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-

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1979

.

The Bee Gees r--A~;;n;;atii;-i
nominated for
.
szx grammzes
I

I

Sanjahy ready to lead

sister, Wanda Lee Hunter.
MYRON C. BESS
·
Mr. Unton was a Navy
Myron C. Bess, 83, died
veteran
:World War 11,
Hy orru OOEWNG
"With a superftcial change
unexpectedly Monday at his member of
of DAV at Athens,
-\sSo•&lt;·ia·&lt;'&lt;l Press Writer of cabinet, by using soine
home on Third st:, Syracuse. VFW of Coolville and Rome
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) opportunist characters and
Mr. Bess was born Aug. 5, Grange of Steward. He Karim
Sanjaby.
leader
of
tlie
the most coodemned tactics
18951n Oakland, W. Va., a son _worked as .a carpenter Ute opposition National Front, of
propaganda, the Iranian
of Edward and Callie Massie greater part of his life.
assailed Iran's new civilian regime and its supporters are
for
best
instrumental Bess. He was also preceded in
He 1s survived by his wife, government today as a plot attemptirig in vain to divert
By YARDENA ARAR
deatit.by his first wtfe, Helen Thelma Sayre Linton, two by ~ ·opportunist characters" the struggle of the Iranian
Associated Press Writer composition
Bess, in 1967, four sons, Richard F . Linton, and said he is ready to lead a people in achieving its
Ms. Murray's " You Needed Davis
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
brothers
and two sisters.
Me" . was nominated for
( AP) -The Bee Gees, whose
Surviving
are his wife, Newton Falls, Ohio, Jess s. replacement government if objectives."
Coolville,
one approved by Ute _ country's
Sanjaby said he was asked
contribution to "Saturday record ofthe year, song of the Susie Wood Bess; a daughter, Linton,
Night
Fever"
went year and best female pop Mrs. Jewell Case, Columbus · daughter, Mrs. Michael Moslem leaders.
at the time Ute Bakhtiar
Sanjaby Ibid reporters at a goverrunent was • formed to
(Anita) L. lltUBSell, Coolville;
unacknowl edged at last vocal performance Another tbree step-sons, Lee WQ&lt;!d
1
smgle,
"Walk
Right
Back,"
five
sisters,
Lucille
Martin
news
conferenced he hopes participate in a Regency
year 's Oscar ceremonies,
Rutland, . and David and
was
nominated
for
best
and
Carrie
Beyler,
both
of
Ft.
the
Iranian
army "will Council that would take over
have been nominated for six
Glenn Wood, both of Myers, Fla., Virgme Par· understand the peoples' the shah's powers when the
categories of Grammy co'untry VQCal performance Columbus;
two
step·
, • 'da F rost, movement
awards,
the
National by a female .
sons, Stewart , .,..1
d
.and. ,.act in monarch begins hts longdaughters,
Mrs.
Mary
Ann front,
Other record-of-the-year Ross and Mrs. Erma
OhiO, Ceola Welch, .act?r ance wtlh 11. . But he anticipated lengthy leave of
Academy of Recordiiig Arts
and Sciences announced nominees mcluded "Baker McGaulghain, both of Lakeville · two brothers demed he was urgmg the • absence abroad. But Sanjaby
Street" by Gerry Rafferty
Leonard 'L. Linton, Ft:~my disobey Ute civilian said he had refused to join
Mooday.
Columbus; aliroUter, Robert,
The Bee Gees weren't and "Just the Way You Are" Houston, W. Va., and two. Myers, and Wllliam J. Un- ~ent of Shahpour .such a body "under the
nominated for any of the by Billy Joel OUter aibum-&lt;&gt;f- ststers, Mrs. VIrgie Baer, ton, Lakeville, seven grand- Bakhllar, formed Frtday present situation."
wtth Shah Mohammad Reza
Instead, he said he
Oscar awards the ftlm the-year nominees are "Even Teas Valley, W.Va., and Mrs. children.
Funeral
services
Now"
by
Barry
Manilow,
will
be
,
P~hl~vt
retamed
as
conproposed
a temporary
mdustry gives in mustc
Thelma Ramey, Houston, W. held Thursday at II a.m. at slltutwnal monarch. .
"Grease"
by
John
Travolta
goverrunent,
under what he
categortes .
Va.
and
Olivta
Newton-John
and
the
White
Funeral
Home
in
"The
shah,
who
clauns
to
called
a
"National
Council,"
But the record industry
· Also surviving are 11
group, in announcing the others, "Running on Empty" grandchildren, 18 step· Coolville. The Rev. Roy w. have h~ard the vglce of the that would rule the countrr
-nominees for its 21st anpual by Jackson Browne, and grandchildren and 12 great · Rose will officiate. Burial will revolulton, h~~ no": resort~ wtth Ute blessing of Ayatollah
be in the Centennial to a new plot, SanJaby satd. Khoma.ni. the &lt;h•h'• •vil"'i
Granuny Awards, said the "Some Girls" by the Rolling great • grandchildren.
" Saturday Night Fever" Stones,
Mr. Bess was a veteran of Cemetery at Frost. Fnends
Joel's "Just the Way You
soundtrack was nominated
World
War I and a member of
for top album of the year and Are ,' ' 'Three T1mes A- Metgs Chapter 53, Disabled
the single "Stayin' Alive" Lady ," by lionel Riehle of American Veterans. lie was a nesday a1 th_e fune:al h~me.
from that album was m the the Commodores, and "You retired coal miner.
record-of-the-year and song- Don 't Bring Me Flowers" by
FLETCHER WELCH
Funeral services will be
Neil Diamond, Alan Bergman
of-tbe-year categones.
Fletcher
R. Welch, 72, a
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
In addition, the Bee Gees · and Marilyn Be~gman Ute Rawllngs-()ats Funeral resident of Pomeroy, died in
rounded out the song-Qf ·the •
were listed in nominations for
Home in Middleport with the Holzer Medical Center 0:30
best pop vocal performance year nominees.
a.m. Monday.
Those nominated for best Rev. David Fields of New
by a group, hest arrangement
Haven, W. Va., officiating. . He was born Feb. 5, 1909, at
By DENIS D. GRAY
graphic isolation from China
for voices , and' best producer new artist of the year ending Burial. will be in Riverview Isomhuet Creek In Logan
AsS&lt;tciated
Press
Writer
indicated
that Chinese
Sept. 30, 1978, were The Cars,
of the year.
County, W.Va. son of the late
Cemetery.
Friends
may
call
.
BANGKOK,
Thailand
(AP)
support
for
the ousted
Elvts
Costello,
Chris
Rea
,
A
Pop jazz-band· leader
at the funeral home at any Clark and Belle Zorie - China promised today to goverrunent would be mostly
of
Honey,
and
Toto.
Taste
Chuck Mangione
and
Albright Welch.
the
defeated verbal. There ·was no
Altogether there were 301 time.
Canadtan songstress Anne
The following children support
t:;ambodtan
government,
expectation that Chinese
nominaltons
in
52
categortes.
Murray each were nominated
survive his first marriage to
to
make
a
reported
trying
troops and planes would
DR. HAROLD HORDEN
in
four
categones. The winners will be
Ida King: Ernest ~e Welch,
Dr. Harold Cecil Horden, Michigan; Okey Welch, West stand in the northwestern invade Vietnam on behalf of
Mangiooe's "Feels So Gqod" announced Feb. 15with about
was nominated for record of a dozen Grammies presented 80, 2725 Wellesley Road, Virginia; Mrs. WUson (Edna) part of the country, and their unsuccessful
the year, his album "Chtldren during a hve telecast on CBS. Columbus, died Monday. Dr. Hackney, Martinsville, Ind.; predicted a "protracted war Cambodian clients.
It also appeared unlikely
of Sanchez" was included In Nominations and awards are Hiden was a retired dentisi Opal, and Mrs. Burtham of resistance."
The
Peking
People's
Daily,
that
the ousted government
the best pop instrumental determined by balloting a native of Middleport.
(Arbutus) Dalton, If Louisa,
the
Chinese
Communist
would
be able to command
IS
survived
by
his
wife,
e
category and for belli album among 4,700 members of the
Ky. One son preceded him in
newspaper,
said
China
Party
much
support among the
nabonwide.
Margaret,
one
son,
William
academy
package, and his "Consuela's
death.
would
back
Premier
Pol
Cam
bodlan
people for a
Love nu~me" was nominated
P. Horden, Houston, Texas,
Tl!ree daughters by a
Pot's
fallen
regime guerrilla war because of the
one daughter, Mrs. Anne second marriage survive:
Half, McDonald, Ohio ; two Judy Musser, Rutland; Jean, "resolutely." It said the fall millions of urban dwellers it
sisters, Mrs. Phyllis Skinner, of fnster, Mich., and Peggy of Phnom Penh Sunday to drove into the countryside to
Pomeroy And Miss Gretta Ellis, Middleport, along with Vietnamese invaders and a farm and the million or more
Columbus; II 15 grandchildren, 35 great - rebel Cambodian Communist people it ts reported to have
Horden,
~·ourteen defendants were
costs, no muffler; John F.
fined and nine others for· Schmittauer, Athens, $10 and grandchildren and eight grandchildren and one sister, movement was a "landmark · executed in its three years in
Mrs.
Myrtle . Price, of doo10 " for Hanoi and its power.
felted bonds in Meigs County costs, assured clear distance; great-grandchildren.
Soviet backers because it was
Analysts m Bangkok said
Funeral services . will be Cleveland.
Court Monday.
·
Lorinda E. Seth, Pomeroy,
the
start,
not
Ute
end,
of
Pol
Pot and ·his associates
Fined by Judge Charles H. $15 and costs, speeding; held Thursday at 10 l).m. at
He attended Ute Baptist
fighting
.
wbo
fled from Phnom Penh
Knight were Don L. Walker, David H. Mora, Rt . 3, the Southeast Christian Church at Hysell Run, Rt. 1
The
U.S.
State
Department
before
it fell were trying to
Racine, $10 and costs, failure Pomeroy, $50 and costs, Church, 3330 E. Linvingston Middleport.
Vietnam's
invas10n
of
said
set
up
a line of resistance
Ave., Columbus. Friends
to yield; Randall Hartly, speeding.
Funeral services will be
Cambodia
raised
the
danger
Siem
Reap and An!r,
near
may
call
at
the
Woodyard
Athens, $14 and costs, speed;
held I p.m. Wednesday at the
Forfeiting bonds were
of
wider
war
and
called
for
the
ancient
Combo tan
East
Chapel,
2300
·
E.
McCoy--Moore Funeral
Gary S. Basham, Coolville, Michael P. Norris, Rt. 2,
foreign
,
forces
to
be
capital,
In
Ute
northw
ern
Livingston
Ave.
,
Wednesday
Leonard E. Richards, Albany, $60.50, reckless
Home with Rev. Jolui Jeffrey
part
withdrawn.
It
said
"all
of
Ute
count\-y.
from
2
to
4
and
7
to
9.
officiating. Burial will be In
Parkersburg,
William operation; David Parker,
countries interested in peace,
The • new provisional
Additiooal services will be Vinton Memorial Park.
Gwen
Barnhart, Pomeroy, Jerry A. Loveland,
stability
and
an
md~pendent
government
installed by the
held
Thursday
at
2:30p.m.
at
Friends may call at the
stone, Columbus and Jolui W Longbotham, Gallipolis,
state
system
in
Southeast
Vietnamese
in
Phnom Penh,
Ute
Rawlings
Coats
Funeral
funeral
George
N
Smith,
Parkersborne
today
from
2-4
Anderson, Pomeroy, $15 and
Asia
should.
urge
restraint
on
the
People's
Revolutionary
costs each, speeding; burg, James Copeland, Home in Middleport with and 7-9 p.m.
both parties to the conflict." Council, said it controlled Ute
Kathryn Richards, Pomeroy, Gallipolis and James C. burial to follow in Riverview
However, Cambodia's geo- area, which is about 120 miles
Cemetery.
$10 and costs, assured clear Lambert, Gallipolis, $30.50
northwest of Ute capital. But
distance; John J . Davis, each, speeding; Paul F .
the
Bangkok sources said
·
JAMES
LOHSE
SE.RVICES WEDNESDAY
Albany, $5 and costs, illegal Lambert, Columbus, $35.50,
ft~hting
was continuinR in
Word
was
received
here
Special guests of the
exhaust; Grover K. Klein, Rt. speeding; Daniel J. Dearlate
Tuesday
morning
of
the
Middleport United Pen·
2, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, durff, Columbus, $35.50,
taking illegal deer; James D. speeding; Dennis E. Wilson, death of James Lohse, 37, tecostal Church at 7:30 p.m.
!&gt;arson, Racine, $5 and costs, Parkersburg, $33.50, formerly of Pomeroy in Wednesday will be Ute Rev.
Hospital News
Cincinnati Monday.
and Mrs. Uoyd Moreau and
defective brakes, $5 and speeding.
Mr. Lohse had been with family, missionaries to
VeteraDB Memorial Hospllal
Ute local radio station for Auckland, New Zealand.
Admitted - Robert C. Hill,
CINCINNATI (AP)
sometime before going to
Special musical numbers Police stopped Cincinnati Racine; Lady Dawn Davis,
Columbus where he became will be presented by the officials from giving them a Pomeroy; Virgie Blake,
l{eep passing the buck
well known in the 81Ulouncing Moreau family and Ute Rev. non-negotiated raise, but Middleport; .Benjamin
field. He was serving as Mr. Moreau will speak on their paychecks may be late Davidson, Middleport; Frank
program director for the Taft New Zeland and a 30-mlnute today.
Wolford, Vinton; Timothy
Broadcasting Station m !ibn will be shoMl.
Hamilton County Common Sklorenko, Middleport.
Cincinnati at the time of his
Pastor WilHam Knittel Pleas Judge William S. MatDischarged - Charles
death.
extends an invitation to the thews temporarily lalted the Beegle.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. public to attend Ute service. city on Monday from
Harold Lohse, Pomeroy,
increasing pollee wages by 7
Holzer Medical Center
were- in Florida at the time of
percent while the Fraternal
Discharges, Jan. 7
SEEKS SUPPORT
his death.
Order of Police is still
Paula
Baisden, Mary Mrs.
The Qf!ice of recovery negotiating a contract.
Other survivors are his
Crabtree
and son,,
Joey
. wife, Michelle; a sister, Mrs. services, State of Utah and
Dean Watkins of the ctty Leamon Dalton,
Ronald
Jennifer Sheets of Rutland, Dora Simpson flied for Division of Audit and Review
Fisher,
Hershel
Henry,
Amy
County
support
in
Meigs
two daughters and a brother,
said paychecks for this week Jones, Wendy Musick, Mrs.
Common Pleas Court against which included the salary
Jolm Lohse of Columbus.
Walter Rawlins and
William Burnell Pettit.
boost have already been daughter, Brian Roush,
printed by computers. So Michael Rowland, Shirley
RICHARD B. LINTON
FREE SERVICE
because of the court ruling, Tyree, .Willlam Wray.
COOLVILLE- Richard B.
There will be free curb every check for all 931
Duscharges, Jan, 8
Linton, 60, Rt. 1, Coolville, pick-up of Christmas trees in policemen now will have to be
Donald
Bell, Brian Bevan,
died Monday afternoon Racine on Friday, Jan. 12.
hand-written.
Hulda
Brown, Helen
following and eKtehded
Matthews, ruling in favor Cameron, Mrs. Patrick Canaillness.
of the police union, said the day and daughter, Bessie
Mr. Linton was born in
CANCELLED
City Council violated the Clark, Clement Cooper,
Athens, son of the late
The ll)eeting of the rights of police Saturday by Jeremiah Hill, Elmer Ihle,
Richard E. and Minnie M. Syracuse PTA scheduled for grantjng the wage boost to
Mrs, Ronald Kapp and son,
. Brandeberry. He was also this evening has been can- both police and firemen.
Mrs. Ralpb Kelvington and
preceded in death by one celled.
The Cincmnati Firefighters . daughter, Elsie Lakin, John
Union has already ratified a Longstreth, Belinda Newell,
... for the finest services offered
new contract which includes Steven Nolan, George ·
· by any bank. Visit us today for
a 7 percent pay increase and Palmer, Virginia Prater,
cost-()f~iving clause for this
a
more information about our
Mansell Robinson, Danny
year
and
a
7
percent
wage
Russell, Mrs. Rodney Spires ,
checking and savings account
boost for next year. The city . llll!!..daughter, Betty Stew-drt,
plans. We will be happy to serve
charter requires firemen and Apnl stinson, Lucille Watson.
police to be paid the same
Y,OU .
Births; Jan. 8
salary.
Mr.
and Mrs. David
Whatever your taste in furniture, you can
The
City
Council
approved
Carpenter,
son, Patriot.
"THE FRIENDLY BANK"
choose with confidence from Flexsteel.
the pay ordmance Saturday
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hobart SherWl:lether you select contemporary,
for both fll'emen- and police, r.nan,son, Jackson.
Walk Up Teller and Auto Teller Window
traditional. modern or colonial, you will find
although
the
police
Ooen Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m.
an impeccable elegance in every piece that
negotiators had not agreed to Deputies check ·
will be a proud addition to your home. This
a contract
Cincinnati FOP chapter
distinctive Fiexsteel styli'19 ·is available in
President
Elmer Dunaway minor accident
sofas.
sectionals,
suites,
chairs.
and
a
-'
said police have asked for a
unique sofa -sleeper . Hundreds. and
Meigs County Sheriff
27.7 percent pay Increase, the
hundreds of fabrics, all decorator-selected
James
J. Proffitt reports
same percentage boost City
for beautiful corrediveness, give you a
deputies
inveatlaated an
j
Council members received
choice of solids in a variety of rich weaves,
when thetr wages were accident Monday evening in
J$!;2 5
prints, quilted fabrics, matelasses.
raised . Paul Berninger, chief Ute village of Racine.
brocades. and other lash ionable fabrics.
John West, 18, Racine, w8s
.
city
negotiator, said he had
· ~ ' &lt;! '•
no authority from the City traveling north on Broadway
''
Council In bargain for more St. when his vehicle slid on
~·
tbe snow covered street
than Ute 7 percent.
~rlking a vehicle owned by ·
'fhe
7
percent
boost
would
Deposits Insured To $40,000
raise base police and fir~ Cressa Shain, Racine. There
salaries from $16,000 to was moderate damage. No
Member f.D.I.D. Member F.D.I.C. ·
citation was Issued.
$19.000 over two years.

.

'

