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                  <text>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. '

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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!
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Point Pleasant
675-2318

__
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Jones calmly
persuaded cult

Middleport · 1
Persona l Notes If

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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

'

�:

..
2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Jan . 4, 1979

3- The Daily Sentine)·, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursd"Y· .Jun. 4. 1!17!1

Humane society news .•
By MARION C. CRAWFORD
Tuesday evening whUe lit Vetera~ Memorial Hospital, I
·

was told there was a poor hw1gry looking dog out at the
dumpsters near 1he intersection of 124 and 7. Knowing this to
be "oome" people's solution to the "I'm tired of this aniilu!l
decision". on the way honie about midnight, I drove over t.o
investigate.
·
• Any of you, who have any heart at all, who could have been
with me would have just died. At first I didn't see anything,
\hen dead ahead of the light beams I saw a cardboard box with
"something in it". I walked up to it and saw a large, half
starved dog curled up into a very small shivering heap, trying
desperately to get away from the freezing cold. I touched her
and slle was so weak and cold that she could hardly move ... the
box was Just a $11l8ll one~ about lar~e enough for 8kitten -o but
this large , Coon dog_t~e animal had somehow gotten into It
.and as thin as she was, was able to curl uP Into a small
miserable heap.
·
We filially got her and carried her to my van and ,brought
..,, her home .. After a meal, which aweared to be her first in
weeks, and some fresh water, we fixed a place in . an
outbuilding, put some heat in there lor her, and left her all
covered up, full and tr~g to tha~ out. .
·
What we need lS a good home lor this animal and I am
asking you foll\3 who live in the country If there Is anyone
among you who feels some con\pallllion for this poor aiiimal
and could provide adequate housing and a place for her, to call
me 992-7680.
As with the few of us "working" members of the Humane
Society I have a house full of animals and feathered creatures,
so I cannot keep her myself.
Among the Sentinel's readers there is someone who has
room and needs a pet. I can only hope that someone will call
and this animal will not have to be taken to the vet and
euthanized. We've had a lot of fine people pop up lately to give
homes to the animals. Let'shope that our latest "gentle ladv''
will find her way int.o a good horne,

HEALTH

.

'

"""'.

B

R

. ft

~1,·

Library

y ••

Marauders rally, tip Rio R_edmen, 72

,,.
...

..... ~- - ~.""

I!

•

Letters

Dear Betty,
.
Remember the White Elephant Sale we mentioned in the
previous issue of the "Friendly Newsletter" ? Well, the Friends
voted to have · the sale on Saturday, January 13 at the
Miadleport Ubrary. We'll be there from 10:30 to 5:00.
Plel)Se tell all your friends that we'd welcome donations of
macrame, ceramics, food, Aunt Desdemona's .last year's
Christmas gift they've been hiding in the attic, etc. Or, if they
received a gift this Christmas that ·replaced something they
already had, maybe they might give the Friends the old
versLOn !

"6y golly, we're not takin' this any longer. Shift this thing into reverse!"

.S reVJ.•eW .--------------"""-----=--.
March new

Music Man".
,
March 3 - Despite snow
and cold weather, Pomeroy
Boy Scout Troop 249 held its
weekend father·son camping
trip.
March 6 - - The Meigs
County Commissioners ap·proved construction of the
second of two nursing homes.
March 7 - Chester L.
(Cbet) Tannehill, managing
editor of The Sentinal, died at
SFORY TOLD - These sad eyes tell a story. Will
Holzer Medical. Center.
someone make the story end happy by giving this
Clarence Schmucker was
homeless animal a new home?
honored as "Legionnair~~o,of
the Year" at the annual
birthday party of Drew
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) 46-15-2 re.cord.
Webster Post.
-Jim Hess, who engineered
Area roaches selected for
March 7- Rutland Council
a national collegiate record of honors by the NAJA Football made plans for cable
14wins this season for Angelo Coaches
Association television in the town.
State University in Texas, included: AI Rutschman,
March 9 - The Meigs High
has been voted NAJA Linfield,
Ore. ;
Ted girls basket baD team made it
Football Coach a( the Year Kassinger , Bethany, Ka n.;
to the district tournament.
for 1978.
Ken Gibler, Mis5ourl Valley;
March 10 - Miners refused
~ ~ess, 42, was selected by Ken Stephens, Central Ar·
to obey a back io work order
his fellow NAJA football · kansas; Dick Strahm,
because contract agreements
coaches after leading Angelo Findlay, Ohio; Blll Hayes
were not satisfactory.
State t.o an NAJA Division I Winston-salem State, N.c.;
March 11 ·- Meigs Local
national championship this and AI Jacks, Clarion State, had its first makeup Saturday
year. ' In five years at the Penn.
school with attendance
sehool. Hess has compiled a
averaging 72 percent,
March 13 - Legislation to
increase overtime parking at
Middleport meters failed td
receive the approval of
council.
March 14- Paula.Swindell
became Meigs County's top
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
speller. The Eastern Local
Board of Education voted to
place a 10. mill emergency
quest to me in care of this levy before voters.
Srriou!'
-March 15- Pomeroy was
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
hl'art rlist•ast'
fuldio City ·Station, New again dodging a flooding Ohio
York, NY 10019.
River.
One of the hallmarks of
March 16' _ Candidates
DEAR DR. LAMB - I wish
.
true
angina
·
pectoris
is
its
were
flling for the June
you would comment on
short
duration
,
usually
less
primary
elections. .\
angina pectoris as to its
than
five
to
10
minutes.
It
can
.
March
17 _ Charles c.
·
symptoms, seriousness and
·
also
be
caused
by
excitement
Cassell.,
construction
effeets on one. I have heard il
and
sometimes
from
eating.
manager,
outlined
plans for
talked about but never really
Jn
general,
llle
mot•e
SeVere
the
hydro-electriC
p)ant at
understood what it is. I've
the
obstruction
of
the
arteries
.Racine
for
Mlddlepprt
•
more or less thought of it as a
to
the
heart
,
the
easier
it
is
to
Pomeroy
Rotary
Club.
nuisance condition.
March 19 - . ~w
DEAR READER - I'm precipitate attacks of chest
Webster Post 39, Ameflll!an
afraid that it is a lot more Jl'!in.
The treatment and·the long Legion hosted a District
than a nuisance. If you really
have angina pectoris, it tenn management is much Eight spring conference.
March 20 _ The spring
means you have serious heart like the treatment of a person
a
heart
attack
weight
East
b k fM1
after
disease.
reducti on, diet and control of .
er rea 0 e gs Local
students was cancelled in
Classically, at\i:ina pee tori s
blood pressure. In addition ,
de
k
is chest pain uS\Jally involv· there
are medicines that can or r to rna e up lost days.
. Robert E, Buck, county court
ing) he area of the sternwn
(breast bone ) right in the be taken to provide lm- judge, filed for election as
middle of the t'hest. It's a mediate relief from anginal probate court judge.
March 21 _ Announcement
pressure sensation . It may be pain and still others that
described as having a weight seem to improve the efficien· was made that John . R.
of the circulation to the
on the chest or a constricting cy
heart muscle.
Thomas would assume
feeling. This unpleasant sen·
operation of the Pomeroy
DEAR DR. LAMA ·- Golf Course.
salion is primarily caused by
March 22 _ It was an·
insufficient blood now to the RecenUy I have be~n la kin~ a
warm
bath
before
retiring
nounced
that the New Haven
heart muscle.
earh
night
as
I
found
that
this
The (JOUr circulation to the helps to relieve daily iensions fire department • rescue
heart musCle is usually caus· and is sleep indul'i ng: Jn the squad would get new quar·
etl by obstruction of the
morning I take a shower to ters.
at1eries to the heart by fatly· start
the day . r am not trying
March 23 - At the filing
cholesterol deposits . Many to be facetious but a friend deadline only two races for
years ago Dr. Paul .Dudl ey has told me that this is too cotlnty offices emerged.
While pointed out that when a much - that it can be hann·
March 24 - Meigs area
· person first started to have f i
b
PTA units joined to oppose
k·
angina pectori s it usually u · l.s Ia mg a ath at night measured telephone rate
meant that he had an and a shower in the mor~g service.
harmful •
.
tmderlying heart atta ck.
DEAR READER .. , I~ . March 26 - The aMual
The pers.on who has persb· doesn't need to be. As people ,. JC~ster egg hunt of the
lent recurring angina · pee·
get . older they sometimes Mcl'udbdlepowarts. Po?'erdoy Rotta~y
loris usually has a pattern to
. "'
.
ra.ne au m
it. Most often the pain will deve Iop dry skm... xcesstve Middl rt
bathing particularl y with ef·
M epo 27 ·
· ·
develop during exerti on. fective
soaps may ~end to dry
arch
- Shan Mitch
That 's why it's called e""r· out the sk·in rven more. This and Beverly Halfman were
tiona! angina . The pain usual· can lead to itching and irrita· named Girls State Dele~ates.
ly goes away when the person lion. If vou don't ha ve this Most miners returned to work
slops exertion.
probl em: there is no reason and the .Columbus and South·
I am sending you The that you can't blithe as ft·e· ern Ohio Electric ·Co. an·
Health Letter number 2·10, quentl v as you chntlsc to .
nounc~ the return to normal
. Hearl Attack, Mytx:ardial'ln·
You 'ran rut II drop or two of operatiOnS ' Middleport
fareti on, Angina Pectoris. In · oil on your bath towel after · Village CouncU accepted a
~ive you more infonnatinh on vou 'vc fini slwd vour hath ;" . g1ft of a lot at Garfield and
how these Conditions arc ;hnwet' and us!' ihai lor ,our Thud Sts., from ,Mary
related to each other, Other lxldy. The nil willlw grm.lua l- Elizabeth Hartinger Thomas.
readers who want this issuP ly ' prcad in a ihin amuun1 ell ~he ri Metg_~ Local Sch?oi
can send 50 cents with a long, nVI'r the skin and "1'1 "'· "
1st ct ~ rd. ol Educauon
stamped, self·addres,ed l!"'i'tm·i&gt;&lt;•r.
placed a 1 mtii le'.'Y before
tmvelopt;&gt;.for it. ~t · nd p mr· n··
.

.

L
I

·rfJ
r

March 1- Four defendants
were released under $8ii,OOO
bond
on
marijuana
possession charges.
March 2 - Vocal students
at Meigs High School were
well involved in their
Broadway musical, "The

.r.-

voters.
March 28 - Bill Quickie
outlined plans· for the annual
Big Bend Regatta for the
Pomeroy Chain ber of
Commerce.
March 29 - Kevin King and
Greg Becker were named
Buckeye · Boys
State
representatives . of Mid·
dleport's Feeney-Bennett
Post.
'
March 30 - An escapee
from the Middleport jail was
apprehended in Mansfield. A
Danbury, Conn. , man flying.
over Meigi County ran out of
gasoline. and was forced to
land his plane in a hay field at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Goeglein, FlatwoodS
Road.

TifF. OAII.YoSF.NTTN F.I.
I)P.\'OTF.O TO TH F:

TNTF.R F..~T OF'
I\1F.Jr.S-MMION r\ R F. A
RO_RF:RT IIO F. FI.IOI
f'ih· F.ditur

P 1 t hli.~ l wd t h lil ~· t'S I"I'Jll ~; ,1u n lm •

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Ol liu

Va ll• ·~·

f'n l!l [ J;IIl ,~"-Mu lt h t w d i;t ,

r&gt;uhli~hmi•

l n t·.

111 .

( 'nm·t St.. Putn{r'«:l. Olut, ~~it ~!l
nu ~ mt·:-~fflnn · Plw1w ~:?· ~ 1£(.
rd i 1~&lt; t" lil l Ph4 &gt;1K· !1!1:'-:!lfol
Sr • r ·, ~ul d;r.~ ~ f'H~ I !II~" p:•r•l :r l
r nrr11 •n r1·. Ohir•
"i: rlrr •r'r al ; r r ll'l'l'll.~ rrrr: 1'1 '111'• '~1'11·

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Srrh 'I TipT inn nolr ·s · nr ·lin ·l'l·rl hr·
r•n n il'r 1d11'n' ii\'Hilullh' 'i:·, 4 ' 1'11 1 .~ ~ ~·i ·
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t. L-o•r\·lwn • ~:tl . l\11 \·r•:1 r : ~i " mnr rtlt~
~II f\fl : T hro•r· ' muuthl', ~ !U1f\
Srrh.~l'ri )1 1 rr•n pnr·r· r n r ·1 ru l r· .~ Srrr ula \
Ti H H'!' ~'\(• nl i lll' l.

.

· ames
N

eee

in the news

•'

Coach Lu Wims ~entrai ·
State Marauders, defending.
Distri ct ·'22 NAIA cage
champions, trailed Coach. Art
Lanh am's host Rio Grande
en most of the way, 35
Redm
.
mm,utes
to be exact, before·
coming from behind to post a
72-66 non-conference vt'ctor y
at
Lyne Center Wednesda y
night.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Clevel.and Mayor Dennis Kucinich's
Ohio driver's license has expired and the police department,
where 275 officers may be laid off Friday at the mayor's
recommendation, knows about it.
"It's true," said Kucinich news secretary Andrew Juniewicz. "Things have been busy around here lately."
·Juniewicz said the mayor, who has a police chauffeur, would
renew his licenSe at the earliest possible opportunity. He added
that Kucinich has done no drivilig since his license expired Oct.
8; his 32nd birthday.
In a 'related development, the, mayor's younge,s t brother,
Perry, 22, was ilidicted by a federal grand jury on a charge of
unarmed bank robbery in ·connection with ·a Cleveland ·bank
holdup last montA .
·
U.S. Attorney James Williams said Perry Kucinich would be
arraigned within the next 10 days. The mayor said ))is brother
had a history of mental problems and needed attention.

sns

!Selected Group

Oakland A's in his option year
last season.
Seghi · said three ot her
teams drafted tbe righl.s to
Broberg, but he was not
aware if they had made any
bids for Ute veteran pitcher.

Ohio College Basketball
By The Associated Press
Wednesday Night
As hland 101, Thomas M or e 88
B~~dwi n - Wal l ace 75, Oberl in
Berea, Ky. 104, Wilmi ngtOn
101 . .
CaSe Re~erv e 95, W il berf or ce
86

"-

.

Centra l S1. 72, Ri o Grande 66

Day ton 73, Bul le r 61
Def iance 86, St. Fr ari cis

66

57
Wrt tenberg 89, Deni son 64
Xa v ier 72, Miam i 67
You~g s l own St. 81, Bel lar mm e 74

•PURSES s3.00

Reg. $9.98

SALE

·

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•

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• Edge Cleaning Suction ~--

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Power

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The best way to care for carpel is a
Hoover Convertable Cleaner .
"

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Middleport,

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\

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FAMOUS BRANDS
VESTS
PANTS
JAC«ETS
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Counting t o urnam e n t
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TWO'S COM PAMY

LADIES'

thusiasm in even the oldest
basketball fan will be staged .
Friday night. This rivalry
will be the malchup of the
Eastern ver sus Southe rn
ba sketball game to be played
at Racine with the . reserve
game beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Highlight of the night will
follow when the two varsity

ss.oo
SALE

o.

TUSCAWOSA, Ala . (AP )
- Coach Bear Bryant look
the day off so he could
personally take aU the
congratulatory calls for his
No . !-ranked Alabam a
football team.
Bryant said he stayed up all
night waiting for the polis,
only w find that Alabama was
No . 2 behind Notre Dame .
But he awoke Wednesday to
the good news that the
Crimson Tide came out on top
in The Associated Press poll
for the 1978 season .
Gov .-elect Fob James, an
Auburn ail ..star running back
in the 1950s, sent Bryant a
telegram. It said, in part :
" Alabama 's perfocmance .. .
combined with a brliliant
regular season left no doubt
as Ill the wisdom of their
selection , irrespective of any

ROBES

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·' -

••

1

Po rts m o uth in a
conference outing.

after losing four of their fir st

End of

Ebersbach H.ardware
.
'

"EVERYTHING IN' HARDWARE"
POMEROY
110W.MAIN

First

th e' Eag les ' going

into

tom orrow's contest.·

This year' s first game be·
tween the two schools tthey
pla y each other at least twice
every season I looks pretty
good on pa per, with Southern
perhaps having a slight edge ,

Jack 's Da iry Bar
Tom's Ca r r~ Ou l
Gibb 's Grocery
Roya l Cmwn
3 In One
Meigs Inn

91
84
66

at least in the win column.

The Torn adoes of Coach Ca rl
Wnife are· currently sitting at

.

writers

Smith

524 ;

Debb.ie

Roach 199 , Bob Couch and
Charley VanMele r J-91; Pa l
Car son 703, Debbie Ha wley

189.

SER lE ~

179.

EAR LY WED MIXED
Oec.27 , 1978

HI GH IN D. GAME S 13
Games) Vrcky Gill il an 460,
Gerry Par:.ons tl58 .
•
HI GH TE AM GAME Newel l Sunoco 783.
HIGH TEAM {3 Games) Newe II Sunoco 2292

6
6

Zid e's Sport Shop
Long shot s
Team No.3
TEAM
SERI ES

Bi sse ll , and J eff Goebel.

Dia na K . 164.

6

Young 's tv,ark et
Smith Nelson Motors

1
7
2

ST . }.()UL) 1AP) - Ea rl
Ca mpbell of the Howston

Oilers. lhr

·

fir st pl ayer

Head q uar ters 1943.

se l·ectecl in l ast s pri ng's

TEA M · GA ME
Headq uarters 676 .
HIGH IND . SE RIES - Ray

;olational Fo otball Leagu e
••
dtaft , has been chosen both

Roach 576, Bil l Part er 517·
rookie of the: yea r and most
Bet.ty Smith 49 B, Hel e ~ • va lu able pl ayer i n the
Phelps &lt;181.
AmcriGm Conference by the

HIGH IN D. GAME -

So uthern clai mi ng a 3·0
record while Eastern stands

Ed

198, Ray Roach 195 ;·

Voss

Betty Smit h 196, Pat Ca rson

Bower s, or Br ia n Mathews.
All ha ve seen a lot of action
at 2-ll.
thi s yea r. Spencer and Goe!Jel
The two teams· have three have bot h been averaging in
common opponent s - So uth· hi gh doubl e fi gures so far this
ern bea t Southwestern by 17 . season .

193.

S

Tea m

TH E COST OF ·
CARPET CLE ANING_
74

~

.•

Headquar te rs
Zrde 's Spor·l Shop
Team No.3

72
69
5]
J9

TEA M SER IES

steadily , and each boy has hit
do uble figUres thi s year. Both

Young 's

Marke l 2043.
T EAM GAME

. :. - Young'~
Markel 718 .
HIGH IND. SE RIE S - Ray
Roach 562 , Bi11 ' Part e r 522 ;

teams ha ve bench strength,

1

91

Smi-Jh . Nelson
Youn g 's Mar lo:et
Long shot s

Forema n has been improv ing

•

pubhcatmn .
,...-~----WE 'VE LOW ER EU

Dec . 20 . 1978
End of F1rs l Hillf

On. the So uthern side.
Brinager will qe joined in the
sta rting lineup by Dwight
Hili , Dave Findley, Dave
Foreman. and Jack Duffy.

· ,

por~mg. News, a week y

EARL Y WEO . MIXED

for a n 11-point and both like to run with the
victor y. Then la st wee k, the ba ll, So uthern perhaps more
Eagles feii to the Miller club than Ea st ern .
by 30 points.
If you don't already have
When these two cl ubs meet. plan s fu r tomuH ow night, ·or

ar e

Rio 32.

60

Wi llford 235, Jerry Rought
194; Mar y Voss 190, Betty

minut es

other poll."
Bryant said the No. I rating
is "a 11re~ t honor" for the
players and coaches. "They
worked awfully hard and
overcame a great deal of
adversity this year, not to
mention the most difficult
schedule we have ever had,"
. Bryant said.
"They set tlleir goals high
and they will hav·e a lifetime
of pride for having achieved
it."
Some coaches and former
players gaiherect in an offi ce
in th e coliseum Wednesday to
let it ail sink in.
"It 's like losing your pay
check and finding it the next
day ," said assistant athletic
director Charley Thornton,
referring t.o tlle No. 2 ranking
gi ven Alabama in ..(he
coaches' poll Tuesday .
The coaches poi! continued
to bother some.
"We ail know that you

Ha lifime sc ore

Cenlrnl Sta te ?'3 _

MORNING GLORIES ·
&lt;13
. 19 , 1978
- Jack 's G. &amp; J . AuDec
83
lu Par ts
Da iry Barr &amp; Me ig s Inn 1975 .
72
TEAM GAME _.:_ Ro'lal N ewell Sunuco
n
Sca rs
~
Crown 726
68
IN O HIGH SE RI ES Bill Karr &amp; Van Zanclt
46
Willford 5&lt;15. J err y Rough t Cle l and Rf!iJ ity
43
Gibbs Grocery
536. ,M ary Vo s:&lt;. 498 , Ma x ine
HI GH LND . GA ME
· Dugan 490.
helma 0 and L enora M e.'
IN D. HIGH GAME ·- Bill T165,
Vi r. ky G.. Gerry ~ . and

season in Dan SpenCer, Brian

records a nd stalistic·S' don 't
mean a thing, and tomorrow

25 - 1 ~

.

64

Team

points and Eastern down ed
the· Highlanders team by
three . Eastern handil y
defeated the Hannan Trace
Wildca ts by 16 points while
Southern won by 35. Mill er
was t he Last common foe. ·
1n a hectic contest, South·
ern pulled away in the closin g

Lonis, 3 713. TOTALS

66 .

· HIGH IND . GAM E - Ray

Hall

Team

non·

Rounding out the Eastern
starting lineup will be either
Keith Wolfe, Don Eynon. Joe

LOWER

·RATES

even if you do, you won't find
excitem ent than

much mor e

night should be no exception. you will at the Southern
Th e . Eagles ha ve thr ee gymn asium.
sta rt er s returninl! from

..

l a~t
Do ·it-yoUJ .~elf
and gor pr ole ssional
resurts

·Basketball Results
Basketball Re sults
By The Associated Press

F ranci s, Il l.. 71
Vanderbi lt 47, Au b urn 55
Virg inia 88, Wa ke Fores·l 75
Vir gin ia Tech 62, New .

79 ,
Fa ir leigh
Dick in son 73. OT
,

Ore lans 60
William
&amp;

Wednesday 's College

EAST

Bos ton

Connec fi c u l 72. New Hamp-

shir e 67
Dela ware 69, Glassboro 68
• James Madison 72, Lehigh 54
Lafayette 64 , Moravian. 46
N\a ine 58, Morgan St. 56
'Ma r qu ett e 57, Br ow n 49
Prov idence 52, Vi l lanova 51
Sl. Fr a nc i s, N.Y 88, North eas te r n 74
St. Fran cis, Pa .. 77 , Clari on

not

64

Syracuse. 78, Co rn e ll 52

W. Virgi ni a 81. Amer ican 79

SOUTH
Alaba m a 87, Mississ ippi St.

65

Delta St. 104, Christian Bros .

83

Florida 76,' KentuC k y 65

F urm a n 96, Bap ti st , S. C. , 61
Jackson v ill e7 l , Fl orida St. 68
Louisi ana SL 97, Georgi a 75
Mar yland
B4,
Geo rge
Washington 72
Nor th CarQiina 92, Clem son

68

Bryant will be the one t.o
give filial approval of the
design for tli~ · championship
rings.
"Now we can put those dia·
mond ring s on our ~ers and
start flashing them around ,"
said quarter~ack Jeff
Rutledge at San Francisco,
where he was preparing to
play in · the EastWe.o;t game
Saturday.
It was the fifth national
champion ship team for
Bryant. His teams won the
AP version of the title in 1961.
1964 and 1965.
Southern Cal was second.
ukiahoma third, Penn Stale '
fourth nnd Michigan fifth in

Ma ry

80.

Muh lenburg 64
MIDWEST
Ball SI. 101, N. Ill inois 81
Da yton 73, Buller 61
Ill inois St . 74, B'adley 61
Indi a na Sl.

1-...:~=

WMPO

iowa St 102, Manka to St . 63
Oklahoma Sl. 101 . Roosevelt
Souther n Il l inois
Jewel l 68

-·

STAR SUPPLY CO.
949-2525

SATURDAYS

101, Tulsa 89

84

=======-

Casey Kasem

Rac in e , 0 .

9 .til Noon

96, Wm

Toledo 82, E. Kenlucky 57
Wis. - P arksi de 77, Wis.
M i lwau k ee 6 1
Xavier , Ohi o 72. Mi ami , Ohi o

Temple 62. Piltsburgh 57
Vermont 93, Niag a rol 76

'

Pen11 Slate 69, Ri chm ond 65

67 '

SOU THWEST

Houston 11 , Texa s Lul her an

79

Mc Neese 76, Pan American

69
Sou thern 66, Texas Southern
62
WEST
Por tl a nd Sl. 96, Greal Fall s 63

St. Cloud St. 85 , Moorhead St.

71
St. M ary's, Calif.. 77, Paci fi c
u 74
San Jose St. 75, Humboldt S t. ·

Ten nessee 72, lv'riss iss ippi 67 ' 73
Tenn essee · St . 6S. Te nn . Ut ah St . 8, Ut ah 72.
Wyoming 66. Air Force 54
M a r li n 56
Tenne ssee Te c h 81. St.

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP·
•

Your New And Used Four Wheel Drive Center
Fuil Selection Of 1979 Jeep Vehicles

:.. 'No. 1 was· Out"'dream."

Cllllnga......:ECONOM I CAL
· .-ont eMf covers most

•

Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils , now 4-4 on the year

dummies ail the time," said
ass ist ant coach Sylveste r
Croom.
•
Former Alabama player .
Ozzie Newsome was openly
proud. " I'm So pleased for the
guys," Newsome said. "We
helped recruit IQ Ill 80 percent
of those on this team."
"This kihd of makes up now
for . som e
of
the
di sappointment of last year:"
said halfback Major Ogilvie;
who scored one ol the Tide's
two touchdowns in its 14-7
Sugar Bow1 win over then
No.J-ranked Penn State on
Monday.·
And All-American tackle
Marty Lyons, who helped
stop Penn Sta t~ twice at the
goal line , said of the No. 1
ranking: "That is what we
have been waiting to hear . I
never doubted our ability to
win the championship, but I
was anxioq£ Ill hear the n~ws

,
GIRLS'

forward.

e'rn i s 5· 1 ove r a ll whil e
Eastern is 3·3. Neither team
st reak of lO' straight against , has lost a teague contest ,

spurts

..'" '" ~ 30 %OFF

CH and Pt .. f ieasant.
GAHS losses have been lo
Wav erly. Ironton, Athens
inside the leag ue and to

South e r n ha s just one
returnee, Tim Br inager.

second win in the L;,:tst five

.

