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1

D~ -The Sunday Timeh~entinel, Sunday , Jan. 28. 1979

- ~ancer

link sought
~OJJ H ' f~1nulics .

Ry TERRY K!NNF.Y
Assol·iatr&lt;l Prt•ss Wri k r

C' INC INNAT I ! API
Michcu:l Southerland is a promi sing s wimmer e~ t t\rvid(J

Juni or Hi gh in Miami. Pia .
HL•'s also a mcmbc1· uf a
··,·;mcl'r family .·'
Our brother clit•d from a
fnrrn of blood Ci: ltleer when he

" I don't n•mt•mbl•r mtwh
;~bout the fir~t up&lt;•ro:ttiun ."
Micha t• l sa id frum hi s

hospital l&gt;t•d friday . " I W8S
only four - almost fi\' l' .
" I used to lcllnw teat"hers I
twd c·anct·r and i hey'd say,

wa ~

four yem·s old, another

·011 . you lliiOI' little boy .' J'tl
snnnker 'ern . 1 thought it wa s
a good ide~1 at the time ."

lost

&lt;t

kg to txmc c:meer .

Two week:;: agu ht• began lu

ft•t.•l sharp pains in hi s l('gs
Hl'"!'arclwr·s hopt&gt; Mich&lt;tl-1
·
t:mt pi'O\' I(k the ilnsw pr lo a a nd hi ps, the rirst r cocpuzzling gt.'tw ti e link lhat t:lltT CIIlt'C of ominous sympmay tr igg('r the diSI.'flSI.' in toms in seven years. Hl•'!l

••••

•••••••••••••••••••••••

•••

CEstate:

~al ~

•

••

Today :

•••

By

Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

9

••
•

•e FINANCING INCOME-PROPERTY
II you ar e co n!empl al in g

t the purchase of income

pr oper t y. the ques ti on of
how large a mortgage loan
• y ou shou ld have will un • doubtedly arise. T hose w ho
• spec1ali1e in this ty pe of
tit real estate , al most to a
• mi"lll. go on the phi losophy
• lh .ll
tncome property
• shoul d be purch{1s ed wi th
as large a m or tgage as
• pc~sihle -- prov id ing the
• prCJp~ r l y yie lds eno ugh net
• in\.:Of"!,e to m~e t m or1grtge
•

· e payn1enls.
•
•

Fr om the standpoint o f
inves l men t analy sis, if ca n
be shown that this policy
• usua lly qive·s the grea tes t
• capital gain, !he largest
• a mo un t o f ta)( · frec income.
• and the largest percentage
e of investment r eturn

r----------~--------------1

In no ot her investm ent do
you have th e opportunity to
u se l ev erage (a s mall
percent age of you r money
to a grea l percentage of
nnother 'sl lik e you do in
real es ta te .' So, the la rg er
m ort gage loan . the fu rther
y ou r own m oney w ill go.

tUJd('l'l-!11 surgt'Q' itgmn Tut ·s~
dil~'.

··Tilt' tllllltll' has worn

Med ica ti,on

helps ,

but

Mi('hael must sleep almost
' itling up. He'd rather be
~ witnmin g

t han

Stn . Edw;.~ rd Kenncdv's son ,

Teddy, when lioth Just a leg

••••
e•

"He gets awful mad when I
him " swimmin g,
Michael said. "But never,
never wrestle with him. He's
Iough. And he's a pretty good
javeli n thrower with his crutc hc~. "

The Suutherlands are part
of
the National Cancer In·
•
stitute's
continuing federal
•
e study of cancer families. A
•
National Institute of Health
•
study published ·last week
said the family "has.a geneti c
predisos ition to ca nce r ,
possibly reinforced by en·

•

•
11 th er e is any thing we
cnn do to hf'lp y ou in th e •
l if' ld of r r.11 estate pl c;t SC •
phone or drop in
at •

•

LEA DINGHAM
REAL •
ESTA TE , 511 Seco nd Av r: .,
Ga ll i pol is. Phone 446 -7699
W~ ' rc here to hel p .

••
•

Wants old buildings saved
Gallipolis, Ohio
Jan. 22, 1979

fGtcing

another round of surgery.
"Wt• really take it seriutL•·
ly , t•spt•cially the t·oaches ,"
s; lid Michael, who has the rib·
Uorts to prove it. '· J shavr til}'
lt•gs ami my arms, and my
mother gavP me a haircnll.he
day I got my I :H timing" in
the 1110-yard backstroke.
Michael's older brother·,
Steve, 18, was befriended by

beGt t

•••

I
I
I
I

vironmenl. ' '

That study traced 16.cases
of cancer in the Southerland
fa mily, including the boy'
father, Ray, who had a brain
t wnor removed three years
GI~ U .

······ ········~············

To All interested Citizens of Gallipolis:
Last Sunday, Jan . 21, it was my pleasure to present a
lecture to the Gallia County Historical Society. During the
business session we heard from our President, M&lt;1j . Gen .
George Bush about the efforts of certain members of the
society trying to have certain areas of old buildings in our city
placed in the National Archives of historica l places.
Well, here I am beating my gwns again \0 the general
public to help me in lite fight to save Washington School No. 2
the old "Central" building from destruction.
'
for 35 years that I know this building has been slowly
crumbling and ' now we were asked rece ntly to have it
demolished and to approve a levy to replace it.
.
I believe this building could still be restored and be an
asset to our community. Sometimes, !.wonder if it received
the proper treatment it should have had over these last 35
years .
I will never support a levy lor the destruction if this grand
old school building that has seen more tha n 50,000 students
pass through rts doors.
When and if our "little" people can see th' ir way clear to
support such a levy I might then fall in line providing
"Central" is not demolished.
There has also been talk of tearing down the old Academy
High School if such a levy is passed. It is time we did more
maintenance work on these grand old buildings instead of
asking the already tax burdened people for money to repiace
them .
•
I hope many of you fine citizens of the Gallipolis City
School district feels the same as I do and that you will think
long and hard about anotMr levy lor building purposes before
you mark your ballot.
· ··
You will be offered all kinds of excuses why this money is
needed so think long and hard.
I hope you citizens who love these grand old buildings will
also light to save them. I don't mind seeing a modern ugly
school building erected when we think we can afford it but let's
save these grand old buildings that have meant so much to the
building of our education.
·
May I hear from you. - Frank Hill, Box 147 'Gallipolis
Ohio.

·

·

'

Monday, January 29 thm

;

Saturday, Februacy 3
t'

The Holidays

~I

';I

• 'i

Dock&amp;Linda
and Their
6 Pi~ece Band

J

:1

li
~

.j

1

~
d ·,.:'
~

i
i

ONE OF THE ALL TIME FAVORITES
AT THE---- ·

UPPER DECK
AT THE PT. PLEASANT INN

The E11tertainment mul Dilling
Spot of th e Areu

'

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

Crow's Family
Restatirant
PoMeroy. Ohio

A 64 oz. Bottle of RC with the
purchase of any bucket, barrel
or family valu pak.

GREAT SERVICE! GREAT CHICKEN!

• •
•
VIctim
m

"wild animal."

TRY OUR ALL NEW
ICroMM'!'oJ
DRIVE THRU WINDOW .....,._.LII ~""'
NOWOPEN
~-

training in one of 13
specialties, T·Sg t. Orene
Gabbard,
Air
force
'Recruit er announ·c ed here
today.
Authorized on a month-bymon.th basis, some 850
guaranteed . assignments in
more than 30 states are on the
January listitig. They will be
available on " fir.t come,
first serve basis until all
ass ignm ent s have been
se l e cted .
However,
Recruiting Service officials
said, all specialties are not
available at each base. ,....
The new option allows a

They turned to metabolic
therapy, whleb includ~:&lt;l.the
use of Laetrile, vitamin
supplements and enzyme
enemas, and eventually came
into
conflict
wtth
Massachusetts autho.ritles.
The Centro Medico del Mar
is rnn by a Harvard-educated
physician , Dr. Ernesto
Contreras, who has testified
on behalf of the Greens.
By coming to the clinic,
Massachusetts
authorities
say, the Greens may have

,_

,

BEAUTIFUL!
usEFUL!

' '·'

Meeting in"regular session
Saturday, Eastern's Local
Board of Education real·
firmed its position relAtive to
the use of school buildings
on Wednesday. evening.
·
evening.
According to the position,
the district will continue to
reserve Wednesday evenings
for church nights. No student
activities will be scbeduied on
Wednesday nights unless
there are eKceptionally
unusual cirewnstances.
The board authorized its
treasurer to obtain an ad·
vance draw on local tax
revenue to meet the January
payroll and approved the
transfer of $8,000 from the
general fund to the lunch
room account.
A resolution supporting the
observance of Right to Read
Week, Feb. ll-17, was approved.
.
Supt. Clark Lees was ad·
vised to contact the state
Mepartment of education
concerning
recent
correspondence on the
learning
disabiliti es
program.
The district had received
approval to move the
elementary special education
classes to another location in
the Otester building.

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 200

700 bodies await burial
BOSTON (AP) - More than 700bodies are lying in
temporary morgues awaiting burial as an tllklay strike
by grave-&lt;iiggers at 20 Roman Calitolic cemeteries
continues .
·
Weekend negotiations - the first direct talks in
ahnoat a month - Produced progress but no solution a
wrion representative said. Another meeting could~ a
Will!~ off, said Mark Kaplan, attorney lor the 90member Cemetery and Greenhouse Workers Local

fOR tME

HOME

1285.

Abetting
trial resumes
'

KNEE HOLE • ROLL TOPS • SECRETARY •
WALNUT - PINE • OAK • CHERRY

. PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) - After a day off
Sunday, the trial of two per'!'lns on charges of helping
convicted p&lt;&gt;rnographer Mrchael Thevis escape an
Indiana jail was to reswne today.
· U. S. District Judge William O'Kelley spent the
weekend deciding whether to order Thevis ' father to
testify . George Thevis, 68, refused to testify on Friday,
even after he was offered immunity from prosecution .

Early American -Modern- Traditional
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, THIRD FLOOR

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

1978 CHEV. MALIBU 2 DR.
Sif'r r fl gold f ini sh with mn l c hing
c lot h interior . Equipped with power
st f'c r in g, power brak es. ai r cond i
li on~ n g, rear electr ic defr oster , and
AM r &lt;'! dio. GM f nctory o ffi c i al 's
Hu tomabil e.

4695

1978 CHEVROLET MONTE

WI"LUI

Pl atinum ex ter io r with beautiful
carmine cloth inter ior . Loaded with
option s like ai r condi tion ing . p ower
windows, power door locks, c rui se
control. tilt wheel, AM· FM 8 tra c k
ster eo. Ratl ye whCe ls. Thi s stunn ing
coupe is su per sharp inside and out .
Only 12,080 mHes .

•5995

1978 BUICK RIVIERA

1978 CAMARO
Th is sports model is sOr e to c atch
your a ttent io n . C~rm ine ex terior
nnd black buc ke t seats with air con
dit ioning, nutomatic tra nsmissi on,
AM·FM r adio nn d sport styled
wh ee ls. Priced t o se ll .
1

5995

1978 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
T he Sporty on e from Pontiac .
M edium blue finish with matc hing
c l oth
bucket
sea t s.
c u s tom
Automatic tran smission, V -6 eng ine,
power steering , AM-FM 8 track
stereo, rear window defroster and
dual spOrt mirror.s .
PRICED TO SELL

CHEV. EL CAMINO
Ttfi s tru ck ver sion i s c&gt;&lt;tra c l ean in
~ic l r
c1 nr1 out . Equipped with
nutomatic tr rt n smi ssion , p ower
.:;tcr rin g, power brakes, nnd Rr.lly c
wh e&lt;'ls with r adia l tires.
Priced to Sell.

. '4595

l.:ocn l exec utive's c M . Finished in
firethorn re d with a white landau
top. Options include AM ·FM in dash
CB rad·io , power seat s, power win dows, crui se cont rol, automnt ic ai r
condit ioning, ' c hrome wheels, · and
mu c h
more.
Thi s
st unning
. automobile i s on display

1977 V.W. SCIROCCO
T his 2 Dr . model is champag ne outside with con tr asting vinyl buck e t
sea t s. Equipped with d speed , nir
c.ond . and A M ·FM r adio . Priced il f

1

5495

'

Teachers ratify contract
MANSFIELD, Ohio I AP) -A threatened strike by
teachers in the Ontario School District near Mansfield
was averted late Sunday with the ratification of a new
two-year contract .
Members of Ohio Federation of Teachers Local
1703 approved the pact only hours before lite midnight
strike deadline they had set. The Ontario Board of
Education met soon afterwards to ratify the
agreement.

1978 TRANS AM
alt. Air ' conditioning, c ruise control.
t ilt w heel, AM · F M 8 track . Ra ll ye 11
wh ee ls an d raised white letter tires.
T hi s new Bonnevill e trade is a loca l l y owned automobile. Only 4,197 low,
loW m iles.
NOW

Thi s stunn ing intermediate has it
all. Beauti ful Sa ffron exterior with a
bu c kskin landau top and mat c hing
60,40 sea ting . Equ ipped with air con
ditionin g, power windoWs, poWer
door locks , ti lt w heel, c ruise control,
AM ·FM cassette stereo system , and
ch rome styled w.hee l s.

Six killed
highways
By The Associated Pr~ss
At least six persons, in·
eluding two pedestrians,
were killed in traffic ac·
cidents over the weekend,
according to the state High·
way Patrol.
The patrol identified the
two pedestrians as a Reading
woman, killed on a Cincinn ati
street , and a Vermilion
youth, struck by a car in that
city.
. .
'
.
The patrol counts
traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. friday
until midnight Sunday .
The dead :
Sunday
CINCINNATI - Janet R.
Clemons, 45, Reading , a
pedestrian struck by a car on
Reading Road, in Cincinnati.
Saturdav
WARREN - J effrey P.
Rand, 23, Youngstown, in a
single-Car crash on Ohio 82 in
Warren.
VERMILION - Clyde
Smallwood, 15, of Vermilion,
a pedestrian struck by a car .
McARTHUR - Clyde V.
Harvey , Jr., 22, Radcliff,
killed in a two-ca r accident on
snow-covered Ohio 160, three
miles south of Ohio 324 in
Vinton County .
HAMILTON - Roscoe
Elam, 42 , Gratis, in a two-car
collision on Ohio 122, .2 rriiles
south of the Preble County
line in Butler County.
Friday
COLUMBUS - Esther R.
Kneisley, 34, Washington
Court House, in a two-car
collision on U.S. 62 at Stahl
Road in F ranklin County.

'
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1979

AREA BLANKETED AGAIN - The Big Bend area was again
blanketed in snow oyer the weekend as the approximate three inches of

15 CENTS

snow fell Saturday· night and early Sunday morning. Eastern Local
Sc hools were closed today and most highways were slippery and
dangerous.

U. S. welcomes China leader
WIISHI NG TON (AP ) President Q_arter, with all the
pomp and spl endor his
government could muster ,

welcomed Vice Premier Teng
Hsaio-ping to th e Whit e
House today to begin talks on
bolstering the new rel ation·
ship betwe en the United
States and China.
The Otinese leader 's long
black limousine roll ed to a
stop bel&lt;&gt;re the South Portico
of the White House at 10 a.m .
to a fanfare from Army
trumpets. Teng and his wife,
Cho Lin, got out and were met
by President and Mrs.
Carter.
Teng re spond ed to the
crowd's applause by ap· .
plau ding back . Th en he
followed Carter down a short
rece iving line that included

Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance, Vice President Walter
Mondale and nation al
security adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski.

The president and the vice
premier and their wives

mounted a platform and
stood at attention as the U. S.
Army band played the two
co untries' national anthems
and cannons in the distance
fired a 19-gun salute, th e
tribute accorded to a head of
gov ernment .

Navy , Air Force and Marine
Co rps . To the . side~ were the
invited spectators, waving
small Chin ese and American
flags.
Several h~ndred yards to
the so uth , outside th e
wrought iron fence, some
demori strators we r e sta n-

ding, their banners barely
readable to anyone without
field glasses. Most were in
C'hinese . On e, in English, said
"Taiwan for the Taiwanese."
The two Jea!lers had two
The ceremony was wit- private meetings on thei r
nes sed by about 1,000 schedule today, their first
report ers and guests inside personal en counter.
Carter, his aides said,
the White House grounds and
to
be
slow
untold millions on television planned
and methodical in six
around the world.
In front of Teng were hours of talks sch eduled with
arrayed
honor g uard s the
74 -year·old
Teng,
r eprsese nting the Army , recogni zing differences that

Thi s 11:1 ton tru c k is equipped with an
eco nomi c al 6·engin e, standard
transmission. lorig wide bed, r ear
step bumper , and r ear sliding glass.
Only 24,043 m iles.

'3795''

STATIQNWAGON
Finished in desert gold with mat ching vinyl interior. This wagon is
equipped with an economical Slant 6
engine. automatic transmission ,
power steering , AM radio, and lug gage rack. Pl enty of
&amp;

economv here .

- "N!W OFFICE- The Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy will soon have a new office
being built by putting a wall in the corridor of the third floor . The new office will hold lour
deskB for the county court examiners office personnel. Shown working on lite wall is Da ;id
Craig from Dexter. Craig Is an employee for the County Commissioner.

inevitably will exist between
a capita list society and a

Heavy dam ages were incurred ea rl y Saturd ay
morn ing when a car rammed
through the home of Mrs.
Howard Largent , Syracuse.
,According to Sy rac use
police chief Milton Varian
Eddie R. SMith, IB, Syracuse,
was traveling west on SR 124
at an apparently high rate of .
speed when he lost control.
His ·vehicl e ran off the highway, struck a tree then
rammed into the front of the

Largent home. The car came
to a rest in the living room.
Mrs. Largent was in bed at
the time of the accident . The
Smi th
vehicle
was
demolished. Damages were
set at $4, 000 to the home.
Smith, who did not claim
injury, was cited to Mayor
Eber Pickens' co urt lor
unsa fe operation of a motor

vehicl e. Other charges are
pending.
Assisting Chief Varian with
the investigation were Sheriff

deputies Robert Beegle and
Randy forbes. The Syracuse
fire Department was also
present. Meanwhile! Meigs

co unty sheriff's department
investigated two accidents
over' the weekend. No personal injuries were r eported .

Saturday at 7:25 p.m. in the
village of Racin e, Brady
Huffman, Jr ., 20, Racine, was
traveling west on Rt. 124
when hi s car slid off the high·
way due to icy road conditions. It •truck a parked

Loss was expected to run
into several thousands of
dollars in a fire early Sunday
morning which . caused ex·
tensive damage to the contents of the Wilkinson Sales
and Service Store, Locust and
Beech Streets, Middleport.
According to Bob Byer,
ass!sla nt
fire
chief,
tremendous heat buildup and
heavy smoke damaged or
de stroyed the business's
equipment including chain
saws, lawn mowers and other
small tools.
Middleport's volunteer fire
department was called at
I :21 a. m. Sunday. The fire,
believed to have .been caused
by 'faulty wiring, was con·
tained to the showroom floor
area.
The establishment is
operated by William Harris
of Middleport. The building is
owned by Jay HJlll , Rt. I,
Oteshire.
fifteen men responded .
The fire is still under in·
vestigation.

Meanwhile, the emergency
unit of th e Middleport fir e
Department put in 'a busy
weekend .
At II :01 p. m. Saturday the
sq uad went to Route 2,
Pomeroy, for Cindy King who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
·
Sunday at 12:05 p. m., the

EXTENDED FORECAST
W-ed nes day through
Friday: Cold throughout
the period with ·snow
llurries possible each day.
High in the 20s. Low 51o 15.

unit went to 981 Hysell St. for
Helen Carpenter who wa s
also taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 1:33 a. m. Monday the
squad went to Hysell Run lor
Harold Han son who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 3: 12 a. m.
Monday the unit went to
Route 124 for Charles Burt
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

·'

SQUAll CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Mulberry
Heights at 10:25 p. m.
Sa turday ·ror Mrs. Paul
L&lt;&gt;w tonight in the mid to Eiching er who was taken to
upper 2ps. Cloudy Tuesday Holzer · Medical Center. At
with light snow poss ibly 5:44 a. m. Sunday the squad
developing by afternoon or was called to Mechanic St. for
evening .
Chance
of Pa~la Dercnberger who was
pre cipitation 40 percent taken to Veterans Memorial
tonight, 50 percent Tuesday. Hospttai.·

Weather

eight

days,

leaving

Washi ngton Thurs day for
Atlant a . He will also visit

Marxist nation, between a
techn ologically advanced Houston and Seattle.
soc iety and on e lagg in g
After arrivin 5 Sunday,
behind in such ar eas.
Teng and the top nrembers of
The president will con· his entourage dined privately
centrate on issues likely to at the home of Zbigmew
produ ce agreement s fu r · Brzez inski. t he president's
thering American security nationa l sec urity advi ser. An
and economic interests while aide said th ey dined in·
helping China achieve Teng's formall y on roast beef served
goal of be coming a modern , by Brzezinsky's children.
industrialized society by the
On a global scale. ad·
21st Cent ury.
min istrati on officia ls exTonight , Teng will be pected Tcng and Ca rt er to
Ca rter's guest at a White exchange views on a va riety ,
House dinner, also attended of subj ects, ranging from
by former President Richard U .S .-Sovict r elat ions to
M. NNixon, then will go to the events in Korea and InKennedy Ce nter · for a dochina .
program put on by several
But the ad ies , who
American entertainers. Teng requested anonymity, said
will tie in the United States they expect the president to
t ry to ensure the discussions
ce nt er on iss ues wh e re
agre ement is possi bl e,
startin g with educati ona l,

House damage set at $4,000

Smoke damages ·equipment

•

1977 .G.M.C.

BUICK
PONTIAC

enttne

on Ohio

•6295

4695

Th e G.M . success car. F inished in
platinum with black 60 · 40 viny l in·
te rl or and a matching padded ia n ·
dau top. A i r conditioned , tilt wh e?e l,
radio, ar1d Rally e I I wh ee l s. See it
now .

WACO, Texas (AP) -A 4-year-old boy playing
near an aircraft hangar just outside the city limits fell
into a pit filled with paint..-emoving acid l!,nd drowned,
police said.
Allen Dale Wrenn Jr. and a 3-year-old playmate
wandered away from Wrenn 's home about a quarter
mile from the pit shortly before 3 p.m. Sunday. The
younger boy returned home and told his mother that
Allen had fallen into some water ,' police said.

Fi nis hed in Mayan red with white
buc ket sea ts. · This T r ans Am h as it

1

1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

Boy drowns in acid pit

PON.TI~C

Smith Buick - Pontiac

at y

Special committee meeting
dates were announced and
include: transportation
committee, Feb. B; personnel
committee, Feb. 12; finance
comm itt ee,
Feb.
19;
buildings and grounds , feb .
20. The next regular meeting
was set for feb . 27.
The board discussed a
read·a·thon contest and will
authorize each school head to
insure that students are being
required to read ·. at their
appropriate reading level for
the period of the contest .
Supt . Lees was authorized
to contact a local repairman
concerning necessary work
on the sewage treatment .
system at the high school.
Approval was giv en to
surv ey parents in the Ar·
baugh Addition concerning
the possibility of pla cing a
bus shelter in that area.
The board discus sed
behavior of some students
Permission was given for and adults at varsity athletic
Ed Cromley to participate in contests. It was noted that
a program of partial reim· some fans are active in a n
bursement lor graduate work unsportsmanlike manner. ·
Supt. Lees was named to
to be taken at an approved
contact
the local Teachers
university.
Association
regarding
Rob ert Roush, Barbara
negotiations
lor
the
coming
Beegle and Marsha Coultrip
year.
The
board
also
agreed
were added to the substitute
to
inve~i ig Gtte costs on repair
teachers list.
of the school tractor.

-.---Nationwise·---~

/

Your Quality Used Car
Dealership ....

•

Supt." Lees will advise the
state that the board has
decided to proceed with
moving the 'classes to a room
on the second Ooor of the
Otester building. The library
will then be moved to a room
on the lower level.
Approval was given for the
senior class trip to Florida .
April 22-27 and calamity days
were approved fqr January 8,
9, 10, II, 12, 17 and 25. The
board approved the purchase
of,performance bonds lor the
board president, treasurer
and local superintendent.
Bonds will be secured
through the services of the
Ohio School Boards Assn. and
the Franklin Insurance Co.
Action to secure bonds was
taken in compliance with a
new state requirement in the
area of keeping financial
ex penditures within th e
boundaries of ava ilabl e
resources .

'

G\~tfi

jeoparruzed liteir court appeals and could face con·
tempt or kidnap charges.
"It's Chad's life that's at
stake," said Green, 11 that's
all that matters."

1

(USPS 145-960)

•

Board ·reaffirms
building policy

'

Mexico
By BILL STRONG
Associated Press Writer
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) Gerald and Diana Green have
. coine to a dusty border town
seeking a lasting cancer cure
for their oon, Chad.
Far from the cold New
England winter, the.Scituate,
Mass., couple lind litem,
selves in a climate that is not
only warmer but more
receptive to their way of
thinking.
At the Centro Medico del
Mar, on the outskirts of this
coastal town, the Greens will
be able to give their 3-year·
old boy Laetrile in the hope
that it will cure his leukemia.
Laetrile is a trademark of a
substance derived from the
pits of apricots and peaches
and bitter almonds.
In Massachusetts earlier
this week, Plymouth Superior
Court Judge Guy Volterra
ordered the couple to stop
giving the substance to the
boy.
"We could stay home and
watch out son suffer in pain,
or we could come here and
give him a chance the
Massachusetts courts cruelly
denied him," Mrs. Green said·
Friday.
T~e Greens originally
stopped Otad's chemother·
apy in november 1977, saying
the drugs turned him .into a

guaranteed

e

•

Dear Editor :
Many of us are quick to criticize our local law officials
when problems are not handled as we think they should be, or
if problems are solved too slowly to suit us . This is not a letter
of criticism, but one of praise and thankfulness. Last Friday,
January 19, one of Gallia County's local school buses in the
Kyger·Creek area came all too c)ose to being the victim of a
faulty railroad crossing signal at Addison. The bus was loaded
as it was in route to KvgerCreek High School at the time.
Upon contacting our local sheriff's department it was only
a matter of minutes before we were told litat the proper
rarlroad olltctals had been notified.
A couple-of hours later we were notified that the faulty
signal had indeed been repaired, possibly the quick response
from the sheriff's department might have saved a very serious
accident as many of lite local residents depend entirely upon
those signals.
Thanks again, to Sheriff James Montgomery and his staff.
- Mrs. Larry Sheets, Mrs. Maurice Harbour.