23 cases terntinated

Pay hike

stopped

--------on

to

on

· e d for
upport prom lS
defeated government

~~~=~s

1

.

wbo remains commander-Inchief.
Apparently as a result of
Jam's defection, Bakhtlar
delayed presenting his new
Cabinet to Parliament for two
days.
Bakhtlar
had
been
scheduled to ·present his
cabinet today to the lower
hoUS&lt;I of Ute Majlls, the
lranlhn ParHament, and to
Ill~. Senate on Saturday for
votes of confidence. But the
government radio 81Ulounced
that the presentation to Ute
lower house would be made
on Thursday.
A correspondent for the
London Financial Times
reported that the prime
minister told him in an interview Monday that It would
be at least 10 days before Ute
sli'ah leaves the country
Ute foreign vacation which he
reportedly has agreed to take
in an attempt to appease his
foes. Sources said Ute 59·
t
year-old ruler . woUld wait
until both houses had given
Ute government a vote of
confidence.
Bakhtiar
said
Ute
corruption trials . of fanner
goverrunent ministers would
start in the next 10 days or so,
and "for reasons of state,
some executions are likely in
Ute near future," Ute British
some areas around the Tonie correspondent reported.
He added that Bakhtlar
Sap, the big lake between
Phnom Penh and Slem Reap. said he was giving priority to
They
reported
the the restoration of press
Vietnamese were making air freedom and the freeing of all
strikes, moving westward political prisoners as well as
from Phnom Penh and the prosecUtion of fonner ~
mopping up pockets of leaders of the shah's regime.
resistance
In Washington, State
Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Department spokesman
Ute former Cambodian chief Hodding Carter said a U. S.
of state, told reporters in Air Force general Who Is
Peking Monday that the visiting Iran, Gen. Robert
Chinese were in radio contact Huyser, is urging leaders of
with the deposed Cambodian Ute Iranian anned forcell to
leaders and would provide support Bakhtlar.
them with weapops and
Huyser's viBit was believed
financial aid.
~
to be part of Ute Carter ad·
But he said ChineSe Vice ministration's effort to
Premier Teng Hsaio11u\g told bolster the new goverrunent
him the Chinese goverrunent in the hope that it can.end the
would not send !coops to political and economic crisis
Cambodia.
in the country and stW keep
Sihanouk left Peking for Ute shah on Ute throne.
New York to appeal to the
The government radio
U.N. Security Council for announced the departure
help for
the ousted fromthecountryofthe shah's
goverrunent. But Cambodia's two chief milltary advisers In
new proviBional goverrunent recent years. 'I'IIIty were Gen.
told the Security Council tbe .Gholam-Reza Azharl, the
former regime had "ceased· , armed for(\!!S chief of staff
to exist" Sl)d a U.N. meeting since 1971 wJ!o in two months
on the Cambodian problem as head of ii'lnllitary govern·
would be "flagrant inter- ment was unable to quell Ute
vention" in Cambodia's anti-shah movement, and
internal affairs.
Gen. Gholam-Ali Ovelsl, Ute
The message, relayed by former mllltary governor of
the Vielnamese mission to Tehran.
the United Nations, was
The broadcast report said
signed by Heng Samrin, tbe Azhari left for heart surgery
president of Ute provisional in Ute United states and
government and the head of Oveisi resigned and went
Ute United Front for National abroad, probably to the
Salvatipn,
the
rebel United States also.
movement which fronted for
the Vietnamese invasion.
SQUAD CALLED
Heng Samrm was a memQer
The Pomeroy emergency
of Pol Pot,'s government, but squad was called to Peacock
broke with it some mooths Ave., at 2:08 a.m. Tuesday
ago.
for Mrs. Earl Denny who had
The new government fallen. She was taken to
promised
to
restore Holzer Medical Center.
democratic rights and
reinstate
traditional
SQUAD RUN
praciices, including the Bud·
The
Syracuse
ER Squad
dhist religion, and to move
was
called
Monday
at 12:10
Cambodia toward ''peace,
p.m.
for
Myron
Bess
who
was
freedom, non-allgntnent and
dead
on
arrival
of
~e
squad.
socialism.''
chief religious opponent.
Asked how the National
Counctl would be 'formed, be
satd, "Please do not. worry
the
too much about
constitution and the legahty·
of tile whole thing . · The
country is in a process of·
revolution.
For
a
revolutionary situation, you
need revolutionary solutions.
Our country is capable of
finding a solution to its
problems."
Bakhtiar was reported
meetmg today with Gen.
Fereidum Jam, Jl popular
former army chief of staff
who backed out Monday from
serving as defense minister.
Sources said Jam bad
insisted tbat the supreme
commander of the country 's
430,000-man armed forces
report to him in the new government, while Bakhtiar was
insisting that he cootiftue to
report directly to the· shah,

.CITIZENS NATIONAL

BANK

Elberfelds January Clearance

MEN'S SHIRTS

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 187

•

'

SAVE

30% • 35% • 40%
'.J

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1979

Thereon Johnl&gt;on, president of the Meigs Regional
Planning Commission; James M. JeMings, Sr ., whose
ftrm conducted the study ; Jeff Burt of the Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Development Commission, and
Cash Bahr, prestdent of the Middleport Chamber of
Commerce.

School bill

enttne

reappears .

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohto jAP ) Some major btlls that dtdn't
make · it through the
dleport Chamber of Com· Legislature last year have
merce to meet at an early started re-appearing in the
date to form a committee and Ohto House
proceed with the project.
An omnibus · mea sure
Bob Bailey, coordinator of gtving school district.. more
the Emergency Medtca l tools· to handle their fisca l
Services, presented the problems ts back.
agency's budget m the
So ts a measure, by Rep.
amount of $131,821 40 which Thomas P Gtlmartm, !).
was appropriated by th e Youngstown, to unprove the
beard for the 1979 operations
lot of Ohio's laid-off workers.
Donna Davidson, Rt. 4,
Gilmartm's bill doe sn't
Pomeroy, wus appointed as raise bencftts,like one vetned
an alternate on the GaUia- last month by Gov. James A.
Meigs Community Action Rhodes But it does retam a
Agency Board of Trustees. provision to eliminate the
A force account resolutwn oneweek watting period to
for the Meigs County High- qua hfy for unemployment
way Department was ap- comPensatiOn.
proved for 1979 The meeting
The vete ran Mahoning
was_recessed subject to the County lawmaker satd he has
recall of the president.
reason In believe Rhodes
Attending were Richard would stgn a bill cootairung
Jones, Henry Wells, and Jim the elimination feature alone.
Roush, commissioners and He said Sen. Thomas E.
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
Carney, D-Girard, planned to
offer an tdenttcal bill in the
upper chamber.
House Finance Chairman
Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville. remtroduced the
pro posa l that would put
of "various ·offenses" and
Ohto's 616 school distrtcls oo
pardons for other prisoners the same fis cal year as the
were being studied. It was not state - June 30 to July I.
known how many were
There was insuffictent time
to consider 1t last year
political pnsoners.
The U.S. government in a because it was not introduced
policy shift was reported to unlll late m the sesston.
By changmg the fisca l
have advised the shah to
leave the country., tern,. years, school dtstrtcls, which
porarily. American offtcials no\" operate on the calendar
,who asked not to be identifted year, hopefully could av01d
said Ambassador Wtlham 1;!. some of the fiscal crunches
Sulltvan had been instructed Uwt occur in the midd)e of
to tell the ruler there was no school tenns
They come a.bout becauSe
possibility of the violent
demonstrations· against him of statutes that pro hibit
subsiding unless he went
abroad.
The officials sa id the
Carter
administration
changed its position after tl
became apparent that the
mstallation of Prime Mmtster
Shahpour Bakhtiar and his
civilian government did not
ease the crisis sign ificantly.

Welfare director, supervisor, resign posts
The resignations of ~ar­
bara Shuler, Meigs County
Welfare director and Mrs.
Cullums,
ADC
Adele
supervisor at the Meigs
• County Welf~re De~artment
were read and accepted by

'
Department.
The commissioners reported a search
will begin immediately to
find replacements.
The resignations came on
the heels of a report released
Tuesday by Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Fred
W. Crow III revealmg that a
grand jury had issued 1mdings and recommendations
on the department.
Crow said the jury's pfobe
was made due to nwnero\LS
complaints from Meigs
County citizens.
According
to
the
prosecuting attorney, a
number of findmgs and
recommendations were made
on Dec. 30. However, as of
today . no record of the fin·
dings has been filed in Metgs
County Common~ Pleas Court
journals.
County ComMeigs

Meigs County commissioners
Tuesday night.
A length discussion was
held
concerning
the
resignations and other .matters of the Welfarea

.--· Nationwlse~---.
Decision

JQUSt

be reached

WASHINGTON (AP) - District of Columbia
pollee officials are faced with Ute question of wbelher
to allow a policeman who underwent· a sex~hange
O!ieration to return to work as a woman.
BoMie Davenport, formerly Onnus W. Davenport
III, underwent the sex~hange operation last fall after
going on a leave of absence without pay in February.
·- Sllifreturn~ Tuesday to begin a series of examinations
required to gain reinstatement to active duty. High·
rariking pollee f!(flcials refused Tuesday to say what
they would do about the case.

Pilot may not fly again

the sheriff's department. The
btd was from the Pomeroy
Motor Co., tn the amount of
$6,695. Present to discuss the
bid were Sheriff James
Proffitt ~]nd William Grucser.
Grueser reported delivery
could be expected the first
week in February.
Eleanor Robson , Meigs
County Recorder, met with
commissioners to discuss the
1979 appropriations for the
Recorder 's office. Miss
Robson stated she was
dissatisfied with the salary of
her deputy and that she felt
her deputy should be paid a
salary
equivalent to all other
Cloudy tonight with snow
late tomght and possibly deputies.
The board adopted a
c-ontinuing Thursday. LOw
tonight near 15 and high resolution endorsing the
Thursday in the mid to upper Meigs Industrial Site study
20s. The chance of snow Is 80 and urged the C. I. C.,
of
peNent tonight and 50 per- Pomeroy Chamber
Commerce
and
the
Mtd·
cent Thursday.

mtss10ners, Richard Jones,
Henry Wells and Jim Roush
were presented copies of the
findings
and
recom·
mendations, Jan. 2. Grand
jury
members
have
requeste(,l permisston to
continue their investigation
past the normal expiration
date of Dec, 31.
BID ACCEPTED
One bid was received and
accepted for a new cruiser for

Weather

Family holdings transfer~ed

LOVELAND, Colo. (AP) - Malburn McBroom,
pilot of a United Air Lines jetliner thaI crashed near
Portland, Ore., killing 10 persons, says be doesn't know
H he wants to fly again. "All those years, I never
scratched an airplane and never iqi!J.red a passenger,"
said Ute 52-year-()ld pilot of the DC-8 that crashed Dec.
28. "I don't know. I don't know. "
McBroom, interviewed at his home here by the
Loveland Daily Reporter-Herald, is recoyering from
injuries suffered in the crash.

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi has transferred the
royal family's huge holdings
in Iran to the Pahlavt
Foundation, the !raman
government radio reports,
but there has been no mdication when he would carry
out his pledge to transfer
control of the foundation from
himself to a government
agency.
The broadcast report also
said nothing abcut the royal
family's vast holdings m
foreign countries, whicb are
estimated .at more than $1
billton.
The foundallon is a combination charitabl e
organization and famUy trust
established by Ute shah in
1968 and controlled entirely
by him. Its records are kept
secret, but it has huge '

Carter family returns
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter and his
family returned to winter's subfreezmg temperatures
in tbe nation's capital after a five~y Caribbean vistt
that mixed swrunitry with a vacation.
Before tbe Carters flew back late Tuesday from
the island of Guadeloupe, Ute presjdent and his
daughter Amy went sailing for six hours aboard a sleek
60-foot French trunaran racer as a motor launch filled
with Secret Service agents trailed behind.

Hideouts will try again
SALEM, Ore. (AP) - John and Greta Rideout,
wbose unhappy marriage was magnified in a courtroom, are reconciled- barely two weeks after he was
found Innocent of raping ber.
The couple aMounced their reconciliation Tuesday ·
to Ute attorney wbo successfully defended the 21-yearold Rideout, a reconciliation that followed a meeting
Sunday concerning their 2'h-year-old daughter.

•

lioldings m Iran and abroad,
including a 36-story office
building it is building on New
York's Fifth Avenue.
The broadcast said the
transfer of royal properties
would benefit " religious,
educational, social and
welfare organization s
organized by the people and
run by them." The move was
intended to quiet widespread
criticism of the royal family
for its enonnous wealth and
alleged corruption.
One diplomatic source who·
asked not to be identified satd
it was a "half-way step"
toward fulfillm ent of the
ruler's pledge to put the
government in control of the
foundation, but "it probably
will not meet the demands of
the opposition."
"In the context of today's
reality, no one is going to
care," the source said "The
foundation has done a lot of

[.
r•

Studio manager defendant
~

CINCINNATI (AP) - A former Fred Astaire
Dance Studios manager and several associates were
~~ed in a civil suit by .the Ohio Attorney General's
'Office Tuesday, alleging consumer frautt.
Hamlltm County Common Pleas Judge Wllliain S.
Mathews set a hearing Thursday on a request for a
restraining order to stop Ray Packham, Sharonville,
and tthers from any future violations of Ohio's
consumer laws.

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-good things, such as financing scholarships for study
abroad, but ir has a bad
reputation as far as
corruption in the royal family
is concerned."
There was speculallon that
by the time the government
was . given control of the
foundation, most or all of tts
foreign holdings would have
been transferred to the shah
or some of the 64 members of
the royal family who have
gone abroad since political
t~nnoil increased last fall .•
In another move to appease
political opponents st ill
demanding the shah's abdication , the ruler pardoned
266 prisoners convicted by
military courts, the national
Pars news agency reported.
The r eport sa td those
pardoned had been convicted

NEW OWNER- David Chase is Ute new owner of the
River-Front-Diner, Pomeroy. Chase purchased the Diner
from Arthur Eblin in December. Tbe Diher will offer
home coo.kl!d food and in the near future, pizza and
delivery service seven days a week. Tbe 'Diner was
formerly jcnown in tbe community as the Blue and Grey
'

)

bcrrowtng agamst future tax
revenues unless the loan can
be repaid wtthm the same
calendar year .
His bill also repeals the new
state school loan fu nd, estabhshed last year to keep some
troubled dtstricts from
having lo close schools.
However, tt sets up local
cont mge ncy fu nds that
apparently would serve the
same purpose .
As usual, new bills also
have surface d in the
Legislature which convened
Jan 2.
State Rep. Wayne Hays , DBe!rnont·, offered his first
legislative propusalsTuesday
sm ce comn1g out of h1s

controvers ial

retirement

from Congress.
• He mtroduced m the Ohio
House proposals to limit the
use by public uttltttes of the
controversial fuel adjustment
clause. and to abclish tbe
Ohio Board of Regents.
Under his proposal, utilittes
could not pass on to their consumers the cost of purchased
fu el except at the cheapest
rate that was available to the
uttlity at the t1me tt was
needed
Hays s8ld utiitttes have
been under no restraint to
buy the lowest priced fuel,
us ually coal .
He sa td the board of
regents

IS

an unneeded Jayer

or bureaucracy whtch
tmpedes operation of Ohio 's
system of higher educatwn.
The former congressman,

67,
return ed to the
Legislature Jan . 2, about 30
months _after Ius restgnatwn
m a payroll mtstress scandal.
He served 111 the Ohto Senate
in the early 1940s

OSP accepting
applications

'

Elderly Woman
dies in fire

WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviei citizens are getting
more cars, · televiBlons, refrigerators and washing
macbjnes than ever before, according to tbe Central
Intelligence Ageqcy. But their economy is still growing
more slowly than Ute V. S. economy.
Overall, the Soviels are catching up in some ways
and falling behind in others.
Knit Shirts · Van Heusen Dress Shirts .
Sport Shirts · Dre.ss Flannels - Westerns •
Turtle Necks. Excellent selections. S, M, L
and XL.

ATTEND MEETING - More than 70 business and
ctvic leaders of Metgs County attended a meeting at the
Meigs IM Tuesday to hear aspects of an mdustrial site
study. From the left at the meeting are Paul Simon
president ' of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce:
'

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VOL XXIX

County study even though the
study was a combined venture. for 'both Athens and
Meigs Countie~. commented
that he had excellent
cooperation, locally, - in
conducting the study. llis son,
James
JenQings , Jr.,
presented aspects of the
Hobson area including
specific characteristics such •
as the tax rate, services to the
location, and availability o.f
the land, which the younger
Jennings said, would not be
sold by Conrail but would be
leased.
The senior Jennings
indicated tbat favorable
and unfavorable factors
had been discussed with
Meigs County businesses in
relation to Meigs County.
The factors Include the
(Contmued on page 12)

Soviets increasing luxuries

_liiitens ~alional Ba·nk
.

the 14 industrial sites
(I J To Investigate, evaluate
developed by the study In- and priority rank both' the
clude, in priority order:
existing and . Ute potential
Hobson yards, Barringer sites. The Hobson sites were
Hobson , the only two existing sites.
Ridge
Road,
Rutland, Five Points,
(2) To ~urvey local
Pomeroy Junior High School, manufacturers
so
~s
Old Dam 24, Dorcas, the area
to analyze the presnear Buffington Island, Port·
ent conditions of each o(
land, Long Bottom, Reeds· the 14 major industrial
ville, 'fuppers Plains and developni'ent location factors.
Chester.
(3) To conduct a market
Jennings
stated potential analysis to idenllfy
topography , the flood suitable potential industries
situation, the size, (at least 15 • with some 400 bemg found in
acres ) and the avaUabllily of · the sj;udy which could easily
electricity and services in· locate · on the Meigs County
·eluding sewerage and rail sites.
service were among the
(4) To compile a list of such
characteristics involved in companies whtch, Jennings
nailing down an industrial advised, should be contacted
site.
and informed of the
possibilities in Meigs County.
PURPOSES LISTED
'Four major purposes of the
Jennings, who presented
only aspects of the Meigs
project reported were:

CLEVELAND (AP ) -Cleveland may find itself
back in the middle of a financial crisis if land sales
planned by Mayor Dennis J. Kucinich are blocked by
utility C&lt;lllpany judgment liens.
_ Kucinich rescinded a layoff order affecting 400 city
workers, including 275 policemen, Monday night after
getting City Council approval to sell about $5 million in
city lands. City officials assured councilmen that $3
million in judgment liens held by the Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. did not affect the properties
that are up for sale.

JANUARY SALE

'

BY BOB HOEFLICH .
More than 70 Meigs County
business and civic leaders
heard about Meigs County's
14 lndustri~l site4 resulting
from a several months study
during a luncheon held at the
Meigs Inil at noon Tuesday.
The Pomeroy and Mid·
"' dleporl Churches of Commerce and the Meigs County
Regional Development
CouncU staged Ute meeting to
preaent industrial site in·
formation compiled by
Jennings Associates,
Columbus, through an Appalachian Regional Development grant secured by Ute
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley-Regional Development Commission.
James Jennings, Sr.,
Pflmar!ly, Jl!eslded over Ute
presentation pointin,g out that

Blocked sales could hurt

FLEXSTEEL

£6

Study shows Meigs
has 14·- industrial sites

'· '

Elizabeth Ewing, 88, Rt. 4,
Oak Hill, died Tuesday
during a fire at her home on
Keels Rd., just off Polk Patch
Rd., in Greenfield Twp.
The Gallia Cour\ty Sheriff's
Department was nottfied of
the fire and fatality at 10:08
a.m. by Ewing's son-in-law,
Marion Payne.
Payne told officers that
upon awakellinl( in a neighboring home he and his wife,
Mildred Payne, noticed the
Ewing home had burned
during the night.
Payne
reported
he
searched the burnt dwelling,
but was unable to find any
sign of his mother-in-law.
In order to notify Ute Gallia
Department, Payne drove to
Oak Hill to the nearest phone.
Arriving , at the scene,
deputies discovered the home
still partially burning,
smouldering and engulfed in
heavy smoke.
Following a searcb of the
demolished dwelling , the
victim's body was discovered
in the bedroom of the frame
structure.
Greenfield Township has no
fire protcctton

U . Ernest Wigglesworth,
Commander of the Gallia ·
Meigs Post, Ohio State HtghSPECIAL MEETING
way Patrol is presently acA special meeting of cepting applications and
Middleport village council testing applicants for 1979
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Academy classes. He asked
Thursday, Jan. II In all men and women incouncil chambers. Purpose terested in pursuing' a career
is to discuss and take ac· as a Trooper to contact their
tion on any business which nearest patrol post for furmi~ht be presented.
ther information.
"The position of Ohio State
Htghway Patrol Trooper
offers applicants Ute chance
of a challenging career," U .
Wiggle s worth
said.
"Troopers are frequently
called upon to take cbarge of
vartous , often emergency
situations. For this reason
ley conditions caused in· they are thoroughly trained
jury to three residents to handle people and
Tuesday.
. ·
situations calmly, efficiently,
The Middleport emergency ana diplomatically "
squad was called to Route 124
at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday for •
Charles Burt who had fallen.
He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 9 :~ p.m.,
EXTENDED FORECAST
the squad went to Chestnut
Friday tbrougb Sunday:
St.; for Karen Bailey, Mid·
Snow ending· Friday. Fair
dleport, who was injured
Saturday and cloudy·
while sletgh riding. She too,
Sunday. Little daily
was taken to Holzer Medical
temperature cbange. Highs
Center.
in the 20s. LOws 0 to 10
At 10:12 p.m., the squad
above early Friday, and 10
went to Grant Sf. for Millard
to 15 Saturday and Sunday.
Spaulding who had fallen. He
' HiS treated ou t~r scene.

:·:·.·;::-;.....; ; ;....;:-:; .·.; :·-:·· ;: ::-;:-: ::·::·

Three injured
in ice falls

·~

Applicants for the position
of Trooper must meet the
following qualifications : 21-30
years of age; a minimum
height of 5'8" (measured in
stocktng feet ) wtth body
weight proportional to
height ; have a valid driver's
license ; must have graduated·
from high school or be able to
show satisfactory completion
of the G.E.D. or equivalent.
for
Starting
salary
Troopers is $12,043 per year
with maximum potential,
through yearly increases, of
$1 4,456 annu ally . Benefits
include patd llohdays,
vacation, and sick leave; a
comprehensive retirement
and penston plan ; group
medical, surgical, and life
insurance programs; shift
differential and hazardous
duty pay.
"The Ohio State Highway
Patrol needs sincere people
who are interested In
developing a solid, secure
future in law enforcement,"
U. Wigglesworth said. "Men
and women who wish to apply
for the position of Trooper are
asked to call their local patrol
post immediately."
The Gallia · Meigs Post Is
located at 422 Jackson Pike.
·'Call U . Wigglesworth at 4462433 or 992-2397 for further
information.
I

i

�..
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-POIIIeroy, 0 ., Wednellday , Jan.

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

IN

·Washington
"
By Clarence
.R ep0rt Miller

LA~T ONE TO LEAVE,

Martha Angle and

TURN OUT THE .LIGHTS .. ~

Robert Walters

Shape up, Riegle!

Stability
main goal

July news ·s ummary.••

Youth jobs

I

Library

--

e
,...

Letters

~

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HEALTH
lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
Lheck out
'hot flashes'

,_

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· .ZaJDIUIW, I
·ll)'ltelll.l

41-JNr~Jd

anaiJi&amp; ·bere,

"'tiJDIIa be bea 111111 110 ...
of lnatncticm lllroqh
..vwtl•• I Ia m
and 116Wt'*l Ill a. palt
In 111111
.
One IIIIIDc paiDt, be ..,.,

s·•-

11 tllat a -If oa I sctal
coflln IBd - pa. ..dult

•.

nam.

·- ·
.
No one serloll8iy expected
Cotbea designer Pierre this country to- return to the
.Cardin hu branched out Into quagmire of Southeast Asia.
. a completely different field There Is no indication any
alltomoblles. Hl1 designer conlllderation Is 'being given
collectlcn for Cadlllles In- to such a move iii light of the
cludes a pulutor lUI, an VIetnamese lnvalllon.
.IIIICiercwtWJD a,lr-flow device, : . The United States has care. a fur r111 tn the trunt and · fully avoided assocl~lng
•Cardin's llgnature In gold at Itself with Olina's charge
. Ylriolll polnta . .
that .VIetnam is acting as a

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·

or vi lle. N.Y., and ·Timothy
Henry, pitcher, Paris, Texas
ani:! Dayton, Ohio.
In the secondary phase,
Cincinnati took Bordley and
Ga ry Kem pton, ca tc heroutfielder, Arlington Heights,

m.

COAMO, Puerto Rico (AP )
- Lasse Vireo of Finland ,
Henry Rono of Kenya a nd Bill
Rodgers of the United States
will participate in t~Je -San
Blass de lllescas maratilon
next month.
Viren, winner of the 5,000
and 10,000 meter events at the
1976 Montreal Olympics, won
the event in 1974 with a lime
of I :06.17. Rono won last year
in I :04 .46.
Rono , Viren and Rodgers,
who won the Boston and New
York marathons last year,
we r e invited along with
runners from 27 countries for
the Feb. 4 marathon on
Puerto Rico's south coast.
NEW YORK (AP ) - Major
Indoor Soccer League teams
will host )\loscow Spartak, a
Russian championship soccer
team, in a six.game tour next
montil .
MISL Commissioner Earl
Foreman said tile tour will
begin in Pittsburgh Feb. 2
and continue in New York
Feb . 4, Houston Feb.5,
Ph il adelph ia
·Feb.
8,
Ci ncinnati F eb . 10 a nd
Cleveland Feb. 12.

Atlantic Oiv'ision
W. L. Pet. GB

.

ev-s.
STEAK HOUSE
Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

HEARTY HOME
.

AWAY FROM HOME. ,

TEAM

At Bob Evans Steak House, we
serve a lot more than steak. We have
hotcakes, fried mush, hot baked
biscuits, fresh farm eggs, and all the
good things ttiat go with Bob Evans
. Farms country fresh Sausage.
So stop on in on yourwaytowork.
And do it right for breakfast.
'

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• • • ••
•

..• •••
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o • e ot "

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(All Games)
W L

Cedarv ill e
Urbana

7 5

6 6

Mal one
Walsh

6 7
.4 8

Rio Gr ande