.

lADIES"

"t~\)tt~

league wi ns ove r Wellston
and .Ja c kso n, and no n·leag ue
triumphs over Washington

the top o[ the SVA C, but
Eastern is right behmd. Th e
f,agies have not pl ayed as
many league gam es. South·

'Bear' takes ·
a - breather

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE'S

LADIES'

Boston t ries to get his team tu

·· t·

Group of Reg. Stock

Odd Lot ol Women's

Dec . 17, 197,8

Headquarters

come hom e with only its

'8.00 Pr.

•ONE GROUP TOPS lh OFF
•ALL COATS 20% OFF
•DRESSES 20% OFF

n n rl.~n11

By GREG BAILEY

Eagles' new he ad coach John

•coRDUROY SLACKS

fo rwa rd nnrl Rr ift

One of t hose cla's si c cage
riva lries tha t renews elt·

to this year 1S clash as.. .- thc

.Reg. $12.98-$14.99 Now

6..{)

five gam es, are i!·3 inside tht!

SEOAL.
The Blue Dev ils' own

see plenty of act ion are Greg
Becker , 5·10 guard who
tallied 16 points in Meigs· 6659 loss to Gallipolis at Meigs
last winter ; Tom Hawley , 6·1
center and Ray Andrews, 6.Q

GRAN DE t 66 J
Swain, 3 2 8;. Bi se, 3 1 7
Pu r cell, 7'J 16 . P helps, 4- 1 9 ,
Ro yse, 3 0 6; James , 2 3 7 ;

Pa I Car son
Howl ey SOd.

EARLY SU-NDAY MI XED

Eastern-Southern rivalry renewed

roundball game.
A new ingredient is added

• JEANS '5.00

•PAJAMAS

victory thus far was a non·
leagUe triumph ,lver Trimble.

sophomore guard.

Thr ee seniors expected to

72.
R I0

Lo&lt;'a I Bow I i np:

'

5~

?7; Gray , 3 06 ; Love, 2 76 ,
Du k es. 7 0 l ol ; Boone , 1 1 3 :
Jones . 0 1 7 TOTALS 28 -16

Bryant . 54 14 ; Craft e r . 9 9·

Ccntp;J .t:•n•,-. ,,n..,,,..,,.., nrl •·"

Coach Ron Logan's Meigs 77·72. Meigs has lost to Vinton
Marauders, 1~ overall and 0· County outside the league,
5 in side Southe~stern Ohio and to confere nce foe s
League piay, · will invade Athens, Waverly, Jackson,
Gallipolis Friday night for a Logan and Wellston.
conference battle.
Coach Logan is . in a
Tipoff for the preliminary rebuildin g year . F rid ay's
game is 6:30p.m . The varsity lineup at Gallipolis wlll in·
tilt is scheduled to sta rt at 8 · ci ude one freshman , 6·0
o'clock.
gua rd . Bo b As hley ; two
Th e Marauder s' lone so phomores, Steve Ohlinger,

teams clash in their annual

One Group

s~~·~ted

lnd
'
.

T~ l eda 82, E. Ken tu ck y

..,. Small Group

•STRETCH SLACKS

CEN TRAL STATE 1721

f&lt;N11lli'll \~ 'f'!'C 1~ , f 10 :'l l n ,.-.

TEAM

•
CLEVELAND lAP) - The
Cleveland Indians have
offered one-year contracts to
two free agents - outfielder
Bill North and pitcher Pete
Broberg.
North , 30, played out his op·
tion last season with the Lo s
Angeles Dodgers. He is a lefthanded hitter with a lifetime
.275 batting average in the ·
American League and an
average of 55 stolen bases a
season. Cleveland General
Manager P,)lil Seghi said the ,
Texas Rangers also were in
.(he bidding for North.
Broberg, 28 ~ is a right·
handed thrower and a onetime coUege pitching star at
Dartmouth. He has bounced
·around tlle major leagues
during his career, wlrining 14
games for MUwaukee in 1975
and going 10-12 .for th e

DRESSES • PANT SUITS'
ROBES

.

MOSCOW (AP)- A SoViet newspaper has attacked former
President Richard Nixon, describing him as a "politician
entangled in intrigues and lies" and branding his new book a
"whitewash."
·

Indians offer contracts to
Bill North and Pete Broberg

NOW '4.50

ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - Ethel Kennedy is being sued by the
owners of an Aspen catering service who allege she refused t.o
pay $500 for a Christmas dinner for 20 people.
The suit, filed in county court here, said Mrs. Kennedy's
housekeeper called Christmas Day asking if a diriner could be
prepared that evening,
Because of the hoHday, caterer Dean Small said he charged
$90 an hour for his work - $360 for four hours. Small said his .
normal rate is $45 an hour. He said other charges Included $50
for cab fare because the finn's van was broken and $90 for the
food itseU. ·
· '
" We've done work for the Kissingers and the Ro~~efellers.
·We don 't believe m overcharging just bi!Caus~of the.!f name,"
S8ld Tom Gerlak, the finn's president.
·
·
Small said he presented the bill to Mrs. Kenned}\'.the day
after Christmas.- $500 plus $3S tax. "She was really fUrious,"
he said. "She said it was worth $25 ... "
Mrs. Kennedy, who was on a skiing vacation with her chil·
dren, could not be reached for comment
.
.

50 pe rcent. 1'he Marauders
werC 16 of 20 at the foul line -· (;rc ~ J anu_·s haule d d!Jwn \0
for 80 percent. Central hdd 28 and f..lan Ri se elglll bt•forc
fi ~,.ul ing uut i n l hc fina l
reboU nds , 23 turn overs I unly
six in lhc secund half 1_&lt;md 1:1 seconds of play .
Hio had 21 1urnuvcrs and 13
assists.
·•
Riu hit 25 of 56 field g&lt;oal assists .
Box score: ,
attempts [or 44. 6';ltrc~nt. The

The Daily Sentinel

CLEARANCE

•% OFF

fiJU! ci rcll' for 84 .2 percent.
Hiu picked· t,ff 28 rebiJU il~ :i .

28 of 56 fi eld goal attempts fo r

.

JANUARY .

•HAJS &amp; SCARF

l'h d f t i· f R'l, G · d
Caticr paced lhc M;rr:'m dcrs
'th e e''ea10 e t ' f ran e al(ad \\iill r ~7 pHinb &lt;md six
WI da •· dnon·ct•n ercnn• rc brJUnds. Udv C ' Ur ya n t
- Oh1'
recur C
. The
efending
Mid·
f
t
·
· &lt;:~ddcd 14 &lt;-IIPng with Pau l
o
on
erence
c
1
amptun
Du kes.
Kcdmctl w1'll
t
now
o
Dan Purcell paced Hiu with
df
f thprepare
· 1
ope
t't ! n' ,. et ense
' d o . he~r eague
.
lfi ma r kers. Steve I .u nes
I e oa ur ay nlg t agamst added 13
visitin~
Maione Coiiege at
l
C
Rio led 32-26 during the
,yne
ent er.
In. Wrrlnp,rlay's
Iill. Mel halftime intel'missiun .

sPORTS, Meigs visits Gallipolis
Friday~or SEO .contest

..

We're hoping that many people will bring tbeir elephants
Ill the Pomeroy or Middleport Libraries or call the libraries •
and arrange to have someone pick up the elephant
·
T)lere are two other things we need in order to have a
really good sale, and! hope you'll s'pread the word about them,
t.oo. First, we need 'people t.o "person" the sale · second we
need people to act as buyers - no talent needed,' just m~ey!
The Friends will be meeting again on MQnday, January 8
at"':30 p.m . (Dorothy made a typo In the Newsletter, so that
looks like another date; don't be fooled ..) We'll have
refreshments and a macrame demonstration in addition t.o the
meeting , Please tell everyone you know about the meeting we.!d like to have a lot of people come. They don't have to Ill)
members to participate. (Though, at $3.50 per person or $5 per
family,IJustdon'tseehawanyonecanreslstJotning!l
I'll look forward to seeing you again at the meettng on
Monday.
YoursinFriendship,
Bllrbilra Karr,
Secretary of the Friends of the Meigs County Ubraries

The Marauders, now "r 1 "n
st ea 1. f' au I Uukes fo llowed
v
the yea r, got th"&lt;:- upper hand WHh
. a l win n.1intcr sccontl.•
'th f'tve rru·nutes
·
y•
WI
le ft , but later . 'Ibat proved
tu be the"
didn't wrap it up untt'l the ga m e's
winhing
"u&lt;~l
final 16 seconds of play.
o
al.though Da. n Purceii pulled
Rio, tral'ied 65""' 4 wt'th 1.· 22 ·H10 1n within three 69-66
left after a Greg James free with 26 seconds remaining.
'
. ,
throw. The Redmen missed a
Ed Love 's two free throws
. the 1ea d at with 16 seconds left assured
chance, 1o re~a m
the 1:07 mrl rk fnii owin" , Cent ral Sta1e of Ih e virtnrv.

66

tQ

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•
~

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1976 CJ·5

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.,

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�----·-

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... - -····"7... --·.

. .'

'

Iay . ~

·1·' .
- U.l(

Sports W9rld
Ry Will Gfim~l\')'
A P Cllrrt·sp•lndt•nt

NEWYORK (AP) :.._ Suppose you got an invitation to come
down to tl&gt;C l' irst National Bank and stuff your pockets with all
rbe bills they would hQlcj. Chances are you'd break a leg getting
there .

'

.

Such "" inviting lure, in effect, is being tossed ·out to ttie
world's top teMis players - Jiuuny Connor~, Bjorn Borg,
Guille m1o Vilas and Vitas Gerulaitis. So what do they do ?
.
They ya1m and sa)C, "Sorry, can't be bothered."
So the._$400,000 \Grand Prix Masters in Madison Square
Garden, the climactic court event of a 12-month, $11-million
season , is furced to' go begging - bereft of its principal stars
and confined to a field of perermial rururers-up. It could be a
disaster.
It 's a sad commentary on a g!lffie whose popularity in the
last decade has pusted out of its seams. It may -and pardon
llie cliche - be the selfish indifference that kills the goose that
lays all those golden tennis eggs.
Tennis, from its roots to its high echelon pen\housc; is disturbed. The old Jli'OS who paved t'he way for today 's bonanza
are disRUSted. Sponsors, the people who put up the rich prize
&gt;o~~r,oney, . are becoming more and more disenchaRted. If the
curret:t trend eontinues, the spoiled, arrogant prima donnas of
the cum•"t game may soon go to the trough and find it dry .
Borg, the No . 2... anked Wimbledon champion, has officially
declined to play in the Masters, set for the Garden Jan . tO-H .
So has Gei'Ulaitis, No. 4 in the world. Corurors, No. 1, and Vilas,
No. 3, have fa iled to respond with the deadline set for today .
. ·'It'' disturbing and disheartening,'' said Jack Kramer ,
former king of the pros and architect of the Grand Prix format.
" ! ~d sick when I think of how much others have sacrificed to
.pror.hJie!.he. game only to have the ir efforts fouled by a bunch
of selfish. short-sighted guys with no regatd at all for the
svstem.11
""TI1ey are ge tting too big for their britct1es," added Don
Budge , the Grand Slam champion of the mid-1930s. "All they
do is take .out of the game and put nothing back in - it 's a

shame."
Bill Talbert, former ranking player, Davis Cup captain and
director of the U.S. Open Championship, admitted that he was
distressed by the lack of sensitivity on the part of many of the
top pJr,yeJ'S .
·
,
"i1JPY ha\'c no regard at all for the sponsors, for the people
who promote and finance the sport," he iruristed. "They refiise
tr, honor obligations and jump all over the world , playing
exhibitions and feathering their own nests . They are jeopardizing the credibility of the game."
Bob Briner, executive director of the Association of Tennis
Professionals, admits concern over the general impact of the
player boycoit.
· '
"I don't know why these guys don't realize that millions of
dullilrs rt•st on the success of the Masters," Briner said .
· ~:thc r sponsors all over the world will be guided by it. These
player': lmve a moral obligaUon, if not a legal one, to
cotnpete."

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Spurts Writer
They call it "Gator Alley,"
and more than one visiting
coll ege basketball team has
been swal!owed up there.
That 's what' happenerj to
the Kentucky Wildcats
Wednesdliy ni ght.
""
" I guess we didn't have the
same mental attitude and enthusiasm as we had against
Notre Dame," Kentucky
Coach Joe Hall said after his
ninth-ranked team dropped a
76-65 decision to Florida in
Gainesville, a ferocious court
for a visitor.
The Wildcats, who had
upset second ... anked Notre
Dam e 81-76 last Saturday
night, certainly didn't match
thal fiery level Wednesday
night.
The
Gators ,
meanwhile, didn 't lack for intensity.
'
" We won ' this game
because my players didn't let
up for 40 .minutes," said
F'lorida Coach ,John Lotz.
"We needed this one ·for our
co nf idence . There are
difficult games ahead and
I'm thinking about Alabama
nelct week . But I'm really not
surprised we won, because
we worked hard for it."
•Ha ll was perplexed,
though .
" It was hard to understand
the loss," he said . . " But I
guess It's a'young team on the
road. We played like a young
team . We didn 't play with
ent husia sm
a nd

91J.li6; No. 11 Indiana Stale

defeated Tulsa 101-l!D: 17thranked Marquett e turn ed
back Brown 5749 and No . 20 ·
Maryland trimmed George
Washington University 84-72.
Reggie Hannah seor&lt;:d 21
points and Ric Clarkson ha d
20 tb lead Florida 's upset of
Kentucky.
"Clarence Tillman played
aggressively on offense, bql
defensively, the team was
unable to stop anything from
Florida's offense," Siiid Hall .
"Florida played really well ·
tonight. . They played an
overall
good
game
throughout." - .
Eddie Phillips scored 21
poi nts and colle cted 10
rebounds &gt;to pace Ala llama
over Mississippi Sta te .
Phillips took over the
. Crimson Tide 's main duties
when leading ·man Reggie
King was hit with ea rly foul
trouble.
"The young kids played super;: noted Alabam a Coach
C.M. Newton. "We had no letdowns. ·· W
e bea t an
outstan d in g basketball
team."
AI GreBn scored 27 points.
and DeWayne Scales had 23
as und efea ted LS U beat
Georgia lor it~ ninth victory.
Georgia played wit hout
Lucius Foster, the Rulldogs'
top rebounder.
"We beat the point spread
by probably 25 points ,"
Georgia Coach Hugh Durham
said, tongue-in cheek. " We

on .'Cats

~6-65loss

Gators slap

•

pl oyed the No. 7 team in tlw
country and we're probably
somewhere around 75th. Y.ou
fi~ure two points b y position
and they ought to beat us by
150 points.
'"fu ey're talented. lf you
were going to chOOs~ up sides
you wouldn 't pick too many of
those red shirts ((}eorgia ) out
there ."

·,. ·

I.SU Coach Dale Brown enjoyed his conference-&lt;Jpening
victory, but dreaded the coming week.
" We now have a· ludicrous

road trip· - thrOB games in
one week," Bro-wn said .
"Th'at shouldn't happen .
Kentucky, Vanderbilt and
Alabama , in one week"and
all on the road.'
'
'

all

5~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

-.·

&gt;vllkc O'Koren 's 22 points
led Nor th Caro lina past
Clemson, which lost for the
first time after nin~ staight

an lliJOint r~n near the end
of the first half.

Washing,ton. The Terps
established themselv.es with

..

TIME CHANGES
Time of services in the Mid~
·dleport and Syracuse United
Presbyterian Churches has
been changed,
·
At the Sy,racuse church the
worship services will be held
• at 9:3() a.m. while the Sunday

his usual sensational game ,"

••

said Tar Heel Coach Dean
Smith. " He does so many
things that don't show up in
the box score."
Larry Bird scored 27 points
and grabbed 19 rebounds as _
Indian;~ State opi!ned its
Missouri Valley Cor\ference
season with a victory over ·
Tulsa. Bernard Toone's 22
points powered Marquette
over Brown. Albert King and
Larry Gibson contributed 2Q
points apiece to lead Maryland.
ove r
George

.;
:1

~

~-

SNOW TIRES

l';

'

......••
•:1

o r....

•••

t•

~ ~

••
.' ,'
z:-

SHOP

..
...'......
t&gt;

MASON FURNITURE

1

FOR THE BEST DEALS
TRI-STATE AREA

'

'.
:

IN THE

RECAPPED OR REGULA.R

\ .

MASON FURNITURE

SHOE SALE
COME
IN; LOOK OVER•
OUR SALE TABLE _
OF BARGAINS

11%
OFFHusH .PUPPIES
WARM LINED BOOTS
AND ALL OTHER
ARM LINED

.....
.' "'
,..,
r,c '!!

•••

1.

r~·

THE SHOE BOX
· MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TIRE SALES

Ed Byhre sa id Tillman 's poor
wa s his own doing,
showing
Xa vi er ' s
Mus keteers
the
result of Toledo's
not
stoppe d a string of six
straight losses to Miami, defense: " You don't stop a
tJ:J pping 1)1e Redskins i2-ll7 at player of his talents - he
Cinci11nati Gardens to s tops himself. He took some
he;,dlin•' Ohio college basket. bad shots and failed to do
ball action Wednesday night. some of the thing s he needs to
· The Mu sketeers pushed do," said B yhre.
Dayton's standout guard
their season record to 7.;!
Jim
Paxson scored 25 points
behind 23 points from Nick
lead
the Flyers to their
to
Daniels and 2Q from Gary
ninth
'college
basketball
.• Massa . The struggling
victory
of
the
~ason
as.they
Redskins fell to 4-7 on the
stopped
Butler
73-lll.
year.
The Flyers, 9-2, took the
In Toledo, the hot-ahooting
Rockets, paced by Jim Slj;a- lead for good when the S.foot'ney's ?.1 points, jumped to a 6 Paxson hit a driving layup
13-1 lead and went on to early in the second period to
defeat Eastern Kentucky 81. make the score 38-36. They
57. The victory lilted Toledo's gradually widened ·that until
record to 7.3, while Eastern they led by their biggest
Kentucky, D-4, suffered its margin, 14 points, with just
worst defeat of the season. over a minute left in the
Kevin Appel and Harvey
J&lt;nuckles of Tol~do held
Eastern Kentucky's James
Tillman, the country's ninth
leading scorer at 'J:I points per
game, to just 11 points.
Tillmnn hit on ooly three of 16
field goal attempts.
"Tillman is a much better
pl.uy~r than you saw/' said
To!Bdo rAJach Bob Nichols.
' 'ln fact, I think their whole
team 'is a better one than the
one seen tnnight."
Eastern Kentucky Coach

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
t 'it \' t'l'

;ir ·ros.o. ; tit~· ll'illlls hidu

Mr s .

t\llt •n

(hester
News Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy
spent Christmas week-end in
Akron with their sons Erroll
Jr .. and Huey and fam ili es.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Hartung and son Jed , Bryan ,
Texas. spent a week with Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Nice and other

••
:~

THESE
PRICES GOOD JAN. 4·6, 1979
. SPECTACULAR SALE
.

DRESSES.·
30%0FF

~

•'

'

•'
•t

LOWEST PRICE EVER ON
OUR MACH-ONE®SPEAKERS!

1'

'

.
;

MANY
PRICE DRESSES

:nHI

Tamm y.

Pr.

$100

Orig. 1979 Catalog Price .43990 Pr.

~

it wHs fl nl t:•ll _ Uwt
Mr s ... Edi t h Spr' !H 't-• r , ct

tl'llstl•t•. is il l. Mr.'i. F.v; t
Dt•;.;s;nlt'l'. Mrs. Elln:t fh·iht•l .

:vtrs . F'l'rn HPus!l . Mrs.
Ha).-l'S. and Mrs. f.lta Will ;d ll'tHkd wi th Mrs. Will Sl' J '\'i ll~
H'i' l'rl'am . chips. cookit•s.

;ttld

l'Uff t'l' .

*Family Prescription
•·ftetords ·

Middleport

* We Fill Ohio Welfare,

• JUSTIN
LEATHER

HANDBAGS
•BILLFOLDS

•BELTS
•SN'UFF
· CAN POUCHES
•lEE STRAIGHT
lEG JEANS

"Fee l" all the music - from roc k to Ba c h - and round
out that Christmas co mpon e nt sys te m w ith tMse
high · performance s peake rs . Eac h has a h uge 15"
acoustic suspension woofer w1th 4 · 1aye r voice coil
wound on a brass fo rm to handle up to 100 wattsplus heavy -duty tweeter and mult1 -cel l midrange
horn for 20-25.000 Hz re spo ns e Ge n u1n e walnut
veneer cabinets 28 %-x l 'l~ 2" . 40-4024

'

TWO·WAY COMPACT
SPEAKER SYSTEMS

AM/FM STEREO
S-TRACK SYSTEM
'
.

LADIES' DRESSES
REDUCED 3Q%

COATS &amp; JACKETS

.••
'

•••
•
··~·····
I

~

1 each size
2 lnfarit Jackets
ite

SNOWSUITS
GIRLS
.
BOYS
size 2·1 only 12 mo .- 1 only
size 4-1 only 18 mo .-24 only
0-6 mo.-2 only
1 each
6-9 mo .-1 each

&amp;

New Haven , W. Va.

1;, Size-s- Misses Sizes

JACKETS

LADIES' SKIRTS
REDUCED 30%

18 Mo. - Only 1
2T-6 Only
6- 1 only
JT-J only
6X-1 only
10-1 only
4T- 3 only

LADIES' SLACKS
REDUCED ·30%

FF

SLEEPWEAR

LADIES' BLOUSES
REDUCED 20%

%OFF

Minimus ® -9 by Realistic

.

Clarinelte® -97 by Realistic

12 MO. - 8 BOYS

•

%PRICE .

Middlep ort. 0 .

CAR COATS
REDUCED 20% TO 30% .

12 MO • 14 GIRLS

GIRLS'

l
••
•
•

VIUAGE PHARMACY

Ladies -

.CARDIGAN SWEATERS

BOYS'

''j

And HEW Prescriptions.

PANT SUITS
REDUCED 30%

BOYS AND GIRLS'

·'•

24

Compensation, UMW, VA ·

Open 9-5 M on., Tue s .• Sal.
Frida v night t i! 8 p . tn .

%.OFF . . .

18.

* 10% Senior Citizen
Discount on all
. Prescriptions

Jmo.-14
Includes Sweaters
and Jeans ·

12,

There's Much
Here For You

rn t.•t· lm ~

SPORJSWEAR

'
•'

lllrlillll-i.

f\h ~

:md

f%· hingt' r ·s lw nllwr . B .\ Tf•fl
Jl\·se ll . ;uul Mrs. Oli\·1• H l:\'1' 1' ~
I ; mc ·astt·t·. w ho al :•; n v is.il l•ii
o! lwr rt·l;11ives h~ · t't' .

ALL

CUT

.'

mg Slw wtll soc111 l)f'l-' 111 ht·r
pr :wt ir ·:tl nu r srn g tr;lining &lt;.tl
~11 Cill'!lll'i Ho!; pJl ;tl ..m f'ol-

l 1nP't •roy , i(ouh.' :t M r . :!!Il l
:\·l rs. P;ml P.khim~ •T . ('l;n d:t

' 1

by Realistic®

P: 11 Jia . a sopllmnnn· a1
C;trut:ll [Jni\'l'I"Sl\ .v. n •t.1 m H'd

F tdnngt·t·. Ht•t ·k ~ ot nd \ 1;t:o.. . t)H ·n · 'I'IH· ~ day ni gltl 1P
..l r . Scull f:i c hirtgt'l' , f)PrtiSt' n •. . IJIIH ' hl'l' studit'." 111 nur~ flt ll ,1/ld dau g htt ·l , lt •tullf•·r ·r- .
:111d Hwhard Mont , ;d l !If

for the Kids·

building materials

KNIT TOPS

PRICES EFFECTIVE NOWI

REDUCED 20%
Rack Ladies

Reg_ 59 90 Pr.
O!ig. 1979 Catalog

.'

Price 229"'

SAVE
530

·BUILDING OR REMODELING?
SEE US FIRST il:ND COMPARE OUR
. PRICES .· QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.
.
WE
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER., &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION -

923 S- Jrd Ave .
Middleport, 0.
992' 2709 or 992&gt;-6611
Open : 1:00 to S: 00 Mon . thru Fri .
7: oo to 3: oo Saturday

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)

with 8 " woofer ,

FLANNEL SHIRTS
REDUCED 20%

40-914

BE SURE
Most 1rems
also a ve~• labl e at
Dealer s
l ook fo r th1 S
SIIJ n tn '(Our

llad1o
lbaek
o•ALI!A

n t!IQhbo(hOOd . .~_ _ _ _. .

'

OF TANDY CORPOH ATIO N

WEAR

PRI CES MAV V~AY A T

INDIVI DUAL STORES

•

ro STOP IN AND SAVE ON ouR lJz ~

heri·tag~

PRICE

.· .• .

Men's Long Sleeve

,

SPORT
SHIRTS
.
.
REDUCED 20%

MERCHANDISE

house .·

OF SHOES
l'nday Til8 P. M.

.
Middlepor1,

/

.'

·~

DUCCILLE

COME EARLY FORTH E
BEST SELECTIONS

SALE STARTS FRIDAY
U RV STH : ,

o.
'I

I
\, '

8~

OPEN All DAY
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.

WORK PANTS
REDUCED 20%

NOW IN PROGRESS!
·.

3" 1wee1er, 24 ·ft.
cable, phono pl ug .

Rad•o Shack.

}.{ A DIVI S t O~

MEN'S &amp; BOYS' FORMAL

Corduroy

Hm ged ·dust cove r.- 13-1197

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA .

DENIM JEANS ·&amp; JACKETS
REDUCED 30% TO 40%
WE ARE NOW RENTING

Add -on 10 c o m pac t sys t e m a t
lefr for "s urr ound
so und " or use as
eK ten sion s with
compon e nt sy s tems! 22 " wa lnut
vinyl ve neer en-

closures . Ea c h

THINK, OF HI-FI, THINK QF REAI..IST/C, THINK OF RADIO SHACK

.i

REDUCED 20%

cont rols and lighted VU meters. Add voice to music as
you record With Siflg ·Aiong. 3 ·speed cha nger with Auto·
2 2" high s peakers wilh 8" woof er. 3" lweeler. 18' ca bles.

CARDIGAN SWEATERS

CUT
5 10

· Record tapes for home and car! Dual rec o'r ping level

Stop, d iamond/ sapphire stylus. Bu ilt -in FM anten na.

.-

.\1t
itnd
Fir ·lllll l-:1'1' .

t;nm·fl w11h IJwir Ptht• t• l'llf'L...I...:
~,w: ; tdit• l' \ 1r ;tnd Mr ~ \1: t-.:

Daughters of Am;erica met

, I

game.
Butler , 2-9, was paced by 22
points from 7-foot sophomore
center Mike Miller.
Baldwin-Wallace woo its
own holiday tournament ,
beating Oberlin 15.j)lj in the
c h ampio n s hip g ame
Wednesday. Case Western
Reserv e outscored Wil''
berforce· in the consolation
g~me 95"&lt;'J6.
Youngstown State got a
stellar 31.point performance
from freshman Dave Ziegler
to defeat Bellarmine College
in a non -conference game, 81·
74.
'.·
In other games, it was Ashland 101, Thomas More 88;
Berea 104, Wilmington 101;
Central State 72, Rio Grande
66 ; Defiance 86, St. Francis
66; Wittenberg89,Denison 64.

·CASY &amp; CARRY
PRICES -

n t)•. h1 for 1h. · l'ol ·

relatives.

and

S p~&gt;rts Sh.,rts
By The ,\ ssociated Pres•!
CHICAGO
(AP)
F or wnrd Scott May has
returned to the Chicago Bulls
roster for the first time since .
last Or.tober after recovering
from his second serious knee
injw·y in two years.
A spo kesman for the
. N a ti o nal Basketball
Association ,team said'
Tuesday the Bulls made room
on their roster for their No.1
draft plck in 1976 by. placing
forward Steve ·Sheppard on
waivers. .
Sheppard, a secood-round
draft pick'in 1977 from Maryland, has averaged two points
per gHm e in ijis 22
. uppcara1ices this se~n .
Jl&lt;b )' ," ~ former "'Jrl&lt;l1ana
star :~'ll n~r~ t.&gt;d 14-:-Gprfints per
game til:.nng his rookie year
aud 13.1 points• a ga'!le last
season. He played ill two
,.games this sea;ron before
injuring his right kne~. ..
May scored fo111' w.tnts
Toesday night in a loss to the
· Wa'/1ington Bulle!B:

l~· f l · : · w , d ; t ~

ll t!lh tlS ili i'Jllll' l fHI' lht• jj' IJPI I li'
!11 l l• 1lh wnod. Fla . ilflt ·r :t
, l.•dt h1 :tT \ri ~h lwr pill'l 'llis.

Pttl !leroy . ;md
P~ lt • m!irw tlw r·tJI'Ill'r.t&gt; so tht ''
11\) H'I'i ll'l 'il i'I'Jati\'\'f' .
' 'i tll llt' ~·:~u gllt in llw frot;l
T llt·t t d:Higlltl' r . ha ri a ,
clnnrs on t•owh sidt• of !llt' c;tr .
\\'t•nt lo · Fltll'id;l lwfurP
nr.1111 POI.I.Y - r illwa,·s Thi s hulds tht• f'am·:ts qnih• .
Chris_tm;ts ;uul tlwn rl•tun wd
l't'JlHl\'t' hut doi!S from tiw snugly . Whl'll n •mn\'iHg llw
prwkagt• and frN'7.&lt;' lhL·m c•ttn·r sh$tkl' it thorol tghb· &lt;uHI to Pnml•my wit h hl'r pHn·nts.
Th• · -\ ll t•n Eidtin~t· rs pnlf'l' .
st•paratl•ly. Whl•n lht·~· an· pi&lt;ll 't' it on tht• floor nf till'
frozt•n I put tht~m all ·jp tlw h;wk S{'&lt;fl. tlwu wll{'ll yo u ar·
.sanw l'nntaint•r. whid1is hHn- ri vt• ;, ( work or w ii Pn~vt:• r p ul
rly wlll'n ymHll'l'd only ci/Jt' or tht · !'over on ·ctgain . This &lt;'t.'rlwoa i.Htim(•. :
·
tainl~· makt&gt;s fur ~a fl•r dri\'·
Tu ckHn mv windows J hu v ing with a f.,!oo&lt;l l'lt• rtr \'iPw
&lt;I gii llnr. jug n.f wimlshi.Pd soi- Ihrouj!ll tlw wi 111 !shll'ld .
Till' ;nrditi ng conunitt t•c nf
\'l'llt i-!IHI diluh• it with W&lt;th•r
roa! furm•&lt; · l·~ l 'itll l}l.· (Ill ad- TIH'odor us
roun l' il
17.
dutlf mul tullf l. It wnrks a ~ Villl l &lt;t gt• h('l'iH IS\' thP as lws D;tUghlt•rs of Anlt'rk&lt;-~ . ml'l
wt•ll ;-,s window dt'a Jw r atl&lt;l is gh·c· tlnt' good tradion wlwn WPdrll'~dct \' at th\' hnnw 11f
H )11t dwapct'.
. . sprlnklt•d on ic ·t• nr Jwrwr Mrs. Nt•tlil' Hayl's to audit
My Pt•l Peeve is with t hoSJ• SilO\\' , '(\liT~' i-1 t'Oilt&lt;tiJwr t;f tlw I 'OI IIll'il houks .
Pl'llplt• who do not cllw&lt;:~ys ust• asht· .., &lt;HHl a ."mall shovd in
D uring &lt;1 hri(&gt;f bu!' int'S!&gt;i
till' Iurn signalS on thf'ir t•ars. tlu· tnnik of your c;11'. f:\'&lt;'11 if
I would like to know hnw 111 yon !I n not lll't•d tht'm ll a·~· ;-m ·
mH kt• my ster·ling s ilvt•r ni!'P to llavt• to hd p !'i etlnt• gu.\·
jt•wt•lry ni ('e and shiny ;;~gain. in trouillt·. - Pi\lii.INf.
•
wit h Mr. and Mrs. Halph
, Aft l~f a· l'OUplr nr YNII'S it
Pnll y will St' lld ynu flllt:' !If
Keller . Joi nin g them on
c-t lwC~ y~ gets lC~ rnil-iht•d and lu•r
s ignt&gt;d lhiin k-vtlll
Christma$
eve for .dinner
clull lookin~ .- CHARI.OTTF.
fli 'WSJl/J)le i' ('0Upon l']ippt•;.,.., if
were
Mr.
and
Mrs. Roger
DF.AR CHAR LOTIF. - I slw USl'.'i vn m fHv o ritt·
Kelter,
Randy
,
Rodney
and
· liSt' n •gulcu· ~ ilvl' r poli stl. Poinlt•r. Pl't'\;,, ur' Prnhll'm in
Russell
and
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
rim;1• wt•ll with hot water a111l lll'r t'olnmn . Writ&lt;• POI.I.Y'S
J
ack
Spencer.
· llwn buff it to Cl Hhine witl1 H POINTf.RS in &lt;'HI'l' nf· this
Christ)nas dinner guests of
soft doth : Toulhpal-itc will , lll'WS jJa f_)l'J' .
Mrs.
Opa l Casto were Mrc
c-t bo dt&gt;Hil it in a pin('h. and
Mrs.
James Hollon and
POI.I.Y
Mr.
and Mrs. Rick
family,
Df.AR POLI.Y - A larg&lt;•
and
son,
Parkersburg,
Hollon
squm·t• pit•ct• of hc(IVV ('anvas
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bob
Parker and
folded .intn a · lriculgll' and
family,
Marietta,
and Mr.
Placed Hl'I'OS~ Uw front windand
Mrs.
Hoscoe
Holl on,
shield of your cat· H!lows vou
loca l.
~ t o httVl' &lt;:1;1 icc -fret~ win&lt;lm~ in
lhP winter . Phtee .sud1 a

•

--

4
_......____,;_:,~-=------ Kellys leave after local visit

I

Kentucky wasn 't the only
ran ked te am that had
problems in the Southeastern
Con fe1·ence Wednesday night .
Mississippi State. the nation 's
No. 18 club, was beaten 87-65
by Alabama.
In another SEC. op_ener, No.
7 Louisiana State play ed
according to form and
blasted Georgia 97-75. ·
In other action involving
the Top Twenty, No. 3 North
Ca rolina whipped Clemson

'

.

St·erling .
won't shine .

.

By The Associated Press

•

,!,·".,

~
~NERAL

OPEN:
Mclll., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat. 8:30til 5:00
Thursday Tiii2 Noon
Friday Until B P.M.
Herman Grate
Mas&lt;ln · W.Va.
773-5592

aggressiveness.''

Xavier·ends Red
skin·s hex, 72-67

0 ., 'fhursday, Jan . 4; 1979
sehool.will held at IO:ao a.m.
•·
AI the Middleport church, .
Stinday school will btl at 10
a.m. alid (he worship service
at 11 a .m. This Sunday there
will be the installation and ordination of new offi.cers for
the year.
!

victories:

"l thought O'Koren played

. ,-

'
'

·1- The Da ily SentineL Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. J~n . 4, 1979

.;;. ·~

•

�____.,_ rhe Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. Thursday, Jan 4,

b

· Estrogen should be prescribed "only for unportant
md1cations when the benefits
seem to outwe1gh the r1sk," 11
sa1d
The study , conducte~ at
Johns Hopkms UmverSity
a nd published m tllday's
ed1t10n of the New England

U. S. Serviceman News·

..

FORT LEAVENWORTH,
Ka n - Chaplam (Ma] )
Bernard H Lieving Jr , son of
Mr and Mrs. Bernard H.
L1evmg , Seventh Street, New
Haven, W. Va., recently was
presented the Mentor wus
Serv1ce Medal at Fo rt
Leavenworth, Kan.
The Mer1tonous Serv1ce
Medal IS awarded by
authority of the President of
the U S to members of the
Ar med Forces wh o have
distmgmshed themselves by
excepuonal achievement m
the performance of their
offi Cial dulles
Chaplam L1evmg earned
the award durmg hiS last
ass1gnment at the U S. Army
Chaplam Center and School
Fort Wadsworth, N Y.
'
He entered the Army m
1967'llnd IS a student at the U
S Army Command an d
General Staff College at Fort
Leavenworth.
ll1e chaplam rece1ved h1s
commtss10n by d1rect ap- ~
pomtment
He recetved a master of
dmmty degree m 1963 from
Un tted
Theolog i cal
St•m mary, Dayton, Ohto.
HIS wtfe, Dorothy, 1s w1th
htm at Fort Leavenworth
~BRTYFOLEY

WICHITA FALLS, Tex A111nan Marty R. Foley, son
of Mr and Mrs. Gary J . Foley
of S) rae use has graduated at
Sheppard AFB, Tex , from
the U S Air Force techmcal
lz a tnmg course for carpentry

TIMOTHY NEASE
WICHITA FALLS, Tex. A1rman" T•mothy M Nease,
son of Mrs Janet E H1ll of
Fla t woo ds
Rd
36109
Pomeroy, has graduated at
Sheppard AFB, Tex , from
the U S Air Force technical
trainmg course for medtcal
serv1ce spectahsts.
A1rman Nease, now tratned
to asstst m the care and
t reatment of pa tient s, 1s
bemg assigned to Wr1ght·
Patterson AF B, Oh10, for
duty w1th a umt of the A1r
Force Log1st1cs Command
Complellon of' the course
earned the mdtv1dual cred1ts
towards as assoctate 1n a~
pi ted se1ence degree through
the Commumty College of the
Atr Force

The" a1rma n IS a 1978
gr aduate of Southorn Local
H1gh School, Racme
JOE FORD
· FUSSA, Japan - MaJor
Joe P. Ford, son of Mrs Ruth
Ford Q.f New Haven , W Va ,
has recetv ed th e second
award of the Menton ous
Serv1ce Meda l at Yokota AB,
Japan
Maror Ford was ctted for
outstandin g dut y performance as a C-5 Galaxy
Ma inte nance Ma nager at
Scott AFB, Ill H1s superb
management
was
Instrumental m the resolution
of the problems faced m the
cha llenge of supportmg and
complex w~apon system m a
world·w1de operatiOn

spec1ahsts
The major now serves at
Atrman Foley, who was •Yokota as commander of the
tramed to co nstru ct and 31 6t h Or ga n1 za bonal
rna1ntam bU1ld1ngs a nd Mam tenance Squadron, a
asse mble pref ab rica t ed part of the Pac1f1c Atr For·
structures, ts bemg asstgned ces
to Bltburg AB, Ge rmany, for
The maJor, a 1957 graduate
duty with a umt of the U. S
of Wahama High School
Atr Forces In Europe
Mason, W Va , rece1ved ~
Complet wn of the course B S degree m 1961 irom West
earned the tndiVIdual cred1ts V1rg1n1a
In stitute
of
towa rds an as sociate m Technology and was com·
appli ed sc1ence degr ee m1ssed m 1963 upon com·
thro ugh the Cornmumty plet1on of Offtcer Trammg
College of the A1r Force
School at Lockland AFB,
TI1e a mnan IS a 1978 h•gh Tex. He also rece1ved an
school graduate
M.A degree m 1976 fr om
Webster College m St. LouiS.

Receives commendation medal
Second 'Lwutenant Ramlv Hncli)'l.S l w1th tlw cit&gt; I nspal l'
R Rec ker son • of Don C 1 l'SPai l h and de\elopmt&gt;nt
flee kcr of 462 South F1fth !&lt;•am ftom J ul v 31, 1975 to l11·
\\ c . Mnitllepot t and KI and· lv 18 1~78
snn of M1 and Mrs D C
It Becket IS a 1971 Meigs
H1gh S1hool graductt e and
H1·1 kct , 434 South Four1h
Muld lepot t has received th~ l l'CCIH'tl Cl bac he lor of e~ rt s
\11
For &lt;:e l om me nd;:~t r nn degt ee m 1 ~75 from the ~~
IlH.d.tl cit Brooks Air F'ol·u~ Me-t!¥ s Umvers1tv at San Antoru o He ea rnt: d q MRA
Hd st m Texas
r l Beeker &lt;hSiinKUI Shed d e ~ ree m 1 ~77 ,11 Park Col
ht rn "it: If by me1 ttor!ous st•t· h•ge, Kansas Ctty,MJs."ioUfl
t. 11 t' Hs H eornputer sy st~rn s nnd IS cu rrently attt.&gt; ndmg ,~
( ompnt t• r systems des1gn

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Social II
1 Calendar 1

I
I

FRIDAY
OPEN HOUSE at H&amp;R
Block Fnday from 9 to 6
Heft eshments will be served
and dno r pnzes awarded
I ~ 1 bbou cuttmg ceremomes
" til be held at 4 p m '
Hf; ACT meetmg Fnday 7
P m
at Se mor Ctt tzens

Upon &lt;.mnpldwn of h1s
! 1 d ll llllJ.! he w11l JOin the compuh•r svstcms dl's1g11 te\rn e~t
I lt •.Jdq u,u h•r s i\ 11 F'ot&lt;.&lt;.
! !lJ..: H;\1{ ss \.omtn r~ IHI at
WJJg!Jt PC~ tl el Sllll t\ Jr For 1 &lt;.'
Rrts&lt;.· dt 0d\ t on for tlw m~ xt

~ .

- - 1--.

~
i

laS

f1lHI V('rll

S

4-11 CLUB MET

.

! J&gt;~

Genera~on ~ap

LOSING HAIR?

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~----~--~
1 Social 1

: Calendar 1

.

"'II

'

,.

ENJOY ERESH FROM .
THE FARM FAVORITES~
R~GHT F~bM
THE FARM. .
'.
'

Bring yot,Jr family to the Bob
Evans Farms: sausage Shor;J.' Here
S'?u 'll fmd homey atmosphere, warm
fnendly smiles and a·ll the wholesome goodness and hearty eating
you 'll need to get you through the
ch1ll of wint~_r. Come see us soon
and often . ,~

MAY BE YOUR
•BRAKES
•SHOCKS
•ALTERNATORS
•TUNE-UPS

•MUFFLERS
•WATER PUMPS
•FUEL PUMPS

EXPERTI.,Y INSTALLED BY
DENVER. KAPPLE
CHECK OUR
COUNTER I

S®

MOORE'S

.

SAUSAGE
SHOP
Route 35 · ~10 Grar.1de Oh1o

W. 2nd or W. MAIN

•

POMEROY, 0.

992-2848

·~

•

,

'

•
~~

..' .
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...'

~~....,.-~.:_::::-:____j

By Cectly Browpr11oDe
Assodaled Press Food Edltqr
COME; FOR DESSERT!
Chocolale Angel ,Loaf
Coffee
Chocolale Angel Loaf
In thls fonn, It's convenient
to serve.
'h cup sifted cake flour
:y, cup sugar
2 tablespoons cocoa
6 large egg whttes ('14 cup)
3A teaspoon cream of tartar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Sift together the flour , I'•
cup of t he sugar and the
cocoa. Beat egg whites,
cream of tartar and vanilla
until foamy; gradu~Uy beat
m the rematning sugar and
continue to beat, 1f necessary,
until stiff peaks form
Gradually Sift in the flour
mtxture, foldmg 11 m as you
' BRUNCH FARE
do so
Grapefruit Halves
Turn mto an imgreased 9
Bacon
Sesame
Eggs
by 5 by a:mcli 1oaf pan, cut
English
Muffms
Coffee
through batter With a spatula
SESAME EGGS
to remove a1r bubbles. Bake
Scrambled
eggs are varied
un a preheated 350-degree
a
dellciolll
way.
in
oven until top springs back
~ large eggs
when lightly touched - 30 to
3li minutes Invert and hang 'h cup commercial sour
pan to cool completely. cream
• Loosen edges and' ease from 'h teaspoon salt
pan. Slice and serve with ¥o teaspoon pepper
chocolate sauce and whipped 2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons sesame seed,
cream or ice cream.
toasted
Beat together the eggs,
EVENING REFRESHER
sour cream, salt and pepper
Chill Cheese
just until blended. In a l~mch
Tortilla Chips
skillet heat the butter; add
Beverage
the egg mixture and cook
••CHIU CHEESE
over low heat, stirrtng~e
I patterned this convenient egg mixture sets; while -Sbll
cold offering after the creamy, stir m the sesame
MeXIcan specialty, Chili con seed and cook unttl as set as
Queso, which IS always you like Makes 3 or 4 ser·
served hot.
vings.
B-ounce package cream
cheese, at room temperature
'h teaspoon seasoned salt
SUPER FARE
I'• cup mayonnaiSe
Vegetable
Platter
B-ounce can Italian peeled
Four-Flour
Bread
plum tomatoes
Cheese
4-ounce can chopped green Frmt
FOUR-FOUR BREAD
chilies, dramed and liquid
The special flours called for
pressed out
3 tablespoons mmced sweet are available in health-food
stores and some super·
(Sparush) omon
markets.
Tortilla chips
Beat the cheese with the 2'1• to 2~ cups all-purpose.
.
seasoned salt until fluffy; white flour
gradually beat m the I 'h cups fine rye flour
mayonnaise. Drain tomatoes 1 cup gluten flour
m a stramer; with a spoon 1 cup rice flour
press out liquid and break up 2 teaspoons salt
the tomatoes - there should I package dry yeast
be 1-3rd cup; stir into the I 'h cups milk
cheese mixture with the ' 'h cup water
chtlies and onion. Cover 'I• cup honey
tightly and chlll overnight to I'• cup butter
Stir together 2 cups of the
let sttf£en and flavors blend.
Serve with the tortilla chips whlte floW' with the rye,
as a spread or dip Makes gluten and r~ce flours. In the
large bowl of an electric
about 1'h cups.
miller, stir together 2 cups of
thill
flour mixtW'e with the
COMPANY LUNCH
salt
and yeast. Heat milk,
Clam Chowder
water,
honey and butter until
Salad Bowl
Bread Basket
very
warm (about 120
New Pumpkin Pie
degrees) - butter doesn't
Beverage
have to melt. Gradually stir
NEW PUMPKIN PIE
It has full pumpkin, not the mtlk mixture Into the
flour mixture; with mixer at
• cheesecake, flavor,
mediwn
speed, beat £or 2
8 ounce package cream
minutes.
Add ~ cup of the
cheese, at room temperature
mixture;
at high speed,
flour
'h cup firmly packed light
beat
for
2
minutes.
stir in the
brown sugar
remalnlnK
flour
mixtW'e
plus
2 large eggs
enough
additional
white
flour
2-3rds cup canned solid-pack
to make a stiff dough. Knead
pwnpkm
:Y, teaspoon pumpkin pie until 11mooth and elastic about 10 minutes. Place In a
sp1ce
'--8-inch unbaked homemade greased bowl; cover tightly
wUh saran; let rise In a wann
graham cracker curst
Beat together the cream '(80 degrM~) dralt.m, place
cheese and brown sugar; until doubled - about 1 hour.
beat m the eggs, then the Punch down dough, Divide in
pumpkin and spice until half and lhape Into 2 loaves.
blended. Turn Into the Place in two greased 9 by 5 by
graham cracker crust B4ke 3-mch loaf pans and let rise as
m a preheated 350-degree before wttl doubled - about
oven for 35 minutes (If I hour. Bake in a preheated
crwnbs around edge get too 350-degree oven, on rack
brown, carefully brush them below center, for 30 mlnu•cs.
Tum out and cool .
oif.) Cool and chill.

P!l tlt'&lt;.' Chen It•" of F.ngland
nnl \.' httcl to t•mnmt•nt lhttt 11
(h•prt'HSl'ci hnn tn see
nt.• wspHper~ dwt•lhng nn the
llHd lll' WS

\

d e p r e s s ·i o n
a nd
And vo1la 1 Wht•n Cha1!es
schizophrenia. But Comings
t•cll'brated
his ~oth bn1lu1Hy
said hla findings are "the first
ret•t•nlly
,
tht•
I ; mrlon Sundav
biochemical evidence of the
Tum•s
gClvt•
h1m
fl frunt page
mutant protein that's
C'(ll unul eontarmnf,.! notlung
Involved in )his psychosis "
He aa1d the protein that sig- but the week's ~!liH I news
Few of us havt• that km d of
nals the gene 's presence was
d
oul
We must thmk of other
Identified in brain tissue.
wHys
to stru~gle' a ga mst
taken from the bodleit of
dt.'lH
csstnn
My new hotlme
accident or diseaae victims.
"F
tghttng
O&lt;•pt·esston
," t•an
It has been found nowhere
help
guule
you
through
thost•
else In the body. This meaDS
had
t11nes
Order
yom·
t•op&gt;
Ute gene can currently be
by
sendmg
50
t•t•nts
pl
us f.
detected only m cadavers,
'el'f-a
tl
dres.ed,
sta
mped
Comings said.
The Identification of the t.-onvelupc lu me m lare of this
protein, he said, enables newopapl'r. P 0 Rox 475
researchers
to
begm Radto C1tv .Slatt Pn, N1•w
unraveling 1ts role a nd Ymk, NY UlO ID
In th1s «'X&lt;.'t'rpl fmrn c-t
perhaps, Comung11 said, "the
l
rl
s ls-mt er vt'ntwn phum•
cause of depression ."
call.
&lt;1 enunselnr helps a
Knowledge of the cause of de·
y
oung
W( JJnHn und l'r stt-~ nd thr
pression, he satd, could then
r oi P anger 1 plays m her
lead to more effective treat(Personal lnments than Ute drugs now tlt•pres~ um
fm·matwn
m
alt
hut -lme exused.
&lt;
'l't
pts
has
been
t•hanged to
The gene was ident1£ted iniproted
the
c·aller'
t'onfulen·
tially in tests on brain
tl"ltty
)
samples from 152 individuals
.JUDY I am a ~ood nurse which showed 31 percent
really
l am. And I usually
carried the gene. The brain
love
my
Job Rut lately 1t has
tissue of 28 persons who had
i)('l'll
mc-tkJng
me ver y
committed smclde or were
rlt•pressetl
Maybt•
tl's hke
diagnosed as depressives or
t•vt•ryont•
sa
ys,
'You
'll lrkr
aleoholics were then tested,
wm
kmg
for a whtle and tht.•n
he said, and mlH'e than 64
tht• system w11l wear ymi"
percent carried the gene.
dnwn '
Teats on 40 multiple
m UNSELOR · How long
sclerosis VIctims showed 21 hHVt'
you been worktn !:! as a
115 percent - had the gene.
n ur~e?
Comings S81d the gene might
JUDY I graduated s1x
Increase susceptibility to
months agu and tins IS m v
multiple sclerosis, lH' might
operate With another gene. fu st Job I have been trymg " '
But he sa1d 11 Is also possible hctnl to succeed Whv Isn't tt
·
Ute gene haa little or nothing wor krng out "
COUNSELOR
What
do
to do with multiple sclerosis.
_youthmk has gone wrung?

