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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

'

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 30, 1979

-

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1)1esday, Jan. 30, 197!1

\

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Constitutional politics
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASIDNGTON (NEA ) • Much as they might like to, con·
gressional leaders see no safe way to ignore the mounting
political pressure for a balance- the-budget amendment to the
Constitution.
Such proposals bave been kicking around Capitol Hill for
years, mostly under the sponsorships of conservative
Republicans, but have never received serious scrutiny.
Now, with public antagonism towards big government at an
all-time high, 22 states have petitioned Congress for a constitu·
tiona! convention· to consider a balance-the-budget amendment. If 12 more states follow suit, such a convention-the first
since the Constitution was written- might have to be held.
Many legal scholars fear that a constitutional convention,
even if called for a single purpose, might open up the entire
document to amendment. Since there is no precedent for such
a gathering, the ground rules are anybody's guess.
Sen. Birch Bayh, )).Ind., chainnan of the Senate Judiciary
subcommittee on constitutional amendments, now plans. to
schedule bearings later this winter or early in the spring on the
ramifications of a possible constitutional convention and on
the balance-the-budget amendment itself.
Bayh may ask Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, )).Maine, and
members of his Senate Budget committee to participate in the
hearings insofar as they address the pros and cons of the proposed amendment.
Most congressional budget experts believe there is no way to
write a constitutional requirement for a balanced federal
budget without either dangerously straitjacketing the govern·
ment in times of military or economic crisis or permitting so
many loopholes that the amendment is meaningless.
They are hoping the Bayh hearings may drive that point
home before too many more states petition Congress for a con·
stitutional convention on the issue.

And the winner is ••.

"Dick, you old devil. You haven't changed

w--------.., ·:******************************·*****'fl'****••··,;
I The Poet's I ! Editorial opinions ·. 1
I
Corner .I
I

I

WEAR A SUNNY SMILE
The morn was dark and
dreary,

For public consumption, the fight over selection of a site for
the 1980 Republican National Convention was waged in purely
logistical terms - which city of the seven vying for the conven·
tion could provide the best meeting facilities and hotel ac·
commodatlons.
'
But as anyone attending last week's GOP National Commit·
tee meeting here can testify, the real battle turned on political
considerations.
Minneapolis.St. Paul was the only site eliminated for a pure·
ly non-political reason: inadequate hotel space. Miami Beach,
New Orleans and Kansas City (the 1976 conventioh city) fell by
the boan!s becaus~ fhey are located in states which have not
ratified the Equal Rights Amendment.. New York has no prominent local GOP officeholders (e.g. governor or mayor), and
got a bad name for excessive work space-and-equipment
charges to the 1976 Democratic National Convention participants.
· That-left Detroit and D8llas. GOP Chairman Bill Brock, who
has consistently sought to broaden the party's base and
demonstrate its concern for blacks, the poor, and the cities,
opted for Detroit. Party conservatives, especially supporters
of Ronald Reagan, fought for Dallas - although mostly they
wanted anyplace except Detroit.
After a bruising struggle, Brock and his moderate allies
won. So Detroit it will be- starting July 14, 1980, which is likely
to mean the Democrats wait until August, after the summer
Olympic games in Moscow.
·

Reagan goes a-courting

And I was feeling blue.
My heart was sad and weary
I scarce knew what to do!
Then I began a thinking
l'.d drive dull cares away,
And found my cares were
sinking
When I heard a sweet voice
say :
(Chorus)
Wear a surmy smile,
It makes bright the darkess
day,
Wear a sunny smile,
It will drive dull cares. away.
start smiling in the morning,
Keep smlling until noon .
Then smile on through the
evening ·
To drive away the gloom.·
Forthwith I started singing.
My heart was made so glad.
I heard the joybells ringing
And was no longer sad.
Quite soon the sun was
shining,
..
I found great joy that day ,
For I had quit my pining
When I heard that sweet
voice say:

(Chorus)

It!

.

.

t*************************•*****************·~~

Meigs historical news;•.
BY MARGARET PARKER
future gener~tions. Official
Many have asked what to records tell facts, but you can
include in writing your leave a history that will make
familiy history. In this article you live in the future .
I'll try to give some ideas.
How interesting it would he
If you begin with an to go back and find a story
original ancestor you might about great-great - grandtell where that p~rson came father, telling where he went
from birth date (if known), · to school, what kind of sports
marr'iage date and to whom, and hobbies he enjoyed, what
children, occupation , and he worked at, what the
interesting incidents you may commuruty he hved was hke
know about the life of these when he was growmg up, how
ancestors.
the people spent their leisure
If you wrtte your story tune.
One story we received
about your immediate
family , include whatever mentioned that the girls
information you
want enjoyed "skip to my louing."
someone in a hundred years Another told about her father
to know about your family. bemg a farmer and logger
This is the purpose of a most of his life.
history, to leave a record for
Others have told about jobs
with the WPA and interesting
incidents that happened while
And I have news for you.
on the job, about en·
When you are sad and lonely tertamment when they were
And have a dreary day,
young,
farming,
and
Just trust in Jesus only,
especially things. that are no
And you'll hear Hts sweet longer in existence or com' Say:
VOICe
mon today. Of course, we
(Chorus)
want you to tell about the
-Composed by Mrs. Riley present, as this will also be
Pigott
· history in the future .
Long Bottom, Ohio, 45743
Birth dates are an imIn July 1935 portant part of your story, for