LeUkemia

for

person to select a base from a material fa c ilities
lb1 of more than 50 before specialists.
en listment. · Under this
for more Information on
program the individual 'sfirst this program and other Air
base of assignment is Force opportunities, contact
gua ranteed .upon successful Sergeant Gabbard at 221 N.
completion of six-weeks basic Columhs Rd., Athens, O)lici
training and spec ialty 45701 or call 593&lt;i722 collect.
training, if the job requires
attenda,nce at a technical
CLASSES OFFERED
training school.
POMEROY HyperThe specialties avBilable
under the option this month tension classes, high blood
arc ; outside wire and a n- pressure, will be held
tenna maintenance repair- beginning Monday, Jan.'29 in
man , t elephone switching the conference room at
eq uipm ent repairman, Veterans Memorial Hospital
aerospace ground equipment from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p,m.
Other classes will be held
mechanic, corrosion control,
munitions systems, aircraft on feb . 5 and Feb. 12, from 6
armame nt systems, air to 8 p.m. at the hospital. The
passenger, cargo, food classes are being sponsored
services, administrative, fire by the Meigs County Health
protection, sec urit_v •. and Department.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy-

Appreciates quick a&lt;;tion

OPENING

Force

•

option available

litan 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor I
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may I
be · withheld upon publication. However, on request, I
t'OMEROY ·- II new base
names will be disclosed. Leners should be in good taste, I of r hoice enlistment option is
addressing issues, not personalities.
I no w ava ilable to qualifi ed
I young men and women inI terested in joining the Air

Rut if theire 8ble to get it 8ll,
that \\o'111lld rPlievt.• the pain.''

e

•
•

aw:1y

tlw bmw and is pushing 11n his
~ p ine a 1 curd ,"
said hi s
mother , 'J;me · Suutherlund .
" He's in et grat t.lt•al of pain .

five yeR rs ago.

•

t New

Letters of opiniun are Wt'lcomed. They should be le st~

~

truck owned by Charle s
Manuel, Rt. 2, Ractne. There
was moderate damage to
both vehicles.
Sunday at 3: 15 p.m. on
Maw St reet in Rutland ,
Charlott e E. Wright , Rt . I,
Rutland , was traveling south
on County Road 3. Wright
advised her car struck a
large hole in the road. Wh en
she applied the brakes, the
vehicle slid into a northbound
vehicle driven by Paul D.
Clay, Rutland.
There was mod erat e
damage to the Wright car and
severe to the Clay vehicle. No
tica tions were iss ued as t he

result of either of the ac·
cidents.
flrobe Vandalism
Friday, deputies r eceived a

complaint from Granvill e
Reeves, Rt. 2, Albany, th at
someone had broken the lock
on hi s outs id e gaso lin e
storage tank and had tak en
some gasoline.
Zelia Coppic, Middleport,
report ed Sunday she had
gone to a rental near Bald
Knobs, and found tbat
someone had broken the lock
from the cover on a large LP
bottle gas tank and turned a
valve. She also reported a
line leading from the tank to
the regulator had been turned
allowing approximately 200
ga llons of gas to escape.
Henry Hensley, Rt. I, Long
Bottom , reported Sunday that
between 6:30 p.m. and 9:30
p.m. friday someone kicked
in lhe right rear fender of hi s
car parked at the intersection
of Rt. 7 and 681.
Damage as set at $147.56.
All incidents are under in·
vesligation.

c ultu ra l and scienti fic excha n ges, then mov ing to

trade and transport ation
matters.

The sole agreement the
pr esident and vice prem ier'

are expected to sign during
the visit is an umbrella pact
aUowing a variety of ex1Continued un page

10 1

Permit
hearing
slated
Middleport Mayor fred
Hofhnan issued a reminder t o
lnter csted village residents
that a public hearing will be
held Tuesday, Jan. 30 by the
Ohio Depa rtment of Liquor
Control for a new C-1 permit
for Tru Bru , In c. doing
busmess as, Save Mart, 497
Locust St., Middleport.
The hearing is slated at 9
a.m. on th e third Ooo r jury
room of the Meigs Co unty
Courthouse.
The issuance of the permit
was objected to by Village
Council because or the short
distance between the Oturch
of the Nazarene and the
proposed carry-&lt;&gt;ut.
Ahearing was requested by
the Village Council and the
Churcti of the Naz arene.
Charles Mull~n and William
Walters will be representing
Village Council at the
hearing.
Any interosted residents
are urged to attend.

�'•

2-Tl1e Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Jan . 29, 1979

AIN'T if A. ~J\ME
HE CAMT 61'1!:
You T~E SAME
A.?~RANCE ...f

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Wahama upsets Meigs in overtime

•

COMMENTARY

BY GARY CLARK

Donald F. Graff

Making new oil from old

'·

Inflation, Chinese-style

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
1/JrsrOt two r~latecJ columns}

By Don Graff

WASHINGTON (NEA) · When It comes out of the
ground. ' 'old ml" looks, smells and feels just like "new
011 .. In fa ct, the two types of crude petroleum are Identical
m every respect except one - pr1ce
TQat sole distmctwn IS a cructal one, however, because 1t
has produced what aides to one member of Congress
descnbe as ·widespread criminal actlvtties and conspiraCies by numerous 01! compam es designed to boost crude ml
pnces ..
.
Under an elaborate federal price control system established In 1973 to provide mcent1yes for mcreased explora·
liOn , most of the crude oil produced m th1s country falls
mto two ca tegones
,
• "Old o1l," from wells m operation m 1972 or before. It
currently sells for a maximum of about $5.55 per harrel
• ' New 01l ," from wells that began flowmg after 1972 or
productiOn from old wells in excess of 1972 levels. Its
current ce1lmg price 1s about $12.35 per barrel.
Because the two types are physically mdislmgUishable,
the Department of Energy (DoE) reqUires that sellers,
midd lemen (also called resellers) and buyers certify the
category to wh1ch their oil belongs.
But as many as 250,000 to 300,000 barrels of " old oil" have
va mshed dally m some recent years, apparently trans- '

It 's the same old story.
Greece Portugal Atlantic City, China. No sooner does
word get'around about a travel bargain than the crowds
show up and pnces shoot up.
Judgmg from current reports out of China, the budget
traveler who hasn't yet visited that country has already
miSsed the good old days. The minimum price of
restaurant meals lor foreigners has doubled to more than
$6. A gallon of gas has tnpled to some $3 . The cost of
personal serviCes such as hairdressing has doubled and
more.
Does an itinerary caD for hops between elites by
domestic Chmese airlines? Be prepared for fares compa·
rable to the standards of the internatiOnal carriers.
And 1f services of an interpreter are required, the cost
has gone up almost seven times since the new year - to
$350 a month, more than the salary of Peking's top leaders
and almost 10 times the monthly Income of an average
Chmese worker.
It certainly sounds like mflation - and feels like it to
foreign v1sttors , particularly America!IS, who have plenty
of experience with same at home. What makes this
Chmese·style inflatiOn different, however, IS that 11 doesn't
apply to Chinese
Pnces charged foreigners have been raised arbitrarily
as a matter of political and economic policy. The purpose
is to help meet the massive bills China is running up in its
crash modernization program by raking in as much hard
currency as possible - and with the traffic jam now · ·
developmg on the road to Peking, that could he consider- "
able. Industrialized countries anticipating a booming trade
with China could well end up paymg for q~uch of it out of
their own citizens' pockets.
Which suggests that Peking's No. 1 Conununist, Teng
Hstao-pmg, may have somethmg to say on his VISit to
Washington that his capitalist hosts could find particularly
useful - tips on handling trade deficits with the least
stram and pain to the homefolks.

formed
refmertes.
mto more valuable " new oil" on the way to
A detailed memo prepared by Investigators workmg for
Rep. John D D1ngell, D-M1ch., describes the vast scope of
the problem
" The buyers. some of whom partiCipated m the frauds,
then passed on the overcharge to American cOnsumers. .
Ki ckback s, brtbes and payoffs were used as mcentives to
fa cilitate the conspira cy
" As simple as the scheme was to perpetrate, II would
have been equally easy to discover and stop But DoE
allo\\ed these schemes to continue and proliferate.
"There IS evidence m DoE mternal files that indicates
top offi cials have been aware of thts crtminal actlvtty as
early as 1975 - nearly three years before the first case was
referred to the Justtce Department for criminal prosecutiOn. "
The schemes mvolved fly-by-night companies, some of
which bega n operations wtth little more than a barren
office and a telephone, as well as larger Independent
petroleum firms and multi-natwnal oil corporatiOns.
" At the peak of this cruninal actJVtly, American
consumers were overcharged by nearly $2 million per dar.
Th ese schemes contmued for over four years, resultmg m
consumer overcharges estimated at nearly $2 billion,"
says the memo prepared for Dingell.
DoE auditors were barred from mterviewmg officials
mvolved m the consptracies, while other department
offi cials work1ng on the Investigations were constantly
rotated m a bureaucratic version of "mustcal chatrs" that
v~rtually guaranteed a lack of continuity
As a result, not a smgle cruninal case involving reseller
fra ud was referred to the Justice Department for
prosecuhon between 1974 and 1978
But at the same lime, DoE was vigorously pursumg
alleged cr1mmai activity on the part of " Mom and Pop"
gas statwns such as the Village Green Texaco Station m
Cottage Grove, Ore , and Jtm and Mary Morton's servtce
sta t10n in South San Francisco.
The cnmtnal cases mvolvmg reseller fraud now are
bemg presented to a federal grand jury m Houstqn. But
mdJctments, f~rsl promised by mid-November, have been
repeatedly delayed.
I'Jnally, the Dingell staff memo contains an exceptionally se nous allegation. Quohng an unidentified mdustry
source, the document says "a mutti·milhon-dollar slush
fund" was established by the resellers "to take care of
DoE"

The department 's response, as m the past, has been to
Ignore the allegatiOns. More than six weeks after being
mformed of the charges, DoE officials refuse to discuss
anv asnect of the situatiOn

.

.

·

"**********************************************.to•
If
•
•
ttl Poet's Comer
:
_.
Jt.

Jt!

Edz.torza· l op zn lO ns
.

Ashes buried today
after simple service
By Henrietta Leith
Associated Press Writer
TARRYTOWN, N Y (AP)
- The body of Nelson A
Rockefeller
has
been
cremated and burial was
plamed today following a
simple memonal service
limited to family members
and close friends.
The former vice president
and four-time New York
governor, who died of a heart
attack Frida)( night, was
cremated Sunday at the
Fern cliff Crematory near the
family 's 25!1-acre Pocantico
Htlls estate.
A publlc service, at which
national and mternallonal
leaders are expected to pay
tnbute to the best known of
the five Rockefeller brothers,
will be held Fnday at
Riverside Church, a huge
edifice built largely with
Rockefeller money
Among family members
who gathered at Pocantico
Hills Sunday to console
Rockefeller ' s widow ,
Margarett a "Happy"
Rockefeller , and their
chi ldren were the two

remaining sons of John D.
Rockefeller Jr. - David,
chairman of the Chase
Manhattan Bank, and
Laurance, · conservationist
and financier
A fourth brother, John D
Rockefeller III, d1ed m an
auto accident last July, and a
fifth, Winthrop , former
governor of Arkansas, died of
cancer m 1973 The only
sister, Abby Rockefeller
Mauze, died of cancer several
years ago
Meanwhile, Rockefeller
family spokesman sought to
clarify the c~rcwnstances,
time and location of
Rockefeller's death.
Hugh Morrow, a longtime
Rockefeller press aide ,
originally disclosed the
former governor died in his
Rockefeller Center offices,
but later satd he, Morrow,
had mtsunderstood the in·
formation first given to him.
lje sa1d Saturday that
Rockefeller suffered the
attack while working on an
art book m his private offices
at 13 W. 54th St
Morrow had said only a

r-------------------------1

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

S1wlling in anklt·
DEAR DR. LAMB ..
Several months after t'he
b~rth of my first child (seven
yea rs ago I my left ankle
began Ia swell slightly. l
thought 1! was due to changes
dunng pregnancy and would
soon become normal.
However , the condttwn in·

, c1eased gradually and this
on urs every day , not just
durmg menstruatiOn

My doctor had me takmg
dmret1e p1lls for two and onehalf years which does help
some

I have read articles stallng
that ankle edema can be
c~used by excess est ro~en
and a vttamJn 8 defiCiency I

murettc:;
The other pomt you need to
consider IS the validity of
those wlld claims about
v1tamm B's relation to swell·
mg of the feet This only occurs m a pal!ent w1th gross
v1lamm B deficiency We call
1t Ber1 Ben disease
If you've been takmg a
mull!ple vitamm pill dml y on
a regular bas1s for a long
period of t1me, there IS no
way that you could have a
Vitamm B complex defiCiency that would cause swethng
Takmg additiOnal v1tamm B,
whether 1! is
one 50
rrulhgram tablet once a day
or tw1ce a day, won 't help you
at all If you already have
enough v1tamm B m your diet
and from your daily multiple
v1tamm tablet.
I'd rather see you use some
good suitable support hose to
try to counteract the swellmg. I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 11.£,
Swelling · Causes and
Management, so you can
have a better tdea of the dif·
ferent diSorders that can
ca use swellmg and what can
be done to help prevent 11.
other readers who want
th1s ISsue can send 50 cents
With a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for 11.
Send your request to me m
care of this newspaper, P 0.
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station,
New York, NY 10019.
I think it would be a good
Idea for you to wear some effective support' hose when
you are up and around or Sll·
tmg The support hose may
exert enough external
pressure to dluumsh or help
prevent the swelhng m your
left leg The next lime you sec
your doctor, ask h1m tf you
have lymphadema on that
side

mentiOned this lo my doctor
and he felt It would be safe for
me to take the B compl ex pill
r have alwa ys taken a multiple v1tauun pill dmly What
do you lhmk about this situa ·
lion' I am 38 years old, 5 feet
8 and weigh 120 pounds
Shou ld l lake on e 50
milligram B complex daily or
two.,
DEAR READER -It would
• help to know what IS causmg
your swelling I could probably say w1th relallve certamty that1t IS not because of
excess estrogen or vttamtn B
·defi ciency.
In the first place, 1f it were
even true that these condi·
bans cause the swelling of the
legs, 1( would affect both legs
and not just one. You can't
very well have vitamin B
defi ciency m the left leg
w1 thout havmg 1t in the right
leg The same thing applies to
the effects of ex&lt;'eSS "i'Strogerr
Unilateral swelling - one
leg only -- IS usually
associated w1th some
mechamcal problem such as
varicose vems m one leg only
or an mterrupl!on m the
lymph channels which dram
.
the clear lymph fluid from
Thought for today ; True
one leg only. This condition IS nobility IS exempt from fear
called lymphadema and it 1s - Wilham Shakespeare, 15&amp;1helped by giVIng patients 1616.

•

•

I was saddened over life's
troubles one day and I
·~ began to think on Jesus and
I gave Him my hurt and I
began to write I'd like to
share this poem with those
who are hurt and feel alone
and think Jesus ts so very
far away, when m fact, He
is in your heart and only a
breath away .
JESUS CARES
When my soul m darkness
cries
I look up and He replies
secunty guard and a You know I hear
chauffeur
were
With You know I care
Rockefeller
when
he I promised I would be there,
collapsed. But Morrow and
another family spokesman, When on the sea of life I'm
tossed
George Taylor, disclosed on
Sunday that a 31-year-old I have a friend whose not at
loss
researcher named Megan
Marshak had been with him He knows the way
and had called the city'&amp; 911 He knows the pian
emergency number to get an He holds me in His nailscarred hands
· ambulance.
Morrow said Miss Marshak
had been workmg with He has come to set me free
Rockefeller on the art book To break those bands of death
for me
. series.
Miss Marshak was once on So when I die His face I'll see
the staff of AP Radio In And llve eternaUy.
Washington.
There
also was a I won't give up this walk w1th
you
discrepancy bet ween the first
and later reports on the tune I won 'I de sparr for y_ou are
true
of the attack
Morrow
first
satd I'll soon be home and un·
derstand
Rockefeller was stricken at
The
love of God for man.
10; 15 p m EST Friday and
Patty Hensler, Box 36B,
pollee said the first call to 911
Racine,
0
45771
came at II 16 p.m.
Later'
Taylor
said
Rockefeller actually
collapsed at 11.15 p.m. but
Miss Marshak had given the
In I 737, the writer and
attendmg physician the
who played a
philosopher
wrong time, which was
maJor
role
m
the American
relayed to Morrow by the
Revolution, Thomas Paine,
doctor.
J1m
Paturas,
an was born in England .
emergency medical
lcchnlcian who attempted to
revive Rockefeller in an
Th~~o Da1ly Sentinel
ambulance enroute to Lenox
Hill Hospital, where he was
.u3PS 145-9601
pronounced dead, said M1ss
a~~-,:.~aMarshak
was
at
DEVOTE:uTOniE
Rockefeller's stde in the
INTEREST OF
ambulance
Mt'liGS-MASON AREA

'fi*************************-if*****************'ilr

I
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
I
I than 300 words long lor subject to reduction by the editorl,
I and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may

HEALTH

!""
*:

I be withheld upon publication. However, on request,
I names "ill be dlsclosed. Letters should be in good taste,
I addressing issues, not personalities.
I
I
I

I
I

Nelson A Rockefeller has had a long career of public
service - governor of New York, almost presidential
candidate several limes around, vice president of the
United States and now purveyor of culture to the masses
Since retiring from the political wars, Rockefeller has
devoted his considerable energies to sharing his notable
art collection wtlh the interested public. Art fanciers
willing to settle for reasonable facsimiles of the real thing
may purchase good reproductions of priZe china pieces,
sculpture and paintmgs The Nelson Rockefeller Collection
is reported to have rung up some $800,000 in such sales,
mostly by mat! order.
Now good is going to he even better. Rockefeller IS
introducmg a new photographic process that imparts a
texture to reproductiOns, somewhat like duplicating the
artist's original brush strokes The results are much closer
in appearance to the real paintings than even the bestquality flat reproductions and will sell for $500 to $1,000 a
copy
·
It is described as a major technological breakthrough in
the "democratization" -Rockefeller's word- of art.
Well, maybe. But when such technological virtuosity is
applied to something else of value - say, money - there's
another term for 1t Counterfeiting

',,

''

By WUI Grimsley
AP Correspondent
Who's going to be baseball's first $1 million-a-year player?
"It has oo come, they're ruching closer," former Giants ' star
Monte Irvm was saying just the other day at ceremorues
announcing tearrunate Willie Mays' election into baseball's
Hall of Fame.
Somebody asked "Say Hey WIUie" how much he thought
he would be worth m today's inflated market.
"H Jim Rtce is worth $5.4 million, I figure I would be worth
$3 million," replied Mays, not one to succumb to false
modesty.
"Ten million at least," whtspered Irvm standing m the

U.S.S. Equal Rights

wmgs
"In Wtllie's day, the mag1c salary figure for the baseball

The Defense Department has embarked on a campaign
to take the sex out of mililary language.
In acknowledgement of the equal-rights movement,
words that designate gender are being retirM from active
duty. As a consequence, the Navy may have to scuttle one
of its longest traditions - that of referring to ships with
femmine pronouns. If recommendations now under consideration are adopted, a ship henceforth will be a neuter
II it. II
It is to be hoped that the revisionists don't get carried
away and start rewriting naval literature. A lot might be
lost m the updatmg ·
"Ay, tear 1ts tattered ensign down ... "

superstar was $100,000 so you can see how far we've come, 10
times greater now," Monte added. "There were some others
who I thmk you'd have to classify as $10 million guys measured
by the present pr1ce tags. Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio,
Stan Musial, Sandy Koufax, Hank Aaron, also Mickey Mantle.
I am not going back to the Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Walter
Johnson eras."
1
Big Dave Parker came close to the new plateau last
Fr1day when he signed a five-year contract with Pittsburgh for
a reported $4.5millwn . Broken down, that puts his yearly wage
at $900,000, highest in the game.
Earlier, Pete Rose signed a four-year contract with tbe
Phillies for $3 4 million followed by Jim Rice's agreement to
keep playing with the Boston Red Sox for $5 4 million covering
seven years.
It will he mteresting to see bow much the New York
Yankees have to shell out to Rod Carew If they land the
perennial Amencan League battmg champion .
Although pro basketbaU has the hi~hest averaEe nav scale
_,.. 0 \llld $147,000-baseball has moved ahead of both baskethall and foot hall m rewarding its most glamorous performers.
Here IS the r\llldown of the aristocrats of sports.
Dave Parker, basehall, $900,000.
Pete Rose, baseball $850,000.
0. J Sunpson, foothall, $800,000.
David Thompson , basketball, $800,000.
Julius Ervmg, baskethall, $700,000.
Vida Blue, hasebail, $700,000.
Bjorn Borg, tennis, $690,000.
Pete Maravich, basketball, $650,000.
Artis Giimore, hasketball, $650,000.
Karccm Abdul.Jabbar, basketball, $625,000.
Darrel McHargue, jockey, $6!10,000.
Reggie Jackson and Catfish Hunter are also m the $600,000
range along with hockey's Ulf Nilsson.
With Rose, Rice and Parker having signed long-term
contracts, the question is who will be the first to reach the $1
million-a-year figure? One man's guess. Ron Guidry, the
Yankees slmgshot.

Names •••
in the news

DAVID BUSkiRK
Published daily em~ pt Saturday

Parent upset over closing

In 1889 , Crown Prince
Rudolf of Austria-Hungary
killed his mistress and
himself at a huntmg lodge at
Mayeriing, Austria

Business Office Phone 992 2i56
Editomtl Phone 992·2i57
Se~;ond cbtss posta!je p&lt;Ud at
Pomeroy, Ohto
N1:1l10nal l:ldvertt.smg represen·
tatlve , Landon Assodates 3101
EuchdAve , Cleveland, Oh1o 44115
Subscnptlon rates Delivered by
cB rner where liV!IIIable 75 tents per
wee k By Motor Route w~re camer
servtce not HVII tlable, One month,
SJ 25 By mHII In Oh1o and W Va
One Year, 127 SO, S1x months,
$14 50; Three months, S8 50 ,
Elsewhere $32 00 year , Stx: months

Dear Mr. Editor,
I'm wnting about the school 's closmg early for the storms.
It IS very nice that Mr. Dowler and his assistants are so
concerned about the safety of our children that they send them
home at the first rumors of a blizzard or whatever is headed
our way. But they do not carry the concern far enough ' Once
Ten years ago ; It was
the children are off the school property, they could care less reported that the U S cost-ofabout their safety! !
living rate m 1968 had shown
My case in point. Last Friday, at lOam. they decided to let the sharpest mcrease m 17
$17 OD
Three months, $9 00
the schools out early, due to rumors of a blizzard headed thiS years - 4 7 percent.
Subse~lon prL('e mdudes Sunday
Ttmes nltnel
way. That was fme, but they didn't bother to try and contact
1
any of the prents! They did have tl armounced on the radio that
f
the children would be home three hours early. But, a lot of
parents didn't hear the radiO broadcast, myself included.
At the time this news was on the air, I was at Holzer's
getting stitches taken out of my two year old'slorehead! !
, . - - - --::..._-- - -- - - - -- - - - - - --,
Fortunately, I ran mto a friend that told me of the
announcement. Even at that, by the time I reached home, my
seven-yea! old daughter was standlng m our front yard,
crymg, scared, and almost frozen! ' When she saw me the first
thmg that she said was, "Mommy, I was praying and praying
that you would come home " To say that I was upset to find her
in such a state IS to say the least! ! ! '
After getting her warmed up and us both calmed down, I
placed a caD to Mr. Dowler. He was not in, so I talked to his
assistant. I asked hun at what time the decision was made to
call orr school. He told me 10 a.m. That gave them
approxunately "1\2 hours m which they could have let some of
the children caD ho.me to see if the parents were there or not.
But no, they didn't even think of that!
No, I had never oold my daughter what to do If I were never
there. I am always here, and if I were placed man emergency,
there would be a family member or someone ' I'd make
arran~ements with to be here. But on this day, I hadn't made
arrangements, because I hadn't been forewarned.
I feel that )twas VERY INCONSIDERATE and VERY.
VERY IRRESPONSIBLE of those in charge oo not even try
and see to it that the children would be met. They could have
Jet each child call home, and if there were no answer, keer.
them at school. ANY parent will pick their child up at schoo .
I asked this man to have Rutland call me if the situation
were to happen again. He refused to take my name or
telephone number. (ReaDy concerned, wasn't he?)
I realize that they couldn't call all the parents, but they
dltln't even make the effort! If they would call even one Mother
and she in tur.n _called other Mothers, the word would get
f'J !91goyNEA InC ~~
around pretty fast. By not even putting forth the effort, they
have Just proven oo me that they just don't care enough about
\
any of the children
"
And that's the famous Washmgton
I'm sure that Mr. Dowler or his assistsnt would feel
Monument, JUSt beyond the pro- Taiwan
differently if 11 were their child left out in the cold by uncaring
demonstrators'"
strangers!!!' !' -Respectfully, Shorty Wright, Rutland, Qbio.
1

1

1

w
d
Berry s 0 r1

][_

'

'

ST. LOUIS (AP)- Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson ill says be's
uncertain how to go about it, but he is considering running for
president as a third1l8rtY candidate because President Carter
is "emharrassingly weak".
"Maybe you just go out and run and see what happens,"
the Illinois Democrat and son of the 11152 and 1956 Democratic
presidential candidate said in a copyright interview in
Sunday's edihons of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The 43-year-oldStevenson was quoted by the newspaper as
declaring that Carter, "like his inunediate predecessors, is
surrounded by amateurs and preoccupied with the methods
instead of the ends of government.
"His cabmet IS strong, but the president IS embarrassingly
weak and surrounded in the White House by bush-leaguers,"
Stevenson said.
LOS ANGELES (APl -Actor John Wayen, who had hts
stomach removed Jan. 12 during gaD bladder surgery, may go
ho_me from the hospital in about a week, a UCLA Medical
Center spokesman says.
It was durmg the gail bladder surgery that doctors
discovered cancer m hts stomach. and removed the stomach.
"He's doing reaDy well. Doctors are very happy and he
should be out in about a week, or a few days," a hospital
spokesman said Sunday.
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)- Traditionalist Archbishop
Marcel Lefebvre says he's not afraid of exconununication
because "the Holy Father weD knows I am as much a faithful
Catholic as he."
Lefebvre said his relations with Pope John Paul 11 are
much better than they were with the late Paul VI, who once
threatened him With excommunication. However, Lefebvre
says the Roman CUria, the Vatican's central adminiatration, is
stiil biased against him and is led by "persons who do not seek
the welfare of the church, and some of them are so liberal they
simply camot stand tradioonalists."
'
Lefebvre made his comments in an interview with the
Swiss telegraph agency.
He is leader of world-wide conservatilve movement within
the church that has rejected reforms stemming from the
Second Vatican Council of the early 1960s, including some
moder~ ways of celebratil'g mass.
TEL AVTV, Israel (AP) -Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan,
who begins talks today with French President Valery Gt.card
d'Estalng, says there is "considerable room for
improvement" m relations between France and Israel.
Dayan told reporters Sunday he would dlacuss the
stalemated Mideast talks and other subject&amp; in his meetings
wtth Giscardd'Estsing, Premeir Raymond Barre and Foreign
Minister Francois Ponce. He spoke with reporters at Ben- ,
Gurion AirpOrt before leaving for Paris.
Sourtes said Dayan would Iring up a 7 percent decline In
France's imports from Iitrael, as weD as other economic
matters.
·

.

\

Sports World

Pre-season golf talk

"'.,
"'

"
~.