Baked chtcken
Broccoli Rice
Condiment Tray
Garlic Bread
Beverage
Fruit Compote
BROCCOU RICE
Easy way to couple a
vegetable and a gram.
1 table11poon butter
1 mediwn onion, minced
'h teaspoon dry mustard
8-ounce jar cheddar process
cheese spread, at room
temperature
lO 'I•·ounce can condensed
cream of mushroom soup,
undiluted
10-ounce package froz en
chopped broccoli, cooked and
drained
3 cups cooked rice
3-ounce can French· fned
onion rings
In a med1wn saucepan tn

t•d angry at the pattt•nt ~ who
Jill! vou 111 the ' pothght hv t &lt;'·
quest mg you tts Uwu· mn Sl'
And you u•r tcunly smmtll'{l
a n~r~· when you rntunall•d
you would hrtve t() low~:.•r ymrr

r--.
.
---·
1 Pomeroy

I Personal Notes

fi nd Mrs

Juanttct

Rrt cillel

spent the hultda] S 111 St Pam
wrth Mt and Mrs Gt:orgt•
nal le~s and fam 1lv Mtdldt'l
mu l Mch ~s&lt;J at h;nnl' c~ml
~h'V&lt;.' , a semm ' at W1tte;1 berg·
Umve1s1lv They (1bo v 1 ~1ted
M1 oml Mr s Bt ll Dall ct~ \\ ho

R1ggs and famtly On Wed
nesday , another co ustn , Mrs
Blanche Jones, Mason
VISited at the R1ggs home
Mr and Mrs Clem Cooper
of Sy racuse, Ohto are sta' mg
at the home of theu daugi1ter

·THIS YEAR
GET INTO A
NEW HOME!

.

Montreal was put under
martial law tn 1637, although
Louis Joseph Papineau,
leader of a rebellion, had
already fled to the United
States

of one near yuu, conti:ld your

Geographer
George
Mercator died m 1594.

loca l mental health assncla·
twn or ~ menta l heHlth Information servtce

I

•

ALL FROM REGULAR STOCK
Values to $25.00

Vogue

TO

'7"

Jolene

'12"

Please present
your medical

LARGE GROUP
Women's &amp; Children's

' 5 o o P r.

SHOES
Ladies

PURSES .
1/z PRICE
-

Pomeroy, Ohio

honor all U. M. W.
Medical
Cards.
L"

NOW IN PROGRESS

Naturalizers

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy
Is Proud to Announce
that they

DURING OUR

Women's
Auditions

.

tlm-

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

~

1 Group

Sl'ott cmd .Jod} Waver l\ Mr
.mtl Mrs Dov td Pll•t&lt; " fM ll

Mr a11d Mrs Melvm Cu ci t!
and ch1ldr~n . Mnn anne i:lnd
stH n&lt;la rd !If carr 1f vnu Mark, W1&lt;.: hata , Kam;i:ls, spent
wantr•d to he at•ceptl'tl. by Chn~mas week here \\ tlh
and son-m·law, Mr a nd M1 s
your t't1-wnrke1s
lhetr
ents, Mr &lt;~ nd Mrs
ll' Si dt' tn St Rail S dnd ell e
Erme Compson, l't hlle Mr
.JUDY Yes, that's light
C E
keslee and Mrs a"octated 1\lth Paul ('J,n k Cooper r ecuperate s from
C:OUNSEI .OR · When vnu Mary Clrde On Chn stmas Rea !tty
s urger}
are f1ght11ig depresstun, 1t Eve they were guests of Mrs
helps tf you ask yourself C1rl'ie 's Sister and brother·m·
whethet you are angry Pen· law, Mr and Mrs Ja mes But ple uftenfeeldepresset! when th er and fam il y, on
th,•y are angry but can't or Chltstmas Day they were
wnn 't express thost• negattv e wtth the Cmle famtl y, and on
feelings
Chltstma' mght " tth the
JUDY · Maybe because It IS Rlakes!ees They left Salur-.
safer to be angry at yourself ' dav to return to Kansas
Mr and Mrs Kenneth
mUNSF.!.OR · Safer'
.JUDY Well vou know Me!.a ughhn spent Chnstmas
Jll'ttple won't g~t angry back m Rittma n wtth their
1! they don't even know you ' daul(hte• ami son·tn-la\\ , Mr.
are ma tl Cnme to thmk of 11 I antl Mrs Wll!,am Howells
am usuallv mad at someo~ and ch1ldren, Bobby Scott
when I 1.;1 depressed Remg ant! Kacey, and MISs Oebbte
angry Is a better feeling than McLaughlin For New Year's
bemg depressed.
the Howell famtly and Mr
The counselor helpj!tl J udy and Mrs Alan McLaughlin of
WE DO IT ALL. BASEMENTS, CRAWL
see that anger IS often an 1m- Fostoria were here and un
SPACE : ETC ... VA LOANS AVA'I LAB LE
port"nt &lt;'mnponent of depres· New Yea r's Day the family
swn Mmely bemg able. to talk e d
wtth
Kev tn
tdenttfy whn IS makmg you Mc!.a ug~lt n from So uth
mad will enable you to for· Carolina, and Mr and Mrs
mulate a plan of ad ton tha t Duane McLaughlin and .!a son
992 7034
1100 E. Main
Pom e roy, 0
may "l!ev1ate the depresswn of Idaho Falls, Idah o
Dr Blaker cannot ta ke
Sgt antl MrS. Ray L
telephone calls from her
r eaders However . there a t c
hundreds of cn sts mterven·
!ton phone hnes m the Untied
States For the phone nwnber

,EVERYBODY UVB HERE

,

M1 o~r1d Vl r ~ CCi l ol F
Pl l'nP t•nteJti:AJ/lcd with tlw

"I

the hot butter gently cook the
onion until wilted; st1r m the
mustard, then the cheese
spl'ead. Gradually stir un the
soqp. Add the broccoli and
rice and st1r gently but welL
Turn into a !&gt;Uttered, shaDow
2-quart bakmg dish. Sprinkle
with the onion rings. Bake m
a preheated 351Hiegree oven
until hot through -about 20
minutes Makes 6 servmgs.

DINNER FARE

Pierces entertain

tJ dtilt rnnal famrl v Chr Jstlnd." .ttlll Joilnn\ ' Mtl t h(']!
dl!mt•r nt th"ll hnnw 111 S(th•m Mct nsfJeld Mr cHid MIS
nt I l'l't't•ntJv lit llll' hmnt nr rl'n t&lt;.•J
Ho ulllt' Di:lvlsun, l.ctiH d S ll'l
ll!DV I "nrk nn .t lll.llt·t ·
Mt
.Jtn;mv
r,,.)dll
l'i
l
Mr a nd Mrs l ha t le\ .Jones
AtterHimg
\\crl'
Mr
ct
lld
fi ll\ WHid ( tn:lkt• fl lH'IIIUl·
linus pfrort tu !.:IV•• mv p.t- Mt•miX"rs wt 1·l· st.'HH•tl .tt .1 Ml s H(!IJt&gt;rt Pte! ( e rA~fl ll d .111&lt;.1 doughtc J. Mandv, M1
lll'nt!'i gund ('H I t• Am i ti lt'' ,n &lt;.' · long t"hlt• dt•&lt;matl'cl fm lh&lt; • ~m el Jeff Grovt•port \1r and ~mtl Mrs Knnmv Plene ami
JmlrdCi\ St' ci SUil
o.;on. I""' I etnk !lll ,. Dl'llrt:t Prt'IL'l'
Mr s C1a1g Prert c, C1&gt;l11 tn
Vl' l ' .tpplt'l'tatl vt• In fH&lt; t
fn-J{os h•sscs weTP Mr s
hu s
Ch.trlt•s Hu g h&lt;.· " .111d son .f~m HH kt'\
~o nw nf lht•m ell&lt;.' t1m
&lt;~ nd
Bc~1 bd ld
J.! l .th•ful Thl'Y only w_rml to lw .lames Stout C-tJH! Mt " John Grovepn1t Ml and M1s Pl t' t ll
ass1grwtl tu me ami f'Oinfllcllll Rl &lt;'l' Cet ml\ ' etnt•s and hand- Wrlham Jnhr-~son and ~.~on r nrnb&lt;.•Jt S,dem CeniL'I Mr
Y. ht•n lht•y gt•t Hn ntlw r nm st• mHdt• ornments Wt'J t• at eaeh Phi llip, Drm ny R d( 1 .Johnson i:llld M1 s Carol R Pll' t ll' Sr
plciU' Mrs R 1n~ had grace J tll W•tiJl•l .t ll o! C.u roll M1
[ . d ii J!.SV II\t •
Tin ~ nf c'11111'!-it', npst•t s 1ht•
The
home
was
t!XtensJvcly
.tnd
M1
s
Chm
les
N&lt;·wton
ntlwr II LII'St•s I dnn 't w:mt
tll't nrated for Christma s and
tl••Jn tolM• m~g~·y with tn&lt;'
Christmas guests
ex &lt;' han ge d
COUNSE LOR You ean t mt•mh t• t s
ph•rtSI' ynm· fl'llow mn·sps and homemade g1ft tlems fullowFILMS SET
En.}J J\ rn g Ch i lstmlls ncn ell
th1• patients at tht• sam&lt;• lnJ.: a contest on the
Th1et' ftl ms ,
St&gt;t ll llct
tilt' ilurnt• o( Mr and Mt s
det:oratrve
wrapplngs
Mr~
tnm•' Is that n ght"
Be~.:om es
an
1\l 1 ohc1t
('J
tff1111 l Might Vmton R- D
W&lt;•sley
Arba
ugh
won
ftrst
.JUDY Yt•s And I r &lt;'fn sl'!n
"Pl~a se Look
Af1 Pr On" \H' t l Mt (I!H\ Mt s Sun on
lind
Mrs
At
ba
ugh,
second,
m
lo\\ll' J my standard nf ( cue
Rea r ,mtl The r. tft wtll l&gt;&lt;' ~J(l llllson Sht~ I on and Andt Clt'
Jll't
I'll be liked hv nl\ the contest
shown at the Mttldi&lt;'Jltll'l Pom e1m Mr afut M1 s
M" Juhn RICe umducted I 11Jra}·y begt nmng at 2 p m
WOi kt'J I.: "fht W)ll llt• -.Jtlli1 tl0n
the
busme.ss m&lt;.•elrng wtlh The program ts open to Oonald Yu~t and Donm
makt•s mt• " H dcpi'&lt;.'SSNI
and Ml s
members telli ng how they kmd ergar tcn tht ough "' xtll Rutland ~I
roUNSE J.OR Not angt,y'
Ang~·lu
\1~.:Dctnwl
l\1!{ hi:!tl
.JUDY Angl'v' I haven't dtsplay thetr Chnstmas cards gr iiliers
,1nd
Ra1HI)
Clrfton
W
Vr1
bt•l'il fet•hng a~gry r h c~vP m responst· tn roiJ ca ll Mrs
On Monday at till' Mtd· Ml dllll :vii S C l &lt;:H l'/H(' Might
lwt•n ft•Phng ttrt•d anrl sad In Fl oyd ~t o ut •·ead the dlc port ilbJitf\ the!(' \\I ll lw
' Al a Jnl et1ng of t he Fl tlnd" of ~md Dd\ 111 V mton \ 11 t~m l
fad I was so tirt•d that I t0&lt;1k e hrtstmas story,
Mr :.: I(' t 1\ Mctht•nc' dll rl
Chnstmas
the
Heut1
Goes
two SICk da) ' last we&lt;'k )11~1
the J Illld l \ Ht 7 ~Op m
Jcr etn&lt;. \ l·,1ungton i\.11 .J:Jd
Home
Home"
and
a
poem.
'I
to rt'l'IIP&lt;'I ate. That dtdn 't
Mr s Hll k M e tlHt~J~\ ;md
tsh
I
Could
Have
Been
W
l'Vt'nlwlp.
Rr &lt;.kll V1nt or1 On], JnLtnbcJ
m UNSF:I.OR Rest won 'I There'" •
of
tile frmul v ab~~·nt n~t ~
Pnzes were g1ven the wm- Yonke! cmd cluldt l'n J,trlclh
lwlp that kmd of fatl gn&lt;'
R
u!Jl
l t F. Johno.;on slat wn u l
nei of ga mes cumluded by cuul Robin uf C"":i:l mp Pokt•
.JUDY What do you mea 11 '
\\
Jth
tht u s AI Ill\ lfl
m UNSEI.OR When that M.s Jame' Stout Th&lt;• door J.a VIS!lt•d OV ~I tlH' lJoJ r dc~\S
i1.:1\
\
d
II
pnze was -.won by Mrs Carl w1 t h tht:•Jr part'tn s Mr .md
til t~! feelmg " caused bv
dt•prt•s!non, only a!'t iv1ty w1il Rarnhtll and the travelmg Mrs Robert Yunk er Roull' ~
make tt go "way Aetlvlty will pme by Mrs Maude r.ray Pomct (" .md M1 .l!lrl Mr ;-;
also help you get rHI of lht• Tht•rt• Wi ll be no meetmg in Rt dtll e) Pooler ('lll'SI II
Mason Personals
Jan u.~ r y
Thcv t:tl stl VISJ tt.•d Sgt
ll·nsr on causetl by an ~er
Mr and Mr s 11 vbett
Yo nk~1 ' s sJ~t e J
Rcr nH t
.mnv Why do You keep
Nesb1t, Pensuken, N J spent
R1 urnfte1d Alban y
brmg1ng up anf.(er'&gt;
the holtda)'S &gt;~Sttm g M1s
Mr and Mrs Btl! Mat! ," k Nesbit 's cousin, Mrs Nr1nna
mUNSEI.OR Ynu S\IUIIli ·

Coptng w1th

!

•

Ttii'I' I; HS I'I.AJ!'lS-1111·
llnst• r.~u t.'(lll r.luiJ member "

«'llJ o~ t d c-t lwlula~ pnthwk

•

"

Rose Garden I
Club met

Karen Blaker Ph.D.
bod ftm es

telephone Inte r view
Wednesday.
Psychotic depression Is a
debilitating
Illne s s
characterized by extreme
withdrawal and Inactivity.
Comings said his discovery
hU tmpllcationa for lm·
proved underotanding and
treatment of such depreulon.
He said the gene's relaUon·
ship is less clear to multiple
sclerosil, a disease of the
nervous system, and ··to
chronic alcoholism The gene
is more common among
VIctims of the affllctioM than
m the rest of the population,
he sa1d, but ''we really don't
understand what the situation
Is
We're just reporting
what we fo1111d."
Comungs is based at the
City of Hope National
Medical Center in Duarte,
Calif. His findmgll were being
published this week in the
Br1hsh sctentlfie.- journal
NatW'e.
He sa1d the gene, which he
calls Pc 1 Duarte, seems to he
present m about one-third of
the population And alt)lough
its presence Increases the
likelihood of psychotic
depression, the gene Is not the
sole cause of the disease••
Commgs said
"There is an increased susceptibility,
but
environmental factors are
involved, he said. "A person
can have this gene and be
perfectly healthy, or he
cannot have the gene and de·
velop the disease."
Scientists have generally
been convinced of genetic 1!1·
fluence on psychoses such as

•..

'

-

lP~ LI

birthday

'

CHOICES .

I
I

\;1.•

--

it.

r _.. _. ._. . --··-·--.._.._..

st lluol dl Kt.•csler All Fu11.:e
Re1 sc Ill R1lmu M1ss

The Hil!btllles 4-H Club •
held a Chrtstmas Party at the
home of Carla and Becky R1fe
on Saturday evening, Dec 23
Lent cr ,\II member s to brmg A suppe r consiSting of
Kentucky Fned Ch1cken
lfJ 1B mnnttot mg repurts
baked beans, french !ms'
St\TUHDA Y
roll
s, relt sh pl ate, cak e:
IV! S l'F:HN BOOT CB Club
cookies,
candy, putatu chtps,
Ht.h llrf s~turday 7 p m al
popcorn,
teed tea, and Koul·
• IIJ L hnll&lt;..:(' on Oak Grove
Atd
"
as
ser
vetl at 6 :!() p m
K'r an '~rd!twr perrmtt mg,
Games of bmgo, scrabble
'1 V game and water games
were played
Attending were Carl" and
Becky Rtfe, Ma ry and Dean
F RIED CHICKEN
Culwell, Opal, Patty and Btlly
HAM DINNER
Modern Woodmen of Dyer, 4·H members Mrs
Amerrca , Ca mp 10900, Alfred, Max me Dyer , 4- H advtsor
w11! stage ~ fr iCd chtcken· Mr and Mrs Ben Rtfe and
ha m dtnner on'Saturday, Jan J an, guest&lt; .
The eventng Was enJoyed
13, to ra1se funds for t he
purchase of a " Jaws of life" , by all.
rescue eqmpment , for t he
Coolville Vo lunteer F 1re
Depa r\ment
Amencan for ces under
Cost of the eqmpment IS Richard Montgomery and
$5 ,800 nnd area rcs1dents are Benedtct Arnold bega n a
being ,ISkcd tn turn out m siege of Quebec City m 1775
support uf the fund-ra iSing !lu rtn g t he
Amc t tca n .
dmner whtch ts to be held Revolutionary War The
from 4 30 to 8·30 p m at the s1ege was unsuccessful.
Coolvtlle Senwr C1t1zens Hall,
Mam St , Coolville Price of
th~ cttnner will be $3 50 for
The inventor or the cotton
adults and Sl 75 for children gm, Eli Whitney , was born tn
under 12
1765

,

~sr r OJ~e n ~ upp lements dW'Ulg

'"'"' ch methods were taken
tnto c·o ns16eratton They
the change of hie
The study examtned 1,339 mam tamed that uteriht&gt;
women m menopause and cancer IS more ltkely to be
At IHJ Stlll.t" I"'H'&lt; t ' In Mt~l­
,J .th,l dill ('Jl tll l, d
TI H ...1(' '"' ~' Hit kt•\. :-,pi!Pt " ,rud
concluded that those who discovered m women who
l
hPw
S w~-tl tou t
Ht•r
ht
P
f111
s!',
itw
Wl
"
l'lllt.'ll
take estrogen p11Is are s1x take estro~e n because th~y I '1 1st ('Ju l'.;tm.t " \ll o1til II ~'
Tht•
( lusmg pr~yc r " &lt;Is
(
',
lltt&gt;lds
Wl'H'
llghtt•d
bv
\ ' o1 ' ) J t' "'t niPd ,!1 ttu \n1Hi ll'
times more likely than non- are under a doctor's care
lrl
vPn
by
J\nmt Rnst• FollowI
11
1.1
Curtt
s
ctnd
Doll
rlti
Authors of the Johns I\ l\rtp1 rst r'hllf ( ll r'hll slrn.t s
use rs to have cancer or the
Ing
tht•
st
1rnnn hy thL• Rt•v
M,unlt'l
Tl
~t•
s
o
ngs
.
Meu
\
s
Hopk tns study sa1d their IJI Pj' l clJJ1
uterme llrung.
P..n
l
Shuh•r,
tr ~Hft.; ~\'t'rP
J
1t1Jto
H(l\
f'
h1
!d
tlll
rl
Tht•
~htlll f'l u t r" w.-t " tlw n.11
For those who use the survey took mt:o account thiS
D1ummc•t
RO\
Wt'l «' sung hv dtstllhlltl'd to thl' du ldren
l
oil
PI
,II
HI
l.
tklrW
I
O(('
s
Wl'l
l
'
med1cme for more than five and other ob]ectwns, but
The pr ogt ;.un \\ &lt;Js pr t'I';CIIted
·years, the riSk ts 15 times their resea rch still showed a n niHn MruuJ\'1 dS M.ll \ ,fciStl/1 l"l1111tt ~-t M clllUCl wrl h Hob1i1
Sham a s .Tnspph · . Ru k v M.trnwl .1s tht• drmnm t'T 11 11dt&gt;t llll' du et tron of .Tuvc&lt;.'
nsk or cancer
greater
.
1
Dr Paul Stolley, who di- St&gt;llt •t. llw 11111 kcl flt' l Ruslt·t T ht't (' Wd S il I t Cidl!l g, :vT ri i11WI \\ Jth P&lt;tlh Sharn ,
A series of earher reports,
f'hrl
stmds
1s
h•s
w·;'
R111.11 - pl(UU S{
most ~~ them also published rected the new study, sa1d nst t\.ml v fio:.;t .md Ht 1 h11•
dctv'
:
ll\
Dnm
ld
Mcunrd
dml
m the New England Journal, 1 women can still take estrogen !l ust', tlw sh(•plwHis t\. nrtc1
~
lht.
'
chJich
l'll
sang
·
AwCly
rn c1
found that estrogen increased durmg menopause wiiTiout Hust&gt;, I lll&lt;lft r mt 1s. Oontta
MriiiJ.!"C.'
I
"Cl
lld
Silent
Ntght
"
the riSk of cancer loW' to facing a n unreasonable Mc-t mrl'l , tht• li ngt•ls t\.ndv
Reet i Htton s
\\t' l t'
Your 'Extra Touch
II
etght times All of them wer e threat of cancer .
Flor1Sl S1nce 1957
·
Wt•lt
omt•
hv
Ri
c
kt•v
" I thtnk 1t co uld be
based on smaller nwnbers of
SI'Jicr~ Clod St•rlt Jt'sus' IJV
women than the latest study . discussed with the woman IJ
J. p.;on Shc-t 111
Thi.' rtu1 ~t
However, last November, whether or not she wants to l.
rtnhl
"
hv
()mula
Ma nuel r
the journal ea rned another run the nsk," stolley, who IS
Wash"
bV
J
,mda
C:urt1
s Whv
ll
uiH'rt
Wrlham
1
.t•slt
v
study by Yale doctors that • now at the UmverSity of
Do
I
Smil&lt;.•'J''
by
Herhw
Ruse·.
Kt•.tlon
n
•]pJn
ah'
&lt;
l
hJs
St't'ond
concluded th e suspected Pennsylvama, sa1d in an
Tlw
Rl'sl
Gift
!Jy
Andy
FLOR 1ST
I
cance r lin k could be mterv1ew "The data suggest lml hda\ ll'f'entl v a t t ht• hnme
Rose
Long
Ago'
hv
/\nn.1 I
discQ,untcd •f erroneous re- that the short-tenn use of a nf hrs p rt l t- nts, M1 mHl Mrs
P H. 992·2644
I
RoS&lt;' If I Had Rt•cn Tile1c"
year or SIX months 1s not a
Kt·mwt h Huffman
A Raggt·d~· Andy t'Hk i! Hnd hy Shem Curt" : 'The St,u s"
E Ma1 n. Pom eroy
\
;·:,:::::::,:,:,:,::::&lt;::::::•:::::•·:::·:::: ·:::::::::::•::::::::: :&gt;::::::::-::::::::::: :,:::,:;:: :: :::::::::::::::::,:::·:,::::::::::::::::::::::.,,:,·· great riSk The btg riSk comes
G1 10d J
Your FT D F lonsl
j
dlt lwr
rl'frt•slum.•nt s \H'I e hy Rusll•J Ro~c
at five years or more.''
Stolley sa1d hot flashes are s t'IVI'cl to Ius gl c-t ndmotlwr N1ght" bv Robl/l Manuel dml l_....-.-...-.~-·..,..._..-.
the only symptom of men- Rt ss Ht'!Hir lt'ks, In:-; auntS:
opau se that estrogen IS M1 s Tt'l t l Sm1t h . Tmfl Henproven to be e£Eecllve dr H ks ctnd Marv Amw HOffagainst He sa1d doctors 111illl , Ius und t', Ar1 Tublll ,
should not prescrtbe the Kl'l lv and TtnH Smtlh, &lt;~n&lt;l
hormone
for
other R \.'Hil Havme~ n St•mhng grfts
co
mplamts,
su
ch
as W&lt;' ll' Mtss Mt!-isy Wrlfong,
HE'S.LIKE ALL FATHERS ·
Mr s R('rnJt•e F'r v a nd Mr
depresswn
and
Irritability.
NO MAN IS GOOqJ:NOUGH
.111&lt;1
Mr·s .J" I' k Rt•&lt; htle
RAP
IJ/1(
It·~.
Rohert and Th~)l n as
No matter who I date, my dad thmks he's not worthy or me
T1•h111
cmcl
Johnny Hnffmr.i1
The only guy he nught approve of would be a stratght-A sta r
.t
ltd
grd
iH
ifatlll'r.
I.lu vd Hoff.
quarterback who looks like Joe Nama th and has been accepted
II !.Ill hospll dht:Pd at tfw tum•
at Harvard Law School ,Even then, he'd fm d somethmg to
\ H I I' Ull Hbh• to a ltPml
poke pnvate fun at him ahout
Smce I don 't usually attract supermen, you ·can see why I
('
hate to brmg new fellas mto meet my folks
Employee party held
I love my father, but how can I shut h1m up ' - JOI ENE
JOLENE .
'
Till• annu a l famll v
THURSDAY '
W1th your mother's help '
EVANGE!lNE CHAPTER rhnstmas party for the
If she can't teach him tact, then try beatmg htm to the 172, Order of the Eastern t•mployt•s of .Jack's Dmry Rar
• punchhne " Yes, Dad, I know you're gotng to say J ohn IS Star, 7 30 Thursday at the \\.ts ltl'ld recent!' a t the
wa rmed-over oatmeal (or whatever IS hiS fa vorite expres· Middleport Masomc Temple
1 ('si,J\11 aut Owners, Mr and
ston), so let's sktp the funny remarks, OK ' " Usmg his own
BETHEL La~ld, 1 MIS ln&lt;k Bechtle, hosted the
wor ds nught show him how they sound - SUE
hufft'l huH heon Grfts ·we1c
P m , With Mrs James Dav1s
t•x t·hcu lgt·cl w1t h Thuma..,
DEARJO ·
rlt•l;m d t t'C'l'IVmg t he dn()r
SATUR!lAY
THEYDIDNOT H
Most fathers priVately think no male aptmalts good enough
•
FII MS at tlH• Mnllllt•pm t ~ IZ (
MALE PATTE
fo r their daughters It 's a combmatioq of protec11veness
1\t!t•ndmg Wl!r e Mr cmcl
puhlw
lllwm
.ty
2 p m for
BALDNE SS
Jealousy and paternal pnde that smart men try to hide
'
thost kl !ldt·r·gH rl t•n tlnough Mr s fliirt y Rou r.; h, .JJ , Hal r \
Perhaps th1s column, served wtth your ~ad 's breakfast cof- SIX!Il gt d (\(
GUARANTE E
Ill ~ama11th &lt;~ and Sm ah
You Will be g1v en a 1
fee , m1ght help teach him some smarts - ijELEN
Jld h Mr and Mrs F'Joyd
MONnAY
wr1Hen guarantee from
FR IE NDS OF: TH E rll'l,ttld Mr and Mr s
begmmng to end on
'DEAR HELEN AND SUE
, .
pro r ated ba s ts
I.IR R1\R Y Momla\ , 7 !0 Thomas Clelcmd , Mrs
When Tom (!11 call h1rn ) and I were tn h1gh school, I had a Jl m at Ow Mu.ldi&lt;•pm t Pt tst· tllt a Sehule1. M1 s
btg crush on him, though he wasn't terribly popular Fmally
1\ ltcta Coum·•l and Rltdget,
LJIH &lt;II \
J W. WEST WILL EXPLAIN HAI R PROBL EMS
after I'd asked h1m to several part1es and dances, he told m~
UN ITED METHO[)! ST Mt and M1 s Kt•RnPth Hoff.
FREE AT HOLIDAY INN, FRIDA Y JANUA RY
he was gay. So I quit trymg
1979, HOURS 1 PM TO 8:30 P.M '
s,
Wo nwn
HPa th U111 tt• d tllHII and Robby, Mrs Tet t 1
Well, Tom got a few mmor parts Off-Broadway, and next M&lt;'l hodt st r1111n h, Mil l· ~mtth. M1 s Jean Vanee
your hme t o see what you
Results guara nteed by
thmg we knew he was m a TV senes and bemg played up as
c1 n do
dlt•pn1 t Munda v 7 :mp m Ht M1s Rt vntl.1 Rlaek , and M1s~
the Ebb organt zat! on We
every g~rl 's heart throb Accordmg to the fa n magazmes he
Many ha v e r epor t ed
tlw ( hm ch Progrmn hv Mt s · M.n \ WJ.st'
don't ask you to ta ke our
dates 'em all
'
'
sat1sJa ct1 on from the Ebb
.
word
You
w
lll
be
gt
ven
a
Ruth R1ungaJJtt'l'. dr~ottt l!ls
Ha1r
Program
Wh y
Can peopl e change m sptte of wha t many psycl~atrtsts say b\ ~rs 'Nqn Mnnrt· .
Written gua r antee from th e
burden
your se l f
w1 th
beg mmng to end on a pro
' hoslt•sS&lt;·s. llfrs Rt•ttv Fultz
or IS he JUSt pretendmg'- KNEW HIM WI!BN
unheal th y hatr and Sca lp
rated bas1s
DEARKHW
'
It costs you nothmg to
Mr·s EIIVl'tta Ret htie. MIS
Male pattern baldness IS
com e m and learn how
Yes, people can change, especially teen-agers who mtght
the cause of a grea t
M .!X IIH' Philson. H!l d Mr s
many people have been
m•s\ake shyness and msecunty for homosexuality.
majority of cases of bald·
POMEROY PTA
('];\\a f'll swl'll
he lped for over 20 yea rs 1n
ness
and
e
xcess1ve
ha1r
And people can also pretend, 1f the1r career bwld·up depends
Tht• Pmner ov PTA w1!1
400 c 1t1 es Why not ta ke
loss, for which netther the
on II -SUE
advan t ag e
of
th1 s
nH•t•t Monday a t 7 .10 pm at
Ebb method nor any other
wonderfu l oppor tun 1t y for
tlw
st
hool
Fdt
he1
•'s
Ntght
method
ts
eHectrve,
and
the
HOl.lllA Y f.UF:STS
he lp?
KHW
Ebb method Will not help
Hohd n\ vrs1tor :-; uf Mr ;-tnd wtll bt• ob'e' ved wtth ,Jun
Just go to the Hoh day Inn
those who are shck bald
There's another poss1bl11ty too maybe Tom "pretended"
Souls!)\' and Rob Mnrr1 s to
'" Gal h pol ts, Ohto . on
Mts
Call
Roal'i1
Wnght
St
,
after
years
of
gradual
ha1r
gayness back m h1gh school to discourage a g1ri who wouldn 't
Fnday, January S, 1979
h iiVt' l'ha1 ge uf the JH ( 1g 1a m
r om t•rm HH' iUd t&gt;d Mrs
loss
only, bet ween 1 p m and
take ·~·No'' fo r an answer
If your sca lp 1s shll
l.tnH'l' M1llt&gt;1. Sh •ve 11 and ~P&lt;'Hk &lt;'I , wtll be MIS Ra tlldl a
8 30 p m Ask the Ho1 el
Whatever, suppress your urge to gosstp, all r1ght? -HELEN
creati ng ha1r and you have
~hll
it&gt;
who
talk
on
the
Tl lu m ~l,t. Coltun h u ~. Ronald
Desk Clerk for J W Wes t
dandruff , or excess1ve ha 1r
II J.! hl to 1ea d p 1ogretm
'
Con sultation s are g1ven
Mtllt•I
(ifld
Angrc.
c
md
Mt
s
fall,
e)(
cess
1ve
oll
1n
ess
,
RAP
m pri va te You wi ll not be
Hns!&lt;.•sst.•s wtll t.w tlw spcual
r.t•l1nule
Mtlle1
Mtdd!Ppor
t
dry ness or 1tchy scalp you
obligated or em barrassed
I'm,stck and t1red of people hke " Run Down" who blast )ogg·
t'!hii'Hitnn mul thu·d g1adt•
should tak e 20 mm utes of
Dal t• Mlllt•l Tampa Fla
1n any way
mg I m not a "stuffy cntter " who 1s fanallca l over runnmg
Mr· a nil Mrs Mark Wtlhanis JH11t'I11 S 1\ flllt'St' I'V Will be
We
a
but I a~ sure as hell not a "stuffed cr~tter;: ~ny more etlher '
CHARGE and VISA
. Pomt•roy Mr mul Mrs Ra v ~ Jlt HVJdcd '
I unce weighed 225 pounds and ha~ a ~inch wa~ st , a lot of mnnd Roa('h . Mrs MJ·II'j •
1
colds and generalllredness Smce I've been runmng ahout r1ve
F't am t•s, Poml:!rov and Pv1 1
m1Ies a day (for the last year and one-half) I haven't had a
Rt•ll&lt;'&lt;TH Mtllt' t'. Fm t Mt•allt•
smgle smff!e, my energy IS up 100 percent and I'm Jean and tn
Md.
Tom, Darin and Randy
good shape
110i-i( h, Pomt•rov
Tom
The best part of runmng may be " whe11,1t 's over "but 1t sure
t't•liu rwd to Flm HIH \\or th
(
'
makes you feel good' - RUN UP
f)al&lt;•
JoW'nal of Medicme, refutes
a Yale Uruvers1 ty report
pubhshed two months ago
which concluded that the link•'
between estrogen and cancer
IS based on faulty resea rch
Est roge n IS a natural
fema le hormone that IS
w1dely prescribed to ease the
discomforts o(,_menopause m
m1ddle-aged women.
" The new work should
dispel controversy about the
assoc1atwn between estrogen
use and uterme cancer, n
Foo d and Dru g com·
mtsstoner Donald Kennedy
sa1d m Washmgton " Women
now takmg or considering
takmg these drugs should
rea d carefull y t he In·
format iOn provided w1th
them and discuss the drugs
w1tlt thmr doctors:
The study IS the latest
argument m a contmwng
debate over the safety of

