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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .;-Monday , J an. 22, 1970

Ohio to
get more
snow

Resistance ·continues
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP )
·- Fighting was reported
today in the vicinity· of the
Cambodian capital of Phnom
Penh as resistance to the
Vietnamese invaders and
their Cambodian rebel alhes
continued 16 days after they
claimed control of the entire
country.
Reliable
sources
In
Bangkok also reported
fig hting around Cambodia 's
largest • ctty,
second
Battambang,
in
the
northwest; Ratanakiri, in the
northeast; the central city of
Komporlg Chhnang; Takeo,
in the southeast, and the
southwestern coastal area
near Kompong Soin, the
nation's only major seaport.
Thw military sources said
the troops of ex-Premier Pol
Pot were apparently trying to
put pressure on Kompong
Chhnang, which the new government install ed by the
Vietname se · declared
ll liberated" ,}ast week,
because it was being used as
a key supply point for the
100,000-man Vietnamese
force now spread across the
country.
Kompong Chhnang , a
western provincial capital 06
miles northwest of Phnom
Penh, also has a recently
improved military airfield,
they said.
The police chief of
Thailand's Sisaket Province,
on the Cambodian frontier,
said in·a telephone interview
that fighting also was
continuing near the ninecentury-&lt;Jid Buddhist temple
of Preah Vihear, held by Pol
Pot's troops. The Vietnamese
reportedly brought in longrange artillery to try to blast
the loyalists from the cliff-top
st ronghold on t~ e Thai
border.
Thai sources also reported
sizable Vietnamese naval and
ground reinforcements in and
around the port city of Kompong Som, which wi's retaken
briefly by the loyalists.
This was verified in part by

two newsmen who late last
week took a Thai fishing boat
to w1thm several hundred
yards of the Cambodian coast '
and saw a large flotilla of
Vtetnamese ships flying the
flag of the new Phnom Penh
goverrunent.
• Photographs taken by the
two showed hundreds of
empty ammunition cases
with Soviet markings flo ating
in the Gulf of Thailand.
.'!'he Bangkok Post reported
that
a
hig h-rank.ing
Cambodian officer who !led
to .Thailand reported exPresident Khieu Samphan ,
aided by Chinese advisers,
was commanding a force of
8,000 guerrillas tn the

northeastern province of
Stung Treng
The newspaper sa1d the
offi cer told it Pol Pol.""was
leading the resistance in the
jungles of southern and
central Ca mbodia .
The news agency of the new
Phnom Penh gove rnment
said reporters from six
Comm unist nations were
VIsiting the capital. It said the
group,
which
arrived
Saturday ._included reporters
from the Soviet Union, Cuba,
East Germa ny, Hungary ,
Czechoslovakia and Vietnam.
Several Western
correspondents have applied
to visit Phn&lt;In Penh but have
not received entry visas.

By The Ass()jllated Press
More snow is predicted for
Ohio by late Monday.
A higli pressure area over
the lower MjSsissippi Valley
will drift east through the
Ohio
Valley
Monday
afternoon and evening.
Alow pressure system over
the western DakQtas is also
forecast to move to the mid
Mississippi
Valley by
Tuesday morning.
.
Snow will spread into
western Ohio just ahead of
the low pressure system. 1
Tuesday's snow will change
to rain in the central and
southern counties as the low
draws warm air northward
from the Gulf of Mexico.

Emergency units busy
The Middleport emergency
squad was busy answering
calls over the weekend.
At 3:31 p.m. Saturday , the
squad went to the Waffle
Shop where Ron Hanson had
fallen . He was treated at the
scene.
At 9:12 a.m. Sunday, the
squad went to 294 S. Third
Ave., for Bob McElhinney
who was ill. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center after
first being taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 3:40 p.m. Sunday, the
squad went to 216 Ash St ., for
Bertha Brickles who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The squad went to
39 Rutland St. at 7:&gt;1 p.m.
Sunday for Leverett L. Roush
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy's emergency unit
was called to West Main St. at
12 :31 p.m. Saturday for
Ernest Imboden, Syracuse,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospit al for
treatm ent
of
injuri es
received in an auto accident.
Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Dreama Hovatter,
Middleport, struck the rear of
Imboden' s ca r . He had

stopped in the lane of traffic.
Miss Hovatter was cited for
failing to have her vehicle
under control.
The squad went to the
county jail at 11 ~29 p.m.
Saturday for .John Blanken·
ship who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.
At 7:21 p.m. Sunday the
unit went to Route 2 Albany
for Lyman Stanley who was
til. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was treated and released.
Ohio High School
Basketball
By The Associated Press
Saturday's Results

Ada 50, Ra wson
Rawson 48, at

Cory ·

Akron North 61. Massillon
Per r y 56

Al l iance 57 ,
All iance
Marlington so
Anna 73, Zanesf ield Ben tam fn Logan 40

·

Boardman 52. Cam pbe ll
Memorial 46, of

Brat en ahl
Christian 61

84 ,

El yria

Brook l yn 70, Rocky Ri ver
Lutheran West 63
Br yan 69, Paufdlng 47

Can ton McK inley 84, Akron
Ea st 53
Can ton South 72 . Navarre
Fairless 58

Cant on

Timk e n

68,

Louisv ille 57

Car dington

64 ,

Mount

Gi lead 58
Carroll Bloom ·Carroll

53,

Lancaster Fairfield nion 51
Chi llicot he Huntmgton 84,
Chillico t he Unioto 75

Cincinnali Country Day 63 ,
Fayettev ille 62
Cinc innati Elder 55, Cin cmna ti Bacon 54
Cinc i nnati LaSalle 84,
Cinc 1nna ti Colerain 69
Cinci nnati St Xav1er 56,
Cincinna ti McNi cholas 48
Circlevi ll e Logan Elm 62,
Am anda Amanda -Ciearcreek

NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE

56
Clevel a nd Bened ictine 67,
Elyna Catt)olic 55
Columbus
Hamilton
Towns h ip 70,
Columbus
Frankl in Heig hts 55
Columbus
Nor th · 62,
Bellefontaine 49
Co lumb us
Ready
60,
Colum bu s Wehrle 56
Continental 93, Ha m ler
Patri ck Henry 66

ON FINE HOME FURNISHINGS
DURING OUR

JANUARY SALE

Cuyahoga Fall s Cuya hoga

Valley Chnstian 76, Canton
8runner dale JS
Dayton Cham inad e 61.
Day ton Fai rv iew '53
Dayton Edgewood 43,
Ea ton 42
Dayt on
Jef fer son 86 ,
Dayton Roth 7d

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

Crow's Fanlily
Restaurant
Po meroy ; Ohio .

A 64 oz•. Bottle of RC with the
purchase of any bucket, barrel
or family valu pak.
GREAT SERVICE! GREAT OIICKEfi!

---- -

.
PUPS SI::EK HOME - These puppie.s held by
Veterinarian Doctors Notter and Boster of Gallipolis have
just been given il medical O.K. and their. shots. They are
Collies like Mother with their "other half" thought to be
also Collie. Aren 't they cute though ? These three males
and two females are available for adoption thr.ough the
Meigs County Humane Society after having been bor~ in a
field up north of Portland about 7 or 8 weeks ago. If
interested in giving one of these puppies a good. home,
please call 992-7680.

SUIT FILED ,
In Meigs County common
pleas court a suit in the
amount of $673.90 has been
filed by The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., against
Joseph McConahy, Mid·
dleport. Deva Ann Cornwell,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, filed for
divorce against Paul E. Cornwell, CircleviUe.

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through
Friday: A chance of snow
flurries Wednesday. Fair
Thursday and a chance of
snow Friday. Hlgbs In the
upper 20s and 30s. Lows
mostly In the teens .

$531.6 billion

(Continued from pag e I) '
further, rather than increase
it .
Carter is returning to Congress
with a proposal it
.;::·::;:;:;::·::::;::·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;::::·::;:::;:;.
spurned last year. He will ask
Congress to approve hospital
Gacy's presence
cost containment legislation .
The savings, Carter said,
being checked
would total some $2.1 billion .
The budget ends for one
CHICAGO (AP ) - The year the unabated growth in
Secret Service says it is federal aid to state and local
investigating the presence of governments that has lasted
mass murder suspect John two decades.
Wayne Gacy Jr. at a
Such federal grants, for
rece ption last year for first programs rapging from
lady Rosalynn carter.
public works and highway
Gacy had a criminal record construction to school lunch
for so(lomy at the time of the programs and revenue
reception, and since has been sharing,
have
been
charged with murder in the increasing at annual rates of
deaths of seven young men. about 14 .6 percent . But
He reportedly has confessed Carter's budget proposes
to killing 32 young men and virtually no increase .
boys.
Howe v er,
Carter
A copyright photograph in maintamed his budget does
the Chicago Sun-Times on not ignore the needs of the
Sunday showed Mrs. Carter poor, and in fact increases
and Gacy smiling and help for the truly poor and
shaking hands .
•
disadvantaged by $4.&gt; billion
The photograph, which the to a total of $68.5 billion.
newspaper said was taken
Nonetheless, 'there is little
May 6, 1978, is signed, "To increase after discounting for
John Gacy, Best Wishes inflation . And the $4.&gt; billion
Rosalyrin Carter."
does not count the cuts in
The newspaper said the in- public jobs at all.
cident occurred when Mrs.
Among programs for the
Carter was in the city for a p·oor · that are being
Polish Constitution Day increased, the administration
observance and to improve cited the following : food
the carter administration's stamps, up $700 million to $6.3
relations . with
local billion; Medicaid, up $700
Democrats.
million to $12.5 b1lllon, and
Gacy, who had been con- supplemental security invicted of sodomy in 1968 in come, up $700 million to $6.3
Iowa, apparently attended billion . Some of the increases
the reception in his capacity were required by existing
as a precinct-level party · law, officials said.
worker.
And some increases that
Mary Finch Hoyt, Mrs.
Carter's press secretary, saitl Carter cited in this regard did
Sunday that Mrs. Carier did not tell the ·whole story of his
not know Gacy and that it is budget. For instance , urban
not unusual for the first lady grants are going up but are
to have pictures taken with sharply below what .he
organizers of events she proposed just last March.
Existing housing subsidies
attends.
are up, but new subsidies
decrease.
Carter proposed increasing
Dayton Miami Valley 57,
Xenia Wilson 46
Medicaid eligibility for an
Dresden Tri -Vall ey 49, New additional 2 million poor
Concord John Glenn 41
children and expectant
Fort Loramie 67 , Fort
mothers at a cost of $451
Recovery 6.4
Grove City 69, Worthington
million.
58
However,
Carter
HamiltonRoss 75, Spring acknowledged there is an
boro 58
across-the-board slowdown in
Haviland Wayne Trace 70,
Wauseon 58 ·
many programs. He said
Hem lock Mi Her 58, Stewart spending
. restraint
is
Feder a I Hocking SO
imperative
because
"if
we
Huron
83,
Castalia
are to overcome the threat of
Margoretta 74
Indiana Deaf 50, Ohi o Deaf
accelerating inflation ... the
27
government will sirriply not
Johnstown Northridge 73,
be able to do as much as it has
Pataskala Watkins Memorial
in the past."
70
Kenton 76, Lima Allen East
Budget Director James T.
66
Mcintyre
told reporters the
Lima C~ntral Catholic 64,
budget "has kept the DemoDayton Col. While 62
.
Louisville Aquinas 66,
cratic Party's commitment
Atwater Waterloo 62
to meet human needs ....
Marion Elgin 61, Marfon
we've done that."
Pleasant 56
The administration
Middletow n 97, Dayton
contends many of the cuts
Dunbar 89
Midvale ' Indian Vall ey
will affect people who are no
North 71, Danville 51
Miller City 75, Delphos longer in need of federal help,
. if they ever were. It cites as
Jefferson 66
.Newa rk Catholic 64 , one example a proposed
Granville 59
decrease in the ' subsldl~ed
school lunch program ~f five
ASK TO WED
cents per .~eal
~htldren
Marriage licenses were from famil1es w1th mcomes
issued to Lsmar Lee lyons, above $13,845.
19, Tuppers Plains, and
It . conte.nds the 160,000
Shirley Marie Bennett, 18, Rt. Pl!blic ~rv1ce jobs slated for
I, Reedsville; Gregory Lee elimmat1on are no longer
Vining, 21, Pomeroy, and needed because. of the strong
Vicky Ann Hysell, 19, employment gams of the past
Pomeroy;
Gary Scott two years. Pubhc jobs under
Chappel. 22, Salem, Ohio and the Com pre hen 51 :V e
Cnrol Ann DeLong, 17,. Rt. 2 Employment and Trammg
Pomeroy; Donald W. Bolen, Act I CET A) would be
56, Pomeroy, and Patricia reduced to 467,000 JObs.
About 250 000 summer
Ann Ray, 20, l-angsville.
'

!or

youth jobs also would he cut
from the CETA program.
Carter defended the budget
against critics who say it will
slow the economy to the point
that a recession will be inevitable. It " will permit
continued economic grow1h,"
Carter said, although he
didn't flatly rule out a
recession.
The budget projects overall
growth of the economy at 2.2
percent in 1979 and 3.2
percent in 1980, below the
level needed to keep pace
with the nation's growing
labor force. The . economy
grew by ~ ·percent last year.
As a result of the slower
economic growth, which the
administration contends is
necessary to help control
inflation, unemployment· is
expected to increase from &gt;.9
perce nt currently to 6.2
percent by the end of 1979 and
remain there through 1980.
A large number of private
economists are predicting
that the economy will slow
even more sharply, however,
and that unemployment will
increase to 7 percent, or even
higher this year. If this happens, Congress might insist
on maintaining federal jobs
programs at existing levels.
Inflation is projected in the
budget at 7.4 percent this
year, compared to 9.2 percent
in 1978and 6.4 percent in 1~811 .
Those numbers also are
considered optimistic by
many private economists.
~-: :;:;::::::!;:::::::·:::::::::::·:::::::·:·:::;.;::::::::::::::::::::::::::

WORKING HARD
The Golden Gloves
boxing season Is fast approaching, and Meigs
County has a group of men
preparing for II. A local
boxer that Is lo tralolog Is
Larry Babbitt.
Other Meigs Countians
who are working wltb
Babbitt are Bernard
LaValley as trainer and
manager,
and
John
Costanzo as sparring partner and corner man.
Babbitt's sponsors are
Roger Adams and JD
Drilling.

LJ&gt;VERETT L. ROUSH
Leverett L. Roush, 69, 89
Rutland St., Middleport, died
Sunday · at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Roush was born June
30, 1909 son of the late
Ephriam E. and Jessie Darst
Rousll. He was also preceded
in death by five brothers,
Rev . Lester L. Roush, Uoyd
W. Roush, Harold H. Roush,
James Joy Roush and John
W. Roush.
Mr. Roush was a member
of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. He was
formerly employed as
district manager for the
Farm Bureau Insurance Co.
and Marietta Manufacturing
Co., Central Coal Co., and did
construction work as a
member of IBEW Local 981.
He. is survived by his wife,
Pauline Hamm Roush, two
sons, Paul R. Roush, Tuppers
Plains, and William . L.
ROush, El Paso, Texas, two
daughters-in-Jaw, Nancy and
Veronica Roush, three
granddaughters, Jennifer P.
Roush and Luellen V. Roush,
a twin sister, Lsura Roush
Morris , Gallipolis, one
brother, Ross R. Roush,
Gallipolis, 21 nieces and
nephews.
·
Funeral services will be
1held Wednesday at I p.m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Robert McGee officiating.
Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
after 1 p.m. Tuesday.
JOSEPH L. JOHNSON
Joseph L. Johnson, 40, 195
Sherwood Ave., Satellite
Beach, Fla., died Thursday at
the Holmes Regional Medical
Center at Orlando, Fla.
Mr. Johnson wasa building
contractor. He was a member
of the Church of Christ,
Melbourne Lodge ·1744, The
Brotherhood of Elks and was
a director of the Home
Builders Assn. of Brevard
County.
· Surviving are his wife,
Virginia S. ' Johnson; a son,
Gregory; three · daughters,
Christina, Cassandra and
Jolynn Johnson, all at home;
his mother, Mrs. Helen D.
Johnson , Pomeroy; , four
brothers, E. Ray, Dublin;
James, Larry G., and Ken·
neth A. Johnson, all of
Pomeroy, and a sister. Mrs.
Beverly Roush of Pomeroy.
Funeral services were held
at 2 p.m. today at the
B•ownlle Funeral Chapel
'with Jon E. Hall officiating.
Burial . was In Florida
Merriorlal Gardens. The
Brownlie Funeral Home Is In
Melbourne.
JASON LEE CARTER
Jason Lee Carter, three ·
month - old son of Blaine and
Martha Brewer Carter,
Route 2, Albany, died
Saturday at Children's
Hospital, Columbus,
following open heart surgery.
Jason was born Sept. 30,
1978 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Besides his parents he Is

HOSPITAL~

.•

NEWS

a

LEGAL NOTICE

. The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has scheduled
for hearing Caae No. 78-676EL-AIR, being.In the Matter .
of the Application of the Ohio
Power Company to Increase
Certain of its filed Schedules :
Fixing Rate:~ and Charges for
Electric Sevice. On Thurs· ·
day, February I, 1979, a
public hearing will be held at
10:00 A.M., at the City Coun- .
cil Office, 218 Cleveland
.Avenue S.W., Canton, Ohio,
At this tlme Interested parties will be afforded an opportunity to present public ·
testimony.

BWE DENIM
'

JEANS
The handsome straight leg
jean. Very comfortable and
completely c;refree too.
In "No-Fault" 100% cotton
14 oz. denim with ·
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shrinks out of' size.
Wide belt loops, front
scoop and rear patch
pockets, Navy,

R ay.Blanton

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) A second federal grand jury
investigating the dealings of
former Gov. Ray Blanton's
administration Is looking Into
the awarding of state liquor
licenses.
•
The panel oolled several
past and present state
Alcoholic Beverage Commission officials to testify
today and Tuesday.
Tom
Guthrie,
ABC
director, conflnned during
the weekend that he· and
several aides were subpoenaed by the grand jury in
_ Memphis and told to bring
ABC records of all Memphis
retail liquor stores and
liquor - by - the - drink
establishments.'
Also called were William
Frogge agent in charge of
the ABC's west Tennessee
office; former ABC Commissioner Frank E. Phillips,
·a close friend of Blanton;
ABC agents Edward 0 .
Gammon of Memphis and
Th ·
·
. omas Wr!Rht of SomerVIlle :

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Also •vailable in

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I'

•.

WAYNE IMPROVES
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Actor John Wayne continues'
to improve following surgery
to remove an abdominal
cancer, ·a spokesman for
UCLA Medical Center,
reports.
"He continued to Improve
and his vital signs are
stable," the spokesman said
Sunday.
The 71-year-old actor was :
initially hospitalized for
routine gallbladder
operation. But during
surgery jan. 12, doctors found
cancer and·removed Wayne's
stomach.

MEN'S

Federal 1·-nrrv
', ;
check
·
,
f'.
IRg tn~V.

...

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital "'
Saturday admissions - .,
Leslie Price, Pomeroy; ·
Bessie
Stitt,
Racine; '
Clarence Peters, Cheshire; , :
Roberta Young, Clifton; ·,
Maggie Gilmore, Racine.
Saturday discharges - .'
Marie Marcinko, Tammie '
Starcher, Neva McElroy, .•
William Morris, Dennis:'
Tolley.
·:
Sunday admissions-John 1
'Biapkenshlp, A!Dany; 1;0ra ,
Loftis, Rutland; Frederick
Stobart, Racine; Kathryn •
Miller, Minersville.
Sunday discharges
Goldie Lswson, Jerry Owens.

ELBERFELD$

:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;::::::·::::::::::::;:;:,

Two supervisors
received oaths

survived by two brothers.-•
Joseph and Adam and a .
sister, Theresa, all at home; ',
a maternal grandmother,
Mrs. Margaret Brewer, •
Springfield; a paternal great-· •
grandmother, Mrs. Lona·
Frye, W1lllamstown, W. Va.,
and several.aunts, uncles an4.
cousins.
• Funeral services will be · ·
held at I p.m. Wednesday af
the Walker Funeral Home In .
Rutland with Mr. Denny
Coburn officiating. Burial'.·
will be In Meigs Memory
Gardens. Frlends'may call at
the (uneral home any lime ·
after 2 p.m. Tuesday and·.
until tlme of services. The ·
family will receive friends at ·
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

SWORN IN -Frank D. Celebrezze, Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court, recently
. administered the oath of office to Thomas Theiss, Rt. I, Racine, newly elected supervisor to
tlie Meigs Soil and Water Conservation Service. Theiss will serve a three-year term. ·

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 196
:-:::::;:::::::·:::::::::::::::::::·:::::;:;:::.:;:;:;:::_:;:::::·:;:;:;:;.;:

Bid O-Ptening
slated·Friday
Governor James A. Rhodes
announced today the state is
accepting bids for the $2.25
million fine arts and class·
room building to be constructed at Rio Grande
Community College.
Bids will be opened 2 p.m.
Jali. 26 (Friday) In the
Columbus office of the
Dlvlalon of Publlc Works, a
part of the Ohio Department
of Administrative Services.
"The building would
provide fa¢1lti~s for student
activities In art, music and
theater and a theater auditorium for use by the
college and the community,"
the Governor said.

Administrative Services
Director Richard D. Jackson
said the fine arts - classroom
building will bouse art rooms
for painting, ceramics and
crafts and will have space for
music education and music
activities.
The theater - auditorium
will be available as a large
lecture room, assembly room
and f0r cultural events for the
community.
Office space wiJJ be
provided for seven faculty
members In art, music and
apeech and administrative
offices for counseling and
placement service:.. ,

SS funds sought
· WASHINGTON (AP) Robert E. Shuck, acting diThe Carter administration , rector of the Selective
with an eye toward being able Service, said the extra money
to draft enough men if war is needed to improve the
ever broke out In Europe, is agency's ability to meet
seeking an additional $5 manpower requirements set
million for the Selective fort1r· in a Pentagon
Service System.
contingency plan for a war in .
· The president's budget, Europe.
proposed Monday, provides
That plan calls for the
$11.5 million for the now Selective Service to be able to
dormant Selective Service supply the first draftees in 30
$9.8million for the (iscl!l year days, 100,000 in two months
starting Oct. I and $1.7 and 650,000 in six months.
mlllion for the rest of this
Shuck said test runs last ,
fiscal year . The current fall found the agency needs
budget is $6.6 million.
four times its current
computer capacity to be able
to process that many draftees
in six months.