"''
"

,

BYJOIINTEAFORD
· · Pomeroy Golf Club
Now that golf tournaments are on T.V. each weekend, I
thought that it was about tune to talk a little about the game
and what it's all about. Watchmg these tournaments work therr
way north means that it won't be too awfully long until we can
smack a big drive down the fairway once agam .
Along with others, I have been known to play m snowy
1- weather with colored golf baUs. The impact of clubhead
) against ball gives off a feeling of hitting a brick, and tbe
vibration Is something else. Now and then a club will break and
fly into pieces. But, those are some of the penalties a golfer
pays for pursuing a chaUenging game.
GeneraUy speaking, when the temperatures start climbing
mto the 40'S again, many golfers will take to the links and try to
work out some of those wmter flaws that have crept in. Unless,
of course, you're one of the more fortunate golfers who can
alford a trip south to one of the resort areas. Southern courses
offer package deals this time of year that are quite attractive.
Playing on some of these championship courses is very
worthwhile. Experience gained by s~eing these courses played
on T.V. and then matching your game wtth that of the touring
pros is quite a treat. Trying shots from the same fairways as
they did will tell YOI! quickly 11 isn't aU that easy.
One word of caution, if you do go, include a sand wedge and
several balls. The courses down there pride themselves on pine
trees, sand bunkers, and water hazards. A well-directed shot
will be rewarded; however, one that IS missed only slightly
finds 1ts way into the pines or less desirable places.
H you have any questions about the game and its
counterparts, drop me a line and I will try to answer them as
soon as possible. Adult beginners and juniors are especially
welcome.

'

December 22. Ttp-off times
will be 5;45 p.m. and 7:30p.m.
MEIGS (59
FGM·ATI FTN·ATI TP
Hanley
8-21 4-3 20
Ashley
6-13 1-2 13
Dodson
6-10 ~ 12
Ohlmger
4-7 ~ 8
Becker
2·12 2-3 6
Andrews
0-8 ~ 0
Kennedy
~ ~ 0
TOTALS
26-71 7-16 59
WAHAMA (62)

•

Barmtz
Richards
Weaver
Roush
Rawlings
Sayre
TOTALS

7-15 3.£
7-12 ~
4·15 4-4
3-11 2~
2-10 2-4
1·7 3-8
24-70 14-27

)7

14.
12
8
6
:;

62

Score by quarters·
I 2 3 4 Tot
Meigs
7 1717 16 2-59
Wahama
13 19 10 15 5-62
Total Fouls · Me1gs 19 ,
Wahama 15
Reserve Game.
Meigs (52)
D Remedy ~12 ; Smith 60-12; Thomas 3-3-9; Swan 2·59, Scott3-2-ll, C. L. Kennedy I·
0-2; Blattnar ~ ; Totals 21·
10-52.

ROUSH SCORES FROM INSIDE- Tim Roush (22),
wbo scored 8 pomts for Wahama, makes good on this twopomt play on an easy lay up. Guardmg IS Ohlinger (43 ) of
Meigs.

Wahama (57)
•
G1bbs 9-1·19; Harris 8-2-18;
Ingels 3.£·12, Roush 2.{).4; "i-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
BUzzard 1-2-4; Barmtz ~ ;
Totals 23-11~7.
'
Score by Quarters.
1234Tot
19 10 14 9-52
Me1gs
13 12 18 14-57
Wahama

SPOR·Ts ~

Today's

Ad\lertising Maaa1er

by The Ohm Valley Publishing
Il l
Company-Multimedia, Inc ,
Court St Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769

Me1gs placed two men in
twm figures with D Kennedy
and Smith scormg 12 pomts
each. ·
Wahama returns to action
on Tuesday night for 1ts fourth
consecutive home cont est
when they entertain Buffalo of
Putnam. The White Falcons
are 2-1 on their current fiv e
game homestand with vlctories over Kyger Creek and
Meigs w1th Fndays loss to
North Gallia has been their
lone defeat at home this
season.
Buffalo downed Wahama by
a 77-38 margm m the Falcons
season opener back on

A fake by any other name

ROBERT HOEFLICH
ClOy Editor

J

After building an eight-point
halftime lead, the Wahama
White Falcons had to stave off
a second half Meigs Maurader
rally before they could claim a
62-$ overtime wm.
With the victory, the local
quintet from the Mountain
State avenged an earlier
season 75-62 sethack at Me1gs
and ran their season record to
~ . on the year. For the
visiting Mauraders, the defeat
left them with a 3-10 mark.
Both teams placed three
men 'in double figures with
Meigs' Tom Hawley leading
all candldates with 20 points.
Rtck Barnitz led the White
Falcon attack with 17
markers. Other double figure
scorers for Wahama were
Gary RichardS - with 14 a~d
Vince Weaver with 12. Meigs
also had freshman Bob Ashley
and Brttt Dodson in Twin
digits with 13 and 12 points
respectively.
Wahama took an early lead
m the contest behind semor
forward Todd Rawlings, who
scored ail six of his points m
the milia! period. Hanley
notched ftve of his teams
seven points in the stanza but
the White Falcons held a 13-7
advantage after e1ght
mmutes.
Gary Richards and Bob
Ashley took over the brunt of

the scoring during the second in the three minute overtime preliminary game wtth a 57-52
canto with Richards popping with Tun Roush and Kreig win over the Baby Mauraders
in 8 markers and Ashley 5. Sayre adding one point each
Like the varsity squad, the
However, the visiting Hawley scored the only Meigs Wahama JUmor varSity gamed
Mauraders still couldn't gam basket m the overtime as the revenge for an earlier season
any ground as the bend area White Falcons captured a defeat pinned on them by the
Falcons sported a 32-24 lead at hard fought 62-59 triwnph.
visiting Mauraders.
While the statistic sheet for
Coach Lewis Hall's team
intermission.
Wtlh the start of the third the Mauraders was una- now has a fme 8-2 record as
quarter, Meigs began Its vailable,the key to the the first half of the 1978-79
comeback behind Hawley. Wahama victory was their · season IS now history.
The Mauraders outscored rebounds, and turnovers The Larry G1bbs, 'Peanut Harris
Wahama by a 17-10 margin m ' locals grabbed a total of 44 and York Ingels ail scored m
the etght minutes following carroms with Roush and double figures for the Falcons
the half-time pause and Weaver collecting 13 each and as they combined for 49 of the
trailed by a lone point 42-41 as committed just 10 turnovers. 57 Wahama points. Gibbs
the fmal stanza got underway.
The Little Falcons made 11, fm1shed up with 19 markers
The White Falcons, after a perfect evenmg for the bend while HarriS notched 18 and
enjoying a fairly comfortable area fans in Saturday's Ingels added 14.
lead up to this point, now
found themselves in a real
dogfight when wtth 7;38
remainmg Hawley knotted the
score at 42-42. The two teams
traded buckets for the next
four minutes until the
Mauraders took a 53-52 lead on
another Hawley free throw at
the 3; 18 mark. Seconds later
Kreig S;!yre saw a charity
toss to make it 55-55 only to
have Hawley put the Meigs
local team m front 57-55. Gary
Richards tied the score with
I 31 remaining at 57-57 and
!hats how regulation time
ended.
In the overtime period,
wahama outscored
the
Mauraders by a 5-2 margin to
emerge with the vtctory.
Barnitz notched three points

I

The Daily Sentinel

DRffiBUNG WIZARDRY - Rick Barrutz ( 13) ofWahama made life a little difficult for
Meigs with his elusive dribbling as diSplayed here. Guardmg 1s Becker {13) of Me1gs

Total Fouls
Wahama 17.

Meigs 19,
Ohto College Basketba II

By The Assoc1ated Press
Saturday's Results
Conference

Btg Ten

Withrow hardwood coach not satisfied
CINCINNATI (AP) Despite his team 's positiOn
atop the rankings in the state
Class AAA boys high school
haskethaU poll, Cincmnat1
Withrow Coach M1ke Ferone
is still less than totally
satisfied w1th hi s team 's
performance.
"We're makmg a lot of
mental mistakes as far as
turnovers or forgettmg to box
out," Ferone said. " Just little
things that give the other
team quick points.
"Daily, we try to drill into
our kids that someone telling
you you're No 1doesn't mean
that it 's so," he continued.
" It 's a great honor to be No.
I, but you 're not No I until
you go out and win
something ''
If Withdraw can win 1ts last
five regular season games,
the school may become the
frrst Cmcmnati team to wm
the state large-school ooll
title since Elder
accomplished the feat in 1961
A twCK:Iass system was in
effect at that time and the
bigger schools competed in
Class AA. ·

Ferone insists that keeping
the top spot m the rankings 1s
not one of his team's major
goals.
"At the beginning of the
season, we set some team
goals," "he said. "We wanted
oo win all our games outside
the league. We wanted to win
the league and we wanted to
wm the City championship."
So far, Withrow IS r1ght on
target for all these goals, and
Ferone suggests that his

Ohto St 66, lndtana 63 at
Mtd Amencan
Bal l Sf 75, M 1a m1 74
Bowl1ng Green 75, E
Mt ch tgan 70 ot
C Mtchtgan 77, Toledo 66
Oh1o U 94, N ll ltnots 78

team's confidence may be lackadaisical m th e first
one reason for 1ts close ca lls half."
other facoors have hurt the
in Its last outmgs agamst Taft
Tigers, too. Withrow's game
and Aiken
W Mtchtgan 65 Ken t St 65
Withrow
needed
an agarnst Aiken was Its fifth in
Metro
Flon da St 80, Ctnctnnatt 77
overtime oo beat Taft, and 10 days To make matters
M1d Conftnent
It
h as
been
trailed Aiken gomg mto the wors e,
N Iowa 75, Youngstown St
time
at
fmal period before pullmg exa min ation
65
away for a victory
Withrow
N Mtchtgan 77, Akron 66
"We're gomg to work on
"The kids have confidence
OhiO
Ba l dw in Wa lla ce
73,
that If we're down, even by 10 fundamentals," Ferone satd,
62
POints m the third quarter, "for Wainut Hills (Withrow 's Heidelberg
Capdal 78 Otterbetn 68
they can come back and opponent tomght ) But we're
Manetta 82, Kenyon 65
wm, " he sa1d. "Maybe that .still gomg to try and have
Mt Un1on 73 , Oh1o Nor
thern 69
sort of make s them some fun "

Saturday's high school results
, By The Associated Press
Saturday's Results
Akron Bu chtel 79 Stow
Wal sh Jesu1t 77
Akron Central Hower 71.
Lakewood St Edward 53
Akron Garfteld 69, Stow 55
A l ltance 67, Ak r on St
Vtncent Sf Mar y 59
A t hens 71 , Man etta 67, ot
Beachwood 81, R1chm ond

Hetghts 50

Bellv ille Clear Fork 73,
Coshocton 69
Berlm Hil and 65, Sug ar
cr eek Garaway 48
Boardman 81. Warren
Howland 49
Botkms 56, L1ma Perry 54
Br a tenah l
67 , Ca nton

Ironto!' stops
-Waverly, 65-47

Brunn erd ale 60
Cad1z 53 Mt ngo Jun&lt;:tt on
Mmgo 48
Canton
M cK Lnl ey
71,
Columbus East 68 ot
Canton South 72, Ca nton
Central 57
59,
T1m ken
Canton
Mass 1llon 46
Cel ma 63, Middl etown 50
Chillicothe
Fl aget 94 ,
Chi lli cO the Huntington 67
CtnctnnatL Chn st 1a n 73,
Ctnctnnatt St Franc ts 70
Clevel and Hol y Name 44,
E lyn a Catholic 43
Cleveland Luther an Ea st
61, Burton Berk shtre 60
Conlmental 93, Ht ck svtl l e
71
Dayton Carroll 97 , Bell
brook 93
Da y l on Northrtdge 84
Dayton Chns ttan 66
Delpho s St
John 68
Wau seon 42
F ort Jennmg s 59 , Mart a
Sfetn Mar Lon Loca l 54
Gates Mill s G1lmour 70
Patnesvd le Harv ey 63
Germantown Va ll ey Vtew
69, Ealon 60
Gnad enhutt en
l n dt an
Valley Sou th 56, Malvern 37
Granville 65 , Palaskala
Watkms Memoria l 63
Hanover ton Un1ted Local
55 , Salmev rll e Sou th ern Local

Coach Buddy Bell's Ironton wumers.
Waverly hit 16 of 45 held
Tigers exploded with 21
pomts m the third quarter to goal attempts for 35 percent
break up a tight game The Tigers were 15of 24 at the
65-47 foul ime for 63 percent.
enroute
to
a
Southeastern Ohio League Waverly had 32 rebounds , 12 50
Havtland Wa y ne Trace 63
basketball victory over arch· by Joel Gordon . The W-T!gers
Convoy Crestvtew 56
had
20
turnovers
rival Waverly Saturday in the
Hea lh
63 ,
Johnstown
Ironton shot a sizzlmg 50 Nor
Ironton Sports Center.
thrtdge 46
The league tnumph moved percent from the field, h1ttmg
Hebron La kewood
85,
the Bellmen another step 24 of 48 attempts The Tigers Newar k Ll cktng Va lley 68
He nri etta Fir el ands 77 ,
closer toward the 1978-79 were 17 of 25 at the foul line Wellington
76
for 68 percent Ironton also
SEOAL champiOnship.
Howard Ea st Knox 73
A VIctory over Athens at had 32 rebounds, seven by Gam brtdg e Gue rn sey
Athens Fnday mght wiD give Tom Gordon and s1x by Tun Catholic 49
Ironton 65 , Waverly 47
the J. Tigers at least a share of Hodges. The !-Tigers had 13
Johnstown 67. Ut ica 58
turnovers.
the crown.
Ke ttertng Fairmont East
Robin Fttzpatrtck, Iron· 53, Vanda lt a 46
Meanwhile, Coach C D
Kmgs Mt l l s Kings 66
Hawhee's crew dropped two ton's 6-8 semor center, played
Wayne sville 43
only
a
few
mmutes.
due
to
full games off the pace with
Lew tstown lndtan Lake 65
only three rounds of loop s1ckness. Tbe Ironton ace Urba na 49
Ltma Catholic 84, St Marys
actiOn remainmg on the W· jumped center at each
quarter break and came ba ck Memonal 74
Tiger schedule.
Ltma Sent or 66, Elida 54
Ironton upped its season in during the fmal minute or
L tm a Shawnee 70, Van
record to 11·3 and league two of action
Wert 60
In the rese rve game,
M ansfiel d Madt son 56 ,
mark to 10-1. Waverly
dropped to 10-5 overall and 8-3 Ironton's reserves won their
&amp;eventh straight league
inside the league.
Ironton led 14-10 after one game, 42·38, to remain in
period It was 23-21, Ironton , undisputed first place m l)le
durmg the halftime in - reserve standmgs.
Varsity box ·
termission.
WAVERLY
(47) - Arnett
Wtth IHS on top by four, 335-1
11.
Dutcher
1; Steger
29, mtdway m the third 3 3 9, Gordon 2 4 08.I Holsinger
period, Ironton erupted for 11 2· 4 8, Fredertck 2 0-4,
straight points and that was Johnson 2·2 6, TOTALS 16-ll 47
the ball game.
IRONTON 1651 - Ha rvey
Larry IBo l Arnett was the 4 0 8, Hodg es 2 3 7, James 7
only Waverly player m 5-] 9 ,
Fletcher
63 15 ,
double ftgures with II , in· Fitzpatrick 1 2-4, Linn 0-4-4,
3 0 6, Barnes ] 0 2
eluding a 60-foot toss JUSt 'Gorden
TOTALS 24· 17-65
before the halftime m·
Score by quarters .
term1ssion.
Waverly
10 11 8 18- 47
14 9 21 21--65
D1ck James tossed In 19.and I ron ton
Reserve score - Ironton 42
Joe Fletcher 15 for the Waver
ly 38

"

81

Mansfteld Sentor 54
M a nsf 1eld St Peter 's 51,
Bu cyrus Wynf ord 44
McGuff ey Upper Sc1oto
Va lley 59, Waynesft eld 57
Midva le lnd ta n Val l ey
Nor th 64, Caldwe ll 59
M 1ller C1 ty 74, Raw son
Cory Rawson 52
M mster 44, A da 39
M ount Blan chard River dale 86 , Arltngton 47
Newark
CatholiC
68 ,
Sum mtt Sta tt on L Lck1n g
He1ghts 67
New Bremen 50 , New
Knoxv tl le 40
Newbur y 67 , Ktrtland 49
New Lebanon Dt xte 65 ,
Lew tsburg Tw tn Valley Nor th

49
New
Phda delph ta
67 ,
LOUISV ill e 61
N ew
Phllade l phta
Tuscarawas Catholtc 64,
Newcomerstow n 51

Ober lin 65, Muskmgum 57
Wdtcnberg 82, Dent son 68
Woos ter 108, Ohto We sleyan

Hoos1er Buckeye
Deftance 82, Tay lor 70
F tndl ay 54 Bluffton 46
Pres1dents
Bethany 83, Case Wes t er n
77 ol

Person to person
health insurance
II can help pay
soaring hospital
and surgical bills.
Call-·

Mike

&lt;;wic,~r

992-715S
149 S. Th1rd St.

Middleport. 0.
SllTf f U t.l MIJtU• L
/,uii)IIH)~IIt IM~Il~ct (OIII~'II'f

MOC cage
standings

•

I Att Games)

TEAM

W L

Ceda r v ill e
Rto Grande
Malone
Walsh
Urbana
Oh1 o Dommtca n
Mt Vernon
Tt f fln

TEAM

,,. u••,.&lt;l

10 7
11 10
10 9
7 9
6

10

5 1I
6 15

' 19

I League Onty l

Rto Grande
Wal sh
Cedar ...~~ lie

Malon e

Mt Vernon
UrQana
Oh1o Domm1 can
Ttff tn

TOTALS

W L

7 0
' 2

4 J
4

J

J
4

2 4

2 5
1

H.ram 65 , Wa sh &amp; Jeff 64
M1d -Oh10
Malone 84, Ttftln 79 ot
Mt Vernon Na zaren e 69,
Oh1o DomLn1ca n 56
Rto Grande 91 , Cedar vt ll e

75

Prevenflon is

the best pntkv ...

FOR YUUNG
DRIVERS
Young men and women

often ask why they have to
pay
more
tor th e tr
au1omobile Insurance
Drtvers 1n thetr teens and
earlier tw enties cause far
more tha n the1r share of
traffiC acciden ts Reports

the

National

Safety

Counc1l 21 B percent of all
mo1orists are 24 years of
age or under. yet these
youthful operato rs are
Involved as drivers 1n 38 6
per cent of all acctdents
and 37 3 per cent of all fa1al
mtshaps
A great many young
peop le
are
sk i lled ,
responsib l e
dnvers
Obv tousl y, thou gh qu1te a
few are not
There's no subst1tu te for
development competen ce
and t he r 1ght attitudes,
mcl ud ·ng
a
post ttve
approach to defen siv e
dnvtng
Our agency pro viCes
f tnan c ta l protect ton and
serv tce tn case of accidents
mvolvmg young drtvers ...
bu t
man y
of
t hese
accidents
can
be
pr eve nted That' s why we
say - pre ven ti on tsi the
best pottcy

DALE C. WARNER

Homr OOn:r

992-2143

BloOIIIIfMJTOII llllftOII

102 W. Main

Pomeroy

DALE'S

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO 001
PUJ IN A
NEW KITCHEN!

BIG 40%

6

27 7.7

Saturday 's results
Malone 84 Ttfl tn 79 (ol )
Mt
V ern on 69 - Ohto Do
mm1 can 56
Rto Gra nde 91 Cedarv ille 75

CASH &amp; CARRY
SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO IT
YOURSELF.

YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
EXPERTS Will

-.
2119-Jackson Ave.
67

Point Pleasant
11

�(

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.~ ,

.r-.tta:: ~~ ~U""'IC1 1 lfllUW~lJUI L•ruuft;l U) r v . , J'f1VUUCI)' t ddU. ~_,, l"l"

,~ &lt;J ·.J

Bucks in.comeback, top Hoosiers, 66-63
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) was
his
defensive
Carter Scott says Ohio State's performa nee
against
66-63 overtime college htdiana'sMike Woodson that
basketball victory over helped
the
Buckeyes
htdiana Saturday night was a overcome a nine-point deficit
simple matter of eiperience. - in the last two minutes of
" We've been in four regulation play.
overtimegatnesthisyear, S9
Woodson , whose 30 points
we're used to it by now," said were tops for both teams, had
Scott, whose seven points in no baskets and just two fouls
the extra .five minutes ruined against Miller's guarding in
the Hoosiers' upset bid.
the last nine minutes.
The triumph kept the lOth" I felt like I've been
ranked Buckeyes two games playing good in practice the
ahead of the rest of the pack last two weeks. But it's hard
in Big Ten Conference breaking into the lineup. We
basketball.
have such talent . I thought I
Scott, a cat-quick, 6-foot-2 never was going to get a
sophomore who led the team chance," said Miller, who
with 19 points, looked at the was a starter in the opener
Buckeyes' 8-0 conference this season.
recoid.
Eldon
Mille r,
the
" It was a great feeling to Buckeyes ' coach, could
come back. It's a great explain why Ohio State fell
start," said Scott, who sank behind 34-27 at halftime and
all three of his shots from the still trailed 55-46 with _less
floor and one of two free than two minutes left in
throws in the overtime.
regulation time.
Marquis Miller a seldom"We did not attack the
used sophomore, ~cored only basket well tonight, ". he said.
six Ohio State polnts, but it "We were not playmg With

patience . You're not going to
win against anybody shooting
from the perimeter. They
were getting the ci,ose shots.
We were not. "
Fiery Bobby Knight ,
htdiana··s coach, did not talk ·
to the media after the game
as usual, but said in a
prepared statement , " Down
the stretch, they converted
and we didn't and that was
the difference."
The players for Indiana, all
but ·eliminated from the Big
Ten race a( 3-5, took the loss
hard.
In the tomb-like Hoosier
locker room , Ray Tolbert
said: "We just gave it away.
We had them where we
wanted them. We had the
situation where we could
become a good team."
Herb Williams and Kelvin
Ransey each had 14 points for
the Buckeyes, ·13-4 overall.
Butch Carter tossed in 14 for
the Hoosiers, 11·9 for all
games.
Ransey stretched his

consecutive double _ figure State. ao-n. Cincinnati, 7_9
scoring streak to 48 games overall, stumbled to 24 in
before fouling out with 1:58 confere nce play. Florida
left in overtime .
State is 12-6 overall and 3- 2 in
Toledo missed out 011 a the conference.
chance to widen its lead in the
Th e 'Dayton Flyers set
Mid-American Conference, school records in nme
losing to . second-pla ce offensiv e categories and
Central M1ch1gan 77~6. Dave • standout Jim Paxson scored
Grauzer recorded 22 points 3! points as the Flyers
for the Chippewas, 6-1 in the crushed Ashland 12().90.
conference, who moved
The 120 poiQts represented
w1thm a half-game of tbe the most ever scored in one
league -leading Rockets, _7-1. game by a Dayton team ..
Ball State, 6-2 in the Dayton also set records for
conference, held onto_ third field goals attempted with 95,
place by edgmg M1am1 75-74. field goals made with 53 and
In other Mid-American most points in a half with 74.
games , Bowlin~ . Green
Highly regarded Ashland
topp"? Eastern !"'1Ch1gan 7_5· trailed by onl-y ,six at the half,
70 m overt1me , OhiO 'but wilted under Dayton's 74University downed Northern p 0 in t
sec 0 n d. h a 1f
illinois 94-78, and Western performance.
Michigan edged Kent State
Wittenberg and 'Baldwin .65~.
Wallace held onto their perch
Elsewhere in Ohio, Metro atop the Ohio Athletic
~nference scoring leader Co nfe r ence s t andings .
Pat Cumming of Cincinnati · Wit tenberg won its . 13th
scored 30 points, but it wasn't straight game, defeat ing
enough as the Bearcats fell to winless Denison 82-68, and
conferen ce rival Florida

Baldwin-WaUilce overcame
Heidelberg 73_-62.
Woost er stayed one game
in back of the leaders at 6-1 ,
with an easy 103-81 victory
over Ohio Wesleyan.
In other Ohio ~nference
games, it was Capital 78,
Otterbein 68; Marietta 82,
Kenyon 65; Mount Union 73,

Ohio Northern 69 ; and 80, Wilberforce 62; Defiance
Oberlin 65, Muski~gum 57. 82, Taylor 70; F!Jidlay 54,
Also in Ohio, it was Bluffton 46; Htram 65,
Cleveland State 69, York 64; Wasbington &amp; Jefferson 64;
Northern Michigan 77, Akron Bethany 83, Case Western
66 ; Northern Iowa 75, Reserve 77, ot; Malone 114,
Youngstown 65 ; Wright State Tiffin 79, ot; Mo1111t Vemm
)1 7, Indi ana - Purdue - Nazarene69,0hioD&lt;mlnlcan
Indianapolis 64 ; Gannon 74, 56; and Rio Grande 91 ,
Steubenville 66; Central State Cedarville 75.

:

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cquntertop .
microwave aver
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Rio Grande trips Cedarville
91-75 for seventh loop win
!Uo
Grande
College
completed first half play in
the Mid-Ohio Conference with
a perfect 7-ll record following
Saturday night's hard-fought
91-75victory over Coach Don
Callan's visiting Yellow
Jackets in Lyne Center.
The Redmen, now 11-10
overall, were in foul trouble
early - starters Steve Lones,
Greg James and Dan Purcell
all had three quick personals
- Dan Bise picked up his
third foul with three minutes
left in the first half.
Bench Does Good Job
However,
the
bench
strength of Coach Art
Lanham paid off once again
as Phil Washington, Brett
McCormick, Dale Royse and
fain Dorsey came in and not
only maintained Rio's lea!f,
but increased it to 16 points
by the halftime intermission.
After jumping out in front
17-10 during the first seven
minutes of play, Rio Grande
fell behind 23·22 on Dan
Baker's tap-in with 9:20 left
in the first haU. Eric Mounts,
who entered the game with a
23.6 scoring average, put the
visitors on top, 26-22, at the
8:30 mark.
Rio bounced back with
consecutive goals by Vince
Phelps and Dan Purcell to
knot the count at 26-all at the
7: 58 mark.