Ronald Reagan, who spent three days in Washington last
week courting Republicans of all stripes on Capitol Hill, apunto you I'm telling
pears on the surface to be following the Ed Muskie strategy o( Now
My
story
which is true,
1972 by seeking early public support from party establishment
Joy
in
my
heart is dwelling
types.
Muskie, of course, had scads of big name Democratic endorsements heading into the primaries six years ago- only to
discover that George McGovern had out-organized him on the
ground.
· ·
Reagan aides insist their man is in a different position, havThe U. S. Soil Conservation land that has been mined for
ing fought the GOP establishment in 1976. They feel he needs to Service (SCS ) will begin coal may be eligible for costprove hili acceptability to all wings of the party, even if he taking applications for the sharing.
doesn1 garner outright endorsements from many moderates new Rural Abandoned Mine
In the first year or so of the
or liberals.
Program (RAM(') Feb. I.
new program," the conThe unreclaimed mining servationist said, we will be
sites which present an ex- concentrating on areas where
treme danger to public health we can protect public health,
and safety will be given top safety, general welfare, and
prionty, according to Boyd property from extreme
Ruth, district conservationist danger caused by past coal
for Meigs County.
mining practices. ·
"Reid Young, SCS soil
The SCS will also be looking
conservation technician, and ~ at projects that will correct
NEW YORK (AP) - lt'J Liv Ulhnann's first Broadway myself, workin.g along with possible adverse effects to
musical and Richard Rodgers' 4oth, but both the star and the Meigs Soil and Water health and safety as second
composer of "Mama" said they were jittery on the first day of Conservation District, will be priority .
In the first year of the
rehearsals for the $1.2 million song-and-&lt;lance version of "! available to help land users
determine if thetr site meets program other applications
Remember Mama."
the requirements of the aimed at restoring the en"I'm enormously nervous," Miss Ullman said Mondsy.
Surface
Mining Control a'nd vironment and land and
"But it's a good kind of nervousness. It's like opening day
Reclamation
Act," ijuth said. water resources will be acat school."
1
·
He
pointed
out people who cepted at SCS offices, but
"Well, naturally I'm nervous. But then, you always are
own
or
control
non-federal they will probably not be
with every show," said the 76-year-old Rodgers, composer of
such Broadway hits as "Oklahoma" and "South Pacific."
Miss Ullmann, 39, said she had been studying with a vocal
1
coach but indicated she won·t try to emphasize vocal .
technique. "I'U try to act it out," she said.
"Mama" is due to open at the Broadway Theater on May 3 r : - - - - - - , _ : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
after a PHiladelphia tryout.
·

SCS accepting RAMP applications

I

Names •••
•

zn. the news

Berry s World

KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)- Tennessee Williams says he and
a friend were mugged by a group of young toughs who said
they recognized the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright.
Williams, author of "A Streetcar Named Desire" and "Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof," said he and author Dotson Rader were
attacked as they walked down a streellate Sunday. Williams
said they were accosted by four or five men in their late teens
or early 20s.
_
He told police poe of the youths told him, "I know who you

are ."
Williams said he replied, "What of it. I'm not afraid. I'm
not in the habit of retreat."
The 67-year-old Williams was .shoved to the ground, while
Rader was punched in the jaw. Neither was injured. The
youths then fled .
Williams was here for the opening of a series of plays by
the Temessee Williams Repertory Company, a group formed
to hoooc the part-time Key West resident.
NEW YORK (AP) -Feminist Betty Friedan saY" women
who put down men do it for reasons of "insecurity and self·

·
i

contempt."

&lt;

"I'm suspicious of w&lt;men who put down men with slogans
like 'a w001an needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle,' "Miss
Friedan,said in an interview published in the February issue of
Family Circle magazine.
~'I've noticed that they were really nothing unless they
could attract the right succesaful men, I think they may bate
men and feel the need to put them down with such foolish
slogans because of their excessive dependence on them."
She added ''a w001ansatlsfied with most aspects of her life
doesn 'I usually turn her back on men ... Most women need
long-term commitment, someone to take care of and to be
taken care of by, to share life with,"

.

~

'

This past week the Ohio
House of Representatives
began operating in full swing
with a complete slate of
committee
and , subcommittee hearings
scheduled.
This week's activity ' also
included a roll call vote on
House BUJ 46. This measure
establishes · mandatory
lighting efficiency rules for
all existing , public buildings
which are owned, leased or
controlled by the state. The
bill also adopted lighting
efficiency recommendations
for all other existing public
buildings. House Bill 46
received approval and will
now be considered by the
Senate,
· Many new bills were also
introauced during this week's
legislative activity. One ~ew
proposal of special Interest is
House Bill 139, a measure
which requires that all soft
drink and beer containers
a bit."
carry a deposit. The measure
would also ban the use of pulltab metal containers.
This so-called "bottle bill"
legislation was not in·
traduced in the most common
way , but was instead
proposed by initiative
petition. Under provisions of
- :It- the
Ohip Constitution and
state law, proposals can be
brought before the General
Assembly in this manner.
Petitions for the proposal
were circulated by the Ohio
the benefit of future Alliance for Returnables. The
secured
the
genealogists. In this day, Alliance
of
92,000
electors,
signatures
many people move and spent
short periods ol time in dif· the required number of
ferent locations. If a birth names to have the proposal
before
the
took place somewhere else, placed
Legislature.
The
92,000
but you live most of your life
in Meigs County, then ·. a elector figure is based on the ·
record of this in your story number of voters which is
equal to at least 3 percent of
might save a future
those
who voted in the
generation a lot of expense
governor's
race during the
and time tracing this fact.
last
election.
The same is true for people
Once the signatures were
living in nearby counties or
secured,
the petitions were
who have moved away, but
submitted
to the Secretary of
their children were hom in
State
for
certi£ication.
When
Meigs County. These records
the
signatures
were
deterare not always searched for
mined to be valid, the
just to satisfy curiosity, but
of State submitted
Secretary
often are needed for legal
the
proposal
to the General
purposes, and to prove birth
Assembly.
dates for social security and
Now that the proposal has
other benefits.
been
formally introduced as
If you have additional
House
Bill 139, this measure
questions, !here will be
will
go
through the same
someone at the museum on
legislative
process as any
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
other
bill.
If
the Legislature
and Monday, Febrilary 2..'i, to
answer questions and accept
stories, from 1-3 in the afternoon.

funded this fiscal year," Ruth
said.