WANTS ANSWER
Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews today
Issued a statement to
taxpayers regarding the
deplorable conditions of US
33 through that viJiage.
Andrews said Pomeroy
Village Is not responsible
for the highway. Mayor
Andrews questioned wby
other counties In Ohio can
get super highways built,
but the VIJiage of Pomeroy
cannot get three miles ol
road paved through the
village on US 33 from Nyc
Ave. to tbe PomeroyMason Bridge.
'::::;:::::::::::::'f.;:;::::::::::::·::::::;:;:::;.;::::::·::::::::;.··:-::-:-

Ohio market to

close on Feb •.6--·
RIPLEY , Ohio ( AP) Ohio's burley tobacco market
will close on Tuesday, Feb. 6,
_the
four
warehouses
announced Monday.
Hundred-pound averages
dropped to their lowest point
of the season Monday. They
were $126 .06, down from
$128.95 J~st week.
Sales totaled &gt;04,312 pounds
for $635,742.04. An estimated
27 percent of offerings were
not sold and went into the
federal support price pool.

Weather
Rain tonight, low in mid
30s. Rain changing to snow
Wednesday. Windy, colder
with high in the upper 30s.
Chance of precipitation 60
percent tonight, 90 percent
Wednesday.

HOLDS CERTIFICATE - Rex Shenefield, Rt. I, Langsville, holds his certificate of
election after being given the oath of office as a supervisor for the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, Frank D. Celebrezze, left, administered the oath.

•

at y

en tine
TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1979

MIDDLEPORT·POMEROY, OHIO

Thereon Johnson was the steel haulers strike, Mrs.
elected president and C. E. Thomas said.
ENGINEER REPORT
~laReslee was renamed
County Engineer Wesley
executive director at Monday's meeting of the Meigs Buehl reported work is unCounty Plannmg Com- derway on the detailed plat
maps. nothing has been done
mission.
Other officers elected were basically to update the maps
Orion Rou sh, first vice since 1928. The work is slow,
president; Henry Wells , according to Buehl.
The group discussed the
second vice president;
Edison Baker, secretary and · possibility of an engineering
che ck being '!lade oil
George Collins, treasurer.
During the meetin g, property transfers with a
presided over by Johnson, charge being involved for the
expenditures for 1978 were purchaser of property so .that
reported totaling $2,612.84. It future 'deeds will be correct.
Buehl also reviewed a high·
was reported the 1979 budget
way
map which will be
is $3,716.
available
in the near future .
The group discussed the
recent industrial site report The map was done by Ohio
compiled bY Jennings and University through a federal
Associates, Columbus, and grant. Printing is now being
decided to contact Cash Bahr, done by an Athens firm. Th e
Middleport Chamber of county engineer said im·
Commerce President, and provements to Page St. in
arc
still
Paul Simon, president of the Middleport
Pomeroy
Chamber of
Commerce , recording the
establishment of a committee
for follow through of the
report which outlines 14 industrial sites in the county.
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas
. reported on the multi•purpose
building project saying that
BY BOB HOEFLICH
work is being done as
Middleport residents will
weather permits. Work was hav e full service cable
held up several weeks due to television service at once.
·"'~.;...;.:
~.
·:".
~

.~die· Bridge
discussion set
CHARLESTON The
Shadle Bridge will be the
·subject of an lnfonnal public
lileellnc ICbeduled for Thursday, Jan. 26 at 7 p.m. by the
· Weal Virginia Department of
Highways. The meeting,
whlc:b will take place at the
Muon CoUDiy Courthouse In
Point · Pleasant, will offer
lllternted citizens from West
Virginia and Ohio an opportunity to uk questions
and dilctllll the Department
of Hilhways' plans to
reDOVIIIe the structure.
DOH per101111el will anawer
questions and ell(llaln the
rencmtlon project.

scheduled and that necessary
data on the project are being
secured by Jennings and
Associates.
' SOIL AND WA'rER
Bqyd Ruth of the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
Service
outlined
the
reclamation of some 60 acres
of strip mine lan d in the
Pageville area.
He a lso discussed a new

program, the Rural Abandoned Mine Program 1 which

provi des fund s for Improvements in ·cases where
mines have caused damage.
John son announced Blll
Zuspan had informed him
that a water loading coal
facility is planned at the
former Wh ite Rock Salt
loca tion m Minersville.
Zuspan told Jo hn son the
fa cility has approval of the
environmental protection
agency, the Ohio Department

of H1ghways and the U. S.
Corps of Engineers.
Johnson said Zuspan had
requested a Jetter of approval
from the regional planning
commission. The conunission
took no ~ction on the matter
because it felt that more
information was needed.
Johnson emphasized that the
safety factor of coal trucks
mov ing to the facility was to
be considered along with the
fat1 that 1,01)0 tons at least
are to be loaded in a day
which would necessitate
heavy coal truck traffic.
The commission agreed to
recom mend the appoint·
ments of L. W. McComas and
Bill Childs , both of Middleport, to the commission by
the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners. Th e ne xt
quarterly meeting was set for
3:10 p.m. on the fourth
Monday in April.

Middleport's council
approves .T V increase

......

......

.

,.._
-

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday tbrougb
Saturday: Snow flurries
Tbursday. F:alr Fdday. A
chance of ralo or snow
Saturday. Highs In the
upper 20s and 30s. Lows In
the teens and low 20s.

Youth fined

for incident
Nineteen - year
old
Raymond A. Barber, Cool·
ville, arrested by Meigs
sherHf's deputies for giving
· false Information to an officer
was fined $25 and costs
Monday in Meigs County
Court.
The arrest stemmed from
an incident at Ludwick's
Market, Tuppers Plains,
when a car owned by Robert
Qualls was taken by a
juvenile.
Barber, upon questioning
by an officer, denied knowing
the juvenile when In fact
Barber had picked up the
youth earlier In the day and
had driven him around
several hours. It was also
revealed that Barber had
known the juvenile for
several years.
The case against the
juvenile was transferred to
Athens County Juvenile
Court.

15 CENTS

Meigs' planning group
elects officers Monday

Full seroice
here Thurschly - :_:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::::;:;::
Middleport subscribers of
the
PolnTVIew
Cable
Television Co. will have
service on the two new
channels which have been
blocked out since the first of
the year by Thursday Paul
Gerard,
company
representaUve, said today.
Gerard
Issued
the
lltlltemllftt after Middleport
council Monday night passed
under
emergency
procedures, an ordinance
providing for a rate increase.
Any011e wanting to beat the
rate lncreue before they
receiVe their new payment
bonks may do so by paying
six monlhs In advance,
Gerard advlBed.

Rex E. Shene!teld, Rt. I 'Langsville, and Thomas M.
Theiss, Rt . l, Racine, recently elect&lt;l(j ~ul"!.rvisors of the ]\1eigs
So1l and Water Cohservation District, were sworn into office by
Ohio's Chief Justice of the ;&gt;upreme Court, Frank D.
Celebrezze at the 36th Annual Meeting of the Ohio Federation
of Soil and Water Conservation Districts in Columbus .
Shenefield and Theiss, elected to three-year terms, join
Thereon Johnson, Roy Miller and David Gloeckner in
administering the Meigs District's conservation programs.
Shenefield, president of the Meigs Boa"d of Supervisors,
stated the challenge of providing guidance in proper land
management and solving our energy problems without
destroying our natural resources so vita l to future generations,
ISstaggermg and will requtre the use of our best conservation
practices.
He considers the District's futur e role in reducmg pollution
from agrtculture and urban development sites as a major
District challenge.
"With the help of the people in the District we will
coordinate the work of the district staff with that provided by
the Soil Conservation Service and other loca l state and
federal agencies to bring the people of the Meig~ District an
efflctent and effective program. We are aU elected by the
people in the district and serve without pay. We are dedicated
to helping our community," said Shenefield.

J
•

This was the outcome of a
meeting of Mtddleport village
council Monday night after
council reversed an earlier
decision turning do1111 a rate
increa se requested by
PoinTView Cable Television
which serves the town.
Over the last couple of
months council had discussed
the rate increase then voted
against the increase raising
the cable service from $6 to $7
a month for most subscribers
and from $4 .50 to $&gt; .2&gt;
monthly for senior citizens
and disabled persons.
As a result of council's
failure to pass the increase,
two cttannels on television
sets of Middleport su b·
scribers were blocked out.
. Rece ntly, council upon
receiving some requests that
it reconsider the rate in·
crease asked subscriberS to
notify them whether or not
they wanted to pay the in·
cr~ase and receive service on
the two channels which were
blanked out about the first of
this year.
At last night's meeting,
council members reported it
had received a number of
calls with an overwhelming
majority favoring the in. crease and full service.
While approving the increase · at last night's
meeting, ·council, upon the
motion of Carl Horky, who
said that the company had
violated its fran chise in
removing a Columbus
channel from the service,
passed an action stating that
another cable company could
he franchised at a later time
to serve the cnmmttnity.
Council \m-;t n1ght ·tppro·ved

GOOD SLEIGH CONDITIONS - Monday's snow and the not too cold weather provided
a good sleigh riding situation for county youngsters who were dismissed from school for the
day . Tired of'sleigh riding but perhaps a bit hungry, Heather Woods, Pomeroy, has a feast of
snow.
~

the rate tncrca se as an
emergency measure giving
the ordinance all three
required readings rath.er
than to let \qe problem ·draw

out for a six weeks period as
would he required if only one
reading was given at each
meeting .
Mayor Fred Hoffman in·
dica!ed PoinTView Ca bl e
Television Co. had stated tt
will begin service •m·
mediately.
'!'. A. Riley appeared before
council last night before the
cable television problem
came up for discussion and
expressed his belief that
council should put the rate
iricrease into effect so that
subscribers who wished the
full service could receive it.
SEEKS BIDS
Council voted to advertise
for a one ton, flatbed truck
upon the request of the Board
of Public Affairs. A letter was
read from HUD on a grant
which has been approved for
Middleport. The letter stated
a discussion period from
Middleport will be held on
Feb. 9 on the $128,000 grant
which deals with \he nursing
home and ~0 units of housing.
Council approved the at·
tendance of Mayor Hoffman
to the meeting in Washington,
D. C.
Three ordinances were
given second readings
Monday night. They include
- a Pi'Y raise ordinance
providing for a seven percent
incre~se generally for village
employees; a snow removal
ordinance, outlining steps In
case of an emergency snow
' removal situation, and a Fair
Housing ordinance, designed
to
Insure
against
discrimination.
II letter from the Ohio•
De part ment of Liquo r
Conti'OI was presented an·
nouncing a hearing Jan . 30 at
9 a.m. at the courthouse in
Pomeroy. regarding a carry
out application filed by the
(Continued on p;~ge 8)
•.

REAPPOINTED - C. E.
Blakeslee, Pomeroy, bas
been reappointed to sen-e
as Exec utive Director of

the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. The
acllon was taken at the
annual
meeting
Pomero_}-' Monday.

in

Rio board
reelects
officer~
Reg ular meeting date for
the Rio Grande Community
.College Board of Trustees has
been changed to the third
Wednesday of each month.
This was announced today
by the board's secretary treasurer, Dr. Herman Koby.
Starting time and meeting
place will remam the same, 7
p.m. in the Rio Grande
Coll ege and Community
College board room.
It was also announced John
Beckly, McArthur, and
Patricia Mills, Middleport,
were re-elected chairperson
and vice·chairp e r so n
respectively. Others on the
nine member board are:
. Orion Roush, Langsville ;
Elnon Plummer, Wellston ;
William Slavens and Dwight
Shumate, Jackson; Malcolm
Or eba ugh and Manning
Wetherholt, Gallipolis, and
Gerry Frye, McArthur.
Koby announced that bid
openings for the Rio Grande
Colle ge and Communit y
College Fine and Performing
Arts Center will be held Jan .
26 at 2 p.m. in the state architects office. Because the
buO'ding is slate fund ed, the
State of Ohio CO.-{)rdinates and
controls the bidding process.
The college's new technical
career cent er is moving
toward completion. It a!"
pears partial opening will be
in March with completion and
total move-in sometime in
May.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport emergency
unit was called to 338 S. Fifth
. Ave., at 12:20 am .. Tuesday
for Mrs. Eloise Wtlson who
was tak en to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and later
to Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Wilson, a sbtcr to Dr. R.
E. Boice, Pomeroy' whose
funeral service:; were held
Monday afternoon, later died.
t

.

'It/

�•
3- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Midd!.port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 23, 1979
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 23. 1979

\

IN WASHINGTON
-·.

.'

ETTI'I _.,.Walm\ Sr11i1 'IR£C~
Huu•lf
N E.f'l, "9

Sports World

\.

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Today's

Donald F. Graff
By WUI Grimsley
AP Correspundenl

Caught in contempt?