Ohi o Dominican
Mt . Vernon
Ti ffin

5 10
.2 7

4 12
1J

4

NEW P UBLISHING
BALTIMORE (AP )
Johns Hopkins Unive rsity
Press says it plans to start a
publishing program in poetry
and short fiction In the spring
oii979.
E;ach year two works either poetry 0r short fiction
- will be published.
·
The university says the
program wili provide a forwn
for writers of superior artistic • standards, whether
they are alr e·ady wid ely
known or a re . talented
newcomer s.

27 1J .675

New J er sey ,.
New Y ork
Bosl o.n
Cen t ra l

19 18 .51.:1 6112
20 22 .476 8
13 2.4 .351 121f2 .
Division

San An toni o

Ar t Lanha m 's Rio Gra nde College Red men
thrilling 73-71 Mid -Ohio Confe re nce basket ba ll
vic to r y o ver v isiti ng Walsh College a t Lyne Center
Tues day evening .
It was a game of "good and of overtime play although
bad" halves and one exciting neither team scored.
overtime.
Finally. with 2: 11 left to
First Half All Rio
play. Lonnie Moore drove the
In the fir st half, the Red· lane for two. It was 69-G7 ,
men, up by as many as 19 Walsh.
poi nts (25-6 ) with 11 :13 ·Dan Bise, playing with four
showing on the clock, could per sonals, put Rio back on
do no wrong. The Redmen led top with a three-point play at
46-32' during the halftime the I :01 mark..
intermi ssi on .
Looked Bad For Rio
. In tHe second half, Walsh,
Walsh called time with 42.
taking adva ntage of five seconds left - the Cavs' final
consecutive Rio turnover s in time out of the game. With 22
the first four and one-half seconds r emaining, Luther ' s
minut es of play, began short jumper put the visitors
chopping away at the home back on top. 71-70. It looked
team 's lead. With 4:39left in bad for Rio.
regulation play, Walsh finally
The Redmen came up
passed the Redmen, 60-59, on court . After passing it around
a tap-in by Craig Luther.
lor 15 seconds, Purcell's long
From that point on. it was a jumper split the cords with
nip-and-tuck affair.
only seven seconds left ,
The Cavs, who led only one giving his team a 72-71 adother tim e, 2-0, on Ed vantage.
Ungahick's first goal of the
A Walsh player ca lled time
game, forged ahead 63-59 with t hree seconds left . Since
with 3:59 r emaining on lour the Cav s we re out of
straight foul shots (two each tlmeo uts, a technical foul wa s
by. Luther and Ungahick). It called. Purcell calmly sank
appea red
the " ga me's the technical shot. Rio took it
momentum had changed to out of bounds. Gr eg James
the visitors' side.
was fouled with one second
James Ends Drought
left, butthe Redmen got it out
Greg James' driving layup of bounds again becau se
with 2:581eft not only cut the Walsh was not in the one-anddeficit back to two. 63-Gl , it one situation.
also ended a Rio ~oring
Time r an out on th e
drought whi ch spp a nned follo wing inbounds play . Rio
seven m inutes a nd 10 now owns .a 2-0 confer ence
seconds.
mark. T!le Cavs dropped
The Cavs went Into a their first league battle in two
passing gam e during the final sta rt~ nine minutes of play. During
On the year. Rio upped its
that.time, Walsh rallied from reco rd to 5-10. Walsh dropped
a 59-56 deficit to compile its to 4-ll overall.
biggest lead of the game,
Luther Top Scorer
outscoring the Redmen 7-0.
Coa ch Ma rk Lamero ·s
Joe Feesler 's two charity Cavs were led by Cra ig
tosses (1:41) gave Walsh Luther's 30 point s. Lonnie
another fo ur-point lead, 65-GL Moore added 11 as did E d
Purcell canned a 20-footer Ungahick. Joe Feesler tossed
from the corner with 59 in 10.
seconds left . It was 65-63 in
The Cavs connected on 32 of
favor of the visitors. ·
57 field goal attempts for 56.1
Wit h 46 second s left , per cent. Walsh was seven of
Wa.lsh 's Feesler was called 12 at the foul line for 58.3
for traveling. Six seconds percent .
later, Purcell came through
Walsh had 31 rebounds, 10
again, knotting the count at by Luther and seven by
65-aU.
Moore. The losers had 20
Craig Luther 's driving turnovers and 10 assi;ts.
layup with 26 seconds to go
Rio Grande placed four
put Walsh back on top, 67-65. men in double figures, led by
Swain Saves Redmeu
Greg James' 24 markers.
Rio worked the ball up Dan Bise had 14, Da n Purcell
court . Purcell let go with 13 and Mark Swain 10.
another 20-footer, but missed.
The Redmen hit 30 of 68
It bounced over to Mark field goal attempts for 44 .1
Swain, who quickly turned percent Rio was sizzling hot
and fired it in for a game- at the foul line, canninJl 13 of
tying goal with only nine 14 for 92.8 percent.
seconds left .
The Redmen had 33
Walsh fa iled to score on the rebounds, 10 by James, eight
ensuing inbounds play, by Bise and seven by Swain .
sending t he game into Rio had 12 turnover s and 11
overtime.
assists.
Action was hot and heavy
In other Mid-Ohio Conduring the first three minutes fer ence ga mes T uesd ay
night, Cedarville evened its
league mark atl-1 with a 9182 victory over Mt . Vernon
Nazarene and
Ur bana
rema ined unbeaten in two
starts by t urnilljl back Tiffin ,
74-63. It was Tiffin's firSt loop
loss.
Steubenville Next
MID-OHIO
Rio Grande will ho st
CONFERENCE
Steubenville College Thurs!League Only&gt;
w L- day at 7: 30 p.m. in a nonTEAM
2 o confer ence game.
Ri o Grande
Urbana
2 o
Saturday, the Redmen will
Wal sh
1 1 take on Ohio Domini can
Ti ffi n
; ; College in a MOC tilt at
Cedarv ille
o 1 Ca p it a l Un i ve'ts i ty,
Malone
Ohio Domini can
o 1 Columbus.
MI. Vernon
0
2..
Tuesday's box score:
TOTALS
7 7
Tuesday' s results :
WAL SH (71 ) - Nau J-0-6;
Rio Grande7J Walsh 71 1ol) Sedm oc k Q. J-1; Moo re 5-1-11 ;
Ceda rvill e 91 Mt. Ver non 82 Sulli va n 0-0-0; Ungahi ck s·-1
Urbana 74 Tiff in 6J
11; L uther 14·2-30; Siegle 1-0-

standings

Washingt on

Phi la~el ph ia 2J 1J .6J9 2

·

MOCcage

'Fhe Daily Se~ltinel

Easte rn Conference

' Houst on

a·

By BilL VALE
talked with the Cincinnati
AsStJclated Press Writer scouts and I explained to
CINCINNATI (AP) - The them ·dad had open heart
Cincinnati Reds, who ha ve surgery, my brother was in a
lost players like Pete Rose serious accident and my
· and Don Gullett to the fr.,.. other brother is going inlo the /
agent draft, are not.-about to Air Force. I had hoped one of
let a gqod prospect get away them could relieve some or
the burden at home," he said.
if they can help it.
"l'm really disppointed,"
Joe Bowen, chief scout,
said the Reds are going to he said,lhat the Reds !!rafted
plunge ahead to try to sign him. " Now I'm going back' to
University of Southe rn USC. I wanted the West
California pitcher Bill Coast. The California Angels
had agreed to put me on their
Bordley.
Bordley, who said he made roster right away . 1 could be
himself available · for the playing major league ball 30
n:iajor league draft by miles fr om my home." .
"He was the best player
switching to a junior college,
said he won 't sign. He said available," sa id Bowen. "We
Tuesday he wanted to play are going to make him a subwith a West Coast team so he stantial offer. I think we honcould stay close to home to ored him by selecting him."
"This is the saddest day of
help take care of his family at
my life, and it's my 21st
Rolling Hills, CaUl. ·
Bordley even wrote letters birthday,"· said Bordley.
He said his mother advised
to non-West Coast clubs
him not to let the family stand
explaining this.
But, when the Reds drew in the way of any decision he
the third lot in the secondary thinks is best for him.
The Reds drafted Kevin
phase of the draft, they were
W
aller
, a 19-year-&lt;!ld third
not about to step aside for
baseman
outfie lder from San
California teams.
·Bordley, 25-2 in two years Diego, first in the regular
with USC, had transferred to phase of the draft.
Selected in the regular
El Camino Junior College
near Los Angeles , he said, •'to phase after Waller were:
make myself available for Rob ert Elli ott, pitc her ,
F la . ;
Kevin
the draft. There's nothing Orla ndo,
more I've ever wanted to do Lind sley , pitc her, Anthan play professional baiL" chorage, Alaska; Larry
He said in a te~phone Raskin,· catcher , Baltimore ,
Interview from Rolling Hills Md.; Dale Cha tham , pitcher,
he wrote to all . non-West Bilo xi, Miss.; Timot hy
Coast teams asking them not Stamper,_ pitcher, LaCrosse,
Wis.;
Richa rd
Rizzo,
to draft him .
• " It was ma nda t ory. I outfielder-infie ld er, Ma n'

SPORTS

Assol:ia tion

·
from t h e side
Da n P urceII ' s 20-f oot JUmper
with seve ri seconds left in o vertim e gave Coach

Reds .draft young pitcher

I

AI A,Giance
By The Associated Press

,

RIO'S Steve Lones (21) fires fade-away jumper on this play. Walsh defender is Lonnie
Moore (14 ).

,

National Basketball

•
•
·
al
Wmnmg go

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT~"

.

I

.

J

'

(

------------,
I Pro 1·
!Standings :

. P urce·II s
Dan
•umper m OT

Berry's World,

peGple pta dlate lllcllaa.e
their cnm CGI!nlf"

...

.

Ri9 nips CaVs, 73-71'
'

There has been much In the the bulned rulna of nlgbtclubl
news lately about the rioting and movie theaters DOW
and tumioil taking place In verily.
Iran. How It will come out no · The opposltton to the Shah
one is quite yet sure. But one appears centered around
thing appears certain, exiled religloua . leader,
whatever the outcome, the Ayatollah
Rubollan
western world ,will suffer a Kho_m einl, who from his
sertous setback In political home In Paria bas been the
and economic tenns.
. prin~lpal Instigator of- the
It 1$ hard for us to .ob- , riot~.- strikes and d"!Jlon·
jectlvely analyze the present strations that have taken
unrest In Iran . In that the place in Iran. An Indication of
government of the ·Shah has his abilily to mobWze the
been a staunch and reliable masses was the astounding
"' ally, a Ioree In International tumout of over one milUon
' politics that hill! done much to anti-Shah protesters In
stabWze the balance of power Teltran, the nation's capitol,
in a higi.ly critical and · on December 11, the high holy
sensitive Erea of the world. day of the Shiite Muslims. His
To our colilltry, the Shah has opposition to the Shah Is
appeared as a well In- shared by many · other
tentloned leader bent on Iranians, not ao much lor the
making Iran, a country of a:; -Shah's religious and cultur~ .
million people a modern, Insensitivities, as lor bls
highly indU!IrlaUzed aoctety, alleged political abUBes. This
a society In which the henelits latter. elf!Ilent of oppoBlllon
of such growth would be open· represents every,ahade of the
to all. To date the ligures · political spectrwn, so it Is
bear him out. Twentycftve hard to say what kind of
years ago Iran's illlteracy government will emerge
rate was 95 percent; today h should the Shab be toppled.
Is an estimated 50 percent.
Russia, the northern ,neighThe school population wsa bor of Iran, ts, of course,
275,000; It Is now 10 million. watching the developments
Twenty-five years ago there relative to the Shah with
was one Institution of higher particular Interest. Though
education; today there are- no Indication of direct In·
about 200. The Iranian terventlon
has
been
government sponsors the evidenced, Intelligen-c e
education of over 30,000 of its · reports have been received
students in
American that Indicate the Soviets have
universities along.
repeatedly beamed InThe Shah's fatal flaw, it flam m a I o r y r ad I o
appears, was his all con- propaganda across their
· suming dedication to the aouthern border into Iran in
modernization of his country. an effort to incite eontlnlled
Financed by the fabulous confrontation. Additionally,
wealth derived from Iran •s they have stepped up their
oil fields, (Iran Is the world's military support of Iraq,
second largest exporter of Syria, and Southern Yemen
petrolewn), he attempted to in anticipation of capitalizing
impose rather autocratically on Iran's present unrest.
a growth pattern and Ulestyle
The uprising against the
many In his nation were Shah is potentially one of the
uncomfortable with. As a worst crises the West bas had
people Iranians have long ' to face In the last 25 years.
been suspicious and resentful Iran is not just a · major oil
of foreign Influences within . suwller. It has al'IO been the
their borders. Nationailstic prime protector of western ·.
by nature, they have ·long interests In a region which
sought to maintain a distinct produces half the non way of Ufe rooted in their conununlst ·\vorld's oil. Its
Persian heritage and Islamic geographical posjtloo on the
beliefs. So for many, the Shah Persian Guilla critical to the
moved too fast and too far. maintenance of the West's oil
The western technology he trade. Continued chaos In this
bought with oil money key cowtry could ligDal the
brought with it western In- . beginning of an unraveling
fluences that offended and process throughout aU of the
alienated ~~·qy Iranians, as Middle East.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Just as every Sj:hool teacher ~
frustrated, if not angered, by lazy student! .whose performance fails to reflect their ability, voters too often are
plagued by talented public offiCials whose work is only
mediocre,
Congress has II.! share of these under-achievers and tllere's
no better eXample of an "A studEnt" currently dol11g C-level
work than Sen. Donald W. Riegle Jr., D-Mlch., who for almost .
a decade batiled courageously for what he believed was right
even when his position wu unpopular.
Since he was s~ In as a senator two years ago, however,
the 40-year-old Riegle has seemingly been transformed Into a
politician too .wllUng to curry favor with special interest
groups In return lor their generous spesklng fees or campaign
contributions.
Riegle was only 28 when he was elected to a House seat from
his hmne town of F11nt, Mich., In 1966. The victocy was
especially impressive because he was a Republican candidate
· in a heavily Democratic blue~llar area.
·
In Washington, Riegle became the youngeSt representative· ~Tl"A
ever to gain a seat on the powerful-House Appropriations Com- HUlMt FO&lt;rr wor&lt;n&lt; &gt;;TAR· THeGI!AM
mittee. In 1967, the U.S. Jlll'llor Chamber of Conunerce named
bim one of the 10 Outatandlng young men In the nation.
. One of the first cungreuional opponenta of the Vletriam War,
Riegle became a vocal crtilc of everything from GOP defense
policies to VIce Presidellt Spiro T. Agnew. In early 1973; he
switched to the Democratic party.
·
After a decade In the House, Riegle entered the 1976 Senate
rae.: In Michigan, toppled the favorite In the Democratic
July 1- Judy Riggs left for Larry's Grocery In 'Syracuse. two new tennis courts was
primary and defeated a popular Republican in the general .
tdunlch, Germany, with 100
July 8 - Summer staffer • underway In Syracuse. The
election.
·
other
members
of
the
first
Judy
Owen pointed out the Meigs Local Board. of
By BARRY SCHWEID
But one of Riegle's few distinctions in his first two years In
United
States
Twirling
Team
'
popularity
of area yard sales. Education discussed inAssociated Pre!is Writer
the Senate was his tie for first place on the 1977 list of ~ators
to
go
abroad
.
July9-JohnRice
became creasing from 17 hours to 20
WASHINGTON ( A~ ) earning substantial 8JIIOUJits of money from speaking lees and Pl'esident Carter'sdecision to
July 2 - Elma Louks and new president of the Mid- the minimum how's required
other honoraria paid for outside activities.
Frances Roberts, sisters and dleport - Pomeroy Rotary for graduation from Meigs
normalize relations w'ith
He earned $25,000, the maximum allowed under Senate Olina had stability in Asia as teachers, announced their · Club. ·
High School.
•
rules. When the senatoni• reports for 1978 are tnade public a prime goal.
1
retirements wrapping up
July 10 - Middleport
July 16- Open House was
later this year, Riegle Is expected to again be at or near the top
But a week after the more than 75 years as VIllage decided to advertise held at the new Bend Area
oftheilst.
for a new backhoe while Medical Center held in New
clicking of champagne educators.
A member of the Senate Banking Conunittee, Riegle ac- glasses, Asia is experiencing
July 3 - Sheriff James Pomeroy VIllage officials · ltaven.
cepted $4,000 lnm the American Bankers Association for a new unrest with the toppling Proffitt announced a survey discussed the possibilities of
July 17 - Pomeroy Council
pair of 19'17 speeches. He received another $1,500 for an ad- of the Pol Pot regime In team from the United States a local Income tax.
again discussed an Income
dress to the Mortgage Bankers Aasoclation.
Department of Energy would
July 11 - Another train tax proposal and then
Cambodia.
He spoke to Chrysler Colp. audiences twice in 1977, earning
work
In
Meigs
County.
derailment
took place near dropped the Issue.
This has led to mounting
a $1,500 fee on each occasion. A Ford Motor Co. speech produc- U.s: concern that the war in
July 4 -Some outstanding Letart In Mason County and
July 18 - A profit plot
ed another $1,000 In outside income.
floats
.were
featured
in
the
evacuation
proc~dures
got
program
for Meigs fanners
Cambodia could touch off
In addition, Riegle's !lelllllorial campaign fund recefved greater instability, with July 4th parade In Racine underway.
was
hel&lt;kat
the Horace Karr
1
more than $6,000 Inm Chrysler, $1,000 from Ford and more Ollna, the Soviet Union , or headed by Pete Simpson.
July 12 - Dr. James COnde farm near Olester. Pomeroy
than $5,000from the National Automobile Dealers Association. both, stepping, into the ' July 5 - The Meigs County announced plans to move Into youngsters found nalls
(In each case the mmey ciune from a political action commit- conftict.
Budget Commission refused _ offices in Middleport. Karr " planted" ln . a school
tee. )
fund
transfers within ap- Construction of Pomeroy was .. playground a discouraging
The U.S.-Chlnese comnluAn early and enthusiastic supporter of proposed federal nique on establishing full proprlatlons of the county awarded the general contract factor againSt mini-bikes.
regulations requlrln8 passive restraints (such as air hags) on relations pledged opposition health department.
for the construction of a
July 20.- ·Eight Contestants
passenger cars,, Riegle unexpectedly switched his position to any country or group of
July 6 - The sheriff's multi-purpose building in for Meigs Junior Fair queen
alter being lobbied by Industry executives opposed to the co u n t r'i e s s e e kin g department
probed · a Pomeroy.
and king titles underwent
devices.
at
July
13
Construction
of
Interviews.
_
breaking
and
entering
"begemony" In the AsiaRiegle has a responslbWty to represent his home state's big- Pacific region .
July 21 - Meigs received
gest Industry, but his record during the past two years lends · That meant the Soviet
grants totaling $892,440 . lor
credence to Ralpb Nader's unflattering characterization of Union and ita friends.
construction of a school for
him as "the selllitor from General Motors."
the mentally retarded and an
But the declaration did not
Moreover, his support of various anti&lt;ODSwner measures is stop Vietnam, with whom the
aduh workshop .
unmatched by any conCixnltant Interest In the numerous Russians signed a 25-year
July 23 - Middleport
By TOM GILLEM
designate by administrative
domestic and intemationallssues that ·reguiarJy attracted his peace and cooperation treaty
Associated Press Wrtler rule those jobs in which 'firemen extinguished a lire
_attention during his years In the House. ·
.
~
on a boat owned by Donald
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) minors should not engage.
In November, from invading
In 1972, Riegle wrote-a best«Wng book, "0 Congress," Cambodia.
A new child labor law for
Mrs. Johnson said the state Newell, Middleport.
whose dust jacket accurately described him as one of "the · Hanoi's unseating of the Ohio, · which
July 24 - Middleport
becomes proposes to adopt as
brave men and wmnen in the House who risk their careers by Pol Pot regime In Phnom effective Friday, gives hazardous occupations the Council took action to get
votin9 their consciences." .
Penh is at least an Indirect parents more responsibility same jobs pr0hiblted by the flood Insurance for-residents.
Riegle would provide both his state and the nation the im-. Soviet thrnst at Peking.
July 25 - Meigs Comfor determining how much . U.S. Secretary of Labor, plus
proved representation they deserve If l!e reVived that high
Evidently the Russians did work their children perform, jobs on railroads, wharfs and missioner Richard Jones
standard and applied it to his lackluster career in the Sena!f.
docks and handling fertilizer. announced an Appalachia
not get the U.S.-Chinese New a state official saya.
Velma Johnson, a division
The federal list Includes Regional Commission grant
· Year's Day message• - or
chief
In
the
Department
of
Insuch
jobs as coal mine of $45,000 towards the multi. - - - -- ' -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , · -didn't' care.
Soviet
Influence
in dustrial Relations, saya the operations, logging and purpose building construction
Southeast Asia could now be new statute also will end sawmill operatloos, use of fund.
July 26 - An electronic
"expanding , just as the , nightmares for employers by certain power-driven maRussians were making conforming Ohio law with chinery and manufacturing voting system was demonL~
I . .
strated for the Meigs Board
or storing of explosives.
headway in Afghanistan and federal law.
I
8
.,.,
"This
is
a
complete
~
The department will of Elections and the board
Ethiopia before Carter
II
__..,,,
revision
of
the
labor
law
for
conducts
public hearing Feb. later put the system into
played his China card. Those
It' ,..•''
minors,';•
said
Mrs.
Johnson,
13
in
Columbus
on the operation lor county voters.
Soviet gains apparently were
A
II
.,... ....
Ju.Iy 'll - Susan Hannwn,
who
heads
thedivision
proposed
job
prohibitions,
R ,..~,.....
ooe
reason
for
the
U.S.
move
y ,... .
Eastern
dealing
with
women,
minors,
High student, was
Mrs.
Johnson
said.
to
closer
ties·
with
Ollna.
y
minimum
wage
and
selected
lor
the AII-Dhlo State
No
longer
will
the
state
set
It
is
stW
not
clear
what
Im,.
,limes when minors may or Fair Youth Choir.
pact those ties wili have on prevailing wage.
July 28 --, Dr. and Mrs. R.
"It's going to make it much may not work at night, she
Jan. 8,1979 Carter's top foreign policy
__ Rev. Wilbur Perrin
R. Plckllllll hosted the annual
goal for 1979 - completion of easier for the employer ... ," · said.
Trinity~ch
a
strategic
weapons she said. "In the past there · "These kids nowadays Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
. East SeCmd st.
has been too much conflict want to work," she said. 11 So picnic at their home ,on
Uml~tion treaty with the
Pomeroy ,Ohio
between state and federal the respoosibWty for them Lincoln Hill.
R•ans.
laws."
working at night will be
July 30 - Lewis Bates, ·
The Soviet negotiating
Dear Rev: Perrin,
Those
differences
include
strictly
up
to
their
parenta,"
Mason,
was critically injured
position could be hardening
• Now that Chrlslmu Is over and one of the Christmas as a response to the U.S.- · such specifics as the limes at slie said.
when struck by a train at the
poinsettias Mrs. ~Ewing donated to the Trinity Church Olinese ties, and relations night when a minor attending
"H they think it's all right Mason crossing.
was in need of a new home, we're happy that you and your between Washington and school may work. The old lor the child to work all night
July 31 - steve Coleman, .
congregation tholl8ht ~ us.
Mllscow, which have been state law said 14 and 10-year- and tben go to school the next 11, Reedsville, was Injured In
We have aeveral P,lanta at Pomeroy Ubrary,lncluding one improving gradually since olds could mly WQI'k until 6 day, then the child can do it." a bicycle-car accident. '·
pot which needs to be dlvlded and half sent to Middleport. But, last spring, may be turning p.m. on school nights, while
the federal law allowed work
aside from that half a pot, Middleport Library hasn't much downward again .
I
green - and it sure could use aome.
·
The SALT treaty that unti'I 7 p.m., sh e. sa1'd .
I hope that your polnaettla (and the plants I hereby Carter said was about
The old state child labor
promise to lralll(llant thla week) will be the start of some wrapped up 15 months ago is law also Includes a Ust of
greenerjr lor the MlddJeport "tolka. Our libraries are looking not wrapped up yet. Tbe prohibited occupations for
somewhat dingy, with dark paint ll8ldng off the walls, and summit meeting with Soviet minors, or persons under age
.
some plants would lielp to liven them up unW we can get nice, President Leonid Brezhnev 18.
·There are no stafu\ ory profresh of! white paint on the walll and maybe some children's that some administration
artw&lt;ik.or some local artisla' work OD display.
ollicials thought woUld be hibitions In the new law. InPlease leU your congreptioo we are grateful for their held about now is off 1D1Ul at stead, the direciOl' of
industrial relations will
thf!Ughtfulness. - Sincerely, Ellen Bell, Director, Serving aU least February.
of 'Meigs County.
And only optimists expect
Brelhnev to be here on the
heels of Chinese Vice
surrogate for the Soviet
Premier Teng Hsiao-ping,
Uflion.
YOUR owN COJTIN
wNie the ower li Uvtng.
who will . make his own
The United States can now
"One guy I know Is dramatic visit to Washington ·
SAN Ja!E, Clllf. (:AP) take on the role of
Dale 1..aml!lw hu juet the lemporarllf Ullng bla as a the end of this month .
imploring
lblnc for the JMI'DI wbo llires ilquGr cabinet. It a1ao could · Carter's natiqnal security · peacemaker,
Olina and the Soviet Unfon
' to plan ahead: a fU6 bllllld u a stereo or a gun adviser, Zblgnlew Brzezinski, not to widen th~ conflict.
Instruction
bootlet calinet," be sai!L
pleased .the Chinese by
Zamlow, naturally, has . making mocking references
np!elnl.. bow Ill dellcn IIIIi
built bla own.
- • to the Polar Bear - Peking
build 7- mrn diD.
"IInce I'm 1cillg to be .Jargon for the Russians - on
"Caskets normal17 eoat
anJWbere . from •100 to cremated, I bave a l.foot- a tour of tbe Great Wall last
·
..,100," be lllid. "1111&amp; II JOU Ian1, +lllciHlllh calket for May.
1MB my bootlllt 111111 add the 1117 ull•," be laid. "My
The communique did not
Cllllt rJ mallrlall, J011 can . wife, wbo cJeolgne d~, Ill promise the United States
Ullng It u a cloeoot lor doll would tate military steps to
bulld - far auwd •·
.counter the Russians or Viet"And bllhles, bow IIIUI)' ckitbet richt now."

L"

3-The_Qaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1979
'

0

25 16 .610
22 17 .564

2

At lanta
20 21 .488 5
Cleve land
17 22 .436 7
New Orleans n 29 .11 0 121n
De~rWeslern c!~,;~~~~~ 12 '1'
Midwest Division
Kans. City 23 16 ·590
Denver
M il w .
Chi cago
Indiana

21 20 .512
18 26 .409
16 24 .400
15 25 ..375
Pacific Div ision

Sea tt le'

24 14 .6J2

Los Ange les ·106. New York
94

San Ant oni o 116, De tro i t 114
San D 1ego 11.4, New Qr leans

107

Golden Sta te 103 , Chicago 10 1
Hous ton 126, Ka ns as Ci ty 11 0
Denver 121, Washi ng ton 90
Ind ian a 11 2, Portland 104
Today 's Games
Los Angeles a ! Boston
Chicago a t New J ersey
New Or leans a! Ph iladelph ia
At lanta a t Mil wa ukee
Ind iana a t Sea t tl e
Thu rsday)s Ga mes
Portl and a t De troit
San Diego a t Sa n Anton i o
Golden Stat e at Kans as

Cil y
Sea til e a t Phoen ix
Pro Hock ey

At A Glance
By The Associa ted Press
Nat iona l Ho c ke y l eague
Cam pbe ll Confer ence ·
Pa trick Div i sio n

gf ga

189 102

23 1J 4 50 168 1JJ
22 14 6 50 140 122

Phila .

22 16 4 48 170 149

Atl a nt a

Sm yth e Div isio n
Chicag o
14 17 8 36 123 144