River Lore
Missouri has endeared
itself to generations of
Americans with its river lore,
folk tales , and especially the
writings of Mark Twain
(Samuel L. Clemens).
Statues of two of his creati ons , Tom Sawyer and
Huckleberry Finn, stand in
Hannibal, his boyhood home.
Hi s birthplace near Florida,
Mo., has been enshrmed in
Mark Twain State Park.

L
I

~

II

-f&lt;l"'

A

""
... .....

11

11
y

l
l
"I just ASSUMED, when I was lnvlttid to the
White House for dinner, I would be' eating
with everybody else!"

..___......,........_~­

INTERFSI'OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Edlt11r
DAVID BUSKIRK
AdvertlslngMan..gt&gt;r
Published dally eJtc:epl &amp;lturdcly

by The Ohi1.1 Ve~lley Publishing
Company-Multimedia , Inc,
111
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Busmes.s Office Phone 992- 2156.
Editorial Phone 002-2157.
~cond cbtss posUtge paid at :
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National advertising rcpresen. tauve, Landon Associates, 3101
Euehd Ave.1Cleveland, Ohio +1115.
SubscriptiOn rates Delivered by
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Elsewhere 132.00 )car: Six montteo"•
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Subscription prke includes Sunday
Times-Sentinel.
1

Quit Swallowing Air
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
wilh a great deal of mterest a
column by you about gas. My
doctor told me that my gas
· problem was probably caus·
ed by $Wallowing air. He
didn't seem to have any sug·
gestion as to how to rflieve
1 this problem.
Like the other person you
. wrote about, I tried leaving
' out different foods but it
didn't help. I seem to have
nOJ'Illal bowel function and
don't take any medicines of
any kind for that, so that's not
my problem. But I do have
gas 24 hours a day. How does
one stop swallowing excess
air?

Library
Letters .

•

January 26,1979

Dear Jamie,
We received the complimentary copies of your new books
My Garden Companion and The Night Sky Book. Both look like
winners to me. In fact we are enclosing an order for a copy of
My Garden Companion for the Pomeroy Ubrary.
I remember when you were in tbe Middleport Lilx-ary
looking around and telling me about the boks you were writing ..
The nel&lt;l day, Tuesday, July 26, 1977, the Sentinel ran an
article on you, and I told my husband how I had met you in the
library the dsy before. He Is big on gardening; and after
seaming your garden hook, I'm sure be will want to check it
out for the valuable information in it that even a seasoned
gardener may not know.
I can't tell you how thrilled I was when I received your .
books. I'Ve been a Middleport person all my life, so it gives me
great pleasure to add to our collection hooks written by a
"local boy."
.,
There is a group of chUdren who meet at the library on
,Saturday afternoons for films, craft programs, etc.; and I am
sure they ,like ali the children who use the lilx-ary, are going tu
find your books really neat.
You can be sure that when you third hook, The Complete
Book of Conununity Gardening is published in March, we will
be ordering it.
The next time you are in town I hope you will stop in and
see us again. Till then, keep wrinting.
·
Sincerely, Ruth Powers.

DEAR READER - Most
people who swallow excess
air are unaware of it. It's
rather difficult to stop a habit
that you are unaware of.
The best training device I
know of Is to hol~an eraser or
some other safe object between your teeth. When you
are doing this, it makes It dif·
ficult to swallow. Consequently, If you do swallow you will
he aware of it. The awareness
and the difficulty in swallowing helps one to train himself
out of this nervous habit.
, To give you more informa·
lion about gas problems and
what you can do about them, I
am sending you The Health
Letter number 6-ll, Controlling Gaseousness . . Other
readers who want this issue
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it. Address your
·request to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Many people do have problems with swallowing air
that cause gas complaints.
An analysis of the gas in the
digestive system in many pa·
lients has shown that, In fact,
it is swallowed air, not gas
relea sed · from fermented
food.
Of course, you can have
both and many people do. If
your basic gas problem is
cau5ed by swallowing air,

•

1

fails to pass the bill - in a
form satisfactory to the
Committee 88 within a period
of four months, the Ohio
Alliance of Returnables can
then seek and secure the
signatures of an additional
92,000 electors and have the
proposal placed on the
November 6, 1979 general
election ballot.
This will be a controversial
issue during ' the next few
months. Supporters of House
Bi11139 claim that returnable
containers would eliminate
about 20 percent of our solid"
waste. Supporters also feel
that throwaway containers
are an eyesore and a health
hazard, and tbilt enactment
of this proposal will he a
partial solution to the litter
problem. Supporters include
environmental and consumer
groups.
Opp&lt;inents of House Bill139
include the brewi!Jg, bottlemaking, canning, retail
grocery, and steel and
aluminum industries and
their associated labor unions.
The Ohio AFUIO predicts a
" ripple effect" of a $100
million loss to Ohio's
economy from a mandatory
deposit law due to job losses
in the glass industry ·alone
and . its suppliers. There
would also be job losses in
can manufacturing and steel
and aluminum supply in·
dustries and in the entire
beverage industry, according
to the unions.
Opponents also argue that
mandatory deposits will not
attack the entire litter
problem since cans and
bottles account for no more
than 20 percent of all litter.
The 'bottle bill" is sure to
be a topic of heated
discussion in the weeks
ahead, and I would ap·
preciate knowing your views
on this issue.

