.a liM f STON f sand gro...,e l.

r\ t l ~ fUliiU I I ~ t•l lU I 11\UIL I !fUSI'Ioloii \IV l'

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan t9)

TAURUS

t••r r1 r r

f./&lt;J') Jbl H

f.ol\'h \W l'il 11\l' l till' T
iilllltiiUIII t :j
W&lt;ll* IS 4 tt' llt~ jM' I \o\1111\ tll•r d&lt;&amp;)' .

d.1 ,,

-. Business Services

Auto Sal es

. Give
-. - Away
. -

WANT AD
CHARGES

8·30-Good Times 8,10
9:oo-Mov le " Pleasure Cove" 3, 15; Charlie' s Angel$6;
Movie " Some Kind of Miracle" 8,10; Great Per·
torm ances 33;; College Basketball 13, Prisoner 20.
10 .oo-Vegas 6; News 20; Great Performances 33;
. 10:30-Turnabout 20.
11 :oo- News 3,6.8,10.13.1 5;
ick Cavell 20; Li fl as
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 3&lt;&gt;-'Johnny Carson 3.15, Pol lee Woman 6,13.

NEVER

one-s p a d e

open 1ng

Locke ll jum ped Lo four
spades . West we nl to JUSt
frve hea rts Loc k ett went on
lo ft v e s parles a nd West Lrled
s1x hearts We s t had set his
trap a nd youn g J acoby (r eme m be r this wa s ove r 40
years ago ) fell r tght mto 1t
and dou bled .
At this sta ge a ll West had
to do was to pass and ma ke ·
six hea rts do u bled wrth an
overt n c k Howe ver, West
got g reedy . He k ne w Lockett
would n ev ~ r take out hi s
pa rt ne r 's double. So West
redo u bled Loc kett passed ,
but J acoby r an t o s ix spades .
West contin ue d to seven
hea rts and now J acoby was
cc rta m that We s t had been
dealt 13 re'd ca r ds. Jaco by
ra n to seven s pad es .
He d;dn' t expect to ma ke
rt . but he did . West opened
th e krng of dramo nds .
. Jacoby r uffed with d umm y's
eig ht of t ru mps, led a low
on e , fi nessed his six, ruffed a
sec ond diamon d hig h, Jed a
se cond truinp , fi nessed his
nine. ruffed h is la st d ia ·
mond. came t o his hand wi th
a c tub . pulled East 's t rumps
and eventua lly d is card ed hts
hea r ts on long cl ubs
tNEW SI'Al'EH ENrF.: RPH ISF. ASSN I

(For a copy of J ACO BY MODERN , send $1 to
Wm ilf
Bndge . · care of /h1s newspa
4

per. P 0 Box 489, Radto Ctly
Sta t1on. New York. N Y 10019 )

�i~ -Tlw Daily SentineL Mirldll•port·Pnt~eruy , ll., Wt&gt;dnesclt~y ..Jan . ~. 1!lilt

. Cold frorit
By The Associated Press
An Arctic cold front that
brought
sub-zero
.temperatures, snow and
death to the nation's mi&lt;l·
section moved east today'
ending a rainy J~nuary thaw
Ui the Northeast .
· · The front turned babny

temperatures to an icy blast,
with the temperature in New
York City plununeting to 31
degrees early tO&lt;jay from 57
degtees at 6 p.m. "J:uesdlly.
.Snow was reported from
Mic)ligan through the Ohio
Valley , in eastern Tennessee
and the northern Rockies. '

. DALE'S
;

moves east

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.

· WINTER MO~THS

Easy·to·
install

NOTHING. TO DO?

RIVIERA

cabinets
let you do
your own
money.
saymg

PUT IN A
NEW KITCHEN!

BIG 40%

I~

:s

Et
.

CASH &amp; CARRY
SAVINGS W.HEN
YOU DO IT
YOURSELF.
BRING IN
YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
EXPERTS WI~L

o·
ub·1 -h ·k·
l o . ~~ ec .