Pirates
defeat
Jeeps
North Gallia woo its second
stra ight
non-conference
game Saturday night, 59-56
over the Soul~ Webster Jeeps
of Scioto County. Friday
night, the Pirates blasted
Wahama.
Three players hit double
figures in Saturday's victory .
Leading 'the attack was
Stacey Winston with 19
POints. Senior guard Sam
Smith canned 18 markers
.. while Tim McComas added
'
12.
Scott Cayton and Matt
Likins led South Webster's
attack with IS and 12 points
respectively. North Gallia
jllfllped into a 14-10 lead and
never was threaU!ned.
The Pirates held a 32-20
halftime advantage and 47-40
lead going Into the final
canto.
NGHS sank 28 of 58 floor
attempts for 46 percent and
three of nine foul attempts.
South Webster took the
reserve game, 65-45. Dave
Pigue! led the winners with 16
points. Miller and Howell had
10 each in a losing cause.
The win pushed North
Gallia's overall season
record to~. 3-2 in the SVAC .
The Pirates travel to Eastern
of Pike County Tuesday.
Box Score
South Webster !56) - T.
Llklns 3-0-6: Cayton 1-1-15 ;
Baer 3-0-6; Moor e 4-0 -8 :
Maloney 3-0-6: Kallas 0-1-1:
M. Ukins6.- 0-1 2andMcCoy 10-2. Totals 27-2-56.
North Gallia (59) - Smith.
B-2-18; Winston 9-1-19: McComas 6-0-12: Peck 1-0-2 and
Little 4-0-8. Totals 28-3-59.
By Quarters :
)0 20 40 56 .
sw
· )4 32 41 S9
NG
• &gt;

Cedarville's last . lead was remainder of the contest.
28-26, on a layup by Mounts
Cedarville dropped to 10-7
with 7:31lelt in the first haU . overall and 4-3 in league play.
Royse Connects
Rio's tough defense forced
Dan Rise's layup at the 7:01 27 Yellow Jacket turnovers mark tied it up 28-28. Dale that was the big difference in
Royse's driving layup with the outcome of Saturday's
6:51 left put the Redmen contest. The Redmen had
ahead to stay.
only 12 turnovers against
Goals by Phelps and Cedarville's zone defense.
Washington upped Rio's lead
Balanced Attack
to 34-28 at the 5:59 mark
Rio Grande placed five
before a free throw by Jack men in double figures in
Potter broke Rio's string of scoring. Purcell tossed in 20,
eight straight points.
Bise, 17 , Lones 16, James and
Behind Purcell, Phelps, Phelps each had 10 .
Washington, Bise and McMounts paced the losers
Cormick, the Redmen with 26 points. Don Reep
gradually pulled away to a 53- · added 19 and Baker 12.
37 halftime advantage.
Rio Grande hit 37 of 72 field
Cedarville reduced Rio's goal attempts for 51.4 per·
lead to 59-45 during the first cent. The Redmen were 17 of
four minutes of play in the 21 at the foul line for 80.9
second half, but with Steve percent. Rio had 36 rebounds,
Lones and Dan Bise con- 10 by Dan Rise. The Redmen
necting underneath and Greg had 21 assists, led by Vince
James and Purcell hitting Phelps' 11 handoffs.
from the outside, Rio pulled
Cedarville connected on 31
away to a 2()-point advantage, of 64 ·field goal attempts for
69-49, with 11 :08 left to play. 48 .4 percent. The Jackets
Last Ditch Effort
were 13 of 20 at the fo ul line
Eric Mounts led a fast-ditch for 65 percent. The losers had
effort to catch the Redmen as 41 rebounds, II by Baker.
the Jackets reeled off eight Cedarville
had 17 assists.
.
straight points during the
next three. minutes of action ,
reducing Rio's lead to 69-57.
Rio maintained a 10 to 12
point
advantage
the

Malone N.ext
Friday, Rio Grande will
play at Malon e. Saturday, the
Redmen take on Walsh at
Canton .
Saturday's box score:
CEDARVILLE !151

2-0-4; Potter 2-1-5; Greue 1-0·
2: Lant z 2-0-4. TOTALS 31 -1375.
RIO GRANDE (YI) - Bi se

Hickma n 1-0'2: Baker 5-2-12;

37 -11-91 .

Mounts 12-2-26 ; Reep 6-7-19;

Streetmatter 0-1-1; Womack

I

I
l

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Caloric puts more in America's kitchens.
SEE WHAT COOKING IS COMING TO AT1

3-15; Rovse 1-2-.d; Swain 1-#-4 :

washington 3--1-1: Clarke 1-0
Halftime score -

I
1·

.. --"4•
:;.....:.......t.
9. . . . .

BAKER FURNITURE

TOtAL.~

Rio 53

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ceda r ville 37 .

OPENWIDE,AMERICA

The Sign
of the Hat:

.

ap5p~;=~~o:'iated Thaftro1~ere t~:

.CEMETERY FUND Trans·
action
PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICES
,.
CEMETERY
· OPERATION ANP
MAINTENANCE
PerSOn.! I Services
7,300.00
'1 0ther
5,580.00
, .Total For Cem eterv
Operation and
12,880.00
Maintenance
TntAI For Cemetery
. f~nd
12,880.00
·section e~fhat there be
.appropr iatf'd from
the

_Cage

standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Portsmouth 13 0 935 104
Ironton
11 3 958 124
Athens
10 3 866 151
Pl. Pleasant 1 2 522 447
Wash . CH
10 4 165 615
Waver ly
10 5 899 714
Gallipolis
B 5 142 682
Logan
5 I 721 115
Ravenswood •3 6 554 576
Wellston
4 .9 185 910
Meigs
3 10 766 953
Jackson
2 11 IBI 1000
Saturday's results :
Ironton 65 Wa verly 47
Athens 71, Marietta 66 (at)
Logan 62 Nelsonv ille-York 56
Wahama .62 Meig s 5Y (at) '
Raven swood 76 Gilmer
County 12 (otl
Tuesday's games :
Ripley at pt , Plea sa nt
Barboursville at Portsmouth
Greenfield at Washington CH
Friday' s games:
Ironton at Athens
Jackson at Logan
Meigs at Wave rly
WeHston at Gallipolis
R&amp;ven swood at Will iamstown
Portsm outh at Ashland
Wa shington CH at Wi lmington
saturday's games :
Logan at Athens ·
Gallipolis at Ja ckson
Meigs at Wellston
Raven swood at Gilmer
County

Weekend
Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
Baseball
American League
Sea ttl e Ma riners - Signed
Willie Horton , desig na ted.
hitter, to a one. year contra ct .
Football
.• National Football Leagut
Buffalo Bills - Names
Stew Barber vice president in
charge of admini stra tion.
Hockey
National Hockey League
New Ydrk Rangers ~ Sent
Doug Soetaert, goalie, to New
Haven of American Hockey
l eague fo r co nditi oning
purposes.
Wa shington Capitals Released Mi chel Bergeron,
right wing .
College
Brooklyn Colle9 e - Named
Char les Massana assistant
footba ll coach .

1

1

Cook with Microw~ speed and still enjoy ·
all the delicious results of traditional·
cooking. Only from Caloric ... the
sensational Microwave &amp; Electric Range.
ME combines a full 700 watts of Microwave
cooking power with Electric baking and
broiling in a full size, full meal oven.
Select Variable Microwave Power from
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8-1-17; James 5-0-10 ; Pu r ce ll
7-6-20; Phelps 4-2-10; Lon es 62; McCormick 1-0-2.

.

OR 01 H ~-:,~~ ~~: 1011-79
, . APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
A RESOLUTION to make
!_pproprlations ·tor · Curren t
~xpenses and other Ex ·
~1 pendltures Of the Village of
Middleport. I State of Ohio,
during the fiscal year end ing
Dec&amp;f1:l ber 31,. 1979,
, SECTION 1. BE IT
- R"ESOLVED bV the Council
· for the Village of Middleport ,
StateofOhio,That,toprovide
fOr the current el(penses and
ot ner expend itures of the Sl!id
\1 lllage. of Middleport durfilg
the fiscal year en ding
Dece mber 31, 1979, the
following sums be and they
are .hereby set as ide and
, ,appropriated as fo llows. viz :
Sec tion 2. That th ere be
i. appropriated from the
'I GENERAL FUND :
~~
· GENERAL
q
GOVERNMENTAL
'l
SERVICES
•
MAYOR
"j, ..P~rsonal Service
s 6,200.00
2.500.00
Other
• total For Mayor
8,600.00
CLERK '' CLERK-TREASURER
Personal Services
2,500.00
Other
· 2,000.00
Totet For Clerk ·
·f Clerk ·'l:reasurer
4.500 .00
·•
SOLICITOR
'
· LEGAL ADVISOR
Persorill Services
3,000 oo
·
' ;rotil For Solicitor Legal Advisor
3,000.00
COUNCIL
1
-~~ Personal Services
1,008 .00
TotBI For Council
1,008 .00
BUILDINGS AND
f
,
MISC 1
" Other.
60,13.5 .00
l rotat. F.or Build ings
1 1 and Misc .
60,135.00
' Total For General
Governmental
services
77,243.00
SECURITY OF
PERSONS AND
PROPE A TV
POLICE DEPARTMENT
I Person II sen ices 36,200.00
Other
21.865 .00
Total For Po llee
. : Department
58 ,065 .00
1
FIRE DEPARTMENT
t PersonaiServices
1,190.00
I Other
8,835 .00
1Total For Fire
1 Oeoartment
10,025 .00
1Tot 1 f s
·
t p~rsg~s. !~~rlty of
1 Property
68 , 090 .00
I
LEISURE TIME
11
ACTIVITIES
PARkS AND
PLAYGROUNOS
1
1 Personal Services
5,500.00
lOther
12 ,500 .00
•Tot at For Parks and
I
Pfaygrounds
18,000.00
Total For Le is ure ·
: Time A~~~i~I~~NG 18,000.00
.•
COMMISSION
•Other
500.00
Total .For Plann ing .
, · Commission
500.00
Total For Commun ity
Environmen t
500.00
STREET LIGHTING
Olher
12,000.00
Total For Street
Lighting
12,000.00
Total For
Transportation
Facilities
12,000.00
. Grand Total
GENERAL FUND
. 1 A
.PPropriation
175,833.00
.. Section -4 . That there ·be
app ropriated from the
STREET CONSTRUCTION,
, MAINTENANCE AND
, , REPA IR FUND I AUTO
... LICENSE AND GASOLINE
TAX)
STREET MAINTENANCE
.
FUND
Personal Services 12,300 .00
Other
58 ,560.oo
Total For Street
·1' Maintenance and
::' Construct ion
70,850.00
Total For Street
Construct ion.
Maintenance and
Repair Fund
70,850.00
..

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Only Bu~r Cbef® Jets.you take our
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BigShef..
regular french fry,
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Attracts many ~ong birds.

BIRD FEEDERS
SS.95 to $12.95

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Fuh Filet,
regular french fry,
small soft drink

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691 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY: 0.

.'

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}

I L IG HT l

'(REVENUE ) FUND
AOMINJSTRATJON
-WATER
Personal Services.. 25.200 .00
Debt Service
36, 570.00
Other
37,230.00
,Total For
~ ·Admin istrat ion
99,000.00
'• - Water
"Total For Water
- (Revenue) Fund 99,000 .00
Section 10. That there be
appropriated fr om The
SEWERIREVENUEJFUND
SEWER CONSTRUCTION
Capital Out lay
125.000 .00
·Total For Sewage 125,000 .00
- ADMINISTRATION
-SEWAGE
Personal Services 21.200.00
Debt Serv ice
24,360.00
Other
14,900.00
Tote! For
, Administration Sewage
60,460.00
Total For Sewer
(Revenue) Fund 185,A60 .00
.. Section 12. Tha t there be
appropriated from
the
•POLICEMAN'S RELIEF
AND PENSION FUND
Other
2,035.00
Total For Policeman 's
Retlef and Pens ion
Fund
. 2,035.00
Section 13 . That there be·
appropr i.ated from the
GENERAL ·
BOND
,RETIREMENT FUND
P.ayment of
5.000.00
. Principal
Payment of ·
1.350. 00
,. Interest
500.00
Other
Total For General
Bond Retlrem ent
· fund
6,850.00
.
ADDITIONAL
· fUNDS
Section 15. That ther e be
~ppropriated
from
the
·METER DEPOSIT FUND
Other
'
2,500.00
Tbtal fOr Meter
2.500 00
oeroslt Fund
Tote For Meter
~ Deposit Fund
2,500.00
sactiOh 16. That there be
•bproprlated frO m the
FEDERAL
REVENUE
-SHARING FUND
Dlher
19,558 .91
Total tor Federal
Revenye Sharing
. Fund
1P.558 .91
• ANTI -RECESSION
ASSISTANCE
FUND
Oth'er
l.A13 . 17
Total For Anti -Recess ion
Assistance Fund
l;A13 .17
Totel for Federal
Revenue Sharing and
Anti·Rtctssion
Assistance Furid 20,972.08
Total All
Appproprlatlons 576,380.01
S~ctlon 17. And the VIllage ,
Clerk Is hereby euthorlzed to
cfrtw his warrants on the
Vlllag• . T.reasurtr
for
pevments from any of the
•

.

,

~O:o~g orie~~i vi~~P ~~g~!~·t 1g;rs ~\;t~}{:;f:~:~~~J\}{~~~~~(}~~~~::· :~~U~~t(:~~~~:::t?t~{{:;~;}}~:}~:)~{:}f~{).

M

\, ~,,. ,

n 's ew :·:: :: :

tlficales
and vouchers
:::::::
ullt~"/1
therefor , approved
by the :;:;:::
board or officers authorized ;:;:;:;
,
.
U
bV taw to approvE' the same, :;:;:;:
or an ordinance or resolution .. ..
of council to make the ex
penditures ; pro\l ided that no '
n.v Ul iGH A. Mlji.J.I(iAN
warran ts shall be drawn or
1\1' Spt•(•ial torn•spmuit.••ll
paid for salaries or wages
W.' Slll N!',TON ill P I _
eMcept to persons ~mptoyeo
.,
by authority of and in ac . Maybe the whole country is
cordance with taw or or ·
· t h 11 ·
ha d ba k t
dina nce . Provide d further gomg 0 e ma n
s e•
that the. appropriations for asyoufindoutevery timeyou
contingencies can on tv be deposit one at a superm~ket
eMpended upon appeal of two .
!h.rds vote of Council for (•heckout counter, but some
1tems of expense constituting things in our society actually
a.tegat obliga tion against the are improving.
v1t1age, and tor purposes
other than those covered by
The railroads, for one .
f.he ot her ' specific ap
W 11 1 t'
h
Propriations
her 'ein
e ,a unesany ow .
made . Soclion 18 . This
I topk the Amtrak from
resolution sha ll tcike effec t at Stamford, Conn., down to
the ea rl iest period allowe~ by
Ja w.
Washingtontheotherdayand
Passed January 17 . 1979
was more than pJeasanUy
· d a t the com fort of
Attest : Gene Grate
surprise
Clerk of Council
the ride, the quality of the
CERTIFICATE
service and the fr iendliness
Sec tion 5705 .39, R .C. - " No
appropriation measure sha ll of the passengers all around
become effective until there me.
is tiled with th e appropriating
Nothing puts people in a
authorit y by th e county
aud itor a cert if icate that th e friendlier mood than to look
total approp riat ions ·fr om outthewindowofafastflying
each fun d, taken together
with all orher ou tsta nding train at a snowy highway
appropriations , do not exceed scene of snarled 1raffic . The
such of fi cial estima te or th
th th
,
·
amended official estim ate .
ought at ey aren t up 1n
When th e appropriations does an airplane looking . out Cl1
not exceed such offic ia l that blizzard scene also adds
estima te , the county audito r
th
Ib h .
shall give suc h cer tific.ate to. e genera on om1e.
forthwith ' upon recei'l ing
The track bed could have
fro m th e ~ ppropr iat ing
h
authority a certif ied copy of been a mite smoother, t e
The appropriation meas ure." windows a bit cleaner, and
The State of Ohio Me igs ·the stops a lot fewer, but the
Count~, ss .
r. Gene Grate. Grate , Clerk experience was a lot more
of the Village of Middleport in satisfying than a decade ago
uid County, and in whose
custody the F ites, JOurnals When nobody seemed to care
and Records are required by how far our railroads had
the Laws of the State of Ohio
to be kept, do nereb~ certifV deterioriated.
that the fOregoing Annual
The smHing, uniformed atAppropriat ion Resolution is tendant in the car had a fast
taken and copied from the
original ResQtution now on hand on the coffee pot and
file with said Village, that lhe was quick on his feet with the
foregoing Resolution has
been compared t;y me with cocktail tray.
.
the Silid original and that the
Apparently no one yel had
same is a true and correct got aroWld to telling him he
copy thereof .
Witness my signature, this was supposed to be moody,
17th day of January, IY79
embittered and resentful o!
Gene
Grate
· l'f
Clerk ol the Vill.age h'IS sta t'ton m
1 e. He ac1ua 11 y
of Middleport, Ohio -- took pride in his work . He
Meigs County , Ohio h I d
II
kid d
·t
Jan . 22 , He
e pe a co ege
epost

•: ;d\ ol u;, arc

h ~· adHI J.: .

··:\othtntl i., txpt•ch·d of the

~t

·

:::::::
:::::::
·'·.····
an t!llunuuus bull fiddlt• in the
luggage rac.:k, wht:elel1 an
. elderly invalid SI:.'V~ral time:;
to the rest room and
diseoursed learnedly on lhe
mathematical certainty of
fiscal disaster in plaring long
shol~ in claiming races at the
Garden State Race Track.
The food came anytime you
wanted it, not when the stewardess felt like serving it . The
apple pie was · hot and
delicious . The lettuce in the
sa lad Nicoise was crisp and
green, the portion of tuna
generous, and the .coffee, all
yo u could drink, was free .
You could type a letter or a
speech, make a telephone
call , walk the length of the
train for exercise and look out ·
oi1 the wintery landscape.
Training by the woods on a
snowy evening, you get a feel
for America that just isn't
there in an airplane or a car
maybe because U1ere 's time
to look and meditate and see

tr;d n p&lt;•:o;sL·nger, " WI'Otl• Llw
\m~rkar1 nuvt"list Pi:illl The·

nmx . ·· tn plant~ s. !he
tr;1vrllcr is t•oru.lemned to
ho w ·.~ in i:.t i. i~ht st:at ; ships
rl'tlu ir ,. high spirits &lt;tnt.l
socwhilit y; t•ars and busts

arc un!peakable .''
\\'henc ' ~·r I boein.l a train, I
Hill always reminded of the

line the porter on
the old Crescent City express
used t11 address to-his I»• ssengers as the bar car thundered
out of wet lllabama . into
prohibit ion country :
, . "&lt;fentlemen, please back
you'se\ves up , we's coming
into Mbsissippi."
In those days, u-ainmen
cared . Maybe that part of our
past is being reclaimed .
cornrorting

1

ATTEND INAUGURAL RECEPTION :.... Mr. and Mrs. Gene
were among those
attending the inaugural reception and ball at Sante Fe, New Mexico, on New Year's Day
honoring newly elected Governor and Mrs. Bruce King, pictured left. The new governor IS a
prominent New Mexico rancher .

HOUSE '!'RAILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE

b

1

Revised Cod e Secti ons 4503 .06 and 4503 .061 as am~nded by
Sub . H.B. No. 330 and Efleclive Augusl 26, 1969

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
NOtiCE OF

A·PPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On January 24, 1979 , in the
Me igs Cou nt y Probate Cou rt,
case No. 2259J, Elmora E.
Bo ice , 124 Mulberry Ave .,
Pomero y, Ohio. Ramora C.
Young , 773 N Thurber Dr E ,
Columbu s, Ohio and Robert
Boi ce, Box 52 13, WalnuT
Creek, Califo rnia 94598 were
appointed Co ExecuTors of
th e estate o f Ray mo nd E .
Boi ce. de cease d, laT e of
Po meroy , Oh10 .

(ll

COMPUTED At"&lt;D
ASSE~SED BY -·

PROBATE CO URT

lco·.o&gt;'d '" 1h ,, \IC"Ie o, th .. f,,~ · d t. , ~1 lunu{H"

PAYA BLE AT --

TAX DUE

AND PAY ABLE ~

'

Small Talk Is Big Worry
ticulardate.
By Karen Blaker, Ph. D.
This homework alleviated
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I my anxiety about a few
amreallytoooldtobeasking po te nti a ll y
awkward
you about dating, but I was moments during the evening
never interested in men until ahead. The motive was selfIturned 271ast year.
presevation , no! making a
This might sound silly, but-- good impression. 1But thai
my biggest worry is what lo date must have enjoyed the
talk about on a date. If I ask evening. We c~lebrated our
questions, I feel that I am 17th WL'&lt;iding anniversa ry
prying ; if I talk about myself, last month. I
I'm afraid I seem to be braggWrite to Dr. Blaker in can•
ing.
of this newspaper, P.O. Rnx
I can control my anxieties 475 , Radio City Station, New
about this problem until the Ycwk, N.Y. 10019. Volwne of
afternoon of the date. Then I mail prohibit s per sonal
hegin the desperate search replies, bul questions of
for topics of conversati on. By general interest will he
the time my date arrives, I discussed in future columns.
am so nervous I only draw a
blank . He has to carry rnost Today in History
of the burden of small talk .
By The Associated Press
Is it possible I am merely
Today is Monday, Jan. 29,
worrying too much? Maybe I the 29th day of 1979. There are.
should put the whole matter 336 days left in the year.
out of my mind until the date
Today's highlight in
begins.
· history: On this date in 1949,
DEAR READER -Do not Britain granted de facto
put off dealing with this pro- recognition ID the new state of
blem until the doorbell rings. Israel.
To help you better undersOn this date:
land and cope with your
In 1861 , Kansas was
shyness on dates, I am sending you a copy of my admitted to the Union as the
· "Shyness" hotline . Other 34th state.
readers may obtain copies of r.==::::;;::::;;:::;::::;;::;::::::;:::;:;::::;il
this newsletter by sending 50
cents plus a stamped, self·
addressed envelope to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 475, Radio City Station,
New York , N.Y.lotl19.
By the time you begin searching lor conversation topic'S
on the afternoon of a date,
you are probably already
nervous to think clearly or
store the information for
recall ·later in the evening.
Instead, start early in the
week. Begin a card file of .
jokes, interesting bits of information , funny or tragi c
s!Dries and news items.
This exercise will heighten
your awareness of the variety
of directions small talk can
take and increase your confidence to the point that you
can relax and participate in
the conversation.
Whether or not your notes
come up during the evening is
immaterial. The ·key is feel.. ing you have something im·
portant and interesting to
say.
As you automatically begin
to remember items of interes! during the !l'eek, you
will probably discard the
card file . But it is a good -way
to begin learning the art of
small talk .
Another useful teehnique is
" The Department store
of Building Since
to learn something about a
1915"
topic in which your date has
expressed some interest.
In college, for example, I
listened to·a football game on
the radio and wt·ote down a
few players' names, their
po11itions and the scoring sequences so I could partidpat&lt;•
actively in a lupic l knew
would come up with a par -

Co·~.,!) TtcJ~u·• · r \ Ot l 1 ~ c

ih\

&lt;t"mOi fl" \ fl

'""loA '' tl .. tt! rfT'• nPrl
IO tltr !nJ 1o

..... .

~

\, ~ n tu lt .rlf 1•':J d ~r" "

: h u l ~ ·•• • ,l Ol 0P ff'mh~t

C o •1r t H vu; r

Wh l!'n a ho u1 e ,,,~ ,If' • h •s • \i tu\ '" th·~ sta te , "~ p•ov idt .J in tt-11 ur t io n, o, the 1st
dJy of J~nu~•y th e full ~mounl of the p •o ra t o1 Ia~ 11 rlut ~nrl p ~ y~ble on or before
th e J
&lt;lay o f hrn,~.ary ,

I,,

'

PENAL T Y --

II rh c poymcrll of the t o• i\ no t mad r o~ provtd t· d abo ·.: o pcno tt,. uf f,vc doll on

c-r t o:. n
~ a ile ct.

DELINQ UENT
TAXES -

RESPONSIBILITY
OF HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER ·--

,h e

A HOUSE
COURT -

TRAIL~R

j)C HI'ttl of the l oa c ~ dul·, w hic:t. cv cr 11
d ,.., c. t ! ::L~•on to the In• d tu e n d . ,;..,. ,.,~,

;:- .H, n l ~ l ,t: JS IIt .:r

i !'l

.1Jdtt r-.w t o .Jnt'

G •l' O il' • .

other

\hot! be trT•pO\ c d ond

rf'" rn Cd• n ro" 1dcd by l1w f or

t hl collt•c lt a n vf ' ·'• C~ Jnd p c n .1lr i c~ ~ h .tl l t' nto rrc &lt;.ul : ~ ct t'ln a t ~ "fh t .u t-~
Hr.J :&gt; CllJ it •t.:\ b~ (I' tf .lC fi O:'I If\ r h r .,:; n ,r .:: f ) 1.0 (:\ tt (' J\Uf(' t ,) ~ J·n ~t t ht O W~lCI
lot fht •('CO\ICIY, ot th e un pJ•d f .lr.('&lt;;

All u~•n'r' u/ h 'l uH: n ~.ler~ h .t ~l n g • \ litH in th~ &lt;j,~~U o f Ohio .and IUb je O
••r: ·.o1 · l ~ d .&gt;i.J o•e MU ST •t gi \ltr suet. l r~t l tr wttf. •he Co .,.nly Aud1lor
pnor uJ •he J&lt;~t~ rl•e 1 ~11
~ nd +J.!y~ble

';o " rl'

if d\lt

lo th e
011

b ., •h'" Co unty Tr u\urtr

€\1 \. ty ., pr .t..I Cir ol J

t_,,

h &lt;:&gt; ".J ~ ( h3 lu cuu tl a t 1-' ·l rk ur C\lo:"ty o wrtcr &lt;J f pr ope rt y uHd

~..~ch r u rpov: v.h(' n th er e · &gt;

trJdc,., w h 1c h

.n .Jl.tt' ust'

o~

tht

nu

cr~r Jior ~ t • .lll ke ep .1 .c~ r ~tc r

court . pH~

ul

.11! ho u' e

or propttty .

HOWARD E. FRANK

COUNTY AUDITOR
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

At Ohio Power, we
have people who show.y!lu
how not to use electricity.

Our Customer Serv1ce~ people i:lre experts on suv1ttg eleetrtc1ly.
And we mea n exper ts. II' you know lhrPP wety~ to sa ve on hot wl-ller. they ca n show you t&gt;ven tllOrf'.
They can give you plenty of idt&gt;as on how to use yoL~r_refrigerator r~ton' e ff~cie n~.l :v. l_1ow to .
save electr icity when cooking and ways you cap save elcl'l.nc1ty when waslung. dr)'lllg. ltghl tng. lwat1ng
and cooling. They'll even show you !tnw-ln bu y applianr(:_s thi:ll cost _l ~ss to use._ .
' Some of their tips you already know. so111e :vou'll kll'k yo1w&gt;ell lor not tlunKuJg about. and
~;o me may even surprtse you.
.
.
,.
Our Customer Services people w11l be happy to answer your questtons. !hey also hill e S! llllf'
.'i.. -1.1 ~ t.'. booklets that st10w you how you cetn save ene r~-:y etllll benuue part of our .'iw •l' : l ll1 £'t'ira:,
1aluaiJ/e li lll'I'YY Program. Stop by for your copies. The.y're abso lut~l y fre.;.
At Ohio Power, we want you to get the mo~l out. ol you r eleclnc serw~e .

LOOK
FOR OUR
MID-WINY
SALE
CIRCULAR
IN THIS
WEEK'S
MAIL

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK·CO.

... Standinjl: : Lert to rilo(h l: Charh:s Harvey. l ron~ on : Jim (;ilium . Pfll:t fl mou t l~ .; Hrend~ Wolfe. Pomeroy;
Ueorj.CC (iraham. Pm·tsmou!h ; J&lt;~lm ll en;lcr, Pu1tsmot1lh ; 1\1\' hard Uddl(' r 1 I orl!lmouth .

Se11ted: C.harlrs Wolre. Ironton: Cordelia Armstron(.:.

Purr ~mn 111h.

Ol,rlo Power ~mpany

1----------.....1

Working together IS the only way.

'··

or

No:. 1H ! " Oio w~ o '' the owne• of rl !.ou\1" trdilf!f "" d Nh O 1~ •e q utr o.! d to •tgi ~ l tr l ,
h,,., ,, :•a: k t .h~ l l f, it la di,p ldy o., the t •o •rt o f svch r • ~il et !lw ' 'l ttt fture -:~r ·' Decal "
;uued

OPERATOR OF

MRS. AARON KELTON
Mrs . Aa ron Kelton,
Pomeroy, is recuperating at
her home following recent
surgery at Ve t e r a ns
Memorial Hospital.

t•f fv !i .... ,

!t.utll! r

OF

Mann 1n9 D. Webster
Probate Judge
Cler k
(]) '29 , (21 5, 12, 3tc

" 'In 'lw rrrt n 1mu m l('lr ,, ~ 3 0 00 pt&lt;

Whe" l lmu•l!'
" cquitl!\ ~ s•tu\ ir. 1hi1 \ Ti !IJ H pro,dded ,., this SP t l ion , ~fl e r
thl! ftr 51 d~y of hrtuary and en or P"Or to tilt- J 1st d.Jy of De cember
the full
ol mOuf1t ol the pro ra t a t,u. is du e ~nd paya ble inomtd+&lt;ttety upon th e tkp !ration ~f
.:t JO d .. y p..r to d tommei\C tng with !he dolle t he situ s is acquire d .