.

·rhe First Christmas Morning '
presented ~y Antiquity Baptist

Estrogen during menopattse may cause cancer
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The
largest study eyer conducted
on women who take estrogen
durmg menopause concludes
the med lclne can cause
cancer of the uterus and that
the riSk mcreases the longer
1t IS used

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1~79

.

cards on each
visit.

One GrouR
Men's Weyenburg

DRESS SHOES
Values
to 535.00

$1299

Pr.

'

Ii

All Ladies

LEATHER HIGH FASHION
-- .

I

Reg.

20% OFF. Price
BOOTS
Marguerite Shoe Store
99~ - 3629

Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main, Pom.eroy,

•

o.

fX!l

ti

Kenneth Mccullooth, R I'~
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanmng, R Ph
Mon. Huu Sot. a .ooa m to 9 p.m.
Sunday 10 .10 to 12 :30 and 5to tp.m.
PRESCRI PTION5
PH . 992-2951
r nendiY !)e rv1c e

E. Main

Open

N1ghts hll 9

Pomeroy , O

"

otl

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8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Poroeroy, 0. , Th ursday, Ja n. 4, 1979

Surgei-y ·taken to save jobs

'Ohio perspect~ve'
By ROBERT E. MilLER

Associated Press Writer
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) A possible need to raise
Ohioans' taxes to .finance
~bllc education, at the state
or local · level , or both,
aiready has been suggested
in the new •legislai)Jre which
Cl)nvened Tues(jay.
Senate Presiden t Oliver
Ocasek, D-Akron, in a spf!'Ch
laQilching a new term in his
Q1lportant leadership post,
called Ohio's schOol problems
"a
continuing
crisis
situatlgn."
'Without making any
specific recrounendations,
the senator said "we have no
doubts that increased state
funding is a necessity ."
But Ocasek added that this
"is not the solution, however.
Local communities must
continue to realize they will
have _to bear their share of the
respmsibility.
"State
support
for
education increased 174
percent between 1971 and
1978. During the same time,

llv S'm AT.DO UTHAT
Assuciated Press Write r

danger to a te tus, the women
said.
"He ·even said he -felt sure
our health insur ance would
cover the operation," said
Ms. Cantwell, a divorcee with
two children.
Cont ac ted. after
the
mee ting , Mercer denied
en ·co ura g·in g
th ·e
sterilizations, but conceded
he mi gh t. ha ve disc ussed
health insurance coverage in
response to questions. He
denied saying women might
be phased out of the chemica(
industry.
"We tried to talk them out
of:gettilig sterilized, " he sa id.
· "In fact, ·our company doctor
even went so far as to tell
them what could happ_en
while they were under the
anesthetic.
"l can't innagine why they
would have done such a

WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va .
local support grew only 66 otiier Democrats ~!aim the (AP )- Four women say they
pe r,eent. We cannot afford to whole problem needs to be had th emselves sterilized
have these sources of funds studied more. The senator after an American CYana mid
grow at such disparate rates has said &lt;ri occasion that he offi&lt;;ial implied the surgery
would suppop higher taxes if . might help save thejr jobs at
much loDger.''
Ocasek took note that 15 convinced .they were needed the chemical· plant.
school districts in the sta til IIi save Ohio'S public school
"I'd never , ever do it
closed last school year for system.
again, "
sa id Barbara
OcAsek told fellow senators Cantwell, one of fi ve workers
Jack of funds, and four more
have done so this far this Tuesday that "we will take a sterilized.
'hard look at the current stare
year.
Ms. Cantwell was among
In an obvious reference to school funding problem as a nine · fe mal e Cyanamid
newly re-&lt;!lected Gov. James start, ro solving what we coli· workers who met with an
A. Rhodes, Ocasek said "we sider a continuing crisis situAssoc iated Pr ess r eporter
have heard promises that no ation."
here Wednesday .
Otherwise, the Senate
more schools will have to
The women described
·close lor lack .of mooey. The leader outlined an agenda for meetings with Glen Mercer :
question now becomes 'where legislative action that plant personneJI directOr - ·
can that money come from included improved programs discussions they said made
lor the mentally ill and them lear for their jobs and
?'"
, Rhodes said during his mentally retarded , new led th em to co nclude
campaign that existing state legislation to proteet Ohio!s sterilization was the answer .
· Merce r told them, th ey
revenues, namely their built- conswners, and a review /if
in growth , can provide utility rate regulation in- said, that federal regulations thing."
Ms. Cantwell rec alled
enough money - $1.1 billion cluding the embattled fuel might soon require women to
be phased out of the chemical sitting in the plant locker
in new state aid - to keep adjustment clause.
tinder the latter, utilities industr y. And he said room and crying aft er
schools open over the next
are
permitted to pass the Cyanamid planned to ltmit ' learning two of her colour years without a tax
in crease . The governor costs of their own fuel along women abl e to have childr en workers had been sterilized.
"And then, a month later, I
promised there would be no to utility conswners.
to jobs in two sections of the
He
also
mentioned plant because of possible lead found myself doing the same
tax hikes, if left up to him.
However, Ocasek and some improved benefits for the
state's unemployed workers
ALL
- vetoed by Rhodes last
month ;tand cited a need for
so-callid "sunset" laws that
would phase state boards and
(Continued fron\ page 1)
commissions out of existence
cident is under investigation. when they no longer are
The Sheriff also reports needed.
deputies investigated a oneOcasek finished his speech
vehicle accident that oc- on an optimistic note. He said
curred Wednesday at 2 a. m. "the General Assembly is
on Royal Oak Road.
oow bettllr able to deal with
Actording to the report, · the wide range of issues
. ALINE WEAVER
Bernard L. Caruthers, 24, Rt. facing our lives thl\n ever
I, Bellville, driving a Ford before. Today, legislators are
pickup truck owned by younger, better educated,
Michael L. Connolly, Mason, and more energetic than
Racine, o.
949-2666
Vine Street
lost control on the icy during past sessions."
roadway. The vehicle went ·
through a fence on the Horace
Karr Farm. There were no
injuries. There waS severe
· damage to the vehicle.

MERCHANDISE

Apartment

Youth

fire kills
two women
CLEVELAND (AP) -TWo

women were killed when fire
raged through a tw&lt;&gt;-Story
business and apartment
building on Cleveland's East
Side Wednesday night.
The victims were identified
by the coroner as Shirley
Fredericks, 28, and her
mother,
Katherine
Fredericks, 65, a widow who
had been brought from a
Massillon nursing home to
·spend the holidays in Cleve·
land.
'Charles Gallagher, who
lived. with Ms. Fredericks,
said he had left the
apartment when . he heard
men yelling. WQen he tried ro
retQ1'11 he ~id he was driven
hack by the fire .
Assistant Fire Chief
Edward Rawllns said when
his men r.eached the scene
flames wey-e already shooting
out of the second floor of the
brick-andfrlUlle buQding and
was spreading to
a
neighboring building. Two
firemen went up ladders
immediately but' were unable
to reach the women because
of the intense fire and smoke.
Linda Forrest, 30, and her
four young children were res·
cued by neighbors. The chil·
dren were passed through a
second-Door living room win·
dow to neighbors who carried
them down ·ladders.
Forty-two firemen and nine
pieces of equipment were
called to fight the fire, whiCh
Rawlins said started in a
back stairway. The cause of
' the
fire
was
being
investigated.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
· Squad answered a call to 24~
Mulberry Ave., at 10 : 4~ a. m.
Weanesday for Harlan
Worner, a medical patient,
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

SEEK LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to Charles Glenn
Lantz, 19, Rt. I, Reedsville ,
and Nancy Jane Tacy, 18, Rt.
I, Reedsville.

thing ." i;he said. ''That.just·
showsyouhowscaredlwas.''
" It makes me · feel
diffe rent , like a part of me iS
missin g, " said 27-year-old
Behj Moler, who is married
·
and has one child.
Seven of the women who
met with the AP at the office ·
of their union said they· ·
considered sterilization after
talking with Mercer last
January . One of the five
sterUized women was at work
during the meeting. All five
have had at least ·ot!e chUd.
Denise CUne, 22, who is
married with one child, said
she considered sterilization.

,.'

!

...

"But .we talked her out of
The ' union has also
it," said co-worker Linda threatened to file suit over
Matheny, "Wouldn't that the sterlllzations.
have been terrible, and her
Plant offiCials . have said
just 22?" · ·
·
eight women in the plant's
. Federal officials toured the pigm~nt department were
plant Wednes(jay in response -told they would have to be
ro a complaint from the Oil, transferred because of
Chemical · and Atomic po(!Sible )ead danger to an
Workers Union of America. unborn child.
The union , which represents
Plant manager Jack 'White
~60 of about ~00 . pl~nt said the women were told
workers, Qas filed a · they· would receive their
complaint
with
the . current salaries for 90 days.
Occupational Safety .a.nd During that Time, he said,
Health Administration they would be able to take
charging some workers are in jobs in other areas of the
"imminent danger" from plant.
lead and other Chemicals, ,

'

-,,
I

992-3662

I

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STUCK IN THE
BOONDOCKS
WITH A RADIO

TheK40
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for -12 months. Any part
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TlfAT WON1

BEAUTY &amp; DRESS SHOP

Ingels has slashed pnces on everything you could want tor your home! We've got
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WITH THE

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MEIGS PLAZA

SEM~I-A.NNUAL

CLEAR.
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THROUGH WIND AND
RAIN,NOTTIIEGRASS
PITISBURG, Calif. (AP)
- "Keep Off The Grass" is
the official order to mail
carriers in an ordinance
banning mail carriers from
· taking short-cuts across
lawns of homeowners.
The U.S. Postal Service
wants a federal court tO
strike down the ordinance,
Saying the ban will
" substantially affect the
efficient delivery of mail."
The city council approved
the ban after homeowners
complained their lawns were
being trampled. And some
Pittsburg mail carriers say
they were only following
· orders.

A sale of quality men's apparel that you cannot afford to miss.
Come in early whiJe our selection is at its best. Listed here, are just
.,.
a few of the fantastic savings awaiting you.

•

Entire Stocks

HART-SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX .· JOHNNY CARSON
PALM BEACH · SEWELL SUITS
105 SUITS ..................... ~ ·················· · ····························· '84.00

1

'135 SUITS ........:............................................. ,............ '1 0 1.00
l175 SUITS ..................... ~ ...............................................•131.00
'
'195 SUITS...................... ,.............................................
~146.00
'210 SUITS ............................................... .. ·...................'157.00

ACTIONS FILED
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Ruth Ann Darst
filed for support under the
reciprocal agreement act
against Harold Edmond
Darst.
The marriage of Dennis M.
Hackett' and · Martha · J .
Hackett was dissolved.

LOW PRICE
INCLUDES
FULL SIZE
BOXSPRING
&amp; MATTRESS

$285 SUITS ........ ~ ............·......................... o.oo···~ o ·o········o··'214.00
ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S

SPORT COATS REDUCED 25%

'

Bold proportiOns . Cli SIHKt rv e detailrng an d deep. rr ch oak
sta1r1 I inisl1 cap tur e th e heor t y m ood of Ju t nc ntr c Cou ntry sty1 i ng 1( s
built. or se lect ~1 F.I rdwoocl s and oak grarn en graved particl e boa rd wi th
s1mula ted wood decorat1ve olomen l s. Group 1ncludes 64x18&gt;:3 1" t ripled~:e sser. 51x8&gt;:43 1 ~··
rn11ror . 37x 47" " arrno 1re . headboard
plu s a lu xurrou s ly l1rm ful t-sr ze mat t ress an d box spring ense mble .

FINE FURNISHINGS &amp; SPORTSWEAR ENTIRE STOCK

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
thata total of $17,724,436.59 in
public assibiance and special
. activites pa·yments were
made in November to Ohio's
88 counties. Meigs County's
pcrtion was $1~,588 . 08.

Dress Shirts Reduced ......... , .................. ............ ~ .................... :... 25%
TopEoats - All Weather Coats Reduced ......... ...........
_
: ..... ............. ... ~

25%

20% • ~5%
Outerwear (leather Coats included) Reduced. .......................... 25% • 50%
Dress Slacks Reducep..... :..............................................

Veterans Memorial Hos[!llal
Admitted -James Mohler,
Middleport ; Gladys
Bosworth, Dexter; Charles
Beegle, Racine; Laura Clark,
Pomeroy; Vernon Hysell, ·
Pomeroy.
Discharged - N.one.

25%
Ladies'
Wear Reduced ........................ ........................ ~ ... 25% ·50%
'
Dre'ss Hats &amp; Neckwear Reduced .................................................... 20%

Sweaters Reduced .

0 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 00 • • • • 0 • • • 0 0 • • • • • • :

Sport Shirts Reduced ....................................................

. •

• •

•• •

• •••

20% • 50%

SUPER VALUES
~~,~s -1 2· 1,

Levi's Casual Slacks - Polyester or Corduroy Reduced ............................
. . 25%

. 1 9 10e 0 10? '
na.\1'S
Co\0\"\\3\ 0...,-,\f\3\C
~'"
. . s C1· •

Samsonite luggage Reduced ......... ................................... ............ , 20%
.

GROUP Of MEN'S

CONTINUES

20%
All Men's Jogging Suits Reduced ••••• ~ ............................. 33%
All Florsheim Shoes Reduced ...·................. ~ .................................. 20%
.
\r
'
Group of Men's Dress Shirts Reduced ............................................. 50%
Reduced .......................................................

SUITS &amp; SPORT,COATS

.

TREMENDOU

1h PRICE

SAVINGS

$6g~.
o\\\.'t

~ ~i,
,,

•

All MERCHANDISE FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK

'

0-\

Immediate delivery is just one
-of many free extras you get at

. NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
'

~

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY

~-~-

. POMEROY

'

' - 1 '

'·

••I

'"

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•\

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.-

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,.

106 N: 2ND AVE. .
-- - --

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MIDDLEPORT,O.

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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pbmeroy. Q.. Thur~day,_ Jan. 4.1979

For ·Best Resa,fts u ·se ,S entinel Classifieds

Reedsville News Notes
Mrs . Heten Archer spent
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
Don Coleman and .family at
Columbus.

Christmas

eve · dtnner

guests of Mr . and Mrs .
Warren Pickens were Mr .
and Mrs . Bill D~etz of
Columbus, Mrs. Kat hryn
Dietz and Bob Day of Belpre,
Mrs. Gladys Williams and
Mr . and Mrs. Lyle Balderson
and Kay .
Holiday guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead and Juli were Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Hensch of
Cuyahoga Falls, and Dr. and
Mrs. lsaac Rrydman , Josh
and Sarah of Buffalo Grov.e,
Ill., and Walt Hensch of
Cleveland
Recent vistiors of · Mrs.
Verna Rose were Thomas J .
Ro se of Akron, Mrs. Martha
Rose, and Mr. and Mrs.
George
Genhiemer
of
Chester, Mrs. Anna Jean
Thipers of Denver, Colo., and
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth.
Mrs . Verna Rose spent
Chn st m as Day with her
daughter and famlly, Mr. and
Mrs . Da na VanMeter at .
Belpre
Visitmg recently With Mrs.
Helen Arc her were Mrs.
Allabelta Torrence of Cind nnati, and Mrs. Ruth Tuttle
of Texas Rd.
Mr and Mrs. Terry Hoff.

man, Lisa and Bryan, of

parents Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Martin Sr . aod family , at
Manakin Sabot , Va. during
the holidays.
Chrislfll4S dinner guests at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
FoS,ter Scott, Sybyl, and Sara,
were Mr. and Mrs . Delmar
Forster of Buffalo, W. Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise
of Parkers.
Mr. and Mrs. E.M. Riddle
of Parkersburg , W.Va. were
holiday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Buckley .
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr . a nd. Mrs. Edward
Chevalier were Mr . and Mrs.
Roy Chevalier and family of
Tu ppe rs P lain s, Cerra!
Chevalier of Mansfield, and
Mr . and Mrs.
Zenith
Chevalier and Allan of Belpre
Rd .
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Lowell
Chevalier were call ed to
Little Rock, Ark., due to !he
death of her mother.
Christmas eve guests at the
home of Mrs. Lucille Smith
were Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Smith, Michael, ·John and
Terry, Debbie Graham and
Teresa Smith .
Recent vistiors of Mrs.
Lucille Smith were Mr. and ·
Mrs. Terry , Hoffman and
family of Morehead, Ky .. and
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Brown and
Joe of Waverly .
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown
and David visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Willi ~m Thomas
and family of Springfield
during the holidays.
The Young People CltWeS
of
Reedsville
Unlie d
Meth odist Church held a
Chirst mas party at the
church basement. Food for
the holidays were delivered .
to several families . Also
caroling was done throughout
the community. A gift ex·
change a nd refreshments
were served to : Rev. and
Mrs. John Douglas, Mr. and
Mrs. Randal Coulson, J oy
_and Kay, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Walker, Mrs. Pat Martin, and
Michael, Mrs. Jean Watson,
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery, Robin
Humhrey , Barbara _Hen·

WANT AD
' CHARGES
ldHy

1 ~1

l 50
l.&amp;O
3.00

3days
fid&lt;~y s

FOR SA'-E

IPrl

It! !"

/U &lt;.,

)O i l

n••• fu.,nt •

will o lwny"

f f"•

2.2S
3.75

W r- wdl ln vr- n nci lf'll'l f't nhf'r y 011

11 1

yo11

f'•Nydoy
Sncfly ''"""~"'('/ hY w dr- -Mul
rln.ught t:&gt;r., ftf'rin Jn r k o; onrl

Ad.s rUI\ntng other U11:1n LVflSe(.'Uti ~e
t.htys will lie t tulrl{NI at the I day

Mortho &lt;.:,t ,-.wo' t

rate.

Notices

In mernur) , Cli nl of 'rtum~ and
Obituary . S cents per word, $3.00

G UN SHOOT Roc tn e Gun Cluh .
f' vP ry Su n rloy 1 fHT'I ~O CINy

..

rho kP. gun &lt;; only

Mululc Home !111.11.% and Yard ~les
.are atcepled only with ca!lh with
order. 25 cent chltrl{l! for ads carry·
ing Box Nwnbt!r lwCare of The Sen·
tine!.

G UN SHOOT. Hon nr Vo h Jil iCN
~trf"' Df'pl h rory Sn turctoy b :JO
rm nt lhPir hutldtnQ in B n~ hon
~ndnry rho kogun&lt;. on l y

'

The Publisher re~~erv~ lhe nght
to t'dit or reject any lids deemed objectional. The Publisher wjll nut be
responsible (or more Uum one inl'or·

1.1

'1/H f,;UL1·

TONH)/o?[)Pnl.tr p t11yl
• 1&lt;1mlord S; t')(l (1(1 T / H t.:!JI.J

II.Jt-."1 ' .