Where there's smoke

WASHINGTON (l&lt;fEA) - In a little-noticed but potentially
far-reachmg court case, a federal judge m Idaho will be asked
Unce more mto the smoking breach.
• With the updated surgeon general's report on the hazards of
next month to issue a contempto&lt;Jf-eourt citation agamst the
the habit, HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano reopens both the
nation's largest steel company.
The protagomsts m the ciVIl swt are the Umted States Steel
official and a personal hattie with the mighty tobacco industry.
Corp. of Pittsburgh and the Multistate Tax CommissiOn, a
The latter was ready and wa1tmg, jumping the gun with a ' '
public relations salvo even before the report was released.
.;
Denver-based orga mzabon formed m 1967 to conduct corThe Tobacco lnstltute, representing five of the six leading '
porate tax audits on behall of 19 states.
cigarette manufacturers, dismisses the 1,200-page wrapup of .
Those cooperative audits are designed to prevent mulllnatwnal corporatlons from failing to pay appropnate taes on
studies made and statistics compiled smce the original 1964 :.
the1r activities m various states by mampulatmg financial
report, which f1rst put smoking on the health-hazard list, as
records to shift Jncome to other states or countries where it IS
"more rehash than research." Califano, an ex-smoker, is '.'
disrrussed
as a ''reformed sinner" zealo!IBIY seeking publicity. .,.
not taxable.
In a typ1cal case, Montgomery Ward [ Co., a Chicago-based
Possibly m part t~ to the industry's detennined coWJter- . •
firm, claimed llbnms' state revenue officials couldn't flj]ly tax
publiCity effort, he 1s certamly getting It The new report, fin: ,,
certam types of )ncome because the revenues were supposed '
ding stronger eVJ\Ienc,e ,of smoking's role in not only cancet
and heart disease but a range of additiOnal ailments such a9 .
to be apportiOned among all the states m which the company
allergies, pregnancy complications and drug reactions, makes ,
conducted Its retallmg busmess
_,.
But m Arkansas - "and probably other states as well," acgocdc~y
u
cordmg to the comrrusswn - the company told state revenue
It also has some gocd news. Total and per capita cigarette '
officials that the mcome m questiOn was taxable only in Monconsumption shows a decline. So does, proportionately, the ':
I'm trying to cut down on my impulse smoking
·:1borrowed them from a horse
tgomery Ward 's home state of!liinms
population. Currently, smokers represent an '
To rrunuruze corporate tax evasion, the commission's staff
estimated
33
percent of the adult US. population, as against "
purchases."
seeks to obtain a lull financial picture of the multi-state and
more than 40 percent 15 years ago The drop has been most
multhnat10nal firms it audits, including all of their domestic
pronounced among men, down to 'II 5 percent from a 1965
estimate
of 51 percent
'
and intematwnal affiliates a subsidiaries.
"*******************************************~·~
~~
The auditors then apply a three-factor lor111ula -mvolvlng ~
The declme among adults 'has, however , been offset to a con- ·:;
property, sales and payroll - to ascertam what portion of the
siderable extent by a sharp increase in teenage smokers, par- ,;
corporation's business IS conducted in a particular state and
ticularly among girls. The number of smokers Wider 20 years .,
thus subject to Its franchise or business taxes.
old is put at some six million and, according to Califano, ., ;
10f!,OOO of these ar_e under 13. By Califano estunate, 4,000
1 In 1972, however, U S. Steelfiled a court suit seeking to have
~
the corruruss10n's multi-state compact declared to be m viola- t****************************************'***·"·~
children start smoking every day.
tiOn of the conshtutional provisiOn that says "no state shall,
Which focuses on a key point of the smoking controversy: · ',
Thomas H Westen, Hazel the proselytizing efforts of tbe tobac~o industry. As Califano " '
without the consent of Congress ... enter into any agreement o r E
M Westen to Raven Hocking notes, 75 percent of smokers acqwre the habit before age 21
compactwithanotherstate ... "
Coal Corp , .056 acre, Sutton. and the nwnber lighting up after 30is insignificant. It's a habit "
Joming U. S. Steel m that challenge were many of the naI '
I '
Nancy H1ll, Patrick Hill, that Is acquired yoWJg. And it is this market that is the major
twn's largest corporations, mcludmg Proctor [ Gamble,
General Mills, Standard Brands, International Busmess B DONALDM ROTIIBERG asked, "How many medl8 oltheSenate1fyoudon'twant Jonme Sue Kmney, Patr1ck target of an annual half-billion dollars in tobacco advertising . . ,
Kmney to Louise Thompson, It is not the mature, confirmed smoker who is meant to be imMachi~es, Gocdyear Tire &amp; Rubber,International Harvester
~ssoclated Press Writer people can't hnd suts ." to call them "Senator?"
pressed by the images of viril males and glamorous ando&lt;Jr ·"
andUmonCarb1de.
WASHINGTON (AP) _ About 20 hsnds shot up.
Sen Nancy Kassebaum, R- Lots; Middleport
Roger Lee Starcher, successful f!Jmales but the impressionable young, seeking ins- ·' ·
After more than .f•ve years of litigatiOn, the U. S. Supreme The Congress was the brand
Jackson motloned some re- Kan , bemg.new to the Uruted
Court last year reJected all of the-corporate argwnents and new 9tith b 1 the s tting porters to vacant seats at the States Senate wondered what Jacqueline K. Starcher, C. tant access to supposed pleasures and prerogatives of ,
upheld the cons~ItutiOnahty olthe cotlll1llSSlon.
brought backu memori:s of comrmttee table. Then he to caU her colleagues, so she Robert Kautz, Terry Leon adulthocd.
One of Califano's proposals is to fight advertising fire with '
The comnusswn - actmg on behalf. of state tax off1c1als m the energy battles of the 95 th surveyed the room agam and checked with their offices. Starcher, Catherine A.
Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawau, Idaho, Kansas, MonThere
was
Energy began directing others to
"Does the senator have a Starcher, ,Judy Ann Kautz to fire. Notmg results to date from publicity on hazardous conse- '
James
R. se~ts:
preferred nickname?" an Terry L Starcher, Catherme quences of smoking, he proposes more of the same. Publicity
lana, North Dako~ and Utah- then moved to conduct a full Secretary
A Starcher, 10 OliO acres, clearly has some effect smce an estunated 30 million smokers ,
audit ofU. S Steels lmanc1al records.
.
.
Schlesmger puffing on his
You, Sit over here ... And aide asked.
The ~ompany, however, refused to make available. ~ny I~- pipe and preparing to testify you young ooes over there,
Unfortunately, the results Chester.
have becomp "ex" since the 1964 report made smoking a '
Alba C. Radford, Hazel B. public Issue. The prognosis for those who do make a serious ef- . •
format1~n that rrught be turned over to revenu~ olflcl~ls m before the Senate Energy move here m front of me and
were as lively as last year's
Radford to Fred A. Radlord, fort to qwt is encouragmg. Nicotme bemg only minimally adCaliforma, where U.S. Steel has another lawswt pending to Comnuttee chair d b s
Sit on the floor This IS just for filibuster.
preventtbestatefromcollectingmorethan$4mil1Ionltclaims H
M J k e DyWeshn. accredited news people you
Sen Wil"am A~stron• Int. m 78 acre,s Chester
dictlve physiOlogically, the one-tune smoker stands a much
· ta
1· bl t
enry . ac son, - a .
•
u
....
"'
Alba C. Radford, Hazel B. better chance of staying off than does a drug user attemptmg
IS due m xes app 1ca ~ oear1Ieryears
.
Apparently no one realized understand . ... You, against R.Colo ., said, "Call Me Bill."
Afte~ months of hostile negotiatiOn a~d !ega! JOUStmg, the what a drawing card Schlesi- the wall, there's still some Sen. Howard H. Baker, R- Radford to Phllip A Radford, to kiCk the habit, according to Julius Fast's "How to Stop
Smokmg and Lose Weight,'' one of nwner.ous self-heljJbooks
cidaorruruhsst1on rekcenrultl~ wen~tinmtotUh. S. D1stnctfCourt itn Bo1se , nger was . The room was room up front ."
Tenn, said, "Ca"ll me lnt m 78 acres, Chester.
on the subject.
mg c1 . g e company. or con empt o1 packed. Every seat was
Then, after asking, "Does Howard." Sen. Max Baucus,
o, o see a
earlier court orde_rs requmng It to make financial records taken. Many reporters were everyone have a seat?" D-Moot, "Call me Max ," and
The report may have a considerable impact but is by no , ,
ava!lableto cormrussionauditors.
.
s ueezed a am t walls J~ckson sat down and read BlfchBayh,D-Ind., "Call me
means
the deciSIVe shot m what promises to be a drawno&lt;Jut
Tuesday
In response, U S. Steel has characterized the contempt pro- n~tebooks an~ pe'\,. r d ' his statement.
B1rch "
duel. Neither party 1s about to g1ve ground. It would have the "
ceedin!J a.s part of a "publi~l.ty campai!l"" ~?d has charged the
Jacksolt amved and·~:~
The exce'pt1ons to the dull ' The golden call IS sym- makmgs of a David and Goliath situation except that as bet- comrruss1on with makmg n~n-negotiable d~mands lor un- about to start readmg h!S
"Call me Bill .. Call me rule were Sen. Ernest bohc of wealth, riches or ween Califano with the resources of the federal goverrunent
precedented amounts of pr?pr1etary corporate mf~rmatwn..
openmg statement when he Howard .. Call me Max
Hollings, D.S.C., who likes Mammon, referring back to and the multibillion-dollar tobacco industry wtth its polltlcal
Scores of other corporatiOns hsve cooperated With the com- s rveyed th
d
d Call me Birch."
"Fritz " Walter Huddleston the Image of gold (or wood clout, there 's the problem of deciding who should more be ,':
rrussion , but U.S. Steel long has been one of the most mtranu
e crow an
What do you call members D-Ky' who uses "Dee .: plated with gold) made by David and who Goliath.
.
..•
sigent opponents of equitable state taxation of major corporaHenry' Jackson, D-Wasb., Aaron for the Israelites to
(A copy oi"How to Stop Smoking and Lose Weight" may be . ,
worship.
ordered by &lt;•nding $1.25 plus 25 cents for postage and l)andiing
twns .
who is called "Scoop" and
"And Aaron said .. . Break to Stop Smok... g, care of this newspaper, P 0 Box . 489, Radio ,:
Alter pouring hWidreds of thousands of dollars mto litigatiOn
Warren Magnuson D-Wash
off tbe golden earrings ...
designed to thwart a lull exarrun~tion of Its lmances, it's apwho hkes "Magg 1 ~"
., and he received them . and C1ty StatiOn, New York, N.Y 10019.)
propriate that U. S. Steel now faces the possible 1gnommy of
fashioned It with a graven
being held m contempt m the federal courts - the forum II WASHINGTON (AP) - Here are majov segments of President
Some dates to watch lor In tool, after he had made It a
"
chose lor 1ts vain effort to frustrate the tax collectors.
Carter's fiscal 1980 budget, which he submitted to Congress , 1979, 1f you are interested in molten calf ... "- Gen. 32:2-1
Senate trivia:
today:
On March 3, Sen Miltoo
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK: The budget anticipates thst conYoung
, R-N.D , wlll have
swner pnces will rise 7 4 percent in 1979, not as much as the 9.2
served
in the Senate 33 years,
percent inflation rate m 1978. Unemployment may mcrease
The Dai ly Sentinel
11 months and 25 days,
from 5.9'percent to 6.2 percent.
!USPS 145-9601
'"
DEFENSE: Spending increase of $10.8 billion to $122.7 moving him past George
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.billion. It is m accord w1th a promise to NATO to mcrease Aiken, now retired as senator
"'
Bv Dr. I.amar Miller
-·~"'"'·from
Ver111ont,
into
lOth
place
0
defense spendmg by 3 percent after inflation is considered.
DEVOTEDTO TifE
on
the
all
.time
longevity
list.
INJ'ERESTOF
TilE POOR: Spendmg mcrease of $4.5 billion to $68.5 billion.
'"
.On April 8, Sen. RusseU B
UU College of Osteopathic Medicine Programs
MEIGS-MASON AREA.
mclude Medicaid, food stamps, subsidized housmg
ROBERTHOEPLICH
With
this
condition
If
I
am
'
Fixed
Specific
Gravity
Long, D-La., will move into
and nutrition programs.
City Editor
holdmg
anything
,
my
hand·.~
By
Lawrence
Lamb,
M.D.
DAVID BUSKIRK
JOBS: The CETA public service job and trammg program 18th place.
HEART BYPASS SURGERY -PART I
Advertl!ln« Manager
DEAR DR. LAMJI -I want bag for example, in my hand ' ,
And
on
Oct.
9,
Sen.
Warren
In the next several colwnns, I will be discussing the would be cut by $729 million to $9.6 billion. It would eliminate
Pubhshed dally except Saturday
to
know about the spec1f1c at arm's length or when I am
Magnuson
will
move
into
by The Ohio Vt~lley Pubhshmg
coronary byiJass operation which has rece1ved much public 158,000 adult JObs and 250,000 summer youth jobs, but . eighth place.
grav1ty of urine and what IS seWing or wr1tmg, my hands · ':
Company Multlmedtll Inc ,
Ill
attention recently as a means of treating coronary artery busmesses would get a tax break for hll'lng yoWig, poor adults.
Court Sl , Pomeroy, Ohto 45~~ ·
the meamng of a f1xed may go to sleep At night the '
Long now has served in the
Busmell,S Olfk: e Phone !t92- 2156.
NATIONAL DEBT. Interest paid will be S57.1 billion . The
disease.
specific gravity I have a hand on the side that I'm ly- : ':
Senate
30
years.
Since
he's
Edt
tonal
Phone
992-2157
QUESTION: What is involved in the coronary byiJaSS national debt 1S expected to me from $787 billion now to $899 ooly 58, he bas a good chance
Second class pootage paid at 1 relatiVe w1th this problem
mg on tends to go to sleep
billiOn by October 1980.
Pome roy, Ohio
operation we've heard so much about lately•
Please tell me what can be
and
don't
understand
it
of
eclipsing
the
all-llme
N~ttaonal advt!rhsm~ represenFEDERAL GRANTS: Aid to states and local governments
ANSWER: Surgery 1S necessary when the arteries wh1ch
t.ahvt!, Landon Associates, ~101
DEAR READER - Spec1f1c done about this.
record
of
41
years
and
10
'
carry oxygen... ich blood from the lungs to the heart become will barely increase, from $82.1 billiOn to $82.9 billion.
Euchd Ave , Cleveland, Ohio Hll5
DEAR READER
1 graVIty refers to the we1ght
Subscnplion rates Oehvered by
SOCIAL SECURITY· Spendmgw1ll mcrease by $13 billion to months set by Carl T.
diseased or blocked. A by'jJass operation replaces these
Pressure
on circulation to the
per
umt
of
volume
for
any
cu mer where ava1\al)le 75 cents per
Hayden, D-Ar1z. Long
blocked or diseased coronary arteries with undiseased vessels $115.2 billion Proposals will be made to eliminate whst C;lrter entered the Seriate at the con- week By Motor Route where umer
hi!nd
or
pressure
on nerves
substance
in
relation
to
serv!re not available, On e month ,
from some other area of the body. Most often, these vessels are calls some unnecessary benefits Taxes might be cut m 1981. stitutional mmunum age of
may
cause
these
symptoms
'
water
Specific
gravity
is
exS3 ?5 By mall In Ohio and W Va ,
WAGE INSURANCE: Anti-inflation program to msure
taken from saphenous vems of the legs. J&gt;ccasiOnally, a
One Year , $27 50 Six month!!,
pressed m terms of water
What causes the pressure•
30
Two
other
senators
wbo
surgeon may use a vessel from the chest wall (mammary workers against 7percent mllation may cost $2.5 b11lion m 1960 did the same are Edward M. $14 50, Three mDnths , $1 50,
You'll have to have an exThe
yalue
for
water
IS
1.000
A
E\sew~re $32 00 year, Stx montll&lt;J
vessel). These vessels are then placed around the heart so as to if it ls enacted
$17 00 , Three months, $9 00 I· fixed specific gravity for
arrunation to find out It can
Kennedy,
D-Mass
.,
and
ENERGY: A reductioo 1n Department of Energy budget
bypass the blocked oc diseased artery and furmsh a new
Subscription prit'e Includes Sunday
urme has a value of 1 010, just start with pressure on the
Times-Sentinel
$8 95 bUlion in the current fiscal year to $8.89 billion, Joseph B1den Jr., D-Del.
from
channel lor the blood supply. Th1s operation takes between
arteries or nerves m the neck
a
tr11le heavier than water
lour to s1x hours in time and reqmres approxunately two when offsetting revenues are taken into account region
This may be
This
is
the
value
for
the
FOOD AND NUTRITION· The Agriculture Department
weeks of hosp1tahziition. The total cost 1S $12,000 to $15,000. The
associated with a muscle thst
charge will vary dependmg on the patient's condition and the proposes to ~nd more than $10.8 billion on these programs,
llmd port•on of has pulled across the artery
compared With less than $9 6 billion In this fiscal year.
region of the _sountry m which the surgery is done.
The kidney filters the or vein.
AGRICULTURE· Reduction from $20 2 billion in fiscal1979 r----....:.-----------------, plasma and normally it can
QUESTION : How common IS this procedure?
Or, in some individuals, it
ANSWER: Estimates are that well over 60,000 of these to $18.4 bill1on m fiscal 1980,. hased on an expectation of "avform
concentrated
urine
to
may
be associated with
surger1es will be done thiS year. This f1gure may climb even erage" weather for fanners.
conserve water you need or pressure from an extra rib
FOREIGN AID: A total of $8 3 billlon is budgeted for fl.
higher 1f the new trend to operate earlier - often before the
dilute the urine to eliminate which we call a cervical rib.
first heart attack and even on people under 40 - continues nancial and economic aSSistance, compared with $7 billion in
excess water you have This In back packers the pack
unabated. Although highly debatable among cardiologists and fiscal 1979.
means the urme may have a may pull the collar bone back
heart surgeoos, there has ~en a strong move to operate on
specific gravity of less than and produce pressure that
10d1v1duals who are asymptomatic (without symptoms), but
I 010 if 11 is dilute and over can cause such symptoms.
who have poSltlve exercise test results. Such results are an
The prob1em may be in
1.010 if it 1~ concentrated.
10d1cation of serious heart stress. Surgeons claim a lower
In the presence of kidney your wrist from pressure
surgical mortality figure in these otherwise healthy
disease, the k1dneys may lose created across the wrist by
asymptomatic patients than with those who have already hsd
the ability to dilute or concen- the ligaments and tendons.
heart attacks Since many large corporations require that
trate the plasma it !ilters to All of the tendons, arteries
Shirley Bumgardner gave
stress (treadmlll) ECG tests be done routinely on all~hell' . Repair of the church signs
for111
urine. The specific and nerves to the h8nd must
was planned dunn~ a devotions using SCripture
executives, many more of these asymptomatic indlvldua are
gravity
then is always the pass through a small tunnel.
meetmg of the Homebuilders from John 15. Nora Rice had
bemg found . The individual with a positive stress test 1 then
The back IS bound by bones
same
as
plasma, fixed at
Class of the Middleport prayer Finger sandwiches,
giVen a special x... ay, called an angiogram, and If this x...ay
to
the hand and wrist area.
1.010.
This
is
an
indication
of
Church of Christ red!ritly.
relishes, cheese 11nd coffee
reveals diseased or blocked vessels, the surgery is considered.
The
front is bound by strong
a
Joss
of
kidney
functwn
and
Mrs. Coleen Van Meter were served by Peggy
QUESTION: What is the coronary angiogram?
•
additional
studies
are
usually
ligaments.
When this space is
presided at the meeting Brickles and Mrs BumgardANSWER: It is a diagnostic procedure wh1ch 1S always
too
small
or there is some
needed
to
find
out
how
much
which opened with prayer by ner Others attendmg were
done befoc~ coronary bypass surgery. This test involves an Xkidney
function
is
lost
and
the
swelling
of
the structures InRussell Wilson Officers • Ed Evans, Joe Bishop, Mr
rky process in which a spec1al dye is Injected into a catheter
side
of
it
then
it Will create '
cause.
reports were given and ar-' Mrs. Hazel Wilson , RJJym'ond
that has previOusly beef! placed into tbe heart and coronary
I
am
sending
you
The
th1s
situation.
A
variety of dif·
rangements were made to and Dorothy Baker, and
arteries via a blood vessel in the right arm. As the ~1• enters
Health
Letter
nwnber
12-12,
positions
in sleeping
lerent
make the necessary rep!Wrs Far1eCole
both the r1ght and left coronary arteries, the phys1c1an can
How Your Kidneys Work, to
can cause the hand and arm "
to
the
church
signs
when
mooitnr its progress through a fluoroscope. X-4'ay pictures are
g•ve you more infonnation.
to become numb. ·
weather pennits The iltaken throughout the procedure so that they may be studied
Others
who
want
this
issue
Also, If you have a bed "•
lnesses of Lillian Bumgardlater These pictures reveal the location of blocked vessels, so
can
send
50
cents
With
a
long,
mate
that sleeps on-your ar111,
VISIT IN FLORIDA
ner and Flo Grueser were
the appropriate surgical procedures can be contemplated.
.
stamped,
self-addressed
that
can be a factor.
Ms Joyce Hutchison spent
noted.
QUESTION: What is the mortality rate of this surgery?
envelope
for
1t
to
me
in
care
However,
ydu can't blame o
Suggested as special pro- the weekend at Daytona
ANSWER: The rate vanes widely from one-half to I
of
this
newspaper,
P.O.
Box
your,
bed
mate
for your hand
Beach,
Fla.,
as
guest
of
her
percent to 5 or 6 percent, depending on the surgical center jects lor the year were repair
01t19bt NEA loc ~~
155J,
Radio
City
Station,
New
gomg
to
sleep
when
you are
SIKier
and
brother-in-law,
of the baptistry and work m
which perfocms the procedure. The rate tends to be lower for
York,
NY
10019.
sewtng
or
writing.
Julie
and
Andy
Vaughan.
centers which do more of these surgeries, say, one or two the men's dressmg room
"The shah 's got the right idea. I wouldri;t
DEAR DR LAMB - What
,'(ou wi,ll have to have an exAlso d1srussed was the Whde there she was the dinpercent. Some centers, however, have a higher mortality rate
mind
leaving
the
country
and
having
a
little
'"
causes
the,
fmgers
and
hands
arrunation
to find' out what
ncr
guest
of
Martin
and
Jack
simply because they operate on hlgher... lSk patients who may possibility of presenting
to
go
to
sleep?
For
several
you
have
and
what can be
rest,
myself.
"
S.·eiig
and
Mary
and
Ron
have been refused at other centers. A lower death rate, d1 a mas at I he class
done
about
It
Smith
••
L..,_..,.--,,--------.---------...I~·Y.ears l' have been bothered
rnt&gt;4 •ting-s
tllerefore, does not,necessarlly mean better _surgeons.
~

.f Editorial opinions

Meigs
Property
* Transfers

I

battle w-emem b ew-ed .
ner.·uy
e,

B u dget Synopo s .
IS

..

Health Review

HEALTH

G"""""'"'. . .

Berry's World

~~'::'r~f~o~r·

Homebuilders class
plans repair on signs

..

..

.

'

'~

.

1

'•if"
(

MIAMI (AP)- It was the superest of the Super Bowls: It
destroyed the myth that Super Bowls, by their very nature, are
doomed to dullness I~ slew perhaps for all-time the charge
that the Natlooal Football League's grand climax is more
circus than contest, more hype than substance.
How's that again , Fran Tarkenton?
"A manufactured megabucks extravaganza with lousy
play,"saldtheveteranMinnesotaquarterbackinhlsdualroleJ'"
as a frustrated three-time Super Bowlloser and announcer for
NBC. "A circus ... Quality of play absurd ."
Would Francis today - 24 hours after watching Terry (Lil
Abner) Bradshaw and his rough and tumble Pittsburgh
Steelers dethrone the disciplined Dallas Cowboys 35-31 m a
real pulsatoc _like ID amend his judgment~
Touchy Tark probably is correct In a portion of his ill-timed
gripe. No question the Super Bowl is a big hype, a revved up
job, the product of a nation's addiction to the bash-and-butting
gridiron sport and Madison Avenue techniques.
But why not?
·
On a Sunday afternQOn in mid-winter, with weather atrocious almost everywhere, Christmas bills pouring In, inflallon
ealing away at the pocketbook!! and Uncle Sam sending out
reminders of the income tax filing deadline, the event serves to
help 118 all drown our pressures and miseries momentarily in a
f
ho
of high
't
t It
both
toni
d
ew
urs
exCI
emen
·
1S
a
c
an
tranquilizer.
If a TV network wants to pay $8 million lor the broadcast
privileges, fme.lf big companies choose to shell out S370,.000 a
minute to hawkthell'products on the llll', who are we to argue?
If Commissioner Pete RozeUe wants to make the Super Bowl
th
_•
e greatest on~ay sports spectacle in the world- which 11
IS, virtually paralyzing normal life for a few hours and freezmg
100 million viewers m front of the tube,more power to him.
It's still only a game and better than plotting war or gomg
out and blowing up an embassy. After all, it took the Olympics
to dosce the Cold War between the U.S. and the Soviets and a
pmg pong team to tear down the bamboo curtain separatmg
the 900 nilllloo people of mainland China from the rest of the
world.
U Commissioner Rozelle had hll'ed the most brilliant theatrical mmds of Hollywood and Broadway, he would have been
hard.put to choceograph a more dramatic and impressive
show than Super Bowl XIU.
The Steelers, pride of tbe blue-eollar Appalachian steel and
coal country, against the Cowboys, all spit and polish from oilrich Texas. The two best quarterbacks in the NFL, slick pass
receivers, defender~ big as Goliaths and concrete tough .

Sports briefs•••
sea:;on poll, are I!Hl this season .
TENNIS
.
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, South Alrica captured the
men's Singles and doubles
titles m the Coffee Tenms
Cup
Schslk VanDer Merwe woo
the singles championship, defeatmg countryman Craig
Venter 7..'i, 6-2. In doubles,
Van Der Merwe and Fred
Sauer beat Americans Earl
Baxter and M1ke Palmer 7-0,
6-2.
PHILADELPHIA - No 1().
seeded Arthur Ashe f1red a
serv1ce ace to win a
tiebreaker and defeat Bernle
Mitton of South Africa 6-2, 7.&lt;;
in ~enmg play of the $250,000 .
U.S Pro Indoor tennis
championship.
No.16 seed John Alexander
of Australia was eliminated
by Johan Kriek of South
Afrtca, f)..(, 6-f.
In other matches , Zjelko
Franulov1c of Yugoslavia
beat Jaune Flllol of Chile by
6-4, 7.&lt;;; Victor Amaya beat
Brian Teacher by 4-i;, 7..'i, 7..'i;
Geoff Masters of Australia
defeated Terry Moore of the
Umted,States 7-i;, 3-6, &amp;-2; and
Andrew Pattison of South
Alrica beat Callfocnian Ellot
Teltscher 4-6, 6-1, 7.Q.
We can show
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. you ways to
Kate Latham upset SIXthsave money
seeded Rosie Casals 6-4, 4-ll,
onyourauto
6-3 m the operung ...ound of a
insurancepro tennis tournament.
In other matches, Laurie
without
Rowley
beat
Hana
sacrificing
Strachonova
of
protection
Czechoslovakia 7-5, 8-7, 7..'i,
for price.
and Carrie Meyer defeated
Ruta Gerulaitis 6-1, 6-3.
HOUSTON - Top-seeded
Martina
Navratllova
defeated second-seeded
V'll'gina Wade 6-3, &amp;-2 and win
a $125,000 tenniS tournl!ffient.
Navratilova and Janet
Newberry teamed to wio the
doubles championship 4-6, 64, &amp;-2 over Betty Stove of The
Netherlands and Pam
Shriver of Lutherville, Md.
HOCKEY
NEW YORK - Center Tim
Young of the Minnesota
North Stars was named
National Hockey League
Player of the Week lor Jan.
1!'&gt;-21.
Young collected five goals
and an assist for six points in
the North Stars' 8-1 victory
over
the New York Rangers
1111 Quickel
.leo nne Starcher
last Monday night.
''Across from the
~aurtltouse, Pomeroy, 0."

By The Associated Press
GOLF
PHOENIX, Ariz. - Ben
Crenshaw finished the fmal
round w1th a par 711or a 199
totalloc a l-6lroke victory m
the weather-~Jhortened, 54hole Phoenix Open Golf
Tournament.
Play was rained out both
Thursday and Friday and
tournament
officials
trimmed the for111at from the
regulation 72 holes to 54.
The purse also was cut,
from $250,000 to $187,500.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NEW YORK - Notre Dame
retained the No. 1 ranking m
the Associated Press college
basketball poll.
Irish ,
The
Fighting
sporting an 11-1 record this
seallOII, collected 49 of 58 firstplace votes and 1,150 points m
ballotmg by a nationwide
panel of sport wr1ters and
broadcasters,
easily
outdistancmg runner-up
N&lt;rth Carolma.
Indiana State, the only
majoc unbeaten team m the
country, moved mto third
place with the remammg two
first-place votes and 933
points. The Sycamores, who
were unranked in the pre-

DAVIS

INSURANCE
AGENCY
"Hm

Representift8:
FEOf;RAL KEMPER
INSURANCE COMPANY

Indiana State records SPORTS
.I
17th sti-aight triumph
The Daily Sentinel

Hy KEN RAPPOPORT
1\P Sports Writer
A !lll'd m hand is worth
much more than two m the
basket. That's Larry Bird of
lnd1ana State, of course
Once more reachmg the
heights, Bll'd collected 31
pol~ts,l7rebounds and eight
assists to lead the spotless
Sycamores to their 17th
straight victory Monday
night 1\lth an 88-79 deciSion
over Southern lllinois
" We got beat by a great
ballclub ," said Southern
llhnois Coach Joe Gottfried.
"They're as gocd as they're
made out to be."
Just moved up to No. 3 in
the national rankings, the
Sycamores remamed the
nation's only maJor WJbeaten
team. And Bird, ~I course,
has been the mam reason'
both
physically
and
psychologically.
"In the past, Larry has
been a leader (just) oo the
floor ," noted Coach Bill
Hodges. "(But) now he has
l!lken charge off the court,
too. He has become a little
more vocal (With his
teammates) away from the
game "
The Sycamores lost most of
a IO'jJomt lead and then had
to light for thell' lives at the
end of the Missouri Valley

Conference game. When the
Salukis threatened down the
homestretch, 11 was none
other than B1rd who shut
them off with a baselme
Jumper.
"I know how good we are
and so do the players," said
Jiodges. "If we Will the
Valley ' we'll have a chance to
show the rest of the nation
how good we are (m the
NCI\A tournment) "
In other Top Twenty actiOn ,
12th-4'anked Syracuse heat
Rutgers 71-4i5, No 17 Texas
defeated No 14 Texas A&amp;M
89~. No 16 Temple whipped
Delaware 96-89, No. 18
Alabama turned back Flonda
77~andTennesseeupsetNo .
19 Vanderbilt 71-70.
Indiana State was up by 10
pomts twice m the game, but
Southern lllinois roared back
to cut the Sycamore lead1 to
81-79 with I·48 left behmd ' he
shooting of Milton Huggms
But B1rd then hit an eight-foot
jumper to cool off the Salukis
and the Sycamores later put
in five foul shots at the end to
wrap 11 up.
Marty Head scored 20
pomts and Hal Cohen hit
three foul shots m the last
I :36 to preserve Syracuse's
victory over Rutgers Tbe
Orangemen overcame a bad
start when they fell behind IS-

Crenshaw claims
Phoenix crown
AP Golf Writer
PHOENIX (AP) - A year
and a hall of pure frustration
has ended lor Ben Crenshaw
"It's been tough," he sa1d,
"watching everybody else in
the world wm I got close a lot
of times and It hurt, really
hurt, to miss in those tournaments Well, I worked
awfully hard on my game
I've really worked at it And,
doggone it, I deserved to win

this week ''
The victory, his first since
May 1977, came by a single
shot in the twice-delayed,
then abbreviated, 54-hole

College results
Mondav 's Collvge
Bnkttblll Scores

By The Associated Preu

East
Army 81. St Franc1s 65
Boston U 98 , Brande is 71
Holy Cross 64 , Hofstra 62
Mansfield St
76 , Patt
(Johnstown l 67
Mess1ah &amp;.4 , W Maryland 83
S1ena 82, Marlst 69
Syracuse 71. Rutgers 65
Temple 96 , Delaware 89
Wegner 94, Fordham 78
South
Alabama 77 , Florida 66
Alabama
State
104,
Alabama A&amp;M 77
Armstrong
Sf
98.
Columbus 96
C1tadet 83, Ersk i ne 61
Davidson 75, Wake Forest
72
Georgia St
87 , Morr is
Brown 80
Grambl ing
79,
Tuas
Southern 65
Jacksonville
State 89 ,
Tennessee Mart 1n 85
Kentucky 73, Georgia 6_.
Knox~ Ilie Co li 79, Mary11 111e
Coli 71
Mercer 63, f11 m ford S2
Midd l e
Tennessee 84 ,
Murra ""- St 71
MISS15Sippi St J.C, Auburn
72
New Orleans 80, Tulane 72
N Georgta 89, Berry 63
N E LOUISiana 90, McNeese

74

NW Louisiana 60. Hard 1n

Stmmons 51

72 ,
South
Alabama
Jacksonville 61
S Carolina 93 , Flor i da
Sou th ern 78

S

Caroltna

State

112 ,

Baptist 81

Tech
86 .
Southern
Oglethorpe 78
Stetson 100, South Florida

89

Tennessee 71 , vanderbllt70
Tenn Chattanooga
72,
Marshall 70, ot
Tennessee
Tech
77,
Morehead St 76
Varginla Tech 100, Rich
mond 80
Western Carolma 50, Ap palachl&amp;n St 49

Midwest

61

Cincinnati 63, Memphis St

Evans11ille
73,
Wis ·
Milwaukee 67
lnd Pur lndpls 85, Ind .
BapTist 52

lndl~na State 88. S ltlinols

19

lnd Southeast 83 , Oakland
c t ty 77

N. Michigan 71, Wis . Green

Boy 65
NE Missouri 82, Missouri ·

Rolla 71
NW
Missouri
81,
SE
MISSOUr i 68
VMI 75, Cle11eland St 72, ot
Wayne
St
79 ,
Lake
Superior St 64
w Ill ino is so. Arkanus St .