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT .
OF FIDUCIARY

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

ol1

&gt;I '''" """~''~"' m tcu ol tf.Hfl( · •" doU{lt\ " u p plHob lf! 10 o huu~P tro;f ,.r ro o t

Hu ...·• ' M'

d ullo.t\ b; t h1• 1\Uf''!:J "

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTA TE .'' OF G EORGE A . ·
MEIN H ART ,
DECEA SE D

On January 24th , 1979, m
the Meigs County Proba te
Cour t, case No. 12594, Bar ·
bara Jane Mayer, 3975 lrwm
Court, Grove City, Ohio 43 123,
was appointed Execu tr il~: of
th e estate of George A . Mei n·
na rt, dece ased. laTe of 94
Hudson STr eet, MiddleporT,
Oh io 45760 .

\· ,.,. ,,, Av•l •t 1• h • .T'\Ih.•pl .,.•·••J t l-• &lt; •·\rll' ' u l ~ wu l ~"' o;o l , ~,~ ha•.n~ lr o.! P r h y th~ t o w ra•e o l
, ;, ,. •u .. · rt~l d ,•l•l • ' ,., .,.. , .. h t he h ov lt· ' •oil~· l, o1
~.:tH

Mannmg D . Web5 ter
ProbaTe Judge
Clerk
29, (2) s, 12, Jtc

Case No·. 22594

CHOICES

'I

'

.

�'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 29, 1979

~

f

7-The D•ily Sentinel, MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. Jan. 29,1979
DF.AR .JERI - (';,.-l'full v
"'itil'k an in.• pit:k or . l'lha1~

john Kerr to conduit G'GA fund-raising campaign
· MIDDLEPORT - John inception, nearly 12 million . and women'sorganizations at
Kerr, President of Radio Mid· dollars llas bee n made our kick.&lt;Jff meeting to be
Pomeroy, Inc. Radio Station available to women 's and held at the Holiday Inn
WMPO , anno unced today men's
civic,
reU~ious,
Wednesday, Jan. "31 . at 10
social
and a.m. Comm un ity Club
that WMPO will launch its fraternal,
1979 community public charitable organizations Awards, open to all, open to
servi c e broadcas t i ng .throughout the world. Over all Meigs, Mason and Gallia
schedule bringing to Meigs, one hundred thousand club women's and men 's clubs or
Mason and Gallia Counties participations, involving six auxiliaries as a fund-raising
acclaimed Community , Club million women, have com- activity , will · actuallY com-·
peted iri CCA throughout tile menc'e operation in mid· Awards.
Community Club Awards, years to earn cash awards for March.
Kerr stated Cash Awards
or CCA as the plan is widely iocal club treasuries.
"ln;ismuch as CCA, over totaling $2,000 will be
known, is currently being
conducted in most of the the years, bas been success- distributed to organization
lUI throughout the co untry, , ·that participates in the
m~jor cities in ·the United
States, as well as Australia, we are looking forward with campaign.
Canada and Puerto Rico . In great anticipation to meeting
Host ess for tile coffee·
the 25 years since the plan's with several hundred men's meeting for Radio Station
WMPO will be Mrs. Jean
:&lt;&lt;::::::,:::::::::::::,:,,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::: Will,
well'known local
::::
.... clubwoman. She has been
active in organizations in the

::.:: H e Ien
· H e Ip ::.:::::. ~i~~.tre.:r~~ ~ear:~
·! US . . . By Helen Botter:: ~~ ~':~;r ~~ s~~~i;:.
:·:·

·

·•· coming CCA Campail(ll.

Are 'Step' Marriages fllegal?
By Helen Hottel

Airman Warner is a 1978
graduate of Gallia Academy.
Her husband, Scott, is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Ted A.
Warner of Pomeroy.

STEPHANIE WARNER
SAN ANTONIO - Airman
Stephani e R. Warner,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Derry D. Hemphill of
Gallipolis, has graduated at
Lackland AFB, Tex., from
Air Force basic training.
The

airman,

who

ls

remaining at Lackland for
specialized training in the
security police fi eld, studied
the Air Force mission,
orga ni zation and customs
and receiv ed special in~tru ction in human relations.
Completion of this training
earned the individual credits
towards an associate in

.applied science degree
thr·o ugh the Comm unity
College of the Air Force.

,------ -,
.

..

1
i

I

Social 1
Calendar
1
·
I

MONDAY
RU Tl AND
GAR DEN
C'L!TP - '0 p.m. Monday,
h t)llli:

'

"'S.

RaiP.,h Turner

wtlll
C:hris Diehl , cohr. , tcss. Containers to be
&lt;li spl"y erl. Mrs . Cha rles
i.l''.l: is

and

Mrs.

Harry

W11!Jamson to havr program . ,
TUESDAY
MA TR ONS ~
l' omeroy Cha pter
186
Tuesday G p.m. with potluck
suppe r at Athens County
I'AST

Savings and Loan .

'POM EROY Chamber of
Ct~n tme r ce mee tin g, noon
Tu"d"y at Meigs Inn.
PAS T Comm a nders,
Trustees and interest post
members will have a dinner
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion home to
discuss proposed post home
improvements; call reser·

vntions to Paul Casci.
ST! VE RSYIL LE
Hill
Church will be open for
services at 7:30 each Tuesday
;tatting Jan. 30, with Rev.
Jerry Hblman as pastor.
·· WEDNESDAY
. LO NG BOTTOM Community Association Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . Residents
urged to attend .
WEDNESDAY
MlflDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. W~dnesday at
the home of Mrs. Emerson
Jones. Mrs. Richard Owen to
rev.iew "The Thorn Birds",

and Mrs. Ben Philson to
discuss James Michener. For
roll ca ll members are to give
either a comment on the program or a m rviPrn novelist
THURSDAY
EYANCE!.lN E CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 1:30 p. m. Thursday,
regular mee ting.

DEAR HELEN:
My wife's daughter, Jill , was in college when we were married. We didn't see one another often during the next five
years. Mary, my wife, and I were ideally happy until the
aul.omobile accident last spring.
JiU stayed on after Mary's funeral to llelp settle the estate.
She brought me out of my depression. Seven months later we
discovered we were in love.
·
The age difference is only 12 years, since Mary was a tittle
older than I. But I have been told that in some states, stepparents-and stepchildren can't marry, and my state is one of
them. Could this be true ' -DUMBFOUNDED IN MAINE
DE ARD.I.M.:
I'm also dumbfounded, but it's true: My Reader's Digest
1978 Ahnanac tells me that Maine and 16 other states, plus the
District of Columbia prohibit marriages between stepparents
and stepchildren.
Checking further, I wrote to the office of the secretary of
state in Augusta , Me., and received·this reply:
"According to 'I..aws Relating to Marriages and Marriage
Records,'·Section 31, under Maine law, a stepfather may not
marry his stepdaughter legally. This office does not have any
enforcement staff, but I have no record of having received any
complaints regarding marriages of this type. (Signed) Doris
Hayes, Deputy Secretary of State "
To avoid possible problems, "D,'' why not marry in New
York, which requires only a blood test, no waiting period between application and license ? -HELEN

. GARY RUSSELL
ALAMOGORDO, N. M.
Gary M. Russell, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lester R. Russlell of
Mason, W. Va ., has been
appointed
to
noncommissioned officer (NCO)
status in the U. S. Air Force.
The newly
selected
sergeant completed required
training in management,
leadership, human relations
and NCO responsibilities ,
before being considered for
this new rank.
NOTE TO READERS: Those 16 other states? The.y are:
Sergeant Russell is an Alabama, Connecticut, Georgia, Iowa , Maryland,
instrumentation mechanic at Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, Pen·nsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota,
Holloman AFB, N. M.
The sergeant i.l a 1973 Texas, Vermont, Virginia, plus Washington, D.C.
Moreover at least three (Alabama, Maine and Mississippi)
graduate of Wahama High
term incestuous therefore void, a union between a man and his
School.
His wife, Carole, is the son's widow, or vice versa.
daughter of Charles H. Kuhl
These non-blood-relationship marriage restrictions seem arof R R I, Pomeroj.
chaic and they might never be questioned- unless inheritance
battles ensue. If you've fallen in love with an in-law or "step,''
better check before you wed.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Jan. 26
Tammy AdkinS, Ralph
Baloard, Frances Briggs,
Sharon, Burns, Helen Chase,
Gregory Engle, David Ewing, Diana Gill , Lawrence
Gill, Forest Gillenwater,
Cora Haskins, James Helms,
Lee Holcomb, Shannon Hunt,
Carolyn Jolly, Margaret Marcum , Gera ldine May! ,.
Stanley . Payne, Brenda
Rainey, Jo Ann Rohrbough,
Frances Roush, Arthur Skinner, Wanda Thorne, AHred
Thornton, Dorothy Waddell;
Randolph Ward, Lawrence
Wolfe, Douglass Wright.
Births, Jan. 26
Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Carter, twins, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Burcham, son, Gallipolis.
Discharges, Jan. 27
Esther Baker, Lyda
Bateman, Roy Burns,Alvin
Cooper, Charles Cornell, Sr.,
Charles Crouch, Margaret
Ehman , Worthy Evans, Mrs,
Michael Fields and son, Nettie George, Raymond Gibson,
Tomi Hahn, Miles Hoon,
Eli1.a Hughes , Lucille Kitchen, Donnavin McCumber, .
Mrs. Timothy Martin and
son, Alfred Plants , Jr.,
Augusta Powell, Patricia
Kuinby, Mrs. Arnold Reffitt
and daughter, Barbara
Rinehart, Davis Saunders,
Mrs. Danny Silvers and
daughter, Jack Sparks, Blanche Sievers, Mrs. Daniel
Sublett and son, Floyd
Walker, Oral Wills.
Discharges, Jan. 28
Mrs. Randall Baldrige and
da ughter, Mrs. Russell
Browning and son, George
Burkett, Lucille Carter, Ola
Coen, Alah Darst, Gerald
Lehew, Rena Plymale,
Daniel Rake, Betty Robinson,
Ronald Sargent, Maude
Wilson.

DEAR HELEN :
My husband was killed in World War I. We married when I
was 16, and I continued living with my folks when he went
overseas.
Our town collected money for a memorial statue, listing all
those who had died for their country. My parents contributed.
Then we moved away before it was built, and I never came
back, until now.
When I went to see the monument, I discovered my husband's name wasn't on it! All these years, he's been slighted
and nobQdy ever told me.
I called the mayor's office and no one seemed interested in
"ancient history'' How can I make them see it's Important?
-NOT TOO OLD TO FIGHT
DEARNTOTF:
Contact ~~~.1. veterans ' organizations, ask for a city council
hearing, and present your case. Be sure to alert the editor of
your town's newspaper. A feature story in the press often gets
action where low-key complaints fail . May you soon see your
husband's
name
in · it s
rightful place !
-H.

Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can
talk it over in her colUmn if you write to Helen Bottel, care of
this newspaper. Copyright 1979 by King Features Syndicate,
Inc.

General Chainnan.
. She is a member of Grace
Episcopal Church and has
served .iri the cominunity in a . ·
number of ways. Site served
on the election board in her
ward and Mrs. Will was
associated with the New
York Clothing House for 12
years.

delivered between March 19
and April 7. The seven dif.
ferent kinds of cookies sell for
$1 .50 per box with 95 cents
from each box going into
developing the scouting program.
The supplier thiS year is
Little Brownie Bakers and
the sale goal for the Black
Diamond Girl Scout Coimcil

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly.Cramer

damp spoon for mt•asuring

Youth G1ass
holds party

LAFF-

powder with your rolling pin

ami return to the jar. u,ing a
the tea ca n ca use 'it' tu lwnp .

usually hardens in the jar oe&lt;ween uses. Tea has become

rather expensive and I cannot
throw away most of a jar. Is
there any way it can be made
w;able again.- JERI

CORN KING

FRANKS

lwn ~

t l ,day

at

the end of the yc•ar you will
hav&lt;' $.1.65 . If you save a
ni~kt• l u dct y you will sav ~·
$17.95 and if each member of
a family of four saves a nickel
a day at the end of the .vear

thin gold dwins in llrckr
lhl'rn on tlw l&lt;'il\'('S nf

pl:1 stw niSt'!-i put in a vas1·.
{'·"'' ~~)'; 1mmv rust•.-: as net'tl&lt;'d ; Owy wi"n bt• dt•&lt;'CH'i.lti vt•
and us~ •f nl r1 t the sam P t i m&lt;•. ·
1\ fter USing tJw OVl'O [ kec•p
lht• Uuor l'lmR•d while lic~in ~

the dishc, ,

r fold the damp

di!"h frwt•l)-i in fourths and
plcH'&lt;' on llw ovt•n nu.:ks and
thl•.v an• d• :·· in no· time.

Polly will ~t' ll(l y&lt;JU ont· uf
lwr s igne d th .:1n k-yo u
nt•wspHper cnupon di pJwrs if :
slw usPs r our £C~v nrit e
Puintc•r . Pet·~~· or P roblt•m in
lll'l' &lt;"nhunn . Write POLLY'S I

..I---------,
N. w. COMPTON, O.D.

nt•wspHpcr .

I

I

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12,2 to s !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.! - EAST COURT
,ST ,_. PQME ROY.
.

1
I
I

lind flood contrm, and asking
them for help in the visual
pollution program, such as
titter. control.

'[ FARM FRESH PRODUCE

J

09

U.S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE

POTATOE$......................10 . ~. 79~
$169
SLICED BACON........~~· •• ·
CAROl NAL

FRESH CRISP

.