V()t f&lt;SWAGON
., lrurrlwd
SW'I(l 01 111ol.o• n ll r 1
l'h nnf' t.ltiQ :160"/

I Q'/'1 ~O WO PICKI JI' Pnnn1 ' r ll
Sl t.,(l(l lQ '/:1 l'n 111rn1\, V PIIIIJIO
Sl'JOO l'ltlfl Plyr n0 rrr h C0up,.,
S/00 04'} () JU(J

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

•P.M.
lhto dol)' 1Mor• pubiiCIIUI)n

"""""'
tPM

Frtdiy l fWmoon

Bernice

~ "\}.0l!Jlf

~dlfdw~~LI

You'll catch more with honey
than with -vinegar

the day goes on, you'll have a

Myrllf'

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Onl y

could become easily trritated if
th ings don 't go your way, and
fa il to accomplish your aims .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Thi s

DOWNING • CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, .Sr . , Mgr .
CALL 992-2342, EVE . 992 -2449

l o ~u p P r vrc.e rnedinn{'
ond mPCl l ~ ~C"~~ in l o r m oll on .
r oi 19H&lt;I :/H lt.l

' :

OHIO STATE
UNNERSITY HOSPITALS

want_e~ to ~uy

:

~

l !MI:JfR P O Mf~O Y
rJ ,.rt s l op prKf'
&lt;,ow lnn hlf&gt; r Col i
l( p nl Hnnby 1.4116

•4295

H5'10

tr P h nxPS h rn~~
rr o n hecl s cfpc, l. c, f'l r
ro mpl e tp hou ~ ehold ~
Wr il c
M 0 Mill er Jolt 4 Pom Noy or
r ol l &lt;N '] Fl bO
COIN S poc k pt w o tchps
r lo :&gt;o; nn gs • weddr n g h a nd ~
rlromond s Gold or :&gt; rl .,.e r (oil
J.! n ger Womsley. 141 n:.11

WAN T TO buy old 45 on e! i'B
rhon ogr orh
r eq:H d ~
Col i
!JQI b:J?U or Conlnc l Mor lr n ~u r
nl lrrrP
W~ PI CK up 1unk aut o b od res b uy

rng 1unk cor s ::.uop rron ho i ·
IPrrP~
onrl mf'lo l !'
Hidf'f '&gt;
Snl.,.og P
SW 114
PornProy
qq:,r SAbfl
WA N T~O TO b uy
o lci IPwPiry
Cnl l QY'} S70:l rrr wri t £' Kay

CN rl
()H

WI 5 /nd

M r&lt;"i&lt;"ii Pror l

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If YOU ho \lf' o ~ Prvr tP 1n a lter
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OP l0ok m g lor wor k
or
w hot evP r
vou II ge l r P~u ll s
lo ~ t er wr th o Sl'n l rn r l Wonl Ad

Co 11 99:J

7 1 ~6

RI SING S lA~ l(pnne l s Soordmg
ond groornrng . all
br eed~
Cheshne 307 0'191 .

3 AND 4 f&lt;'M l urni shed a nd tr n •
l u rni s h P d
qQ'} 5434
1

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an equitl opportunity-atflrma11ve adlon employer .

op t s

Hammond

For Sale
COA l LIM I STONI ~ rmrl ~:p crv.-.i
r o lr rtlll1 r hl o rrrll.:' l r r lrlul" r d 0 ~j
l nnrl onrl oil typ£&gt; ~ of !&gt; Cl lt ht
rPI&lt;.io r So !t W n r h . In( ~ M om
St 1-' Cl mP, oy 941 J/:1 91
A f.' P I f5-

~I TZ PATJ.!I ( K
O rc hmd
Stol P J.!! t~tt t.l Phonr&gt; Wrll. {'!svi l lf'
e-.cyt,~ 3"/HS

O lJAL lTV CO N O ITION!:D rnrxed
hny Wrl l d!' fl vp • qcn 710 1
HUTLAN O HAROW AfiF 8/'1 Morn
!:or '/A') T./~5 Wr&gt; hi:Jvp to mok£&gt;
r o('lm lm ~ rrrn 9 lfl Pif h ondi sf' ~CI
• n il q ork rn c; tor£&gt; 10 pPr re nl
nil 1 hr s m r('H1 S ; f' llon g ~n r nf'
r n r1rho n dr ~c o t coo; !
So qp l
yorrr Ghrr c,trnCl " 91 ft ~ now Or"'n
fl &lt;.J th1u Chrr ~ lrn o~ N o pmlo.rnq
I" n hl l'lll "
'
Pf A ,..H AUL~h'S Cl:l So IPs hn 11p
r11('rr l now on so lr- nil rn sl oclo.
f.lnrlr n&lt;, or\rl O I( P &lt;;&lt;; or ' e~ lhrnl'qh
r"h • i~rrn n ~ OpPn P\/P r y rl oy e :w
r Pr t Sunrloy
011ci
M on doy
f VI." nr n q ~
hy n ppotn l m f' n l
Ohro
Pho n!'
PN II onrl
~OR

..

sol e 94'1 'JHS? o tt e-rS

f.' UTlAND HARD WA J.!f Ru tla nd
O hr o N !:! w YPo r ._ tn. . en lmy
Soi C' All wood ond cool s l o11 £'~
I"IPCt r rt onrl k e r ospn p he a ters
to(l l hoxf's m N honrcCl l tools
c;o riH•t ~1" 1 w rp nrh ond eiNI1 rr
nrphnrl(p &lt;, Ora sl ico ll y rPrlur

pcf

·

H F APT . 1n M1ddlepo rl Suitabl e
Koy ( e(il

l or o n e

ti9') S~b l

I :/

l'

rll ep o r1

3
.r el rigerotor
Co li QQ? "1"/Ql

t

/ I'l l:)

or

TRA CTO R nnrl mowe r
Hoy l or ... olp 949. 'l:JMl

~ l RS T

AN[) ~Pco n rl rlltlrng hCJy

S "IS nnrl S H5 bot ('

TuppPr ~

Plo m s, O hro b14 .()b'l -3:l6H

' GOOD MI XE D hoy A l te r

~

((rll

Fro nk B1oclPrirk Cjq') 7513
li.JT/ INTHfNA TlONAl
Phon e 949 :104:.'

I:IA CK H O ~

MOBil f HO M f d oo r

32 x 64

chann e l

sc anner

SNOW
TIRE SAlE

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

ln Pom e r o y Wril e
lio,. nq W . co !h e Doi l y Srn !rno l , PomE&gt;r oy Ohio 457~Q

'pomeroy Landmark
~

) - The
Mociornltza
are ere
with an the
religious attention to detail,
craftsmanship and tradition
that lith • century monks
lavished on the spiritual
works of art.
About 20 of them were on
display during the Missouri
·Liturgical Congress here
recently.
Mrs .
Miciornitza
·speculates that she is me of a
handful Of people able to
create icons because few

AmslerHam.
She directs the first
Byzantine MuselDII of North
America,
which
she
establiahed in Montreal in
1975.

SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

0.

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

!li!!,

- -Real
- Estate for Sale
~1 1

• Auto &amp; Truck
,
Repair
'Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Tyree Blvd ., Racine, Ohio ,
Phone 949-1-118 . Ev,n ing
after 5 P.M. Weekend!!
after 12 noon .
12;.31-1 mo .

Estate for
Sale
. - Real
------ -fO H ~n iP
locati o n
WV ~our hpd roo rn s rlr l
lf" .,.C" I bur fl m k rtchcn wrth
ovf'n ron gr gorho ge d rs p oso l
nnrl ba r I orn rly r oo rn d rm ng
I (ln ll1 w ho /(' h ou SP (r:Jr)le lin q
fu ll ~i7 P ho.,f-' rn er, l Ce 11 t•ol orr
onrl forr p d o i r g a s h eol A ll
ci1Op f'~ , p l u~ w o sh N an d rl rye r
Ko cky o rd 10 II
h rgh a•d or
fPn Cf" onrl cedar rl ec k s l o r
r ri v ocy Hen terl ~or o ge Clc!.C
In c;r hno l ~ I OrP p or i.. ancllf'nnr o;
c-n1 1t I Can h a&lt; I Ga r y L Grbb s

HOlJ Sf

Mo ~o n

Coli

bill QIIQ. '}'Jdb

4........

Estate for Sale
-Real
------------

HO MfSIHS"l o r sol e. 1 acr,p an d
u p Mtddl e p or t nca r Ru tl and
Co l! 991-74 8 1
THRf f BWR OO M frame hom e in
M1drll e p o rt~ C a ll Q9J :.1457

FARM fOJ.! sa l e Hous e 2 barn s.
trorler larg e pond I 0 a cre s o r
1'1 ncres 7d1 -'l5oo.
REAl f ST ATF LOA NS. VA - N o
monP)'
d ow n
(el tgtble
Ve !er ens ) FHA As low as J ,_..
dnwn {all r1on Ve l erens an d
ge nera l publ rc) l o p urc h a se
rP ol e slol e a 1 relr no n ce 30
YfA WS TE RMS IRHAND MOR .
TG AGF CO . 77 E. Sta te St .
Athens. Pho n e 0 14 59'} 305 1.

ot land . $48,500.
HOME -

--~ ~-

Has 3

enclosed
nice birch

"'''"''" ' dou•ble S. S. sink ,
new nat . gas furnace and
level lot near town. $29,500.
28 acres - Plenty of wood

for a stove, 2 baths with
tubs, d ining room. bar in
the modern kitchen with
built - i n appliances ,
carpeting In all except kit.,
cen1ral ai r and heat. Want
$40,000, but owner says sell.

One year old.
FAMILY HOUSE S bedrooms,

10
3

baths, 2 tubs. central heat
and air, d1nlng room and
modern kitchen . Spacious

I

for a family'. 5 to 6
old . $65,000.
SE RENTER WILL
E BY BUYING ONE
THESE,
THEN
ECT WHEN YOU
L IT ... GOET A
SELLING
PROBLEM,
CALL 992-3325.
G. Bruce Te•ford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

.

'

2 LOTS - 50' x 152' each .
Ra nch
t y pe , thr ee
bedrooms, carpet i ng,

paneling, full basement,
porches, close to school.
$27,300.00 .
CAR WASH- Located on
St.
Rou te.
Building,
ground, ail equipment. A
buying price at $15,000.00
1'12 STORY FRAME Three bedrooms, natLiral

gas heat, lovely lot, port
basement.
Asking
$11,000.00. Make an offer.'
FOUR LOTS - Two-story
frame. natural gas !&gt;eating,
bedrooms,
ba1h ,
b&amp;sement, porches, work·

A

shop. $9.500.00 .
MIODLEPORT- 1 story
frame, new kitchen, new

heating , carpeting, also
mobile home 10' x 45'
located on

double

lot.

$15,1100.00.
NEWER MOBILE HOME
- 12' x 61 ' two bedrooms,
natural gas heal, located
on own lot. unfurnished .
$7,500.00.
WHEN YOU HAVE TO
MOVE FAST . ... LET US
SELL YOUR PROPERTY.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. CLeland Jr.
Associates
• Kathy Cleland
Leon• Cleland
m -22S9, 992-6191

Headquarters

~--~-

nrrP&lt;. m y ..-.rnP' OY SPc lurled
woodNJ mr•o on l op o f hi ll
OvP r lonh r ivf!f Wo ter , ~ l ee
tm ovoi loh l f1' qQ'), 3fitl6