~-~------- ----.-------·----,

l

Are·a.Deaths

former · r~sirteQt of Meigs
ASA GRADY
#'
County and a graduate of
TEXAS
Asa
Fugen
A heavy snow waming was
While - residents
of
Racine High School, died
issued for northwestern Worcester, Mass., enjoyed a Grady, Houston, Texas, died
early - this morning . Mr. Monday at MI. Carmel East
Pennsylvania , and= winter spring-like day Tuesday with
Grady, a former Meigs Hospital ,
CHICAGO
( AP )
later replaced.
·
storm warnings were posted a record lligh temperature of ·
She was an employe of the Investigators say the ground
Cllunty resident, was born
The
bodies
lound
at
Gacy's
in New York state and 57 and in Baltimore it was a March 18, 1933 the son of the Rimrock Cllrp. for the past 10
a
northwest residence were burled
Vermont.
babny 64, the thermometer late Onie and Espie Grady. years and was employed beneath
suburban
home,
site
of the 6eneath his rancb-etyle home
Travelers' advisories were dropped as much as Bdegrees He was also preceded in previously with No or h
mass
murder
and his garage . The b¢ies of
nation's
worst
in effect for New York, below existing records in
death by his wife.
American Rockwell for 25 of the century. has probably two other young men, which
Vermont and Pennsylvania, parts of Texas · and the
.
Survivors include four years.
yielded its last body.
authorities uy are linked to
western
Massachusetts, Mississippi J/alley . Frigid
sisters and five brothers,
She was. a member . ofHo.
w
ever,
authorities
said
Gacy, were found In the Ilea
northwestern Connecticut, weather continued in Min.Lillie Johnson, Ronald Eastern Star Corinthian Tuesday
they
will Plaines River. Only six.of1he
and New Jersey, and from nesota, where Tuesday's high
Grady, Tessie Wolfe, and Chapt~r 393.
doublecheck the area with victims had been identified
North Carolina to Ohio.
temperature reached only 2 Raymond Grady, ·all of
She is survived by her heat sensors to make sure by Tuesday, according to Dr.
·In Kentucky, icy roads degrees above zero in the Racine, Frances Parsons,
husband, Walter P. Nocks. they have unearthed all the Robert Stein, the county
caused at least one death . Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Paducah, Ky., Hollie Grady
her mother, Mrs. Beulah A-. skeletons puried at John medical examiner.
Sta.t e police said James · Aftershocks
of
an and Martha Emerson, both of ·circle, Columbus, twin
Wayne Gacy's horne, where
·The ~year-old- contractor
McBride of Louisville died earthquake that rattled five
Wellsville, Ohio and Charles stepdaughters , · Connie ol the remains of 27 young and convicted sex offender
when his car skidded on icy California counties continued Grady, Phoenix, Ariz .
Johnstown and Ca ndy of males have been uncovered. has been charged with
Interstate 64 near Midway, Tuesday as winds of 90 mph
Services and burial will be Westerville.
Sgt. Howard Anderson, ~urder in the death of Robert .
Ky.
and flooding clo sed an held in Houston, Texas.
Friends inay call at the supervisor of the Cook County - ~estr. 15, of Des Plames.
Barton Clark, 8, of Dallas inters_tate hig hway and
Schoedinger East Chapel, s h e riff • s
north e r n Piest s body has. not been
died Tuesday when he several bridges, stranding
5360. E. Livingston Ave., investigations unit, said snow found. .
. .
touChed a live electrical wire hundreda ,j)f motorists.
·
Columbus, Wednesday from 7 removal and cleanup work . According to ~bJimled rethat neighbors said snapped
The California Highway
ELEAN&lt;IR C. NOCKS
to 9. Graveside services will
much of the day ports, pollee hay~ sa1d Gacy
two days earlier under a Patrol said six cars and three
COLUMBUS - Eleanor he h·eld Thursday at 10 a.m . occupied
Tuesday.
Crews
working at acknowledg_ed killing up to 32
heavy coat of ice .
trailers were flipped hy high Circle Nocks, 55, 103 N. at Forest Lawn Cemetery,
Gacy's
home
contended
with boys and young men after he
William
Aston ,
vice winds on Interstate 8.
Lowell Road, Columbus, Columbus. ·
...
subzero
temperatures'
and had sex w1!h the~.
president of Dallas Power
Rain and thundershowers
about
nine
inche.s
of
show.
The body total linked to the
and Light, said the dangling , were reported early today
"I
don't
think
they
expect
.Gacy
investigati~ has su_r·
wire had not been repaired over southern Florida. Skies
to
find
anything
more,"
said
passed
the 26 bodies found m
because of the huge numher were mostly clear along the
Anderson
..
"They
will
go
back
a
Houston
homosexua:Iof repair calls since the so uth Atlantic and Gulf
over
ground
that
hasn
'I
been
tort~e ring in 1973, and the
weekend ice storm.
coasts and from the eastern
Hulzn Medical Center