Ce_lerv .................................
~~~~~ .. 49e
WINESAP
.
DELICIOUS APPLES ......·4 ~. 79~

Now there is an exciting new COSflletic
. that can temporarily smooth away
wrinkl es for up to 8 hours. It's called
Secret Miracle and its scientilic blend
of unique beauty ingredients works
within minutes to smooth over wrinkles, crow's-leet, and under eye
puffiness. NeW Secret Miracle will
keep your ski n prac tically line free
all day or all night. Secret ,Miracle
costs SS and is sold with a strict
money back guaranlet! by the manufacturer. So berore you consider th at

FRENCH CITY TASTEE

BOLOGNA ......... ~~;. 8

9C

'

U.S.O.A. CHOICE ARM POT OR

ENGLISH CUT ROAST ..........Po, nd $1 n

Family Pak

.

.Red Radishes ... ~ ............ 2 ~:. 29e
LARGE RED RIPE
lb. 49e
Tomatoes............... ··~··············

inal

Pomeroy, Ohio

CHUCK ROAST ....................... Po,n d $1 79

CARROTS...........................2~~~P.k~~-49e

'

VAUGHAN

Nelson's Drug Store

U .S.O.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

tONG CALIFORNIA
CRISPY

nati've... new Secret Miracle Temporr~rV Wrin kle Smoother.

Pound

FRYERS
lb. 49e

~

D

-..,

~
Quantity
Rights Reserved

MAXWELL HOUSE

TAB SPRITE

CUFFE

COKE

Limit

one with coupon

8

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE ................................... ·~~':' S]7'
BARS.

8 •

e•

1 • • 1

e• • ee • •

1 • •

e• e • • •

1 • • 1 • • • •

e• • •1

16-0Z.
BOTTLES

• 1 • • • • • • • • 1 • •

.

12-oz. French Style Green Beans
14-oz. Whole or Sliced Beets
14-oz. Sliced Carrots
16-oz. Veg·A'I Mixed Vegs.
14Y2-oz. Sweet Peas

14 Yl.•-oz. Cream St.yle or 12-oz. Whole Kernel

Reg. $9.95

.

NOW

·

(ubber Back)

NOW

sq•

499 yd.

CHERRY
PIE
.

FILLIIG

10% OFF

JIFFY PIE CRUST MIX ....... .-.-..... ~~

'\

MARDI GRAS NAPKINS

•

•

CHI

* DISCONTINUED
. SAMPLES
SMALL

MEDiUM

Wide Selection
of models/

LARGE

•
••

2

•

•
••

.

BUFFET
SUPPER

WE HAVE OUR. OWN CARPET LAYERS AND WE CAN INSTALL
THIS CARPET FOR YOU WITHIN 2 DAYS AnER YOU BUY IT.

Miniature die-cast metal
cars, famous for their color
and detailing!

BEN

106 N. 2nd Ave.•

'

'

}

Chh:l&lt;on lo Dumpllngo or
Chicken 6 Noodlel

Lb.

. 1

MARGARINE

09.

Z

"I

1-Lb.

Cartons

$100

~=~

·.·

• CAR[)INA LFaoo sTORES .

29

AUNT JEMIMA

xe;; •111 il• J: 1

PANCAKESYRUP j

li~i l

ont wilt&gt; CO IJflllft
one couoon per f'er!ltly

36 ·0Z .

Rattle

s1 59 ~
'"

~

f.-.pOi-e:t 'Ul/79
Good it C......, f\cl~ • l Blue S1ore 1
I){)

0
~

~

30 05 ~

CARD I NA L ~~

JlteliJi;t•l:l

CRACKERS j
69(~
o
::;;

Pkg.

2
'
'

~

lett •1 IJ ;;;:

• CAROINAL FOOD ST OA £S
I j ~I ·
~~ERRICHNCHIPS - - - · - -- -

\.uOKIES

13· 01 .

" l'kg .

~

89( ~
~

i»

~

l~'l/J/7 9

G~ at ~ Roy•l 11,,. B1a.n

.

Chocolate D~ink

Gat

Bordens -

$l

59

FRESH

H4'F. HALF CEREAL MILK ..............c:~.:. 59c
FRESH BORDENS

D
::;;

00. 10 0~ ~

""''NmiG

2% MILK .......................... ~~!·.. $1 59

•.
~

'"''"'" "'

NAl \'&gt; iff

COnAGE CHEESE ............................. ,... i!~":.;69'

.

Vo STORE S

0010 0f&gt;

'llallev Bell

'

Pomeroy, 0.

'

$

TWII POPS ........................................ ~~~- 89'

Mlddleport,-0.

"

KRAFT PARKAV

Cans

icie~cilili~A~~~~ $1

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWEIJY

~bring variety to

~

0~~&amp;

Ellf"' ZIJ/79

Turkey, $11i1bury Steek.
Beet 8t Noodles. Beef Stew,

Z

a

CIKICI.- C•ntlftalllovel Blu• Su.. oo

i

BANQUET

59c·

i'

~

V!GAt
SHE.RBET•••••••••••••

••

p':g.

Pkg .

sroRE S • CAROINAL ro oo sroR Es

4 -Ct .
Pkg.

6-oz.

Valley Bell

•,

~~

59( ~
-

Lb .

Umll &lt;J nlt .,.;,h e oopol'l
one cou pon ~· 11mi1v

'bo STO RES

White or Assorted Colors

140-C&lt; .• •(
PkQ.

••'

'

00 213 06 ts
CARDINAL
T\3

X!I•l*lilt·l:J

~

~

'

~
Cl)

KE MIX

BATHROOM TISSUE

DOWNY........................·r::~~:$3"

COUPON TO STORE

6'S"x12 Beige .•..•.•...... $25.00
7'x 1S' Green Plush .. ....... $59.00
S'x12' Green Tweed ........ $25.00
S'6"x 12 Shag Green . .. .....s2s.oo
9'x12' Orange Nylon ...•..• $45.00
11'x121 Orange Nylon •.•... $79.00
11'S"x12' Gold Plush Wool . . $79.00
8'x12' Red Tweed •...•.... .· $39.00
4'x12' Orange Kezhli Carpet $20.00

Pk g.

GRYJACK

·Fabric Softener

Coupon Expires Jan . 31, '79

LUCKY SIZE REMNANt-

~

~

29c

CLIP AND BRING THIS

~

"'!!J~m~
Ill.
I
· t

$10.00 Purchase

1

s1 29 ;=

26 · 0Z .

N~~;'j S . CAA DINALfOOOSTOR{S

BROWN 'N SERVE ROLLS~················•··················,:;~.' · 49c

59c.

FILLING ....... .-.-.. ,.. .-..- .-....... .-.. 2~~~·

PURCtf·ASE OF
WCKY SIZE REMNANTS

1] :

GNf Itt C.tdiltlll

Vo ST ORES

Can

, APPLE PIE

ill

£,...iJM 213/ H
fl o~ tl Blue Storu

..,

ZEST A CRACKER·S ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ..........,iiD~·.$1

THANK. YOU

(ooosi OR ES Jlit.e]IJ

Lim il on11 V!fitlt Coupon
ont coupOn p•"tamily

ASSORTED VARIETIES

RICELAND RICE •••••••••••••••••••••• ~.••••••••••••••••••••••• 2

20-oz.

• CARDINAL

POTATOES

HAWAIIAN

'

.'

V&gt;

PILLSBURYHUNGRYJA CK

•

'

*THROW RUGS

'--=ro,.,~tE S

Reg. 99'
8 oz. pkg.
Potato Ch .lpS••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
6 9~

THANK YOU

$695 yd:

Reg. S7.95
. $

Cans

SNYDER'S

sq

C•o:lfh1•l " ov•l Alu• SUirn

[CARDINA L\G

49(

DORITO'S.....R.e!:~:~.................. 79c ..... lo~ OFF

yd.

lit

00 liJ 0!&gt; ~

Cans

••••••••••••••••••••••••
sq.

~

{\Qod

MIX or MATCH

;.100
:r'

•

Limit 4 and 110.00 purchase

J

~

D

14-oz. Peas II Carrots

For

99( ~

'

18 -Ct.
Boxes

$119
3

"
z

~

Ass t. Varieties

Plus Deposit

F.RESHLIKE

GREEN
SHAG (with rubber back)
BROWN
PWSH . (rubber back)

Vo STORE S

SALE DATES JAN. 29 • FEB. 3, 1979

REG. DRIP ELECT. PERK or ADC

TWEED NYWN CARPET

J

I.

•
,.

GREEN &amp; RED

200 East Main

I1

POINTERS in care- of this

----~-----

n

Reg. S7.95
KITCFIEN
sq.
.
$499
yd.
CARPET (10 Patterns) NOW
GOLD (Reg. Back, Nylon) Reg. S8.95 sq.
NOW $695 yd.
SHAG

POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN

counted multitudes and 41 : 49

111{• lmt1t'l' from burning or
gt•lt ing Inn brown. - E I.J ,y

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

79c

12 oz.

$5.000 lace lilt. consider the $5 alter-

Five years ago ; Belgium's
King Baudouin dissolved the
nation's parliament after efforts to form a .new coalition
e goyenunent failed.

t'd gonds and other nun rx•ri shahles so ilS to C'UI down
on fnO«I bills whl'll I lwvt·
brrge u1 ilit.y !~ ill s .

Figura tively " sand" de~ quantities o( weight impo'"iOP. ,\ 11 POI.i .Y - Wlwn notes instability and is so ble to measure .
llli'lllng bntt er r rttld a fe w used in the Bible but it is also
'' J osepb gathered corn as
drops of t•nnking oil tn keep used as a symbol of un- the saud of th e sea. ''....- Gen.

TURKEYS ....... ~:~~~~~~:.·.. :~;. 79c
TURKEYS ... ~ ... !~:~~~~~: ... ~~~- 89c

without surgery

suspect you . were acciden tprone '?''

~·our

MHS . .J .R

. ARMOUR STAR BASTED

is 420,000 bo11;es. In Meigs
County there are approximately 250 girls and 50 adult
volunteers involved in the
scouting program. There are
a total of 17 troops on the
brownie, junior arid cadette
levels. Mrs. Pat Thoma,
Wolfe St., Pomeroy, is ser-·
vice unit dir&lt;;ctor for Meigs
Coui'lty.

WRINKLES
SMOOTHED

L--"''====='---':!!l
"W hen did you first begin to

OF.M{ POLLY - To kt •t•p

my pmltry sti~!lVl'S w ith, {'CUUl w

1r ynu saq• &lt;t p&lt;·nny

After stirring tca in a glass uf
watrr thoroughly dry the
spoon befort&gt; measuring out
more tea fur another glass
· and I think your troubles will
be over. -POLLY

l hj ·~ 'I\ ill h:t \ '4' SllVt •rl ~~~ fill.
-M .J'! T.

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

Prese-rvation Society to r_neet Sunday
including an inventory of early manmade buildings and
objects, calling attention to
soil erosion, run.&lt;Jif water

into ftw

knif~·

mH:-:s sn lht.• Jump!:i wi ll cmm.•

·out of th&lt;' jar: roil them til a

TEA GETS LUMPY
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I prefer
instant tea and like to keep it
on hand for guests but it

Girl ~'cout cookie sale still on

Meigs Countians are
reminded that the annual
meeting of the South Central
Ohio Preservation Society,
Inc. will be held on Sunday,
Feb. 4 at 2 p.m. in the home of
SCOPS coordinator, Helen
The tee!Uige class of the Van Meter, 178 Church St.,
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Chillicothe.
Church had a pizza party FriFollowing a short business
day night at the home of meeting to elect new officers
Richard and Shirley Friend.
and a general discussion
The Rev. Floyd Shook had from the membership, there
prayer . The party was in will be a tour of the newly
observance Qj Youth Week. restored home and offices ~
Sunday evening members of SCOPS president, Deborah
the class took part in the ser- Douglas Barrington. Her
vice at the church.
home is an example of an earAttending were the youth ly home adapted to modern
directors, Randy and Darla use and will attract interest
Hawley and Patty Barton, the from those interested in
Rev. and Mrs. Shook, ·Bobby preservation.
1979 has been set aside as
Foster, Mark Friend, Tammy Clark, Margo Martin, "Youth Year World· Wide."
Laura Smith, · John Smith, Some time ago SCOPS in·
Frank Martin, Eugene Jef- itiated a program to work
fers, Angela Martin, and Ed- with youth groups, leading
die Sellars, a guest.
them into various activities

PKG. OF2!
In 1820, King George III of
Britain died, and his son be. came King George IV..
In 1843, the 25th American
president, William McKinley,
was born in Niles, Ohlo.
In 1850, Henry Clay in·
trodllced iq the Senate a corn·
promise bill on slavery that
included the admission of
Ca lifornia into 'tbe Union a s a
'free state.
'

''

~.·

:·

U. ~: Servicemen News

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
and served, as its director for
six years.
. In 1973, 5he helped organize
the Meigs County Humane
Society and WliS its general
chairman for three years.
She ·served in ,1966 as
American Heart Association

The annual girl scout
cookie sale will continue
through this week with orders
to be placed with any girl
scout or through Mrs. Pat
Philson of Syracuse, the
county cookie chalnnan.
"Cookies are Fine in '79'' is
the slogan of the cookie sale.
Orders only are being taken
now with payment to be made
:::; capacity of Community Club when the cookies .. are

~· :

HOSTESS- Mrs. Jean Will, Pomeroy, will serve as
ill'&gt;'•. iw ·:'\dnesday's coffee meeting staged by Radio
St. _.. ''·! .; v to inaugurate a Community Club Awards
program for Meigs, Mason and Gallia Counties.

Mrs . Will kno,.:s the
community through her own
activities and knowledge of
the area and its peop1e,.- Kerr
said. She has been active .as a
PTA president, president of
Winding. Trail Garden Club,
hPloed to organized the
Ladies Auxiliary of tbe

puintt•d petring

OF.tl il POJ.J.Y - In stun mc.·r wlwn tn } ' gas and t•lt'&lt;' trit· hil ls e~re 's rmllh•r I stock

�&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Midllleport-I-omeroy, 0., Monday , Jan. 2!!. 1979
NO 500
ANNUAL

OROINAN~E

APPROPRIATION

ORDINANCE

A RESOLUTION to make

appropr iations

for

Current

Expenses . and other E,.;
penditures of the V tltage of

Pomerov. State of Ohio ,
dur lno the f•scal vear ending
Uecember 31. 1979
Sect1on
1.
BE
IT
RESOLVED bv the Council
for the Village of Pomeroy ,

State of Otiio, That, to provide

for the current expenses and
other e-Kpend1tures of the sa1d

Vtllage of Pomeroy dur ing
the ftscal
year endtng
Oecernber Jl , 1979 , the
fo llowtng sums be and they
are hereby set as tde and

cordance w tt" taw or or
d tnance , Provided furt.,_ er
that the approprtahons for
cont~ngencies
can on ly be
expended upon appeal of two
th1rds vote of Council lor
ttems of expense constJtutmg
a legal obltgat1on agams1 the
vtllage , and lor purpo ses
other than those CQvered by
the
other
spectftc
ap
propriat1ons herein made
Sectton 18 Thts reso 1ut1on
shall take effec t at the
earliest per10d allowed by

law

H 0

appropr ta led as follows, v•l
Sectton

2

That there

appropr.ated

from

be

the

GENERAL FUND ·
GENERAL

GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICE
MAYOR

Personal Servtces
Total For Mayor

S2.400 00
1,400 00

CLERK ·CLERK
TREASURER:

Personal Services
3,000
Total For Clerk
Clerk Treasurer
3 000
TREASURER
Per sonal servtces
360
Total For Trea surer
360
SOLICITOR·

00
00
00
00

LEGAL ADVISOR

Per son aJ Serv ices
Tota l F.or So llc1tor
Legal A d vtsor

3.000 00

Other
Tota l For Elecltons

1,000 00
1 000 00

ELECTIONS

3,000

oo

COUNCIL
Personal Ser\ltces
L440 00
1.440.00
Total
GENERAL
ADMINISTRATION
Personal Serv 1ces
6,610 00
Supplres and
13,000 00
Ma teria ls
Captta l Outlay
2, 000 00
18,000 00
Other
T otal For General
39,610.00
A dmtnt stra hon
To ta l For General
Governmental
Ser \11ces
50,810 00
SECURITY OF

PERSONS AND

PROPERTY
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Personal Ser vtces
65,000 00
Supplie s and
Mater ials
30,700 00
Capt tal Outlay
7,000 .00
Other
3,000. 00
To t al For P ollee
Depart ment
105,700.00

PARK METER FUND
IGEN I
Other
3,900 00
To ta l tor Park
Meter Fd (Gen J
3,900 00
To ta l For Secur1 t y
of P er son s and
Proper ty
160,4 10 00

PLANNING

COMM15510~

Other
2.500 00
Tota l For Plann1ng
Commission
2,500 .00
Sec tion 4. Th a t there be
appropriated
f rom
the
STREET CONSTRUCTION,
MAINTENANCE
AND
REP AIR
F UND
!AUTO

LIC E NSE AND GASO LINE
TAXI
·
TRANSPORTATION

FACILITIES
STREET DEPT

P ersonal Ser\ltCes
Supplies and
Matenals
Cap1tal Outlay
Othe r
Tot al For St r eet
Pavt ng

30,000 00
15,500 00

1.500 00
10,000.00
57 ,000 00

STATE HIGHWAY

DEPARTMENT
Persona 1 sen tc es
2.000 .00
Other
3.000 .00
To tal For State
Htghway
5,000 00

PUBLIC HEALTH
SE ~VICES

CEMETERY
OPERATION AND

MAINTENANCE

Personal Serv1ces
13, 000
Supplies anct
3,000
Materials
Tota l For Cem etery
Operation a nd
Ma tntenance
15 ,000
Total For Cemetery
Fu nd
15,000

00

00
00

!REVEN UE )

FUND

WATER

DISTRIBUTION
Personal Services
36,000
Su pplies an d
Ma tena ls
30.000
7.,000
Capita l Outlay
21,000
Othe r
Tota l For Wate r
Sys tem Oper arto n. 94 ,000
ADMINISTRATION

CERTIFICATE
Sect ton 5705 39, R C - ' No
appropnatton measure sha ll
become effecti\le until there
tS ftled wtth the appropr .ating
a u thor1ty by the countY
audttor a cer t lftcate that th e
to tal approprta t to ns from
each fund , take n together
with all other outstand~ng
appropr•at1ons , do not excee d
suc h off 1ctal es ttm ate or
amended oft tCi al estimate
wnen the appropnat1on does
n ot exce ed such offic i a l
es t1ma te, the cou nt y audtlor
shall gtve such cer l1fica te
forlhWt lh upon r ecetvt ng
trom
th e
appro pr ta t tng
authortty a certlfted copy of
Jhe appr opn a t ton measure "
T he State of Oh to, Me 1gs
Coun t y, ss
I , Jane Walton , Clerk of th e
V1 llage of Pomeroy tn sa1d
County, and tn whose custod y .
the Ft les, Jou rna ls and
Records ar e r equired by th e
L aws of th e State of Oh1 0 to be
kept , do hereby ce rlt fy thet
the foregotng Annual A p
propr1a t1o n Res olut on ts
taken and cop tes from th e
ortgtnal Resol u tio n now on
I tie with satd V ill age, that the ·:
foregotng Resolution h as
been com pared by m e wtth
the sa •d ongtnal and that th e
sa me ts a tr ue and corr ect
cOpy thereof
W1tness my signatur e, fhts
15th day of Januar y 197 9
Jane Walton
Clerk of the
VIllage of
Pomeroy
Meigs Count y, OhiO
{ 1 ) 22

29, 2tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
Pub lic Hearing on the
Ann-ual ~lan for Programs on
Ag tng will be conducted
during the f 1rst week of
February , 1979 Heanng s w11t
be held
Monday , February 5,
1979 at the meettng roo m of
th e
Athens
C tty . County
Health Buil dtng, West Un ton
Street , Athens. Oh 10.
Tuesday , F ebruary 6,
1979, at the community
Bu l ldlng ,
Noble
County
Fairgrou nds, Caldwell. Ohio,
- Wednesday , Fe br uary 7,
1979 at the Perry County
Sentor C1t1zens center, 526
Rear Mil l
Street,
New
Lexing t on , Ohto
All Public Hea r ings will be
held from 11 . 00 AM to 3 00

PM

00

00

00
00
00

The subtect of these Public
is tne revtew of the
Annual Plan for Programs on
Aging
Tes ltmony can be spoken or
written or ca n be presented
informally Th e Area Plan tS
available at your local
county Comm issioners Off1 ce
for rev iew.
T he publi c is cordially
urged to attend and g l \le
testtmony
For farth er tnformatton
pl ease contac t Buckeye H 1IIS
Hock tng va !ley Reg to nal
Oe\l elopment Otstrtct (614)
37 4-94 36

SEWER(REVEN UE I FUND
SEWER

MAINTENANCE
Personal Se r v1ces
11.500 00
Supp11es and

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

ESTATE

OF ,

GREENLEE ,

HANNAH

DECEASED

Case No. U576

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
On Jan uary 18 , 1979, in th e
Me tgs County Probate Court,
case No 22576, George E
G re en le e. 7551 L ee Rd •
W e~ terville , OhiO 43081 was
appotnfed Admin tstrator of
the
es tat e
of
H an nah
Green lee, deceased , late of
357 Wtlltams St, Middleport,
OhtO
Mannt ng 0 Webster
Probate Judge
Clerk

(1)

22. 29 (2) 5, 31&lt;

9 physicists
comingtoOU

20, 00 0 00

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) Nine
physicists
from
31.500 00
universities in China will visit
~DMINISTRATION
Ohio University for three
- SEWAGE
Cap1ta l Outlay
34,800 00
days beginning Sunday. This
To tal For Admint!tratton
will be the second visit by a
- Sewage
34 ,800 00
Tota l For sewer
Chinese group to the campus
1Re\lenue) Fund 66,300 00
in three months.
sectton 13 That the r e b e
appropr tafed
from
the
The delegation will consult
GENERAL
BOND
with
Ohio
University
RETIRiMENT FU ND
physicists
engaged
in
Pa yment of Prin ct pal 7,000 00
Payment o f Inter est 2.625 00
neutron, heavy 1on and
Total F or General
pulsate physics research and
Bond Re ttr emenl
Fund
9,625 00
Jearn the capabilities of the
Section 15 That there be
university's tandem neutron
appropr.ated
fr om
the
FEDERAL
REVEN U E
accelerator.
SH AR ING F UND
Members of a Chinese
&lt;..: ap1tal Outlay
19 ,200.0Q
·education
delegation which
Other
3,900 00
Tota l For Federal
visited the university in
Revenue Sharing
October toured the acFund
23.10000
Section 16 T hat th er e be
celerator facility and were
approprtated from tne FIRE
briefed on its r esearch
DEPI&lt;RTMENT FUND
capabilities. Reports from
FIRE DEPT .
Personal Services
4,000 00
this group and research at the
Suppltes and
university led to the second
7,500 {]0
Materials
~ 3.720.00
Other
visit.
Tota l For Ftre
The vlslt ls part of a survey
15,220.00
D ept ~
TOTAL ALL
by the Chinese of American
APPROPR II&lt;T IONS
556,687 22 physics laboratories.
Mater~als

Tota l For Sew er
Matntenance

Section 17 And the V•llage
Clerk is- hereby authOr ized to
draw ht s warrants on the
v tllage
Treasurer
tor
pe vmen ts from any of !he
totegolng
appropriations
upon receiving proper cer ·
flftcates
and
vouchers
therefor , approved by the
board or off•cers au thor iZed
by l aw to approve the same,
or an ordinance or r esotu tton
of c ouncil to make the e)&lt;
penditures; prov 1ded that no
warrants sha ll be drawn or
paid tor salaries or wages
except to persons emp lo yed
by auth()ri l y of and In ac

fl&lt; l ~' .,~.I '

15 Wol'ds or Under
Cash • Churge
100

I~

3dltys

1 ..
I Ill

2~

Rdays

300

375

I day

.'
One year ago: U.S. and
Canadian scientific learns
continued
efforts
to
determine the radiation
danger from a Soviet satellite
that disinteg rated over
northern Canada,
with
results still inconclusive.
Today's birthdays : Actor
John Forsythe is 61 years old.
Actor Victor Mature is 63.

liM~5TONf

sond grn yr&gt;l
ro lr'l lll'l r hlo• rl(! ff' r ltltr(!r don
l nr'rl nnd all type " n l -., oil l ~
1 C' I~ !!"L I Soil Work •, lnr
I: Mom
St 1-'omN ny qq7 :HW1

C()A I

..

Pets for Sale
- ---- ---- -

mlmmwn Ctish m advanc:e
Mobile Home sales and Yard sales
IICt"t!pted only wtlh cash wtth
order 25 cent chl!.rge for ad!! canying Box Nwnber In Care of The Sen·
tinel

are

reserves the right
to edit or reJect any ads deemed ubJe&lt;.iwnal The Publisher wlU not be
responsible for mure than ont~ im.v r·
The Publ1Sher

-

--

-~---- -

-

-

-

Auto Safes
- - --- - - --

1975 CA DILLAC ELDORADO full
r nwer orr cleon bccellent
co ndtl •on Ph one 99') 74b'1

rt!Ct uwerilun
Phone 992-21$6

JQM DELIVERY JHP 2 whee l
cir ive $400 1J week old pure
hred great rfone SlOO 1974
Husv uorno WR motorcycle
S300 Call 747 2406

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

LARGE ROUND bol es S20
SC]uare bales 51 M M Corn
!&gt; hnllcr 985 4131 9HS 3537

HAY

AI. TROMM OONST.

GRAV El Y TRACTOR and mowe1
Hoy for so le. 9.49 1368
G~AI N

HO

beef

- Room Additions-Custom Remodeling-

Ree!Osvtl l('

bl4 378 6311

ceramtc Tile . Formica
Counter Tops - Ceilings

(Suspended. Texture) . Tile
. Floors . Paneling &amp; Tr1m .

Qualify Work You Can

19i'b CHfiVSLER CORDOBA

Monday
Tu!!Sdlly

lhruFr1day

thedaybe1:r~ublfcaUon

l

l ull
power AM FM stereo tore
cr u 1se rontrot •ear w1ndow
rlnfogger fo tr condt1ton $:1200
'1 92 612.4
1918 FOND BRONCO Custom
u nder
10 000
m t l es
' 30 d 173 9 132 a fter 6ptn

For all
Needs

GUN SHOOT Racme Gun Club

Factory

GUN SHOOT ROcme Vo l un t ~er
Ftr e Dept Every Sa tu r day 6 30
pm at thet r bu tldmg tn Ba shan
Foe tory chok e gu.,s on ly
INCOME TAX Setvtcc Federal
. and State Taxe s 992 7'172 for
oppts or see Wando l::blin
41000 Laurel Ch ff Rd
INCOME TAX Ser vtce Feder o l
and Stote Wolloce Ru ssell
Bradbury Call992 7228
FRH CANDY mokmg cla ss of Dt s
Candy and Cake Suppltes Spr
mg Volley Ploro 446 2134 l or
reg 1stro t. on II s fun ond easy
You II be o mazed al what you
con do

Services Offered
- - - - -· -- ---WILL CA RE for the cld f! r ly 1n our
home Phone qcn 7314
WATER WHL drd lmg Wd ltotn T
Gronl 7d'l 7879
TRH TRIMMING and
7J 'l 3167 01 74'1 2573

Will

CARE for elderly person tn
prtvole homt'l' tn Pomeroy
~ ... c r yt h.ng
furntshed
but
medtco tt on S750 per month
ro ll99'l w:n

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

SEVE N WE I::K old puppte s Cute
f ather H us~ ~~
5 mo le
3
f(&gt;mol e 992 2941

Wanted to

Januory 30, 1979
Unu sual chances to further
yo ur ambtttons ma y co me out
of the blu e lh ts comtng year
lnves trgate them and, 1f all
checks o u1 ta ke ad'tlantage of
these untq ue opportunttles

Mt:T AL TOOL bb)( for
hurk ') motorcycle s
needs
a nd Suzuki
'149 :J813

Buy

CHIP WOOD
Poles
mo"
dtomeler 10 ' on lar ges t end
$12 per ton Bundled slab $10
per ton Del tvered to Ohto
Pollel Co
Rt 2, Pomerpy
~92 2689

half your bailie tod ay If you
th1nk you're bemg handed a
lme, don t he st tate to change
dt rechon s F1nd out more of
wha t ltes ahead for you in 1979

by sendi ng for your copy of lhe
all-new Astra-G ra ph Letter for

1979 Ma1l Sf for each and a

POMEROY Fores t Pro
ducts Top pnce for stond ing
sow t tmber Coli 99'1·5965 or
t&lt;enl Honb11 l d4b_8 57~

OLD FURNITURI:: tee boMes brass
beds 1ron bed s. desks etc
compl ete households
Wrtte
M 0 Md ler fh 4 Pomeroy or
coll99'l 7760

lon g , self-addresse d , stamped· OlD COINS
pocket watches
envelope to As tra-G raph , P 0
d oss rmgs weddmg bonds .
Bo x 489, Rad1o C1ty Stal1on,
dromonds Gold or si lver Coli
NY 10019 Be s ure lo s pec1ly
Roger Wo msl ey 742 2331
b.rth s1gn
..
NT TO buy old 45 and 78
WA
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
p!'lonogroph
records
Coli
Thmk twtce Recons tder what
992 6370 or Contor t M ortm Fur
your maJor goals are today
ntfure
What appears to be top prt orrty
al l~rSI may nol be all !hal WANTED TO buy old 1ewelry
1mportant
Coli 992 -52b'l or wr tle Kay
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Any
Cecil 87 S 2nd Mtddlepor l
co nfuston resul ting from the
OH
early day s problems can be
WANTED TO buy Used portable
qu 1ck ly overco me by relym g on
sewt ng mochme 992 57E:I6 or
wha t you r mst1ncts are trymg to_
'1?2 2529
tell you to do

TAURUS (April 10-May 201 AlMobile Homes for Sale
1' ' ACRE 12 M bO mobt le home
neo r Dex ter 992 5tl5B

~EMINI (May 21-June 20) Don't

1&lt;,16/ TOTAL ELECTRIC mobde
home
furntshed
J bedr
washer ond dryer A tr cond t·
ltoned 1 lot, 210 fl frontoge
$12.000 Phone 742 2826

expect any pat s on the ba ck for
grvmg a hcl&lt; and a promise to

th1ngs you do loday . In lacl, ·
halfway mea sures c ould get
you mto b1g trouble

CANCER (June 21-July 22) A

co-worke r s feeltngs co uld be
hurt through a mrsunderstand-

lng ol lacls you presenl today
Make sure you com muntcate
accuratetiY

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Again
today you had better have your
wits about you tn commerctal
dealings One whose standards aren ' t too htgh c ould try to
snow you

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Oul
of the goodness of your heart

1955 Prolne Sc hooner 28 x 8

bd,

19b5 General bOx 12, 2 bdr
1968Eicono 52x12 2bdr
196&lt;,1 Buddy 60 x 12 4 bdr
1970Sylvo bO x 12 2 bdr
1970 Cos ti P. 60 x 17 2 bdr
1973 Arlmgton, bO IC 12, 2.bdr
19/3Rtdgewood 70•14 Jbdr
1973 Ktrkwood 50,.. 12 2 bdr
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMESALES

' PT PLEASANT, WV
675 4424

Jl~68 T~AILER 12

60 OS IS $3500
Good cond11ton Ca ll 7.4 2 7806

you may agree to somethm g

X

loday that you should~'! have
Some fast lhl nklng could gel
you out of 1t

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Th ~ng s
may go wrong al work loday ,
but w l":en a little wmdfall comes

your waY you'll forgel all about
th e earher troubles

to Rent
- ·--Wanted
----------

TWO BI::DROOM house trailer or
oportm11mt . preh~ ·obl y m th e
Mtddleport
or e a ,
wlfh
reasonable rent 992 78 U

SCORPIO (Ocl . 24-Nov. 22) II 'S
quite possible you may fee l
For Rent
used by one you consider to be
COUNTRY
M OBILE Home Pork
an old and lrusted friend Get
Ro ute 33 north of Pomeroy
all lhe facts before pass1ng
Lorge lots Call ~2-7 &lt;179
1udgment. You'll f1nd you were
wrong .

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Don 't 1gnore whal your
nobler tnsttncts are telling you
to do today Keep you r stand·
ards htgh and no one can harm

you
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22•Jan. 19)
Pesslm1sllc frien ds could put a
dampe r o n your day if you let

lhem II would be best to seek
your more positive pals
Shun negative thoughls.

992 5434
TWO 81:0ROOM kitchen fu rntsh
cd opt Call before 8 orr
'192 2288
TWO 8~0 ROO M mob ile hom{
near Dexter near No 1 Mme
'J92 5858
~

IVF. HOOMS and both ups10 1rs
npt
tn Pomeroy
9q2 210~
b .fOi l'!' 5

St. Rl. 1':14 loword Rutlond,

Auto &amp; Truck

Call

Repair
Repair

THE SWEEP

ltth Century- Strvlce with
20th century Know-How.

Phone 992-5682

Woodstove, Oil Furno co
&amp; FlrepiiCO FIUII
Phone: 742-3110

1.:'-------.:-..!~~!:!!~~
Hammond

&amp;

CAPTAIN I
DO YOU READ ME-,!

CAPTA IN ~ ...

..
.,'

•

Kim White, Proprietor

WHAT:S HAPPENING
DOWN THERE~!

I' •

'
I · ,_

~==~~--·: ,

"::.

. ·•.--.
Your Headquarters For ·-

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

Lower

Organs , Story &amp; Cl•rk
Pianos. S.les &amp; Servl~;e.
1New &amp; Uaed). Servlu on
current
S•lu.

AnnstnJng carpeting

PETE SIMPSON

EWOTT
·APPUANCE II

SALES REP. tUR
SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, Q,
Coif 992-7113
For Free Estimates

Phone 94f-2118. Evening
after 5 P .M ." Weekend•
after 12 noon.
,_
12·31 ·1 mo.

_

.....

r•rktr p
Hondo
r epo tr

. -"
•

••

PI&lt;CMl% 00'1' TO l.J'IJI...
IF I. ThU... 'loU WHICH

we;%1" ~'!' Ml':&gt;rm·~J

Masonarv Works

-----

-----

SNOW
TIRE SALE

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STliTION

Pomeroy Landmark

",9,.._Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
.

,

Phone 992-2181

BROWNING MARK IV C8 ci nt~nno
tower 1 rotors wolf meter,
D 104 Twee11e Bird mike
lmeor Colll tllle lf1t 8oby sw
mg 15 b zke 1978 Cutlo5s
Co la ts
oxcelhml cond1t1on
9d9 1265
CON DITIONED mtxed hoy
bo le 742 2873

$1 25

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
~ !192·1174
1

b: ·
HOWI::HV
AND MARTIN
cov otmg
5epl 1r
sy5 1ern s
dozer back hoe dump truck ,
blackt op
lzrnestanc
gravel
r ovmg Rt 143 Phone 1 (6 14 )
698 733 1

HOMESITES for so le 1 acre and
up M tdd lepart ' nea r Rutland
Coli q97 748 1

LOTS ON Peacock Ave
Pomeroy Ohto Over J a cre~ of
prtvory 997 ~34_2 ?r 997 2449

FAIRVIEW HEIG HTS 6 year old all
e!eclrJc home. 3 bedroom 11',
ba th love ly fo mtly room With
wood
burntng stove
l ull
carpeted garag e 1 oc re Near
Me•g~ Hg th Schoo l To see coli
991 628 7
FORMER
ADOLPH
Grueser
rcst dence loc ated m Dut
chtown M 1nersv1 1ie Approx
10 acres good garden. lots of
wood two slorte s wtth Iorge
fron t porch
1',
bath
2
bedrooms wtth sleeptng encio s·
ed proch. counlr y k1 IChen, dtn·
rng rocm l.vtng room , so trm
wtndows. naturol gas furnace
unhm sheJ bosem~n t
deep
rock wa lled open well wtlh
sheltered cover . olso CJSi ern
Oropes ond corpe tmg tnduded
4 to 5 good butld1ng sp ots Tu p·
pers Ploms wafer Ohio Power
Coble TV , Gener ol Te lep hone
Pncc $25,000 Call Wtl l•om
Russell ot 992 5614 Charles
Grueser at 997 2'1 11 or Woller
Grueser ot 992 3270
lm
med1ote possess ron
HOUSE AND lot , furntt ure ,
household goods 760 Lau rel
Sl ~ i~d!epo~ t _ •
CORNER LOT located at tn1ersec
tion of SR l2d
7 and 33 in
Pome •oy. Oh•o 997-2449 or

'"n 1342

:toME ROY,

with 4 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
full basement, and garage
tn Syracuse

ROCK SPRINGS - Only 13
years old. 3 bedroom frame
home.

Enclosed

bath,

modern kilchen, and utility
room . Real Handy for
commuter.

28 ACRES -

Lays well

with pasture and plenty of
firewood . Has a modern

t~~~~-----.,...----------.,-, y:;;;;A~~S';;EE'L:-;T":~3Y~~DE¥,'
... MY ARMS FEEL
Ebewhere
70D~~\l iO5 Impudent
s=oNG ! ALMOST

on

·u.

11 Foregoing
!3 1940's
hlm star
H Chng
15 Barely

~~ ~~A~D
HAVE GOES CJ.I;AR

10 "il-IE BONE!

good' street

in

16 Parrot
17 Party pro
18 Ramble
Soprano

..

21 Exploit
....-.........:::~1..2ll..:Uhl_J 22 Uqmd

SAVE ON
CARPETING
l'rn not
t oo old'

LARGE LEVEL LOT -

~

i~~11~~~~j~ Iii

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor CcM!ring In Stock
and- wlult you're getting
- hocholocllllnr'- Fully
stOcked.
Clfl74a-~m

TA1.K-TO
Wonohll or Horb Grato
or Gone Smilll

RunAND
~. FURNil]JRE
I
Rutland j
I

/

·~42-2211

doors

to

the

corner lot .

3 PERCENT DOWN
CLOSING COSTS
YOU A HOME .
NOTHING DOWN ,
CLOSING COSTS.
992-3325.

PLUS
BUYS
V.A.
JUST
CALL

RUTlAND FURNRURE
•
WE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two full floor, of all new

'·

'

Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Assoctales

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

How Model T bidding went
NORTH

+ KJ932

1·29

• 7 53
t AK

+K8 2
EAST
a5
• J 10 9
• Q 10 8 5

WEST
• 10 4
• K 8·
• J9 763

32 Tate

+QJ

'
•'

+ 107643
95
SOUTH
+ AQ8 76
• AQ64 2

Openmg lead : +Q

One le tt e r s1mply stand s for another In th1 s sa mple A l S
use d for t he ttu ee L's, X for the IY. o O's, etc Smgle l etl ers.
apostrop hes. th e lengl h and format ion of the words ar e all
htnt s Each day the code l('ltcr" arc &lt;hfTc rcnt

.''

CRYPTOQUOTES

•
HIS FINGER PI&lt;INTS CHECKED
OUT WIT+l 'THOSE
ON F ILE: IN
WASHINGTO,\J I

OH,BILL 1 MY
I?ARLING. REUNITED AFTER
ALL

'THE:SE

YEAI&lt;S 1

SHE 'S NOT

GETTING
111l?OU GH
TO HIM.

P SG

GRVM
FA MZ

KUGRQZ

GQ
GAM

Ki!RCMJ

KZB

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

B MYRPMIKGM
GRV M

WQ

Alan . " How a bout some

H Q I hands that show the b1dding

by the bes t of the early

J G

QT

R Z

contract players?''
Oswald : "We didn't have

much

DO IN' IN TH'
HE REALIZES THAT HIS
61RL BACK HOME DOESN'T
LOVE HIM AN.'.f MORE ..EVEN
THOU6H SHE JUST SENT

HIM ABOX OF COOKIE 5:..

science

in those early

days. One of our problems
was how to bid suit slams
KZBIMF
N K U E J Q Z and we played that the jump
from one to four was definite
Yesterday's Cryploquole: TilE MORE WE DO, THE MORE slam try . Open~r could then
WE CAN DO; TilE ~ORE BUSY WE ARE, THE MORE g uess about bidding six. The
late Hal Sims was the greatLEISURE WE HAVE.- HAZUTT
est exponent of the 1-4-6
BARNEY
GARZERZW

YARD?

school As for grand slams
Hal had a s1mple rule. He
d!d not bid them. "
Alan : " Modern experts
could hnd their way to six
spades in any number of
boddmg se'luences 1 but that
Model T bidding you have
shown

here was short, sim ..

pi e' and ef fective."
Oswald: " Very few expe rts of that early da y knew
the correct way to play the
heart su1t . In fact, lots of
today's players would go
down at the slam. Not Hal.
He drew trumps, cashed his
ace of hearts , stripped the
hand of clubs and diamonds,
led a heart toward his hand
and rose w1th the queen.
West took h1s king but had to
give Hal a ruff and discard."
Alan : "Hal 's play was the
best. He was s ure to make
the slam if East held the
heart king or if West held it
smgleton or guarded just

once ''

MAW, WHAT'S OUR ROCKV CHAIR
!:&gt;ee the Grate Fa'!'iiY at

I

dance

'
•

Headquarters

OWNER MUST SELL - The own e r ol thi &lt;
charmmg 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this tine
home for a low, low price of $20, 000.: There
are 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
livmg room w-fir_fplace, formal dinmg, eatin kitchen, bafh' IN-shower, garage &amp; a king
s[zed yard. Good location on Mill St. Call the
W1Seman Real Estate' Agency, Gallipolis,
446-3643.

abbr
37 Elt's mom

'

Housing

.

4;2"-=

Monday, Jan . 29

Vulnerable North-south
Dealer: South
West North Easl Soulh
1+
Pass 4•
Pass 6+
Pass Pass Pass

furniture .
•
2. Nice selections of used
furniture .
3. A large building full of
beautiful carpet.

G. Bruce Teaford

on ship

36 Language :

CONGRESSIONAL
DINING ROOM

I

sundeck .

4:00-News 17;
Maverick 17. 5 20-World at Large 17.

D~rect1on

BRIDGE

GKEM

Modern kitchen and large

31

• 42

nice bedrooms. Just right
for a family . Has a large

dining and sliding glass

Tomorrow J; News 13
1 :45- NBA Basketball 17 ;

support

+A

I

ENORMOUS - 10 rooms 1n
a 5 year old home. With 5

mmg hole
23 Pubhc show
24 Worshipful
25 Reve1lle
call
27 Heavy

I'

-

Buy where you c:1n coml 1n

commune
8 Footrest
of sorts
9 Leadmg lady
12 Divulge
16 Part of
Arabia

26 J e wish
month
. 27 Suffix
b
w1thduck
28 Baseball's
Le Fiore

'4.88 ..1;;'.:';

Located in Middleport .
$15,500
TO THE MAN WHO
PLANS TO SELL - REAL
ESTATE
IS
OUR
BUSINESS,
NOT
A
SIDELINE . MEIGS CO.' S
OLDEST FULL TIME
REAL ESTATE BROKER.
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND

7 Belg1an

Yesterday's Answer
19 Approximate 29 San - , Cil.
22 Old sw1m30 Picasso

~=~~~~~~'/,~~~{c~r••~·;
Famous
1 '; 29 scrolls

As Low As

-

device

recipient

Rubber Back carpet

news in the house, 2 lots.

I C1ty 1n Oregon
2 Arouse
3 ~ of
l proht by I
4 Orb
5 Bellowed
6 Airport

25 Bequest

All carpel installecf with
padding at no chorge
ExDarl lnstallotion.

Nat gas heat, 3 bedrooms,

Three's Company

Three's Company 6, 13, Movie "Big Jake" 8, 10;
9 30-Taxl 6,13, Energy War 33, 10 :0Q-Storsky &amp;
Hut&lt;h • 13; News 20 .
10 · ~~Like If Is 20. 11 ·QO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15 ; Dick
Cavell 20. Geraldine Fllzgerald at Reno Sweeney
33
11 15-Hogan' s Heroes 17; 11 ·30-Johnny Carson 3, 15;
ABC News Closeup 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8; Movie
"City Beneath the Sea" 10
11.45-Movle " Wednesday' s Child" 17: 12 :40-Movle
"The Thief Who Came to Dinner" 8; 1:®-

2J Stately

measure

DRIVE ALITTLE
&amp;.
SAVE ALOT

workshop $23,500 00.
NEAR SCHOOL - 1 floor
plan, 3 bedrooms, bath,
basement, 2 lots, porches,

double w ide home and a log
house. East end of the
j&lt;(:Ou,nty on a good counlry

make out

Tassinan

firepla ce, full basement,
large 2 car garage and

'

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 R1dge
l Surfeit
DOWN

2 family

bath, part basemen!, olher
features . Sll ,000.00.
HOUSE AND MOBILE
HOME - All rented, lots of

f 1ner older homes around,

Answer

BUT

(Answers tomorrow)
LOOSE NATAL FALLE N BEFOUL
A passenger duesn'l know whether he's
cornrng or go1 ng when he s thiS ALL AT SEA

~

11 ·3·1 l!lQ;

Sweep ers, looster5 zrons oil
small opp t.o nc:es Lawn mower
nex t to Stole Htgh woy Garage
on Route l

opporlunily on Main Slreel.

One of the

FA ~'"

WHERE' S THE NEAREST
GROCE~'( STORE ?

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

other features $27,300

1.9 ACRES -

KID ~

I Jumbles

XXI XXJ

Jumble Book No 12, co nta ining 110 puzzles, lsavl!lllablelor S1 75poslp1!1ld
!rom Jumble,clo th ts newspaper Box34, Norwood, N.J 07646 Include your
name, address, zt p code l!lnd make checks payl!lble lo Newspaperbook s.

BRADFORD Aucltoneer . Com
plete Serv•ce Phone q49 2487
or 949 2000 Roc me O hro Cnlf
Bradford

a neat little location for a
small business and live
upstair s
Wonderful

water, and electric

WOH'T GO TOO

'

Cellulosic (wood" fiber!
Therma! insuli!tion
Save3o pct.roso.rt.
.., hNtingcos
Experience and
fully Insured
Froe ElL
Cill9f2·277,

bedrooms. bath. dining.

NEED STORAGE? - Out
of high water In Middleport
and one tn Pomeroy Both
ha ve natural gas heat. city

Saturday 5

WELl, A HUNDRED BUCKS

HOW DO WU
AIM TO SPEND
IT,

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

We have 1ust the place, 3

Small amount down .

..

J~L

Print answer here: [

LITTLE OIIPIIAN AJIJIIE..-SALVAGE

. ·'

M1ddleporl 2 kilchens, 2
balh s, all rented. Excellent
Inve s tment
JUST
$13,000 00
NEED MORE ROOM? -

992-3325
216 E. Secol!,d Street
YOUR CHANCE - To own

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Real Estate tor Sale

home

FARM FOR sole House 2 barns
trot ler Lorge pond 10 ocrf"s or
81 acres 742 2566

0.

1·4·1 mo. (Pd. )

SEWING MACHINE Repatr s ser
v1ce oil mak es 9fl2 2284 The
Fobr tc
Sh op
P:orner oy
Au1 homed S• nger Soles ond
SerYJCe We sharpen SCissors

Now arrange the crrcled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

C 1911 D• IH £ lot I II ~ 00 ~ $ "" n o

992-2356

--

JusT LISTED -

THR EE BEDR OOM !rome home m
M tdd lepor t Co li 99'1 3d 57

H OUSE IN
Mtner sv tll e
4
bedroom l. vmg room k ttchen
both end ut llt ty room · N• ce lull
szze basemen t 992 5813

Middleport,

992-7583
10 Years Experience
]·19·1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

3' , acres tn Pomer oy Secluded
wooded a(ea on lop of htll
Overlooks fl\ler Wat er elec·
In( ovodob le 99'1 3886

CONSTRUCTION

•· OO-Misfer Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6, Porky Pig 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Batman
10; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17.
4:30-Bewltched 3: Giilglgan's Is. 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Peftlcoal Junction 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
S:OQ-1 Dream of Jennie 3, Beverly Hillbillies 8,
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle
· USMC 10. Bionic Woman· 13; Brady Bunch 15; I
Dream of Jeannie 17
5 3G-Carol Burnell 3; News 6; Sanford &amp; Son B; Elec.
Co 20, Mary Tyler M&lt;&gt;Ore 10, Odd Couple 15;
Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33.
6 00---News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6: Andy Griffith 17;
HodQeoodoe LodQe 20.
6 :30-NBC News 3,15, ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnell6;
CBS News 8, 10, Over Easy 20; Mv Three Snons 17.
7 ·oo-cross.WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Please
Stand By 8, News 10; Love American Style 15;
Carol Burnell 17; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Studenf
Affairs Inqu iry 33
7.30-Holiywood Squares 3: Let' s Go To The Races 8,
Condld Camera 6 ; , Price Is Righi 10, Donna Fargo
13, Amerlca'nlzatlon of Elias 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17;
MacNeil Lehrer Reporl 20,33.
B oo-Mork Twain 's America 3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Republ ican Response to the State of lhe Union 8, 10;
NBA Baskef\rall 17, Soundstage 20.
_
8·30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13, When The Boat Comes In
33; 9·oo-Movle "The Trlongle Factory Fire" 3, 15;

THE BEST WAY TO •
!!IE SI"TTJ"'G.

651 Beech Street

M08U HOME repou s Furnac es
eiN tncol wor f.o. p1pes sowod
- plumh•ng 9q2 5858

...

REAL ESTATE LOANS VA
No
money
down
{ eltgt bl e
Velerens ) FHA A s loW as J,,..
down (a ll non VeterF&gt;ns ond
general pubhr) To pu rchase
rea l es tate or ref tnonre 30
YEARS TERM S IR HAND MOR
TGAGE CO . 77 ~ Stole St .
Athens folhone614 592 3051

ROUSH

EXCAVA TING , dozer loader and
backhoe wo r k dump tru cks
BATHROOMS AND Ktlc hens
ond
lo·boys l or h1re wd l houl
remodeled c:e•Omi C ide plumfill d ~r t to sod limestone and
btng , ca r pentry and general
gr avel Coli Bob or Roger Jel
13 years ex
motntertance
f er s day phone 9'12 7089 ntg hl
penence. 99'1 JOBS
p~one 99?·3525 or 991 523 2
PULL INS EXCAV ATING Comple te
EXCAVAT ING
dozer bocf.o.hoe
Serv1cc Phone 997 ?478
and d1tcher Charle s R Hot
AUTOM OBILE INSURA NCI:: been
Bocl-.:
Hoe Servtce
f te ld
roncelled? l ost your operators
Rutl and Ohto Phone 742 2008
l1c:ense? Phoneqq'l2143
f C HI::CTfi iCAl•(of1 lro.::lor ser v
:n g Oh1o Volley ·rcg 10n Stx
cloy5 o week 24 hours servrce
Emergency coil s Coli BB'l 2952
or 882 2305

C avett 20

18 Year~ Experience
Will Make
Service COlis

General Repatrs

Love of Life 8, 10; Mulligan Slew 33 ; 11 55-CBS
News 8. Ho u.., Call 10; News 17
12:0Q-Newscenfer3: Bob Braun4; Jeopardy 15; News
6.10. Youno &amp; the Restless 8: Midday Magazine 13:
Love Am erican Style 17, Know Your Schools 33.
12·30-Ryan's Hope 6,13, Password 15; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec7 Co. 20.33; Movie " Critic's
Cho ice" 17
1:()()-Hollywood &gt;quares 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Resfless 10; Not For Women
Only 15;
1·30-Days of Our Llv~s 3,15; As The World Turns
8,10, 2.00--Qne Life lo Live 6.13: 2:25---News 11.
2 30-0octors 3, 15; Guiding Light 8,10 I Love Lucy 17 .
3 00---Anolher World 3.15; General Hospllal6, 13; Lil ias
Yoga &amp; You 20. Speed Racer 17, Beethoven
Festival 33 .
3.30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnlsfones 17; Dick
4;

BORN LOSER

RUNOlD'S
ElfCTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

For COI!I.Petitive Prices
Home Remodeling

. . . ..., hi the

11 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,1S; Family Feud 6, 13; News

Unscra mble these four Jumbles,
one lette r to each square, to form
lour ordmary words

'

_ROUjH_
.CONSTRUCTION

Survival Ki t 20

11fllfW} fe}'ft ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHennArnoldandBoblee

11 ·9· 1 mo.

Contact

Service
..........

20 .
9 3()-{)n The Line 33 , 10 00---News 20.
t0 :30-Crockell's V1clory Garden 20, Long Life &amp;
P rospen ty 33.
11 ·oo-News 3,8,10,15 , Di ck Cavell 20, Hogan 's Heroes
17. Song by Song by Gershwin 33
11 31l--;College Basketball 3; Miss Ohlo·USA Beauty
Pageant 4, Johnny Carson 15, Rockford Flies 8,
Mov ie "The Slory of Rulh" 10, Movie " Hotel
Sa hara" 17
12 0,0- News 6,13; 12 30-FBI 6, Ironside 13, 12 40McMillan &amp; Wile B.
oo-Tomorrow 3, 1 30-Tomorrow 3! News 13;
Movie "E lvira Madtgan" 17, 3 20- News 17, 3 40ln The Name of God 17.

CAPf AIN EASY
'

1i1so Transmission

Speclalltlng in

Green " 8,10, College Basketball17, Growing Yea r s

. .•

Don 't let a ch lm n~y fire put
a damper on your life

Tbinkmg Of Having
A New Home BUt It?

- ------ -

J AND 4 RM furn ts hed ond un
fu rni~ h ed , apt ,. ,
Ph on e

~ulld

'

ON E FURNA CI::: MASHR wood
burn'Cr
rcgulor $495
now
S400 One auto fl od ton l woorl
h eoter
r eg
5199 95
now
5170 00 3 Cool Moster stoves
wood or cool regular 5378 55
now 5300 Gravely Tractor
So les ') 10 Condor Pome• oy
99'.1 '1975

14

tho ugh you may at f1rst feel the
wor ld 1s against y6u today,
¥ou ' ll soon change your mmd
wh en a fnend does somethmg
nrce fo r you qutte une xpec ted-

B 30-WKRP In Cinci nnati B,1 0; Las! of the Wild 17
9 00---AFC.NFC Pro Bowl 6, t3 , Movie " The Corn Is

Insured

0.

HAY $75abo fe 9491514

Give~wa'-'y'--~­

TO GOOD ~ome Mole dog l ong
ha tr Block ond whtte 2 years
old 992 5'1?2

·1·12-1 mo.

JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

HMALE OALMATION 1 year old
Shots To good home tn roun
lr y 99'} 7107
ADUlT FEMALE Engl•sh Bull dog
hrown and w htte Very gentle
Ca ltMarli-Scorles 1 367 02 11

Swteps

¥• milt off Rt. 7 ,liY·PIII CMI

6·10-News 17; 6:25--Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:30Focus on Columbus 4, Romper Room 17; 6.45Mornlng Report 3, 6 · 50-GOO!I Morning,
!Nest
Virginia 13 ; 6:55-Chuck While Reports 10; News
13.
7. oo- Today 3, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13;
Tuesday Morning 6: Schoolles 10; Three Stooges
17, 7 15-Wealher 33
7·30-Famlly Affair 10; 8·()()-Copt. Kangaroo 8,10;
Leave It To Beaver 17, Sesame Sf. 33.
8 30-Hazel 17 ; 9 00---Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue
4,13 , Emergency One 6: Hogan's Heroes 8: Malch
Game 10; Lucy Show 17.
9 30-Brady Bunch 8, Hogan' s Heroes 10; S20,000
Pyramid 12.
10 00---Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 6: All In The
Family 8, 10; Oaltng Game 13: Movie "She's
Working Her Way Through College" 17.
10 30-AII Slar Secrets 3,15; Andy Griffith 6 , Price Is
Right 8,10; $20.000 Pyramid 13
11 00-High Rollers 3, 15; Happy Days 6,T3, Consumo!'r

Conducts 20, Ener gy. War 33