CRIME ,DOESN'T PAY
78
STIRLING, Scotland CAP)
Southwnt
x as St 90, Centenary
- Some 90,000 cigarettes 83,N 2 Te
ol
stolen frottl a warcbo1.11e her~
TeMas 89, Texas A&amp;M 66
F•r West
'" 'we're_.ruined after being
Arizona
hidden In a lar111 shed which Cal1forn•a 72 74, Southern
let In rain.
Oen11er U , Houston Baptist
But the thieves had to pay·- ' Pc . Lutheran 88, W hit worth
anyway. They were fined 65
Puget Sotand 89 . St Mar
f1,700 fir the . tlleft rJ. the
71
cigarettes, which were tan's
San Diego St 80, Arizona
Sl 73
valued at $5,000.

••

Pboerux Open
And 1t came m typical
Crenshaw fashiOn - out of
the woods
He'd g1ven himseH a 4-shot
lead with a spectacular, 1().
underiJar 61 In Sunday's
second round No one caught
him in the third and !mal
round Monday, but Jay Haas,
playmg m front of Ben, ·
dropped a 12-foot birdie putt
on the last hole to cut the
margin to I.
Then it was up to Ben He
needed only a par 5 on the water .guarded fmishmg hole at
the Phoerux CoWJtry Club to
wm 1t And he almost let it get
away
He hooked his tee shot mro
the trees, a pos1Uon w1th
which he has become
familiar over the years. His
second shot was still behind
the tree line, but he d1d have a
shot to the green. Haas was
standing behind the puttmg
surface watchmg
'
"He hit about the only shot
he had out of the trees," Haas
said. "He kept It low. When it
rolled on the green, well, I
didn't think much of my
chances. Ben 2-putted from a
long distance , maybe 3040
feet, to win It with a final
round of par 71 and a 199
total, 14 shots under par .;•
He claimed $33,750 from the
total purse of $187,500, which
had been trimmed down from
$250,000 when two days of
ram delayed the start of the
tournament and forced
officials to cut the event to 54
holes.
Haas closed w1th a 68 and
was second at 200. Tom Kite,
Crenshaw's teammate at the
Umversity of Texas at
Austin, fired a blazing, 8under.par 63 In the sunny
weather and moved to third

at 202.
The group at 203 included
Lon Hinkle, Andy Bean,
former U S. Open champ
Jerry Pate and Pat
McGowan. Pate and Bean
had 71s, Hinkle 68 and
McGowan a 66 that included a
back nine of 29.
John Mahaffey matched
par 71 and was tied at 208 w1th
his World Cup tearrunate,
U.S. Open champ Andy
North, wl,lo had a final-round

72.
Crenshaw also woo his way
Into the Tournament of
Champions and tbe Masters.
"My No. 1 goal for the year
was w win a tournament
before the Masters It feels
good. I've worked awfully
hard at it. You have to keep
working, keep trying to
lmsrove," said the softly
drawling Crenshaw

Tonight's games
Ironton at Jackson

Waverly at Golllpolls

Hannan Trace ~t Eastern

Kyger Creek at North Galha
Southwestern at Southern
Ravenswood al Tyler County
Russ.ell at Portsmouth

Rock Hill ol Wellston

Vinton County at Pt. Pleasant
Madison - Pla1ns
aJ

5

72 Fred Co wan's -20 pumb

· The pressure defense got
us back mto the ga me," sa td
Syrac use
Coach
J 1111
Boeheun "I've never seen a
Syracuse team come out that
nat 111 Manley Field House."
Tyrone Bran) an scored 29
pulllts and Jun Kll vacs
u•ntnbuted 28 to lead Texas
past Texas A&amp;M The
shootm g of Bran yan and
Knvacs so dommated the
game that at one pomt o! the
first half, they had 23 o! 25
pomts chismg out the period
"They tned to break our
rh yt hm, but thmgs JUSt
weren't gomg for them," said
Texas Coach Abe Lemons
"The waywewereshootmg, f
doubt whether anythmg they
could have tned tonig ht
would have helped "
Ricky Reed scored a
careerh1gh 26 pomts to lead
Temple over De laware.
Robert Scott 's 19 pomts led
Alabama over Flonda Terry
Crosby hit two free throws
With six seconds left to pa ce
Tennessee over Vanderbilt
Elsewhere, Joe Nehls
scored 31 pomts to lead
An zona over ~ .. thern rol 74-

p:u cd Kentucky over

71-64
&lt;

Willie Mays expected to

r.eorg1e1
Ken Wtliiams hit a

areer-ht~h

41 pornt s as

enter hall-of-fame today

llo uston beat SMU H2 78,
(;reg Crnn sank three free

throws m the !mal 18 seconds
lll lead MISSISSIPPI State past
Auburn 74-72, ,John Gerdy 's 27
poin ts powere d DavdiSon
over Wake ~'orest 75-72 and
H1ce stopped TCU 59-06 as
J:lhert Darden contrtbuted 19

RERf ROS ENTHAL battmg style after the former
'Yankee Clipper "
NEWYORK (AP)- Willie
'I got 1t from wat"chmg DiMa , ,. legendary career MaggiO m the newsreels and
br ill g~ back memories to 011 televtston," Mays satd. "I
many baseball people , never saw hun play m real
particularly Leo Durocher life {before the 1951 season),
Durocher, Mays' lll'St bJg but I always copied him ,
leal&gt;Ue manager with the New every chance I got "
York Giants m 1951 and a faToday, Mays was expected
the• IIgW"e to hun for many to jom his Idol 10 Baseball's
years, sa1d , " Willie could do Hall of ~' arne . The Baseball
everything from the day he Wn ters Assoctatton of
JOin ed the Giants He could do Amenca announced Its latest
all the thmgs you look for m a mductees - If any - and the
player better than anybody I "Say Hey K1d " figured to
ever saw He never had to be make It easily, and become
taught a thmg "
only the mnth player to gam
"The only other player \\ho enshrmement m hts fll' st year
could do 11 all was Joe D•- of eligibility
Ma ~gw "
Other leadmg candidates
DIMaggio, like Mays , ex- mrl uded E nos Slaugh ter,
celled as a center !Ielder with Duke Smder, Gil Hodges,
a New York team - th e Ya n- R1ch 1e Ashburn, Alvm Dark,
kees
Irom ca lly, May s Nelli e Fo&lt;, Luis ApariCIO,
entered the maJor leagues the Red Schoendtenst , Jim
year Dunagg10 departed
Bun rung, Lew Burdette, Don
D1Magg,Io was Mays' hero Drysdale, Milt Pappas and
Ma) ' said he patterned his Hoyt Wilhelm
But It was the flashy , funlovmg, flamboya nt Mays who
was the dommant player 10
the ballotmg
" Baseball was my life,
Meys on ce said - and he
played hke he meant it
il}

AP Sports Wntt•r

IXJllllS

Also, luna defeated Pitt 8479 m overtrme behmd K evm

Hamilton 's 37 pomts, Holy
Cross held off Hofstra 64-i;2 as
Kevm Greaney scor ed seven

crucial pomts In the last ftve
mmutes, Nayron Monk's 22
p01 nls paced Drake over
Bradley B6-ll4 , Earl Belcher
amassed 25 pomts to tngger
St Bonaventure over OhiO
Umvers1ty 84-lll, Cmcmnatt
lnpped Memphis State 63.j)J
behind Pat Cummmgs' 25
pomts, M1ke Edwards scored
21 as New Orleans de!eated
Tulane 80-72 and Kim Goetz
contnbuted 20 pomts m San
Diego State's H().73 decisiOn
over Anzona State

Ex-Reds hurler Nolan now
card dealer in Las Vegas
LAS VEGAS, Nev tAP! Ga ry Nolan mi ght have
gotten a bad deal when his
mator league baseball ca reer
was cut short by arm trouble,
but nowadays , It' s the former
C10cmnat1 Reds ace whose
domg the dealing .
He's learnmg a new cat ee r
as a dealer at a local casmo
Those who know hun noti ce
that hiS World Senes rm gs,
earned durmg his best }ears
at Cmcmnab, are m1ssmg
fr om his hands as he dea ls
"I don 't wear one of the
nngs because people stop and
ask about II and get lo talkmg
and It slows the game down ,"
Nolan explamed "So me
people like to talk when
they're gamblmg Others JUSt
want to play "
Baseball went out of
Nolan's hfe last year After
. the Reds traded hun to the
Cahlornla Angels, his arm
went out on hun Shoulder
trouble had forced him to
miss most of the 1973 and 1974
seasons. He came back m
1975 and 1976 to wm 15 games
Durmg both those years, he
was the top control pitcher m
the National League
"There's no doubt I could
hsv e won 200 games m the big
lea gues, " Nolan said, "but
the way I threw, the pressure
I put on the arm , It JUSt
couldn't take 11
Nolan was traded by the
Reds m June 1977 He spent

most of the year on the disabled hst 'with Caiiiorma and
then was released early the
nelct yea r He was Signed by
the Mllwaukee Brewers but
released bef ore th e 1978
season started

me If I was the ballplayer and
I sa 1d I was He 5allhere and
talked to me and dropped a
couple of hundred dollars and
seemed happy that he had the
chance to talk to me •·

VALUE
RAT&amp;D

He f m1shed h1s career with

Pro HOCke y
At A Glance
By The Assoc•at ed Pr ess
Nattonal Hockey L eague
campbell confe re nc e
Pa tnck Dt~ IS i on
w 1 1 pt s gl ga
N Y I sland ers

a 11().70 record and 1,039
stnkeouts
No lan dec ided aga mst
ha vmg a second operatiOn
which might ha ve prolonged
his career, an d mstead

]]

moved his family from the
small to wn of Oroville, Calif,
to Las Vegas.

6

9 7 1 21A 119

N Y Rangers
26 15

5 51 19 2 159

Phtla

USED CARS
'

1977 CHRYSLER

NEWPORT

22 15 11 55 158 145

At lanta
25 19 4 54 19 1 166
Smythe 01\ IStOn
Ch1cago 16 21 8 40 135 161
Van couver

In many ways 1t was out of

character for Nolan, who
wasn 1l a card player when he

was With the Reds
But he satd !,.as Vegas had
&lt;rept mto hiS blood He hked
the city and the actwn
"The other mght I go to thiS
affa ir , see, and there's Jane
Fonda and Henry Fonda and
i\nn-Margret there and I got
to meet them and talk to them
and, f mean, where else m the
world do you get that ?·: he
srud
Some of the card playe rs
fmd out Gary Nolan " a
former ballplayer and they
Want to play at h•s table
Somettmes, even form er
teammates such as Johnny
Bench sh ow up and play
awhile w1U1 Nolan.
"One mght this guy heard
me paged lor a phone call ,"
Nolan recalled. "He asked

SEDAN
REAL CLEAN,
LOW MILEAGE,
FUUY EQUIPPEil

16 25 6 38 145 ISO
51 L OUIS 10 3 1 7 27 \ 37 213
Co l or ado 10 3 1 7 27 134 197
Wale s Conference
Adams Otlll!.tOn

BO S IOn

30 10 7 67 19 7 146
20 19 a 4f3 15 1 1•19
18 16 ° 11 4 7 151 1J6

Toron 1o
Bu ff alo

M•nnc sota
16 23

Norns
Montr eal 30
P•tt s

6 38 142 160

Ot~ ts 1on

9

19 19
19 2 1

7 67 181 117

B 46 163 159
6 4-4 167 164

Lo s Ang
wa sh
14 26 7 35 154 204
Oetr 01 t
9 25 13 31 1110 173
Mondav 's Gam es
Bo ston 3 At la nta I
N ew York ISlander s 2,
Ch1ca go 1
Today 's Game
Montr eal at St LO UIS
Wed nesday 's Gam es
N ew Yor k Ranger s al

Washing ton
To ronto a t M 1nnesota
P•tt sburgh at Los Angele s
Ch 1ca Qo at vancouver

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You' ll L1ke Our Quality
Way of Domg Bus.ness

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Even1ngs 'hl6 oo

Ttl5 p m Sat

SHOP

MASON FURN IJURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
.

OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8 : 30 tiiS:OO
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday UntiiB P. M.
Herman Grate
Maslin
Va.
773·5592

w.

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS WANTED
FOR

SYRACUSE, 0. &amp;
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(Between Hudson Street and
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PH. 992-2156

THE DAllY SENTINEL
.
BETWEEN 8 AM AND 5 PM

Wash 1ngt on CH

''

'

'

THIS WEEK' S SPECIAL

'I

�•
4- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 23, 1978

.Today's Topic:

Oil for modern China
lly .IUHN ROOF.RICK

Most ul Sheng 1.1 's workers

,5- The DalJy Sentine!, Middlt;A~rt-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 23, 1979

Pianos
peak

Middleport Baptist installs officers
Choi~~Ifrficers for 1979 Kathleen Arithony. d1Ur&lt;'h

":e~~ lD8
ed
~g rt';':" 1ce

a\ the Sunday miSSIOns treasu rer with
o . the Mid- Dreama Hudson, assistant .
W::,y ~:! B'6.t:: Church.
Ushers elected for nne year
. church clerk wi~ R1~gs, terms were Gerdld Anthony,
B
.
M_ary Joe Anthony, Wtlhs Anthony,
,;ewer, ~lstant; Alwdda Edison Baker, l.at·y Rat1on,
wierner, c urch treasur.er Harold Clase, David .Darst ,
. lh . Nonna W1lcox, ass1s- Tony Fowler, Clifford Hayes,
~~nt, h Dorothy Antho~y, Fred Hoffman, Milton Hood ,
_urc or~amst. WJ!h J~mce Fred Klem , Harold E. HubG~bbshassh1stant, Do_
n Wtlson, bard, Gene Hudson, Kenneth ,
c urc sc ool supermt~ndent Imboden, Asa Jordan , Robert
":'th Lacy Barton, ass1stant; Lewis, Russell Mills, Rob
Sara Fowler, church school Parker, David Wilcox and
secretary_ and trea_surer with John Werner .
'
~orma Wilson , assistant; and
Vari ous boards of the

.\ ssul'iatt.·d Pn.-ss Writer have radios, bicycles, wrist
SlmNG Ll, China 1liP) - wat~hes, sewing machines,

By LOUISE COOK
and higher than average
Aswl'iatcd
PrL'SS Writer
savings ,accounts. llut tlley
of
pianos
are growing
Sales
lack .one thing money can't
steadily
and
it's
easy for
buy: a horne they can regard ·
someone
who
is
not
an
expert
as theirs.
musician
to
strike
a
sour
note
One . case js Mrs. Hsun
that
could
mean
the
wa~ll! of
Mingchin. 38, boss of 36
1,
·workers, most of 'them $1,000 or more.
The
Nation~!
Piano
women, as head of a
collection and transportation Manufacturers Assooiation
pumping station. She and her reports that abnost 259,000
husbaJ)d, a secretary, met as new pianos were sold in i977
Shanghai University students alone. Their retail value was
and She still yearns for the nearly $346 million. And that
great port city that was doesn't count the thousands
of used pianos that change
home.
A
pleasant-faced , hands ·through private sales.
There are two basic types
intelligent woman whose
of
piano: upright an~ flat or
hl\nds are black with oil, she
grand.
As a general rule, tlle
came here 11 years ago,
larger
the piano, the better
believes in China's ability to
the
tone.
A large upright,
become a modern nation and
tllerefore,
can
he equal to or
is convinced she Is helping
better
than
a
small
grand in
make it possible.
terms
of
tone
quality.
"Conditions are hard here,
A grand piano ranges in
but the country needs. us/
size
from 5 to 9. feet; the
she says. "Food' Oh yes,
pianos are the concert
largest
there is more variety in
grands.
A new grand piano
Shang hai. But It is a
wiU
start
at about $6,000; a
consumer city and this is a
production area . We get by used one will cost $1,500 and
all right. I arn happy to be up. A concert grand runs
here, doing my duty, as long about $15,000 new and $6,000
as the state needs me. But if a used.
The concert grand provides
field should open up near
the
best quality, but
Shanghai...well, that would
generally
is practical only if
be better. I would like to go
the
player
plans professional
there .. .! am happy to do what
performances
or if space and
I can to help our country
become modern, like the money are unlbnited: The
manufacturers '
group
United States."
She earns 70 yuan, two advises that consumers faced
more Ulan her husband, and with the choice of a good
has two children, the younger upright or a so-so grand
with her husband's mother in Should select the former.
Upright pianos - also
Shanghai. Her mother lives
called
verticals - range
with them at Sheng Li and
3611l51
inches in height.
from
does tile cooking. They have
·
They
all
require
about the
visited Shanghai only six or
same
amount
of
floor
space
seven times in their 11 years
5
feet
by
2
feet.
The
larger
here .
..
Mrs. Hsun has been here uprights - 44 inches and
longer than most people and taller - are called studio
knows what hardship is. The models; they cost $1,500 to
first workers, some from $4,-000 new and $900 and up
Taching, lived in make-shift used. The medium-sized
huts. Sheng Li, tbough 'still uprights, c3lled consoles, are
backward, has come a long priced at about -$1,000 to
way since. But the going has $3,000 new and $700 used. The
sm3llest of the verticals,
been rough.
known
as spinets, cost
Not only is the climate forbetween
$900
and $1,800 new
bidding. The earth Itself is reand
$500
used.
sistant to oil exploration . It
Whether you seiect a new
contains numerous rock
f11u1ts whicll create oil or used piano, you Should
deposits at wildly differing measure It against tlle doors
levels. To reach oil, drillers of your home. Do not let tlle.
have had to go down as much movers "keyboard" the
as 16,500 feet or as little as piano by removing part of it
for easier handling.
5,600.
The manufactuers' associ·
Above ground, there also
ation
has prepared a "Conare problems. The soil has an
sumers
Guide to Buying a Pialkaline content which has
·discouraged farming for ano." It is available, at no
centuries and made life charge, from the National Pimiserable for the mean ano Manufacturers
1
villages which have existect Association, 435 N. Michigan
in the fields, They do here since the days of the Chi Ave., Chicago, Ill., 60611.
Enclose a stamped, selfrelatively light work with the dynasty, more than 25 cen- addressed envelope with your
exception of 76 in the "Half turies ago.
But there is something new. request.
Sky" team - from Mao TseThere are more than :;o
tung 's description of women Now tlle wives of the agro-in- brands of piano on the
dustrial villages have waShed
as holding up half the sky who take samples, make tlle soil with water diverted market tnday. To get the best
piano lor your use and
analyses and do the same · from the Yellow River and budget,
it is a good .idea to
they
say
they
are
producing
rough, outdoor work the men
select
several
dealers and
extraordinary
amounts
of
do , repairing wells when they .
visit them all.
grain.
break down. ,
Another 80,000 women,
most of them wives, run agroindustrial villages. Their
income supplements
husbands' wages, which
average 65 yuan - $43 dollars •
- a month.
In wir)ter, chill winds send
the temperature down to 4 degrees helow zero. In summer,
100-degree heat turns the
treeless land into a blazing
desert unrelieved by air
conditioning.
Because it is a hardship
post, the government offers
workers inducements that
include
free
water,
elecb-ici\y, housing, medical
care, "'bathing facilities
CQOking fUel, sChooling, nur.:
eries, transportation and
heating. And because the
work is tough, they get 15 Ill
25 kilograms of rice monthly,
double tlle national ration.
army of 100,000 men and
wo!"en labor ~ 24 hours a day
· on a frozen wind-swept plain
here to extract from China's
second biggest oil field the
"black gold" vitally needed
lor modernization .
Toiling beside ancient
mudwaUed villages near the
Pohai Gulf in populous
Shantung province, the Sheng
Li workers produce a healthy
chunk of China's oil needs.
Described by its own
workers as backward
compared to the showpiece
field at
Taching
in
Manchuria , and light' years.
behind Texas fields Vi ce
Premier Teng Hsiao-plng will
.visit in February, -it
nonetheless coaxed from the
uncooperative soil in 1978
about 18.25 million tons of
crude oil worth some $1.6 billion on the world iDarket.
Most of the oil gushing from
its 3,000 wells contains
between 10 percent and 17
percent paraffin which has to
be removed at refineries
before it can be used.
It moves from here by
b-uck, rail and underground
pipeline Ill Tsinglao, Tsinan,
Nanking and other Chinese
cities which take almost all
its production . A small
amount is shipped from
Tsingtao to other countries,
chiefly Japan, the Philippines, Thailand and Brazil .
Natural gas from Sheng Li
Is piped to Chipo, 80
kilometers away, where it
goes in((} the production of
300,000 tons of ammonia a
year.
What Sheng Li - aptly
named "Victory" after · the
village where the first oil
strike was made in 1964 needs most is automation and
modern equipment. Some of
its people recall the
contributions made in the
past two years by the Smith
Drilling Co., which supplied
unproved new drilling bits,
and _the Dresser Co., which
proVIded up-to-date logging
tools. Both are from Texas.
Aside from this help, and
acquisition of a Romanian
drilling rig, Sheng Li is an aUChinese operation doing the
best it can under prilnitive
conditions.
What makes it a success is
·the dogged pioneer spirit of
its workers who, for wages a
Western oil worker would
sneer at, put in a 48-llour, sixday week witll a healthy slug
of overtilne.
.
An

..

t•
'

Debbje -Fin law

CALGON
BATH BEADS
15 Oa. · $1.45 Value

Polly .Cramer
MASSENGILL-

1

Richie Carson

petes for more honor from International. Winners in the
Valentine contest will be pictured in the February issue of
Torch Magazine.
Active in Beta Sigma Phi
for the past nine years, Debbie is the immediate past
president and now serves as
treasurer. In 1975 she was
selected as "Girl of the Year"
for the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi.
Debbie, her husband,
Stephen Finlaw, who is
associated with his fatller in
the Outdoor Equipment Sales
in Gallipolis, and their two
children, Matt, six and
Heather, eight, reside near
.Chester. A 1968 graduate of
Middleport High School, Debbie attended Rio Grande College a year before getting
married.
She is a member of the
Bradbury Church of Christ
and also belongs to a card
club. She plays piano, sews
for herself and others, knits,
crochets, and does needlepoint, and enjoys baking and
cooking.