dug up yet, the less promising bodies of 25 ~utilated f~wt
Hospital emergency rooms half of Texas and the Veterans Memorlill Hospital
Discharges, Dec·. 29
James
ADMITTED
areas. They jlclr want to dou- p1ckers found m Yuba C1ty,
in Dallas were crowded with northern Plains through the
Ida Conn ley, Mary Deer, blecheck."
King, Minersville; John ·
Calif.
victims of cold weather and Mississippi Valley .
Mrs. Richard Geor·ge and
Blosser,
Middleport
;
Eric
Meanwhile, a source close
Farm labor contraptor
icy conditions Tuesday, with
daughter , Margaret Hardjn, to the investigation, who Juan Corona was convicted in
Powell,
Reedsville;
Paul
one hospital reporting 22
Hudson, Pomeroy; Dorothy Na ncy Hood ; Millis .Johnson, asked not to be identified, the
California deaths .
persons .brought in with
Eth~l · said police don't plan to check
Sr.
Myrtle
Knapp,
Wri
ght,
Ru~land;
Wilda
However,
Corona's case and
broken bones after slipping
Knott s, Mary Mahan , out a report by a carpenter of that of Ebner Wayne Henley,
Brogan,
Rutland;
Ethel
rn ice.
Carson , Tuppers Plains; Margaret Perry, Harry a foul smell coming from the convicted of complicity in six
Growers in the Rio Grande
Beulah Collier, Dexter; Richards, Cynthia Rupe, basement of an ice ·cream of the Houston murders, have
Valley of Texas held an all ·
Nellie Groce, Long Bottom; Clarence Stutler, Julius parlor and bakery he and been overturned· and sent
night vigil as · freezing
Henry Taylor, Gacy remodeled two years back to district courts foc reWILLOW ISLAND, W.Va. Clarence Adams, Racine; Swa nn ,
temperatures threatened the
Katherine
Thomas, Dianna ago.
trials.
area's $40 mi)lion citrus crop. ( AP) - The manager of the Sylvia Wolfe, Racine; ,Jack
Trace,
William
Viars.
Lance·,
Midd
·leport;
Jhe source said police
Gacy is in police .custody
But in Florida, the citrus American . eyanamid plant
Births, Dec. 29
•
learnep the smell carne not and is currently undereoinll ~
crop was reported safe . here says he can't explain Lawrence Babbitt, Racine.
Mr. ami Mrs. Kenneth Mad· from corpses, but · from a court-ordered
_psychiatric
DlSCHARGED
despite temperatures in the why five female employees
~en, son, Middleport.
Katherine
Weaver,
Delores
themselves
sterilized
had
cracked
sewer
tile
that
was
evaluation.
30s in the growing regions.
Discharges, Dec·. 30
Growers said winds would rather than accept new jobs Wickline, Robert Hite, Joetta
Ceci
l Arthur , George
Krider.
prevent frost damage in the at the plant.
Blanks,
Herman Borland,
But a union vice president
cenfial Florida groves.
Mrs. Charles Brecenridge
says the women faced a
'
• and dau ghter , William
potential pay cut or possible
' '•
Capehart. Sus'an Clemente.
loss of their jobs.
Audrey
Drosos,
Bob
Green,
"Any company that says it
· Urias Hall, John Hawker.
is your job or your life, or as
Alice Keefer, Gertrude,
in this ~ase, your job or your
Kloes,
Heather Kni g ht ,
is '
a
offspring .. . that
Christmas guests of Mrs.
Draconian choice ," said Chester Erwin were Mr. and Ru!Jert l .a bus, Geraldine Lee,
By GREG MacARTHUR Lowery said. "He was
Anthony Mazzocchi, , vice M.,. Michael Erwin and Frank Lundy, Mrs. James
Associated Press Writer declaring that -that's not the
president of the Oil, Chemical children, Scott , Kevin, and McLain and daughter, Mrs.
ATLANTA (APj - Accom- way Uiey should die. It was
and Atomic Workers union. Melissa , Salisbury, Md.; and Bruce Richards and son, CAr·
The women were told they Mr. and Mrs_ Don Erwin , rie Rife, M1·s. !Wndall Roush panied hy an eerie chanting better that they should die in
and daughter, Vicky Skaggs, .sound, .J im Jones calmly pur- protest as they had prepared.
could no longer work in the Amy and Matthew_
Audra Smith, Glenn Smith, suaded his followers that sui''There was rather eerie
pigment department at the
Mr·s. Marie Steiner has Sr. . Harold Sprague, Jr, cide was the only way to
music in the background,"
plan\ because they would he returned from a two week
torture
and Lowery said. "Kind of like a
exposed to trace quantities of holiday vacation in northerlf Katheryn Swalford, Josie avoid
Cheryl
Whheler,
Thivener,
destruction,
according
to
a chant being played too slowly
lead dust that might injure Ohio . - She visited her son,
Wheeler,
Charles
Wilder·
U.s.
civil
rights
leader
who
on a tape ~ecorder.
any unborn children.
!Wy, and his family in muth, Ernest Wiseman.
said
he
heard
a
recording
of
" Then
there
was
Five of the eight women in Clevela nd , and her son, Earl
Births, Dec. 30
the last moments of the Peo· screaming and shrieking of
the department, ranging in and his family at Warren. A
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Thomp· pies Temple.
children and by what s&lt;&gt;unded