~tl!'i SAY'S.IT'S
OO'&lt;~ME-10
~~~e.w

HOU SF
lN
Mrr, Pr svi ii P.
&lt;i .
h rodroom l i v inH r oo m lo.rt r hPn
ho lh o11d u lillty morn . N• rro lull
~ ~7 ~ bo ~c men t. 99 1· 5~7:1

~l"( llj m n IN town l1v rnq . A ll
· ·IN •rr( J h,... d rfv "rn 1' ' kn th
'llt ·r!r-d
l n rn• l'y rnnm w rth
'- tp y r - (101\1(ll~
11
l ' :"lo l .,lrr
or • p l nnd N •.. nr · ,.,.,
t--f tn h
..,, hrofil l r · •::P •ni l 'hi- 'r1:1lfl

,g,.,

I

•

9 00-Mrv G riffin 3;, Emergency One 6 ; Hogan' s
Heroes B; Match Game 10; Phil Donohoe 13,15.
9·Jo-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's .Heroes 10.

,,l

/

J

.

Answer: THE [

J&amp;L INSULATION
JIM KEESEE

I

11 -3-1 mo.

WHAT' S. THAT .OLD CRAcK?

Business Services
------ -----

SEW ING MAC HINI: J.! ep oi r s ser ·
"' """ · al l m ak es 997 128d . The
~obr rc
S h op
Pome t oy . ··
Auth omed Srnger Soles ond .
Se r11ice W e ~ harpen. Sc 1 ssor ~

II'S SOMEONE 'M-10'&amp;
Qt..JICKER'N A WINK 1
AN' ST;:ONGE!i!: 'TH~

WI-IAT 16 niER!: ABOUT

11-EM 'THAT T ICKL.J:S
'OJ SO? I WISH
'IOU'D TEU ME !
I'D LIKE '10 I&lt;'NOW!

/ .,.,r,;:

A

"NRANNOSAU~i:!

·

·

"'

doz er
backho e .
onrl dit ch er ( horles R. Hoi ·
Bock
Hoe
Se r vi ce.
!r e id .
Rutl an d 0h ib. Phon e i' 4'1 L008 :

Wi ll

d o r oo fi ng , co nst r ucl ion , .
p l umbmg a nd healing . No io b .
too Io rge or tno sm all Phone •
!A:l·1JAB

HOWERY
ANO
MARTIN
bt
co v alrng .
sep h c s y s l ems .
dozpr b a ckhoe d u mp /ruck
l rmesl onf&gt;
g r ove l
b lo ckl p p
p o v111g HI 143 Phone 1 (614 )

Peanuts 8 , 10, Washington Week in Review 20,33.
6,13; Peop le ' s Command Performan ce 8,10,
Cong ressional Outlook 20,33 .
9:3Q-Turnabout 20: Visions 33.

10 · IXJ-E ddie Capra Mysteries 3, 15; News 20.
10 :3Q-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20 .
11.1Xl-News 3,6,8,10,13, 15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Soundstage
33
11 :3Q---Johnny Carson 3,1 5; Baretta 13; Mov ie "Call
Him Mr . Shatter" 6 ; Gunsmoke a, Movie " Dracula
Has Ri sen fr om the Grave " 10.

Yesterday's Answer
16 Work on
copy
21 Puntmg
need
23 Tropica l
bird
25 Stable
dweller
27 Human being
28 Show results

12:1XJ-Monty Python 33.
12 o 3Q-Juke - Bo ~ 8; 12;40- lronslde 13.
1:Oo-Midnight Specia l 3, 15; News 8; Movie "Death
Curse of Tartu " 10.
1:4o-News 13; 2·3o-News 3
3·0Q-MoVle " Te xejs Across The River" 3.

.

5:oo-Movie " The Man Hunter" 3.

29 Related
m aternally
31 Large wasp
33 Misbehave
34 Big game
35 Enroll
37 - Balbo
~0 Nucleus
44 Playing
marble

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

A right squeeze decision
• 2
• AK3
• A 10 3 2

. J 9753
WEST
EAST
+ KJ954 • 10 8 7 6 3
• 62
" ' QJlOB
• K9765
• J B4
• 4
• 2
SOUTH
•AQ
.. 9 7 54

36 Reme' s

•Q

38 Menu term
39 Musical

M &amp; M Home Improve m en t serving Galli po l i s ond ar e a We
sp ec1a h ze
in
\ll ny l
on d
oi Um rnu m
srdr ng
Fo r free
e st1motes . co li 6 14· 36i' -012B
Gollrpol 1s .

.AKQI0 ! 6
Vulnerable ; Both
Dealer: South
West North East

event
41 With : Ger .
42 Oz dog

•

P:,~~w;.~~-:-----------~-------------------- 43 Wright:s

-

1970 Amh er s t SOx I 'l 1 BR
1970 Champ io n 60x12 1 BR
i &lt;lbS Genera! 60x12 7 BR
1908 PMC 52xl1 1 BR
1955 Pror - ie Sc h oo ner 28 xB 1 BR
1973 J.! oyollimbossy 08~&lt; 14 3 BR
1959 Sl ar SOx lO "l 8R
J 9TJ Slor bOx 14 'l BR
I 968 Stor 60 )( 12 '2 BW
19"/0 Sylva 60x 12 2 BR
1968 V illages b0xl2 '} BR
I 96-4 W ind so r S I x lO 2 BR
1970Kirk woo d 12x60J BR

Pass
Pass
Pass
Db!.
Pass

''- Son''
45 Utilities

customer

'VULI'VE

46 Bring joy to L-...L.........I-.1--

1\ Lt,.,.L.~,
1-ITTL.f', 1.!'1"

VCU~

it..:

One letter simply stands Cor another. In this sample A is

HEA~,. ~A(( J\

LlnL!: ••.

used for t he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin g le l etter s.
apostrQphes, the length and formJ tion ol the words are all

hints. Eac h day the rode letters arc dlf!eren t.

CRYPTOQUOTES

S A I~S

1~ ACRE

12 x bO mobi le hom e
near De .. te r 9 97-5858

WI NNIF:

Jq67 TOTA L ELECTRIC mobile
furni sh ed
3 bedr .,
h ome
washer a nd . dryer ~ i r cond1 ·
tio n ed 1 l o t 210 fl . frontage .
517 000 Phone7-41 -'l82b.

• ARE 'IOU SVRe
YOU WANT TO
GO ASHORE ? I
COULD LOOK.
IAl•(l)UNI/ FOR

_ __ __Give Away

J

'

LET'5 CHEO&lt;. MY FRIEN D,: llJTU./
1HE BEACH SAID THE l&lt;tCLU5t:
HAD A 5HELTE R
FIRST.
AOOUT A HUN C'RED

HE$AID WE
5HOULD
LOOK FOR
FOOT-

'THERE ARE NONE
HEI&lt;E1 13UT n4E TIDE
MAY HAVE WA:'&gt;HED
n4EM AWAY.

PRINT;£"~·
:;&gt; ~·~~==~~~~

TWO MO . o i Q port wire h·aired
te rr ier and (OCker spani el
q&lt;n. J61B .
BLACK A ND tan oduh female
coon dog . M eigs Humane
Soc1e1y . 992-2592 or 992· 7680

CJHKQX

0 I YA
KC

SKQQ

JPABMM

y J pI

•
'•

HYHEYA

ZBKTOKTD

I BQ U
0 I Y

on January 8th , 1979, 1110:00
. A .M . a public sale will be held
· at 105 Unton Ave .• Pomero't,
Ohio, to sell tor Cllh the
following collateral to.wlt:
·· 1-969 Chevrolet , 6 Nove
Cpe . , Mfr .'s serial
No .

t•

3+

Pass

Pass

4t

74•.

XYJAM

OIY

.'

JPPVM·

C KTDYA
...1 RBIT
RKQQYA
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: COURTESY : . PLEASES HIM
WHO GIVES AND RECEIVES, AND THUS , UKE MERCY IS
TWICE BLESSED.-ERASTUS WIMAN •

squeeze suggested 1tself and
oefore we go a ny further see
if you can find the squeeze
that Victor worked out.
It started what is known as
a dummy reversal. He won
the heart, cashed ace of
dia monds , ruffed a diamond, entered dummy with
a trump, ruffed a second
d1amond, entered dummy
with a second trump, ruffed
dummy 's last diamond to
leave dummy with two more
trumps than he had. Theil he
ran trumps and the second
htgh heart to come down to a
two-ca rd e nding . Dummy
held the deuce of spades and
trey of hearts ; Victor, the
ace-queen of spades, . and
poor West, who had started·
with four hearts, had been
forced to unguard his king of
spades. So Victor dropped it
and had hts grand siam.

.::.l:l!! OOl-9 :E! :J ;,u ~

Opening lead: • Q
· By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
We don't quite understand·
Victor Mollo's bidding of
today 's ha nd . I n any event ,
Victor found himself in an
optlm1shc seven-club contract.
Not really a bad one s ince
he could take the spade
finesse and d i sc ard
dumnny'slow heart on t he .
Spade ace . There was one
real fly in the ointment.
West had doubled Vtctor ' s
four-spade bid .
Victor was c ertain that the
spade finesse was not going
to work so he had to look
around for another way to
mak e hi s co ntract. A

You hold :
1-4-B
•AKQ
• 65432
• AK J 4
• J
A Geo rgi a reader wants to
know the correct opening
bid.
We make the standard
opening btd of one heart, as
·would a ny expert playing
any norrnal system.
1 Nfo: WS PAPER

ENTERPRISE ...SSN. )

(Do you nave a ques tion for

the experts ? Write " Ask lhe
Experts ," care of this newspaper. Individual ques tions wiU
be answered if accompamt~d
by slampe"d, self·acldressed

envelopes The most mlere!t·
mg questions will be used ;n
this colum n and will rece1 re
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

B,\H NF Y

.

I,THINK IT'S AN ILLU510N A WRITER DoESN'T NEED
TJ..IAT. A WRITER NEEDS A PLACE Bl( TI-JE OCEAN
A FANCV 5TIJDIO
OR IN THE l\j0UNTAIN5

.

T'f'fE

Nre

Tl{f!: Tl(Pe

113279W55~200 .

The Farmeri Bank &amp;
savings Companv, Pomeror,,
Ohio, reserves the right to b d .
o'

0 BDY•

AY CAJ K TM

© 1978 King Feat ures Syndic1tti. Inc

PUBliC; NOTICE
.
Notice Is hereby given that

Pass
Pass
Pa5s

South

1· 4

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how t o work
AXVDLBAAXR
fs LONGFELLOW

•

Tllursday, Jan. 4

NORTH

~--~-~'&lt;~--~~~------~~~ ~~~~~~----~------- 22Na rrow
I want to be readlj! lf
Walt 's It doesn't mean miet
we weren't the weather clears; we packinq a thinq,Nina' He 24 Prepare
leavinq
could qo
the car' usuai/I.J qets thi&lt; clams
for a weeif,'
soone r~
,--_,/·..._
far 126 Business
deal
30 Cheer
32 An Arab ·
land

0'18 -7331

Jtc

BU C KLE

8;3Q-Joe &amp; llalerle 3, 15; Wall Street Week 20,JJ.
9.Olh- Rockford F tles 3, 15; Movie " KIll er Grizzly"

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
47 Father; Fr.
I Pinnacle
18 Pisa sight
6 Actor Sum· DQWN
~~= merville
I - Attlee
:::
10 P ry
~ Pause
II Corrida
3 "Little"
~;;;o;;;;g;r\1-::=: beast
girl
· 12 Inflllllous
4 Je wish feast
Marquis
5 "Key
13 John, m
Largo"
ldodrva
Oscar
U Electrica I
winner
unit 6 Cooking
15 Sloane
dtrective
or Chad
7 Rodgers &amp;
17 Wreath
Hart song
18 Scepter
8 Incensed
19 Caddoan
9 Card game
lna i•n
I! Work ~ of a
20 " - eac h
surrea list
life .

i\ LLEYOOP

'
·
'
·

SUBUR B
Wha t ther e sa burn 1ng need for- FUEL
FINNY

~

~XCAVATI N G .

s, 7,

j

I'VE LEAR NED : ..

Jci'JS .

at this s•le.

5:3o-News 6 ; Sanford &amp; Son 8, Eleo. Co. 20; Mary
Ty ler Moore 10, Odd Couple 15: Doctor Who 33.
6·0Q-News 3,8, 10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33 .
6 3o-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7.00-Cross Wits 3; New lywed Game 6,13; Muppet
Show 8; News 10; Love, American Style 15; Con.
sumer Surv ival Kit 20 ; Big Blue Marble 33.
7 3Q- Hee Haw Honeys 3; $1.98 Beauty Show 6 ; Family
Feud 10; Bonkers 8; $100,000 Name That Tune 13;
Pop Goes The Country 15; Mac NPII -Lehrer Report
20,33.
.
8 ·IXJ-D iff' rent Strokes 3, 15; Donny &amp; ' Marie 6, 13;

80Y·OH·BOY.' YOU CAN SAY

HWOOD BOWE RS REPA IR
Sw(&gt;e per s. toasters . rr ons all
.., moll opp l ionce s lawn mow er
n PIO't to Stol e Hi ghway Goroge
on Route 7 Ph one (6 14) 985

BSS MOBIL~ HOME
PT PlEA SANT , W.VA

Brady Bunch 15.

Now arra nge the ctrcled le tters to
form the surprt s#"-answer as sug·
. gested by lhe above car1 oo n

lliAT AGAIN ' OH\ WELL ... LI VE
AN' LEARN · AT LE AST I HOPE

U S A CURVE .' " .

•

Bf!AO J-=ORD . Au clt oneer . Co m ·
p le l e Ser\lrce Phon e 94SL2A8i'
m 9&lt;i 9· 7000 Ro cm e O h io Crr tt
8ro dl or d

fXCAVAT l NG dOl er . lo ader ond
ba ckhoe wo r k dump truck s
ond lo· b o vs f or h1re w tll hou l
ldl d• rt to so rl lrm eslone and
qra.,.el Col t Bob or Roger J,e f .
fp r s day p h one 99'1·708lf . nr ght
pho ne 992 -J S'JS or qq7 . 51J1

Petticoat Jun cti on 15 .

5 00-S iar T rek 3; Bever ly Hill billies 8; Mister Rogers
20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency One 13;

Jumblt Book No. 13, c ontaining 110 puzzles , rs a~a l / able lo r 51 .75 postpaid
fromJumble ,clo thiSn ewspader , Bo ~~: 34. Norwood. N J 07648 Inc lude your
na m•, ftldf&amp;SS , zip code an make chec ks paya ble to Newoapape rbooh.

· ORPHAN ANNIE

30-Ryan ' s ope 6, 13 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

Batman 10 ; Dinah 13.
4 3o-Bewi tc hed 3; Gilligan 's Is. 8; Brady Bunch 10;

CAME I"&lt; F IRST
IN THe ~AKING '
CONTEST.

I XI I XI XX1 I

Jumble s JETIY
A.nsw er

10 ;00-Card Sharks 3.15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8, 10, Dating Game 13.
10 :3o-Jeopardy 3.15; Andy Griffi th 6, Price Is Right
8,10, S20,000 Py ram id 13. ·
11 :00-High Roll ers 3.15; Happy Days 6, 13; Elec . Co.
20.
11 :3Q-Wheel of Fortu ne 3,15; Fami ly Feud 6,13, Love
of Life 8, 10; Sesame S. 20
11 5~CBS News 8; House Ca ll 10.
12 00-Newscenler 3; Bob Braun 4 ; News 6, 10; Midday
Magazine 13; NBC News Special IS.

4.00--Mister Car t oon 3; Ho!lywood Squares 15 : Merv
Griffin 6; P orky Pig &amp; Friend; 8; Sesame Sl.20,':!3 ;

(Answers tomorrow)

PHONE 992·Z772

~.

33.
7·3o- Famlly Atfalr 10 ;. Rebop 33.
8 Do-Capt . Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesame St . 33.
1 ~ Weather

I :OQ-Hollywood S q u~res 3, All My Children. 6, 13;
Young &amp; the REst less 10; News 8; Not For Women
Only 15
l.Jo-Days of Our Li ves 3, 15,• As The World Turns 8,10.
2:00-Qne l tfe to Live 6, 13.
2:3Q-Doctors 3,15; Guiding Light 8,10.
"3: 0o-Anoth er Wor ld 3, 15, Genera l Hospltal 6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3·3!1-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Over Easy 20.

.rJcJ ·o

i&amp;.50 per bag

(11

News 8; Sc hoolies 10.
1.

12

lR EBAWE:.t,.~..,..,.....,
[I KJ [%]

~

- 'The

_ '•

-. ' ' ' '

(

ICORNAYI

CEllULOSE
INSULATION

•

OWNER M ·U.ST SELL
own e r Of tht s
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must seiJ now so she is offering this fine
home for a low , low price of S20,000, There
are 2 bedrooms Cl is extra large), spacious
living room w · fireplace, formal dining, eatin kitchen, bath w -shower, garage &amp; a- king
s ized yard. Good loca.tion on Mill St. Call the
WiSeman Real Estate Agency ~ Gallipolis,
446 ·3643 .

13.
7·00-Today 3,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS

DIEFT

SMAll ADULT w h ite femal e poo ·
die . Port Cock ·a -poo . l ong
hot red mo le k i !len . yellow and
wh rfe . 3 m o . old. M eigs Co .
Humane Society 99'2-2592 or -a fter
. . b.. 992-5427

.
....
Housmg

' ,.' '

~

AUTOMOBil E l NSUf?ANCl: been
can ce lled? lo st your o p er ol ors
l1(ense? Ph on e 997 -214 3,

Willi
POMEROY, 0.

MAIN

~

(J
I
...... ....... , . ....

BATHROOMS
AND
Kitc h en s
remode l ed . "cer orm c t1l e p lum·
··' hrng corperl tr y , and general
rnoi nl en once
13 year s ex ·
perr ence 99'1 -3085 .

rooms ,

---- ~

H O M~

have an op)iortunity to learn
the !,~year-old art.
Mrs. Moclornltza learned
tpe ancient art 25 years ago in
l&gt;er native Romania while
restoring damaged icons in
churches and monasteries.
Her work has
been
exhibited by galleries In
Rome, Paris, Munich and

PETE SIMPSON

building and almost 2 acres

G ~ AVH Y

UPSTAIRS AP T 5 roorn s an d ba 1h
rn Po m N o y q9') nos b e fo re s.

'

'¥• mile oH Rl. 7 by-pass on
St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,

Phone992 -2181

llprn .

t AJ.!Gf

(New &amp; Used) . Service on
Current Sales .

i'H 1190

Mi d
oltf! r

Service .

JACK W.
CARSEY
Mgr.
f l flf."WQ0[) ~O R ~O I P ')4 /

l ll(&gt; n

&amp;

ROGER HYSEU
· GARAGE .

Clark

Wonderfulloca1ion in fown .

60 mob rl o homeneor Del'tPr

ROOM l o r

&amp;

Want S25,000.
LARGE ,- 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, modern kitchen with
stove and dishwasher. Full
basement, garage, utility

Re gPnc y 4
9fi'j 4'nl .

Te i P.vr~ion

Sales

Lowery

&amp;

992-3325
216.E. Second Street
INVESTMENT - Start
your own business and live
upstairs In this building .

SALE PRICES

q~') . SHSH

Sl Ft PIN G

·call: Tom Hoskins
94?-2160
11-28-c

LKNAlB
•

,.... PUlliNS EXCAVA TIN G Com pl ete
Se rv rce Pho ne 992 -2478

Headquarters lor all your
G. E. T.ll.'s &amp; Hotpotnt
Appliances.

_ e .... en 1nqs

tuaranleed
20 Yrs. EJCperlence

•

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Ph on+?

TWO B~DHOOM . kitchen fu rn1sh
Pd, opr Coli b efore H o m
QQ'} '17 ElH

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
21) Soc1al complications could

PSYCHIATRIC NURSING SERVICE
Get In tou ch wit ll yourself . Become part of a
comprehensbte team approach to care for adult and
adolescent psychiatric pat ients and th eir families .
Your l ife w ill never be the same. Competitive sa lary
and excell ent benefits .

-

......

"WE HAD MONEY AMD NERVE
,., THEN lADV LU&lt;;K THREW
Planas .

PI GS

Free Es1imate - all work

Phone 742-2029 .
11-16-C

Organs, Storv

fl 4J·7U64 .

Pets for Sale

Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling
tile

Reasonable Prices
References AvailabiP.

hPd ~

0 1D

Roofing, guHers, new and

Valley

20
10 :30-You Bet Your Life 20; Alton Ochsner at 80 33.
.]lft\}'\Ml fii}]l ~THAT SCRAMBLlO WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~(.!l~ -~
by Henri ArnoldandBoblee
Unscramble these fou r Jumbles ,
one leMer 10 each square , to Jorm
l our ordrnary words

r11. HHI74

repair.

Hocking

6:0Q- PTL Dub 15; 600 Club 6,8.
6:2s-=-Societ ies in Transition 10.
6 : 4~Mornlng Repor1 3; 6 50-Good Morning , West
Virg inia 13; 6 : 5~Chuok While Reports tO; News

6, 13 ; Barnaby Jones 8. 10; Sneak Previews 33 ; News

11-9-1 mo.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; ROME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

Carpentry , Electrical,
Pain1ing

" GIVE US A TRY "

( 304) 773-5777

() j l) FURNITt J ~f .

- -For
- Rent
----

Don' t even ask others lo do
somethi ng for you today . Vou 'H
only aggravate yourself more
when they turn you down. Try
to function by yourse lf.

(NEWS"PA. PER E:mERPRISE ASSN.]

THEIR l!lOAT WAg ATTACKED ·sy A MAAI·
CAPTAIN
....___M_AKO SWEARS IT WA5 THE 5113GE5T ONEt;VER S EEN !
EArE~-A GR:EAT WHIT~ SHARK ~

STATUETTE;'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

$37.

J. R. Construction·
Co.

Loca1ed on W. Va . side of
Br idge.
Pom eroy.Mason

'11./') . 546 5 or

. .
CO tJNTRY MOBILf Ho m e ~ f o rk
Route 33 . nor lh of Pomeroy .
Lorg(' lol &lt;. Co li q97 .747'1 .

coul d fin d yourself aced out of
some thi ng yc u might have
shared if you are too strin gent
in your demands today Give !n
whenever you can .

Don't be surpr,lsed if yo u' re lelt
noldlna the baa.

Pomeroy, O.

C. II 992-7113
For Free Estimates

.....
700-15-6 Ply Deep Lug
$42.45
Mounted &amp; Balanced Free
Phone 742-2328

·Construction
Maintenance

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

~o res t Prn
l or o; t nn rl in~

----------.-

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You

arise today if you're not careful
of your choice of companions .

WOT HAPPENED
AFTER MAKO AND
HIS PAL SWIPED
THAT 60LDEN

220 E. Main Street,

......... t• ,.. .

700-15-6

~S ;

S1yle

,:RIDAY, JANUARY!, 1979
Rport 13; 5 : 50--~TLCiub 13.

..5.55-S unrise Se mester 10.

20 .
9;30-Soap 6, 13 .
10 DO-Dayid Cassid y Man Undercover 3, 15; Family

!'APT•\I N F: ti SY

Service
,,.....,.

on heating cost
Experi.ep(e and
fully msured

Si lver W·red vinyl top, 2
dr, 13,000 mi., p. s., p.b.,
air, auto

CHIP
WOOD
P o l E&gt; ~
mo )(
rl romrtrr 10 ' on larg es t enfi
51') pf' r ton Bu rrd iN l :; l ob 510
rN tCln
Oel rvert"rl to Ohr(l
Poll e t Cq
IH I Pn rn efCly
!.I'll 76Ht,r

that ap-

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

THE

b.

Ameri can

5 : 4~ Farm

9:0G-Quincv 3, 15; Barney M iller 6,U ; Hawaii F lve-0
8; Here To Make Music 33 ; Duchess of Duke Street

EWOTT
-APPUANCE II

lfth CentUr'Y- Service with
20th Century Know -How .
Specializing In
wood stove, 011 Furn•ce
&amp; Firepl•ce Flues
Phone : UhlllO
Kim White, Proprietor

Cellulosic I wood · fiber&gt;
Therma I insulation
Save 30 pet. to so pet .

1977 FORD
-GRANADA

woul d be a good day to walk

A good investment, S20 , oo0 .

'

_ll_: J.- I_ITI_ Q_,

YOUNG MAN. seilki ng e mp loy ·
mPnt. Boc- kg'roun'd BA l)('g rcf"
Bv s. Mgt A lso so rh e co n stru r
Iron f'IO' p er reoc e.
Hor ~ ed
rn
oreo . Co ntort John or leovf'
m('SSOQ f' :J0-4 ·6/5· S69J

a cool head will su rv1-v e today 's
conditions . Be on guard! You

be two apartments or one large home. Two car garillge .

651 Beech Street

Free E$1; .
·call992-l772

W H L (A io! f l or th e r lder ly rn our
home Phonr'J9'll 3 14 .

20) Try to

extra-protective of .your resou rces today, espec1ally if
dealing ·with ·one whos e motives are que stionable Don 't
yield to pressu re selli ng.

CaiiTHE SWEEP

Will Make

'1995

~omPo n fl

be espectal ly.f' prudent where . WA H ~ WEl l rlrrl l rn g Wrllrom l
Grant 741 '1879 .
finances are conce rn ed today .
Your budget IS burst1ng . It W ILL [)0 hou sekeeprng , hoby~ t t
won't stret ch anymore.
tm g onci orld 1ob$ 9cn . "J"/TJ

four rooms and bath down . Can

Don't let a chimney f ire p ut
a damper on your life

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

P.S, P. B., air , c~ ulse ,
great car .

Services Offered
----------

few more re spons1b tllt1 es tha n
normal. •

rooms and bath up -

Gu~td

Your Headquarters for
Armstrong Carpeting

J&amp;L

1974 BUIC~
.
LESABRE

Wnrlrl o;

AKC
Rf G I STE J.!fD
Do hermon
pup s
11 week s old Coo(l'
pPrlrgre e 74'1 71'1 5

nize your ti me wel l and try to
delegate c hores whene-ver
poss ible today . You' ll lind , as

VIAGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be

Sweeps

1:Oo-Tomorrow 3; l .SG-News ' 13 .

Bluegrass 20; Wild, Wild World of Animals 33
7:30-Hollvwood Squares 3; Bonkers 6; Wa ltons 8;
$100,000 Name That Tune 10; Nashville On The
Road 13; Dolly 15; Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 00-Proiect U F.O. 3, 15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6; 13; Nova
20,33; College ' Baskelball 10.
8.30-Whal's Happeni ng 6,13; Please Stand By 8.

In sured

1-4-1 mo. (Pd .)

10 l rvf' w rlh f' k 1Prly 1"nu
pi ,-. in i f'tnrl orrn Th(' rourlf'
rnn rlo" s£' 11 cor P hu t hut O£'f'd

B room house on corner of Spring and Condor. Four

·

992-2356

PH~SO N

POMEROY

Chimney

Service Ca Its

Middleport,

IN SU RANG OP PO IHU NI TY '1 m.
d iv rrluol c; who nP.f'd rrp to $"!('!)
10 S900 p Pr mnnlh Q(' l rvC'ry
route n r u 1s~rronn" f'IO'prr r('nce
hl"lphrl h u l nnl Of'Ce !\~O r y
Plr&gt;O &lt;;f'&gt; col i 453 Ubtl6 l0 r oppl
ff]uo l Orpor Iundy (o

Th•""'Y
lhMJ Fr lduy

~ro ble ms

Member ot

18 Years Experience

IQtJq CH f VWOI f T NO VA"} rkr 01 b
ryl ont o P S Slrrrlrlr&lt;"i ltl f'\
Gonrl &lt;.hop£&gt; :~04 "/'1:1 570'/

331

- - - - '
!-felp_ wanted

Moodily
Noon on Sl:ltur!Wy

pea r insurmountable . Th e solution can 't be fou nd when people are diametrically oppo sed.

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

Midcilr&gt;por I Oht n

HA Jl!'Y HlfHHDA Y tn thf'
D rPolf·,., l Molhf'r Mr "'
!:Or over WP lrwl"' yn11
YrHr r ~rd .;

...

awa y lrom

t, ry l

IQtJ7 '. Inn Fmd p irl.up
Std S:JSO :rm tJ:$4'1

INCO Mf TAX SNv H·"
!-rei N o I
nnrf Sinh~ To • .., ~ 9tl') ')')7"} fnr
n ppl s , &lt;1 1 &lt;;pf' Wonrlo fhlut
d. I000 l mm&gt;l Cil fl ~d

NOTICE

21-lun~

Love,

ll&lt;-, ;1

!1 (1 1 ;~

•

'
THURSDAY , JA,NlMRY 4. 1919 ,
- 6 30- NBC News 3, 15; BC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
·
Friends 6; ·CBS News 8,1 0; Over Eosy 20,33.
7 : 00-Cro~s- W i ts 3; New lywed Gam e 6, 13; News 10;

Business Services

. I' H

t

:

Wdl hP rl oo;;.-.rl Oo&gt;( :iS In Jon ')

Phone 992-2156

GEMINI (May

S TO IH

HA i l !-V ' S
N / nrl A vP

r~1. 1 nsel11on .

•

~}.! '' I

11 :00- News 3.6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett ~0. Lilies,
Yoga&amp;· You 33 ,
11 :3o-Johnny Corson 3, 15; Storsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Gunsmdke 8; ABC News 33; Movte " Do Not
Disturb" 10.
12 3Q-News S; 12 :4o-S WAT 6,13.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

q!ly

Each wor!.l vver the Jnlntmum l~
wortl.s is 4 t:ents· per wor!.l per duy .

rni mmwn . Qish lnlidvllnct~ .

.

$/fl( l

nntrC.! . PICt&lt;ll l'

' 1 (AMARO 'I SP rudn
Vf' IY onnd rr .oorl 1lnon

t 1&lt;

fnt qo •l

II C'I f

1' ' 'I
'·1:1

J

1.90

TAURUS (Aprii20·May 20) Orga-

I
'I.

fl r'fl 0'

Jnttt•nrv ((l lllC ~ wd h "nrl rrptf'!'.
l hP rlny n .. cl Ih.., rnn11n1 wf' ~ h nll

Morehead , Ky., were holiday
gue;is of Mr. and Mrs. John
Hetzer and other relattves
and frierlds.
Lt. and Mrs . Michael
Bede Osol
Boring of Syracuse, New
York· spent the Christmas
holiday with his parents, Mr.
a nd Mrs. Grant Boring, and
sister, Mr . and Mrs. Hugh
Martin and Matthew.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth
a nd Mrs Verna Rose visited
January 5, 1979
with Mr . a nd Mrs. Garrett
Reed of Coolville recently.
Th ere w1 11 be some excell ent
oppor tu nifies to asser t yourself
Visiting with Mr . and Mrs.
this commg year 1n area s ImGene Wilson during ' the
portant to · you Don 't stand
Christmas holiday were Mr.
back t1m1d ly. wagg1 ng your tarl.
and Mrs. Robert Sams of
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
Weston, W.Va., Mr . and Mrs.
Domesttc is sues and demands
Gail Sams and Adam Lee of
could be a bit heav ter on you
Jane Lew, Mr. and Mrs. Bob . derson, John Henderson, lod ay than usua l It w111 take the
Sams of Allan Bridge, W.Va., Greg Wigal, Don Putman who le famtly to pitch in and lry
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Mike Hall, Alison Cauthorn, to cooperate , not ju st you .
Gelltng along with oth ers IS
Congrove a nd Mr. and Mrs. Teresa Smith, John Smith one of the sect ions yb u'l! enjoy
Gary McNeamey and Jason a nd Kay Balderson. Gifts 1n your 1979 Astra-Graph Letof . Zanesv ille, and Mr . and from t he class teachers, Mr. ter Get yours by mailing 50
Coulson and Mr . Walker were ce nt s for eac h and a long, se lf ~
~r s. J errv Palmer, Michael
addressed . stamped enve lope
presented to each one.
and Matthew of Burbank.
to Astr a-G raph , P.O Bol( 489 ,
Mr. and Mr s. Denver
Radio Ctty Stat1on. N.Y 10019.
Weber, Mark and Dave were
Be sure to spec1fy birth srgn .
Christmas dinner guests at
MIAMI ( AP ) - Oklahoma AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You have no tru st in your own
the Oscar Weber home at guard Reggie Kinlaw, who
Ideas today and w1ll feel you '
Keno.
made 11 unassisted tackles in
Mr . and Mrs . Howard Monday's 31-24 Orange Bowl have to soun d them out on
another Unfortunately , you ' ll
Young of Paden City, W.Va. victory over Nebraska,
only get nega t1v e adv1ce. l
spent Christmas with Mr. and shared most valuable player PISCES (Feb. 21J.March 20) You
Mrs. Garth Smith .
·
hon 0rs wtth Heisman trophy _ can weath er thing s ni cely today 1f you buy only wha t you
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer and Mr. winner Billy Sims.
need when you need it. Trying
and Mrs . Frank Bise visited
Sims, an Oklahoma junior to keep up With th e Joneses is
with Mr. a nd Mrs. Rawleigh halfback, gained 134 yards on
fooli sh J~
Hetzer and family of Akron, 25 carries Monday, scoring
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) Temduring the hohdays .
per your meth ods with tac t and
two touchdowns. He led tbe
Mr . and Mrs. Hugh Martin nation with a season record of charm today You ha-ve a tendency to be overly agg ressive
and family, visited with his 1,762 yards on 231 carries.

'

M IMOJ.'V · I Thc~&lt;nn~ f.' r!llt lf

v.ho
l ''lul

l&amp;words or Un!.ler
Dish
CharMe
l OO
125

2 d ~tys

Auto Sales

In Memory

'

11 - The Dail} Sen(in •I M"ddl ·
·
e • 1 eport-Pomeroy. D.• Th ur~dHV. Jan . 4. 1979
fliCK . •\ CV
.

'

• t

'

I · DON'T MIND TH'
TERMITES EATIN'
MV KITCHEN
TABLE, PAW --

I JEST WISH THEY
WOULD!\l'T SPIT TH' NAILc;
OUT ON TH' FLOOR

�'

'

.'
•

•

11. ·The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan . t"il971i9-.o.--------.,.;,--..;-~~----llllll---~------------------------------

r--A~~~-n~;-~h~-~

I

Elberfelds .ln Pomeroy

I

ROSE MARCINKO
Miss Rose J . Marcinko,. 71 ,
Rt. I , Reedsvill e, died
Wednesday afternoon at the
Jackson Care Center. near
Oak Hill ..
She was born at Ba rton, 0 .,
the daughter of the late
. Charles a nd Rosa Tallarorich
Marcinko.
Miss Marcink o wa s a
member of Our Lady Loretto
c·atholic Churc h , Tuppers
Plains . She had been a
reside'j' of the T~pp ers
Plains - Reedsville' area for
the past 51 yea rs.
'·

s·urvi vors include

on e

brother , Th omas, of The
Pl a ins, sev er cll ne phews,
·nieces and cousins . She was
preceded in death by si~
brothers and two sisters.
Gene ral ma ss will be
conducted Saturday , 2 p.m. at
the Our Lady of L&lt;&gt;retto
Catholic Chur ch, Tuppers
Plains. In charge of Father
Fra nk Papala with burial to
fO llow iDthe church cemetery _
in Long Bottom .
Rosary will be recited
Friday.evening, 7:30 p.m. at
the White Funeral Home,
Coolville, where friends .may
call Friday afternoon.
~

Oil cutoff threatened
refe rring to the whiteminority South African
government's racial policies:
Bakhtiar also said he would
trim the powers of SAV AK,
the shah's dread secret police
force and turn it into an
intelligence agency . He said
his government would not
s ubinit " to any military
authority, whatever it is." He
said he did not think the
·army, still devoutly loyal to
the shah , would attempt to
oust him·.
Spea king
fluently
in
Persian , French and Englisll,
he indicated the troops called
out by the shah to battle
street demonstrators would .
be returned to their barracks.
He
said martial law, in effect
Ulat."
since
Sept. 7, would end
Asked
to
elaborate,
"
region
by
region .''
Bakhtiar said he thought
Israel, which gets 60 percent However, he said diso"rders
of its oil from Iran, "should- would ' not be tolerated and
settle its disputes with Arab persons arrested for murder,
countries and these countries looting and other serious
c~es during recent rioting
share our religion. "
Although not an Arab will be prosecuted.
He said the shah "wants to
nation , Iran is predominantly
Moslem like most of the Arab rest and take a vacation and
Ayatullah that is the desire he has
world,
Khomaini ,
the
exiled expressed himself."
Questions about the future
religious leader of the fight
a gainst Shah Mohammed of the embattled monarch are
Reza Pahlavi, has called for " extremely delicate," he
an end to the oil shipments to said, adding he hoped to
IsraeL But in Washington , restore "the legality of the .
U.S. Energy Secretary king ."
The shah reportedly has
James Schlesinger said the
United States would fulfill a promised Bakhtiar to give up
1975 commitment ·ahd s.e e much of his royal power and
· that Israel was supplied if take a vacation, leaving arelrahian shipments to the gency council to e~ercise
Jewish nation were cut off. royal authority while the new
Schlesinger
urged prime minister 's civilian
Americans to reduce oil government attempts to end
consumption ·'until the more than a year of rioting
resumption of Iranian pro- against the shah.
duction, which has been
A TO Z •
almost completely cut off by
SAN FRANCISCO ( AP) a strike against the shah . He
said there was no immediate Who hasn't ever had an urge
problem,
·but to be at the top or the bottom
supply
shortages could develop by · of the telephone dir,ectory?
In the San Francisco
fall if Iran isn't exporting by
telephone
directory, a man
then . The United States normally imports about 500,000 named "A" leads all the rest.
" A11 is actually the
barrels a day from Iran, or 5
professional name of Bob
percent df its needs.
Bakhtiar said he also may Smith, a 27-year-old silverrefuse oil to South Africa, smith who sets up samples of
which gets most of its oil from his handiwork on the street.
Iran, because of a dispute "on He choSe the ·name j ~A '' he
'
another plane." He refused to said, " just to be the first in
·
elaborate but obviously was the phone book. "
By THOMAS KENT
Associa~ Press Writer
TEHRAN , Iran (AP) Prime Minister-designate
Shahpour Bakhliar has
threatene&lt;j to cut off oil to
Israel and South Africa,
promised to curb the secret
police and the army and
again
indicated
Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
will leave , the country
temporarily .
"We must not refus~ to sell
petrol to countrie s that
request it ," Bakhtiar told a
news conference Wednesday.
" But given the conflict that
we have on a religious plane
with IsraeL .. I think my
government wouldn 't do

FROSTBITE. • •

JANUARY

FRIDAY JANUARY

.

\. ·I

I

OPEN

3 piece vested su its in sizes 38 to 46.
Regulars and longs , patterns and solid
colors . Entire slack included .

79.95 Su ITS...............15199
•

MEN'S
MEN 'S 139•95 SUITS ...............153.99
MEN'S 199.95 SUITS .............. ..S44.99

I
!

NOW

iN

~I

Great savings now on sheets and pillow
cases, bath towel ensembles, table covers,

Sizes.

~~~~~Lst~~~~~~ w~isl

bottoms, colorful palte.rns.

------· -·

.MEN'S s11
FLANNEL SHIRTS
·

a6''
•

.

.

!

NJE.R JACKETS

~~

I

Our entire stock boys' warm winter jackets
in .sizes 8 to 20.
Boys'$14 95 J k t
$9
.
•
ac e s .... . ........ . ..... , .
.70
Boys' $17.,9 5 Jackets .................... SH.SO
Boys'$19.95Jackets .................... $1 2:'90
Boys' s22 95 J k t
.
·
·
aceS .. ,, ................ $14.90

l

Ir
l
!.
1l

1295 SOLID COLOR

I

BOYS'.

WI

Solid colors only. sizes small. medium, and
large. Limited quantity . MR. Leggs quality .

l

~

I

Twin , full or queen sizes. Contemporary and Early
American sty les .

REG. $398.00 .......................... SALE SJ19.00
REG.$449o00""'"""""""'""" SALE$359.00
REG.S479.oo ........................... SALE$379.00
REG . $498.00 ................. _. ....... SALE1399.'00
REG.I519.00, .. , ........... ; .... , .... SALES419.00
REG.ss8a.oo ...................... , ... SALES469.oo
REG.S648.00, ... , ........ _. ......... ,SALE$519.00

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR

RACINE
.!HOME NATIONAL

.

AS LOW AS

1

Ii

'2"

I
i
I
I

JANUARY CLEA"ANCE '

.

'249
CHILDREN'S .
SNOWS'UITS
·-·

I

.

WINTER JACKETS

1

r

JANUARY CLEARANCE

FROM ONLY
'

I_

I

Sizes 36 to 59 in waist length and longer length styles.
Our entire stock included in this sale, a good selection
of styles, sizes, colors. Winter vests included , too .

CHILDREN~S

.

MEN'SS22.9SJACKETS ... ; ................... $1UO

Four killed in train wreck

MEN'SS29.9SJA.CKETS · ••••••••••••••""• .....$19.40

MEN'S$39.9SJACKETS ...................... S26.00

ANKARA, Turkey (AP)- Two packed passenger
express trains collided 3 miles from Ankara early
Friday, killing at least four persons and injuring at
least 93, officials reported .
The Cmnmunications Ministry said four bodies had
been removed from the wreckage, but many more
dead .were feared. Officials said rescue teams had
brought 93 Injured persons to Ankar~ hospitals.

MEN'S $64.95 JACKETS ............ , •••• ,. ••• $42.00

MEN'S$89 .9SJACKETS ...................... S58.00

I

•1 D

WARMUP SUITS
u.
JACKETS
A

I

!