Has
.-- w:.:~n~oZ'~ ;:s~de ~:
· birthdary r------.
1 So ·oa}lI
I
Cl
I
I Cal
I
end ar 1t

Richie Carson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Carson, Hysell
Run Road, celebrated his
fourth birthday on Jan. 3 with
a party at the home of his
Maxine
g randmot her ,
Owens, Pomeroy. Gifts were
presented to him and
refreshments of ice cream
cake, and punch were served.'
Others attending the party
were Freda Casto, great- ·
grandmother, Mr. and Mrs.
JackStgman, AndyandKris
and Chad Carson. He als~
received gifts from Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Carson and Mr
and Mrs. Larry Salser.
·
PUBLIC NOTICE
A public meetlDg will be

held on Thursday, Feb.1, 1979
at 7:30 p.m., downstairs at
Village Hall, 237 Race Street,
Middleport, Ohio, for the
purpose of providing information to citizens and
obtaining public Input as
required before the filing of a
pre-application for funds
under the Small Cities'
Discretionary Program of the
U. S. Dept. of Housing and
.. Urban Development.
Fred Hoffman
Mayor, Vlllageof
Middleport
(I) 22, ltc

-be--a-,
heart

r=o
· =-o~n-,-t-:-,

b r:ea•~er
1'

~

TIJESDAY.
AMERICAN LEGION Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39
Pomeroy, 7:30p.m. Tuesday
atthe hall.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter t7,
OAPSE, meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Meigs Junior
HighScbool,Middleport.
AMERICAN LEGION Auxiliary, Racine 602, 7·:30 p.m at
the hall, weather permitting.
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY Area Branch, American
Association c:i. University
Women, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Co. Topic for discossion, "Redesigning the Goals
of Education, Phase II" by
Sharon _Johnson, state dlviSIOII •hatrman, Gallipolis.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Tuesday 7 p.m. at
town house. Refreshments. .
WEDNESDAY
OHiO Valley Commandery
No .. 24, Knights Templar
:Wedhesday 7:30 p.m. Full
form opening practice swords
and belts. AU sir knights
w~Icome .
. .. ·SPECIAL MEETING
The safety lamps, invented
Middleport Masilnlc Lodg~
by
Britain's Sir Humphrey
363, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 1
Davy, was first used in coal
p.m. to confer entered ap- mines II\ 1816.
prentice degree on two
candidates.
POMEROY
MID'
DLEPORT Lions Club
Wednesday noon at the Meig;
Inn . Lions ur~ed to attend.
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middleport, 7:30 p.m .
meeting preceded by · 6:30
potluck dinner.
AMERICAN LEGION Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
t28, Middleport; 7:30 p.m.
meeting at the hall. Potluck
dinner with the legionnaires
to precede meeting. •
THURSDAY
.
PRECEPTOR BETA RetH
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:45 p.m. Thursday
in tlie Riverboat Room of tt.e
Athens County Savings. and
Loan Co.

·SALE·
FURniTURE
AT HUiiE 5AUinli5
NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE
ON ANE HOME FURNISHINGS
DURING OUR

$1 .32

Value

Inc Amoncon HQ01 k.!.OCJOhon . . . .

..... -l&lt;lO!Q!!!!LII.

I

"

Q-TIPS

HOT COCOA
'MIX

99(
RAGU

SPAGHETTI SAUCE

69(

15.50z.·98&lt;Value
Pla;no'

w / Meat

SINAREST
S 1.79 Value

89(

DEAR POLLY- My sister
gave me a 98-year-old white
christerdng dress for my
baby to wear when she is baptized. The dress is in good
condition but is yellow • look·
ing so r wish you would tell
me how to ,make it white
again. -SUE
DEAR SUE - The fabric in
your dress may be weak, so it
should be handled with care
and anything considered
should first be tested on an inconspicuous spot. You -might
try a bit of cream of tartar in
water. Soak and then launder
carefully by hand. Color
remover will whiten cotton
fabrics but I would hestiate
before using it on a frail
fabric. - POLLY.

DEAR POLLY - I thmk ,
have the answer for Mrs. W.
E. who has polyeser fabri c
covered with green lint. She
should rinse the dress in
water mixed with white
vi negar and then rewash as
usual. This works like a
charm on linty socks. (Polly's
note- Test first. ) - LOIS.
DEAR POLLY - If you
cannot afforq a expensive
burglar alarm system, you
can ~ake your own early
warmng system by attaching
strings of bells to the locks on
doors, windows , et. I use Indian bells that have a loud
clear sound.
'
To save energy I put 4-watt
night lights in rooms like the
kitchen and bathroom where
I go in and out a lot. Instead of
switching on one or two 100watt bulbs each trip and
sometimes leaving them on, a
4-watt night light gives me all

the light I often need. - .JACQUELINE.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with hostesses and
waitresses in restaurants.
After I have stood patiently
by the "Please wait to be
seated" sign, I hate being
greeted by a sarcastic curled
lip and "JUST one' " Even
though they may have a jobrelate~ reason for asking,
there IS a more polite way ,
such as, "How many? or,
"A table lor one?" It.is then
for me to say "One," "Two,''
or whatever. - BECKY.
·
Polly will send you one of
her s igned thank-y ou
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve o~ Problem in
her column. Write POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
11

DOLORES JOHNSON
Mrs. William (Dolores l
J?hnson of Carroll, dau~hter ·
or Mr. and Mrs. Carol R.
Pierce, I.aflgsville, is confined to Grant Hospital in Columbos.
. Mrs. Johnson was injured
m lJ two r ar accident recently

in which she suffered a
broken hip. She will he confined to the hospital and in traction for the next six weeks ..
Her address is ·Mrs.
Willi am Johnson Grant
Hospital, 309 East State St.,
Room &gt;06, Cohunbus, Ohio
43215.

GEORGE PICKENS
GRAYSON, Ky . . A
, student from Long Bottom
h ~s been named to the Dean's
List for the first semester at
Kentucky Christian College
according to a repori
released by the Olflce of the
Academic Dean.
.
Receiving the honor was
George Franklin Pickens, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Hartis E.
Frank, who reside at Rt. 1,
Long Bottom.

"Using the
Short Form
could cost
you money!"·

H&amp;R BLOCK'

'.

BOWL
DEODORANT

HAND L()TION

$1~~e~iu·99(

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

79(

s1.3 1

Value

GROCERY BUYS

FRANK IES ....~~.~~.~~~:.~ 1°

810 SLIM T · 20's

@~~~~ ~~i~~

$169

15 0~ . Peanut Butter &amp; Honey

,. ·6 9(

Val~•

..

260's • 84C Value

$149

$2.49
Value

69(

LB.

CUT UP FRYERS ....~~·... 79¢

NORTHERN· 200 Ct.

FACIAL TISSUES

2I

ONE-WIPE
$1.09
Valv•

WHOLE FRYERS .... ~~;...69¢

DELUSIL LIQUID

83'
Value

DUST CLOTH

N

FRESH

12 Oz .

ME GAS

_COSMETIC PUFFS

BA

79"'·

l·Oz.
100 COUNT REFILLS

CHUNK BOLOGNA ... ~~~. 99~

13 01. ·Jumble, 14 Oa . · Oatmeal or

Value
51 . 19

DIXIE CUPS

SUPERIORS

MARKET
SLICED

COOKIES

TOILET TISSUE
51.79
Value

9

DIET CAPSULES

CAROLINA
b PK - 2 PL 'f'

DAIRY

DARI FRESH
MELODY MAID

BROUGHTON
FRUIT DRINK

"

'

CHOC•

GAL

VAUEY BEU
BROUGHTON
COTTAGE 24 $119 ICE ~GAL
· oz.
CHEESE · CTN.
MILK

OXV-10

ACNE PREP.
I Oz. • $3.49 Valuo

EGGS

99c

DOZ.

.

LIGHTER

Value
$1.39

3 / ·$1

•

CHAPEL HIU SOFT SPREAD ••• t~~·-~~!9~........ 894
BARBARA DEE ASST. COOK~ES .!~t~~!~~ ....... 994
BAMA STRAWBERRY PRESERVES.LL~~.1.~~. ~139
HILTON'S OYSTER STEW.u.l.~~.~~-~~••••••••••• 594
ARGO PEAS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •. 3CANS 'SJOO
ENGLISH WALNUTS .••••~~~!.SJ~~ ••• !.~~-.~~... ggt
HOLSUM KING SIZE BREAD •••••••••••••••• 3
S}00
HOLSUM BARBEQUE BUNS &amp; HOTDOG BUNSJ.P~~•• 494
.HOLSUM BROW~ 'N SERVE ROLLS •••• . •••• ~~~ ••••• 494

VAUEY BEU
COTTAGE CHEESE
24 oz. . • ,19

99~

...
SCRIPTO MIGHTY MATCH

"'

VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE

SUPERIORS

4.6 Oz . · Regular

;

ouse.. •

$179

~!i~!

APEX TOilET

4 f$1

Handle Old Fabric
With Care
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM

Anthony. treasuret·.
Roartl of fleaconesscs :
Martha Klein chaim&gt;"n .
Kathr yn M~t lgt• ,. • 1•11 :
ehairnwn : 1..,,,... Sigman ,
st'&lt;'J'ctarv: .lanic·t• Daniel
Dreama- Hudson and Ancii
Van Maire.
'
Trustees· .Rio Grande
Association : Mr. and Mrs.
Willi s Anthony, Mrs. Frances
Smart.

TOILET BRUSH
w/HOLDER

20's ·

45&lt;
Value

0:~: .

10's • I Oz..

170 's · S 1.59 Value

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

GEORGE M. COLLINS·
MEIGS CO. TREASURER

OVALTINE

w/ lron · I OO's

BAI&lt;ER
FU RNITUR E

THE FINAL DAY TO PAY TAX
IS FEBRUARY .14. 1979

Reduce If overWeight.

ONE A DAY
VITAMINS

JANUARY SALE

EXTENSION OF TIME HAS
BEEN GRANTED TO PAY
REAL ·ESTATE TAXES .

66(

Twin Pock · 6

1979 Valentine Girl
for ·Beta Sigma Phi
chosen recently
1979 Valentine Girl of Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority is Debbie
Finlaw.
Debbie.was-selected for the
honor by vote of the chapter
membership. She now com·

POLLY.$ POINTERS

churt:h ;md their offil'&lt;'"' installed wen· as follows:
·FmfiD&lt;'&lt;' Corrunittec : Tom
Dm·st , chairman, Rc•t·niee
Ha~cr , secretary Ha 1·old
Chase, FrancesSmar1, David
Da1·st, and Dale Wall&gt;urn.
Trustees: Kenn eth Ionbod en, chairman , Sara
Daune Owen, secretary, .June
Kines, Dan White, Ma1-y
Hughes, F.dna Wilson, F.dison
Raker, Clifford Hayes, a nd
Clarent•e Boyles.
Hoard ol Christian F.ducalion : Jerry Pullen, chairman: Freda Hood, secretary :
Adelle White, adult t•hairman: Dan Riggs, youth chairman; Fran Parker, children
chairman: Freda Hood missions chairman ; Nadin~ Bartori. leadership education
l'hairman.
Hoard of Deacons: Manning Kloes , &lt;'hairman ; John
Werner, vice chairman; Fred
Klein, secretary, and Willis

Mulligan·'s Stew

the designer next door
close at 9:30 p.m., (which is
prominently display·ed.
' unheard of in Rome ) when
Mario and Amadeo are ac· the shops have closed and
msed of "keeping Vatican everyone else is just head:ug
. By HUGH A. MULLIGAN guide books even mentions it hours." They open at 8:30 off Ill cocktail oour. The two
AP Spec_ial Correspondent but it does far more for his in: a.m., w make the crabmeat
barmen, who bought the
ROME (AP) - " A man ferionty to name drop its lack salmon and truffle canape; place a few years ago when
for which they are justly the owner lost interest, have
~ho has not been to Italy " of name than to have been
said Doctor Johnson , ,.'is part of the thousands every famous among the beautiful been rattling the Ice cubeS
always conscious of an day who push their way people. The early opening since the bar-with-no-nl\ll)C
inferiority for his not having around the Forum, hurry pleases Roman Senators who opened in 1952. Or, as Mario
seen what is expected a man past the Piela and drop coins like to catch a couple of eye- dates history, "when dry
to see."
m the Trevi fountain as fast opening Bloody Marys on the martinis were only 5 to 1 inNow far be it from me to as those urchin s with the way to parliament. They stead of 1 to I."
disagree with the ·great magnets on a string can fish
lexicographer, but it seems to them out.
me in this case he is giving
The ·nameless world 's
old Jamie Boswell the tour smallest bar is right in the
guide's outlook on trave l. heart of downtown · Rome
Johnson Is advising his friend tu cked away among all those
Ill see what ought to be seen exclusive shops on the Via
like ruins and cathedrals, but Co ndottl , which author
not what he might like to see . Ludwig Bemelmans, who
like maybe the bars and t~ specializes in portraying the
night clubs .
posh, ca lled "the most
The thing I like most about elegant street in tile world
going to Italy, besides the more like a well-appointed
fact tllat the o!fice pays when drawing room ." The bar is so
a new Pope is elected or tiny and out-glittered by
another government falls ts Guc ci, Pucci, Cucci and those
seeing what f never expected oth e r extravagently
If you don't know tax laws, you need H&amp;R
Ill see. Like for instance : tbe expensive but non-rhyming
Block to review your tax situation. You want
smallest bar in the wor Id. Roman boutiques nearby
Now tllis is one place where that it is regularly passed up
to be sure you are using the proper tax
tlle tourists never go because by the lllurists.
form. Even if you filed the Short Form last
I ha.d passed It up several
there isn't room f~r them
year, your circumstances this year could
and in the second place it times, too, until taken there
let you save money by filing the Long Form.
by my
doesn't have a name.
. friend, John Hart, the
A man is not expected Ill emment art ~riti~, who is a
At H&amp;R Block, we'll take all the time necesknow about a bar that has no regular. He hkes the toasted
sary because we want to be sure you pay
name , because none of the truffle sandwiches and ti\e
the lowest legitimate tax.
slow-stirred martinis. Being
a regular at a bar that holds
only a dozen people when
DENNIS TULLOH
packed to overflowing is
GRADUATES
certamly pushing exclusivity
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
Dennis F. Tulloh, son of beyond the fire lilnits, as
Mr. and Mrs . Harry L. JohnisnotaShamedtoadmit..
Mason, In !act, he calls the bar with
Vickers,
Jr.,
2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
graduated magna cum laude . no name "La Snobberia "
618 E . MAIN ST .
MASON , W. VA .
POMEROV,O.
on Dec. 15 from West Virginia because of all the chi-chi
Open
9
A.M.
to
Tech .
shoppers who come here
OPEN TUES.
6 P.M. weekdays,
THURS. &amp; SAT .
TuUoh was a member of from the hest families in Italy
9·5 Saturday
9 A.M.·S P.M.
Tau Beta Pi National and the best houses in
PHONE 992-3795
PHONE 773-9128
E ·
.
Europe, surrounded by their
ngmeermg honor society shopping bags with names
and Eta Jappa Nu, a national li'ke "Valentino," "Bulgaria' '
Appointment Available But Not Necessary
El ectrical Engineering honor R
society.
( orne's most expensive
jeweler) and Pino Lancetti ,

PAK 16 Ol

BOmES
Plus Deposit

WU· Hold
Clear w/ Aut. Color Ud1

19&lt;

2/ 1

FRIDAY ONL Yl

ALL

Value

WIIK

5

DR. PEPPER

PEPSI

9
gc
8

Plus Deposit

1:tk.oz.
Plus.

.. Deposit

8- ~~~- 7·9

4

.

SUPER MMI\ET - OPEN DAILY 9 to 10 P.M.
~. SUNDAY 10 TO 10
.

ACCept Federal Fw.~ Stamps - We Rr. 'S;rve The Right To UmH Quantiti4u

REG. PRICE

99C

..

�.

'

6- :r'be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 23, 1979

Apple Grove

News Notes

For Best ResUlts Use ·S entinel Classifieds

Fairview

News Notes·r---w_AN_T_AD
_ __,
CHARGES
ISWortb orUnder

C.Oh
1.00
1.50
1.01
3.00

lday
2day.s

3day.s
6days

Each word over the minimum 15
word.&lt;! I! 4 cents per wurd per day.
Ads nmmng other than conRCutJve
Wl.ys will be chargal al the I day

'""'In memory, Card of Thanks 1:1nd

-Notices
- -

Unel
The Publisher reserves lht! nghl
to edH or reject any ads deemed olr
je&lt;.'t.lonal. The Publisher will not be
responsible for mort! than ont! incor·
red tMerllon
Phone 99%-2156

INCOME TA X Sllr\lke f'edr rol
and State ToMeS
n n l or
nppts. . or sec Wando Eblrn
41000 la urel Cliff Rd.

... ·-

INCOME TA X Service, Feder al
on,d State Wallace Russel l
Bradbury , Ca ll 992 72~8

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
_ Mondoy
Noonon&amp;tlurday
1'll&lt;&gt;d•y
thru Friday

___~f!anted _t~ _Buy __ __

FOUND , LA~GE white angora cot
w tth gray spots and gro',' to il
w rth blue colla r. 99'1 2b82

CHIP WOOD . Poles
max
d iameter 10" on largest end.
51 I per ton BUndled slab 510
per ton Deli\lered to Ohro
Pollet Co , Rt 'l Pomeroy

--- -- -- ·-

WHITE POMERANIAN missing ,
stray ed or stolen Please call
99'2 3040 loshro Mtcthell b33
Bos worth . ne xt to swtmmrn g
pool Mrddleport . Ohio

Sunday
4P.M.

Ftiday afternoon . .

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ROBERTA C. O'BRIEN

OLD FURNITURE , rce l::io:.es bross
beds. ' iron beds , desks . etc,
co mplete hou seholds Write
MD ' Miller , Rt 4, Pomeroy or
collm 77&amp;0.

PUBLIC NOTICE

BtdS will be received at the
Mayor ' s Offtce unt t! 4: 00
PM
Friday. February 9,
1979, 237 Race Street for the
following : ..
..
Used Tru!k: no rater than
1974 model. 1 Ton ; Flatbed
Dump , 350 cu . In V8 or
eQurvalent , 4 speed trans
m iSS10n ; Stake Body , Low
Mileage , Heater .
The VillaQe reserves the
right to accept or reject any
or all bids

It is Intended to convey all
the said land south of satd
division line as aforesaid with
the exception of that part out
of the northeast part deeded
to Samuel Ward .
Reference Vol. 112 page 348
Meigs County Deed Records .
TERMS OF SALE Cash in
hand on day of sale ; to be sOtd
subject to real estate taxes
due and payable
The rtght is reserved to
re[ect any or a11 btds .
Property
appraised
at

S5 ,005 00

Your HeadquartiiS For
Armstrong Carpeting

11 Yean Experience
Will Mike
Service Colis

APPLIANCE II

IF YOU hove a sen1ice to offer
wont to buy or sell something,
or
o e looking for work
whatever
, you 'll get results '
foster w1th o Senltnel Wont Ad

220 E. Moln SlrNI,
Pomeroy,O.

651 Beech Street

"i·111J

Coli
For FrM stlmotti

Middleport.

992-2356

Coll9'11 1156
-

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

-

Pets for Sate

January 24, 1979
COLLIE PUPPIES . Beautiful , 11
Events could take place this
weeks old Soble and whrte ,
'coming year thai will bring
full blooded COllie puppieS . !i~
about a fresh outlook toward
991-7300
things and people you've
known for a long time. You are
entering a happter cycle.

you have mauers to discuss
and wo rk out with olhers . today

power good fires runs good.

,sa_
oo, ~ol_! sp-:n~ er 9~9- 7150

might be a good day to do so .
The smcenty and truthwortht·
nes s wh ich you show rubs off

For Sale

Ge1t1ng along with

COAL. LIMESTONE . sand . grovel ,
calcium chloride , fertilizer . dog
food , ond oil types of salt h ·
cehoior Soli Works , Inc , E Main
St , Pomeroy . 992 -389l

others is one of the sections

you ' ll en;oy in your 1979 Astro·
Graph Leller Gel yours by
mailing $1 for each and a long,
self·addressed, stamped enve·

-·-APPLES FITZPATRICK

·-- -

Orchard
State Rt 689 Phone Wilil:es..,rlle

lope 10 Aslro-Graph, P.O. Box
489, RadiO C1ly Slal10n , N Y

669·3785
10019. Be sure to •pecify birlh
sign . PEA HAULERS CB Soles Equip·
men! now on sole oil in stock
PISCES (Feb. ZD·March 20) Be·
Radios ond oc(essories through
Christmas Open every day eM
cept Sunde.,. and Monday .
EVemngs by oppomtment
Po r tland
Ohro
Phone
843 -2064

cause of the kindness of aneth·
er , a task you haiJe to repeat

will go smoothly and qu 1ckly
and a successful day will be
yours alter all

ARIES (March 21-April 19) AI·
lhough people m1ght be difli · MIXED CONDITII9NEO hoy v"ery
cult in the mornmg, your philO·
soph1cal o utlook wtll gain con·

g o od quollly
Delivery
ovorloble Phone 992·7201 or

9'12-3309

J AMES J . PROFF ITT . trol and you'll have a very
SHERIFF OF
pleasanl day.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ' TAURUS (April ZO·May 20) You
have a knack lor smoolhing
been agaln's l you You'll have a
GEMINI (May Z1-June 20)11 you
and another don ' t see eye-toeye about something, be sure
to disc uss the issue openly but

1n a kind way

II can

HEADQUARTERS
For all
Need!.

be

resolved .

CANCER (June

21-July

Appliance

Work on proJects today where
you consider your efforts to be ·
labors of love . You 'll save
money and also enJOY yourself.

JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 9t:l-2111

--

CAPRICORN (Doc. Z2·Jan . 19)

!i. quiet day, bul one you'll

relish stnce you ·prefer lo be
alone and do your own thing
Chances are you'll accomplish
much more than first expected.