age from 26 tp 43,_then had family gathering was held on
The Rev. Joseph Lowery, like some of the adults. Then
themselves
surgically Christmas at the Ray Steiner son, daughter, Crown City.
Discharges, Dec:. 31
president of the Southern · he (Jones) charged the
sterilized.
home. _
Rebecca
Barnett, Mrs. , Christian Leadership parents to keep their children
"That is something of a
Mr . and Mrs_ Tom Lyons
screaming
and
mystery to us why they would and children , Kimberly and Robert Bethel and daughter, Conference, said officials of from
choose such drastic measures Tonya, Pontiac; Mich., and James Broderick, Mrs. An· the Guyanese government resisting.
" He was challanged by one
to avOid a , transfer," said Bernard Lyons, Lake Orion, drew Easton and ~aughter, played the tape for him last
Mrs
.
Rodney
Fulks
r
and
month
when
he
·
visited
woman,
who told him she
Ja ck White, manager of the
Mich . were holiday visitors of daughter, John Gilpin, Jr, Jonestown, where more than didn't think this was the way
Cy3!1amid plant.
their parents, Mr. and Mrs . Sylv ia Henry, Bethany 900 members of the cult died
out - that they should get
White said the women were
John Lyons. Mrs. Bernard Hodge, Darlene Hussell, Mrs.
Nov. 18.
their friends to help them
told they would receive their Schramm rctumed to Pun"It was the strangest , escape," Lowery recalled.
. ptesent salaries for 90 days . . tiae with his gnmdson and Freddie ~at h ews and
.daughter, . thomas Musick, ee riest t hing I've ever
" Jonesr resp9nded to her,
During that time, he said, family.
Sr, Paul Phillips, Sharon heard,"
Lowery
said seemingly without anger'
they would he able to take
Mr. and Mrs_ Denver Rice Pierce, Stella Rouse, Russell Tuesday. "Jones' voice was
that his friends the Russians
jobs in other areas of the
and Billy 'spent Christmas in Sargent, John Smith , Jr, Mrs.
extremely clear. He was didn't want ,t he in now
plant.
Atlanta, Ga. with Mr. and Arnold Stover and daughter, preparing the people for an
"We .fully believe, based on
because they had been
Mrs. Chester Rice. They also Mrs . Johnnie White and impending
crisis,
an disgraced by the killings,"
rates of attrition ... that they
visited Mr. and Mrs. George
impending attack. He was Lowery said. " The thing was
would be back up to their pre- Chambers and children, Clint daughter.
Births,
Dec.
31
very cabn. He never raised to take the peaceful way of
vious rates of pay," White
and Emily, at East Point,
Mr.
a
nd
.Mrs.
Monte
his voice."
said.
death."
Ga. , and Mr . and Mrs . James Gilliland, daughter, Jack30n .
Lowery said Jones told the
But Mazzocchi says the
Lowery added that he
Cunningham and ftlmily at
Discharges, Jan . 1
people ,of plans hy si&gt;nie of heard no gunshots on the
plant should clean up the Marietta , Ga. Before leaving
Mr. Dennis Ault and son , their fellow cultists to kill tape .
working environment instead
011 the trip, the family enterMRs . Gary Casto and U.S. Rep. Leo Ryan, D-Calif.,
of moving people around or
He said Guyanese ·officials
tain ed with a holiday dinner daughter, Ad- Adda Crisp ,
although
Jones
was told him there were many
threatening them.
for Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Har· Joann e Elli ott , William
personally against the attack. taptls of meetings at the
ris, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth .Jenkins. Valerie .Jonas, Mary
Ryan, "\three ~me ric an jungle settlement, and that
· Harris, David and Kenny, Leonard, William Miller,
newsmen and a temple the FBI had a copy of the 411Mr. a nd Mrs. George Harris, Mary Myers, I.aura Wade.
defector died' in an ambush at ·minute recording of the
Jr.
and P. J .. Mr. and Mrs.
The 1918 Versailles Peace
Births, Jan. 1
a dirt airstrip near the suicides.
Conference discussed the Tom Ray Harris and
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Cur· isolated settlement shortly
"We were just stunned by
terms of peace following the daughters, Carrie Ann and nutte, daughter, Gallipolis .
before
the
suicide
ritual
what
we heard on the tape,"
end of hostilities in World Resa, and Stephanie !WdMr. and Mrs . Larry began.
Lowery
said. "I'm amazed
War I and resulted in the ford. Thev also had Mrs . Ellison , daughter, Wellston .
" Jones said that once it was that I remember any of it at
signing of the Treaty of Horner Rice in for a holiday
Mr. a nd Mrs. Edmund done, they would be attacked all .l've never heard anything
dinner.
Versailles in June 1919.
Annstrong ,
daughter , by parachute and other like it in .my life and I hope I
Jackson.
· means and the children would never h~r anything like it ·
· be tortured and they would all again."
he destroyed and killed,"