Vancou ver 15 24 3 33 130 164
Color ado
9 26 6 24 117 169

Sl l oui s

Ry ALEX SACHARE
AP Spur•s Wri1 er
It took awhile, but the In-

in U1e second half, when the
I..akers moved in fr ont by as
many as 20.
Nuggc•s 121, l!ullets 90

di a na Paeers have fina lly
l&lt;lmed the wild , wild West.
Indiana

Denver scored the fir st

won on lhe road

seven points and

8 29 6 22 125 196

Wales Conferen ce
Adam s Di vi si on

neve r

tra iled , le~ din g Washington
by as many as 40 points en
route to its third straight
vi c tory. Davi d Thompso n
scored 16 of his g\l me-high 22
points in the f irst ha lf, when
the Nuggets eonnec ted on 57
pereent of their shots.
Spurs 116, Pislons 114

aga inst a Pacific Division
dub for the fir st time in team
3
his t ur y· Tues day ni ght ,
7'12 journeyiog to P ortland and
71/ 2
8'12 coming away wit h a 112-104
vic tory over t he Tra il
Blazers.
The Pacers had lost 25 conv, secutive
road . ga mes to
3'' 1

Phoeni x
26 16 .619
Los Ang .
25 16 .610
Golden St.
22 19 .537
.Port laTld
19 18 .514 4'12
Sa n Diego
20 23 .465 6 11:&lt;'
Tuesd ay's Ga m es

w I I pis
N.Y . Isl anders
2l 5 7 61
N. Y . Rang ers

Pacers end _hex,
~road game

Pacific Di v ision teams in

George Gervin scored ·32

their three years in the poinls and Larry Kenan had
Na t i o na I B a s ketba 11 29 for San Antonio.
Association. '
Delroit Coach Dick Vitale
·: usua lly when we come in was ea lled for a lec hnica Houl
here we're blown out by half- with one second logo when he
time,' ' said Pacers guard

rushed onto the court afte r

Ricky Sobers, who scored 12 on e of hi·s players , Leon
of his 211 points in lhe fourth Douglas, had fallen down .
quarter. "It's ver y gratifying The free throw by Kenon
to win out her e, especially gHve San Antonio a two--point
because Portland has on e of lead.
the best home r ecords ( 16-5)
The Pi stons IJ·ied an a lley fi nd because this is the fir st m p play and scored what
ga me on ou r f our ga m e appeared to be the tying
swing."
basket at the buzzer, but it
In other NBA games was disallowed because of
Tu esda y night , the Los offensive goa lt end ing by
Angeles I.akers beat the New Terry Tyler.
York Knicks 106-94, the
Warriur s 103, l!ulls 101
Denver Nuggets clobbered
Phil Smith .&lt;eored 32 points
lhe Washin~ton Bullets 121- to lead • Golden S_t.ate. but .
90, the San An tonio Spurs fo uled out wil h 5:44
edgetl U1e Detroit Pistons 116- remaining. Chieago reeled off
114, the. San Diego Clippers eight pnints in a row to pull to
.defeated th e New Orleans within 101-99,' but Warrior s
J azz 114-107, the Golden St.ate ce nter
Robert
Pa ri s h
Wa rriors trim med the responded wi th a 20-foot
Chicago Bulls 103-101 and the
for the eventual
Houston Rockets beat the :;;;iiiiiliio.liiii
oilinil
tsii..--~~~
Kansas City Kings 126-110. •
Johnny Davis stored 25
)» ints on l().for-15 shooting
and Mike Ba ntom added 21 on
9-for-12 shoot ing as the
Pacers posted their fourtil
victory in the last five games.

Bos ton
Buffa lo

27 '"'6 7 61 175 123
Indiana scor ed six straight
16 14 10 42 133 129 ,points to !&lt;Ike lead for good at
Tor on to 17 19 6 40 136 138
R9-l!5 with R: 18 r emaining. SoM1nneso ta
·
14 20 ' 32 118 135 bers' late scor in g kept them ·
Norr is Di vi si on
on top.
Montrea l 28 8 5 61 166 102· ,The Blazers, who have lost
Los Ang . 17 IB 6 40 149 145 four of their last five games.
Pitts.
15 17 8 38 142 141
Wash.
10 24 7 27 127 1 8 ~ lost guard Lionel Hollins. who'
Delrbil
8 22 11 27 121 148 spr a ined his right ankle early
tuesda y 's Ga mes

Phi ladel phia 5, Washing Lon

2

New Yo rk Is lander s 7, Los
Ang eles 1
A ll an ta 5, Buffa lo 3
New Yor k Ra nger s ·s, St.
Louis 3
So v iet Wings d, Boston 1,
ex hi bi li on
Today' s Ga mes "'
New Yor k Islanders al
Detroit
M ont r ea l at Pill sbu r gh
Minneso ta at T or on to
Los Ang eles a t Chi cag o
New Y or k Ranger s a t
Colorad o
Thursday's Games
M innesota at Bos, on
De tro it a t Phil ad elphi a
Wash ing too a t Bu ffal o
St. L ou is at Van couver .

World Hockey
Association

w I I pis gf ga
Quebec 20 13 4 44 141 123
New Eng. 19 10 6 44 155 124

in the game . Ba ckcourtmate

Dave Twardzik led Portland
with 23 poinl&lt;.
Portland outscored Indiana
23-2 from the free lhrow line
in the fir st ha lf and 42-20 for
the game, but the Pacers had
a 46-31 edge in field goals .
!.akers 106, Knieks 94
Ka reem Abdul-J apbar,

• Fis hing Tac k le
an d Rod s
a nd Reels
• Gun s and ..
Re lo ad ing
w Ba ll Gloves
Camping
Eq uipm ent
• ·Arc her y
• Indoor Gaines
•'We
have Gi lt
Certificates
'&lt;}

601 Main St .
Pt. Pleasa nt ' W . Va.

wea ring No . 50 instead of his

usual No. 33 because his
mother

for g~t to

VISA"

return his

'j e rsey after doing the
laundry, hill2 of 15 shots and
scored 28 points as the Lakers
easil y beat the 'Knicks and
climbed wi thin onehalf game
of Sea ttle and Phoenix in the
Pacifi c Divis ion. AbdulJabbar scored 20 of his points

I' HONE

675-2988

Open Sunday 1- p.m.-6 p.m.
. Monda y thru Sa t urday
9 .. rr •,e p.m.

Wi nn ipeg 16 13 5 37 143 124

Cine .

16 20 4 J6 140 147

Ed m on ton

Birm .
x-l nd .

x

17 16 10 J4 127 11 8
15 18 3 J3 132 lJB
5 18 2 12 78 lJQ_

suspended operati ons

Tuesda y's Ga mes
Quebec 4, Cinc i nnati 3
Winnipeg 4, Ed m onton 3 , at

Today 's Ga mes

No ga mes sc hedu led

Thursday's Ga mes

8 reasons why

·_ReDDY HeareR®

outP.erforms

·all others

Winnipeg a t N ew Engl and
Quebec a t Ind ia napoli s

&gt;'

.'.

3. He• vv duty trau ·
forMe r and soark
ptulf ignitor assure
'I QUick

IMJSi!iV&amp; SllftS

... even in subzero

Burke names 2

remper11mes. ·

&amp; High capec:ity IM

' "" Ilea¥¥ f Ull
1110tor ciftu lelll
ho! air fof

more assistants

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) Brian
Burk e ,
Ohio
Univ e rs ity 's new football
eoach, has selected two more
assistants and expects lo
2; F eesle r 4·2·10. T ofals 32 -7complete his staff later this
71.
RIO GRAND E (7J) - Bise week .
Pete Cordelli a nd Russ Jac6·2-14 : Jam e::. 9 - 6 ~ 24 ; Lones 32-8; Niday 0-0-0. Phe lps 1-0-2; ques are the newest aides at
Pur ce ll 5·3-13 ; R,oy se 1·0-2;
t he
,M i d -A m er i c a n
Swai n 5·0-10 ; Washi n gl on 0-D· ·Conference schOQL
0, TOTALS 30-13-73.
Burke has two staffer s to
Ha lftim e score - Rio 46,
name yet.
Wa lsh 42.

efficient htet1111.

8. Simolt &amp;ir

espirtllf\9 system

klr urviceabihl'f'

and dt"ndabitity.
No tuetPUmP.

Y·btlts. oullevs or
cumbersome
. controls to fa il. 7. Fla!nll oot oretection
IJII I .. for t ddld
u tetv. Heeter
I UIOIIll1icMt, shtlts

oH i11 the evtnt ot 1
ldure orlatk ot htel.

6. Euily nhictd eir

end

fUe t lilter~ to

keep dirt 8nd
1:0nttmint nts ''""
enteri~ttlht

bllrner

lll•d .nd combr.rs·

tiOft

c·111111btr .

.'

EFFICIENT, ECON.OMICAL,

RELIABLE &amp; WARM • • •

REDDY HEATER
•
.

NOW AVMLABLE A!:

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Pickens kardware ·
MASON, W. VA.

·~

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f

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..

. 4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., W~nesday , Jan . 10, J979

OSU cannot name n:ew coach until Monday
By GEORGE STRODE
.record of leadership, ability
AP Spurts. Writer
to work with diverse
COLUMBUS, Ohio ! API con st itu encies, develops,
Ohio State camot annoWJce organi~e s and implements
its new ·football coach until football program, recruits
Mooday tzy state Jaw. ·
and coordinates student
Ohio requires any vacancy · athleti c
r ec ruitmen t
at ·a state university to be activiti es, selects, instructs
advertised for at least fi ve and rna~hes athletes, assists
working days and the wit h bud ge t ma nagemen t
·
,Buckeyes' coaching vacancy ac tiv iti~s.
was not posted until Monday
··Salary: $il5,000-$45,000."
at various campus points.
Mea nwhil e, Ohi o State
The internal advertisement Athletic Director Hu gh
appears in the green sheet Hindman is heading a three"University Persannel Post- man delega tion interviewing
ings."
candidates at the national
Said an unidentified .Ohio college convention in San
Sta te athletic department Francisco.
o
official, "So technically, we · Hindman says he hopes to ·
·cannot announce a new coach have ·a re place ment for.
until Monday even if we want Woody Ha:tes chosen within
to. "
the next we~ k . He will not say
This is the ;.ay the ad the number of candidates nor
reads :
their names. He did say the
"Head coach major sports, current Ohio State staff
ba chelor's degree , head members were interviewed
coaching experience and-&lt;Jr before he left Columbus
subs t anti al equiva lent Saturday.
experience. Demonstrated
One of Hay es ' form er

;,ssistant cO'aches says he

une i the speculation, added

WJderstands Ron Meyer, the
current Southern
·st

tn
eor ge Chaump a nd
G . rgc Hill o£ the Buckeyes'

mentor . a nd
's Tef
Donahue are "r ufinin g one-

: taff. Lou Hol tz of Arkansas,
Bo Rein of North Carolina
State, Earle Bruce of Iowa
Sta te. l)on J ames of

two for the job."
DQnahu e's nallie i ~ ;;~ new

"1 have no great burning
desire to return to the college
cuachin~ ranks. l would lik;e
tu stay in or close . to the
Nati on~ ! Football League ,"
McVay told a Canton, Ohio,
luncheon .

Washington and Bill Mallory,
fired Color ado coach .
And there 's one man who is
nnt " candidate at the Big Ten
Conference power. He 's John
McV&lt;iy , 48-yea r-&lt;•ld fired New
York Gi" nts coaqh, ·

Tuesday's high school results
Ohio High School

Cincinnati Nor th west 73,
Fores t Park 65
Ci nCi nnat i Read i ng 55,

C o 1u m bus
M cKi nley 97 ,
Br iggs 68

linden
Col umbus
B~ The Associated Press
·.
Tue5dav Night
Har rison 41
Columbus Mifflin
62 ,
Ak ron Hoban 65 , Akron
Cir clev ille L ogan Elm 58,
Columbus Eastmoor s4
Norlh 64
Mille rs por t 42
Columbus
North
72,
A m anda ft ··6·.s ,·· 'D'fn·r;:·crs t er ·· · · · Cl~ve l a nd E . -Te-ch -82, . Col.umbus l.ndependence 55
Fisher 62
Cl evel and Glenville 7
Co lumbus
Ready
72 ,
Ashta bula 80, Ashtabula
Cleveland K enn ed y 85, . Colu mbus Ham il ton Town ~ Basketball

Edg ewood'S2..

Cleveland Ha y 70

As htabula
Harb or -48 ,
Ash tabula 51. John 53
Bell br ook 66, Wa ynesv ille
58
Canal
Winc he s ter
56,
Pi cker ingt on 50
Ci ncinnati Mount Heal thy
54, An derson 37
Ci ncinna ti Nor th College
Hill 48 , F inneY. tow n 46 ·

Cleve la nd
R hod es 63,
Columbus St. Charles 70,
Rock y Ri ver 59 ·
Colu mbus Westland 54
· Colum biana Crestv iew 64,
Co lum bus
West
74
L. isbon 55
Coh,1mbus Beechcroft 63
'
Columbus B r ook ha ven 99, · Columbus Whitehall 73
Culumbus Wa lnut Ridge 53
Grove City 60
'
Columbia Cente nn ial 65, ·
Dayton. Meadowdale a
Columb us Sou th 64
Miamisburg 46
L
Col umbus
Eas t
87,
Da t
w · hi 84 0 1
Cntumbus Cen tr a l 61
CarrJ'11°~7 ng
• ay .on

shi p 69

49

63, Parma Forge 57
New Concord Glenn 62
Mo·r gan 46
'
Newton Falls 46, Girard 43

Old Washingt on Buckeye

Trail 47, Newcomer.stowr1 39

·

Dresden Tri -Valley
Philo 60

Orrville 80, Smithville 51

Oftoville 47, Leipsic 31

Sarahsville Shenandoah 52,

Gue~nsey

{Pa .)

n:

46

.

50

Tol edo Rogers 88, Sylvania

Southview 76
Toledo .Scott

Geneva 49, Conneaut 47, 4

AUTOMATIC
WASHER

TABLE LAMPS
36" TALl

RANGE
.•

REG. '29.95

'

REG. '499

'
White only

N
0

Reg . $349

B

w

EUREKA
UPRIGHT

NOW

REG. '89

" baby

599 . '

SWEEPER

GIBSON
2 DR.
17' FROST FREE

REFRIG·
.
ERATOR

AMANA

RADARANGE
REG. 129.9.

Reg. $599

~

$450

NOW

BOX

ZENITH

· WALNUT
.
STEREO ~. '379

. 12"

N~

REG. 1129

h •

C OICe .

fat"

-

SPRINGS
&amp;
MATIRESS

$195

REG. 1299

N
0

has been

WE HAVE 1T1

Toledo Start 72, Toledo
Central 59
.
Toledo Whilm er 56, Oregon

Stritch

45

Toront o
76,
Brilliant
Buckeye North 54
Trot wood Madison 71.
Dayton Stivers . Patterson 67
_Warren Cham pi on 73 ,
V1enna ·Ma thews 58

Warren

Harding

70,

You ngstown . Mooney 63

Warren . Howland 47, Niles

McK in ley 44
Washing ton Court House

62, Hillsboro 53

69,

·usbon

Beaver Loca l 58
Willoughby South 59, Lyndhurst Brush 52
Windham 82, Rootstown 75
Woodsf ield 77, Beallsville
57
Xenia

Bea vercreek

...

*ALL SEWING NOTIONS - * GOOD SElECTION
45"-60" Vz PRICE
FABRIC
*SPRING FABRIC
ARRIVING DAILY
* McCALl .&amp; SIMPliCITY
PATTERNS
*GOOD USED SEWING
MACHINES
· *SCISSOR~ sHARPENED
* MACHINES REPAIRED
(All Makes)

I

·'

Ohio College 'easketbalf
By The Associated Press

Tuesday Night .

Ohio Wesleyan BO, Denison

.
Mid-Ohio

Urbana 74, Tiffin 63
Other 'Games

Memphis St. 106, Heidel· berg 75

PRODUCE
Rome or
Winesap

APPLES
3tb. 59~
CELERY ·

'

•'

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 ·pm

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. 0•
PRICES G,QOD lHROUGH
JANUARY 13, 1979
,.

CHUCK ROAST. .. ;..

Dean

Earle Bruce may
be next mentor
.

'·

..

.

..

HOMEMADE

9~
SANDWICH SPREAO. ~a••
FRENCH CITY

WIENERS..

GRADE A.

9~
Chicken Breasb!-

Chicken ·Thi~...

G

BUSINESS
•
COLLEGE

I

P.O..... ' "
Giti'lipc&gt;fis, OH. 456:11 ·'

.
··T
·'
'

3

Yellow Onions.. ~. 3

a:

VALLEY BELL
•

PHONE _ __..ZI ,~·---~

CITY

. STATE------4

FRANKIES ............~~:-$1 19

W£LCH

BANQUET

~

•

•

.,'

BACON
ENDS &amp; PIECES

ZUlO~AVY

,,;

..

2LB

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BAG

"

I

.j

~S ..........~.-~.159

_,

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RAVORITE

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SOUR CREAM~'-~.69~

C OUPON

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:ORANGE . JUICE ......~.~...$} 09

.

GRAPE JELLY.1".r..~l og TV DINNERS... !!~ 5

_ 2 LB. SLICED $}&amp;9

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DEL MONTE
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SUPERIOit

Cat Food 9 Lives Tuna. 6 oz ................ 4/$1.00
Del Mnnte Ke_tchup 2Q oz .. . ..................... 49c
vvagon Trart Pancake Syrup. 24 oz .... . ........ 39c
Nor!hern Balhroom Tissue ...... ·.... , •• 4 Pak 89c ·

VAU.EY.BELL

2%

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

ADDRI51i------------~

-. -~---

Wagner's Orange Drink, qt .................... 2-89c

10 LB.

••••

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CLOSED
SUNDAYS

LB.7

ALL!POLJS

Libby 's Sliced Peache s 21h Size Can ........·•• 69c

9:00 1117:00

12 oz.
·PKG.

Whole Fryers .....L~4

St..... 75-12-04721

Pow' wow . Snaks Popcorn . Cheese ·Puffs, Corn
Ch.ips . .. . . . ..... ; . ; .••• •.•••••• .•~ ······ 3 Paks-$1.00

Saturday 9:00-9:00

.. .

l'l-t

Jr. Accountir.,.
Genertl Offi.ce. ·

.Business Administration
Executive Secretary ·
Secretary

Jnno's Doubie Pizza ••••••••••••••• • •••••.•••• ••• s·1.29
Krall Macaroni &amp; Cheese. 71/4 oz ., ••••••••• 3/$1.00

Thursuav, Jan. 11 through Jan t
We Gl•dly Accopt Fld. ·Fooasran.~·
Mondav fhru Friday

..

, NEW-YORK (AP) - "Man, look at my hands sweating _
I m more nervous than I've ever been in a football game,"
Terry Bradshaw sa1d as he donned a pair of ice skates at the
·
Rockefeller Center rink,
• :~~~-~~ ~ lookins down•the throats of Too Tall
·J !1'1eS ~'."'· ~r;Ye~ ~rtin ,aDY day ." . · . . . . ·
·.
. ·. Jt w~s B!l.uwkward,.uneimlortable m0111ei-tttor:the riiri8h81" .
· ~lel'an. (jllarterback of th~ Pltll!btir'gh Sllle!e~, llllm.ed by The .
· Alsoclated. ~eas nthe Most Valuable Player in the National ·
FooU~&amp;llf.eague. But, il~ ls biB. nabire he tOok it all in high
.
·
· ' .· ·
·
.good' humor·.
.With Super Bowl Xlll ooly·ll days away, .here he was - the
lilan deilgnated to beat R91!er S~ubach and th~ chal)lp\oit
Dallas Cowboys -putting on a pall' of razor-llharp blades and ·
preparing to do a whirling dervish nmnher with his wife · JoJo
· Starbuck, for a prebowl television slieclal. · · · · : '
. .X~id old Art Rooney (Steeler owner) and Coach Chuck Noll
know.the risk being taken by Uieir million-dollar field general•
"Good gosh, no," he said. "If they knew ! .was here doing ~ · ·
· they would .skin my bide. Mr. Rooney would swallow his Cigar/'
.
It wiisn~t all that lr~cherous, after all. Bradsliaw.·who as 8
kid skated on frozen lak;es around Slreveport, La., o:Uy h8d to
glide arm41W11111 with JoJo toward a camera lind then JoJo a ..
.national patrs cha!DP~oo and an Olympic flnaitst, comple~
the pli'OUetting, spllllllllg and leaping routine ID a Wting love
song .,-- about two minutes of it.
·
.T hetalltwlll be part of "Super Bowl Saturday Night," a twoholD' special Jan.:lllover NBC (9-11 p.m. EST) ·on the eve of the
. Dllllas-Plttsburgh batUe for football's biggest prize. Terry and
JoJo s11are the stage with sueh celebrities ali Jolmny Carson
Bob.. H~. Angie Dlck;inson and
Martin: ··
'
·. "I wouldn't mind .so muClh lf ihey'd,Jet me just go out lbete •
and.skate around;" Bradshaw, said. "But I 118ve ID spin with
JoJo, hold her down and 1hlngs like that. It makes me a little
jittery.'l
. They wanted Terry also to sing.a song- at least lip sync ·a
fe(!Ord he taped for Mercury a few years agO - but ·lie was
.
given an 11th-hour reprieve. . .
"We couldn't find the rll(!ord,'' the loose, wisecracking
quarterb!lck said."Once I skated and sang 'Happy Birthday'
to JoJo 111 a show at Hershey, Pa. There were 18,000 people in
the stand&amp;. I was terrified. But take my word fat ir- I atn the
best off-key singer in all football.'' .·
· ·
They are a handsome, charming couple- the Bradshaws
nilw matried 21'. years. Terry is 6-foot-3, 211! pound&amp; with ~
strong Nordic· face, .pugnosed as a prize fighter and a cleft
chin. JoJo looks like a fragUe doll with her slender figure blue
eyeji ·and c!Os«:ropped golden hair.
· ·
'
One would t!J!nkil was a marriage made in heaven- or, at
leaSt Hollywood. The story-book football hero and the ice
ballerina from the show w«ld, two people who don't have to
Uve the shadow of the other's fame.

INQUIRE NOW: ~r E~:~ing

I

-1

By wm GriDiltley
AP Correspdndent

"'

~ .,.fl

-""' ~~

I
I

Ceda r:ville 92, M t. Vernon
Nazarene 81
.

.

,,,

----G ac· . .

I

Ohio

. . '.

...,

.·.

THE
FABRIC

65

~

Conference

aHEBE'~ STORE

Toledo

71.

,•,.'

SHOP

58

"'

...

drafted by the Boston Red Day ton Berrrwnt 63, at
'
Sox.
Ye ll ow
Springs
57,
The American League Mechanicsburg 53, at
team selected 6-foot-4 Ken- 55 Zanesville 56, Cambridge
Zan esville Maysville 82, ,
neth Cox Jr. of Cincinnati in
.
•tM free agent draft of , ·Crooksville 57
amateur baseball talent
Za n e s v i I I e
We s I
115 W. 2nd ., Pomeroy, 0 .
Tuesday
saying the 20-year- Muskon
gu m
57,
New
. .'
Lexmgton 53, at
old 1uruor college player is
.,.
expected to shed some
weight.
Cox was Boston's fifth
choice in the draft. Team
~
.
officials conceded they were
taking a gamble.
......(J
"The scouts 'claim he has a
lot of baby fat," said Red Cox
spoke!lman Dick Bresciani.
~r
PROVIDES
" But they a® say he has
THE . TRAINING YOU NEED
good power, · agility an~ a
FOR THE BUSINESS WORLD
quick bat."
Months
Not
Years
Prepare You
LEBANON RESULTS
To
Eunt
LEBANON, .Ohio ( AP) Hi Do's Knight won the .$1,001!
featured pace mile at the
opening of Lebanon's 8Q.day
winterspring meeting
Olsses .
Tuesday night, paying $1:!.60,
$5.40 and $3.40.
Gofer
Jack
placed,
CAL~(614)446~367
returnmg $5. and $3.60, and
NOW ENROLLING
Seminole Maid came in third,
paying $3.20.
FOR NEW TERM
The 4-2 double of Craig's
t ond ll months .C arotr Pr09rams ·and 11
Pride and Shanty's Son remonths Anociolt Dovrot In Spoclallald
turned $44. The crowd of 1,099
luaint~s Proenms.
·bel $96,207.

w

.

s£V1\NG

I

BEMCO

ZENilH
B&amp;W

·

Wel lsvil le

1

$399

•

lO'
-e

Bowsher 70

BOSTON (AP) - Oneofthe
biggest prospective ma1·0 r
league baseball players in
history - a 2BS-poWtd first
baseman · burdened with

ROPER

MICROWAVE
OVEN REG.

Hanoverton United 61.
Sta nton 48
Hudson Western Re serve
64, Garfield Trinity 56
lndepend~nce
58,
s.
Amherst 40
London Madison Plains 70
Circleville 56
'
Medina
Buckeye
51
Columbia Station CoJumbi~

':

.rl

.

Tayl or · 81.
Ci ncinnati
70
·
Thornv ille Sheridan 74
Wa rsaw River View 50
'

Garfield Hts. 41. Lakewood

GIBSON
30" ElECTRIC

'j

••
;,-

"'

Wy oming ~

40

. NORGE 18"

''

,..

W1erton Madonna 63
Strasburg 67, Zoarvil le
Tuscarawas Valley 52
Sugar Grove Berne Union
54, Fairfield Union 52
Swanton 61 , Milbury Lake

Prep · 49 ,

ot
·
Genoa 59. Otsego 58

.,
"
''

Steubenville Catholic 71 ,

Elmore

Hopewell Loudon 70
Franklin 58, Springboro •9

IVE

a.

'I

1._;

'

· Spo.r ts WiJrld·

''

East

77 ,

li verpool 72

Fort Jennings 81, Columbus
Grove 68
Fostoria St . W.endelin 74,

&gt;AVE

76,

•~

South Point 107, Iron ton St .

Joseph 48
Steubenville

Youngstown North 46
FarmingtOn 55, Lordstown

'E SAVE
!SAVE

65 ,

''

The toughening of academic more than 1,000 delegates ln a
entrance standards and a general discussion Mooday.
resolution decrying Title IX A resolution urging that
headed a full agenda today as football and basketball be
the NCAA entered the final exempt from strict per capita
business session of its 73rd expenditure compliance was
expected to be adopted.
national convention.
The academic plan, su~ · Before winding up today ,
mitted by· the NCAA CoWJcil · delegates will also decide 00
and endorsed by the College 36 legislative proposals left
Football Association - most from the day before. of \he major football powers . Ninety-six proposals were
-' would · do away with the voted on Tuesday, with delecurrent 2.0·high school grade gates
adopting
seven
point requirement.
procedural changes in the
It would be replaced with
enforcement program · and
''triple option" approach of a . Division 1-AA and Division II
2.25 high school grade point voting to cut their maxilnum
or · certain · ·scores on the number
of
football
standard SAT or ACT college seliohirships.
entrance te:·ts. ·
After pro!imged debate, ICom!lliance guidelines for AA,. by a 22-21 vote, cut its
Title IX, federal .
footb~ll scholarship limit
barring dis c
from .95 to 75. In Division II,
the limit was trimmed from
60 to 45.

Shaker His. so. Parma Sr.
48, ot
Southingt on 50, Maplewood
40
.

Eastlake Nor th 61, Mapl e
His. 52
Erie

Catholic 51

Sc io
Jewett -Scio
Freeport Lakeland 63
Sebring
McKinley
Lee tonia 36

East Cleveland Shaw 69,
Parma Nor mandy 64

Elnl w oo d
52 ,
Woodmere 51

Ment or. 61. Bedford 53
Middleburg His , Midpark

..•••'. .: ·Today;·s:·. ··
•

Academic entrance
standards
tightened
SAN FRANCISCO ('AP) ·

. ,•.

BEANS

2/$1.

/lit.

DOG ·FOOD
25 LB.' $299 .wic
BAG

:FRIED
32

CHICKEN ~·

oz. $

79

�,_,.. "~-·-'-'·'··~r~~'ii;I;;;"iicl'm'•1
Meigs Co. Ihfirmary ~xtends ·thanks
CO~IDUDJty )
·
P :;
.
·
:
;
u
Corner . !.:.: S.
·

;::

Mildred Jacobs,
superintendent .ol the Meigs

Murray,MissMarionEbersbach, Mr. and Mrs. Jack

.

Women's Group, Seve.oth Bank, Citizens Nallonal
Day Adventist Church, Bank, Eagles Club, Pomeroy

• • By Helen Botte~:···,: : cere
;:s~~ts~~!:~'J'·th»;::~: ~~~~~=·~:::!!: ~~t~:: ci=h at'~?:: ~~r~er~e~\~.r, ~~~~::~~~ .
·thanks to those who Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich . Pomeroy Baptist Oburch, American Legion, Western ,·

tt. . DEARHEL.EN.

FRIGID WIVES BE HELPED?
.presented gifts to the
·
residents that made their
By Charlene Hoeflich
My wile and 1 have.been married almost a year and we love Christmas a very happy one.
I .each other very much, but she has a serious libido problem.
Those who presented gilts.
·
She 1·8 very tnhibt'ted .and has no t'nterest. ins·ex-at all. She ·to the residents were:
longtime resident 01 ''"ddleport, now conJ Udso n White,
· Mrs. Ada
· Root,
Mr. an d Mrs.
lined to the
Pinecrest Nursing_ Home In Gallipolis, will be 100 bel 'teves this t·s· because she was brought up ,·n a· strict,
·
k
M
puritanical household where·sex was considered obscene. It's Mr. and Mrs. Die Karr, r.
years old Monday . . · ·
alsocompounded .byhertem'blet.nfert"oritycomplex.
·and Mrs..Cbarles Blakesiee,
While some remembrances are being planned lor Mrs. Root,
Mr.and Mrs. Da 11 as Hill • Mr.
'"aresult,wemakelove(Twt'shshethou"~. toft'tthatway) ·
wouldit't-it be nice' lor·all of us to send her a card. Mrs. Root,
=
tw
·
·
we're·told,
is alert and talkative, and would enjoy hearing no more· than . once or twt'ce a month. Our relationsht'p ,·8 and Mrs. Cbest~r K1118ht, Mr.
from friends.
·
· ·
understandably strained.
·
and Mrs. Cbarles Corder, Mr.
Is there any type of free or low-cost counseling? We don't and Mrs. Jake. Lee, Mt. and
Mrs. Ho,mer Goodwin, Mrs.
Yes, it's time to do something about those extra pounds you have$60anhourforprolessionalhelp.-FRUSTRATED
DEAR
FRUSTRATED:
Allee
Davis, Mrs. Lucy Gaul,
put on during the holidays ..... or they may be there to stay.
Almost every medium-sized city has a Family Service Agen· Mr: and 1\l:rs. Delbert
Reducing .doesn't necessarily mean ·joining a weight watcy or Mental Health Cli~ic which offers graduated rates ...
chers group or starving while trying to go slender.
The key to taking off weight and keeping it off comes from depending on your ability to pay.
II you can't lind thempy that suits your needs, call the Counlearning and applying the principles of good nutrition, our ex_.
ty.Mental Association for a referral. ·
tension friend agent tells us.
Of course you must lilltit your calorie intake if you are to lose · Books such as "How Not to Split Up" by Dr . and Mrs.
weight, and exercising help.s tone those muscles and burn up Wilijam Appleton or "No Fault Marriage" by Norrruln
ATHENS - A special
Lobsenz and Marcia Lasswell might also help. But on!~ closesome of the calories.
audio-visual
presentation of
If you need tbe encouragement of others with a similiar prO- in counseling can relieve your wife's inferiority compfex -a
Debussy's
rarely
performed
major
part
of
her
problem.H.
·
blem, then perhaps you need to join a group, but if your time
"Chansoms
de
Bi]ltls"
will be
P.S.
Don't
drift
on
and
on,
postponing
talk
until
it's
too
late
and money are lliltited, then do it on your own. Sure you
featured in a faculty recital
·can......
· .· .
._
lor cha~ge. You might end up like "C . J." who writes :
Friday at 8.:30 p.m. in Recital
Set a goal, get some information on nutrition and the caloric
Hall on the Ohio UniversitY
content of foods, exercise a ljttle will pOwer a\ the table, and DEAR HELEN:
think slender.
·
I was raised to think there were nice girls and the other kind. campus.
You married a "nice girl" who made you happy and reared . The work, presenting the
your chl)dren. Though inex]ierienced as a bride, she was sup- story of the Greek courtesan
·These are days lor looking up ..... .
Tl's a real winter wonderland with the ice covered trees posed to enjoy sex, love your body and your mind, and you'd BUitis, involves musicians,
dancers and narrator, with
live happily ever alter.
"ltistening in the sunlight.
I marrierrthe pure sweet girl of my dreams 55 years ago. Be- special visual effects.
Performers from the
ing
the perfect Christian gentleman I was as innocent as she
If you happen to have a Jan. 8 issue of News Week, you can
was
on
our
wedding
night;.But
I
had
high
hopes.
.
read about Dr. RusseU McTntyre on page 67.
They were soon destroyed! Whenever I came near my wile,
Russ, husband of the former Christine Coats, daughter of
Maxine Gaskill, Middleport, is a doctor of philosophy. He was she'd complain, "Is that all Y,OU think !'bout?" Once I asked OJMers installed
a miniiste minister at an Eastern church before going into her, " If you don't care about me, what did you want_.to get marwere installed at
teacbit\g_medical ethics on the university level. Medical ethics ried so badly lor?" Her answer stunned me: "To get away theOfficers
Sunday
s,ervice of the
is a relai'lvely new field which presents the spiritual side of from my G-D- parents!" I'd never heard a woman swear like Middleport First United