first, what's on second.
"Pete Rose is my first
baseman for 1979 and for
three years th ereafter,"
Ozark said. "The only reason
Rose has never been an All·
Star first baseman is that
he's never played first .
Maybe it will help him get to
the Hall of Fame faster."
Rose has been a National
League All.Star as an outfielder , second baseman and
third baseman. He played out
his option with the Cincinnati
Reds last ~eason and signed a
four-year contract with the
Phillies for a reported $3.2
million.
The cans of worms involves
Richie Hebner, Ted Sizemore
and Mike Schmidt. Hebner
has played first the last two
years. 1lte Philiies appear to
feel that Sizemore can't play
regularly at second because
of a hand injury suffered last

season. They've talked about
moving Schmidt to second
and playing Hebner at third,
where he performed for the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
Ozark, of course, could give
Sizemore a chance .in spring
training, and if the veteran
shows he has the power back
in the damaged hand, Hebner
could be traded. It's doubtful
Hebner would want to stay on
as a utility player. Or
Stzemore co uld be dealt for a
second baseman or pitcher,.
Or Sizemore could be traded .
Stzcmore already has saia
he will not sit on the bench.
He has told Phillies' per·
sonnel director Paul Owens to
trade him if the club doesn't
plan to use him as the star·
ting second baseman. .
Owens, meanwhile, claims
he 1s patiently waiting for
other clubs t&lt;&gt;· ring his
telephone, since the per·

~·

'

FIGHT FOR BALL - Members of the Eastern and Southern girls cage teams give an
·all"Outefforttoget the ball in this action shot taken by Kim Grueser Monday night. Eastern
won the contest setting the stage for tonight's big boys' varsity contest between the two
rivals. Attempting to get the ball are the Eagles' Jeannie McClure ( 10) and Laura Eichinger
( 12) . Southern gals fighting for position are Della Johnson (5) and Janis Carnahan ( 15).
Tueoday

"The law of the Medes and

Eastern girls defeat
Southern gals Monday

Persians" referred to the
laws and decrees agreed to
by the coWtcil of princes and
the Iring; these could not be
changed by the ktng. The
~ression stlll means something that is Wtalterable and
irrev!'Cable.
.

altering your diet isn't going
to help much. What you have
to do is break the habit of afr
swallowing.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
a 9-year-old son who is extremely hyperactive. After
bemg tested, he was placed
on Ritalin. This medicine has
done wonders· for his·
behavior but I worry about
the possible side effects.
I have been told by our
family physician and the
psychologist that this is com·
monly used and is perfectly
safe. Do you agree? I would
appreciate any information
you might have.
Dieting doesn't work with
this hoy but the Ritalin works
well. Am I safe to go ahead
and give him this indefinitely
as ordered?
DEAR READER - As I'm
sure ·you know, there are
many hyperactive children.
Ritalin is commonly used in
controlling some aspects of
the problem. It is a good
medicine for this purpose and
there is no reason why you
shouldn't use it if your doctor
and psychologist have deter·
mined !bat your son needs it.
About the only side effect
tbat you really need to worry
about when it's given in the
proper amount is suppression
of appetite. You want to be
sure that your son does eat an
adequate well-balanced diet
S9 thst he gets plenty of nutri·
lion for good growth and
development.
·You might find that giving .
coffee will also help. If he
drank enough coffee, he
might not require as much
.Ritalin.
Usually as a child gets
older, there is a time when
Ritalin and other medicines ·
are no longer required. You
should depend on the evaluation of your doctor and
.psychologist to tell you when
you can decrease the amount
of medicine your son takes or
perhaps stop it altogether.
Thatpointusualiyshouldbe
after the chlid Ia in the teenage period and has more or
less passed through the
hyporactive stage of his life.
I

sonnel . director believes he
has expendable talent. The .
Phillies covet San ~·rancisco
second
basema n Bill
Madlock, or Chioago Cubs'
second baseman -Manny
Trtllo.
.

Oh}0
• State
•
JUin
p.S tO
7th p Jace,

Today·s

snorts
r

w0 r ld
_

Ry Will Grimsley
AP Corrt•spnndo•nl

.Orangernen,'
d urnp wva
e
By KEN RAPPOPORT

Men tenrus players are cattier than women tennis players
and are less generous in their contributwns to the game, says
Chris Evert.
·"We are more together than the men - we wouldn't think of
boycotting a tournament," the world's No. I player said in a
brtef stopover in New York en route to the West Coast to
pursue the women's tour. Her next appearance will be in a
$125,000 tournament Feb. 6-11 in Seattle.
From the airport, the four-time American ladies '
chiunpion was whisked to a midtown hotel to help promote the
$275,000 tournament at Madtson Square Garden March 21-25.
"I don't think any of the topmen players would fly to a city
to give a tournament a boost," she said. "It's not easy. But the
women are different. The top women gtve more than the men.
"We all are members of the Ladtes' Tennis Association.
We all get along well. We don 't have the jealousies that the
men l!ave. For that reason I think we have a better tour.
"What good is a tour if you don't get all of the top players to
play ? Boycotts could really hurt the game."
Chris' two-fisted shots were auned at the current schism in
the men's Grand Prix circuit wtth a cordon,of the world's top
players- Jimmy Connors, Bjorn Borg, Guillermo Vtlas, John
McEnroe and Vilas Greulaitis, ail non-members of the
Association of Tennis Professionals - refusmg to play tn stx
designated tournaments.
U they don't sign by March 5, they will be meltgtble lo
compete in the 93Grand Prix events, mcluding Wimbledon, the
U.S. Open, and the French and Italian championshtps
" We are not going to sign," Connors insists adamantly.
Someone has to give. Wanna guess who?
Chrts was accompanied by her bridegroom-to-be, British
DaviS Cupper John Lloyd, who staunchly supported his
fiance's stand.
.
" It is sad that the top five players, who have made so mu ch
money out' of tennis - and good luck to them - ca nnot put a
little back mto the sport," he said.
Uoyd is a handsome Hollywood matinee type He and
Chris met at Wtmbledon last summer . It was love at first sight.
Now it's wedding bells in the spring - date and site a guarded
secret.
Both plan, m the meanttme, to pursue their separate tennis
careers, holding weekend rendezvous wherever possible. And
Chris is findmg herself caught up in new priorittes.
"I used to think tennis 24 hours a day , but now I have found
there are other thmgs in ltfe," she satd plaintively. "It is
difficult for me to get mtense new·"