will ..be made

HOSPITAL ~EWS

Sterilization
issues aired

HELP YOU!
2119 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
675-2318

__
_.
____
l
r
I

I

Jones calmly
persuaded cult

Middleport · 1
Persona l Notes If

REACH_
InG
new HEIGHT/. ••
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MEMBER FED£RAl DEI'OSIT INSURMCE CORPORATION .

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-Ban·k .
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LaunCI,ry

'

'

.'

Erwins entertain
Christmas Eve·
Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin
entertained Christmas Eve
with a buffet dinner party at
their home on South Fourth
St., Middleport.
Their guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Rollin Wolfe, Columbus;
Harold Wolfe, Debbie and
Steve Miller, Mr. and Mrs.
Oon 'Reuter and children,
David and Scott, Middleport;
Janis Carnahan, Racine;
Freddie and Mary Lou Wolfe,
Tyler and Darcie, Rutland ; .
Johnnie Wolfe and daughters,
Shellie and Tara, Syracuse;
Pam Williamson, New
Haven ; Earl Lockett, Mitchell Chapman, and Tracy
Pnnp_

Some haIf-a-million
passengers flew between Ute
t!nited States and the
caribbean islancj of .Aruba iii
1!!77, according to u:· S.
government s.tatlstics.. - Of
these travelers, 107,000 were
charter passengers.

Blue Denim -

CARPENTER
JEANS

. . . . enttne

at

'

be .slate-registered. ·
By TOM GilLEM
The American University
Associated Press Writer
of
the
Caribbean,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) headquartered
in
Plymouth ,
Wellhead prices of natural
Montserrat,
West
Indies ,
gas from Ohio wells will be
set soon by a new division ol claims the state has no
the state Departmen.t of jurisdiction because its
Natural Resources ; an students actually earn their
degrees in another country .
.official says.
Funding
for
the "" The university has been
department 's division of oil
and gas ·was approved
Wednesday by the state
Cllntrolling Board.
Richard Midden, the
department 's deputy director
of administration, said
owners of several wells are
waiting for the new price
Meigs County Sheriff
structure before beginning
James J. Proffitt reports 18·
production.
year-old Ronnie Masters, Rt.
Under guidelines of the
federal Natural Gas Policy I, Reedsville, has been
Act , the state has been arrested and charged on a bill
of information with the
charged since Dec. 1 with
breaking and entering of
setting the prices, he said.
High School last
Eastern
At an earlier board
November.
meeting, the department had
Masters was taken before
sought $262,419 from the state
Meigs County Common Pleas
emergency funil for .the
· division, and the request was ·Judge John C. Bacon on the
Bill of Information. After
deferred. Since that time,
warvmg
grand .
jury
enough money was found
proceedings, Masters entered
within the department to pay
for the division's operations · a plea of guilty. Judge IJacon
accepted the plea and
for the rest of this fiscal year.
released him on a $500
In other action the . board
approved morley to fund a , recognizance bond pending a
pre-sentence investigation to
lengthy administrative
be.conducted
by a State Adult
hearing to determine if a
Parole Authority probation
medical
West
Indian
officer.
university now conducting
Also involved in the
classes in Cincinnati should