·
·
medicine, ~and that's what the story is about. The Mclntyres that before.
Over the years, my love and ego have been shattered, but r · Presbyt•rian Church.
live at Morristown, N.·J.
Tnstalled by the Rev. Fred
took it. We have two children, lour grandchildren and a great
Sams
of the Columbus
Our congratulations to Evelyn Lewis, who Saturday will grandson and for these line people I'm grateful. Five years
Presbytery
were 1\ft·s.
observe her 89th birthday. We're sorry she missed her birth· ago they gave us a golden wedding party. What a farce : we Richard Karr, elder;
Cyntia
day party.
hadn't had sex together in two decades, and before that it was
Mills,
Mrs.
Patty
stein,
The surprise party planned by Evangeline Chapter, Order ol meaningless. The subject has always been taboo with my wife. deacons, and Lewis Sauer
the Eastern Star,lor Mrs. Lewis, a 65 year member who is pro- She considers it vile and ugly.
What do r think of virginity lielore marriage• Not very and Frank Epple, trustees.
bably the most faithful of the faithful, turned out to be the
Mrs. Richard Vaughan will
Chapter's St.!rprise. !fdrs. Lewis became i1l and wasn't able to much! I only wish. I had had sense enough at age 20 to know
that so-called ''bad" girls (non-repressed, non-frigid, non- be installed as an elder and'
attend that night.
Mrs. Donald Vaughan as a
'But she was honored in absentia and the money tree virgins ) can make wonderful wives and homemakers. -FULL deacon
at a later s~rvice.
prepared lor her was delivered.
OF REGRETS
CAN

and Jayne, Mrs .. Linda
Brunty, Mrs. Betty YoWl~! •.
Mr. RUII!ell RadcUffe, Mrs.
Sharon Folmer and family,
Mr. and Mrs. LJOyd Wright,
v
Mr. and Mr. s.MHoward
·~·-an·
Meter' Mrs. ary """"'er•
Mr. Clark Lees (Eastern
u•~~ .,.,,oo
..... I) • Mrs. ·. Bonn!e ·
,_.,
Mr
d Mr Ro
Conde,
. an
· s.La Y
Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. rry
Clark.
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore, Mr.
and Mrs. Butch Mash,
Tuppers Plains thristlan

Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ, Racine Baptist
Church, Knights of .Templar,
Laurel CllffWMS, Middleport
Mt. Moriah Missionary
Metho~'~
Group, ·.R--~-~"
~wnwe
H h U Itw.&gt;&lt;d
Church,
eat . n ~
Methodist Church, Syracuse
Ch. ch St · J ohn' s ·
Nazarene
the
Ch urch ,Mlddl
"'
Lu ran ur , H 11 epo.,.
In.de pen dent
o ness
Church, Meigs Christian
Center, Sew Rite Sewing
Club, Pomeroy N~ional

Boot CB Club.
.,
Middleport FeeneyBennett, XI Gamma Mu
Sorority, Middleport Post 128
and Auxiliary, Salvation
H b b ar d s
ArmnhY ,
Melu Chapter
Gree ouse,
gs
Order of DeMolay, Mr. Jay
Ha,
11 Ro
. ya1 Crown Bottling
Th s e Up
Company, Be linev n-Co Pepsi Cola . ott g
mpany, Jaycees, Jayce~es;
Mrs. Maxine Gaskel, Em·
ployees of County Home.

,

,
·
"
&lt;

7- The paily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1979 .

Mothers' milk may be homogenized, pasteurized
COLUI\I:BUS, Ohio (AP) - '
Jtesearchers at Ohio State
Unlversl!y are studying preservation of mothers' milk as
a way of inc;reasing tbe
human milk supply lor
premature babies.
· Nutritional
and
immunological benefits of
human milk are · especially

. -

important to premature
babies, but "quite often tbe
mother isn't any more ready
In give Ute. mil~ than the baby
is to be born;'' said Poul M.
Hansen, an Ohio State researcher working ori ways to
preserve the milk.
Hansen said a number of
hospitals in the United State•

•

elsewhere
have
and
Hansen and Emil M.
established milk banks to aid Mikolajcik have received a
in feeding premature and · three-year , $65,000 reseai-ch
other problem babies in tbe grant to lind new ways of
last 10 years. '!'be need lor collecting, preserving and
safer and more effective storing human milk. Both are
processing and storage of professors of food science and
milk has grown along with nutrition in Ohio State's
the number of milk banks.
College of Agriculture.
Currently, when milk is

•.
example, he said it may be
possible to reduce the beat
and
le ngth
of
the
pasteurization process, still ·
killing micro..,rganisms but
retaining milk proteins.
Hansen sa id another·
re searc h possibility is to
culture the milk with

collected from donors it must
be processed to make it
bacteriologically safe . But
conventional heat treabnent
des troy's most of the
immunological properties.
The researchers bope to
apply to hwnan milk some of
the same techniques used in
proc essin~ cow milk. For

beneficii'll nrganismR as is

done with yogurt. The orgap- hundreds of thousands of
isms would be lactic acid gallons a day. but with only a
types normally found in the · few ou nces," Hansen said .
intestines of infa nts and
The study is being done
would minimize the elfecis of with the cooperation of Dr.
harmful organisms in the Haro ld Lubin, assistant
professo r o[ pediatric
milk.
" We need to desi'gn nu tr ition at Childre n ' s
methods and equipment that Ho&lt;nital in Columbus.
wiii allow us to work , not with

.ALL KROGER

Faculty recital planned at Ohio .University
School of Music faculty will
be Lucille Jennings, harp;
Debra ·Sharrock, flute; and
Margene ·stewart, celesta.
Cltoreography is
by
Assistant Professor of Dance
Margaret Tcheng, Wbo Will
perform with a group of her

POLLY"$ POINTERS

By CHRIS CONNELL
rusuclaled . Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) Polly Cramer
Twelve months after HEW
Secretary Joseph A. C!(lifano
Jr . launched a war ag;~inst
wrote that she could neve!
cigarettes as "Public Health Wants to
get the last part o.l a lip.stick
Enemy No. 1," skeptics are stiffen crochet
out of the tube and ends up
saying he has produced a lot
throwing it a-..ay. r suggest
of smoke but not much fire.
DEAR POLLY - l ho(A' so- that rather than wasUng the
Califano will trY to light a meone can tell me what to use end she reach inside thetube
fire Thursday when HEW re- to stiffen c rocheted with a cotton-tipped stick to
leases a ,second Surgeon snowflakes. The boiled sugar get the required amount and
General's Report on Smoking solution (equal parts of sugar then apply it with the stick. and Health. The 1,!100-page and water) does not do a good CATHY
second edition comes on the job. What else could be used
DEAR POLLY- When you
15th anniversary of the firSt to make them stiff and help hang .coats, suits or better
surgeon general's report that keep them white looking? - dresses on the outside
sent' shivers up the spines of MRS. F.B.
clothesline to air, slip ·the
millions
of
American
DEAR · MRS. F.B. .. hook of the hanger the garsmokers.
Perhaps the following letter ment is on through a rubber
But officials at the Depart- from a reader will help with fntit jar ring ihat you have
ment of Health, Education · your problem. Good luck! - looped over the clothesline. It
and Welfare say the new POLLY
will stay put even on a windy
report will not include
DEAR POLLY- Perhaps day. -MRS. S.
startling new scientific my formula wm help the
DEAR POLLY- When it is
evidence about smoking, nor reader who wishes to stiffen a time to trim my little boys'
will it provide any break- crocheted basket. Mix 'one' hair so as to get their bangs
through on ways to quit pound of flour, one pound of straight I place a piece of
smoking.
cornstarch and two-thirds cellophane tape with the top
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., cup oi salt. with one cup of of the tape where the bangs
castigated Califano Tuesday water , Let this come to a boil, are to be cut and stick it to the
for not letting Congress see remove from the fire and let hair that is to be out off. I
the report in advance.
it partially cool. Rub the trim the bangs and the hair
Few of more than a dozen paste into the basket thai is cut off comes off with
initiatives against smoking thoroughly, stretch, pin the the tape so none gets .in their
that Califano promised a year points to a cardboard and dry eyes.- BETTY
ago have produced visible the same as when using sugar
Polly will send you one of
results. No new federal taxes starch. The item could be her sig ned thank-you
or regulations have been- stretched over a form or dish newspaper coupon clippers if
imposed ·on cigarettes.
that is near the right size. she us es your favorite
However, the Agriculture Keep shaping as it dries and Pointer, Peeve or Problem ln
Department has reported a when dry it should sta nd her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
drop in Americans' cigarette alone.- MRS. M.S.
POINTERS in car~ of this
cons umption in 1978, and
DEAR POLLY - June newspaper.
Califano is likely to claim
credit for that. Americans
inhaled 615 billion cigarettes
in 1978, down 2 billion from
1977 and the first drop in 10
years . Per capita adult
smoking was the .lowest in 20
years: 3,965 cigarettes, down
from 4,051 in 1977.
Ca lifano's anti-smoking
drive created a politica l
storm in tobacco-growing

Mr. and Mrs. ~y · Fimk;
Columbus, are announcing
the birth of a son, Jason Scott,
on Jan. 6 at Doctors H0spltal
North in Columbus.
Grandparents are Mrs.

PANTAITIC: UoYINGi
ON KIOGIIIIAND
P'IODUCTS

.

$

-·......

UIJID lllOW All JUST
, A UW IXAM,LII

' .lf!A,.;
·"""
_.._

,....,, .1.,.

EKh of . ce-

.,.

-

0

LET. US HELP YOU WITH

a

BARGAINS
GALORE
•
IN ALL DEPARTMENTS:

=

Plumbing

~

......,iMd

lten. it
rlqUirt&gt;d to be rllldily ...,.....,.. far Mle
in MCh ~(roger Slore , e11Cipl II
~peeif~ noted in "th• .cl . If WI do
run ou1 of • n advertield item. we will
offer vou vour ChOice ot 1 compar1bll
iMtn, when l\leillble. rtfltcting the
urne .. ..nnga or 1 rtlncMck whith.will
tntitll vou 10 ;;~tct.l thtl ~iled
item 11 che .ci111MiMd price within ~

u

HOME PRIDE

~·

"'•,

'( '

\,. . .:~
;( ~. .i.J ..l,.
"'·. ."""'"'. ""',,. r.

Aluminum Foil

25-Ft.35 c

E~ you buy

""• • .:

lell

·sse

Stri Steak

utt:»motlive- Housew41re ,

$

12/6 SUN.

BUY NOW

AND $AVEI

MUSHROOM
OR .
TAN BARK
HICKORY

us·oA

can•

Tail-Less T-Bone
or
·
P.orterhouse Steak...
6·8·LB.
Whole
Smoked Picnics .......
Whole Fresh
Loin ........ ..

.,.____

16·01.

I

Cans

I
I
I

I
I
I
I

KIOGEII

Tomato
•

&lt;16-oz.

JUICe ................ : can

I

Ivory .

1&lt;1· 17-LI. AVG .

$

Liquid

•
ONLY

·SHEET

ONLY$
.
..

.99
EACH

SAVE.

soc
ON2

KROGER

Fresh
Celery

Grade A
Large Eggs ........ l&gt;o•·

STUDS

.59

c

I
I
I
I
I

•I

I

PURCHAS£

Polar .Pak ;1,.Gal.
Ice Mllk ...........
ctn ••

AVAILAILI AT STOlES WtTM DIU DIILT'
HOT fOODS AVAtLAIU 11 AM,7PM .

EACH

Kahn's .· ·
Kielbassa • : · . :

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola

$. 91&lt;
.·:. .... :

a•
11.
Pak

,

lORRAINE
$2 99...· ·
Swiss Cheese.................... lb.
ll1CI~, IOIL~O
s· 9~ :·
Sm1thf1eld Ham .... .. .... .. .. lb. .2 : ..
D;nut Sticks·........ ....... ~o.. ·

FRESH

·Florida
·
7' EACH
Tangelos .......... .

..::·. .. ·... .
. .... .. :':
',

lb.

6' 79co_: ··

For

•
.,

,

goc

Kroger 20-oz. ·
White Bread ......... .
Bleach

I
I

SAVE

ROUND TOP

PARTitAL

Other Batteries at a Comparative Pri(e ·

I
I
I

I
I
I
I

2''x4"x8' ·

4'x8' SHEETS

I
I

I

PRE~CUT

Was;st!f

I

&amp; W'IAI'PED FREE INTO ONE

No.·l

SAVE 10.00

Pomeroy. o.

16-oz.

AVG.

BOARD

·

'

~~::«

$

CHOICE

c

1

John F. Fultz, Mgr.

can•

2 $1
$
2 1

ITPKILY
Fruit
····
Cocktail..
. ·
STOICILVHAlVISOI
Sliced
Peaches .

Elce,t Wllite Slhlllr s,riqs ' llilltoa

Stokely
Green Beans .

Beef Loin

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Power House BATIERV

992-2101

,

l7 •OZ.

Except Closed Sat. Midnight Til 9 AM Sunday

GOV'T GRADED CHIOICE·,
BONE IN ,

.

MEIGS TIRE
--cENTER, INC.t

·

3· $1

Catsup.. _32.ii:~·
G0 ld en
Corn.......

STOKELY

GALLIPOLIS&amp; POMEROY STORES

WE IISEIVE THE IlCHT TO liMIT QUANTITIU. NONIIOLO
TO DIALEIS.

Cans

II

perlble brend Of retund yow purchMe

ADAY

17-oz.

'-4 .{ · ,. .,• "'V; 1

~;s~stokely

COPVIIGHllt1t-THI KIOGEI CO. ITEMS AND PRICE$
GOOD SUNDAY JAN. 7THIUSAJUIDAY JAN. I3.Jt7tiN

Electrical

Catherine Hobnan, Racine,
and the late Jacob Holman,
and Mr . ;md Mts. Roy Funk,
Logan, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs.
Funk· have at!other son',
Shawn, eight. '

It=

TOTAL SATISFACTION
GUAAMTEE

;co

Building Materials

ONLY

I

It's hard to , maintain
romantic remembrance of a
hayride while still pickinf
hay out of your socks three
weeks later.

THIOUGH01 1TTHI
110ft POl

~

states . Kentucky 's state

leg islature called lor his
·
resigna lion.
But anti-smoking groups
and the Tobacco Institute
agreed at the start that
Califano's program was less
sweeping than expected.
"AB far as l can tell, the
war hasn 't even started,"
says John Banzha( director
of Action on Smoki.~g and
Health.·
. Dr. Sidney 1\1:. Wolle of the
Health Research Group says ·
the problem is not the HEW
secretary, but his boss.
"President Carter made two
outrageou's
speeches
r supporting tobacco . He 's
taken an i;'regpansible stand
on smoking," charges Wolfe.

lOOk POl 'HIIItOH

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Ace is the pla~e with the·
c
:z: Helpful Hardware Man
•

OP
HOU 5

Stokely
Applesauce
··~ ':"~

New arrival

Wanted: Smokers

Languages Is the ~arrator.
In the first half of the
program, Mrs. Jennings and
Miss Sborrock will perform
works · by Krumpholtz,
Persichetti, and !bert. The
recital is free and ·open to the
public.

studentR. Fre&lt;!ei'ick Krap.s is
In charge of visual effects,
which Include photography
by Joseph Welling, heaa of
OU's Telecommunications
Center.
Ja!!'luellne Bolin of the
Department · of Modern.

'

�G

· ·-··R;~d;j;;g· 'Projects discussed bj Eastern Star ·
Several r emodeling pro- ·
jects to be ca rrie-d at the Mid·
d leport Masonic Temple this
yea r were discusst!d bv Mrs.
Ann Thomas, worthy 1ill.tron,
. at the Thursday ni~ht
meeting of F:vangt•li nc
Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star .
Paul Dar nell , wort hy
patron, and Bo!J King were
nppointed to the conunittee to

see what is needed in the wny

Chapter along with an invitaMrs. Kathryn Mit chell
of renovation and how it is to tion to the District Sehoul of J,tavt• et ways and m••etns .
~done .
Jnstruetion to be h•ld Jan . 2~ n•purt on Christma~ dinnt&gt;r~
Initiation was set for Feb. 1 at Athens . The host chapter St•rvOO. There WHS a diSt'U."l· .
m eeting with a practice to be ·will be Amesville.
swn on St. Patri l'k 's Oay dinhe ld un Jan . 2B at 2 p.m. at th"
Thank you note was read ner and the Easter bazaar as
temple. Mr. and Mrs. King from James Ruchanan . a!onK .fund raising projects. Mrs.
thanked the rhaptt•r for the with a letter from the Ohio F.uvetta Bechtle, cheer com·
gift presented to them during _ 1.ung Association . A donation mittee, noted ·that a symwas sent to the Lung Associa- pathy card had been sent to
the recent installation.
Rcad at the meeting was a lion .
M1·s. Kathrvn F.rvin and a
coinmunic:ttinn frnfn r.r·:•nr'

gt·t-well card t~ Mn&lt;. Mary
Hughes·. The death of the hushand of Noami Rt•t•d was also
nolL•!.
. Rob Kuhn reported that his
wife. Beatrice, is in Pitt·
sburgh, Pa. as.•i,'ti ng her
mother with the illness of her
stepfather. Also reported ill
was the father of Mrs . DOnna
Stewart .

Naomi J&lt;mg and Reverly
Wikox were the sunshine
pages: Pro tern officers were
Kathryn Mitchell, associate

matron ; Etta Mae Norton,
mnductress; Euvetta Bech·!
tie, Martha.
Refreshments were Serve&lt;t,,

9- The DaUy Sentinei,Middleport~Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1979

A surprise party .was held for
Mrs. Evelyn Lewis who was .,
unable to attend. A money
tree was delivered to her.

Phone 742 2100

.
. I lb. French City

. WEDNESDAY . .
GIRL SCOUT LEADER
Rervil'e unit meeting, 7p.m·.
Wednesday . night at . the
MeigR Inn.
MEIGS- B.OOKMOBILE
unit is out ot'service for th·e
entire week due to repairs
bei!lll made &lt;in the vehicle.
. POMEROY Chapter, No. 80
RAM Wednesday, 1::l0 p.m.
BOSWORTH .Council. No.

46, R&amp;sM, Wednesday,
p.m.

THE LAUREATE ENSEMBLE- Robert Atherholt,
oboe; William Wolfrain, piano; Timothy Malosh, flute;

Russell Rizner, hom; Dennis Godbutn, bassoon; Steve
Hartman, clarinet.

Community Concert Association
·.· presents Laureate Eisemble Sunday
One of the most unusual
and musi cally satisfying
. cve~ts . to take place in ·
GallipoliS durmg the 1978-79
. season will be a concert by
The Laureate Ensemble, it
was anno'unced today by The
Trl-County . C?mmunity
Concert Association. In the
Ga!lia
Academy
High
School ... audJtorium
on
'Sunday, Jan. 14, .at 3 p.m.
local music lovers will hear a
varied program representing
ea rly and later eras of music
as performed by six brilliant
young
instr umentalists:
Timothy Malosh, ·flute;
Robert Atherholt, · oboe;
Steven Hartman·, clarinet;
Dennis Godbum, bassoon;
Russell Rizner, horn ; and
William Wolfram, piano.
These six young men
comprise a welcome addition
to the American concert
scene. The ensembl e brings
to life an important segment
of mUBical literature. a rich
repertory not cqn s tantly
performed , and delightful in
many aspects.
• Laurels go to those who
deserve them . In a ncient
times Uie Greeks bestowed
the laurel wreath as a crown
to victors ·of the Pythian
games. This ensemble ~aPlJy iiamed, for each artist
niight justly wear the Greek
· symbol af excell e nce in
achievement.
Timothy Malosh (flute)
attended
Wayne
State.
University in. Detroit where
he studied .with Clement
Barone and Albert Tipton,
and completed his bachelor
and master's degrees at the
Jullllard School. He was a
scholarship student of Julius
Baker, and principal flutist in
the Juilliard Orchestra. Mr .
Ma!osh has performed with
many orchestras including
the New York Philharmonic,
the Detroit Symphony, the
Caramoor Festival~ Musica
Aeterna and the New York
City Ballet Orchestra . . In
addition to frequent recitals,
recordings and solo ap·
pearances , his diverse
,schedule has recently in·
eluded U. S . tours with the
popular group, Emerson ,
Lake and Pabner , and as
so(oist with the Eric Hawkins ·
Dance Company.
Tobert AtMrholt (oboe)
ea rned both his bachelor and
master of mu~ic degrees
from the JuU!iard School,
where he studied with Robert
Bloom . Following
two
summers of studies at the
Berkshire Music Festival at
· Tanglewood , he ga ined

•

valued e~perience at the
Festival of Two Worlds in
Spoleto, Italy and at the
festivals of New College,
Sarasota
Florida- · the ·
carinthi'scher Fe~tival
Villach Austria· and at th~
lntern'ational' Festival,
Ljubijana, Yugoslavia . Mr.
Atherholt presently plays
Principal Ohoe in the North· ·
eas tern Pennsylvania
Philharmonic. He has also
pe~formed as Principal Oboe
of the New Jersey Symphony,
and as soloist with the
Coloni?l Symphony
of
Madison, New Jersey. In New
York's Lincoln Center he
appeared with the American
Woodwind Quintet, and he
recently joined Parnassus, a
contemporary music en·
semble.
steven Hartman (clarinet )
received his bachelor and
master's degrees from the
Jui!liard School, where he
studied
with Augustin ·
Duques. Mr. Hartman has
been Principal Clarinet in the
Nat ional
Orchestra .
As soc iation, the Spoleto
Festival Orchestra, and most
recently the New Jersey
.symphony , As a chamber
'luti•t he has .appeared at
Carnegie Recital Hall, with
the Southern Vermont Arts
Festival, the New Am· ,
sterdam Ensemble and the '
Music Project of New York.
Dennis Godburn (bassoon)
h as performed frequently
throughout the New York .
a r ea in orchestras, opera,
and chamber music. He has
.been heard with the Orpheus
Ensemble, Hartford Sym··
phony, St. Luke's Chamber
E n s em bI
Hartford
Chamber Orchestra, and the
Goldovsky, Connecticut and
New York City Opera com·
panies. Mr. Godburn Is also
involved in the performance
of Medieval, Renaissance
and' Baroque mu sic on
origihal instruments. His
early music credits include
Guido's other ~land , the New
York Renais.s ance Band, the
New York Consort for Music
and Poetry and the Ensemble
for Early Music. He has
recorded for New World, Vox
and Nonesuch Records. Russell . Rizner (horn)
studied with Myron Bloom at
the Cleveland Institute and
was recipient. of the
Rockefeller Foundation
ScholarShip at 'the Peabody
Conservatory · in Baltimore. ·
He has performed with the
Detroit Symphony, the
American Symphony; and
spent four years with the

e,

National Ballet of Canada
Orchestra. His varied activities include solo recitals,
recordings and Broadway
shows, as well as . ap·
pearances with the American
Ballet Theater. He is
presently a member of the
Apple Hill Chamber Players
and he plays Principal Hom
in the Northeastern Penn· .
sylvania· Philharmonic.
William Wol(ram (piano),
a 23 year-old pianist, is a
graduate
JUilliard School
where he was recipient of the
initial Irwin Freundlich
Memorial Award presented
for outstanding piano per·
formance. He studied with
the late Mr. Freundlich and
presently studies with Jacob
Latiener. Mr. Wolfram was a
Laureate of the Ninth In·
ternational Chopin Com·
petition in Warsaw. A tour of
Poland followed, including
orchestral performances,
solo recitals, radio and
television appearances. A
year later he was one of the
first two Ainericans ever to
reach the · final round of the
Liszt-Bartok
International

of ·

Piano
Competition
in
Budapest. His performance
credits include appearances
in Allee Tully Hall and Avery
Fisher Hall in New York's
Lincoln Center, as soloist
with the Master Virtuosi of
New York. He has ·given
nwnerous. recitals around the
country and performed on
radio and television in New
York. Mr. Wolfram has won
prizes from the Kosciuski
Foundation, National Music
Teacher's Association and
Buffalo Young Pianist
Competition. ·

MISSIONARY Services at
Middleport
Independent
Holiness Church, Pearl
Street, Wednesday,. 7:30p.m.
Speakers will be. from Point
Pleasant , West · Virginia
Training School. Public in· .
vited.
·
REPRESENTATIVE from
'Clarence ·Miller's · ·office at
· court house 'Wednesday from
10 a.m. iuitu noon.
, PAST · Councilors 'Club,
Chester Council 323, Wed-1
nesday 7:30p.m. at home of
Marcia Keller.
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, ·
. Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
·
hall .
JUNIOR .AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeney Bennett Post 128, Mid·
dleport, 7:30 Wednesday .
night at the hall.

... .. .. ......

roli

.HOMEMADE HAM SAlAD ••••••••••••••~~;. s1.19
. . ·.

1 lb. Blue Bonnet quarters

~

.

·

tb.

·

MARGARINE ......... 69$
CHEESE
................
SPREAD .......... ..
Banquet or ·Morton 1V Dinners ............. ~~~~. 69~
1 lb. Kraft Velveeta

bunch

oz.

KNOW YOUR C~RRIER - Rodney Roush, II, is a
new carrier for the Daily Sentinel. Rodney is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Roush, Union Ave. , Pomeroy. He attends
Pomeroy Elementary and building models is his hobby .

.

12 oz. Nestle's

·HQ.T CHOCQ
• ILft
A'JE ..............................
with marshmallows
.
S119 ·
'
, •

-,

12 oz.

ARMOUR ·TREET•• ~i~~.~:~.~f:

••••••••••••••••••

Complaint dismissed

s1.19

6 oz. Instant

FOLGERS .COFFEE. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 52.98
Jqi;, oz. Old Fash.ioned Campbell's

VEGETABLE SOUP. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••.2i55'

SPECIAL Gl}ESTS at the .
Middleport United Pe.n·
tecostal Church; 7:3o · this
evening, will be·the Rev. and
Mrs. Lloyd ·. Moreau and
family, missionaries to
Auckland, .New· Zeland. 'I'Ile
family will present vocal
nwnbers and the Rev. Mr.
Moreau will speak on New ·
Zealand and present a 30
minute movie. Public invited . .
THURSDAY .

CHUNK PINEAPPLE•••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 63$

So~!~;E~s~ayB~;o ~.:

PORK &amp; BEANS........~ ••••••••••••••• ~ ••••. 2/Sf

home of Mrs. R·uby Baer.

•

Sl 39
RING ~U.DDING ••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••• •
French City

16· oz. ·Idaho

INsTANT POTAtn~s••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·63~
20 oz. DelMonte

~

·

·

200 cf

WHITE PUFF TISSUES ......................... 69$
1411? nz. Show Boat

L--------•••••••••••••••••lil•••l

Rates. of Taxation
for 1978 ·
.
.

'

Some 40 pereell! of an
orange is juice and 60 percent
is peel and pulp.

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
• •

I!!!

WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO DO?
PUT IN A
NEW KITCHEN!

::i

it

BIG·40%

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

A~; CORPORATIONS

RuTLAND

2.30
1.00
1.70

24.00
24.00

•

24.00

SALISBURY
Meigs Local S.D. -- ---. 4.30 1.70 24.00
Middleport Village __ .. -4.30
.20 24.00
Pomeroy Village ____ __ 4.30
.20 · 24.oo
SCIPIO
Meigs Local S. D. ---· 4.30 2.40 24.00
SUTTON
Southern Local S. D.· __ 4.30 2.10 30.90 '
Racine Villl!ge -~--- -- 4.30
.60 30.90
Syracuse Village __ . _~ 4.30
.60 30.90
SUTTON
Meigs Local S. D. ___ __ 4.30 2.10 24.00

CASH &amp;CARin
SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO IT
YOURSELF.
BRING iN
YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
EXPERTS ·WILL

.10 . .40
.10 .40

Alexander S. D. ---- · - 4.30 1.70 29.00 .10 .40
LEBANON
.
Eastern Local S. D. ___ 4.30 2.70 32.00 .10 .40
Southern LocalS. D.•• 4.30 2.70 30.90 .10 .40
LETART
Southern Local S. D. __ 4.30 2.70 30.90 .10 . .40
OLIVE
Eastern Local S.D. ___ 4..30 2.70 32.00 .!0 .40
ORANGE.
Eastern Local S. D. ___ 4.30 2 50 32.00 .10 .40
Meigs Local S. D. ~-:- 4.30
Rutland Village -- ---· 4.30
SALEM
Meigs Local S.D. ___ __ 4.30

3iso

.10 AO .10 _.26 . 1.00 ..
.10 .40 · .10 .20 . r.oo

.10 .40
.10 . .40

1.00
.013912ao
. 1.00 : 40.80 .. 08805076

.10 .20
.10 .20

1.00
1.00

1.00 ·~1.60
1.00 33.60

.09050098
.01871099

.10

1.00 2.40

1.oo

4o.2o

.2137s7o7

.10 .20
.10 .20

1.00
1.00

1.00 41.80
1.00 . 40.70

.09342116
.10018896

.10

1.00

1.00 40.70 - .09752626

.10

.20

.20

0

.20

1.00

1.00 41.80

.09026456

.10 ..20

1.00

1.00

.08997838

.10
.10

.20 . 1.00
.20 1.00

5.50

41.6.0
'

.20

1.00

1.00 32.80

.10 .40
.10 .40
.1o .4o

.10
.10
.10

.20
.20
.20

1.00
1.00

1.00 32.80 .01391242
1.00 87.60 .02419414
1.00 37.10 .02376285

.10 .40

.10 .20

1.00

1.00 33.50 . .01868874

.10 .40
.10 . . 40
.10 .40

.10 .20
.10 .20
.10 .20

1.00
1.00
1.00

. 1.00 40.10 .09666673
10.10 1.00 48.70 .09761088
. 6.3o 1_oo 43.90 .09801414

.10

.40 .10 .20 1.00

. 6.20
5.80

1.00 83.20

HELP YOU!

.01676602

2119 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
675-2311

•

•

. TENNIS SHOES

9!oo.

M~J~~i~~~~~~~~·t~·

I .

·,

TILL 8 P.M. NEXT 3 MONTHS

VERY SPECIAL BUY!

Chill Chaser Reduction

WOMEN$ '·"
PRINTED TERRY
BATH
THERMAL
UNDERWEAR TOWELS
Fuli -size. Beautiful florals

Tops .or Bottoms . Circular
knit keeps cold out and
warmth in most all sizes ,

on

While

gro unds .

Irregulars of Cannons S2.99
thick terry towel.

2101 $3

OUR a·IGGEST EVER JANUARY SALE!

SUPER
WOMENS
KNEE-HI·
NYLONS

::~;:~

REVERSIBLE

FULL SIZE

MULTI-COLOR
BRAIDED
RUGS

PRINTED
KITCHEN
TOWELS

4 7s~

2~~:5

Pair

Still Afew Left
KING OR QUEEN

CANNON .
'BED SHEETS

$100 2 $1 .2 $10
For

For

MORE REDUCTIONS! NEW ITEMS! STARTS. THURSDAY

A. M.

10

Firstone ,.

roalll Fill

BED

PILLO~s

2 ,., 'soo

BULOVA

RAVELL~

The affordable quality watch ...

We have·a superb selec~
lion of Bulova ·caravelle ·
watches: All with jewel·
lever movements. All
megnificenlly styled.
Como and see that flne
111iatches don't have to

De e~penslve.

Mh1 Neatly tllloreelln cltrome
stllnltss steel. With sliver
I

Wlttl till Clitl,

.

TOPS· PANTS
SWEATERS

r

Vinyl Plastic

Fitted Plastic

VINYL

SHOWER
CURTAINS

MATTRESS
COVER

STORM
WIN

1s1
Riduced30% .Quality

7.9e

Full
Bed
Size

79e

BIG

MENS
SHIRTS

Re1. 39'

$500

22~