By TOM CANAVAN
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) _ lttook
11 weeks, but Indiana State
finally lost one _ off the court
that is.
Notre Dame, despite
garnering only 15 first. place
ballots to the Sycamores' 32
and losing a game in the final
seconds to Maryland last
week, retained the No. 1
position in 1be Associated
Press college basketball poll
today.
The Irish received 1,124
points i.n ballottng by a
nation-wide commtttee of
sports writers and broadcasters, edging Indiana
State, 18-ll, by a mere 13
points in one of the closest
votes in AP poll history.
Both teams were named on
each of the 60 votes cast by
committee members. Notre
Dame was tabbed no lower
than sixth by the members,
while the Sycamores were
listed as low as loth by one
member.
While Notre Dame and
Indiana State were battling
hard for the No. 1 spot, last
week's rash of upsets created
wholesalechanges amongthe
rest of the Top Ten.
Preaeason favorite Duke,
ranked seventh last week,
moved into the No. 3 position
with eight first-place votes
and 1,025 points following
victories over Virginia and
Marquette.
By JOHN.NADEL
Super Bowl berths tn as many
North Carolina, No. 2 last
AP Sports Writer
NF L seasons. "' It 's been a
week and seemmgly the hetr
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - It long year, but a good year.
apparent to the No. I ranking wasn't exactly son of Super I've en joyed it.
after Notre Dame's loss on Bowl XIII that brought the
"But I can't wait to catch
Saturday afternoon, took National Football Leag ue's that btg bird in the mommg
themselves out of contention longest season ever to a and fly the fri endly sktes
later that night, dropping a merciful end. Maybe a great, ba ck to Dallas ," added
66-61 decision to Clemson. ' great grand-child would be Dorsett , who gained 27 yards
The Tar Heels settled for more appropriate.
on seven car:ri es Monday
fourth this week with 970
And although some ra~id mght " I'm gorng to relax for
pomts, including one first· fans might disagree, many of a long, long time "
place vote.
the players seemed happy to
Roger Staubach, a teamUCLA, ranked sixth before call it a year.
mate of Dorsett' s, rifled a 19victories over Washington · "'I'm feeling great ... this yard touchdown pass to yet
and Washington State laSt capped off a very nice week another Cowboy, wide
week, received two first- with a lot of nice guys," said ·receiver Tony Hill, with 3:43
place votes and 957 pomts, Mimesota's Ahmad Rashad remaining in th e thtrd
edging Louisville for the No. 5 after helping the National quarter to give the NFC its
position by one point. The Conference to a 13-7 victory victory.
Cardinals, who were fifth last over the American ConThe only score o( th e
week and posted triumphs fer ence in the amual Pro second half followed a 16over St. Lollis and Virginia Bowl extravaganza at the yard punt by Oakland's Ray
Tech, received the remaining Colise um Monday night . Guy and capped a 45oyard,
two first-place votes.
"One of the highlights of my five-play drive .
Ohio Stole, which career was just being here.
The winners took a 6~ lead
knocked Duke from the The most valuable player after 7:06 of the second
unbeaten ranks earlier this award was just gravy."
quarter on a 2-yard run by
year and was unranked
Rashad caught five passes Philadelphia' s Wi lbe rt
three weeks ago, continued
for 89 yards and ws one of at Montgomery. The touchdown
its rise, moving from lOth least a handful of players who came on a fourth·and-1 play .
to seventh with 851 polnts.- were MVP posstbtltltes m the
New Orleans quarterback
Eastern powers Syracuse, nationally televised game Archie Mannmg engmeered
692 points, and Georgetown, played before . 38,333 fans. the 70-) ard, ll·piay march.
623, took the eighth and ninth' More than a third of those Los Angeles' Frank Corral
positions , while Louisiana who purchased tickets was wide on the conversion
State rounded out the Top Ten 13,310 - either stayed home attempt.
with 497 points.
. The AFC retaltated with tts
or went elsewhere.
Texas, No . . 17 last week,
It was a requirement of Los only sco re of the ni ght ,
headed the Second Ten , Angeles Rams' season ticket- moving 62 yards on nine plays
followed by Marquette, holders to purchase a ticket after the ensumg kickoff. The
Alabama, Illinois, Michigan to the Pro Bowl.
touchdown came on an 8-ya rd
State,
Texas
A&amp;M ,
The NFL kicked off its 1978 pass from Mi ami 's Bob
Maryland, Temple, Arkansas exhibttion season last July 29. Gries e to Sea ttl e's Steve
and Vanderbilt.
Following
were
four Largent. Garo Yepremian of
Michigan State and Illinois ·preseason games, 16 regular- the Dolphms added the extra
took the wildest rollercoaster season games, three weeks of pomt.
rides. The Spartans fell from · playoffs and the Super Bowl.
Largent, the first member
fourth to 15th after losil)g to
The victory was the fourth of the seahawks to play in a
Michigan and Northwestern, for the NFC in the past five Pro Bowl, fini shed with ftve
while the lllini tumbled from years and the fifth In nine catches, all in the second
eighth to 14th after being · games overall since the all- quarter , for 75 yards. Both he.
upset by Michigan and Iowa. star contest change4 formats and Rashad tied the Pro Bowl
North Carolina State, a to pit the two conferences record for num be r of
member of the Top Twenty against each other.
receptions .
since the beginning of the
There were only 20 points Staubach outplayed Terry
season, was the only team to On three touchdowns and two Bradshaw, his counterpart in
drop out of the polL extra points - scored in a Super Bowl XIII, with nine
Maryland, which has been in game where the teams completions in 15 attempts
and out of the Top Twenty oil combined fo~;. 616 yards in for i25 ya rds. Bradshaw hit
year, is this week's only new total offense. !twas a far cry on seven of 17 for 54 yards.
member.
Second · stringers Griese
from the Pittsburgh Steelers'
wild 35·31 triumph over the and Manning made their
The AP Top T"w..nty
By The Associated Press
Dallas Cowboys in the Super presence felt. Grtese comThe Top Twenty teams in Bowl eight days earlier.
pleted 10 of 20 for 122 yards
The Associated Press college
and
Manmng, the first
"This
was
not
the
Super
basketball poll, with first member of the Saints to play
place votes In parentheses, Bowl, it doesn't ease that
season records and total loss, but it's nice to win an ali· in a Pro Bowl under the
points Points based on 20 19 star game," said rwming
current format, was eight of
·1 8 17 - 16 - 15 -14 - 13 - 12- 11 - back Tony Dorsett, who has · 17 for 78 yards.
10 -9 -8 -7 -6-5- 4-l :
~
The AFC's Earl Campbell,
I. NotreDame
(15) (12- helped the Cowboys to two