.'

teaching medical classes
since last summer in rented
space at Mount St. Joseph
College in Cincinnati.
" The eyes of the whole
country are on this .case,''
said Frank N _ Albanese,
executive secretary of the
state Board of School and
Cllllege_Registration .

Youth enters
guilty plea
breaking and entering was a
Rt. 1, Reedsville juvenile who
will have a hearing in the
Meigs County Juvenile Court
this week.
Reportedly taken in the
breaking and entering were
.two sets of speakers. 1\ set of
speakers the juvenile had has
been recovered, but the set
that Masters had were apparently thrown into Forked
Run Lake.
Deputies are investigating
the breaking of two windows
at Southern High Schoo l
during the weekend of. New
Year's Eve.
According
to
James
Adams, principal, a window
in the main office and the
window in the principal's
office were broken. The in·
(Conti nued on page 81

-

..,. .t II

,•

.. .
,, '~.

,.

.-

/

' .

t.

Wednesday al midnight, 3.5 feet below flood s_tage. The water in the dip in

KEEPING WATCH merchants who in December had water in the1r busin esses are keepin g a
watchful eve on the river : The river was scheduled to crest at 43 feet

the Pomeroy parking lot did, however, inconvenience traffic.

Mutually acCeptable solution sought by EPA
.

-

Nationwise--:------.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency extended an
olive branch to Ohio utilities

Wednesday in their dispute
over the burning of highsulfw· local coal to generate
elecu·icitv.

' And at least one ·of the
power companies indicated a
wi11ingness to resolve the
mutter through negotiati on~ .

Barb a ra Blu m . depu ty
EPA administrator , said the
agenc y wants to find a
mutually acceptable solution

By The Associated P~s

Murder

sus~ct

released

JACKsoN, Mich . (AP) -A man who had been
held for questioning in the murders of three Conrail
employees in a New Year's Eve shooting was ~eleased
today for lack of evidence, authorities said.
Jackson County Prosecutor Edward J . Grant said
he ordered the release of Rudy Blade!, 46; of Elkhart,
Ind., at 9:1:; a.m. today- 4ll hours after Blade! was
taken into custody .
Grant said there were no eye witnesses to the
shooting and police had turned up no solid evidence
linking Blade! to the deaths of the Conrail employees,
who were killed ahout 6:40p.m. Sunday.

· Sea search continued today
MIAMI (AP) - An international rescue squad
resumed searching today for , 30 . seamel) who
abandoned an oil tanker that caught fire in the stormy
Caribbean and later sank. Four .crewmen survived,
and at lease one other d&amp;owned.
The five crew members who have been accounted
for stayed aboard the burning, 3511-foot Master Michael
for 24 hours after the fire broke out before plunging into
the sea Tuesday mor~g to swim for a passing s~

Navy fails to change plans
. WASHINGTON (AP) - Cllngressional auditors
said today the Navy has failed to change ~onstruction .
plans for a new fleet of ships even though rt knows the
vessels may have to be. recalled for major alterations
after being sent to sea.
The auditors also said the ships, 26 guided missile
frig~es are " quite vulnerable to low-level enemy
thrfl!ts,:' and that ways to improve their survivability
are limited.

General Haig resigning

Two deaths attributed
to cold temperatures
•'

By The Associated Press substantial threat. "It will
It was icy cold from Florida brighten up the fruit and start
to the GreAt Lakes today, and trees into dor-mancy, '' said
at least two persons were re- Bob GibOOn of the Florida
portell killed while battling Citrus Mutual.
The National Weather
freezing temperatures that
sent citrus growers into the Service reported early today
fields with heaters, sapped that an unexpected wind shift
power supplies and set cold added moisture to the air
over the Florida citrus belt,
records .
An' exposure death was re· further reducing th e threat or
crop damage.
ported in•Wisconsin .
In Texas, where less than
The cold temperatures
worried farmers in Texas and 10 percent of the $40 million
parts of the SOutheast, but - citrus crop is protected by
were called a boon to Georgia artificial heat tng devices ,
g rowers began gathering
peaches.
.
The National Weather oranges and grapefruit lor
Service said •the co ld juice. Cabbage and broccoli·
were
reported
" improves the prospects of a crops
good peach crop this spring," damaged.
Power outages attributed
by sending peach trees into a
•
. to the cold were reported in
rest period.
Florida citrus- growers set widely scat tered areas
up heaters in their fields, but Wednesday, includin g
the cQid was not seen.,as a · Birmingham, Ala .; Miam1,