TO '9.00

Womens Hi1h
DRES$
BOOTS

MENS THERMAL.

BOOTS
SOCKS
1st
Qua illy
And
lrr's.

-~
~J.'p

~
_J1f

88CPr•.

MENS
•
SWEATERS
Values To '13.99

·ssoo And s7oo

FROM
Men's &amp;
Boys

s10.00 tO $29.90
N

~

$500

.-."~M~i~d~:~~~~~:~:~~~~~~~~-~o_c_k

.

3 Piece
PLASTIC
DRAPES

·\_
"

/

ENTIRE STOCK

WOMENS
SHOES
Cl~rance

794

Priced!

DRASTIC
PRICE
OUTS!

-JARMAN
-HUSH PUPPJES

72 Pnce

DRESS GLOVES

IIIYSI

-FLORSHEIM

.

and Mens

wa•MuP

FOR MEN

tL

Bop "Bi1 Yank"
BRUSHED DENIM $681..
JEANS

'

HARTLEY 5 SHOES, INC.

'.

·..

·.

s20.00

.·

THANKS FOR MAKING LAST WEEK OUR LARGEST SALES DAY EV!:R IN
JANUARY . WE HAVE MORE MDSE . AND BETTER VALUES TO HELP YOU .'··
FIGHT INFLATION . YOU ASK. WE'LL TRY TO STOCK IT. WE WANT YOUR
BU SINESS, TELL US WHAT YOU CAN' T FINO .

HEADQUARTERS FOR .

CONTINUES

. Alw~ys.exa~in~ y~ur tax receipt to .See th~t it cover~
Y9ur ~pert~.· ·Wfi~e ~o~l;·
A.M:. , .
. to4.00 P.M. dally ·~~ept Saturday :wh.e n off1ce eloe~ ,at. Noon . • Tax:Books .wilJ .o,pen Deoeplb11r 20, ., :
·
·
· ·
· ·
' .... ·: ·" ·
. to Janua.r y 20, 1979. · · · · ·

;,n

ment would proceed with the
earlier administrative complaint against Iowa Beef lind
Columbia Foods, which was
aimed at prohibiting the companies from contilJjling the
arrangement with the feedlot
cooperative.
Iowa Beef's headquarters
are in Dakota City, Neb. , and
Columbia Foods' in Pasco;
Wash . Iowa Beef bought
Columbia, the largest beefslaughtering firm in the four
states, in 1976.
Department officials said
North West Feeders was set
up on June 23, 1977, as a nonprOfit cooperative association
of six cattle feeding
companies, five in Idaho and
one in Washington.

JANUARY

.01391242

Real Estate taxe~ '!'hich have not been paid at the close of each cblleet)Qn carry a penalty of ten
· per cent.- T":xes may. 11e J)llid at the .office of the colJ)Ity treasurer . or by man . . Pleaie brinr your
last tax receipt and if yoq pay by mail-be i!ure to IO!l"te your·property ,b y taxjng, diati-let and en. close stam]Jed self· addressed enve!dpe.
· · ·
·
·
·
·
·

Vemon J . Hazlett, District
Director of t.h&amp; Immigration
and Naturalization Service,
Cleveland, today urged aliens
in the area who have not yet
filled out . the annual alien
address cards to do so before
January 31.
The Immigration official
pointed out that ·the law
requires all non-citizen s'
except persons in diplomatic
status ' ' and
foreign
representatives to certain
mternational organizations,
such as the United Nations to
mail their address card to the
Government each January.
Hazil!tt added: '·'The parent
or legal guardian of an alien
child under fourteen ( 14 )
years of age must fill out the
address card for such a child
in order to comply with the
law." He said, " We have
tried to make it as convenient
as possible for non.citizens to '
meet the address report
requirements; and, in view of
the se rious penalties for
willful violation, all persons
subject to the aadress report
law are urged to fulfill this
obligation before the end of
January . " Reporting is not
difficult. The card with which
to report may be obtained
from any United States Post
Office. Any non-citizen who is
ill may send .a friend or
relative to obtain the card lor
him."
After filling it out, place a
postage stamp on the reverse
of this card and drop the card
in any maUbox.

CONTINUED SAVINGS AS

1 .00 ' 83.40 .01800563
1.00 37.60 .02700915

.10 .40. .10

i.oo

competition."
The complaint involved a
joint venture set up with
North West Feeders Inc., of
Boise, Idaho, a cattie feedlot
cooperative, in which it was
alleged Iowa Bee! and
Columbia would slaughter
and process • steers and
heifers it produced.
Department officials said
this arrangement, in effect,
would "tend to create a
monopoly " in the supply,
slaughter and marketing of
beef in Washington, Oregon,
Idaho and Montana.
The department also asked
a federal district court to
grant an injunction to
prohibit the joint venture, but
last June 8, the U.S. District
Couri in Boise denied USDA's
petition.
Accordingly, officials announced then that the depart-

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) HB 52 - Boggs. Changes
In the I.A!gislature Tuesday : limit on township bonds
ADOPTED IN !iENATE which may be issued for fire
SR 3 - Jackson . Elects Keith protection service.
Brooks of Mahoning County
HB 53 - R. Hugl!es. Conas Clerk of the Senate. Vote:
firms land sale agreements
22-0. (Resolution adopted entered into by lake lands
Jan. 8, 1979.)
administrator.
SR 4 - Jackson. Sets
HB 54 - R. Hughes. Consalaries
for
Senate firms land sale agreements of
employees. Vote: 30-0.
lakelands administrator.
SR 5 - Jackson. Appoints
HB55 - D.Johnson. Raises
Charles Curran of Dayton to maximum purchase of
replace Sen. ·Tony Hall in township road equipment ·
Sixth Senate District. Vote:
which may be purchased
16-0 (Democrats only).
without competitive bidding.
INTRODUCED IN HOUSE
HB 56 - Hays. Abolishes
•HB 40-Maddux. Requires; the board of regents.
fair· treatment of auto insurHB 57 :... Hays. Restricts
ance policyholders involved use of fuel adjustment
in accidents which are not clauses.
their fault .
HB 58 - Karmol. Makes
HB 41 - Mayk Permits retirement system benefits
suspension Of students prior • subject Ill garnishment.
to their appearances at
HB 59 - Karmol. Requires
transit bUBes hauling school
expulsion hearings.
HB 42 - Gilmartin. Elimi· children to have caution signs
nates one-week waiting similat to those on school
·
period for unemployment buses.
· HB 60 - Zehner. Requires
compensation.
Branstool.· law library · associations
HB 43 Restricts adv~rtising receiving public funds to open
materials for sic'kness and their libraries lor public use.
accident insurance policies.
HB 44 - Shoemaker.
Changes school district fiscal
y~ars to July 1.June 30,
makes other changes in
· school funding laws.
,HB 45 - Carney. Permits
continuation of health
insurance eoverage following
changes ·in marital or health
status.
HB 46 -Carney. Sets light·
ing efficiency standards for
public buUdings.
FOR WOMEN
HB 47 ...:. Maddux. Sets up a
committee
to oversee
-JOYCE
operation of the Fairfield
~ -VENER
School for Boys.
· HB 46 - Maddux. Creates a
-HUSH PUPPIES
12th District Court of
-EASY STREET
Appeals.
HB 49 - R. Hughes.
-CRAWDADS
Requires
county
cmunlssioners to set salaries
FROMS10.00 TO
for all elected county
officials.
One Group
HB 50 - Mad&lt;il~Ac. Requires
all bllls enacted by the
Legislature to carry a
1
statement Of purpose.
HB 51 - Maddux. Allows
. public funds to be held In savings and loan savings
......
accounts.
·

~n plirsuance of· Law, I, ·George . M; ~lli.ns; Treasurer of ¥elgs County, Ohio, in .compliance .with rev·
18ed Code No. 323.08 of State of Oh1o, do hereby give notice of the Ratos of Taxation for the Tax
Year of 1978. Rates expressecnn dollars and cents on each one tholisand dollars tax .v aluation.

BEDFORD. . ..
. ·. .
. ·
.
· Meig~ Local s. ·D. : __ ~ 4.30 · 1.70 :· 2~.00
Eastern L&lt;ical S. D. ___ 4.30 1.70' 32.00
CHESTER
Eastern LocalS. D. ___ 4.30 2.50 32.00
Meigs Local S. D. _.. _ 4.30 2.50 24.00

evidence now available,
further prosecution of the
charges would not serve the
public interest."
No official announcement
of the dismissal was made by
the department but one was
expected shortly.
One .source, who asked not
Ill be identified , said the complaint · was dropped because
USDA lawyers decided "it
would have been very
difficult" to prove the
allegations in the original
charges .
On Dec. 16, 1977, the
department charged that
Iowa Beef and Columbia
Foods, a subsidiary, "have
been and are now engaged in
unfair acts and practices, and
unfair
methods
of

Legislation at glance

..

'

By DON KENDALL
AP Fanil Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - An
administrative complaint
against the nation's largest
. beef packing company,
charging that it and a
subsidiary were trying to
Corner the beef market in
four northwestern states, has
been dropped by the
Agriculture Department.
· Papers filed with the
departnlent's hearing clerk
disclosed Tuesday that the
charges, filed more tban a
year ago against Iowa Beef
Processors
Inc.
and
Colwnbia foods Inc., were
dismissed at the request of
department attorneys.
The papers showed the dismissal request was approved
because, "on the basis of the

COLD WEATHER BRINGS
MORE SUPER SA VINGSI
OP~N

·.

TOWNSHIPS
FREE CLINIC
The Harrisonville. Senior
Citi:iens will •hold a blood
pressure clinic, free of
charge, on Jan. 16 from 10
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the town
bouSe. Everyone is welcome
to attend.
·

DALE'S

'

8: 1~·

Rodney Roush··--Know Your Carrier

Social
· ·l
Prices Effective Thru Sat., January 13th
· . . , . ... . I.
.
' Calendar
I·
- · ·
II .R
.Oll
· ·. SA. USAG
. E.~. · ~. .~ · ~ .· .·~·~········~
·.
s1· ·39·.
· . '
t
I

'

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

,--~~~~,,~1

Aliens
·must
report ·

•

VISIT
US OFTEN
COME IN

[lSMEI~

OPEM

TILL
8 P.M.

~!i11£fJ~r?lPttrz~

·

Sale
$tarts.

thun ..
10 a.m.

::::~J.~.·--~--~-.............P.O•I•N•T··.P.L.EA..SA__N_T_o_r__M_A_so__N_·.·--~~------_.

.....

I

,

.. ,
..
' .

�'-

,_

10- The DaUv Sentinel, Middleport·Pqtneroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan.IO,I979

..

:

1~

words or Under
Cash

LOO

ldll)'

3duya

L50
LIO

Sdays

3.00

!d.!llys

O..rge

LIS
L!IO
2.25
3.15

Each wohi over the minimum 15
words is 4 cents per word per day.
Ads runniJll! other than conaecutlve
d.y1 will be Liwjj:ed at the 1 day

_ JanullJ 11, 1171
- lpu'll be spending a lot of time
.and effort salisfyi ng and pursu- lng -- your self-interests this
cptitlng year. Bring others into
ttl.e picture as you progress so
you'll have people 'with w~om
--·- .' lo -share your happiness.
\ · . - CAPRICORN (Dec. -22-J .... 111
-- - - You might find yourself teamed
. ·ijp wllh an individual today who
--:· -: Is ·not about to do things your
- - _wily: Qlve In 10 hts whims and
--: . -. sa_ve yourself frustration . Find
- _-·aut moie of what lies ahead for
- _·you In 1979 by sendtng for your
. copy of Astro-Graph Leller.
'Mail _11 for each and a long.
-self-addressed, stamped enve· lope to Astro-Graph , P.O. Box
489, Radio City Station, N. V.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
-sfQn.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Ill

rato

In memory, Card of Thanks and
Obituary: 6 cents per word, $3.00
minimum. Cash In advt.nce.
Mobile Home sales and Yard sales
are ac«pted ooly with c""' ·with
order. 25 cent chlrge for ads clllrryinl Box Number In Care of The Sen-·
tineI.
The PublJaher ~serves the right
to l!dlt or rejl!d any ads doemod objectional. 'l11e Publll!ber wt11 no1 be
responsible for more than one incorred insertion.
Pbooe 1192·2156

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADI.JNES

mlgtil be how you 'l l be today.
Better face up to them , fo r
lb'ey'll have to be · handled
sometime.
PISCES (Feb. ZD-M•rclt 201

Monday
Noon on Saturday

thruFrt&lt;JtY

Some days are not mean1 for ~
going wrong in . thts area, do

4P.M.
the day before pubUcati011

TAURUS (April 20-May 201. AI· Jan uary comes with sod regrets
though you might feel like The Do¥ a nd the mon th we shall
not forget

• sounding off to one who reall y

deserves It, hold your tongue . For m our hearts you wilt always
stay
You 'll come out way ahead by
We will love _and rem ember you
keeping silent
_
e11ery day
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Bet· Sadly
missed by wile, Faye , so n,
ter lake a second and third look
Jim, Mother Elfie ; Brothers ond
at any situation which involves

Sisters and the John Oil! Fomi -

money today . There are hidden
traps lurking beneath the sur· !Y~ - - - - - - - - - - - lace.
CANCER (June 21-July 211 A
Lost and Found
meeting of the minds might be
difficult IOachteve t&lt;&gt;day . If you LOST- TWO hall Schnouze,, hotf
'

poodle. block puppies : Peppy
ond lucky . Lorge St Bernard Shepard , excel le n t watchdog

LEO (July ·2S.Aug. 221 If you Abo'e
Reed., ;ll e
don 't have anything pressing at __61_4-_:17~ -~3~1 :_ _ ______ _
work !hat must get done today'
put Important things off unlll
day. Your

concentra~

lion Is faulty .
PROBATE -COURT OF
VIIIGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Guard what you say carefully ESTATE OF CARRIE . E.
today when around friends . A SMITH, DECEASED
sensitive pal 's feeling s could

be deeply hurt because of your
poor choice ol words .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 It's
going to reflect on your image
II you try to take too much
credit for something another

helped you accompl ish . Tell it
like it Is.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Everyone Is entitled to an opln·
ion, so don't overract when
someone e Xpresses a viewpoint contrary to rours . Re-

Cue No. :12,575

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
DF FIDUCIARY

on January 4th , 1979, In the
Meig s County Probate Court,
Case No. 22,575, Irene La
Mont, 300 Surface Drive.
Charleston. w. va. 25307 was
appointed EMecutriK of the
estate of Carrie E . Smith,
deceased, late of 865 Pearl
Street. Middleport. Ohio
45160.

spect the rights o others- in
(11 10.
this respect
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-D"G·
211 Mistakes are very easy to

Manning D . Webster
Probate ~udge.

17 ,

24, 3tc

Clerk

make in vour commercial deal-

Ings today. Trying to bring In a
second head further compli·
cates matters . Avoid the linan·
clal world today If possible.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I

'\

Alfred

Social Nota
· Sunday School attendance
on Dec. 31 was 53, the offering
~1 .96.

·- -

· -

- ·-

-

.

-

~

-

~-

.

~e 1 vkt1

THf
AND brother s of
Clor McMostNs w •sh to thank
the relatives. friends and
nei hbor s lor the kindness durIn hP.r sickness and deoth. A
S PCiol thonlls to Rev . Koch,
wing Funeral Home, Pomeroy
mergency , . Doctors and staff
ot Holzer Medical Center .

- -- . .

wo n t to buy or sell sofl'! ething.
ae looking for work . , . or
wha tever
you'll get r es uhs
laster with o Sent mel Wo ~t Act .

Coli '192-2156

- ~ -,..----'~
-1973 CHEVROl ET CAPRICE, 4door , r,d , block vinyl top ,
rodio l t1res red velvet seats,
. A- 1 condition . Arnold Grote.
Rutland Day s 747·221 1 Nights
747-2'146

GUN SHOOT. Racine Gun Club .
Every Su nday 1 pm . Factory
choke guns only .

197.4 PONTtAC U:MANS . Aut o.
tran s. , P S. , V·B. New e &gt;e houst.
_g oo? l~re: -_51_2~0 _94_9 ·?2?2: ~

- ·- · - · · · - - - GUN SHOOT Racine Vo lunteer 1975 BLAZER .4 -wheel drt ve .
55.000 m1les $3500 985·3875 .
Fire Dept. EvfJry Saturday b:30
pm at their building In Boshan . 1976 CHEVY SPORT &lt;4 wheel dn ~o~e .
Short bed, stepside .' 350 4 bbl..
Fo_ct?r~ c~k4! g_u~s on~y ._ __ .
au to trans 36 .000 mi. Very ·',
BAI LEY ' S
STOR E',
33 1 good condition l ots of e•tro s
N 2nd A&gt;Je .. Middleport, Ohto.
Coli afte r 5 pm 992-778b
Will be dosed Dec 25 to Jan 2.

-

INCOME TAX Service. Federal
and Sta te Taxes . 992-2271 for
oppts or see Wando Ebl1n.
.41000 laurel Cliff Rd.
N~.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Is hereby orven that
the annual meeting of the
stockholders of The Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Company of
21 1 West Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, will be held
at the office of said Bank In
Pomeroy , Oh io, according to
its by -laws, on the third
Wednesday of January. 1979,
at 4 : 00P .M . for the purpose
of electing directors and the
transaction of such other
business as may property
come before said meeting .
PaulE Kloes,
Sec retary ,

-

.

-

.

-

.

-

1967 ", ton Ford pickup. b cyl .
std $350 378-6349
1973 DODGE POWER Wagon. 4wheel dnve 985-337 8.

,

CAKE DECORATING Classes now
form1ng . Begmr,mg or Intermediate . To reg ister, to ll
Carousel Confectionery , M id·
dleporf 992·6342 . Drowing for
1 se t of free lesson s from oil
_oppl_i c~n ! s . _____ _ __ _
Stat e . Wallace

"

DO YO U nee d a good transpo rto ·
l 1on cor? 1974 Chevrol et p1ckup
6 cyl sfd , $900. 197.3 Olds
custorn wagon , S1495 1975
For dMustangGhio 6cyl ., d-sp,
$1005 All in 'good condition .
304 773 -5471 -

- ----- - - - - -- -·

Mobile Homes for Sale

Russell .

Br_o~b~ry_ ~a~l ~~· 7?2~ . :

Help Wanted
NEED SOMEONE to core for lady
in her own home live in, fix
mea ls ,
drive
cars ,
g et
groce ries, super vise medication, e tc. Ideal woman would
be middle aged . trustworthy
and willing to make her home
in Syracuse. Ohio. 992 -7034 or

'192-7671.

WAITRE SS AND grill work on
Soturdoys ond Sundays. Ap pl y
of Ri~o~erfr o nt Diner .

1970 Am herst50x 12 2 BR
1970 Champion 6(h12 2 BR
19b5 G eneral b0111"2 2 BR
1968PMC52&gt;tl22 8R
1955 Pro1rte Schooner 18x8 I BR
1973 Royol Embassy 68x 1.4 3 BR
1959 Star SOx 10 1 BR
1973 St~r60x l4 2BR
1968 Starb0xl2 2 BR
1970 s'ylvob0M'l2 2 BR
19b8 Villages 60xl2 2 BR
19b4 Wtndsor 51 M 10 2 BR
1970 Kirkwood 1'1)(60 3 BR
PT.

near DeMler _992 5858
1967 TOTAL El~CTRIC mobile
home. furn ished, 3 bedr ,
washer ond dryer Air conditio ned 1 lot; 210ft. fronta ge.
S 12 000 . Phone 7 41 2826

.-

Re5PC111Sibilities: Oolerall
administration of all
phases: fifteen stalions, 28
ALS Vehicles, full -time
staff of 70 and support

- -

. .

REAL ESTATE LOANS . VA

No

money
down
( el i gibl e
V!O'terens ) FHA · As low as 3,....
down (oil non· Veterens and
general public ) To ~ 'P urchas e
real esta te or r'elinance . 30

YEARS TERMS IRELAND MORTGAGE CO. 77 E. State St.,
Athens Phone6 14·592-3051 .
HOUSE FOR
so le. Lo cati on·
Mason . WV. Four bedroom split
level. built in ki tchen w1t h
oven. range , garbage diSP.OSOI
ond bor Fornily room , dining
room., whole house ca rp eting
Full Sll8 basement . Cen tro/ air
end forced air gas heot. All
drape s plus washer and dr yer.
Backyard 10 ft. h1gh cedar
fe nce and cedar decks for
pri vocy Heoted garage Close
to school , sto r e pork and tennis
cour t. Controc l C ory l G 1bbs
Call bl.t 949 2746

SECLUDtD IN town li ~o~ing . All
electric . 3 bedroom 1 1 ', both,
corpeted , fa mi ly room wi th
Frankli n stove, goroge, 1 I
acre land . Near Me1gs High
Schoo l. To see clol992-6287 ,
WEL L ESTABLISHED .grocery with 7

'oom upsto'" opL on So lem SL .

1n Rutland. Oh• o 7.4 2-2424 or
742·3ldl .

damper on your life .

1

19th' CiniUiVSiivlce with
2:0th Century Know-How.

Specializing In

Woodstova, 011 Furnace
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone: 742·3110
Kim White. PrDprletor

COAL. LIMESTONE sond , grovel.colcium chlo ride , fertil•zer , dog
f ood ond all types of sal t. EM·
ce ls•o r Salt Wo rk ~ Inc .. E Main
_st_. ~o~':"~Y _~2:3 8_91____ _
APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orchard.
State Rt. b89 . Phone Wdke~v itle

Retirement.

069-37BS.

_... _
.....

Yom HeadquarteiS For

Annslron1 Carpetin1

Service

EWOTTAPPUANCE li

-...
c...

I'

.I

- ROGER HYSEll.
GARAGE

Tyree Blvd.,

Phone

after 5
fter 12

Racine.

Qualifications:
.
Bachelor's degree and five

QUALITY CONDITIONED mixed
hoy . Wil l deliver. 992 ·7201 .

years emergency medica I

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

services administrative or
equivalent minimum .

-

PEA HAULERS CB . So les . Equipmen t now on sole . all in stock
Rad1os and a ccesso rie~ through
Christmas. Open every day ex·
cept Sunday and Monday.
EVeni ngs by oppo1ntment .
P o rtland ,
Oh1o
Ph o ne

, financial

background helpful.
Submit resume including
salary
history
to :
President, SOUTHEAST
OHIO
EMERGENCY
MEDICAL SERVICES,
INC.. P.O. Box 805,
Gallipolis, Olllo 45631, by
Jonuory 16, 197t.

843-2064 ,

-

PIGS FOR sole . 949·2657 aft er 5.

c -;-- - ------- -

POMEROYlANDMARK

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD .
Poles moM
diameter 10" on largest end ,
$12 per ton . Bundled slab, $10
per ton Oe l i ... ered to Ohto
Pollet Co .. Rt .' 2, Pomeroy.

Hudqu,rtors lor all your
. ·G,E. T.V.'s &amp; Hotpoinl
Appliances.

SALE PRICES

Ill.

ten

- -SNOW

Pom.-oy Landmalll

-- - ---

..

Wood

frame house with large
rooms,
2
fire pi aces.
natural gas furnace , c ity
water and large lot. Reduc -

ed to $21,500.
FINE NEW HOME - With
family room that has a nice

woodburnlng fireplace. 3
bedrooms, carpeting all

949-2111. Evening
P .M . Weekends

noon.

12~31~1

mo.

- ---::::--:-::_- : - : - -':---.--

Real Estate for Sale

-

'

.:.BOUT 6 YEARS OLD - ,
bedrooms, nice kitchen,
dining room , all electric,
storage building , nice lot.

$28,500.00.
MIOOLEPORT

Nice

-

home, 3 bedrooms, di n i ng,
nice kitchen . 2 mob ile

homes ,

all

rented.

$19,500.00,

ONE LOVELY ACRE All furnished, small creek
through,
almost
new
mobile home, large con ·
crete parking area. Manv
other features . 116,500.00.

thru. 2 fu II ball\s, 2 car
finished

home on co rner lot. Three
bedrooms , two baths,
modern kitchen, lots of
remodeling,
all
very

garage

on

one

. small shop and live in wi th
all utilitieS for on l y $12,000 .
This is your chance.
WARM Large natural
gas furnace, ba t h, 3
,bedrooms, new carpeting

·au the way . Glass sliding

·door; nice kitchen, basement and backyard . Only

$16,500. A bargain for you. .55 ACREs-Well with

pump, 10x50 mobile home,
-gas furnace in the cbuntry

mOdern . S27.500.00.
48th ACRES - 1978 HOlly
Perk mobile home, B' ex ·.
pando, new addition l4x36
add-a -room, large dec k .
Many, many features . All

for ius! $&lt;48,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT -

Two

build ing s,
both
with
business rooms and apart·
ments, also well establish ·
ed tavern and restaurant

business with goOd income.
Many other features. If
really interested, please

want. Plenty of firewood on
some and water l ine by
some. 2 mobile home lots.

J•cc~~a~IIIJI:~o~r ~·~~~~'~~·rr~
UP BEING

Housing
Headquarters

1

P~;~·~~t~H,WHEN
YOU
L
PROPERTY

WITH US
SELL.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland

Henry E. Cleland, Jr .

ASSOCIATES
Leona Cleland
Kathy Cleland
99'-l259-99H 191-992-2568

.· ,&amp;

..

-- - - -

~

-

-

-dozer
- - - - - - -, lood er ond

EXCAVATING
ba ck hoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boy s f or hire: w ill hou l
fill d1rt . to soil , limes tone end
gravel Ca ll Bob or Roger Jef fers . ~o y phone ~7- 7069 . n1 ght
phone 992 ·3525 or 992· 5232

plumbing and heating . No 1ob
too large or too smol l Phone

I

~!

\TOLBET

rJ

UTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE;
.

MORE LIGHTS ALOHG 111' SHORE -- ·
LOT MORE 60ATS, TOO "' BtGt
DIRTY O~ES "' WE CAN'T Bf'
TOO ffiR FROM TH'
OCEAtl"-

LEl'S STAY REAL-CLOSE
lO SHORE AND KEEP OUR
E'IES PEELED ... PHEW ... Bl(i
SALT MARSH THAT WAY---

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

-

Yes terdays
_ _

'r emodeled ceramic tile plum
bing, carpentry , and general
maintenance
13 years eM' ·
_PC:ri!~e..:. ~2..:_3~8~ _ _ _ _
PULLIN S EXCAVATING. Complete
Service . Phon e 992 -2478
_._

__

------ -- - -

AUTOMOBILE INSU RAN CE been
co ncell ed? lost your operators
license? Phone992-2143.

M &amp; M Hom e Improveme nt serv-. ing Gclli po l is and oreo . We
s pe C iali:~ e
in
viny l . and
oluminum sid ing . For lree
estimates
coli bld -367-0128,
_G~I~p~ l ~. _ _ _ _ - ~-SNOW PLOWING service. Call

991-7201 or 991-3309.
E-C ELECTRICAL Cantroctor serv·
ing Ohio Voll ey region . Six
day s o wee k , 24 hours ser&gt;Jice .
Emergen cv call s. Call 882-2952
"
or 892·2305 .

.

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

-985-3920.
-- - ·---FIVEPUPPIE S. 992 -75 18.

'TII11J-"

I

Jumbles GASSY FUROR

MORTAR BAKERY

.
. .
.
Answer· How to get a good appeti t e · ~ no hme-FAST

ACROSS
42 One of
1 Susan Clark
the ages
TV film
DOWN
1
.}_~~~:=':~~ 5 Role for Bea Tree trunk
r
Arthur
2 Greek
10 Stare
assembly
11 Great
·aTowheaded
Britain
4 Scary shriek

0H NORTH AND 'SOLn:H
JUST Ll$reN iO ME!
~IS DUDE'S 6CfT A
V&gt;f{)fi:P AND IT'9 ...

RISING STAR Kennel~ Boardin g •
end grooming, oil .b reeds . .'
Cheshire, 367-0292.
AK C BRINDEN boxer . 1 11, years
old, mole, we ll br ed . qq2-7519 .

is one
13 Squint
15 Sea eagle
16 Ending

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

SAVE ON

fur !!quid

1· 10

.,_._..~.17

GASOUNE ArLEY

DRIVE A LITTU
&amp;.
SAVE A LOT

No problem!
I'll ba c¥. up
and turn
around!

wtm
padding at no charge. !
Exfll!rl lnotall•tl.,.
lhn. . . . .

Rubber Back Carpet .
AIL-AI

Soft shoulder! The4
..,nc,wn

put up

Giqn5!

Unhappy
sound
18 Veneraled
20 French
friend
21 Hill
22 State
of anger
23 Gyrate
: 25 Curia
llibWJal
Painter
Chagall

5 ':- Roberts"
6 Inquired
7 The gums
8 Informal
dance: Fr.
9 Accolades
12 AccoWJt
entry
14 Brother
of Moses
19 Of the ear

Yesterday's Answer
22 The body, 27 Tokyo raid
in biology
carrier
23 Imitation
29 Phjse
silk
30 Quail
24 Talk like
31 Muse of
a child
lyric poetry
25 Sacred
35 Actor O'Neal
reminder 37 Operate
26 Paired
38 High priest

Wedand·y, lu. 11

B

.

Importance of using ARCH
• K2

•QJ975

• 8 52

WEST

EAST

• A 63

• 9742

• Q J 10 9 7

• 863

• A6
• QJ6

• 83

up

+109 74
SOUTH
• QJ 8
• A 54

• K 10 4 2

+ AKJ

-

floor Caverin1_1n .s~

Vulnerable: BothDealer : ~uth
Weol Nortlt Easl South
I NT
Pass 2NT Pass 3 NT
Db!. Pass ~· Pass Pass

Buy wMre you eM come in
and- wMI ~ou'ragafting

- 8ctJ Wllt1WJIU- Fully I

.

1·10

NORTH
• K 105

9' and 12' VinYl

stOc:kecl.

.

,.

" TAlK-TO
Wenden or Herb Grlla
orO....Smllll

RUnAND
fURttllURI

· Opening lead : • Q

I

Rullltnd

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
lo
I:.IJ.~~~~.:.;;~,.&amp;~;:.,.;;;~J.;.!~..J.;J...J:U..I.I.J..I,.J..:.J.~~:.,.:...L,J~:....;,.:....:,..J.J.;..:..:...:;....:;,~..;...L;.:..,:.....:Or.::::::O:::O:.:;:..:.::.:::::..::.:.:;::--.
•

WINNIE

All RockeiS in Stock ·
going for wholesale and ·.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

·one letter simply stands fo r another. In this sample A • is
used for t he three L's , X for t h e tw o O's, etc. Sin gle letters,
apostr ophes, the l ength and formation of th e words are all

hints. Ea ch day the code letters are difl'erent.

Mf&lt;lS_WRIGHT. .. WINNIE ...'IOU
MUST SAIN CON'mOL OF
YOURSELF. JUe&gt;T WHERe
C!IDYOU ~CEJHIS MAN?

below - We must-sell
these to ni• 1110111 for .·
stock.
Example: -Velvet Rockers Reg. 5199.9S,
1-

~:2

t

D

to

(
•

By OIWald Jacoby '
ud A1aD Soalal

u Sbakeapeare had been a

brids~yer he mlabt well

have

: "What focila thelle

Well playel'B be." Of COIIl'BI,
we have subltltuted "West
cliYPTOQUOTES
players" for "mortala." B11t
we are writing about bridge,
MEW
S WK I
MLEWBY
DLY not characters who sport
about In England on a mid·
HI
p y w . summer nlglit.
MLEWBQWB
Weal didn't bid like a fool.
He waited patiently unW hill
oppononla reached three notrump and then he doubled
happUy.
© 19'19 King Features Syndlcato, Inc.

'iO'RE UNDER ARREST,
SNUFFY·· REACH!!

NOW ONLY · '9800 -

E

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

...... """/!·
·--

-

8:00--Mark Twain's Amerlco 3,15; /Mork~ &amp; Mindy
6, 13; Nova 20,33; Waltons 10.
B:JO-What's Happening!! 6,i3; Please Stand Bv 8
9.00-&lt;:lulncy 3,15; Barney Miller 6,13; Barnaby Jones
B, 10; Raised In Anger 20,33.
9:3()-Soap 6, 13.
IO :OD-NBC Reports 3, 15; Family 6,13 : RaIsed In
Anger Follow-Up 20; ,33,
10 :3()-To Be Announced 33.
ll :OD-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
11 ·30--Johnny Carson 3,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch f.ll •
Gunsmoke B; ABC News 33; Movie "The Battle of
the VIlla Fiorita" 10; Dick Cav~tt 20.
12:3()-News8; 12 :40-Mannlx 6, 13, 1:00-Tomorrow 3
I :So-News 13.
·

~."rea(
by THOMAS JOSEPH

GA'ZOOONY.I

Ca'N74H211

PART BASSE TT dog, 9 mo. old.