-'

- - - -

---

-

---

-

VIRGILI.SR. ~~
Hl-3325
216 E. Second StrMt
LARGE

'Pom.ay l.llldmlll .

AND LEAVE

'

\

''

new oil furnace, L .C .
water, modern kit. and

'

Jock W. Y!rHy, Mgr.
Phone tt:l-2111

8A3 - ~2_!11 .aile~ bpr:r

_ _ _ _... _

Rl:OlJ CE SAFt: and fast wrth
GQ8e!'le Tohlets and E-Vop
" water pill s'', Nelson Drug .

-.

. -

.

H~v. ~9~ - ?~n ~lt(,lr _
bpm .

-

-

•

1

DRECa

I... ..I... -·...
,.,
"''"' .......

. . - - --

· home .
washer
tioned
$1'1 ,000

ond lot for only 512.000.
I YR. OLD Nice 3
bedroom ranch home. Kit.
and dining area with view
of nature. Garage and one
acre. $35,500.

-~

--

- --

ElECTRIC mobile

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

I
~Ao

bedrooms

business.

568,000.

All

·SICK WOMAN

HU RRY "· AND

'fOUR MOTHER ?

NEE DS

for

only

Helen L. Teaford

Sue P. Murphy
Assoclotos

- - ---·-

Housing ·
Headquarters

Give Away
LASSIE TYPE puppies , 7 to 8
, weeks old. Adorable. Mole ond
females. shots and wormed.
.-Ull SIZE mottrets and ,bo~spr·
. .in_gs;_ ~~-c~n~.~!~O~- ~!2~ :
LONG HAIRED cot . Whrte adult
mole. litter trained . Meigs Co.
!i'!m.o~e ~o_cl!'!.:..!9~-.~~.:.... _ _

1

THREE MONTH old Benjl type ·

. .. -· .. ··- ··-·· ·-

one

1

-

.

'

WHAT THERE' 5 ~URe
TO BE SOMETHIN&lt;S OF

C:VER:Y

6 13; Porter Waooner 8, News 10; Love Amrlcan

WeDDI

Style 15; Carol Burnell17 ; Footsteps 20; Big Green
Magazine 33 .
7 30-0olly 3; ; Dating Game 4; Malch Game 6 ;
Muppet Show B; The Judge 10; Thai' s Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 1 5; Sanford 8. Son I~ ; MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33 .
B:OQ-Movie " Mandrake" 3,4, 15; Eight is E nough 6,13,

Now arrange the c•rcled lette rs to
torm the surpnse answer, as sug·
gesled by lhe above cartoon

Printanswerhere :

A

r XI

1I )

Incredible Hulk 8, 10; Great Performances 33;

Edward lhe King 17.
9.00-Charlie's Angels 6,13 , One Day AI A Time B,10,
Movie "The Sun Also Rises" 17 ; Prisoner 20; 9 :30Jeffersons B. 10.
10·00-Sgl T K.Yu " 3,4,15 , Vegas 6.1 3; Kaz B.10; Rizzo
33 , News 10.
10 30-Turnaboul 20; II · 00-News 3,4,6,8, 10. I 3. 15;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 .

(Answers tomorrow)

THAT WOMAN

P NOW,'

Yesterda y s

I

Jumbles TULIP HUMAN UNHOOK JARGON
An swer How to put " pressu re " on som.eo ne yo u
love - HUG HIM

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Augment
~----=:::2 4 " The
Lockhorns"
GOOD HEWINS 10 BETSY! T'~I6KTEN
OH MY, (lH Me;! Wl-IAT
OUT 'Tl-1 ' SILLY
WOULD I WPNT' WI'Tl-1
WAY '101-l 'TAU&lt; ,
NON - RHYMING "Tl:A?
10AD'YN05E!

675 - 4~24

1968 TRAILER 12 H 60 as Is . $3500
Good condition Call H2 2806 . ·

cartoonist
9 Novehs t

Amble r
II Dryden or
Parent, e g .
12 New star
13 Harmonize
11 Arbadella's
daddy
15 D1m1nis h
16 Football
pass
18lla re m

ll · Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ;

8 Adolescent
10 Barracks
11 Festivals;
fetes
17 Caddoan
Indian
20 Ca slle part

6:00PM. - Lei' s Do II .\gain ! PG ). B PM J' leclric
Light Orchestra ; 9 PM. - Big Wedne&gt;day (PG );
ll : 30P .M - l9781nSpor1s ; 12·JO . Let's OoltAgaln

! PGI

Yesterday!s Answer
tl Large
clam
22 Tolerate
23 Stand
behind
24 Crony
26 Superannuated

Tuesday, Jan 23

28 Opera's
Beverly
29 Of barium
30 Woody Vln
31 Actress
Burs tyn
33 Arrest ·
sL

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

----·--- -

Playing the percentages
los e if West hold s four or fi ve
NORTH
4&gt; AKJ987

PRICE REDUCED- This
handyman's special can be

beautiful

new

• Q6

EAST
• 10 5 4 ~

• JB

•Q1063

WEST

This
ranch

where

549,500, 91f•% Interest, 30
year term. Approx. $.116.23
monthly payment {P&amp;I) .
10 LOTS - With barn and

queen or queen-small in the

Eas t hand . The mne play

• AK63 2

Vulnerable: North-South
=-+-+---11--1 Dealer : North

fencing, in Long Bottom, ·

good 1 floor plan home.
fruit trees, garden space,
nice kitchen, view Of the
beautiful Ohio, basement,
many other features. ON-

;-:-+-t--+--1

West

,.,.,-t-t--t--1

8uT HOW

t:&gt;O You
!(NOW WHAT '!"He
Ft.eSH T'oNE.$'

E X C E L L E N T
NEIGHBORHOOD In
Middleport, z story home
that looks nice and can lOOk
nicer Close to schools,

shopping, etc. ASKING
$2(),000.00.
SECLUDED RANCH Close to town, '4 acre, 3
bedrooms, nice bu!ll·ln kit·

12EALL.Y liRE ON
THf. MUPPeT .SHOW&gt;
•

room,

Ct11to 1 f&lt;E• I"c i UI' f91J S ~01 0t l 1i

.o

Is

CRVPTOQUOTES
UCUPG

WELL ... AL L RI6HT...IF YOU
PRO~~I SE TO CALL IF 11-IERE'S

ANY CHANGE ... ANYC/IAN6E
ATALL.

I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

hmts E ac h d ay th e cod e leit ers are different.

............ . 1·1.!

WHY DOr--IT YOU GOTO
• HE'S RE&amp;PONDING 10 TREATMENT; YOUR HOTE L AND REST?
WE V'ON'T WANT YO// 10
MRS. WRIGHT. 1l1E:RE1&amp; N01J.I IN6
GET S IC K ON US ;
VOU CAN DO FOR. HIM AT 1!1E _...-· '-DOWE
PRESENT TIME.

P ZV R E

YJEZWH

ERWOVRE

BARNEY

TH' BRIDGE BROKE

DOWN, SNUFFY!!
DO SOMETHIN:

A GOOD WATCHDOG

SHOULD BE WELL-FED

THAT'S WHL! I DON'T MIND
FIXING 'IOU A GOOD
DINNER EVER't' NIGHT

I REALIZE THAT A
WATOlDOG SOMETIMES HAS
TO 60 INTO ACTION AT
A MOMENT'S NOTICE ...

s:::..

NOT ME .. .I NEED AT
LEAST TWO WEEKS TO
PLAN Ml/ STRATEG'i:

6•
Pass

Pass
Pass

6 NT

2•

4 NT
5 NT

and Alan Sontag
South' s

five

that he

notrump

held

the

fourth ace a nd mvited North

to bid seven. North declined
that invitation bec ause his
spade suit had two holes in
l.!..
VHF it.
South , who had placed the

ERU slam in notrump, won the
diamond in his own hand, led
his deuce of spades and
XUYOEG
WH studied for a long time. beI UY M
WA
ZE I
fore playing the ace from
AYJU
KUPIWH
YHF
ERU
dummy . He continued with
the king ,' smileiln appliy
'
when West produced the
TWRH
POISZH
queen
and chalked up game,
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THIS WORW BEWNGS TO THE
slam
and
rubber.
MAN WHO IS WISE ENOUGH TO CHANGE IDS MIND IN THE
" You should ha ve played
PRESENCE OF THE FACI'S.-ROY L.SMITH
dummy 's nine at trick one, "
EPOU

IUEI

© J979 King Features Syndicate, Inc,

• .lB·

Pass
Pa ss

apostrophes, 1h e le ngth nnd !ormati on o! the words are all showed

L

WINNIE

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

South

Pass
Pass

North
14&gt;
3+ ·
5+

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
Opening lead : •10
A X V D L B A A X R
._B_y_O_s_w_a_l_d_J_a_r-ob_y_ _ __,
One l etter simply stan ds ror another. In thi s sam pl e A is
u sed f o r the three L' s, X fo r the t wo O' s, etc Sin gle l e tters.

QUICK!!

fi ve tnc ks can ' t be

produced , It loses only tn

• K 75 2
t K QJ

amount

or doubeton

They we r e both wrong .
Th e jac k play will produce
f ive spade tnc ks 71 percent
of the time. Except for cases

• 2

downpoy·

WE HAVE
FINANCINO
TYPES OF PROPE
AND NEED LISTINOS,'
CALL TODAY.
REALTORS
I
HENRY E. CLELAt&lt;ID SR. •
HENRY 1!. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
LEONA CLELAND
KATHY CLELAND '
992-2259
Hl-4191

th e smgleton
t en'' .

tl09842
• 65
• Q 10 9 5
• J 74
SOUTH

family room, basement,
garage,
l'h baths, 3
bedrooms, 1 acre. Approx· ,
mortgage

" I don't think so,'' replied
South " The nme play costs .
m e the contrac t if East holds ·

• B

features a hearth centered

10%

to the q ueen·!en ."

1·23

• A94
• A73

yours for the low price of
$8,000 - In Pomeroy on 4
lots, 2 stories, bath, kit chen, 3 or 4 bedroom~. This

won't last long .
FHA APPROVED -

Poll ee Woman 6, 13;

12 .cto-Mannlx 6,13; Ko i ak 8 ; 1. 00-Tomorrow 3,.4 ,
1· 5ir-News 13,17 ; 2· 1o--Movle " Chuka " 17 ; 4 : 1oMaverick 17, S: lo-Dragnet 17.
WEDNESDAY , CH. 4 HBO

!~:ding
/a~~~~~g

·"

Rocklord F iles B; ABC News 33; Movie " The B•g
Game" 10; 11 :50-College Basketball 17

DOWN
llnvolvmg
jail
2 Redolence
3 Golf term
I Stopp' ng
place
5 Staple fare

POMEROY,O.

1
OWNER MUST SELL_:_ The owner of lhis
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sen now so she is offering .this fine
,home for a low. low price of S20,000l There
11re 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
living roo111 w·firfplace, formal dining, eat· .
in kilche11, b&amp;t!IIN·shower, garage &amp; a king
·sized yard. Good location-on Mill St • .Calllht .
Wiseman ;Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,

446·3643.

I

MooreiO; Bailie of lhe Planels 13 ; Odd Couple 15;
Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 6; Andy Griffith
7; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
o: JO-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell
6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20, My Three Sons 17.
7 :00-Cross-WIIs 3, PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game

~

1955 Prairie Schooner 'l8 x B,
bdc
l ljl65Generol, 60x 12. 2bdr.
lljl68 Efcono, 52xl2 , 2bdr
1969 Buddy, 60 H 12. 4 bdr.
1970Sylvo. 60x 12. 2bdr
1970 Castle. 60 M12, 2 bdr
1973Arlington , I:JJx12 2bdr
Jljl73 Ridgewood , 70 • lA , 3 bdr .
1973 Krrkwood , 50 x 12, 2 bdr ,
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMe SALES
PT . PLEASANT , WV

15acres also ·~~~~:i·s

IF YOU CAN AFFORD
$1,000.00 DOWN, WE CAN
SELL · YOU A PLACE .,
CALL 992-3325.
G. &amp;rued Tufora

GUITAR AND bonio lestons
available. Phone 614 -367·7729
after 2pm.

ff!rilale pup. Shots. Call Or. Not·
fer, 61~- .. 1116.111090. ,

and

Hillbillies 8; Misler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ;
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Brady Bunch 17
5· 30-Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; Sanford &amp; Son 4;
News6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec Co 20, Mary Tyler

rJ

HE lOOKS LIKE J UST AN
OLD BUM ... SUI HE '5
ALL I COUL D FIND IN A

OLD

BAti!GE ? lS THE

Hollywood

S:oo----1 Dream of Jeannie 3; My Three Sons .4 ; · Beverly

.....,.....

J I I

furnished . 3 bedr .,
and dr.,.er Ai r condi1 lot, 210 ft . frontage .
Phone 742·2826.

the house must b@ moved.

INVESTMENT - 5
I
In production. Four 2

~ ~

Splderman 4,

Squares 15; Bewitched 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Sesame 51. 2(),33 ; Salman 10; Mario &amp; lhe Magic
Movie Machine 13; Space Giants 11
4 30-Bewilched 3; Alterschool Special 6,13; Superman 4; Gilligan ' s Is. B; Brady Bunch 10; Petticoat
Junction 15; Gilligan' s Is . 17.

ff;('i '9f=:J:'

Ractne, Ohio,

11 '1 ACRE 12 x 60 mobile home
near Dexter 992·5858

4.00--Mister Cartoon 3.

I [j

'
SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
'
_HAMMOND ORGANS

1967 TOTAL

by Henr1Arnold and Bob Lee

YIFFT

PETE SIMPSON

fireplace . A GOOD
AT$2(),500.00.
$6,000.00 will buy this nice 2
,bedrbom home ,In the country near Langsville. VERY
GOOD CONDITION - But