·CLEVELAND (M')· - A wo'lnan alternate jurat
fainted in federal court Wednesday, delaying briefly
the retrial of a damage suit arising from the May 4, '
1910 shootings 11,t Kent State University.
.
The woman fainted as the jury gatherecl around a
six-byo11ine-foot model of the shooting scene set up at
the rear of the courtroom.
.
The Identity of the juror was not known. Becawe of
threats made to a jilror in the flrst trial in 1975, none of
tiui 12 jurors and five alternates _in the retrail have_
been identified.

beca use

of

subzero

temperatures, were expected
to be sent out Saturday for the
first full-scale weekend trash
collection since 1971. $orne
Milwaukee hol)1es have not
had garbage picked up in 15
days because of the holidays,
heavv s now nnd cold.

·. ·.,· ..

··.·.
.. ·. ··.·.
EXTENDED rlfRECAST
Saturday
through
Monday: Gradual war·
ming with a chance of snow
Sunday. Highs in the 20s
Saturday and rising into
the 30s Sunday and Mou·
cla y. Lows fiv~ to 15
degrees Saturday morning
and in the 20s Sunda y llod
MondaY. ·
•

Ac~oss the nation's midsecti on
early
today.
temperatures we~e beginning ··.·.·.·.·.·.·.. ·.·
to moderate. But sub-zero
readings prevailed acro ss the ...
northern Plains, Mi.rmesota ,
and from Wisconsin lhrough

....· • · · ·

Diles will
annowtce

niinois.

MEETS JAN. 9
llle MCigs County Regwnal
Planning Cqmmission \Vill
.meet with the Pomeroy ~ nd
Middlep ort Cha mber s of
Commerce Jan, 9 at noon at
the Meigs Inn .

Jfo
]:;·•'•; ic ~·}
c.·
'

.

-

. Hula Bowl
ABC Sportscaster. Dave
Diles . form er Mi ddleport
rcsidejlt. will announce the
Hula Sow l game from Hawaii
on Jan . 6.
Di les will also be lhe
... speaker
the 44th aiinual
awa rd!; dinner of the Touch·
down Club of Washington, D.
e. on Jan. 27 honoring Bob
Hope, house speaker Thomas
·I Tip l O'Neill and coll ege and
pro foot ba ll lumin aries .
President Carter is an invited

devices, some Utilities plan t.o
switc h to low-sulfur coal
mined elsew here, a move
that could cost 5,270 jobs in
Ohio mines and up. to 10,000
related jobs, the EPA said .
Susan
Harris ,
a
spokeswoman for Clllumbus
&amp; Southern Ohio Electric Cll .,
said the utility "welcomes the
opportunity to sit down with
them and discuss the ·
matter.''
But Ms. Harris said no one
at Columbus &amp;'Southern has
to
yet --t5een invited
Washington .
" It seem s cur ious that they
t EPA) would reiterate that
today before following
through ," she said , referring
to an EPA report two weeks
ago that also suggested Olrio
utilities should use Ohio coal.
Ms. Harris said the EPA
suggestion wo uld probably
affect only the company's
Athens County plant, where
pallution is a problem. She
said the coal used at other
Columbu s
&amp; Southern
stations is mined exclusively

in Ohio .
Most other Ohio utilities,
U1ough , use at least soine outof-state coal, she said .
Ms. Blum said the EPA is
" urging all · affected Ohio
utilities 1 coal interests and
public interest groups to sit
down with the -EPA team
right now and work out the
best possible solution for
protecting the health of Ohio
c itizens from air· pollution,

protecting jobs in coal mines
d
·d'
d
an
avor rng
a ve rse
economi c
impacts
on
elec tricity con swner.s," she
said .
Ms. Blum sa id that if an accord is not reached, the EPA
may invoke a federal law
which would requir~ the utili-