I .I

-

Pets for Sale

All carp.r

Now arrange the circled loners to
form the surpnse answer. as sug geste d by the abOve cartoon.

Jumbl• Book No. 1:1:, containing 110 puzzles, Is avalllblelor $1.75 po~tpald
Irom Jumble, c/o this ntwtp':fer, Box 34, Norwood , N.J.078oiB.Incluc:t•your
name , addreu, zlp code an make ch&amp;eks payable lo Newtplperbooks.

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

CARPETING

I

(Answers tomorrow)

AU.EYOOP

HAVE ROOM, board and alu ndry
m priva te home . Will toke
sem i-invalid. 992·5422. Elderly
lady
•

698-7331.
------ -----BATHROOMS AND Kitchens

E'l MA'Y !!&gt;E
E!IUT
"THEY AR:EN''T
QUI'TE MODE5T:

FA~HIONAI5L.E,

Print answer here:

ment. BockgrounC:· BA Degree ·
Bus Mgt . Also some construe - - ·
fl on expenence. Rai sed · In ,
area. Contact Joh n or lea ve
_m_:s~aiJ-:.._3~,:_6~- 5693_:_ _ _
TREE TRIMMING and re mo~o~ol.
742·3167 or 742-2573.

1

,_..,

0 1mbyN(A Inc: lM Aesi US"'-! 011

-- ------- - - -------------- YOUNG MAN seek ing employ· •'

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

HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex-.
cova\ing , septic sys t ems .
dozer . backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone, gra ... el , blacktop
paving, Rt. 143. Ph one 1 (614)

-

[j

()

[j

WATER WELL drilling. Williom T
Grant . 7_,42 -2879.

742 1348,

"ott&lt;&gt;'

CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom house with 'lull
basement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre
land and la"9e -storage building . Price $21 ,500.
TWO ACRES-A beautlful4 yearold,2 bedroom home
with large eat-I n kltctten, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, lull basement with TV room. Many
more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace . All this and two nice acres of land .ln a good
location. Will go quick fer $35,000.
ACREAJJE - with large beef barn In Pomeroy.
SPACIOUS 81-LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. It has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass doors . Large living room and
family room, and to finish this well-laid out home e
have five bedrooms, utility room and garage. Very, w
healing bill . Red barn-like storage building. Lo led
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy lust off . 7.
Asking '$55,000.
•
_
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 1'12 stor house, •
mostly carpeted with 4 bedrooms, dining room and
laundry room. Also almost new 2 car huted garage.
This home Is nicely localed In Portfand and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy.
· 50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'12 story house with lull
basement. Large pond 1tocked with fish . Priced for .
• .
quick sale . $40,000.
SYRACUSE - good 2 ·bedroom home, almost new
kllch*' cabinels, all nicely carpeted, laundry room. a,ll
Insulated, natural gas heat, utility building, 2 lots .
S21 ,500.00.
Talk to 1 locltl re•l .ntolw agent before trying to nil
your !lome. His experience can llelp you. We nttd
- m•ny types of property, give us a call.
CALL JIMMY DEAN, A'SSOCIATE 94f.2381
or NANCY JASPERS, ASS_OCIATE 949·2654

~

/li-ID t '
\1.1/o.t.rr rr

--------------WILL do roofing , co nstruc tion,

·.m· J

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

.... ., o............ " . ...... ,'.... ..

.

EXCAVATING. dozer . backhoe
ond ditcher. Charl es R. Hatf ield
Bock
Hoe - Service ,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742 ·2008 .

byHenriArnoldandBob le~

I.........I_,_I

~
()J 11-11&gt;-T

WILL CARE for the elderly in our
home. Phone 99~- 7314 .

-

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

TOJUS

Services Offered

-- - - - - - - - -- ___,-

-

•

:t III»!T ~

'

---

_-

GiveAway

I

•

992-2356
1·4-1 mo. . (Pd.)

. -_

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. service , all m akes , 992·2284 . The
Fabric
S h op , Po m'eroy
Authorized Si nger Soles and
Ser vi Ce We sharpen Scisso rs -

Lovely

for only $6,000.
LAND - Buy what you

WE LIVE REAL ESTATE,
SO CALL US AT 992·3325
FOR YOUR ANSWER ON
REAL ESTATE . . SELL
THROUGH A REAL TOR,
APRO .
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Assocl•tes

BORN LOSER

651 Beech Street
Middleport, O.

.

3:J.

8:01)-C(;apt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:00-Merv Griffin 3; Emergency One 6 ; Phil Donahue
13,1 5; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game 10.
9:30-Brady Bun&lt;:h 8; Hogan's Heroes 10.
10:01)-C(;ard Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 6; All In Tht
Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13.
10 :3o-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; Andy Griffith 6; Prlc;e Is
Right 8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :DO-High Rollers 3,15; Happy Days 6, 13.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, IS ; Family Feud 6, 13; Love
of Lite 8, 10; -Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12:oo-Newscenter 3; Jeopardy 15; News 6, 10; Young
&amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12:30--Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search lor Tomorrow 8,10;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
I :DO-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women
Only 15.
1:3()-Day•of Our Lives 3,15; As The World Turnsa, 10.
2:01).--{)ne Life to Live · 6,13: 2:30-Doctors 3,15:
Guiding Light 8, 10.
~
3:oo-Another World 3, 15; General Hosoltal6.13; Lilies
Yoga &amp; You 20; Studio See 33.
J:JO-Mash B.
4:0D-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4: Porky
Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Batman 10;
Dinah 13.
4:3o-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is. 8; 1 Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15.
5:110-1 Dream of Jeannle3: Bionic Woman 13; Beverly
Hlllblll le• B; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33;
Gomer Pyle, USMC,_ 10; Brady Bunch 15.
- 5:3()-Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Mbore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Doctor Who 33.
6:110-Ne\'IS 3.8;,1 0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Rebop 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,1 5; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:01)-C(;ross-WIIs 3; Family Feud 8; Newlywed Game
6, q; News 10; Lo_ve, American Style 15; Hocking
Valley Blue~rass 20: Bill Green MaQazlne 33
730-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers 6; Walton$ 8;
$100,000 Name That Tune 10; Nashville On The
Road 13; Dolly 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to form
lour ordinary words

-

--:8;-u-s""i_
n_
e_
s~
s'"'s"e
_r_v
_i;c
--e_s__

.

GOOO;

18 Ve•n Experience
Will Make
Service C. lis

'

HOMESITES for sale , I acre ond BRADFORD , Au ctioneer. Co m~
up. Mtddleporl , neor Rutland .
plete Ser vice. Phone 9419-2487
Cotl 991-7481 .
·
or 9o49 2000. Racine, Oh1o , Critt
Brodlord .

MIDDLEPORT -

level acre. $69,900.00.
BUSINESS AND HOME Want to try your luck at a·

1-

MOTOR
l .El£CIRIC
Sfi)P
.

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

Ohio,

AREN'T so

AT~RACTIV&amp;'.

'ftfl\l'iMt rn'\l

REYNOLD'S

'10 mile ott Rt. 1 9Y·fll!ll on
St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland. o.
.

SAilS REP. FOR
SUNDINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

START FINDif..l€1
IT SLIGHTI.Y

~ ~ ~~~ ®

1

--

PETE SIMPSON

ARE YOU IM·
PL'IIN6 SOMe
OF THeM

4

r'·

.I'

11-9·1 mo.

Sales.

FEATURES~

!lONE~;

.

current

6:3()-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends _6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7 : ~ross-Wits3 ; Newlywed Game6,13; Sha Na Na
8; News 10; Love, American Style 15; Footsteps 20;
Big Green' Magazine 33.
7:30-Dolly 3; Malch Game PM 6; The Judge 10; Price
Is Right 8; That's Hollywood IJ ; Wild Kingdom 15;
MacNe il-Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:DO-Gift of Song 3,15: Eight Is Enough 6,13; Jef-

MY BETTE~

fersons 8, 10; Great Performan ces 20; Afri cans 33 .

Thermal insulation
Seve30 pet. to 50
_, tiNting COl
Experlenceond
· 1u lly inourod
FreeEs~
_
l.ait992-2T2
-- 11 ·3- 1 ""

,'
..

Pomeroy, O.

Hammond
&amp;
Lower·
Organs, Story &amp; Clark
Pianos. Sales &amp; Service.
(New &amp; Used) . Service on

NeXT THINEr,
YOU MAY EVef&gt;l

THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 197f
5:4s-Farm Report 13; 5 : ~PTL Club 13; 5:5sSunrlse Semester 10.
6:DO-PTLCiub 15; 700Ciub6,8; 6:2s-For You .. Biack
Woman 10.
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:0D-TOday 3,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Schooll., 10
f :1s-Weather 33; 7:JG-,Famlly Affair 10; Studio See

WHAT DO

- YOU MEAN

'

Coll992-7113
For Free Estimates-

"HZ-2174 '

WHY· EA7Y- BELLE! DON'T . -··~
Mil' YOU'RE BEGINNit./15 TO
AN INTEREST IN MY

. Cellulosic !wood' fiber!

220 E. Mllin Street,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

CAPTAIN EASY
EASY'S STILL. 'SATTLit./ 6 THE
HUMILIATION OF HAVIt./6 TO ~ERVE­
AI&gt; sPICil' MAKO '~ MAIO!
V"' HOW
A80UT ~~~~~!i\ll
A C&gt;A&amp; OF
D!EPER COLOR
ON EACH SIDETO &amp;RI"'S OUT
'/CUlt CHEEK

••

Blown Insulation
JIM
KEESEE
.

:

.

'.

I

J&amp;L

.

Sweeper s toasters , irons, oil
sma ll appliances. lawn mower,
nex t to State H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985-

ing. $40,000. .
5 BEDROOMS -

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 197f
4:110-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood Sauare• 15:
Bewitched 6; Sesame St . 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah
13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Alterschool Speclal6; Gilligan's Is.
8; Brady Bunch 10; Petticoat Junction 15.
5:110-Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh·
barhood 20,33: Gomer Pyle, USMC 10: Afferschoo(
Special 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5 : 3~arol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; E lee. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Doctor Who 336:110-News 3,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20: Studio
Seen.
-

-'

~----

electric,
city
water,
natural gas, loading dock,
gasoline tanks, and park-

..,.
,.
,,...
.•.

..·
,-

_sotfiCE

8:3o-Monte Carlo Circus 8, 10.
' :01)-C(;harlle's Angels 6, 13; Prisoner 20; Nation• I
Geographic 33.
9:30-Best of Saturday Night Live 3, 15; Entertal...,. of
the Year Awards 8, 10.
IO:oo-Vegas 6, 13; State of the State Address 33; News
20.
10:_30-Turnabout 20.
11 :DO-News 3.6,8; , 10,13.15: Dick Cavett 20; Lilies
Yoga &amp; You 3311 :30-Johnny Carson 3,15: Pollee Woman 6,t3;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Compulsion"
10.
12 :30-News 8; 12:40-SWAT 6,13; I :DO-Tomorrow 3.
~
1:50-News 13.

.TELEVISION.
VIEWING

:,

- --- - - - ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

216 E. Second Stroei
STORAGE Appro• :
I 36x80 above all floods. Has

.

~

-,

For Sale

to 22 -member regional
Board of Trusteeo.
Salary:
15K - 20K
negotiable , by
qualificat io ns , benefits
include Health. Life and
Disability Insurance ,

'

.

ROofing, guttei-a.' new ·1nd
repair.
lnslde ' Ponellng &amp; Cotjling
lilt
FrH Esllm•l• - all work
guaronteed
20 Yrs. Experience
-Call : Tom Hoskins
•. 49-2il0
11 -28-c '·'------~~~:;...;~
•

caii.THE SWEEP

__Real Estate for Sale

9?'2:345?

·

Don't let a ch im ney fire put
ll

THREE BEDHOOM frame home in
.M ~d~lep~rt_ C:al!
FARM FOR sole. House. 2 barn s,
traile r. Lorge pond. 10 acr es or
82 dcr es. 7.t2-2566.

-

MAINTEN!NCE ·

Insured

-- .

3825

Harrisonville
Society News

aoo

--

-

'
.---....,..-----,· -. - - - - - - - - . ·---~-- ......
OHIO VAllEY
'-· .~ Sweeps
~~::;;'
_.ROOFING &amp; IIJME·
Guild

304-882-1406 ,

servIces, execution , of
seven
annual
county
contracts, etc. Answering

'191-16!!9The New Year was ushered
TIMBER . POMEROY Forest ProJACKW.
ir)andtheoldyearendedwitb 1121 27, (1) 7, 10, 15, 4tc
ducts . fop prtce for stand1ng
CARSEY
a Sunday evening service
sow timber Call 997-5965 or
Mgr.
with Alfred and st. Paul and
__K ~n!_ H~ ~br_ ~- ~~~~~ ___ _
Pllone '192·2181
others combined services lor
OLD FURNITURE . Ice boxes brass
bed s, iron beds . desks, etc. , FIRST AND se&lt;ond cutting hoy .
the-New Ye~~r and ending the
co mplete households. Write
$ .15 and $,85 bole . Tupp ers
old. 'liiere was a hymn sing
M .D. Miller. Rt. 4, Pomer oy or
Plains , Ohio . 6lo4 -667 -3368 .
and special singing and a
- - -- - - - - - - - - - - Christmas Day guests of · _&lt;oi l!13 ~7~ '- _ _ _____ _
COOD MIXED hoy After 5, coli
sljde.presentatlon on the Holy
and Mrs. Roy WiSeman OLD COINS, po&lt;ket watches ,
Fronk Broderick , 992 -7573
Land by Edson Roush, In· Mr.
--------------were their nephew, Mr. and
doss rings , wedding bonds ,
HOME door 32 x 6'4".
sp!r,atlonal readings and Mrs. Donald Jones and
diamonds. Gold"' si l,er . Coli MOBILE
Regency 4 channel scanner.
special -music, prayers,
__R~g! r ~~~SI_!Y_.: 7_42_: 7~3~ . __ .
985-4217
tesllmony, fellowship, and famlly, Alexandria, Va., Mr. WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
I-refreslunenta with 45 in at· and Mrs. Larry Clark and
phonograph ,eco,ds . Coli 471 DETROIT DIESEL with dutch
and trans, $750. 16ft. flat grain
family, Middleport, and Mr.
991-6370 o' Contact Mort;n Fu'dance.
bed, $350 . 40 IL !lot low
and
Mrs.
Earl
Starkey,
~~u~•- ___ ____ ___ _
. 'lbe U.M.W. 1'ffi meet on
tandem truck troller , $750. 1000
"
• WANTED TO buy old iewelry. . !':.. 2~nih_PPe~ S_2~ .__7~2-_;l~3.: _
the third Tuesday In January · Carpenter.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Stanley
Colt '192-5262 or w' ite Koy
at 0 -p.m. at the Follrod- and son, Mr. and MrS. Roger
b'::'i l. 87 s. 2nd . M'ddlepod_ 1975 CADILLAC ELDORADO, lul l
p ower and a•r. Asking $4700
Robtnson home.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair WoOde Alklre, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie - -- - - - -- - - - -- --- Phone 992-7-462.
REDUCE . SAFE o"d lost with
and Conn! of Dayton, 0. spent Wilt and family, Lancaster,
For Rent
GoBese Toblets &amp; E-Vop "woter
O!rlltmu Day with their visited Sunday at their aunt's
and
grandmother's
home,
COUNTRY
MOBILE
Home
Park
_
_Pi~s~
_!-1-:_ls_?n_D~u~ · - _ ____ _
- parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Stella
Atkins and Ruby and . Route 33, north of Pomeroy I BEAR WHITETAIL compound bow
Charles D. Woode, and Hilda Mary Diehl.
·
. ~~g_e l~t.! :~C?_! I_!9_3~ 7,H9 __ ,.
with qu 1ver and sight s. Phone
! White, returning to their
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, 3 AND ~ RM. furnished and un- _9"?-.?1f!l~ __
' home the following day.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wileman
furni shed
opts .
Phonr
; Charles and Helen Woode
992-543•d
J
and
W
Clark
and
I
eny
-- -------. - aUencled the Chrl.stmaa party visitedoyMrs. D1a WlBeman
In TWO BEDROOM. k;tchen lurnishiud hymn Bing at the home of Sp-'~nfield Wednesday. •
ed, opt Colt - befo'e B om
TIRE SALE
· Chester
and
Mamie
'""'
'192-2288,
dinner
guests
of
I --- - - - - ---- - - - - -- -Swtday
: - Frederick on last Friday Mr.andMrs.BobAlklrewere ' UPSTAIRS APT . 5 'ooms and both
SNOW TIRES
. evenJ.ng.
Mr. an&lt;J Mrs. Bob Giblon and --~" _Po.m_er."'- '!_'~~ 2~ 0~ J:"~o~e ~- ·
-oN SALE AT
:----Gam,r Griffin spent
L'A.RGE HOME in Pomernv Write
POMEROY LANDMARK
Box 729-W. c-o th• Doily, Sen· QUiltmas wlth .his daughter Robin • Colurnbus ' and Rlly :
SERVICE STATION
_ ~ i ~e~ ~o~.!"ol :..O~i~ 4~7~9.:.. __
. - and family, Mr. and Mrs. Alkire, Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple 12 M 50 trailer in Sy rocuse : Fur·
·, C)Jarles O'Brien and.Kevin In
In Zanesville with
visited
nished . Covered patio . Sl.4D per
• j Q1111Ji1bui, 0.
mon th. Wat er paid Deposit re·
their
children
over
the
_; _, -~evleve Guthrie spent
_
_
q~i r_!d.;.. 9_?2_:2~~ . _ .: _____ '
·_ · : ,'&lt;;hrl.itmaa With her family, weekend.
FUR~ISHED
APT . .4 room s and
Weekend guests of Mr. and
~- ·
Mrs. Delbert YOit Mrs
bath , 992-5908,
. Jess Carroll were
- - - - -- - '
'ani!·farrilly:
-. , 'Nina - Robinson ·spent Qleryl and Kenny J.,eady,
-·
; Chrl.stmO .with Mr. and Mrs. GaWpolls.
-Gerald S'!'artz and family at
: Marietta, Ohio.
OWNER MUST SELL- Th e owner of this
charming '2 story stone home in Middleport '
: Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
_ .
, Swartz spent Chrl8lmaa with
must sell now so she is offering this fine
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swartz; and Richard Swartz @lid 8004«-- ·- -,-homeJor:. a I.OWI.Iow , pr,t~.!UIJ 520,000' There
. and famlly In WU!lamstown, , of Salem, 0., were recent
are 2 bedrooms· (1 is extra large), spacious
W. Va.
• -villtors of . Grace Swartz,
living room w·fi~eplace, formal dining, eat·
We were very sorry tO hear here.
in kitchen, bath w-shower, garage &amp; a king·
' of the death of Marie Hopkins
The f8Dli1Y of Clara FoUrod
sized yard. Good locatioll'on Mill St. Call the
In O.ytoo, 0 ., a member of and Nina Robinson spent
Wi$eman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
IAlfred d!urdl.
Cbriltmaa Eve with them
446·3643.
-Cull Bentz of Ravenna, 0 .. here.

.

-

,

L - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - ·-__.. .•
•.
• rio!,

PART FOR 1973 Vega. Al so. tires.
9.:19-2379

1974 TWO BEDROOM mobile
ho me, furnished, gas hea t. eM'
tro clean w1lh underpm111ng
porch. winterized ready to
· m ove m. On ren!ol lot 1 mi
fro!:fl New Hoven , Rt 33 55000 -

Executive Director.

Bus,ihess,

-

NfW HOYAl portable typewriter
S75 Strong's BMhousti vt! Bible
( onco rdance with Greek and
Hebrew diction ary. pir te SIO.
99 7-7331

HO USE IN
Min ersv ill e.
4
bedroom . liv1ng room . kitchen.
, both and utility r oom . N1ce full
size basement 992-5823

B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES '
PLEASANT , W VA .

-

197 4 PINTO. $875 Baby cr ib , sw:
Stroller $7 .SO 12 go. Win
( hPs ter 370 gun. 5.40. 949-2779

DICK TRACY

...'.

Business Se"'ices

ROUND MHAL t ~rC'p lo ce w ith
Mng•r hC'ot b lowa r onct gr nt('
SISO 6b7 -327B

3 "1 ac-res in Pomerov . -Secl~d~d
wooded· area on top of hill.
O~o~e rl ook s riv er Water . electriCcvctloble. 992 -3886

I '-', ACRE . 12 &gt;e 60 m'obil e home

POSITION AVAILABLE
Private,
non- profit
(publicly controlled)'
seven-county •dv•nced life
support service seeks

-For
- - Sale
·- - - - -

-

----~
A~u~
toSal~e~
s _____

Notices

- -·- - - - - -

..-'.'·•
-r-~------~~----~~~--~~ ~.,_

~4 ·

19b9 CHEVROLET NOVA 2·doar , 6
cyf , auto .. P.S. Studded tires.
.. Good shope . 304 773 5707 .

• WNAT to thailk evervone who
remembered me with cords,
frull and g1fts for Chri stmas
Your thoughtfulness was rea lly
appreciated
fmmoHood .

and

motives are likely to be ques·
In Memory
tloned today, so make ce rtain
your behavior and purposes IN LOV ING memory of Or'llille.E.
Watson . who passed a w ay Jan.
are above reproach . Keep your
10 . 197 1
nose clean.

another

- -r - -SI ~ TERS

Sunday
4P.M.
L...J--..:Frl.;.;:da;:.:Y..;8..:11e..:moon;;;:
;;;_
· ---1..1 liNCOM,E TA X Service, Federal

something else with your time.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll191 Your

run into one whose views differ
from vours, don ' t Qet into a
confrontation .

----~ - -

•••••·-----

Tlleolay

socializi ng and this could be
one of lhem . If things slart

- - - - -.
- -c.;,;:d of Tha-n~s --- -. -- - Yard-Sale
- ·--- - - n· YOU hovo a
to olfPr:

---------··---

NOTICE

Uncovering hidden m istakes
. a'n d · trying to correct them

11-The DaUy Sentlnel, Middle~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. IO, 1979

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds.

WANT AD
CHARGES

j

U:J:"

He opened
of
South
the
hand. AppUed the code word
ARCH. Analysed the lead II
lrom a five-card l1llt. Reviewed the blddlnll to cllldde

hurta.

that Wat held

both mi111n1

aces. Counted to 10 wlnnen
If he took Ume to ....,.
thoulhtfully and melqleln
control. If not, be could Onbr
count lwo hearta, two clubl
and four dlamonda for a
tolal of just eight wiDnlnl

trlcu.
Where could he . . the
ninth? The logtcai way
would be to go iisbl after
dlamonda. West wOUld baft
to do a lot of d1Kardlnl and
might well let a beut 10 Ill
order to keep three clubl
and the ace ofllpllcle..
South !lave up tbal Idea:
He knew West w e n =
know that West would
on to three hearta come
or bl&amp;h water.
South knew IGIDethllll
elle about Well. Welt wu
greedy. So Soutb the
lieart -In hill own band and
led the Jack ofllpllcle.. Will&amp;
should have riMn wltb the

ace. A little

point

cou:::!

show that 1:. .
couldn't bold • ~ bul
West ducked. SOuth · t.d
stolen llp8da Irick. Now
be weal after dlamonda ud
bad his nine trlclul.
would

INEWIIPAPIIlR ICIITI:IIPRIIII - . )
(For • copy of JACOBY MOD-

nti
f!·

ERN, stmd 11 ID: "Win al
B~." a.re of fhl•
per, P.0. Box &lt;Ill, Radio
StilliOn, New Yorlr, Y. 1t/MI.

AN' 'lOU SAil I NEVER LIFT
MY HAND AROUND HERE

...

�12 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;Jrt-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Jan . 10, 1979

Rising costs forced December prices upward

Leaders hope to finiSh organizational work
Bv TOM GILLEM

1\ s~uriatt&gt;d Press

Wr il l'r
COLUMB US, Ohio (API -

.'
'•,,·

.

..

l.eaders hoped to finis h
organizational matters and
eommittee assignments in
the House today, clea ring the
w~y for the consideration of
bills.
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe J r ., D-New Boston,'said
completion of th ose matters
a nd ,the adoption of
procedural rules will enable
committee hearings on bills
to start next week .
The
\\ 3th
Ge neral
Assembly conv ened Jan. 2,
but has devoted its time so far
to organization - not unusual

pushed into htgher brackets

t'OIIlllll t tee mter vtewed each

as a res ult of inflation .
Hep . .J ohn E. Johnson, D-

c:a ndi da te
be fore
the
Demot ratic l'll ucus selected

saitJ· Curr ctn and Dayton

Orrville. also proposes in his.
bill . supported by eight other
Dcmncrl.lts
and
five
Hepublicans, to 'increase the
per sonctl
income
tax
exe mp tion from $650 to
$1.000.
Se nators weleomed a ne w
member to their ranks Tuesday. fi lling a vacancy created
by the elec tion of a senator to
Congress last yea r,.
Senate Democrats chose
Day~m ci ty commissioner
Charles J . Curra n to fill the
v:rcant 6th District seat.
Curran , 39, is an assista nt

Curran.
. Hcp. Paul R. Leonard was

attorney John V. Spalla were
acceptable alternatives.

the ;tvetwhelming favorite of
Dayton DemntTats, but they

· l.ennard was not optimistic prnl&gt;ably doomed because he
of hi ~ chances when he declined to pledge a "loyalty
entered
the scre ening . oath " to party leaders. He
cnmmillt-e interview.
· also lost favor with the Senate

Earlier . he said his bid was

and

Hotise 'Democratic

posted on a driving while .
RICHARD VAUGHAN
JAMES LOHSE
intoxicated charge was
Funeral services for James
Rkhard Willlam Vaugh!ln,
Raymond H. McGrath, 38, Lohse, 37, Cincinnati, for- II, 23, Flourlsant .. Mo. , died
Pomeroy. ··
merly of Pomeroy, will be Jan. 7 at Jewish Hospital, St.
held at II a.m..Friday at the Louis, Mo. Mr. Vaughan was
Seven defendants forfeited Tufts Funeral Home in born April I, 1955, . and
boni:ls and five persons were Loveland. Visitation will be graduated from Meigs High
fined in the court of Pomeroy from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday.
School in 1973. He was also a
Mayor Clarence Andrews Burial will be in Riverview graduate of Case Institute,
Tuesday night.
in the first ·year of a
professo r of government at
Cemetery, Middleport, with · Cleveland. He was employed
Forfeiting appea·r ance
legislative bienniwn.
Sinclair College in Dayton
local arrangements to be at Granite City Steel . Co ..
bonds were Timothy Thomp- announced .later.
So fa r , 61 bills have been in- and has bee n a commissioner
Granite City, Ill. He was a
son,
Racine, $30, posted on a
troduced in the House. None since t970.
Surviving and not lilrted member of the Middleport
charge of running a red light; earlier is a grandmother,
have been formally offered in
Party members in both
Presbyterian Church.
Opal
Cununins, Racine, $26, Mrs. Herman (Eleanor)
the Senate, but members are .. chambers ar e given the
He is survived by his
speeding; Kelly Winebren- Lohse, Middleport;
authority to fill · vacancies in
having them prepared.
parents, Richard W. and
ner, $32, speeding; Jack
Among 22 bills put into the their ranks by state law.
In lieu of flower. &lt;!_onatlnn•. Ruby Yeauger · Vaughan,
Wolfe, Racine, $33, speeding; may be gi~en to the Meigs
House hopper. Tuesday was
Democ rats in the Senate
Middleport, one brother,
Richard -Butcher, Mid- High School band boo&gt;rters.
one tha t would index state had asked party officials in
Vaughan,
Donald
E.
dleport, $30' speeding; An accomplished musician,
incom e ta x brackets to Day ton to submi t three
Pomeroy, two sisters,
Melanie Vujaklija, Hemlock Mr. Lohse, along with his
prevent Ohioans from being choices.
A
screening
Elizabeth A. Vaughan,
Grove, $331, speeding; Ethel sister, Mrs. Jennifer Lohse Hurricane, W. Va. , and
.-..-~.-..._..._._._.._
Roush, Portland, $200 each on Sheets, composed the Meigs Zandra D. Vaughan, Midtwo counts of petty theft.
High School Abna Mater dleport; grandparents, Mr.
Fined were Edward several years ago.
and Mrs. Richard E.
.Laudermilt, Pomeroy, $100
Lohse is a former radio Vaughan, Pomeroy; one
and costs, leaving the scene personality with WMPO'. He great - grandfather, Walter
of an accident, and $250 and form'erly served as program Vaughan, Chillicothe, several
costs, reckless operation; director at a Columbus radio
· L(nda Sturgeon, Chesapeake, station and has been em- aunts and uncles and one
.
nephew, Donald E. Vaughan,
$250 and costs, reckless ployed with Taft BroadPomeroy.
•
·THURSDAY
operation, and $100 and costs, casting (WKRC) in CinFuneral services 11ill be
ELEANOR CIRCLE, leaving the scene of an ac- · cinnati.
held Saturday at I p.m. at
Heath United Methodist cideitt; Greg Roush, New
Ewing Chapel 'with the Rev.
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday Haven, $100 an~ costs,
Mark McClung officiating.
at the church. Billy Jo possession of a controlled
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Krawsczyn , Joyce Blake. and substance , and $200 and
Cemetery. Friends may call
Jean Fisher, ho; tesses.
· costs, petty theft; Linda
at the funeral home after I
MEIGS County Humane Giles, Pomeroy, petty theft,
'p.m . Friday. In lieu of
Society Thursday 7:30p.m. at $200 and costs, and Gloria
flowers contributions may be
Thrift Shop corner of Second Reynolds, Pomeroy, $50 and
made to the Leukemia
and Walnut Streets. Mid- costs on an unsafe vehicle
Reseatch Fund, 1480 West
dlepoit .
charge, and $50 and costs on a
If you come to a participating H&amp;R Block office
Lane Ave. , Columbus.
(Continued
from
page
I)
FRIDAy
charge·of failing to register a
before February 1st 1979, we'll do your 1040A
RETURN
Jonathan
Meigs
motor
vehicle.
difficulty of getting raw
Short Fo r~ for only $7.50, and then we'll do
materials Into the county,
Chapter,
Daughters
of
the
any state or local return for even less. Remememploye living conditions
American Revolution I :30
ber, you must come in before February 1st.
RETIJRNS HOME
such as the shortage of
p.m. l"riday at Riverboat
MOTHER HOME
Beverly Wilcox has return- housing, the .price and the
Room, Meigs Branch, Athens
MIAMI ( AP) - After
County Savings and Loan, W. ed to Marshall University location, and the condition
spending a night in jail for