arena, whtch opened last
AP Sports Writer
year.
You -can't beat that
"They". say Houston had a
homecourt adva ntage in bad game against us
college basket ball And tomght, " noted Texas Coach
Sy ra cuse and Texas are Abe Lemons. " but tt seems
certainly taking advantage of ltke eyerybody has been
It
having bad games agamst us
The e 1 g h t h _ra nked this year."
In other action mvolving
0 ,. .1: c·emen extended thetr
wtnn.•. streak at home to 42 the natton·s Top 20 teams, No
wtth 0 9().74 rout of West .1 Lou isiana Stot e beat
Vtrgima and No. 11 Texas Tennessee 84-78: No 16 Texas
mad e tt 2J stratght by beating A&amp;M hammered Baylor 71Hou&amp;
ton 79 -.~ 3 Monday mght. 58: Virginia defeated No. 16
The essential power of the Temple 73-71 and Florida
Orangemen _ thetr front line · turned back No. 20 Vanderbilt
_ did most of the damage, 90-87 in ove rtime.
teaming for 67 of their points
llte Mountaineers trailed
at the nois) Manley Field most of the way agamst
House.
Sy racuse and made a se~wu s
"We were just trymg to run at the Orangemen wtth a
&gt;tay out of their wav and let H-2 bur;t late in the set"Ond
them have a field clay ,.. half Ihat cut their dcfic1t to
Syracuse guard Hal Coh en seven points . However, the
said of his team's Big 11lree rall y ended when West
_ Dale Shackleford, Loui e VtrgmJa center .Jumus U&gt;wis
Orr and Roosevelt BouiC.
fouled out.
Sha cklcford scored 27
"We've been mconsistent
pomts , Orr collected 22 and on the road ali year,' noted .
tied a school record *&gt;~'ith 13 West Vtrgtnta Coach Gale
asststs and Bo uie collected 18 Catlett. " I thought if we could
points.
get close to them down the
"West Virginia played a stretch and pressure the bali ,
triangle-and-two defense,.. they maybe they 'd crack The
said Syracuse Coach Jim key wa s when Lewis went
Roeheim.
out."
"I told our guards not to ~~~~~~~~~~m
move and just let Orr ,
Shackleford and Bollle play.
No team m the co untr; can
play these three guys With ·
that defense."
Jim Krivacs and Ron
Baxter teamed for 45 points
as Texas remained undefeated in its Super Drwn

II

NFC takes dull game

By Greg Bailey
After a slow start the
· Eastern
Eagle
girls
generated some offense as
they downed host Southern
for the second time this year,
27·14 Monday night.
That rival contest seemed
to set the stage for the clash
between the two boys' teams
at Eastern tonight.
After nearly four minutes
of scoreless basketball, Jan is
Carnahan's bucket put the
hosts on top 2-ll. Tight defense
by both teams kept the score
low, but in the next minute,
Jeannie McClure tied the
score with a layup. Southern
led 4·2 at the end of the first
quarter.

lawrence E.lamb, M.D.

DEVOTEu'I'OTIIE

~\·

~-

By RALPH BERNSTEIN
APSportsWrlter
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Da!ViyOza:k, m~~agerofthe
Philadelphta Philltes, opened
a can of worms Monday night
when he 8":"0';'"Ced that Pete
Rose was hts ftr&amp;t baseman in
1979.
Ozark made the announcement in front of 1,000
guests at the Philadelphia
Sports Writers Association's
75th annual banquet.
The 38-year·old Rose,
sitting on·the dias with Ozark,
later told the audtence that he
had heard Ozark's decision
for the first time when the
manager addressed the
banquet.
"Ever since we got Rose
(last December) I've been
asked where he was going to
play," Ozark said. " Well, I'd
ltke to end this Abbott and
Costello routine of who's on

HEALTH

I I)S~ 14~MIH

·'

Jamie Jobb
The Yolla Bolly Press
Covelo, Calif. 95428

]

•

Thi&lt; Da1ly Sentinel

.