home with bath, nat. gas

~~~o~e~~~r,-_!9~-?~·---

ALFALFA HAY, Iorge round bales .
New Ideo umprcker-shellor .

'

chen,
family
carpeting,

large lot near town . 523.000.
BARGAIN - B room older

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

EAT,DRINK

Current

I

LY $17,700.00.

RENEWED -3 bedrooms,

WILL CARE for elderly person in
private home In Pomeroy.
Ever.,.thing furnished. but
' medication . $250 per month.

- ------ -

3

and good repelr . $29,500 .

-- - ----- -----742·3167 o• 742· ~573 .
-------- __.__ - --Call9'12-6022 .

-

nace with oil clly utilities.
Only $25,000.
MODERN -7 yrs. old . Lol·
100x125, 3 nice be&lt;lra&lt;)ms. ·I
family room, In town sub
diVISion with city water·

TREE TRIMMING ond removal. .

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT ,
•POMEROY LANOMARK ·
SERVICE STATION

ROOMS

bedrooms, all have closets,
l'h baths, new nat. gas fur-

- ..

I

{NIW &amp;

ment,

-

-

&amp;
Low· ·-~~
Story &amp; Clark
Salts &amp; Service.
Ulld,. Strvlct on
Seles.

Hemmond

lmately

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

The
sacked
workers
accepted a total of some $10
million In severance pay and
a thr..,~ourse turkey dinner
as plirt of their settlement.

--

--- -

11me comes easy for you today
sheller 985·4131. 985·3537
9'1~ - 2288
It 's possible you might even be
J
.
C.
PENNEY
wood
burnmg
stove.
TWO
BEDROOM mobile home
responsible for patching up a
near Dexter near No. 1 Mine.
_ _51_~- ~4~2~ 3~ ._ _______ •
problem between fr1ends
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) AI STEREO , JVC rece1ver . BIC turn
_9!_2-58,¥_: _ - - --- - - _ .
first 11 might appear you're nol
table . Two 301 Bo1se speakers. - FIVE ROOMS and bath upsta 1rs
apprecialed , but as lhe day . _99}~ 1El _o~~2 ·.3~9~ _ _ _ _ _ opt. m Pomeroy. 992-2205
goes on those you ' d least VERMEER 605 Super C Boler. 1500
_b!_f~e_5:_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ ~ •
expect to come forth with admilb . Me1gs County's Autonzed
ration and credit.
Vermeer Dealer, Gory Asptn,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
De Mler Phone 742-2877.
Services Offered
..,.
~ 2t) Your charming personal ily ~
GRAVELY
TRACTOR and mower .
and warm d1spos1tion ts a wei·
WILL CARE for the elderly 1n our
_H~y_!o.!:~l! ,!4J· ~~ :_ ___ _
come relief for those besel
home. Phone 992-7314
with troubled hearts. Kee p LUGGAGE , TWO medicine WATERWELLdrll~-.-W
- i"lll_o_m-T~
cabinets. 992-2021 .
lhose sm1les going all day'
Grant . 742-2879,

- -- --- ---SNOW
TIRE SALE

t.!eVf:R FOOL.
Pm!IW!C.IA\J.

___ __ _ ___ __ _ _

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Saying HAY , LARGE ROUND boles , S20
TWO BEDROOM, kttchen furnishall the right things allhe righl
Square boles , $1 M M Corn
ed, opt. Call before 8 om

off.

-

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs. ser money
down
(el1g 1ble
viCe. all makes 992 2284 The
Veterens) FHA - As low os 3.,...
fobr1c Shop ,
Pomeroy
down (all non-Veterans and
Authorized Sin,9er Soles and
generol public) To purchase
_Ser\I!C~ ~~ s~o!p~~ S~is~o!s.:
real estate or refinance . 30
YEARS TERMS. IRElAND MOR EXCAVATING , dozer . loader and
TGAGE CO , 77 E., Stote St .
backhoe work . dump trucks
Athens. Phone614 -592 3051.
ond lo·boys for hire . will haul
- - - - -- - - lill dirt. to ~mil , limestone and HOUSE FOR sole
location
grovel . Call Bob or Roger Jef·
Mason, V'N . Four bedroom split
fers , day phone 992-7089, night
level , built in kttchen with
p~o~e_99_2·~535_o!_ ~2 : 5~~ · _
oven , range, garbage disposal
and bar Family room dintng
t:XCAYATING , dozer, backhoe
room whole house carpeting
and ditcher Charles R. Hot ·
Full srte basement Central air
field , Sock Hoe Servtce,
and forced oir gos heat All
Rutland. Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
drapes plus washer and dryer ,
WILL do roofing , construction ,
Backyard 10 ft high cedar
plumbing and heating . No 10b
fence and cedor decks for
too' Iorge or too small. Phone
pnvocy. Heated garage . Close
74'2 -:2378
-- - -- ---- · · - ·- - to school store pork and tennis
court. Contract Gory l Gibbs
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
,Coll614 -949-2246.
_...
covoting , septt c sy stems
dozer . backhoe, dump truck 3 1 ', acres in Pomeroy. Secluded
limestone . grovel
blacktop
wooded area on top of hill
paving Rt 143. Phone I (614)
Overlooks river . Water. e!ec·
698·7331.
tric available. 992-3886.
.
BATHROOMS AND Kitchens WEll ESTABLISHED grocery with 7
remodeled , ceramic tile, plum room upstorr s opt. on Solem St
bing, carpentrv. and general
in Rutland , Ohio . 742-2424 or
morntenance. l3 years ex
742 -3141.
penence. 992·3685 .
- - - - --. - - - - - - --HOUSE
IN Minersville . A
~ULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete
bedroom , living room kitchen
Service . Phone 992 2478
both and u1ility room . Nice full
- · - - - - - - - - - - · -Site basement . 992-582:3.
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE boon
cancelled? lost your operators
license? Phone 99'2 ·2143.

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

SWJNOON, Ellg)and (AP)
:.... N eaarly 1,000 hi.fl factory
workers received a Christ·
mas boitus and a free dinner
here - just before being laid

---~·--

-·--- -------- - -

rewarded in more ways than
_,J
one because of the thoughtful RUTLAND HARDWARE 2 doors
ness and consideration you
down from Rutland Post Office
show to another todav .
1 Iorge King cool ond wood
For Rent
Applause , applause!
heater, regular price $398.95
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
with blower , SALE PRICE COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Those dear to your heart will be
Route J3. north of Pomeroy
$319 95 wrth free 36 x 54 heavy
Lorge lots . Call992 - 7~79
the objects of ntce ges1Ures
stove board 2 Rodtont cool
from you today You want to do
heelers . regular prtee $254 . 'il5. 3 AND 4 RM. furnished and unthings to show lhem how you
SAlE PRICE 5199 95 with tree 36
furnished
opts.
Phone
feel.
.M ~6_h'.:o~y ~ t~v~ ~o~r~ ___ _
9'12-5434 ,

{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . I

~

REAL ESTATE LOANS . VA · No

-. -

- - - - - - -- -

~OU'D

'
Mob1le Homes tor :sale

BRADFORD, Auctioneer. Com- HOMESITES for sole. 1 acre and
up . Middleport. near Rutland .
plete Service Phone 94q -2.,87
Coli 9'12· 746 I.
or 949-2000. Roctne , Ohio, Critt
Bradford .
THREE BEDROOM fromo home m
Middleport Coll992-3457 .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers, toasters , irons, all FARM FOR sole . House. '1 barns ,
small appliances . lawn mower.
trailer. Lorge pond 10 acres or
neMt to State Htghway Garage
82 acres 7~2 2566
on Route 7.

MOBILE HOME repairs Furnace$ ,
electrical work . ptpes sowed
_pl~~b~n~. ~~- ~8~8 ._ ____ _

.""'==.:...______

BORN LOSER

one t4t·211t. IYinlng
S P .M ... Wttkends
etter 1:r: noon.
12-31-1 mo.
-- -

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor serv ·
ing Ohio Volley region . Six
do't'S a week, 24 hours servtce .
Emergency call$ Call 882-2952
or 882-2305.

SALE PRICES

ZZ)

LEI) (July 23-Aug. 22) You ' ll be

your

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

"'ttz.Zl74

P

. Real Estate for Sale

Busmess Serv1ces

--- -.

most producttiJe day

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

Orgens,
Ptenas.

Love American Style 17.

11 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Password 15; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co 33 ; Movie ''Gone Are the
Days " 17 .
1·00-Hollywood Squares 3, All My Children ~.13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women
Only 15
J ·Jo--Oays of Our Lives 3, 4,15; As The World Turns
8, 10; 2 ; ~ne Life to Live 6.13; 1 .25-News 17.
2:30-Doctors 3,4, 15; Guiding L1ghl B.10; I Love Lucy
17 3:00-Another World 3.4,15; General -Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17; Sludio See
33.
3·30-Mash B; Joker ' s Wild 10, FllntsloQes 17; Over
Easy 10; Rainbow' s End 33 .
~

ftlJ\11.\.ft fii)1t fii;l THAT SCRAMBLED WDRD GAME

~ ~ ~~~~ ®

1fler

.

-

.

-

o.

·-------- -'-- -- ·

things and w1nnmg over those
who would otherwtse have

-

T~ne Blvd.,

1·4·1 mo. (Pd.l

~~--

Auto Sales
AQUARIUS ·(Jan . 20·Fob. 19) If 1q73 OLDSMOBILE DELTA BB lull

on lhem

11·9·1 mo.

--

RISING STAR Kennels Boarding
and groomrng , all breeds .
Chesh1re . 367 0292 .

_
... _
- .....

rn9_j

'REYNOLD'S
El FCIRIC MO'IOR
SIIJP
.

I

EWon

Yard Sale

-

1·3·1

TEMPTIITION IN MY PATH
T HIS WAY~

Service

Cellulosic (wood' fiber I
Therma I insul~ttjon ­
Sovo :10 pet. to 50 pet.
on liNling coot
Experience ond
fully ln1urtd
FrM EJI.
cau••1·n2
I

IT 1$! NO \II \1/H V'D

5HE HAFTA GO THROWIN '

~

WANTED. USED trrtgatron pump
also some alumtnumpipe Ber ·
nord Wagner . Rt 2, lowell , 0
A57.44 . Phone 896 -7271

LEGAL NOTICE

Pursuant to an order of !ale
issued by the Court of
Common
Pleas,
Meigs
County , Ohio, 1 will offer for
sale at public auctton on the
17th day of February, 1979, at
10 A .M . on the Court House
steps , Pomeroy , Ohio , the
following described real
estate, to -wit:
S1tuated in Olive Township,
Meigs County, Ohio , Being in
Fractton 35, Sect[on 27 , Town
4; Range 11 Ohio Company's
Purchase; beginning at the
southwe~t corner of sa ld
traction. thence north to a
line made as a diVision line by
John Hol k 2nd, Surveyor ,
between the said Samuel
Osbo~n and Willi'&lt;lm Osborn,
runnmg east and west ,
thence west to the west line of
said section ; thence south 106
rods to the south line of said
tract ton ; thence east lJA rods
to the southeast corner of said
fraction
and
place
of
bea tnninQ .

Phone: 742-3110
Kim Whitt, Proprietor

OH

NO. 16,619

I'

know -How.

Sptclellalng In
Wooclstove, 011 Furnect
&amp; FlrtpiiCI FIUII

WANTED TO buy· old 1ewelry
Colt 992 5262 or write Kay
Cec1l tl7 S. 2nd Middleport

Bernice Bede Osol

Century

20th

YU P•• HERE

,Radl,atorl~

JIM KEESEE

THE MEEP
ltlh Century- sirvlct With

WANT TO buv. old 45 and 78
phonograph r eco r ds . Call
992 6370 or Contact Mortrn Fur
nttur e

ASTROeGRAPH

Blown Insulation

Don't let 1 chImney fire put
a damper on 't'OUr life Call...
~

WEI.I. oWHADDA VA KNOW! DON 'T
l RECALL EA$ Y MENT IONIN G THAT
S PI CE CAR~ IE$ AROUND THE
KEY TO iHE RADI O S HA CK ~

4; Love of Life 8,1 0, Sesame Sl 20,33 ; 11 55-CBS
News B; House Calf 10; News 17.
12 ·1X)--..Newscenter 3, Bob Braun .4; Joepardy 15; News
6, 10; Young &amp; the Reslless B; Midday Magazine 13;

6, 13; Barnaby Jones B; Movie "4 for Texas" 10;
Movte " Hells Angels on Wheels " 17.
11 :40-Banacek 8; I :00-Tomorrow 3,4.
1·30-News 13; Movie " Plains of Bailie" 17; 3:30News 17; 3 :50-Movle " Zilla " 17.
Ch . 4 HBD
6:30PM. - Sweet Revenge ! PGI ; B 00 PM. Europe
on l c~ ; 9 P .M College Basketball . Oral Roberls at
Marquelte; 11 P.M. - Private Files of J Edgar
Hoover { PGl
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24,1979
5.40-Worldat Large II; 5 .45-Farm Report 13; 5 50PTL Club 13; 5.55-Sunrise Semester 10
6:00-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8; 6 :10-News 17; 6.25Chrislopher Closeup 10.
6:30-News Conference 4; Romper Room 17 ; 6:45-

l·f2·1 mo.

J&amp;L

lnaurecl

MAVE\e VOLJ'~e ~IGHT, HAI.F ·P IN T!
MAY&amp;E I WiLl. MAKE A &amp;ETTER.
IMP~s;;IOIIJ ON EA;Y IIJ JU5 T
MY JE R 5E Y. ! l:l!il'"'/

Thomas Remembers 20
II :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Family Feud 6, 13; News

11: JG--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Movie ,;Ash Wednesday "

CAPTAIN EASY

PI«)NE 742-2328

10 Years Experience
1-19-1 mo.
,·

•

sw .. paGulld

1

z•

...-....

17.
10:00-Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8, 10 ; Dating Game 13, M'ovle " The Ar t of
Love" 1710 :3o.-AII Star Secrets 3.4. 15; Andy
Griffllh 6; Price Is Rlghl8,1 0, $20.000 Pyramid 13.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4 ,1 5; Happy Days 6,1 3; Lowell

9 60-Siale of lhe Union Address 13,15,3,8, 10 ; Mov1e
" The Magnificent Se ven" 17; Rizzo 20 . 9.30keyboard Sonata 33 .
10 ·00-Three' s Company ~. 13, Flying' High 8. 10.
10 30-Taxl 6, 13; Like Ills 10; Area Showcase 33.
II ·OO-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13. 15; D•ck Cavell 20. So iii
Conducls 33 .

...._.

Depend On ....

992-7583 '

B 3Q--Hazel 17; 9 :0Q-Merv G r i ffin 3, P h il D onahue
4, 13, 15; E~erge nc y One 6 ; Hogan' s Heroes 8;
Makh Game 10 ; L uc y Show 17.
9 30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan' s H eroes 10; Green A cres

When The Boat Comes In 33.

Oualily Work You Can

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

'}l' ~~~::~:·

OLD COINS , pocket
cla ss rrngs , wedding bonds,
dtomonds Gold or stl\ler Call
Roger Wamsley 742 2331 .

Gene Grate ,
Clerk Treasurer
Village of
Middlepor t
{1) 13, 30, 2tc

Home Remodeling
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
~lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5412

TUESDAY, JANUARY23, 1979
8·00-Mov ie " Midwa) ' 3, 4,15; Happy Days 6, 13 ; CB S
New s Special 8, 10, Let's Go To The Races II ;
Soundlslage ~0; C1ly Nolebook 33
8 30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13, Las I ol the WIld 17;

Ceramic Tile . Formic.~
Counter Tops . Colli~•
!SUspended, Texture). T o
. Floors . Paneling &amp; Trill!.

Genera 1 Repairs
Masonary Works

Mo r ning Report 3; 6 · 50-Good MornlnQ , West
Virginia 13 ; 6 :&gt;5-Lh uck While Re ports 10; News
13
7:00-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morn ing America 6;13; CBS
News B. Schoolles 10; Three Slooges 17.
7:30-Family Affair 10; e ·OO-Capl Kongaroo 8, 10;
Lea..,.e tt to' Beaver 17, Sesame St . JJ
-

TELEVIS/l)N
'V IEWING

-:-Custom Remodeling-

For, Competitive Pric:es

St. Rt. 124 toword Rutllnd,

'
watches

PLAINTIFF

vs
ONEITA BAKER HUTTON,
ET AL,
DEFENDANTS

.• ,

· -Room Addilions-

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

f&lt; milo oH Rt. 7J!Y.,.,II on

•

TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro ducts Top prrce for standing
sow timb er 1 Coli 992·5965 or
K ~nt_ Han.by , 1_- A46·8570 _

.

Wednesday, Jan.

Contacl

GARAGE

9'12·2689

4P.M.

the day before pubiJcallon

•

AI. TROMM CXJNSJ.

A New Home Built?

o.

Lost and Found

--

J •

--·

Thinking Of Having

ROGER HYSBL

WANTED SOMEONf to live on
.,rnoll hlll srde form bo ck of An
lrqu fly In rcporr 8 room hou se ,
nn l rnodcrn Dol orous Smith , 38
W Ooklonrl Avp
Col urnhus
Oh•o.

9n

. -

'

Business Services

WA NTE D TRU CK mecho nrc for
lrghl ond rn eduun duty truck!i
Mu .. t hove C1 Wr l tool " Appl'l' of
Two Rtvf't 10 Fnt d Service Dep t
GU N SHOOT, Ronnr Vo luntc r r
l'u·e De pt. Every Sa turday 6 30 CASHifR . APPLY
in pt:or son
prn at their butlding 111 Bashan
Ro cmr Food Marlcet 40 hour
f nna ry choke gun ~ only
w C'ek .

Mobile Home sales and Yird !Uiles

'

.

_ ,_tleiJ! vt_a_nt_ed_

~

C.LJ N SHOOT Rccinf• Cu n Clu b
l:: vc&gt; ry- Su ndoy I p n 1 1-=oct ory
r hok e- Qtln!. onl y.

Ob1luary 6 ct:!nls per wOrd , J,'J.OO
minimum Cash m advance.

are accep~ only with CHsh wi\h
order 25 cent charge for ad! carrying Boll Nwnber In Care o( The Sen·

'

.

.

By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
Mr. and Mrs . Russell
Roush celebrated their 33rd
wedding anniversary Sunday
by dining at the Redwood Inn
at Belpre.
Cindy Roush spent Monday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush and daughter,
Kimberly.
Ted Wilford called on Mr.
and Mrs. Owen Anderson
Sunday.
Mrs. Lela Riffle ~bison,
fonner resident, Ls a medical
· patient at Oak Hlll Hospital.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middiepor t-Pomeroy 0. Tuesda" J on 2'l 1979

DICKTRACY

said North. ':This way you

loses t o sm g l eton or double·
t o n 10 a nd sing l et on queen
and has a 70 p e r cent c hance

of success.
Th e ace pl ay 1s th e worst

It only wins 69 pe rce nt of t he
hme.

The jac k play has another
advantag e . It g1ves declarer
a 19 pe r cent chance f o r an
overtrick .

A M1ssoun reader wants
t o know how to play A Q 10 9
x x oppos 1te 8 7 6 with plenty

of entries .
If you n ee d s1x tricks m the
suit the fin esse of the queen
IS best. It g1v es you a 27
percent c hance . If you need
JUSt five , play your ace and
then lead toward the queen .
Th1s giVes you an 83 percent
chance to win against all
combina tion s you can wtn
against.
! NE WSPAPE H ENTE RPRISE ASSN I

(Do you ha ve a question for
the experts? Wnte 'Ask the ,
Experts, · care of th iS newspa·
p er IndiVIdual quest1on s wilt
be answered If accompanied
by slamped, se lf-address ed
en velopes The most interest·

mg ques tions will be used in
th1s column and w1!1 rece1ve
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN.)

\

�'
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-------------------------A
.
i Area ·Death_s· l ss1gnments nearing completion
1- The .Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 23,2979

BENJAMIN DAVIDSON
Benjamin
E.
!Ben)
Davidson, 74, South Third
Ave ., Middleport, died
Monday evening at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Davidson was born
Jan. 20, 1905 in GaiDa County,
son of the late Theodore and
Ida Russe"U Davidson. He was
also preceded In death by his
first wile, Eva Gail Edwards
Davidson, and his second
wife, Lizzie M. Kidder
Davidson, and several
brothers and sisters.
Surviving
are
four
daughters, Dianne Davidson
. and Mrs. Carl (Kathryn)
Gardner, both of Middleport;
1)1rs. John (Helen ) Mulford,
Cheshire;
Mrs.
Ron
(C harlotte) Hanning,
Chester; nine sons, Carl,
John, Ben, Jr., and Michael,
all of Middleport; William,
Racine; Arthur, Athens;
Warren , Pikeville, Ky.; ·
AUen, Syracuse, and Danny
of Providence, Rhode Island.
Also surviving are 19
grandchildren, several great
- grandchildren , a sister-inlaw, Mrs. Susie Edwards,
' Middleport, and a mother-inlaw, Helen Kidder, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Thursday at the
Raw.llngs-Coats
Funeral
Home with the Rev. Noel
· HerrmaM officiating. Burial

will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends
may can at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
p.m . Wednesday .

ELOISE WILSON
Mrs. Eloise Wilson, 62,
Middleport, died thi~ morning at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs . Wilson was the
daughter ofthe late Lester M.
and .Oleva Price Boice. She
was preceded In death by her
husband, Joseph and attended funeral services for
her brother, the late Dr.
Raymond Boice on Monday .
Mrs. Wilson was an active
member of the Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club and was
employed In the office of the
late Dr. Boice.
She is survived by two
daughters and two sons, Mrs.
Thomas (Carolyn) Grueser, ·
Pomeroy; Myrta Casto;
Richard Wilson, Parkersburg
and Joseph Robert Wilson,
Middleport ; three grandchildren , Barbara and Jeffrey Grueser and Joseph
Anthony Wilson; one brother,
Robert Roland Boice, M. D.,
Walnut Creek, Calif.
Funeral arrangements win
be announced by Ewing
Funeral Home.

· lly .ROBERT E. MIU..ER
Associatrd Pr&lt;•ss Writer
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Slow-moving state senators
hoped to complete assigning
memberships on standing
committees today so the
three-week-old -1979 General
Assembly sessfon ra n gear up
to start legislating.
Senators have had political
problems
in
makln~

individual "ommit(ee
assignments. However, a
spokesman in the office of
Senate President Oliver Oca·
sek, D-Akron, said Monday
that th ese were being ironed
out and that the assignments

were near completion. _
The House has
its
committees tined up , and
hearings have already
started in that ri,"!T'""" n"

various proposals. More were
on tap today as the two
chambers returned from a
weekend recess.
Ocasek
and
Senate
Minority Leader Paul E. ·
Gilimor, R-Port Clinton, have
disagreed over the number of
Republicans there should be
on each of th e Senate's 11
standing committees.
Gillmnr w:.ntPCf rninnrjf~·

blocs increased from what
they were last session in ,
deference to the gain of three
c;op seats in the Nov. 7
e 1e c t i o n . De m o c r a t s
prevailed 21-12 in the Senate
during the last session, but
the" current edge is 16-15.
Gillmor said he and'Ocasek
had reached a sort of com·
promise
by
giving

Carter's message emphasizes
fighting inflation· urgency
By DAVID ESPO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) President carter' praised by
an
economy·minded
Congress
for
showing
restraint in his budget, is
following through with a
State of the Union message
that emphasizes the urgency
of fighting inflation .
Carter
goes
before
Congress and a nationwide
television audience .to make
his address tonight (at 9 p.m .
EST), a day after unveiling a
"lean and austere " budget
that calls for spending $532
billion with a deficit of $29
billion.
One House member said
after a briefing at the White
House Monday that Inflation
was uppermost in the
president's mind as he
reviewed a succession of
drafts prepared by his
speechwriters.
Those at the session were

Middleport's

told the president will ask
relationship with Taiwan.
It was not clear how deeply
Congress to approve his wage
insurance program, hospital
Carter would go into any proposed legislation . A White
cost containment legislation,
House aide said the president
a scaled-down welfare
revision "bill and loosened is making a "serious
th emati~ speech" and will
government regulation of the
trucking industry - all send Congress his legislative
measures -to cool Inflation. priorities later this week.
One source said carter
But it was learned that the
would explain a proposed president at some point will
$10 .8 billion increase in . request countercyclical relief 1
defense
spending
as for local governments in
necessary to fulfill pledges areas of particularly high
made to NATO allies and to unemployment,
public
assure military strength financing . of congressional
during arms negotiations ca mpaigns new education
and
nat~ral resources
with the Soviet Union.
On foreign affairs, Carter is departments, and a bill . to
expected to discuss the SALT settle the long-running lands
negotiations and touch on the . dispute in Alaska.
Carter, dispatching his
legislation
need
for
implementing the Panama budget to Corigress, predicted
canal treaties approved by that his spending proposals
the Senate last year plus will win broad public support.
unspecified measures to "It is a budget good enough
reflect the new American that I will fight for it," he

Court news

said.
There is plenty of evidence
he )Viii need. to.
Even though carter won
praise for his drive to cut the
deficit from this year's $;17.4
billion, there is disagreement
in Congress over how to
spe nd the money that is
available.
'_'There are differences of
opm10n a_!&gt; to where these
cuts: or whether the~ cut.~
ar~ m the proper posations,
srud ~ou_se Speaker Thomas
P. 0 Neall _after the Wh1te
House bnefmg.
Many Republicans offered
carter grudging praise for
his attempt to reduce the
deficit .
"Considering that it c:une
Iron:&gt; a Democrat admml~­
trat10n , the ne~ budget IS
austere,"
sa1d
House
Republican Whip Robert
Michel of !Uinois.

Utility customers cannot
shop around for .bargains

(Continued from page I )
Save More Station in Mid·
dleport.
percent surcharge onto their
penses, to finance a $115.9
By TOM GIU..EM
Council had failed to apmillion
construction program
basic
electric
bills
beginning
Associated Pre:ss Writer
prove the application because
thi~
year'
and to make debt
March
I
and
give
the
utility
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) of the. proximity of the station
payments,
he said.
service
$63.6
million
in
additional
to a church. William Walters When it comes to buying elec·
The utility , which plans to
tricity
or
natural
gas,
there's
revenues.
and Charles Mullen will
seek a 50 percent permanent
represent council at the no comparison shopping or · Dick Retterer, Columbus &amp;
looking for bargains, says 71· Southern manager, of public rate increase in March, was
Love
hearing .
scheduled to present its
Council authorized Mayor year-old caroline Neuffer. affairs, said the utility, which
case
for
the
"We can't shop around like serves480,000customersin 25 . formal
V
Hoffman to file an application
emergency
increase
when
the
·for a $330,300 Community we do for groceries or southern and central Ohio
utilities commission resumed
clothes,"
·
the
Columbus
counties,
is
in
a
financial
Block Grant which must be
I
its hearing this afternoon.
widow said Monday at a emergency.
filed by Feb. 4.
But William A. Spratley,
Utilities
Commission
Additional
revenue
Public
A discussion was held on
Ohio's
consumers' counsel,
from
the
the · removal of meters from of Ohio hearing on a 25 generated
said
his
agency will argue
Diamond Pendants
In front of the Ingel Furniture percent emergency rate in· emergency rate boost i• against granting the entire
Heart Loekets
Store and Citizens National crea~ request by Columbus needed for maintenance ex· emergency increase.
Bank so that emergency &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Pierced Earrings
Although the Office of the
"We have only one gas
vehicles can clear that comer
Consumers' Counsel believes
. Plereecl Earrings with Diamond
better. Councibnan Mullen comp~ny and one electric 7\.
Columbus &amp; Southern has a
Jade Bracelets
said
Mrs.l~~ 141
volunteered to point up the company,"
financial emergency,
Nothillg Necklaces
exterior of Village Hall at Neuffer, who says she lives
.
SpraUey
said the. rate boost
Charm Bracelets
cost this sununer if workers on a fixed income and caMot
should be $37 million to $43
proposed
increase.
pay
the
cannot be secured to do the
Monogram Pendan~
million, or about 9.5 percent ,
She and several other older
rather than 25 percent.
~~
.
Bulova Watches
Ohioans spoke out against the
The
death
of
former
·
" The real question is did
Speidel Bracelets
Councilman George Meinhart plan, which would add a 25
they
create that fmanrial
was noted and a com·
&amp;.1
crisis," Spratley said.
mendation to the late Dr. R.
"
J .K. Madan, a financial
E. Boice for services ren·
SUIT FILED
By The Associated Press · analyst and engineer with
dered to the area through the
A suit in the amount of
A new winter storm spread Touche Ross &amp; Co., will
years was approved.
$802.38 has been filed in snow from the Rocky MO\lll· present the consumers'
Attending the meeting were Meigs County common pleas tains into the upper Midwest coimsel position at the rate
Mayor Hoffman , Clerk- court by Ohio Casualty In· today · as
a
colder hearings, Spratley said.
Treasurer Gene Grate, and surance Co. , Athens, and . temperatures advanced from
Madan disagrees with
.
Councilmen Dewey Horton , Wesley Wise, Middleport,