~~~~:::'

Tyree Blvd.; Rlcfne; Ohio,

PI«JNE 742-2328

Appliance

ROGER HYSEll
GARNiE

TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, lf7f
5.45-Farm Reporl 13, 5.5()-=PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrise Semester 10; 6 00---PTL Club 15; 700 Club
6.8

MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 197'
7 30-Thaf Nas hville Music 3, Muppel Show 6; Price Is
Rtght B. Wild K1ngdom 10, $1 98 Beoufy Showl\l 13,
Nijshvllle On The Road 15: Sanford &amp; Son 17;
MacNeil· Lehrer Reporl 20,33.
8·00--- Backstalrs at 1he While House 3,15: Salvage 1
6,13; Ma•h 8,10; Let's Go To The Races 17, Soll l

=

WA fE R AND m 15r hou lmg Co li
qcn 5858

___
Tuesday, Jan. 30

removal

your

Depend On ....

SALE PRI!:ES

1974 DATSUN 610 sfolton w agon
Good
condrl1on
$ 1500
outo
trans low milcog~ excell en t
cond:tton !idSOO Ce ll 985 4187
nller Spm

•

HEADQUARTERS

~===Fr~t~y~
a==m=oon=·==· =~ 1917Y92H5465
after S
Notices
CAMINO ClaSS!S ss

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

l -26-l m o

JQ:to [)00GE VA N b:r ellonl con
ci•t•o11 low rn tleoge $3500 In
g&lt;'IS f urm lure Store 992 26J5

Noon on Saturday

out

Wash1ngton St., Albany, 0 .
Phone 698·6T 73
Oavid Coleman
Agenlfor
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANOY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.

RISING STAR Kennel~ 8oord111 g
onrl groom 1ng oil hr£&gt;edc,
API'HS .fiTZPATRICK Orchnrd
ChC'shtr e 367 029'1
t; lole Rt 6l::IQ Ph o n~&gt; Wdke svd l ~
All WHITE l ull hloodeci Germori'
66Q Ji't!S
Sh£&gt;p01ci pupp 1e~ 7 wo£&gt;k!; old
Ml XL() CONOITIONfD hoy Vm y
304 173 59b1 Cl•flon
gnod quoltty
Deltvcry
BOS TON TFR NtER ruppie s 10
ovollobiP Phone 992 TlOI 01
w~ek s old
Call after Sprn
qcn J309
99'1 5867
ROUND I:IAL ED hoy 643 2514

In memory, Card of l'h&amp;nks and
Obituary 6 cent! per wurd, f3 00

Every Sun doy 1 pm
choke' guns o~ l y

MIENAN
INSURANCE AGEN

For Sal e

&lt;~&lt;n 3~92

,.

Business Services

lnni.. 111CJ lm worlo
01
w lrn lrvm
you ll g r&gt;t rf"L.11 Il
lu•. tr 1 w•th n Srnl lm·l W nn l Ad
r otl 'J'If 1 1 :,{,

LOST FFMAll:: 811l f' Ttr k rnon
hound
Hrmlo c ~
G1 ovf"

El:lch word over the mimmum Ill
wurds IJ t t'i!nl.a per wurd ~r duy
Ads runnmg other than L'(lllSe(;Utin
t!¥ys wdi be charged at !.he I day

WRONG, SAM?
SLEEPY-

OP

- - .
Lost and Found
--- -- -

100

Sunday
4
ilil P,~

I

TELEVISION
VIEWING

•
LOO~

If VOl I ht .., .. o ~ t h •t ll' h r nftC'f
,.,n l d In b11y rr 1 "I II o,n mr&gt;th• ng

BtJI.,INI L ' 1\IJU {)tf'J(", : 1'1
'l ye !JI II ' I '
()f, /

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) TIMBER
Know mg who to deal wtth IS

PROBATE COURT OF

- WATER

Personal Serv i ces
700 00
Debt Serv.ce
84 ,532 22
Total For AdmtntSfl"&amp;fiOn
- Wate r
85 ,532 22
Tota l For Water
(Revenue ) Fund 179 ,532 22
Sectt on 10. Th at the r e b e
appropr 1a t ed
fro m
the

WANT AD
CHARGES

DICK TRACY

Yard
. Sale-

For Sale or Rent

H ~ ar ln gs

00

Total F or Electrtc
( Ltghtl (Revenue)
F und
23,000 00
Sec t1on 9 . Tha t ther e be
app ropriated
from
t he

WATE R

Brow n, Jr
Prest dent of
Council

( 11 22, 29 , 2tc

DISTRIBUTION
OF ELECTRICITY
UTILITY
Other
23.000 00

·For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
2dttyl

Passed -- Jan 15 , 1979
Attest
Jane walton
Clerk. of counctl

9- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jan 29,1979

-

Ask IIMI!XDG'II
A Virginia reader asks If
the grand s lam bonuses
have a lways been 1,000 not
vulnerable and 1,500 vulnerable.
No. From 1932 to 19'35 they
were ra1sed to 1,500 and
2,250. This proved most
unpopular .
I NEWSPAPER

ENTERPRISE ASSN I

!For a copy of JACOBY MODERN, send St to · " Win al
Brtdge ," care of th1s newspa·

per, P. 0 Box 489, Radio C/ly

srarlon. 1'/ew York. 1'1 Y 10019 1

I THOUGHT TH' TERMITES
WOULD LIKE TO EAT OUT
FER A CHANGE, PAW

�,_

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jan. 29, 1!179

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

Light snow lingers,
western states chill
By The Associated Press
Ught snow lingered today
from the Great Lakes and the
OHio Valley to New England,
with I inch or less dusting the
area, while parts of Southern
Ca lifornia and Anzona
shivered under chilly tern·
peratures and some snow.
Temperatures ranged from
well below freezmg in the
mountains, to the chilly m1d
30s m parts of Los Angeles
and the r est of Southern
California.
In northwest Los Angeles
County, traffic on a portion of
Interstate 5 near Gorman,
was halted temporarily by
snow. About 2 mcbes of snow ·
was reported m Palmdale.
San Bernardino County
sheriff's officials reported
more tha n 200 persons
stranded on MI. Baldy east of
Los Angeles, where the main
road was closed Sunday
night .
" Nobody can get up or
down," California Htghway
Patrol Officer Steve Pudmski
said. "We've got upwards of
200 people who're spending
the night up there. "
Snow also fell Sunday as fa r
south as Topanga Canyon, a
few miles from Malibu and

the Pacific Ocean. Snow was
reported in Altadena and
snow or sleet glazed some
parts of the Harbor Freeway
in Los Angeles.
In Orange County, cold
precipitation, rangmg from
· mushy snow to hard sleet, fell
along the coast.
Heavy snow and strong
w1nds swept the htgber
elevations of the southern
Rock1es. Flagstaff, Af!Z ., had

Hospita,l News

I'

! Area Deaths !
I

7 mches of snow smce Sunday
afternoon and some highways
were clo sed L1ght snow
reached into the northern
Rockies, while sleet moved
across the northern Plains.
Cloudy s k1es stretched
from the So uthw est into
Texas and Louisiana with a
light rain wetting southern
Texas.
Clear s kies and cold
temperatures prevailed over
the Plams, while sub-zero
temperatures dipped as far
south as Nebraska. Even the
Gulf Coast states slipP.ed
near freezmg overnight.
Partly cloudy skies ex·
tended from the Virginias
into New Eng la nd, with
temperatures near freezmg.
Early morning tern·
peratures around the nation
ranged from ·17 in Worland,
Wyo , to 63 in Key West, Fla.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Satu'rday admissions Robert Reiber , Racine;
Dorothy Norris, Racine;
Golda Roush, Middleport ;
Betty Williams, Portland.
Saturday discha rges Kathryn Miller, Ross Kent,
Magg1e G1lmore , Richard
DeMoss, Terry Hopson .
Sunday admi ssions · Paula Derenberger,
Pomeroy; Annett e Boyd,
Pomeroy; Charlotte Kuhn,
TWO DISTRICTS GOING
New Haven ; Larry Curtis,
Schools
of the Meigs and
Long Bottom; Franklin
Southern
Local School
Casto , Pomeroy; Alice
Di
st
rict
s
were
.. in sesswn
·Games, Dexter.
today
.
Eastern
Local
schools
Sunday discharge - Donna
were closed.
Sellers

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

Crow's Family
Restaurant
Pomeroy, Ohio

A 64 oz. Bottle of RC with tbe
purchase of any bucket, barrel
or fam!ly valu pak.

GREAT SERVICE! GREAT CHICKEN!

FRANK WESTFALL
Frank Westfall, 87, Route 3.
Albany, died Sunday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Westfall was born in
Vinton County, a son of the
late Edmund and Emma
.Jane Hawk Westfall. H~ was
a retired carpenter and was a
m•Jmber of the Point Rock
Church of the Nazarene.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Alma Harvey, Albany ;
two grandsons, Dale Harvey,
Albany, and Dian Harvey,
Oak Hill ; five great·
grandchildren; two sisters,
Mrs Nora Knotts, Bidwell,
and Mrs. Clara Cardwell,
Gallipolis; a brother, Emery
Westfall, Crystal River, Fla .
Preceding him in death
were his wife , Hilah
Houda shelt Westfall, four
brothers, George , James,
Howard and Carl, and a
sister, Mary Spires.
' Funeral serviCes will be
held at 2 p. ffi. Wednesday at
the Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene W(th the Rev .
Herman Stewart officiating
Burial will be m Mt. Olive
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the B1gony-Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p. m. Tuesday. The
body will be taken to the
church one hour preceding
the serv1ce.
H. SMITH
Gertrude H. Smith, 74,
Hartford, died Sunday at
Holzer Medical Center.
She was born May 29, 1904,
in Point Pleasant to the late
0 . B. Harper and Lulu
Comstock Harper.
She was a member of the
Hartford Baptist Church ,
New Haven Garden Club,
Julia Bryant Sewing Club and
the Colonel Charles Lewis
Chapter,
DAR,
Point
Pleasant.
Preceding her in death
were her husband, Donald A.
Smith, who died in 1955 and a
stepbrother, Ralph.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Robert Kay (Patricia
Lou) Wilson, Route 3,
Pomeroy; a son, Dr. Donald
E. Smith, Morgantown , a
brother, Goerge 0. Harper,
Point Pleasant, and six
grandchildren, Mrs. Jan
Eichinger, Ann and Kathy
Smith, Deborah, Beth and
Jinuny Wilson.
SerVIces will be held
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m . at·the
Foglesong Funeral Home
w1th the Rev William (Bud)
Hatfield officiating. Burial
will follow at the Suncrest
Memorial Park,
Point
Pleasant.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m.
Tuesday.
GE~TRUDE

Save for the Day
Your Baby becomes
a Big Wheel on Campus
Life styles ch&amp;nge, costs of living-escalate,
children seem to rush through Infancy
U~~~~
Into adolescence at a galloping
C.
run. Parents who anticipate risIng college costs begin edu·
cational savings plans with
Farmers Bank at an early
date. Let us help you arrange an
Interest-accruing savings ac·
count that will grow with
your children, and be
ready for college
when they are,

. POMEROY, OHI()-

.

~

I

STEVE ROBSON
Steve Archer Robson, 76,
who resided .at 120 Kmeon
Drive, Gallipolis, died at I
a.m. today (Monday) at
Holzer Medical Center,
where he had been a patient
smce Jan . 12 . He had been in
failing health for 18 months.
Mr. Robson retired from
the New York Central
railroad at Hobson in Oc·
Iober, 1970, after 35 years'
service. Pnor to his Hobson

..... 1

..