•

.

1

·1
!
1
1
REG. 4.50 .............. ....... , ........ SALE 3.39 !
REG. '6.00 ........... ................... SALE 14.49 !
Sharp warm-up suits featuring NFL colors and
emblems. 100 per cent acri lan. Months'sizes thru I.

!I
1

1

1 AND 2 PIECE .SUITS
MONTHS ~IZES JHRU

14

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUA,RY CLEARANCE!
M E N s SWEATERS
Vests . slipovers, cardigans. in sizes s, m, I
and xl. A good selection, enfire stock on

Two youths found frozen

sale.

\ MEN'S '9.95 SWEATER ....-.......... , ...... '6.00
! .MEN'S 114.95 SWEATER.................. '9.20
! MEN'S 118.95 SWEATER. .. _. ... ........... 111.70
MEN;s ?1.95 SWEATER. .................. ;u6o

PALOS PARK, Ill. (AP) - Two 8-year:..ld boys
dresoed only in pajamas apparently wandered outside
a school for the retarded into sub-zero cold, could not
get back in and froze to death, authorities said.
Nathaniel L. Jackson and Islunael Santana, both of
Chicago, were found huddled rogetber on the doorstep
of.the Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy School for Exceptional
Children Thursday : The boys died later at a hospital In
Chicago suburb.
The Cook CoWJty sheriff's police said the boys
apparentiy wandered out ·of their cottage donnitory
late Wednesday, and were locked out.

!
R~~~:!;_::.::.:.:::.::;.:.:;:.:;.:;.:::.:;.:1~~:!:~.l---.----_.._.._.-~-·-----~-------..l.-M!~S-~JW_EM~.:;:.::.::.:.:.::.::::::~~~
WOMEN'S .
l
I WOMEN'S TOPS
COAT SALE.
I!
I1 RED, NAVY, BROWN,
BEIGE, S, M, L, XL
·
.
SALE PRICES

1

REG. ;s.llo ............................. SALE 5.99· 1

.

JANUARYCLEARANCESALE!

Good se lection of casual and dressy styles
including ski jackets, boot lengths, car
coals and furs.
Junior- Missy- Hal( Sizes

WOMEN'S SWEATERS
Cardigans and pull overs in assorted styles
and colors. Sizes S, M, L and 40 lhru 52.
Large savings on quality name brand
sweaters.

!

I

l

Auto crash claims two lives

1

WINCHESTER, Ky. (AP) - Two persons were
killed early today when a car driving the wrong way on
lnterstate-75 collided with another vehicle, state police
said.
The viclims were identified as Donnie Lowe, 43, of
Cincinnati and Colleen King, 24, of cadillac, Mich.
Pollee said that Mrs. King's husband, Bill, was
hospitalized in Lexington. His condition was not
immediately known.
Pollee at . the scene said that the Lowe car was
northbound in the southbound lane of 1·75 when it
collided with the King vehicle near here.

1 REG. $7.()().. .................. :.. SALE $4.89
I
REG. ~.()(). : ........ :........... SALE $fi.29
REG. $11.00 ,............ ,....... SALE .$7.69

I
I

$599
-~!.~~~.~3!~!~-~I!~---~---------------·~---+~!.~;.~~~.::::.~:::::···:~~.!
!
oom ~-!!!_
!1
1 ,
1
I
Ii
I
·
1

Reg. 554.00 to $248.00

FROM

I

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

NECK .

tMANN

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

! MEN'S 18.95 KNIT SHIRTS .................. 5.80
I MEN'S 111.95 KNIT SHIRTS ................ ..S7.70
1 MEN'S 11295 KNIT SHIRTS
'S40
!
·
................. ·

I

.·

COAT SALE

r
\

.

.

Snorkels, car coats, fur trim and
snowmobile suits. Lillie boys and girls sizes
2 io 4, 4 to 6x and 7 to 14.

I MEN'S 1'9.95 SPORT SHIRTS........ -- ....... '6.40
!
1
! MEN'S 12.95 SPORT SHIRT$ ........ .. ...... 8.40 !
!+·MEN:s
:14.95 SPORT SHIRTS ...............; '9.70 J
MENS 16.95 SPORT SHIRTS ............... ll.OO +-

.

.
.
11.
Neck sizes 14 12 to ll'l2, sleeve lengths .32 to
1

35 inches , solid colors and patterns.
·

111.50
MEN 'S 112.50
MEN.'S 116.50
. MEN'S 120.00
ME~'S

·

!

Sizes 38 to 48 , regular and long, solid color
and neat patterns. polyester double Knit and
wools .
·~

!I

!

DRESS SI:IIRTS...... :......... '8.05' MEN'S 149.95 SPORT COATS. ....... _. ... _..~29.90 .
18 70.
DRESS SHIRTS
135 90 !
MEN'S 159 95 SPORT COATS
DRESS' SHIRTS ............. .'l1.5p
,
•
....... :......;.. • !
1
D(fiSS SHIRTS...
............
114.00
MENS
169.95
SPORT
COATS
...............
41.90 · !I
.
I
1

. ·"·" . . ". . !

save ll14 '

FLANNEL PAJAMAS.

.

Sizes A, B and C only, permanent press,
coat style top. adiustable gripper boxer
waist bottoms. While they last.

. ·~ .

$

. .

63

7.

EIb:';I;.AI~':~I~,~~~·;roy

l.

'

•

Pr 11 fl t'l' Ui i n g.

Mixed reviews received
•

WASHINGTON . (AP) - Ohio's congressmen
received mixed. reviews from the liberal Americans for
Democratic Action. The progressive group gave the
state's representatives marks ranging from a high of
95 to a low of five ; based on their votes on 20 issues.
,
The ADA also evaluated the Senate, and concluded
that the 95th Congress was "ooe of the !Vorst sessions of
Coogress in recent history" - bad for women,
minorities; the middle class and the national interest.

~.

.

Au ..r n e y, S47.1'JXlOO :

Ju ve nil e C.mrt . S24.b46. 77 ;
Pr nhate G tUr t , $14,8&lt;.X}.69;

O e rk nf G •urts , $43,231.40;
Coroner , 18. 700.00 ;
Cu unt y Cnurt , $37. 132.36:
Board nf Elec t iona, 167.442. 00";
Building an d Gr o w1d8 1 $36.000.00;
She'riff, 1'1 24,900 \
G •unt y Re'"cnrd er . 126.215.00 ;

Two

h~

in· mishap

Reul E s t at e As sess m ent , S24.&lt;XXl.OO :
M o t1 1f

Ve hicle

and ga so lint'

Lax

fund

I MAHI .

Soil &amp; Water Co nse r \·ntiun. SIO,.'W .l. OO ;
M 1r e Hr alth . ~9. 72H. 6 1 1t n d
Gru nd 'I'Hta l All F u n d ~ . ' 2.226. 76:.:;rl.

Ag ric ultur e, $25,925. 00;
Ge ne r a l H• 1s pit ai Care , $1 ,647.00;
HuApifal O ini c 8, $49.1.2H.61;
Vital S tatif~~iu. $100.00 ;

·rn

•

enttne

Fifteen Ce nt s
VoL 29, 1\o. 184

('

'

.
-

.,,N•'(

.,.,, .,

; ;,·, ,,.,.,.

.,"""'""'"'''. -·
:~

constructed well ahead of schedule. The center will cost
approximately $1 ,100,1100 with .n o cost to the county. It is
located on the former Genhelffier farm on old U.S. Rt. 33.

NEW NURSI NG HOME -The 100 bed nursing home
fa cility being constructed by Eller Enterprises, Inc .,
Columbus, which is owned by Americare , is being

co·u ncil 'committees selected
By Katie Crow

Herm an

Lond on

was

elected president of Syracuse
Village Council and committees were named during
the first meeting of 1979
Thur~ da y night .
Mayor Eber
Pi cken s
named the followin g committees. The first named
listed will serve as chairman.
St reet· - Troy Zwilling,
J immy Joe Hemsley, Kalle

Crow , Herman London , John
Fina nce -

Herman Lon-

don , John Arnall and Katie
Crow.
Ordinance - Mick Ash,
John Arn ott and Truy
Zwilling.
Safety - Emergency and
fire committ ee, Jimmy J oe
Hemsley , Ketie Crow, and
Troy Zwilling.
Planning and development committee - K.atie
Crow, Jimmy Joe Hemsley
and Mick Ash.
Recreation and scheduling
- John Arnott, Mick Ash and
Jimmy Joe Hemsley.
News media - Ka tie Crow.
London Pool Robert
Wingett, May or Picken s,
Junmy Joe Hemsley and
Herman L&lt;lndon .
Council, in ot her business,
named Frank Port er a s ·
Village Solicitor and Robert
Wingett ·as grant s administrator. George Holman .
is treasurer, Janice Lawson,
clerk a nd Milton Varian is

chief of police.
Council approved a temporar y appropriation of
$5,000 for the village and
$3,000 for the Board of Public
Affairs.
Arnott reported cost to
repair the guardrail on SR 124
in front of Hubbard's Green·
· house, da ma ged as a result of
an accident, would run bet ween $350 and $500. II was
noted the insurance company
must authorize payment.
Coun c il di scu ss ed condition s of Sandhill Road
because water that is running
. from Lee Circle' s property
down onto Bridgeman Street.
Sa ndhill Road will be
clo sed to traffic until the
problem is corrected .
Mayor Pickens r eported a
new fo ur in ch water line had
been · pla ced from the
Presbyt erian Church to
WorchesterStreet. A new fire
hydrant is to be insta lled at
the end of the' new line.
Chief Milt on Vari a n sub-

mitted an activity report for build picnic tables fur the
his department for the year pa rk providing tile village
supply materials.
1978.
He re ce i v~d 133 com Also
r eportin g we re
plain ts, made 106 arrests, depa rtment heads and ofinvestigat ed 12t accidents, ficer s of the em ergency
r eceived 215 phone calls, squ ad and fire department .
iss ued 135 wa rnin gs a nd They included Bob Willis, fire
J eff
Hu bba rd,
collected fin es and costs, chi ef :
tot aling $6,249.60 . He drove assistant fire chief: Dave
5,674.3 mil es a nd had $61 3.21 Smith , capta in : Ralph
Lavender , f irst Lt ., and Bob
in expenses for the year.
Aa ron Say re told council if Cunn ingha m, 2nd Lt.
it wished, the FF A cla ss a t
Of iS Hubbard, squad chief,
So uth ern High School would J eff Hu bba rd, assist ant
~sqtt3d chi ef: Aar on Say re,
capta in : Mary Pickens. 1st
Lt. , and Shi rley Sayre. 2nd
Lt. : Troy Zwill ing, president;
J eff Hubbard, v1ce president;
Aa ron Say re, secretary ;
SQUAD CALLED
Donn
a Aleshire , t reasurer ;
The emergency unit of the
Oris
Hubbard,
news reporter .
Middleport fire department
Attend
in
g
were Ma yor
was called to 332 Grant St. at
5: 13 a.m. Frict'ay for Eugia Pickens, Mr s. Lawson; clerk,
J ohnson who was having Chief Va r)a n, Troy Zwilling,
chest pains and difficulty in Herman L::m don, .J ohn t\rnott
breathing. The .,pa lienl wa s a nd 'Ka ti e Crow , co uncil
t ak en to Holzer Medi ca l member s, Doug Hemsley and
Or is Hubbard.
Cente r.
I

'

'

Suspects identified
Two eye-witnesses to the
Dec., 6 armed robbery of
Jones Boys in pomer oy have'
positively identifi ed s uspects
held in a police lin e-up al
Huntington, W. Va .
The witnesses were taken

•

to Cabell County Thursday by
Meigs County Sh eriff Janies
P r offilt a nd in vestiga tor
Gary Wolfe.
Sheriff
Proffitt 'has
declined to give - nY further
details in the case until after
t h e in vest igatio n js cum pleled.
In other depa rtment acti vity, Donald Swearingen,
21. Rt. I, Albany, will be
EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday: A chance of snow
Sunday and rain or snow
Tuesday. High In the 30s
Sunday and In tl)e mid 30s
to the lnw lOs M,onday and
Tuesday. Low ld the teens
to low ZOs Sunday morning
and in the 20s Monday and
·
Tuesday.

LEBANON, Ohio .(AP) - Police Chief Lester
· Kllblirn was fired and capt. James Toller was named
interim chief by City Manager Charles Guard in the
aftermath of an investigation of the department..
Guard said the firing was tbe only disciplinary
· action he would take following investigation into,
allegatiollB of miSsing evidence from a .bank robbery
and parking meter funds. Guard said there was no
evidence of . missing money ·but that 19
recommendations fer handling evidence ·and other
matters were instituted. ,
'

a rraigned before Judge John
C. Bacon in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court today.
Swearingen is ch arged with
the Nov. 20, 1976 breaking and
enter ing of pro perty owned
by Jack Warner, Jackson ,
located in Meigs County on
To \\Tiship Road 178.
The sheriff aiso reported
the arrest of Ruger Butcher ,
30, Rt. 4, Pomer oy, Jan. 4 .in
connect ion with t he alleged
theft of a dep uty sher iff's
badge.
Butch'er was a r rested at the
Centu ry Bar in Pomeroy .
While sea rched. the badge
was found pinned to the inside
of Butcher's wallet. Butcher
is being held at Meigs County
jail. Charges will be filed
consultin g
to day
a ft er
Prosec utor Rick Crow.

,,,,.,,, ,,,,,.,.,,.,,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,..,.,,,,,.,.,.,., ,.,.,.. ,,.,.,.,. Kno p 1.' heading

Weather
Occasional. snow tonight .
Saturday . Accumulati ons
around one inch by tonight.
L&lt;&gt;w toni ght 15 to 20. Not as
cold Saturday with the high in
1he upper 20s to low 30s.

Acid was leaking from truck
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Obio (AP) - Hydrochloric
acid was eilcaping from a small leak In a tank truck · ·
that overturned oo I-70 near here Thursday njght and
authorities Said there was a possibility some .area
residents might have to be evacuated.
"There's a possibility that evacuation
the homes might be necesaary If the situati · gets out
of hand," a Highway Patrol spokesman sa "But
there's ooly a sinallleak and no threat at this tlme,
added ..

11 2;81'».{)();

$700. 2lltJ.00'

Arnotl and Mick Ash.
Two persons were treated of SR 7.
According to the patrol, an
for injuries sustained during
auto
operated by l,ewi s
a one-vehicle accident Thurs.
Pulmer,
25, Minersville ,
day on Union Ave., sevenbacked
into
the front of a
tenths o f a mile east ot'SR 7,
parked vehicle owned by
in Meigs County.
The Gal)ia - Meigs Post, Ronald Masters, Reedsville.
Both vehicle s incurred
Highway Patrol, reports a
west bound auto operated by slight damage.
Eloise Grenner, 24 , Pomeroy,
went out of control on the wet ,
icy pavement, ran off the
roa.dway and struck a metal
retaining walL
Eloise Grenn er and a
passen ger, Travis Grenner,
1B monthS, displayed visible
signs of injury and were
transported by the Pomer oy
Volunteer SQuad to Veterans
Memorial· Hospital, where
lhey were treated and
released.
The Grenner vehicle was
CLEVELANO (AP) demolished.
The numbers drawn Thurs·
Officers investigated a two- day io the Ohio State
vehicle mishap in Meigs
Lottery were: blue 141,
County at 12 :55 p.m. on SR
white 67, gold 1, wloathon
248, two-tenths of a mile east
02764.

1\-li ~c c ll e n e H U S .

Total b enero l F tmd, 198.2. UW\ %.
IJ.,~ a nd K t•nnP l. S10.945. ll0:
Public "As s is t a nef' . 5449. :1 19.CXl ;

Ci vil Defense, S51XJ.OO.

at

'

Menta I Re to rda tjnn. $.)8, OCIO. 00:
County H~&gt; m e, s55. 59&amp;0..1 :
Child w,~ Jf art" Board. !!1650. 00: ·S.u l d i ~ r' ~~ Rf:' Jie( $13. ~. 00 ;
Ve terans' Ser vice. " 2.1 63. 76; ·
Public As t~ i s t an&lt;;e . S&lt;J,CKX).OO ;
E d Uc t~t i • •ll . ti2. 500.00:
lnsuranct•, _P ens i•.,ns, ta xe s . !92 -:'50.00;

Planni ng Cn mm iui n ll,· Si 650.0U:
.G tnlrtli• O Ple as G •urt . $40.258.28;.

•

Ho\\·ever, last month the
It was agreed that Pierce and
board turned down the
a new board member who
offer and agreed to seek
will be appointed to fill the
legal advice. The Insurance
vacancy of Wendell Hoover
company theo made the
who resigned recently, will
offer of $9,000 for the bus
receive $40 for each regular
and the district can keep
meeting while the other three
the vehic.le for salvage. ·
board members will receive
That offer was accepted
only $20 at this time.
last night
A service fund was
Board members disc ussed
established for use of board
sch ool mailers with several
members to attend meetings
men who arc being conand liability insurance was
purchased. It was agreed to
sidered for appointment to
the board to replace Hoover.
continue membership in the
They were Robert Snowden, a
'Ohio
School
Board
Association . Supt. Charles ·· 'former"board member; Pal
O' Brien, Don Anderson and
Dowle r was named the
district 's agent to receive , Larry Powell . The appointment is expected lu be made
~xpend and account for
at the next regular m eeting
federal funds . Bonds were
purchased for the treasurer , which will be Jan . 16.
The board authorized the
the superint endent and the
treasurer to request from the
president of the board. ,.
county auditor an advance
The board accepted the
draw of $1110,000 for the Jan.
resignation of Earie Wood , a
I
custodian in Middleport. The 19 payroll.
Barbar
a
Archer
was
board also accepted the offer
employed as junior high
of the Erie Insurance Co. on a
secretary replacin g Becky
bus demolished in a school
bus accident in the Rutland Glaze who resigned recently.
area . The insuran ce company Miss Archer formerly held
had earlier made an offer of the junior high secretarial
post . Other board m~mbers
$8 ,750 for the bus.
are Virgil King and Dr . Keith
The board was to have
Riggs.
kept the bus for salvage.

Olher Healt h. 17.500.110:

.162. 357. 84;

Probe results in firing

. ·
_--:"' __ .__...__.._.._._.._.___.._...,__..~.._.- · - _...._.._.._.._.._...,_~-------- .........,.........-.....l.-....... ~-·----------··~-·~......~·---1

Racine,_Ohio

huddled in a closet, trying to escape a fire in their firstfloor tenement apartment, fire officials said.
The children were rescued by firefighters but were
pronounced dead at St. Joseph's HospitaL They were
identified as carleton FiSher, 6 months, Christina , 3,
and Shoone, 6.
"'
Fire Chief James Malloy said the youngsters'
mother was across the street when the blaze broke out
about 10:30 p.m. Thursday.

REG. $12.00 ....................... SALE $9.00
REG.$14.00 ...................... SALES10.50
REG.$17.00 ...... ,, .............. SALE$12.75
REG. $26.00 ....... ._ • ._ .......... SALE$19.50
REG. $32.00 • ._ ... , ........ : .. •• .. SALE$24.00

'l Dre~~~el~ c~~?.~~ye~~~k~!.~isure l

SKIRTS AND SLACKS. PR.E·TEEN
PRICE

!
I

· PROVIDENCE, R. L (AP1- Three children aged
6 moo ths to 6 years were overcome by smoke as they

Solid and plaid coordinates, skirts, jackets
and slaCks, 8 thru 18. ·

___;-------·--------·------CHILDREN'S
.

shirts, westerns, velours, cotton pOlyester blends, sizes
I
SELECT GROUP OF SWEATERS, VESTS, BLOUSES, I ~~~~~ ~~~~9~4'Ni ';';~~i"m t1s1s•t,J, targe 116·16'12) and

lL
. 72

~

I
1
1 MEN'S '15.95 KNIT SHIRTS ............... -'10.30 1
._._......,._.._.._.._..

Three children die in fire

LADIES SPORTSWEAR

Sizes S, M, L. and XL in a big selection of
styles and colors, all of our men's long
.. sleeve knits included .

changes in the appropriations
at that time.
Carol Pierce was. elected
president, and Mrs, Jenni!er
Sheets, vice president. Jane
Wagner was appointed to a
four year term in her post as
clerk-lreasurer at
her
present salary.
Regular board meetings
were s~t for 7:30p.m . on the
third Tuesday of each month .

Nationwise ·

---.~.-----.-~-.----·--------r---------.------.__.._.._._..._.._.._.._...__T---...;.---...-------_.._..-_.._.._._

BANK
•

BY BOB HOEFLICH
The Meigs L&lt;&gt;cal School
District Board of Education
adopted a $3,643,264 budget
for the calendar year of 1979
on a iemporary basis at its
annual
organizational
meeting held .Thursday night
at Meigs Junior high school in
Middleport. The board will
review the budget in April
and will make any Jli!Cessary

MEN

l

G 'unt ~· C. •mm i s lli , ,m~ r 8 .

REG.S459.oo. ......................... SALE$:169.00

_:_~JANUARY~~,~~~-~~~~~~~~~_:~;.~~~n;~o:_
II NICE GROUP OF· BLOUSES, SWEATERS, l
s
I
VESTS AND KNIT TOPS IN SIZES 3 TO
I
GX AND 7 TO 14
!
i
War'm w inter sleepwear for boys and girls .
Pa iamas, gowns. robes and sleepers. Sizes
months thru 14.

e

Bi•ard ,,(

Cuu n ty Audit,r . $70. 720.(.1();
C m nty T rr a !l ur t&gt;r . $39,(1.76. 5 1;

Annual appropriations
okayed by Meigs board

HIDE-A-BEDS

~~~~~~~~A Home
Bank -~~;;..--~-~~~;~:;A";-~
~~r;-For
People

f'riday, January 5, 1979

__.._. _. _,._. _

!l

SPORTSWEAR

Meigs County

' Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

!
!
ready madP. drapes, bedspreads and many
!!
...
.
1! other
items.
Home
Furnishings
, ..
! Department, lsi Floor .
I
-..-----------~.__
_.._...-C....-.--..-----~--..---------------,.,..----JANUARY CLEARANCE
!
JANUARY CLEARANCE
1
SAlE
95
1

JANU,ARYCLEARANCESALE!

we wanted to make bank deposits and
w i thdrawals .
That's
before
we
d iscovered ·lhe dr ive-in w indows at
Racine Home Nat ional Bank . Hooray for
convenience! Now we never set fool in
the cold!

8

BOYS'

PROGRESS

-------------...-------.--·-..,------..-.-_..-._..
__
PRE-TEEN . I
-It used to be , we 'd just about freez e when

FRIDAY ' NIGHT TIL

JANUARY WHITE SALE

Turtle neck styles in sizes small , medium , large and
extra large. Big selection of styles and colors.
Men's $7.95 Turtle Neck Shirts- .. .. ..... $4.77
Men'sS9.95TurlleNeckShirts .......... $5.97
Men'sS10.95TurlleNeckShirts ......... S6.50
Men's$13.00 Turtle Neck Shirts .......... 7.80
Men's$14.95 Turtle Neck Shirts .......... 8.90

'

A.M. -

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M£N~S SUITS
l
f
.$11
.

KNIT SHIRTS

·U!:.,,
I

5th 9:30

SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE PRICES ON ALL THREE FLQORS. ALL SALES FINAL, NO EXCHA~GES
OR REFUNDS, SALE PRICES LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND.

.: MEN'S TURTLE

DRiVE -IN\t !'i',.

By Katie Crow
agreed that further discussions concerning that matter would
The Meigs ~unty Commissioners have appro~ed an be held at a later date. Buehl informed the board he had filed
app~priati~ of $2,226,76?.56 for 1979 with the general fund for a $20,000 Ieder~~) grant for a bridge inventory and
showmg ,a nunor Increase of f14,11i8:96.
.
· inspection program .
The overall a!J!lropriation reflects the general fund , public
:Barbara Shuler, welfare director, met with the board
assi$ance and highway department. Appropriated In the regarding the Welfare Depariment. The annual Welfare
general fund was $982,108.95 compared with $908 000 a year Department budget in the amoupt of $449,319 was approved .
. ago.
•
Henry Wells, commissioner, reported steel and brick for
County engineer, Wesley Buehl met wlih board and a
the new Multi-Purpose Building haS' been delivered. Work on
lengthy discussion was held concerrung tugnway department the project is progressing in a satisfacrory manner. A letter
appropr18tions.
. ·
was read from Buell! requesting passage of a face account
. Appropriatloos in the amount of f100,286 were approved . resolution for the year 1979. The matter was tabled .
Deleted from _the budget as presen~ was $170,000 from
Appointments approved upon the recommendation of
asphalt matertals, $35,000 'from aggregate materials and County Judge Charles Knight were Elizabeth Hobstetter, clerk
$24,000 from equipment purcbases .
•
of county· court ; Donna Koehler, deputy clerk, and Sonya
These categories will be discussed at future meetings be- Ohlinger, deputy clerk .
·
tween the board and the engineer.
·
Here 's a breakdown of the annual appropriation as
Also discussed with engineer Buehl was tbe overall appr~ved incl_uding salaries of the elected officials, employees,
perfor~nees of the supervisory !Jnd office personneL It was suoolies, eqwpment, contract repairs, etc.

;.

BEGIN.S

$2,226,767 county appropriations apptoved

...

I

MASSIVE STRUCTURE- This massive structure
alohg the river bank ln Mason when comple\ed will serve
as the warehouse for Hogg and Zuspan Matenal Co.

Though the frame work Is completed l&gt;!ld weather could
slow down construction.

'"

MEETS MONDAY
l l1c Meigs C11unty F a ir
Board will meet at 8 p.m .
Monday at the board office on
th e Rock Sprin gs F a irgroun ds.

'

Sutton

~rustees.

·

Otis Knopp · was .elected
chairman when the Sutton
Towns hip Trustees met for
their 1979 organ izational ses swn.
· Dt•lberl Smith \\'HS t'l!'cted
\'i et• chai rman . TIH' thit·d ·

hoard nwrnbt•r is Homer Circle. Regula r mee ti ngs will be
held on the firs t Tu esday of
each month at p.m. in the
Syl'acusc Muni cipal building

a

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