Rose iiow /irstbaseman

James' Report

II WASHINGTON

_

Southern hit th e first
bucket of the second pertod,
but then the Eagle offense
came alive and by intermission the vtsitors had
taken a IHl lead. ·
By the third pehod buzzer
Eastern was ahead 18·12,
mainly behtnd the comer
shootmg of Laura Eichinger.
The Eagle offense held
Soutl\ern in check wtth only
two points in the last quarter
as Eastern kept on gomg.
Eastern 's Lita Young Jed
all sco ring with .10 points
while Sarah Goebel tossed in
7 Eichinger ended the mght
wtth 6 points. Carnahan led
the iosers by netting seven
potnts whtle Tammy Smith
tossed in five

Eastern was called for 14
fouls while Southern was
tagged with 20. Southern hit 4
of 16 charity tosses while the
winners scored 7 of 19. All
seven Eagle foul shots were
made. by Goebel.
In the junior high contest,
Southern kept its record
clean by racing to an easy 41·
18 win. The winners shut
Eastern out in the first
quart er while building a 16-ll
lead, but by intermission
Eastern had cut the margin
to 23·12. The third period was
34-16
Melanie Weese had 18 for
the winners and Tonja Kaiser
had 12 Becky Ambrose led
Eastern with 8.

...
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•'

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•"•

DOlT

"'
'.

.

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"
"
'

_,

HAVE

..'''
.....'

Drive in to Bob Evans and take
home some finger lickin' good chicken from the Colonel. Pick up dinner
after work . You'll see us on Eastern
Avenue . Don't drive by. Drive in.

.'.
...
..•..•
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••••
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2) 1.124

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DRIVE IN

WE DO IT R'GHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT.:"

•

~·

I' '

"'·-'
l

2. Ind. Stole
(32 ) (180) 1.111
3. Duke
(8) (14-3) 1,025
4. North Carolina
(I) (15-3)
970 '
5. UCLA
(2) (14-3)
957
6. Louisville (2) (17-3) 956
7. 0hioState
(13-4) 851
8. Syracuse
(18-2 ) 692
9. Georgetown , D.C.
( 16 2) 623
10 Loulslona St. (15-3) 497
II. Texas
(15-4) 41!4
· 12. Marquette
(14-3) 460
13.Aiabama
(13-4) 355
14. 1lllnols
(16-41 325
15 Mich . St.
( 11 -5 324
16. Texas A&amp;M (18-41 283
17. Maryland
( 14'5) 251
18. Temple
(15-3) 210'
19. Arkansas , J 13-41 169
20. Vanderbilt
\14-4) 153

·'

wlio led the NFL tr. rushing as
a rookine for Houston with

1,450 yard s, topped a ll
ground-gainers with 66 yards
on 12 cam es. New England' s
Sam Cunnmgham had 49
yards on eight attempts for
the losers.
.
Montgomery led the NFC in
rushmg with 53 yards on nine
tries.
"I never got up for it," said
Bradshaw. th"e NF L's most
valuable player " I wanted to
be alert, but I really didn 't
want to play another game.
" ! don't think anybody
wanted to play, but tt's an
honor to be in tt," he added.
" !'m glad nobody got hurt,
that's the important thing.
I'm tired, I'm emotionally
drained. mentally fattgued.
"' It 's been a great year, but
I'm glad it's over."
Rashad felt that players on
both teams wanted to win the
game, which meant $5,000 io
the 400 NFC participants and
$2,500 to members of the AFC
team.

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but several fine insurers : •• like The Continental Insurance
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busi ness. What we say counts with the Insurance companies,
just as wha t you need counts with us.

It's a nice system, designed lo give you the ultimate In
Insuran ce protection and se~lce. Drop by one day soon and
let us tell you what The lnaurance Store can do for you •

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE

Rn
II

214

••
••
•
0

ST.
POMEROY , O .
992-5130 or 992-5139
"YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY ,
YOU HIRE AN AGENT"

.

~ . MAIN

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·•

�4- The. Daily Sentinel, Middleport:Pomeroy, ()-•.l:u_esdar, ~all: 3(), 1979 .......... .·..·.·. .......................... .......

·

syH::=.::~.~ouel

By Helen and Sue Bolte!
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Mygirlfriend'sbrotherJackistheproblem. Ilikehimlikea
brother, but he wants to go out with me. He's the jealous type
and whenever he sees me liking or even talking to another guy ,
he either beats him up or threatens to.
Like the other night, I was over at their house and his cousin
Pete came in. We got talking and Pete. offered to teach me
some dance steps. Jack blew up, started banging things
around and threatened to punch him out. Then he stonned off
slamming the door. Later he told me he loved me . (He's 16. )
Dot (his sister) and I have tried talking to him, but he won 't
take no for an answer. I don 't want to lose her as a girlfriend,
butijustcan'ttakewhatJackisdoingtomylife.
Now that I'm beginning to like his cousin, it will be even
worse. Please help.- WANTS TO BE JUST FRIENDS
DEAR WTBJF :
Jack's parents should be told about his overblown jealousy.
If itisn'tcurbednow, itmaybringhimtroubleallhislife.
(Of course, if they've s~iled him into thinking "What .Jack
wants, Jack gets," you'll be talking to the wrong people; but
I'd guess insecurity is more likely his problem.)- HE~N

Matthew Evans
Matthew Shane Evans ,
year old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Evans , Portland,
celebrated his first birthday
on Jan. 19 with a family party .
Refreslunents were served
and gifts were presented to
Matthew. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger and
I ~mra , Pomeroy ; Matthew 's
maternal grandmother, Mrs.
llda Van · Meter, Portland,
lllicia, Cindy and Ryan
8vans. Mrs. Bernice Evans,
Matthew's paternal grandmother, Gallipolis send a gift.
He also received numerous
cards .