eastern Colorado into parts of Columbus &amp; Southern's
~urt St., Pomeroy
Carl Horky, Charles Mullen , against Stephen L. Randolph,
the Mississippi Valley .
revenue
and
expense
William Walters and Allen Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
Hardest
hit
was . projections · for 1979, which
Lee King.
southwestern
Minnesota form the basis of the
The suit is for property
where 6 to 8 inches of snow company's request, .Spratley
damages as a result of an
blanketed the area, closing said.
accident on Jan. 23, 1977 in
more than 50 .schools by
He lee Is some of the
Gallia County on Jessie Creek
Road.
midafternoon Monday. Eight revenue projeciions are too
inches blanketed Canby and low, and some expense
Marshall , Minn. and wind projections are too high,
gusts of up to 30 mph piled causing the company to
FUNDS COLLECTED
drifts of more than 2 feet on request more than it actually
A total of $1,09l.SO has been
some highways . Four Inches needs, Spratley said.
contributed to the Gifts for
sno'w
coated
the
The consumers' counsel
the Yanks Who Gave of
Minneapolis-51. Paul area, has asked PUCO to require a
"p rogram of the American
snarling even~g rush hour management
audit
of
Legion by Feeney-Bennett
traffic.
·
Columbus
&amp;
Southern
to
Post 128, Middleport.
Similiar
conditions determine if the utility is
Albert Roush was chairmanaged ,
prevailed in South Dakota efficiently
man for the fund raised
where 4inches of snow closed ~ratley. said.
through personal donations
some highways.
and other sources.
Travelers advisories were
hoisted for the Colorado
Springs, Colo., area as the
Hospital News
snow storm moved through
VISIT HERE
eastern Colorado. Some 4 to 6 Veteraas Memorial Hospital
Shawn and Bobby l..&lt;&gt;gan
Admitted
Beverly
inches of snow covered the
are here visiting their grandThompson,
Stewart;
Brady
Denver metropolitan area.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Knapp,
New
Haven;
Millie
The Colorado State Patrol
Logan. The children will be
Price,
Middleport;
Donna
stopped all empty traUers
returned to their mother,
and mobile homes from Sellers, Shade ; Patricia
('vlrs . Skip Wireman at
proceeding ea~ on Interstate Hoffman, Pomeroy.
Douglasville, Ga. in
Discharged Robert
70nesr
Limon, Colo., because
FebruarY.
Manley, Virgie Blake, Mary
of winds up to 45 mph.
Blowing snow also caused Damell, Thelma Garrett.
problems in northeastern
New Mexico.
MORE SURVIVORS
Heavy snow warnings also
Holzer Medical Center
Among the survivors of
Discharges, Jan. 22
Leverett L. Roush, Mid· have been posted for today In
Clara Adams, "Clare AUyn,
dleport, not Usted earlier are ·southern Wisconsin and
northwestern Illinois. ·
, John Banks, Carl Cssto, Mrs.
a granddaughter, Ana P.
· Travelers
advisories MichaeiDonleyandson,Mts.
Roush,
El
Paso,
Tex.,
and
11 you ha ...e an Insurance claim, you alreadv
for example. And we
to help
two step-grandchildren, Tom exterided from the mountains Larry , Dunn and son,
ha\le a problem. At The lnaurance Stpre we
you recei ve a fast, equllable settlement or ·
feel that complex claim• procedu reashould , your claim .
and Amy Everett, Tuppers of northern Ne_w Mexico into Kathleen Edmonds, George
not be an added problem tor you. So we
eastern Montana, over the Henry, Edward Kitchen, Jr,
Plains.
give our customers " follow•through service,''
Plains states from South Margaret Marcum, Cynthia
Drop by and get acquainted with our "crew''.
Because we are independent agents we can
We'll aleer you on a straight cou111e In any
Dakota through the Te•as Moore, Jolu) Morgan, ·Amy
and ' do work with many fine insurers . , , '
lntur&amp;r"!CI problem-and help ball you out In
Panhandle ·and most of Ollie Oliver, Mrs. David
ro01gh wnthtr.
•
like The Contlntntallneurance Companlet,
Oklahoma, and across south- Preston and son, Dana
western Iow.a, western and RAyburn, Lori Rutherford;
SPECIAL MEETING
southern Missouri and north- ·Mrs. Lyle Sheets and ,
A special meeting of the
eastern Minnesota.
daUghter, Morri Sheline,
714 E. MAIN ST .
POMEROY,O.
Southern
Local
Band
E a r Iy
m o r n i n ·g HAzel SMith, Gerald Sparks,
Boosters
will
be
beld
at
7:30
"2·5130 or 992-5 139
temperatures oonged from 14 Lois Spencer, Gamet y Arian
p.m. Wednesday at the high
"YOU DON ' T BUY A POLICY,
at
Grand Forks, N.D. to to 65 Ru!ly Werry, Mrs. To.;
sc..ool. All band boosters are
YOU H!_RE AN AGENT
in
Key Wpst, Fla.
Woodward and son,
urged to attend.

BEAUTIFUL·JEWELRY,
That Says
I
You For
aientine' s
Day

Te• ., storm

. d rng
•
snrea
r

Snow *Oday

JEWELRY STOQE
.

Republicans more seats than temporary fisCal problems.
before on some co!IUllittees, . The _- same _proposal, · by
but keeping the same number comnuttee chal1111811 Myrl H.
on others.
Shoemaker, [J.Bournevtlle,
''It is sort of a compromise also mandates certl!ln fiBcal ,
and I'mnot oompletely happy procedures that would
with it. ButneithetisOiiver," increase the flexibility of
the GOP leader said.
districts to borrow against
The House Finance Com· anticipated tax revenues.
mittee resurries hearings "The newly create4 House
today on a bill making it Public Utilities Committee
illegal for schools . to close hopes to increase legislative
because of lack of funds.
expertise on complicated
The measure repeals the ratemaking policies·of Ohio's
newly created state school public utilities a~ a series of
loan fund , but establisbhes briefings.
Committee chairman
local contingency funds to
help districts which run into Ronald H . James 1 D·
Proctorvtlle, said members
and staff of the state ,pyblic
Utilities Commission will be
lead-off witnesses tonight at a
series of briefings that will
Fourteen defen!lants were cover the next three or four
fined and 11 others forfeited weeks.
Rep. Thomas J. carney, Dbonds in Meigs County Court
Youngstown, chairman pi the
Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles House Energy and Environ·
Knight were Gary D. Evans, , ment Comm\ttee, said his
Racine, Ronald 0 . Francis, psnel will hear a discussion
New Mat~moras, Dana W. on 1977 amendments to the
Clean
Air
Act
Murray , Pomeroy, and U.S.
morning.
·
Wednesday
James R.
Rohrbaugh,
The House Judiciary Com·
Rodney, $15 and costs each,
mittee
caned for oppoSition
speeding; Herald N. Hudnell,
testimony
this afternoon on a
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, right
bill
reinstating
Ohio's death
of way ; loretta G. Vankirk,
penalty.
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, stop
Proponents were heard last
sign ; James A. Laudennilt,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs, 20 week on the proposal to
days confinement, DWI, 20 replace Ohio's capital
days confinement, $150 and punishment la_w . It was
costs, no operator's llcens\!._ declared unconstitutional last
Paul D. Mitchell, Langs- July 3 by the U.S. Supreme
ville, five days confine· Court.
Rep. Terry Tranter, [).
ml'!lt. no operator's license,
Cincinnati,
the bill's chief
$150 and costs and five days
It was designed
sponsor,
said
confinement, DWI; Harvey
to overcome the U.S. court's
R. Leamond·, Racine, $25 and objection th_a t the old law
costs, no operator's license; didn't give enough discretion
Robert DeMoss, Pomeroy, 90 to judges imposing the death
days confinement; assessed sentence.
costs, assault; Jack Mays,
Rt. I, Reedsville, $25 and
costs, stream littering; Dealer attended
Wesley L. Wise, Middleport,
$150 and costs, three days tire conference
confinement,
license
John and MarUyn Fultz of
suspended 30 days, DWI;
Meigs
Tire- Center, Inc., '
Richard K. Stephenson,
Pomeroy,
recently attended a
Gallipolis, $150 and costs,
six-day
Marketing Cen·
three days confinement,
ference
in
Hawaii, sponsored
DWI, $150 and costs, driving
by
the
Dayton
Tire &amp; Rubber
under suspension; Raymond
Company.
Over
600 people
Barber, Rt. I, Coolvllle, $25
attended
the
conference,
and costs, false information .
representing Dayton and
Forfeiting bonds were
Road King customers from
Richard Miller, Belpre,
$30.50, speed;
Charles across the nation. Meigs Tire
'Vaughan, Pomeroy, ·$35.50, Center, Inc. has been a
Dayton and Road King
stop sign; Ronald W. McVetz,
customer
for over six years.
Newport, Johnny J. Jackson,
The
conference
program
Belpre, Jessie Boggs; BidIncluded
speakers
of
national
well, and Elizabeth Massie,
who
shared
their
prominence
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $35.50 each,
on
sales
and
profit
expertise
speeding; Ruilsell Bowers, .
Rt. I, Guysville, $3 •. 50, making ideas, seminars
speeding; Martin McAngus, where distributors exPomeroy, and Gerald Dill, changed information on
Rt. I, Minersv!Ue, $360.50 successful marketing and
each, DWI; Rex L. Roy, promotional programmtng,
Racine, $62.55, speeding; plus informal get·togethers
Kemleth Neigler, Rt. 3, . and island tours for
and
their
Racine, $62.55, reckless distributors
spouses.
operation.

ELBERFELD$

,.

. ·.

e

'(~SPS

145-960)

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 197

•

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at y

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1979

15 CENTS

work
harder
i~:encans
must·
,
..
~to heitt inflation ... . .Carter
\

ByDONALDM. ROTIIBERG
• Associated Press Writer
, WASHINGTON (AP ) President carter is sounding
a keynote of restraint for a
Congress whose leaders
agree with his austerity, but
are already · arguing about
P,roper targets for the budget
cutters.
' " Th~ president charged
liu$iness and labor and the
COngress to work together to
Qeat Inflation ," said House
~aker Thomas P. O'Neill
Ji' ,, . D-Mass. "I will do
Wliatever I can, as speaker,
tO · do what the preside nt
wants."
:Assistant Senate- Majority
1-e~der Alan Cranston was
- nbt so effusive. " I differ with

•

•

the president on the proposal Senate must ratify by a two:
to increase defense spending thirds majority.
by huge sums when we are · With negotiations on the
the strongest nation on treaty In their final stages,
earth," the
California Carter made a strong appeal
·for support of the agreement
Democrat said.
House Majority Leader Jim once it is finalized and sent to
Wright, D-Texas, called car- the Senate, probably early
ter's commitment to fight in· this year.
"I will sign no agreement
nation commendable and
said, " He will have the active which does not enhance our
support of Congress." But na tiona! security," said the
Wright predicted "there may president.
be some disagreements as to ·. Moments later, he added :
where the cuts should come." " I will sign no agreement ·
carter's State of the Union unless our deterrent force
message, delivered to a joint will remain overwhelming."
session of Congr'lSS Tuesday
Addressing congressional
night, dwelt heavily on concern over whether the
Inflation and the strategic United States could rely on
arms limitation treaty with the Soviets to adhere to any
the Soviet Uniori, which the treaty, carter said, "SALT II

will not rely on b·ust. It will
be verifiable."
With its-domestic erpphasis
on austerity, the speech
followed by a day Carter's
budget for 1980, a document

!leview insurance coverage
advised the Bradfords to
filling other vacancies at the
check with local Insurance Meigs County Welfare
agents and get estimates on Department were outline~ in
additional coverage before detaiL
reporting back.
Commissioners decided to
The board agreed to panel contact the Ohio Department
the rear wall in the Common of Administrative Services to
Pleas Courtroom because the establish job openings and to
wan peeled the last few times procted with the necessary
it was painted. It was felt that
testing procedures.
a permanent improvement . Progress of the Multiwas necessary.
Purpose Building project was
Procedures required for discussed. It was reported
hiring a new director and that all the necessary steel
was on the job site and that
.•.
~
erection of the steel would
begin in the near future,
weather permitting.
Bob Bailey, Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
coordinator, revi ewed the
EMS operations as they are
related to the SEOEMS
operations in Meigs Coainty.
Commissioners requested
-..· 'Harofll E. "Hullbiird; preslltent'of the Citizens that
Bailey draw up an
National Bank, Middleport, and Oliver W. aHernate plan that could be
Birckhead, president of the Central put into effect in Meigs
Bancorporation, Inc., today announced plans for County to serve those areas
now being cove. ed by
acquisition of Citizens National Bank by The SEOEMS
should the time
Central Trust Co., N.A., Cincinnati, The Anchor come that the service would
Bank of Central Bancorporation.
cease.
Terms of the proposal, which is subject to
Attending were Richard
Jones,
president, Henry
approval of regulatory authorities and
Wells,
vice
president and J 1m
shareholders of Citizens National Bank, will be
Roush, and Mary Hobstetter,
announced later.
clerk.

, :Insurance coverage on
various buildings at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds
\VaS discussed at Tuesday's
regular meeting of Meigs
Coimty Commissioners.
:: Meeting with the com·
inission were Mr. and Mrs.
Wanace Bradford, president
~n(l secretary of the fair- bOard.
It was decided that several
guildings
were underir{s ured.
Commissioners

Central Trust

buys local bank

In late December, l978, Central Bancorporation
announced plans for Central Trust to acquire the
$25 million First National Bank of Gallipolis. U: S. bond sales
Together, Citizens National Bank and First
N~tioqal Bank of Gallipolis will provide strong near 1978 goal
representation for Central. Bancorj)oration in
December 1978 sales of
Southeastern Ohio.
·
Series
E &amp; H United States
The $1.1 billion Central Trust Co., with 35
Savings Bonds were $37.9
banking locations in the Cincinnati area, is the million . The state attained
second largest· bank in Cincinnati and ,has the 93.3 percent of its 1978 sales
oldest and third largest Trust Department in Ohio. goal December 31, with sales
Central Trust is Central Bancorporation's anchor totaling $48_7.2 million for the
bank and has provided advisory and specialized year.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
services to the holding company's other ban!cs for Meigs
County Volunteer
a- number of years.
Savings Bonds Chairman,
Central Bancorporation is a $2.1 billion bank reported December sales of
holding company headquartered in Cincinnati. Savings Bonds in the county
The corporation has 13 affiliates;.IO Ohio banks, a were $16,778. The county
achieved 69.1 percent of its
IJIOrtgage banking company, a real estate holding amual
sales goal December
· company and a resinurance ·company.
31.

NEW PRESIDENT Fred Crow was elected
presid e nt of the Meigs
County Bar Association
Monday night. Other of·
fleers elected were Judge
John C. Bacon, vice
presidenti Pat O'Brien ,
secreta r y and Uarbara
Knight, treasur er. The
associa tion will ho st a
tcstirnqnial dinner in honor
of Judge Manning Webster,
former president of the
associa~ion, on Saturday,
Feb. 10.

he described as " lean and
austere" and reflecting the
need for ~acr ifi ce "i£ we are
to overcome inflation. ''
Midway through his farst
term in the White House and
following an election in which
inflati on emerged as the
major issue, Carter ca lled on
Congress and the nation to
"change our attitudes as well
as our policies."
"We cannot afford to live
beyond our means. We camot
afford to create programs we
can nelther manage nor
finance, or to waste our
natural resources: and we
can not
tolerate
mismanagement and fraud .
Above all , we must meet the
challenge of inflation as a
united people."
''New Foundation ,' '
emerged as the catch-phrase
(Conti nued on p"ge 14 I

..

...

,.

.~

' '• .

'

(

"'

.

SUPERIOR AWARD - Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District received a Superior
award as part of the Distinctive Service-Goodyear Conservation Awards program at the
Annual Meetin~ of,the Ohio Federation of Soil and Water Conservation Districts held in
Columbus January 16, 17, 18, 1979. Receiving the award is Leota Young, presenUy serving as
office secretary to the Soil and Water Conservation District. District supervisors attending
th e meeting were: Rex Shenefield and Mrs. Shenefield, Roy Miller, and Tom Theiss. Arthur
Brandt, president of Ohio Federation of Soil and Water District is shown with Mrs . Leota
Young, Rt. I, Minersville.

Mace named interim director

During a m eeting in r eplace past-Director Ted
McArthur Monday night. the Turner, Gallipolis, who
21-member Southeast Ohio resigned from that position
Emergency Medical Service on Dec. 28.
[SEOEMS) board employed
The board did not vote
an
interim
exec utiv e Monday night on whether to
director, voted to mcrease recognize Local 589 of the
the pay sca le for paramedics Union
of
Operating
by 25 cents per hour, and Engineers, which won the
contracted with a linn to right to represent the I..&lt;&gt;ga n
negoti ate with Hocking Station in Hocking Co unty by
County personnel with a near unanimous vote of the
regards to a proposed union full and part-time medical
contract.
tcchmcians in an election
Randy Mace, Athens. who conducted by the National
has served as public relation&amp; .. Labor Relations Board.
Board approves
director for SEOEMS, was
During the meeting, the
appointed to ser.ve as interim board hired a Columbus firm,
competency test
Executive Darector of the Cle man s.
Nelson
and
The , Sout~ern Local School seven county system for a Associates. Inc . to negotiate
District meeting in regular pea·iod of 90 ·days.
with the Hocking County
session Monday night apMace will temporarily personnel.
proved a competency type
lest for graduating ·seniors. It
will be administered this
spring .
Purpose is to determin e the
effectiveness of the present
NEW HAVEN - Craft o " Pickets a re in evidence at
education program and to
union members, protestil)g both the main plant entrance
assist the board in deterthe contracting of non-union and construction entrance.
mining fu ture · competency
workers at the Philip Sporn
A sign carried by one of the
policy .
Plant here remained off the pickets bears the message,
The board authorized the
job today.
" Diversified Construction
treasurer to scrure an ad500-600 Company has not signed in
Approximately
vance draw of $30,000 on real
employees of various craft compliance with our conestate tax collections · and
unions working at the plant tract."
approved an agreement with
walked off their jobs Monday
"This 1the coal handling
the Gallia·Ja ckson-Meigs
in a contract dispute with job) does not have anything
Mental Health Ce nter to
Diversified Construction
employ the services of a
Com pany . Eugene Gloss,
speech and hea ring therapist.
plant manager, described the
Barbara Beegle" and Robert
work as a coal handling job.
Roush were named to the
Diversified, low bidder for
substitut e tea chers li st.
the project, is a non-union
Approved as calamity days
SHERIDAN , Ohio (AP) contractor.
were Dec . 11. Jan. 8, 9, 12 and
Authorities say ca rbon
17.
monoxid e p oiso ning
Superintendent Bo b Ord
apparently killed thr ee
was named as board agent to
Kentucky residents and a
receive a nd expend federal
Windy and colder with West Virginia woman whose
funds. Performance bonds snow tonight . low in the bodies were discovered In a
were purchased for the board teens. Cold with snow flurries van parked in this Lawrence
president, David Nease, the Thursday . High in the mid County community.
superintendent a nd the
20s .
The
chan ce
of
The dead were identified as
treasurer,' Linda Spencer.
precipitation is 80 percent Thomas Sawyer, 34, of
The next regular meeting tonight and 50 percent '!burs· Frankfort; Harrison Shield,
will be Feb. 20.
day.
36, and Geraldine Rye, 32,

The Hocking County employees are seeking an increase from $3.25 to $3.47 an
hour, but · one SEOEMS
director has said this is not
the major item in the
proposed agreement.
The eight full-time employees at the statioil o a re
seeking to change their work
schedule from 24 hours on
and 24 off duty to 24 hours on
and 48 off.
The board is not expected
to act on the union proposal
until the consulting firm
finishes their report.
The Columbus firm was·
employed at the rate of $5o
per hour. Their consultations
with the Hocking · County
paramedics is expected to

Workers remain off jobs
to do with their contract,"
Gloss said. He noted that the
pi cketing
workers are
engaged In the building of Oyash precipitator• at the plant
while Diversified is engaged
in installing heaters around
coal conveyor bells and other
work .
There is no indication when
work will resume.

4 bodies found in van

Weather

both of Ashland, and Sarah
Linville, 27, of West Virginia .
The van was found psrked
outside a Sheridan night club
Tuesday morning with its engine still running and its
gasoline tank about a quarter
full . Authorities said Ms. Rye
worked in the club.
The sheriff's office ·said
there was no evidence of foul
play.

take between 10 and 25 hours.
Some board members fear
that recognition of organized
labor within SEOEMS could
spell an end to the financially
burdened system.
The board did authorize a
25 cent per hour increase for
all paramedics throughout
the seven county emergency
serv ice system. The raise will
be retroactive to Jan. I.
It was reported that during
the meeting, between ~.000 ·
and $67,000 was received by
SEOEMS from participating

counties.

'

Financial problems began
to surface as auditors
r ecently reported that the
system's expenditures were
exceeding income.
The auditors said that the
financial
problems
of
SEOEMS, which was formed
as a federally fin anced pilot
project to provide emergency
medica l service to rural
areas, stem partly from the
time it takes for the system to
receive payment for services.

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday:
Fair Friday. Snow or rain
mixed with snow Saturday
and Sunday. High in the
30s. Low In the mid teens to
"mid 20s Friday and in the
20s Saturday and Sunday.

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport emergency
unit answered two calls
Tuesday.
At 12 :23 p.m ., Marion
Francis, 620 Locust St., was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 5:30 p.m.
Douglas Lewis, 701'.! North
Second Ave., was taken to the
local hospital.

Challenge sparked 4-H drive

NOW ...
You can
Roast
Poultry,

Ham,
Roasts!
BIG 8 QT. SIZE

GJ»Ius •••
BAKE rolls, cakes,
breads. Rack lncllud,edl

HOUSEWARES
DEPARTMENT
1ST FLOOR

.

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

AUTOMATIC COOKER

--

•

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

ELBERFELI)S IN POMEROY

'CHECK. CAMP DESIGN - Area 4-H personnel are
_shown-with Bob Evans, Bob Evans Farms checking a
drawing of the new improvements proposed at canter's ·
cave 4-H camp In Jackson County. With Evans are left to

__ _

right, Dan .
, county agricultural agent, Highland
County; Roy M. Kottman, Director, Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service, Columbus; and Charles W. Lifer, State
Leader, 4-H, Columbus.

COLUMBUS - A challenge
produced over $500,000 for 4H in southern Ohio. The
challenge , a $250,000 grant
don ated toward the improvement and expansion or
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp
educational program and
facilities, In Jackson County,
was extended by Bob Evans,
Bob Evans Farms, GaUia
County.
Provisions of the challenge
grant , made to citizens of
Adams, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence and
Meigs co unties, involved
matching the $250,000 grant
within a 12-month period,
which ended December 31,
1978.
" It was a real challenge, u
said Dan Cowdrey , Highland
County Agricultural Agent
and chairman of the Board of
Directors, Canter's Cove 4-H
Camp, Inc . '' But we made it
the hard working,
dedicated people of these six
counties met the challenge by
mid -Dec~mber, 1978, and they arc continuing to work to
raise additional funds for the
total needs of the c~mp," he '

said.
The Canter's Dave 4-H
Camp , Inc. board is made up
of two Ohio Cooperati ve
Extension Service agents and
two trustees from each of the
sax counties. The board
provided
organiza tion a l
leadership and guidance in
the camp improvement
drive, based on the need as
expressed by the people of the
six counties . Canter 's Cave 4~
H Camp facilities have been
in use 25 years . The need for a
new lodge to replace the old
bam that has served as a
summer
dining'
and
recreational area was the
first priority.
Bob Evans' challenge was
just the spark needed to get
the six-co unty, citizen force
moving to raise $571,000, at
last count. Evans, who feels
4-H is ·one of the greatest
youth organizations in the
nation, has been a continuous
supporter of the 4-H program.
Members of 4-H clubs, 4·H
advisors,
4-H
a lumni ,
business . communities and
others promoted and devised
ca mpaigns for raising the

matching funds. Efforts
included such activities as
bake sales, car washes,
radiothons, news coverage
and various other fund
raising projects throughout
the year.
The Ohio State Uhiversity
Development Fund assisted
with overan fund raising
efforts and many contributions came Into The Ohio
State University Development Fund earmarked for the
Canter's Cave · 4-H Camp
Improvement.
Roy M. Kottman, director,
Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service, worked closely with
Canter's Cave 4·H Camp
Board members and The
Ohio State University,
providing leadership and
organizational guidance
where needed. Because of the
plaMed improvements to the
Canter's Cave 4·H Camp,
Kottman Is convinced that
many more youth will be
encouraged to join 4-H and
ta ke advantage of such
educational programs.
"The youths" of our state
are 9ur g r~atest resource,"

'r

said Kottman, who is also
Dean of the College of·
Agriculture and Home
Economics . "They must
receive
an
adequate
education to develop their
great est potential," he said.
"A key psrt of this education
is an understanding of the
environment and man's
relationship with it. One of
the best ways to teach this is
through organized outdoor
education programs a nd
facilities, which are limited
in southeast Ohio," Kottman
said.
The Canter's Cave area is a
unique site that lends itself to
development of an out·
standing outdoor laboratory.
Already being used by
thousands of youths and
adults annually, the Improved fa cilities and exponded edura,tional activities
will add additional thousands
of youths to tWs number each
year.
Due to its location, six
miles North ol Jackson off
State Route 35, the Canter's
Cave area has 60 acres of
(Continued on page 14)
.i

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