'40,000 Maximum Insurance for Eacb Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

wurh . lw had been t•mph•~cd
at the Pmn&lt;&gt;roy Sal! Works at
Mirlt'rsvJII e for uver 16 years

an&lt; I also at tht• Marietta plant
for thrct' Vl'&lt;II'S
A me1,;ber of the Asbury
Umtrd Methodi 0t Church al
Syracuse, he had resided In
Gallipolis since 1D51.
He was born Sept. fi, 1902, at
Hartford , W. Va., to ·fullph
Robson , Sr., and the former
Nancy Hood . He was tw1ce
ma1·ried : to Willie Alma
McKamey on Feb. 11, 1922, at
Pomeroy, and she died July
13, 1946; and Merle Myers
Vesner on Feb. 27, 1951 at
Greenup, Ky ., and she d1ed
Nov . 12, I!nO.
Surv ivi n g are two
daughters, Mrs. Wanda
Burdette, Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Wilh am (Dorothy)
Winebrenner, Syracuse ; SIX
grandchildren and five_great·
grandchildren.
ANOTHER DONATION - Shoppers Mart of Mason is the latest to make a
A stepson, Bobby Vesner,
donation to the Wahama High School Band uniform fund drive. Shown here
preceded him in death .
presenting a $100 check on behalf of the store is Carlotlla Boyer (far rig~t).
Five brothers and_ three
Accepting the donation, left to right, are band officers Rachel Beard, v1ce
s1sters preceded him in :'~\
president; Melanie Sisson, president; and Karen Brown, secretary.
death ; he was the last of h1s :::
fam1ly.
' '\;::::::::;::;:::;
Services w11l be held at 2 ,...
p.m. Wednesday at the
King and Kay L. King ,
Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral
SUIT FILED
SEEK LICENSE
Home, the Rev. Harvey Koch
A suit in the amount of Middleport , against Terry M.
A marriage license was
&lt;Jff1c1atmg, and burial Will be issued to William Keith $218.67 was filed in Meigs Spencer.
The smt is for damages as a
in MoundJhll Cemetery.
Hayes, 34, Middleport , and County common pleas co~urt
Fnends may call3·5 and 7-9 Nancy Jean Jeffers, 20, by Motorists Mutual In· result of an accident on July
p m Tuesday at the funeral Pomeroy
surance Co., Columbus, Allen It , 1977 on U S Rt. 33 , m
Pomeroy.
home.

CHARTER MEMBERS - These charter members of
the Meigs County Jaycees, organized in 1952, were on
hand Saturday night when the organization held a charter
night banquet at the Meigs Inn. The group of charter
members, no longer active with the organizallon, includes

(USPS 145-960)

· Annette L. Carter, 17,
Patriot, went out of control in
a curve, slid left of center and
struck a westbound vehicle
driven by Roger L Dent, 22,
Rutland.
Both drivers claimed in·
jury , but were not un·
mediately treated . Both
vehicles inc urr ed sever e
damage .

Cold air continues
By The Associated Press
A northwesternly flow of
only moderately cold air will
continue across Ohio through
Tu esday. This flow is
associated with a large low
pressure disturbance located
offthe northern New England
coast.
Periods of light snow and
freezing drizzle are expected
to occur with this northerly
sweep of air across most of
the state through Tuesday.
A
break
in
this

precipitation pattern is ex·
peeled in southern areas of
the state tonight and pa.rt of
Tuesday.
A low pressure system,
located 1n ATizona thts
morning,is expected to 111ove
eastward into the Gulf states
by late Tuesday.
This system will mcrease
the potential for more light
snow again in southern Ohioo
Tuesday
aft ernoon
or
evening.

U •.s. welcomes
(Contmued from page I )
changes between the two
countnes, including bureaus
for news organizations and
seeds used in agricultural
cross-fertilization . The
agreement has been the
subject of negotiation for
months.
The administration expects
Carter and Teng to discuss
prospects for a new trade
agreement giving China most
·favored- nation tariff status
and access to credit from the
U. S Export - Import Bank.
There are a number of
problems, however, which
could surface in this phase of
the talks.
One is the issue of ex·
propria! ed American
property in China. The United
States bas validated $196.8
million in claims for lost
property, the largest bemg
$53 8 million for the Shanghai
Power Co. , a subsidiary of
Boise-Cascade Corp., the
Chinese seized in 1949.
Against that, the Umted
States has frozen about $80
million in Chinese assets
here
Technically, the American
claimants can ask the
government to continue to
freeze Chinese assets until
the claims are settled, a
move which would. prevent a
normal trade relationship.
In practices, however, such
problems are usually settled
by compromise. The ad·
ministration's China experts
are hoping the Chinese will
agree to pay some of the
claims and that Congress will
put up the money for some of
the rest .
But they are wary of a
precedent that might make it
more difficult to settle the
$1.8 billion in claims against
Cuba if relations with that
country are normalized.
And those experts still have
not d~cided on how to give
favorable trade status to lhe
Chmese, with whom relations
(

A pickup truck driven by
James L. Merry, 21, Bidwell,
incurred severe damage
during a one-vehicle accident
on SR 588, one-tenth of a mile
east of milepost 1, Sunday at
11:45 a . m.
The patrol reports tliat
Merry's eastbound truck
went off the right side of the
roadway , struck an em·
bankment.
crossed
a
driveway, and flipped over on
its top.
Merry displayed visible
signs of injury, but was not
inunediately treated. Merry
was cited on charges of ex·
cessive speed.
A vehicle operated by
James Waugh, 20, Crown
City, was demolished Sunday
during a three-vehicle accident on SR 7, two-tenths of a
mile south of milepost 12, at
12 :50 p. m.
Officers
report
that
Waugh's northbound vehicle
had slowed to make a right
tum . An auto driven by Judy
Wells, 19, Northup, was
unable to stop and struck the
Waugh vehicle in the rear.
Following the collision, the
Waugh vehicle slid into a
parked vehicle owned by
Harley Wells, 41, Crown City.
Judy Wells was Cited on
charges of failure to main)am
an assured clear distance.
There was moderate
damage to the Judy Wells
auto, minor damage to the
Harley Wells vehicle.
Ronald Kingery,
19,
Eureka Star Route, was cited
on charges of left of center
following a two-auto misJ!ap
Sunday on CR 40, eight-tenths
of a m1le south of SR 141, at 2
p. m.

Send A Little Love
To All Your Friends

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

went to Donna· Schmoll,
ha unted house project ;
members and six member .Tammy Searls-, food basket
Ja} ccc work m creatmg a awards we nt to Kauff , program,
Village
of
bett er Amen ca
J enkms and Young. Jenkins Pomeroy, use of senior high
Ralph Werry was master of rc cei ved a nin e member building; board of educatiOn,
ccrct nonics for the dinner award. The awa rds were use of field for frog Jump;
wtth
Dav1d
J enk in s, pins.
Radio WMPO, The Sentmel,
presi dent ,
giv in g
the
.U. S Jaycee mcmbershtp The Messenger , Economy
welcome.
awards. patches, went to Supply Co . electncal supOn hand for the event were Young, Kauff, Jenkins and piles for haunted bouse.
Herb Schul , district director, Schmoll Jenkms and Young
Cerllf1catcs of merit went
and Virgi l V. Brown, rece ived five
member to Mark French, haunted
Pomeroy, a former state awa rds A honorary Jaycee house, Hichard Kna pp ,
president and a cha rt er awa rd went to V1ctor Gaul , ha unted
hou se,
M1ke
member of the local group. Jr., son of Mr and Mrs \Vilhan,, haunted house, and
Membership Awards . ·-·· Victor Gaul, for his help to John Kkuff and Davtd Fox,
Membership recruitment the group. .
cha1rmen of haunted house.
awards went to Bob Schmoll,
Certificates of appreciation
'Continued on page B)

15 CENTS

TUESDAY, JANUARY 30 , 1979

By ROBERT H. REID
Helicopter international m were reported m the towns of
Associated Press Writer
the central Iranian city of Sanjan and Rezayleh .
Military authoriti es an·
TEHRAN, Iran I AP) Isf aha n on Mond ay af·
'npunced
that the airports
The U. S. Embassy today ternoon .
would
reopen
today after
ordered the evacuation from
U. S. Consulate sources m
being
closed
for
s1x days to
Iran of all dependents of U. S. Isfahan said the trouble there
delay
Khom
emi
's r eturn
government employees and began about 4 p.m. Monday
Prime
Mimster
Shahpour
again urged all non-essential w1th an altercation between
Bakhtiar
told
r eporters
American citizens to get out the Bell Helicopter employee
Monday
the
Tehran
airport
of the country following at· and an Iranian taxi driver
would
be
open
in
a
few
hours
near
the
city's
Khoroush
tacks on three Americans.
Hopeful travelers hurried
The order came as sup- Hotcl.·The sources said a shot
portersof-Ayatullah Ruhollah was fired during the dispute to the airport th1s morning,
Kohrileini took to the streets and the taxi driver had been but troops and police turned
as the exiled Shiite Moslem hospitalized with a facial them away. Japan Air Lines
said 1t landed a chartered DCopposition leader continued wound.
8
to evacuate Japan ese
Details on the attack -on
delaying his return .
petrochemical
worker s, but
This is the first time th e U. McGaffey were not _ im·
other
foreign
airlines said
S. government has actually mediately available.
ordered anyone out of Iran.
Iran's airports were SUP'"
Previous announcements posed to be open today , but
have encourag ed people only one commercial plane
without important business to was reported to have landed,
troops turned outgoing
leave.
There are fewer than 10,000 pa ssengers away , and
Americans left In Iran, down Ayatollah Rubh o lah
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) from a peak of 45,000 when · Khoemelni continued to delay The battle over how to make
the unrest here started a year his return from exile.
Ohio utilities stop pollutmg
Mobs of Khomeini's sup- the a1r moved into the public
ago.
The order was issued after porters hit the streets of arena today, with one stde
a shooting attack on an U.S. Tehran again, attacking a shouting higher electric hills
Air J"orce major Sunday police officer, setting fire to a and the other threatening
night in Tehran and the brewery and clashing w1th massive layoffs in the coal
beating ofU. S. Consul David sec urity forces " ' least twice
fields.
C. McGaffey and an Peaceful demonstrations . The stage for c!ass1c battle
Amer(can emplovec of Bell
was the third and final
hea ring conducted by the U
S. Environmental ProtectiOn
Agency on pending orders to
the state's seven ma jor
utilities on bow they must
comply with stringent a1r
quality standards
STRONGSVILLE, Ohio (AP) - The price of milk
The basic argument was
sold by farmers to dairy plants in Ohio, western
whether the utilities should
Pennsylvania and parts of West Virginia will increase
be a llowed to buy low-sulfur
a penny a quart on Monday , a farmer 's cooperative
coal - available only outside
Ohio - to eluninate pollution,
said.
Del Groves spokesman for Milk Marketing Inc.,
or if they should be required
said processors' may pass on an even higher raise to
to continue using Ohio's high·
consumers. In addition, the cooperative with 10,000
sulfur coal and ,install the
members said the increase would also affect llie prices
nec essa ry clean-up equip·
of other dairy products such as cottage cheese and ice
ment.
Clev eland
Electri c
cream.
Ull uminating Co. has been in
the forefront of the fr ay, and
in testimony prepar.ed for
NEW YORK (AP) - Fifteen-year-old Nelson·
delivery today, CEI attorney
Rockefeller Jr ., eulogized his father as the ashes of the
James M. Friedman said the
former VICe president and four-time governor of New
hea rings have developed into
York were buried on his family's 25-acre estate
an emotional and political
Nelson Jr . spoke during the service Monday at
circus.
Pocantico Hills attended only by family and a few close
Friedman contended that
{riends.J 'Dad, we know how much you love us, and we
officials conducting the
want you to know how much we lov_e _you and how much
proceedings have prejudged
we're gomg to miss you. Your spmt w1ll live w1th us
the facts .
forever, " he SBld. "We'll try to live up to the example
The attorney said EPA
you'veset us as a father, as a husband , as,a brother, as
officials have already con·.
a statesman and as a friend . But, Dad, we re not saymg
eluded that utilities should
goodbye. but until we meet again."
invest in scrubbers to remove
sulfur dioxide from emissions
from coal-fired generating
NEW YORK (AP) - The Ford Foundation has
plants, rather than buy low·
ended a year-long search for a president with the
sulfur coal from other states.
naming, of Franklin A. Thomas, a lawyer and one of
EPA officials , howev er,
New York City's most pcominent blacks.
have said the deciswn on
ThCIIlas, 44, Is head of the Bedford Stuyvesant
scrubbers is not firm . The
Restoration Corporation In Brooklyn and fqrmer
EPA also announced 1n
Deputy Police Commissioner. He will take office June
1, becoming the first black and theseventh president to
head the $2.2 billion foundation.
Prices decline

they had no ofhctal word th at
Khom clnl, leader of the
they could resume fl1ghts m year-long campaign to oust
and out of the country.
Shah Mohammad Reza
In Parts, a spokesman for Pah!av1 and make Iran an
Khome1m smd the 78-year·old Islami c repub!tc,
had
Shute Moslem leader would planned to return last Fr1day
not leave for Iran Tuesday after 14 years in eXIle. But
mght because Utr France, Prime Minister Shahpour
wh1ch will supply hun a Bakhtiar' s govern ment
chart er flight , wanted to closed the airports; touchmg
the
sec urtty off street battles between the
check
arrangements at the Tehran patn arc h 's s upp orter s m
Airport for at least 24 hours Tehran and , the army and
aft er 1ts reopening
police m whtch ' at least 63
A large crowd massed at were reported killed and
the a trport for demon · hundreds were wounded
strations m support of the
Bakhltar. after Khomeini
ayatollah but broke up by rebuffed his attempt to go to
midmorning
Pan s and negoti ate per·

Nationwise

Area milk prices going up

December it was appomting a
team to negotiate witl1 the
ublit1es as to the be;t )!fay to
proceed A spokesman for the
agency in Washington said
recently that the team has
conta cted several ullht1es,
but negotwtions have not
beg un
Mmmg mterests teshhed
previo usly that the state
could lose thousands of jobs 1f
utlhtles are allowed to burn
non-Ohio coal to meet clean
atr standards
The federal agency ten·
tatively
agreed · last
December following hearings
m Cleveland and St ClillrS·
ville, saying it would hurt the
state' s economy if th e
ut1ht1es were permitted to
stop buymg loca l coal.
""By taking the position that
Oh1o e!ectn c utilities must
install sc rubbers, which have
not been technologica ll y

developed to the point where
they are effective, the EPA is
forc in g
an
awesome
economic burde n on the
cons umer.
creating
a
monopoly m the state of Ohio
for Ohw coal producers,
adding sigmficantly to the
mflat10n Ohioans must face,
and setting the stage for an
economic wa r between
states, " Friedman charge.
It w11l cost CEI rate-payers
$248 m1lhon a year for the
next 20 years to msta ll
scrubbers, F' nedm an sa1d.
Low-sulfur coal from Ken·
t ucky or West V1rgmia would
cost $98 mtlhon a year
A fmal decisiOn on whether
to rcqu1re scrubbers or allow
low-sulfur coal purchases 1s
expected e1ther by Pres1dent
Ca rter or Douglas Costle, the
head of EPA, somet une after
Feb 26, the deadline for
comments on the case.

LUCASVIlLE, Ohio (AP) - The state Highway
Patrol is investigating the death of an inmate who was
stabbed in the back with a makeshift knife at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.
.Baby Joe Cannon, 34, was killed at about
5 p.m. Sunday as he returned to his cell from tbe dinmg
hall George Lehner, spokesman for tbe Oh1o
~men! of Corrections and Rehabilitation, SBid.
No one was immediately charged in the death and
probably would not be. fer a couple of days, Lehner
said The patrol would consult witl'i the Scioto County
pr~tor befere filing charges, he said.

Clergy support nwunting
CINCINNATI (API - Legal and clergy support
mqmted fer the release of the Rev. Maunce
McCrackin Imprisoned lor contempt·when he refused
to testify w'a grand jury about escaped prisoners who
held him at gunpoint.
McCrackin, 73, whose hunger strike began Jan. 19
'when he was arrested, will have a hearing Wednesday
befere Hamiltoo County Common Pleas Judge Rupert
Doan.
-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~

. ..----.,..-------~---~
~

RIPLEY, Ohio (AP)
Prices were down slightly
although volume wsa up at
Ohio's burley tobacco market
Monday. The pr1ce decline
was blamed on poor late
offerings.
The market will close after
sales on Wednesday this week
and shut down for the season
Feb. 6.
.
Sales totaled 380,470 pounds
for $482,958.03 and a 100·
pound average ·of $126.94,
down from $129.11 ' ar last
·week 's closmg.

Weather
Snow tomght and Wed·
nesday Low tonight in the
low 20s and high Wednesday
in the upper 20s. The chance
of snow IS 80 percent tonight
and Wednesday .

Jn ct d en t

tou ching off a battle bet ween
the crowd and the secunty
forces.

·

Candidates may
obtain petitions

Khomeam is returning to
give new unpetus to the ftght
to replace Bakhttar and hts
cabmet by a provtsJOnal
government named by htm
Nommatmg petitions for appCflr on the November
wh1ch would then end the
ballot, must also file by
monarchy and set up a the upcommg J une prmmry March 22
republic ded1cate.d to th e a nd November Genera l
The the th ree' smaller
elections are ava1lable al tl~e
tenets of Islam
vtllagcs. Rutland, Racme and
Meigs
County
Board
of
Although he has not ex·
Sy rac use, the followmg
plained how he plans to ac· Elect ions office. Mulberry
positions are up fo r el ~ct~on
Ave
..
Pomeroy,
accordmg
to
comphsh this, one of h1s chiC!
ma;or. clerk, two postt Jons
an
election
board
spokesmau
local aides sa1d the nation·
Pnmanes w1ll be held June for counc1l ami also two
wide strikes call ed by
positions for Board of Public
5
m
Middleport and Pomeroy
Khom eini ,
whi ch
are
Affatrs
In 1\j!ddleport, two seats on
paraly zing the economy,
Fllmg date m these VIllage
vtllag~
co unctl are up along
would cont1n ue until the
races
is August 8, whtch 1s
w1th the mayor's post, clerk·
government qmt.
treasurer's posttton and the also the filing date for the
races.
Each
two slots on the Board of town ship
town::;htp has one trustee and
Pubhc Affatrs.
fn Pomeroy, two seats will tls clerk up for electwn
The Me1gs County Board of
be up on that counctl along
w1th the mayor 's seat, clerk· Ertucatw n and South er n
treasurer's pos ition and one Local have tY.o posttiOns up
pos1t1on on the Board of Puhc for elc ctwn thts year
Rex Shenefield was re·
East ern Lo cal nd Metgs .
Affatrs
elected president of the Me1gs
Deadlme for filin g petition s Local Will elect thr ee
Soil and Water Conservation hsted above is March 22
members each
District !SWCD) board of
Fthng date for board of
Independent candidates for
supervl sors at a r ecent these positions, who Wish to educatiOn members IS August

Shene(ield

reelected

Other offic ers elected were
Tom Theiss, v i ce~presldent ;
Roy Miller , secretary·
tr easurer ; and Th er eon
Johnson , fiscal agent.
David Gleckner also serves
on the board, which works in
cooper ation with Soil Con·
servation Scrv1ce and other
U S D A. agencies in plan·
mng and carrymg out nat ural
resource management.
Comm1ttees were assigned
for
accomplishin g th ~
district's goals for 1979. They
include involvement in the
208
water
quality
management program, a
Meigs Co unty reclamatiOn
committee. resource act10n
council, regiona l planmng
comm ission, and ASCS
Program Development.
Activities included in the
annual plan of work are a
conservabon film program m
the schools, a poster contest,
a no-till forage field day, FF A
land judging contest, air tour,
soil stewardship week observa nces, and a conservation poster display and
hay show at the Meigs County
Fair
The district will conduct an
annual meeting and electiOn
of supervisors, sell wildlife
packets, partic~apte in the
Big Bend Regatta parade,
and attend summer super·
visors school and other sub-

Yearlong search ended

Inmate stabbed to death

HIGHEST HONOR - Bill Young , nght, received a
Jaycee International Senatorship Award, the highest
gJVen by th e J aycees Sa turday rught when the Me1gs
Jaycees held tl1e1r ftrst charter mght banq uet at the Me1gs
Inn. Makmg the presentatiOn was Herb Schul, dtrector of
Jaycee D 1stn ~t 8-B

meetmg

Son eulogizes Rockefeller

,,

sonally w1th him , sa1d the
ayatullah could come home
as soon as h1s safety could .be
ens ured. hom e!nl r epli ed ·
·-we don 't ask any security
from Bakhtiar or anyone.
God is the best protedor of
my safety."
M1ll10ns of Khom eim's
followers are expected to
throng Tehran for hts r eturn
and to greet h1s arrival with
the Wildest enthusiasm Local
religi ous leaders and their
mdes are certain to make
every effort to prevent the
mobs tummg v10!ent, but
there IS always the possibility
of an attack by militant
partisans of the shah or of a

spon t a neou s

Battle hits public arena

Weekend Sports
In Brief
By The Associated Press
- Bollin2
LAS VEGAS
Heavyweight Tony Tubbs, a
~l:Y,ear-old from Cincinnati,
outpointed Russia's Evgeny
Gorstkov in the final bout to
boost the United States to a S5 team VIctory over the Soviet
Union.
It was America's first
tnumph
in
these
in·
ternational a bouts since their
inauguration in 1969.

ELBERFELPS

John Kauff. David Jenkms
and B1ll Young. for three

Evacuation ordered today

Officers report that a
vehicle driven by Kingery
slid left of center and struck
an auto operated by Larry
Jones, 43, Glouster. Both
vehicles incurred · moderate
damage .
The GaUia • Meigs Post
investigated
10
other
weekend accidents during
which the vehicles involved
incurred minor damage.

were normalized Jan . I ,
without violating the prin·
BUCKEY RESIGNS
eiple of dealing evenly with
OXFORD, Ohio (AP)
the Soviets. Neither country
David Buckey has resigned
now enjoys most-favored ·
as quarterback coach at
nation status.
Miami University to return to
The Chinese v1ew of U. S. ·
the football staff at North
Soviet relations, as indicated
Carolina State.
in official party statements,
BuCkey, who joined the
Is that while both nations are
staff here a year ago,
imperialist superpowers, the
graduated !rom North
Soviets are more dangerous
Carolina State in 1976 and
and aggressive.
was Wolfpack quarterback
Chinese diplomacy is
coach in 1976 and 1977.
consistently aimed at con·
taining the Sov1ets, much as
American diplomacy was in
the 1950s and 1960s. With that
common
ground,
the
American officials think
Carter and Teng can discuss
contributions to stability in
several key areas.
One is Korea, where the
North and South Koreans
Remember special people on Wednesday,
have decided to resume
February 14 with loving Hallmark Valentines.
negotiations. China and
They'll love your for it!
North Korea are longstan·
ding allies.
Another is southern Afnea,
where the Chinese are
friendly with several key
groups in civil war there.
A third is Indochina, where
China and the Umted States
are ·both anxious to blunt
Soviet and Vietnamese ex·
pansion.
But the officials cautioned
that they did not expect Chma
to push any third country such as North Korea - into a
settlement. "They don't.
operate that way. They say
that one country should not
tell another what to do, and
they praC:.ice that," one official said.
· · © 1979 Hallrntnk Cl!rd~ Inc
Carter, hls aides say, will 1 -~~--------,-------..,..­
make several points with
Teng He will r eiterate for the
See our excellent 5electlon of l:lallmark Valentines,
record his concern that the
packaged Valentines for kids and Haltm•rk ValeQ·
issue of Taiwan be settled
tine's Day party Items.
peacefully
He will also tell Teng that
the Uniied States has decided
'
not to " tilt" toward the
Chinese and against the
Soviets
'

tinu c workmg hard to ac·
comphsh established goals
and stressed the value of the

en tine

at

,VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 201

A ta lk by Bill Childs, a
charter member 27 years
ago. and presentation of
nu merous
awards
highlighted the ftrst annual
charter night banquet of the
Meigs County Jaycees at the
' Me1gs Inn Saturday mght
In hi s talk, laced w1th
humor, Childs congratulated
the local Jaycee chapter for
its third pl ace ranking in the
state and lOth in the nat10n.
He stressed th e value of the
orga ni zation m prov iding
Ind ividual growth through
work
in th e Jaycee
organization.
He urged Jaycees to con·

•

•

e

Blame icy road conditions
for 13 weekend auto wrecks
The Gallia • Meigs Post,
Highway,Patrol, investigated
13 weekend accidents.
Two persons claimed in·
jury following an accident
Saturday on Patriot· Cadmus
Rd., one and two-tenths of a
mile west of SR 775, at 7:30 p.
m.
Officers report that an
eastbound auto operated by

from the left, Virgil Brown, a past state president; Don
Mills, Roger Morgan, Dick Follrod, Theodore T Reed ,
Jr., Dale Kautz and Bill Childs, who was speaker for the
event. Another charter member , Don Mullen, was present
but is not pictured.

Awards highlight fete

BIG SNOWMAN - Although there is an over
abundance of snow in the Big Bend Area there have been
· very few ''snow persons". However, this mini~owrnan
- with red accents - did materialiZe on Brick St.,
Pomeroy, over the weekend .
1/

23

Patrol checks three
wrecks, no one hurt
The Gallia-Me1gs, Highway
Patrol, Investigated three
accidents Monday.
OffiCers were called tn the
scene of a two·vehlcle
colhswn on Bob McCormick
Rd., one nule south of SR lfiO
According to the patrol, a
north bound auto driven by
Dr. John Groth , Jr , 49 ,
Gallipohs, went out of control
on the 1ce covered roadway,
shd left and struck a "\Ufl1
bound Gallipolis City School

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursda y through
Saturday: flurries da1ly.
High Thursday In the luw
20s and rising Into the 30s
by Saturday . Overnight
lows flve to 10 Thursday
and In the 20s Fr•day and
Saturday.
.;.: .... ··... ..;::.·:···-:-::·:.:· ·.::.: :: .· ::··

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to
"dn .~
West Main St. at ml i6..t
Monday for
Ernestine
a~ea ~nd local soi~ and water Winebrenner who was taken
dtstr1ct
me etmg s
~~--. 1 t 0 Veterans
Memorial
scheduled..
' Hospital.
The Me1gs SWCD board
meets regularly on the fourth
Wednesday of each month
SQUAD RUN
and the public is always
Hilda McDaniel, Route 7,
welcome to attend.
ncar , Middleport, was taken
Meetings are held m the
to Holzer Medical Center at
agriculture serv1ce ce nter
2: 58 p.m. Monday by the
conference room , second
emergency unit of the Mid·
floor of the Farmers Bank
dleoort F1re Department.
building at 8 p.m.
,I

bus operated by Hoberta
Roach, 37, Ga lli polis
The!re were no InJuries
Both vehi cles incurred
moderate damage.
In a related accident, an '
a uto operated by Anne
Romaine, .47, Eureka Star
Route, went out · of &gt;£ontrol
near the prev1ous accident
site, passed off the nght side
of the roadway down an
embankment, and struck a
fenc-e.
There was moderate
damage to the vehicle.
In further action, Ut e patrol
investigated a two_.veh1cle
accident in Meigs County on
Kmgsberry Rd., three and
five-tenths of a mile west of
US. 33, at 1:45 p.m.
Officers report that an east
bound auto dnven by Ronald
Wood: 20, Pomeroy, and a
west bound vehicle operated
by Kenneth Wya nt , 20 ,
Pomeroy, met m a curve.
Foll owmg collision , the
Wood vehicle passed off the
nght s1de of the roadway
down an embankment.
There was heavy damage
to the Wood auto, moderate
damage to the Wyant vehicle.
EXAMINERS ' o•' FICE
The office IJemg built on the
th~rd floor of the eourthouse
is for state C1\aminers who
will be auditing all county
records . The work is being
done by David Craig, a CETA
employe.
l

'

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