H&amp;RBLOC~
Main St., Pomeroy. Slide after spending the holidays of labor In relation to work
refusing to . give up their
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
presentation on ·tamassee here with her parents, Mr. performed lor wages paid.
baby, Nadia and Marvin
Jennings reported some ~ Johnson are back home, their
DAR School by Miss Lucille and Mrs. R&lt;tymond Wilcox.
Smith ; hostesses Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox and industries are suitable for
17-month-old son in state
618 E. MAIN ST .
2nd &amp; BROWN ST _
P atrick Lochary, Mrs. Aryan took her to Huntington . Meigs CoUnty locations and custody.
POMEROY , O.
MASON. W. Va.
· some 400 companies would
George Skinner,
Mrs. Monday night.
Open 9 A.M. to
The couple were jailed for
OPEN TUES
6 P.M. Weekdays,
represent these 40 different ignoring a judge's order to
Clarence Struble and Mrs
THURS.&amp; SAT.
9-1 Saturday
industries.
- Mark Grueser, .fr
surrender the hoy, Jerome
9 A.M . . 5 P .M.
PHONE 992-3791
MEETING
OF
The
speaker
recommended
Alexis. They , relented late
PHON IS-73-9128
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
Rock Springs Grange
Of White Shrine of Jerusalem scheduled to meet Thursday the formation of a technical Tuesday and were released
team which would have the
after .telling a friend to turn
Friday 8 p.m. at Pomeroy
night will not meet due to "know how" in providing the boy over to authorities.
Masonic Temple.
weather conditions.
information needed by inA jUdge had ordered the
terested companies. He
boy made a ward of the state
recommended a direct mail after the Johnsons' divorce
campaign with the 400 case included testimony of
companies and a newspaper
violence.
advertising campaign.
During a question and .
answer session, Jennings
pointed out In answer to Fred
Crow regarding some of the
14 recommended sites being MINOR SMOKE DAMAGE
in flood areas, that 71 percent
The Pomeroy fire departof the Hobson site was out of ment answered a call to the
flood . Crow stated the home of Mr. and Mrs.
PRICES GOOD
Pomeroy Junior High School Leonard McKnight, Spring
is also in a flood area. J en- Ave., Tuesday night. The call
JAN. 11th
nings said that data on each was a chimney fire where
site will contain flood in· there was only a small
THRU
formation.
amount of smoke damage.
It was brought out during
, JAN. 14th
the discusslon·(bat no sites
on what is known as the
flood
road, between
LB .• , 49
Pomeroy and Middleport,
END MARRIAGE
are Included In the study.
In Meigs County Common
Questions as to why sites Pleas Court the marriage of
were not included in'Lebanon Brenda Shepherd and Edand Letart Townships were ward
Shepherd
was
answered by Jennings. He dissolved.
reported that property
owners In those two townships had been contacted but
had not wished to have theiJ
land listed for industrial
purposes. It was also noted
that four of the 14 sites listed
are locations which would he
ROUND STEAK ................ lB•.
close to a new high way which
might
develop in Lebanon
CUBED STEAK ................ LB.
Township.
Regarding the discussion of
SIRLOIN STEAK ...c. .. . .. ........ ., LB.
the flood areas as detennined
Whg.le
~
by the federal government, it
was pointed out that agencies
·--~~:.
involved In expending federal
funds should be asked to
change their Policies since
HOT DOG OR
&amp; P k
some of the land listed In the
HAMBURGER BUNS·............. : ••
flood areas has not been
~-__...
flooded since 1937.
C. E. Blakeslee, executive
director of . the Meigs
Regional Development
Council, pointed out that the
county should not count on
FINE ASSORTMENT
federal dollars but should try
or7~P
to get 'industrial dollars in·
8 - 16 oz.
OF STORE SLICED
vested in the county. It was
Bot11es
also pointed out that inLUNCH MEATS
·dustries can " Rood proof"
buildings and would not be
dependent upon federal
moneys.
Jennings assured Edison
Baker that a profile of Meigs
'County wiD be .placed In
necessary locations In
Columbus. In answer to Rich
Jones' questions on what
should be done now, Jennings
urged ·an orga0lzation take
o'·cr the progrHm on industry.
and •.take contacts by letter,
newspaper advet'\lslng and
follo)l'·up infonnation.
I
Four defendants were fined
and a fifth forfeited a bond in
the court of Middleport
Hoffman
Mayor · Fred
Tuesday ,night .
Fined were Donald Lovett,
55; Middleport, disorderly
manner charge; Sammy
Little, 42 , Middleport,
di sor derly manner, and
Buddy McKinney, 61, Middleport , disorderly manner,
all three $100 -and costs each,
with
McKinney being
assessed another $100 and
costs on a disturbing the
peace charge ; Ben Harris, 27,
Racine, $100 and costs,
driving
while
under
suspension.
Forfeiting a $350 bond

1
I
I

I'

1·
•aJ
I.
Cl
So
Calen. dar

l

·Study

ROUND
STEAK

BONELESS
ROAST

salary of $22,500 since he did
not ·vote on the bill, said he
told the Senate panel he
would have "voted for it and
supported it."
curran also apparently
passed the loyalty test.
"I told them I have teamed
from my experience as a city
commissioner the .
imwrtance ol teamwork, and
I could work with them," he
said.

leadership when he was
vacationing in Florida the
day the legislative pay raise
bill was voted on in the House
·
last month.
Curren told reporters after
his appearance before the
screening committee thathe
was asked his feelings on the
pay raise bill.
The new s~naror , who will
receive the new increased

-

Hospital ~ews
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Neva
McElroy, Pomeroy; Freda
Russell, Po!lleroy; Earl
.Glass , Mid~leport ; Lydia
Beach , Middleport;
Catherine Mees, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Oscar Klein,
Cecil Haning, Virginia Dean,
Herman Warner,~ .
·

Monthly
report
•

'

MEETING POSTPONED
A meeting of the Afternoon
Circle scheduled for Thursday afternoon at Heath
United Methodist Church In
Middleport has been post·
poned due to the weather.

JANUARY SALE!!!

ARMSTRONG
FLOOR COVERINGS
Designed and created by people for
people - Floors that bring your
indoor world more variety, vitality
and originality than ever before.
Floors for today:s living.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FASHION CLEARANCE

$}89

CHICKEN ·······.····..........

Young Juniors
g.t it tot•tMr

49.

3g~

- SWEATERS SLACKS

'1"

VESTS

~BLOUSES·

-

- SKIRTS
. .·

PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR .·

ELBERFELDS IN POM'EROY

I

•

at

-

President Carter's proposal to offer "inflation insurance" to
workers who limit pay increases to less than 7percent.
·'The reaction has been rathe r bland ... not enthusiastic,"
Byrd said.
.
.
Workers who comply with the 7 percent limit on wage increases would be eligible for a tax credit of up to I per cen t of
their first $20,000 in wages for each percentage point the cost of
living rises above 7 per cent.
·
The Council on Wage and Price Stability, which Kahn heads,
said Wednesday private wage-insurance plans similar to
Carter's federal proposal will not he allowed under the administration's vqluntary ,guidelines.
II.. Cost-&lt;&gt;f-living increases granted employees by companies
were to be included under the 7 percent pay -hike limit, but the
council had approved a Minnesota company 's wage-insuralfM
plan which would have circ-umvented that requirement, the
council said. That approval will stand , but the council's new
rules forbid other companies fr om following suit.
Also Wednesday , the Bank of America, the world 's largest
commercial bank, issued a report predicting a 7.5 percent to 8
percent inflation rate this year.

entine

Fill t't'tl l't' ttls
\ 'ol. :!!1 . ."u . IX,'&lt;

Annexation committee
headed by Wingett

Wednesday morning ..The Mason volunteer fire dept. was
called to the scene at 7 a.m. The fire caused $8,000
damage .

HOME DESTROYED - A mobile home beloning to
Dale Smith. Front St.. Mason, was destroyed by fire early

Some residents may be forced to
leave ho11!-es if outage continues
many homes, have wood or
coal burning stoves for extra
heat.
SOME POWER RESTORED
Power has mostly been ·
restored to customers of the
Belmont Rural Electric
Cooperative, said H. B.
Lodge , Belmont Electric
office manager. "We still
have a few people out. The
workers were out all night
and the main line is on, " he
said.
Lodge said, at most, 500
Belmont customers scattered
through Belt;11ont , Monroe
·and Harrison counties were
without power. He said all the
outages were south of U, S.
40.
Tuesday evening, two days
after the ice storm struck,
about 200 customers of the
Washington Rural Electric
Cooperative were still
without power, but company
spokesman Richard Flood
said most power had been

The Eastern Local Schaul
District remained closed
Thursday, marking the
fourth consecutive day that
diStrict bas been out.
Secondary roaas In the
. district were reported
heavily Iced and dangerous.
The district bad planned to
reopen WednesdaY, after
being closed Monday and
Tuesday but changed its
'"' ' plans dne to road conditions:
,. ' . students of the Meigs Local
School District reported this
morning after being out

::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.

'~

Monday, Tuesday and closed Monday and Tuesday.
Wednesday due . to the Two buses in that district
weather and road conditions. were unable to make their
All buses of the district ran routes, but all other buses
although there were some were able to make their pick
portions of some of the routes ups.
whiCh could ilot be serviced.
Meigs Local Supt. Charles
Dowler · reported th'e attendance was at about .65
· percent in classes today out
of an enrolhnent of .2797.
&lt;.1asses lit the Soutliern
Local District reopened
Wednesday after having been
~

'

restored by early Wednesday.
Customers in the hardest
hit areas still without wwer
are in Athens , Gallia,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton
counties.

hiterim
director
designated
'
.

The Meigs County Commissioners Wednesday
designated Norma Jewell as
the "in-charge person" at the
Meigs County Welfare
Department following the
resignation of Barbara
Shuler, Welfare Director, and
Mrs. Adele Cullums, ADC
Supervisor at the Meigs
County Welfare Department
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::.
The resolution passed read
as
follows: "That this board
TRAILER DESTROYED
of Meigs County ComA house troller belonging
missioners does hereby
. to Kermit Fisher, Rt. 2,
empower Norma Jewell with
Raelne, burned to the
ground this morning at 2:45 · the authority to implement
and carry out all duties and
a.m.
responsibilities required for
Mrs. Fisher awoke and
implementation of public
smelled smoke and alerted
welfare and children's ser·
the family. They all
vices programs in Meigs
escaped
wllb
some
County effective Jan. 10, 1979
clothing. Two Racine fire
and to remain in effect until
units and two . fire unlls
further notice by said Board
from Syracuse along with
of Meigs County Comemergency units from botb
missioners. ''
villages responded to the . . The motion was made by
call. The cause of the fire Is
Henry Wells and seconded by
unknown and Is cu~rently
Jim Roush.
under lnvestigatl~n. The
trailer
. was Insured..

Eastern students still 9ut

12 PRICE

I

e

Pnmcroy-Miclclleport. ohio
Thursday. January 11. 1!17!1

With power outages in Phil Skidmore of Buckeye
·Galli a and surrounding Rural electricr
counties continuing since . Ice and poor road conSunday, some Buckeye Rural ditions have hampered repair
Electric Cooperative crews attempting to flx lines
members have gone for five in the remote hill country.
days without electrical
"Things are now so bad
that we just don't know when
service.
Buckeye Rural Office we'll. get the power back,"
Manager Don Robinson has Skidmore said Wednesday.
been quoted as calling the He said ice-laden trees have
situated a "royal me~s".
cut some lines in as many as
Repair efforts have ap- 20 places.
parently been hampered by BUCKEYE HARDEST HIT
Buckeye, which services
the use of crews unfamiliar
with the cooperative's lines. customers in nine counties,
Buckeye Rural contracted was hardest hit. Repair
service with the Floyd Pike problems have been . com- .
Construction Co., North . pounded by icy roads and a
Carolina, to maintain the 'strike by company linemen.
lines during the current slx In some areas where
week strike by Local 2359 of mechanical equipment can't
the
International be driven, linemen have dug
' Brotherhood Of Electrical in frozen earth by hand to
Workers (I.B.E.W.).
replace broken power poles.
The union has been on
Crews from North Carolina
strike against the cooperative are helping repair Buckeye
lines while repairmen from
since Dec. I.
other parts of Ohio are
OFFERS HELP
Reacting to the situation, helping rural electric comGallipolis State Institute panies in Washington,
Superintendent J9hn Beattie Belmont and Adams counties
has armounced that space will make repairs, said George
be made available for up to Robey of the Ohio Rural
200 people if the outages force Electric Cooperative.
residents from their homes.
'Robey said lines continue to
Assoclated Press reported collapse in one area as
today there's no end in sight linemen repair them in
for southeastern Ohioans who another area. Power comhave been withoui electrlcty pany spokesmen say - new
since power was knocked out outages could occur as iceby an Ice storm Sunday
covered trees and llinbs
night.
continue to fall . Outages
Repair crews have been could also occur when the ice
working nonstop to retum finally melts, causing lines to
power to 4,000 homes and spring and touch together.
Skidmore said emergency
businesses, but . officials
refuse to say when the work shelters have been organized
will be completed. In some to house persons fleeing from
areas ice is causing lines to unheated homes. Residents
drop out of service as fast as also are staying with friends
\heY are being repaired, said who have electricity and

WE'RE HAVING A

·

PriceS were higher for processed poultry, fruit and vege· _ Alfred E. Kahn , who heads the anti-inflation program, tol~
tables, dairy products and csndy . Prices of eggs dropped 4 the National Urban Coalition Wedne:;day that " the prescribed
percent.
,
medicine for inflation is restraint" by government and the
The price of gasoline, sold at the refinery, rose 4 percent in public.
As part of the anti-inflation effort,. he said , more money
December, and kerosene rose in price by 2.8percent.
The report measured finished goods, or the price of products cannot be spent to figh( unemployment, to rebuild the cities or
just before they are sold to consumers. The Producer Price In- to pay for universal medical care.
His audience was not pleased.
dex for Finished Goods stood at 202.4, meaning ,that wholesale
products that cost $100 in the base period of 1967 cost $202.40 · "What kind of restraint would you suggest for an elderly
".
woman living alone who. cannot alford medical care and
last month .
'tbe rewrt was released as urban officials and the Senate enough food w eat?" asked Donald McCullum, an Oakland,
leader of President Carter's party were giving tf\e adminis- Calif., judge.
tration llttle encouragement on Its anti-inflation program.
Kahn responded, ' 'I 'would, if I could, impO§e a minimum
At -earller stages of production, there were some signs of levelbelowwhichasacrificewouldnotbeimposed."
Joseph Rho\les, a state representative from Pennsylvania,
improvement. :J'he cost of intermediate goods rose 0.6 percent
and the cost of crude goods, the earliest stage of production, told Kahn be could "kiss goodbye" wthe anti-inflation
slowed markedly to 0.4 percent because of a decline in crude program if the military budget is increased while other coonfood prices. However, food at the intermediate level was still a tries are making what he called inadequate contributions to
high 1.2 percent.
· NATO.
••
The administration is trying to cut its budget and promote its
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, Dwage and price standards as a wiw to fi ght infl•tion
W.Va ., said he hasn't detected much support on Capiro) Hill for

g~ven

Fifty-two arrests were
made by the Middleport
Pollee Department during
Holzer Medleal Center
Illi:ember, according to the
Discharges, Jan. 9
.
report of Police Chief J. J ,
James Adkins, George Cremeans.
Bates, Sr, Gerald ·Belcher,
Of all the offenses, disor·
Minnie Doss, Lewis Elkins, derly conduct led the way
Garrett Fellure, Stanley with 25 persons charges .
Glassburn, Mrs. Charles Har- Seven persons were arrested
rison and daughter, George on speeding charges; four on
Hemsley, Elmer Hern, charges of driving while
Selena Hoffman, Melinda intoxicated and four others on
Howell, Edna Jones, Sheila charges of disturbing the
Lanham, Tara Martin, MAr· . peace while three were
tin Mcangus, Jr, Katherine charged with falling to
Moore, Shawn Moss, Wayne control their vehicle.
Mullins, Edward Perry, . There were two persons
Harold Sayre, Hubert Sheets, · charged with assured clear'
Florence Snowden, Swisher distance and two cases were •
Starcher, Lewis Taylor, dismissed. One person WJls
Goldie Terry, Mrs. Wllliam arrested on each of the
Trace and daughter, Esther following charges: reckless
Wamsley.
operation; spinning tires; eid
Births, Jan. 9
fines and . costs and
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil possession of a controlled
Skaggs, daughter, Jackson . . substance.
The department
in·
vestigated 12 accidents and
the wlice cruiser was driven
BURLEY R~SULTS
4,322 miles during the nlonth.
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP)
Parking meter collections
Prices and volwne dipped totaled $344.25 since the
slightly Tuesday at the Ohio meters were freed bffore
burley tobacco market.
Christmas. A gl(t, however, is
Growers sold • 477,452 . to be presented to the village
pounds for $618,143.34, for a by Middleport merchants In
hundred-pound average of appreciation for the freeing ·
$129.47.
of the meters.

Bill Dineen, later an urn·
pire won three games for the
Boston Red Sox against the ·
Pittsburgh Pirates in the 1903
World Series, the first ever
played.

By MICHAEL OOAN ·
AliS41clated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (API - Rising costs of gasoline, food and
machinery pushed wholesale prices up 0.8 percent in December as·inflation kept up its momentum, the Labor Department
said roday .
For all of 1978, wholesale prices rose 9.1 percent, the biggest
such increase since an 18.3 percent jump in 1974, the department said. In 1977, prices went up 6.6 percent.
·
The wholesale price figures are important because they are
an early sign of what consumers can expect in the way of price
changes in the next few months.
· The 0.8 percent Increase for December was the same as in
Nove!llber and about average for the JlllSt four months. If avera~ed out over an entire year it would amount to 10 percent slightly above the !nllallon rate of about 9. to .9.5 percent for
_1978..
.
Wholesale food prices, which had eased in November, resumed their climb last month, -rising 0.9 percent.
Beef and veal prices turned up in December afte. declining
In November, but pork prices slipped.

A .spokesman at Eastern
High School indicated today ;
that it would be doubtful if
classes can be resumed there
tomorrow . Monday is a
holiday for all of the schools
of the eotinty in observance of
Martin Luther King Day.
•

added to the population of annexation plan will be held
Racine. The area which was at 7: 30 p.m. Monday at the
· under study for annexation to town liall in Racine. When the .
Racine several years ago, but . plan ts completed tt wtll . he
which was not annexed, was prese nted to . th e Metgs
about eight times larger than County Commtsswners for
the area now being studied , approvaL
.
.
Wingett commented.
In other Ractne Vtllage
A planned sewage disposal matters, A lb~rt Htll was ,replant for Racine would be elected prestdcnt of vtllage
located in the Dunham Run co un ctl at
a
r ec ent
area according to present orga nizational meeting. The
plans, Wingett stated. The '1979 budget of $63,597 was
plan is to provide not only approved.
sewerage disposal, but water
i\ppomted to the finance
service for homes in tlte comnuttee
were
Ea rl
outskirts of the village he Cleland , B e~ Petr el a nd
&gt;tated .
'
Maxine Wiogett. Hill , Harry
The final meeting of the Willford and Cl·a rence
committee to wrap up the Bra dford wtll ha nd le t he
street cornmLttee.
Council disc usse d the
possibility of building a new
building for the emergency
squad behind the present .
barbec ue pit. Squad members are to meet with coUncil
in February regarding the
project.
It was reported that the
Elm tree plaqu e wa s
Meigs County Sheriff car. The youth waved at tinuing on his northern drive . damaged in a hit-skip acQualls ran back into the cident. Council is to inquire to
James J. Proffitt reports the Qualls and· drove off in the
store
and completed his call see if the insurance company
on
SR
7.
car
heading
north
arrest of a 17-year-old Rt. I,
Qualls ran into the market to the Meigs County Sheriff's would replace the plaque.
Little Hocking youth on a
The
She riff 's Cost was estimated at $387.
deliquency charge (unauth- to call authorities. While office .
Also disc ussed were
orized ·use of a motor making the telephone call he Department broadcasted a
vehicle) following his ap- looked out the window and radio alert. Shortly af- se wage probl ems a t the
prehension by the Ohio State saw his vehicle stopped in the terwards an OSP unit from c-om er of Elm and Third
Patrol on U. S. Rt. 50 west of highway outside the sto~~ the Marietta Post spotted the Str eets and Main St reet .
Coolville. Charges resulted with the driver leaning across vehicle and began followin g it Chri stmas t rees will be
picked up by the village free
from an incident that began the seat talking to a person . south on Rt . 50.
When
the
OSP
unit
turned
of
charge l'riday.
on
the
sidewalk.
standing
at 5:40 p. m, Wednesday
Qualls ran outside again on its red lights to stop the
Tom Wolfe, street comevening in Tuppers Plains.
· According to the report, " yelling" at the youth. The car, the juvenile hit the gas mi ss ion er, and Ma rshall
Robert W. Qualls, 101 New youth then drove south on 7 in pedal causing the vehicle to Lyon s were granted $50 per .
Street, Pomeroy, had stopped the vicinity of the Tuppers go out of c"ntrol on the icy month raises.
Co uncil di sc ussed the
at Lodwick's Market to Plains Branch Bank. The roadway . The vehicle ran off
purchase some Items. He left youth turned the car around the roadway , the car's front problem of a trailer parked
his vehicle with its engine in the roadway and headed end going through ice into on cemeter y property. It
decided to move t he trailer
running, parked on SR 7 north again . Qualls and water.
The youth is confined to the and collect past due rent .
another unnamed person ,
across from the market.
lt was agreed to block off
When he came out, he saw a seeing him coming north juvenile section of the Meigs
young male subject with attempted to block the road, County Jail . According to Vine Street hill for sleigh
blond hair sitling under the but the youth swerved the information received he is on riding from 6 p. m. to 6 a. m.
wheel of his car. Quails yelled vehicle, then drove around parole from a state juvenile A meeting on th e proposed
a nn exat ion will be held
at the youth to get out of his the roadblock while con- detention facility .
Monday, Jan . 15 at 7 p.m.
•
A committep headed by E.
A. Wingett is working
towards the annexation of
some 200 to 300 acres of additional land to Racine
Village.
Racine Village Council
appointed Wingett to lead the
annexation study in compliance with regulations
providing additional services
'in sewerage for a federal
grant. Syracuse and Racine
villages have combined efforts for a sewage disposal
system.
Wingett said the area under
consideration for annexation
starts near the Am eri cr~n

Legion Hall and runs east of
Route 338, going up Route 338
following Dunham's Run to
the rear of lots on ' John' s
Road including the Black and
Hart properties and crossing
over Pine Hill to the Wagner
land. The annexation in cludes land on which the high
school building is located.
The annexation area crosses
Route 124 and takes in the
Jake Lee property, running to
the present boundary of
Racine Village.
Wingett said the area involved ' is some 200 to 300
acres and includes an additionall50 to 200 people to be

Youth charged after
wild driving episode

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

Navigation still

blocked at dam

River traffic ls starting to
back up at the Gaillpolis
Locks and Dam in Eureka as
workers continue to retrieve
a sunken barge.
Traffic on the Ohio River
was halted at the dam 6:30
a.m. Wednesday. Before the
barge could be moved, of·
ficials had to unload its
l'ontents of limestone, a dam
spokesman said this morning .
.
The spokesman added as of
7 a .m. today, seven tows were
SQUAD CALLED
waiting to lock up river. As of
The emergency unit of the 10 a .m. 20 tows were waiting
Middleport Fire Department to lock down stream.
'answered a call to 270 W.
Rollers at the dam were
Main St., Pomeroy, at 3: 11 p. dropped to 64 feet at 8:30a.m.
m. Wednesday for · Richard today . During high water
Winebrenner , a medical earlier in the week, the
patient, who was taken to rollers had been lifted to 120 ,
V~erans Memorial Hospital: feet .
The river continues to fall. .
At 10 a.m. today the lbwer
SQUAQ RUN
gauge reading was 27.7, down ,
The Pomeroy emergency some 17 feet from last
squad answered a call to Friday's reading. It was 13
Spring Avenue Wednesday feet on the upper gauge. The
evening for Robert Van river is dropping three-tenths
Meter , who was ill. He was of a foot an hour.
·Gallia County schools
taken to Veterans Memorial
rein a incd closed for the
Hopsital.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
through
Monday: Snow contlnulog
Saturday and gradually
ending Sunday. Fair
Monday. Cold with little
daily variation. In temperatures. Highs mostly in
the 20s and lows in the
teens .
•

Weather
Increasing cloudiJtess with
occasional snow beginning
tonight and continuing
Frida y. Low tonight 15 to 30
and high Friday In the low
30s. The chance of snow is 70
percent tonight and 80 percent Friday .

fourth straight day as the
result of last weekend 's
::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::
winter blast.
Temperatures_ remained
below freezing In Gallia
.'
County. Wednesday's high at
the East Gallipolis Station
was 25 degrees. It was 11 at 9
a.m. today. A low of seven
degrees was recor'ded
overnight.
Meanwhile, according to ,,.... ,,,.,.,.. •. .......
Associated Press, a high
pressure zone that brought
mostly clear skies and cqld
temperaiures to Ohio today is
-moving into eastern New "
•
York tonight.
Clouds will increase in Ohio
behind the front, and an area
(
of snow ls expected to spread
into western Ohio early
tonjght, and over the entire
state before morning.
The cloud cover, coupled
with a southeast flow of air,
will 'push temperatures
slightly higher tonight and
l'riday. The lows tonight will
~·
fall mostly between 10 and 20.
ENJOYS SNOW- Nathan Baloy, 31 braved the winter
' Occa slonal snow will
·
cold
w sleigh riae down Lincoln Hill Wednesday. Nathan
continue through Friday;
is
the
son of Mn. and Mrs. Fred _Baloy, 101 High St.,
with temperatures during the
Pomeroy.
day warming to the 20s.

.

~

-

,.

,II

0

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