ties to use locally or
regionally
min ed coal
guest .
. together with other pollution
Diles. a noted raconteur,
• co- hos ts "college football controls such as stack gas
scrubbers .
scoreboard ", which follows . " We would rather negotiate
ABC sports NCAA Football alternative -compliance
telecasts. He also serves as agreements with the utilities
an ABC Sports commentator and save mining jobs through
for a variety of events during . cooperation r&amp;ther than
the ·year. A recipient of issuing orders, " Ms . Blum
llUllJerolis
awards
in said.
broad
castin
g.
writing
and
Among
the
possible
/.:.
'
public service, Diles has solutions would be to allow
written four books including
.
" Twelfth Man in the Huddle" "cerlain planlll to rrux some
high..sulfur Ohio coal and
·a hoo~ about the religious some low..sulfur, out-of-state
moveme nt in professional coal to meet sulfur dioxide
standards," Ms. Blum said.
foot ball.
Utilities involved include
Columbus &amp; Southern, Ohio
Cloud y . tonight. snow Power Co., Ohio Valley
possible by daybreak . t,ows Electric·corp., Toledo Edison
five to-10 above. Occasional Co., Cleveland Electric
I snow Frr'day. H'rg hs m
· th e illuminating Co., Ohio ltdison
upper teens to low . 20s. · Cll.; Dayton Power and Ught
volunteered to help with the proof reading and correcting .
Chance of sn ow is 30 percent Cll., and Cincinnati Gas and
~11own are left to right, Charles Rogers, Blakeslee and
tonight, tiO percen.t · Friday. Electric Co.
Clara Lo ckary .
,j

l,

, ...

Weather

•

WORK SESSION - C. E. Bl~keslee, representing the
Museum History Book Committee, is shown working with
RSVP members "'- the Meigs Senior CitizenS Center who.
'

I

Key West and Ja cksonville in
Flor ida ; and Detroit.
Schools were closed in upstate New York Wednesday
after the area was blanketed
by 16 inches of snow. 'More
than 26,000 youngsters got t he
day off in Syracuse, N.Y.
In
Co lumbus ,
Ga .,
temperatures fell to a record
low of t5 degrees, and James
Williams, 60, was fatally
burned after ·' he lifted a
heater from a ditch. spilling
fla ming diese l fuel onto his
clothes.
Leola Matthews, 85, of
Ozark, · Ark. , di ed aftet
inhaling fume~ from an oil
hea ler.
And in West Bend, Wis., the
body of Gor y Bieniek, 17, was
found in a vehicle parked on a
city sti·eet. Officials said Bieniek, apparently fell asleep
and died of exposure.
Garbage collection crews

in Milwaukee, unable to work

to the problem rather than
resorting to legal action to
prohibit the utiliti es from
using out-of-state coal .
She said a special EPA
learn hopes to meet with
r eprese ntatives of Ohio
utilities in Washington to
hammer out an agreement.
Much of the coal mined in
Ohio ha s a high sulfur
content , which releases
harmful amounts of sulfur
dioxide into the air.
Rather than purchasing exp8 nsive a nti-polluti o n

at

Fainting juror de~ys trial

)·

,.

'

....
AIU10ugh a llood is not predicted, Pomeroy

sald

10 ounce denim · san .torized · shrunk ' -·
100% .cotton · ·triple
stitched seams_

Fi.fteen ·cent s
VoL 2!1, No. 19:1

.,

CLEVELAND (AP) - A courlty auditor
Wednesday that property tax revenues and other funds
due financially insolvent Cleveland are being seized to
pay off its $5.3 million debt to a pension fund.
Cuyahoga County Auditor Vincent C. Gamp~a
said he has been ordered by Ohio Attorney General
Willlam J. Brown to ensure the State Police and
Firemen's Disability Pension fund receixes the
payments th~t Cleveland falleif to inake last month.

0

•

•

Board approves
gas, oil funding

Tax revenues being seized

Men's · and Young ·
, Men's Size 29 to 42
waist. Choose your
correci length .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 4, 1979

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - Gen. Alexander
Haig supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe,
anno:Wced ·a t a news conference today he will resign on
June 30.
.
'
Haig said he offered his resignation to President
Carter and the secretary general of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, Joseph Luns.
He said he had no palitical plans for the time being.

ELBERFELD$
...

•

,.

.

)

•\

• I

'

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