. •.

•

b

·. ours servtce gzven ry
·;:Meigs Retired Settif!_~Volunteers

Birthfiays li''"G;~;;;ti~;;ii;p"li207, 291
f.

h

· WANTS:
Another way: Why don't you and Dot bring a new girl or two
on the scene? Teen-age crushes don't last forever- especially
if someone just as cute makes a real play for the guy. -'SUE

---::::::----~

II total of 207,291 hours have Hospital rhaplainey . pru'beer] given in volunte~r scr- gram, proviced f!SVP
vice opportunities over the emergency assistance, the
past six years of the Meigs adult c·ommunity training,
Cou nty Retired Senior worked at several of the
Volunteer Program, ae- smiur citizen dubs and
cording to the annual report assisted or presented prouf the Meigs County Council grams at Bradbury, Chesler,
on llging.
Riverview , Portland, and
For t.he year 1978 there Middleport
Elementary
were 287 persons over the age schools, and the Southern
of GO who did volunteer work Junior High School special
to make up a total of 49,011 educaUonprogram.
volunteer hours. During 1978
A recogniUon dinner for
the volunteer stations served vol unteers in Ohio has been
were Veterans Memorial scheduled for April 26 at the
Hospital, COAD Senior Nutri- Colwnbus Sheraton. Tickets
lion Program and home for the dinner must be
delivered meals, bookmobile, ordered by March 1 and any
Cancer Society and Canl'Cr senior volunteer planning to
Clinic, Hearl Fund, Meigs attend should register at the
County Museum, Red Cross Center. Transportation will
and Bloodmobile, Arc~dia be provided.
Nursing Home, Meigs County
Infirmary, the Athens Mental
Health Center, Salvation Army,

DEARRAP:
,
Being concerned with people and teens the way you are, and
from your experiences, would you conclude that high school
years are the bjlst social -most carefree and least pressured
-years of your life? '
What do your readers think?
We want to include these conunen:S in our big social studies
tenn paper. -SUSAN AND AUCE
DEAR SUSAN AND AUCE:
I think you'D receive more "No" than " Yes" answers to
your question, even though our recent teen survey indicated
most young people were quite happy with the present. (But I
colild be wrong.)
How about it, readers: Are (or were) your high school years
the best social,least pressured, times of your lives ?
For me personally? No! How awful to think l hit my peak
before age-18, and from there on it was all down hill. I've
always insisted the best time of my life is right now. (But persuading myseH bas sometimes been a little djfficult.) -HELEN
SUSAN AND AUCE:
High school a "carefree, pressureless time ?" No way! The
competition (unless you're the straight-A popularity kid ) is

the

Senior

· ~.
HEARTY HOME
AWAY FROM HOME.
At Bob Evans Steak .House, we ·:~~· .
serve a lot more than steak. We have •. • •"•
hotcakes, fried mush, hot baked • ••••
•
• • •
biscuits, fresh farm eggs, and all the
good things that go with Bob Evans
Farms country fresh Sausage.
~~
So stop on in on your way to work. c:.::
And do it right for breakfast.

.

.. lit . . . .

• • 0 •"'
• • •
8

tremendous- for dates, acceptance, grades, friends, honors,
whatever. Then there are parent hassles, as you seek more independence than they think is wise ... And often money problems; not to speak of preju(hce and discrurunation: the

"outie" worries.

.

For me? High school was better than junior hi, llUt college
topped both. By then I was mature enough to realize. how
foolish I'd been. -SUE

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

(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion, twogeneration style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen
Bottel - or both if you want a combination mother • dauther
answer - in care of this newspaper. (

.,- - - - v - - - -

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So. Cl"a}

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T 0 day ' s T optc:
,

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WASHER &amp;
DRYER

.

BAKER FURNITURE

By FRED BA VLES
• Other questions are asked
Assodated Press Writer
about which colleges may be
Faced with sagging best - or not s~ted - for
enrolhnents, more American fore1gners . Officials at
universities are looking for Windham
College
in
new students _ and their Vermont, for . example,
tuition _ by swapping , wound up w1th mo.re
education for petrodollars complaiiits than tUition m_1ts
from the Mideast Africa and efforts to enroll foreign
South America. '
students - and the school
It is a trend that already folded .
has made a modest dent in
At Northeastern, Ms. Hyem
this country'iflrade deficit _ says, the reputation of its
pumping back an estimated engineering school has
$900 million in the u. s. pushed foreign .enrollment
economy each year in tuition past 10 percent. Overseas
alone:
applic11tions continued to roll
In the past five years III at Northeastern and other
foreign enrollment at u. s: . Boston-area schools, giving
schools has nearly doubled, Massachusetts a foreign
hitting over 235 000 in the student population of 10,500,
1977-78 school year. While the coWJtry's fourth largest.
representing only 1.8 percent
Cahforma IS first w1th
of total u. s. college 35,367 students, followed by
enrolhnent, the figure still New York, 21,569, and Texas,
makes the United states the 19,134. The figures, from the
world leader when it comes to Institute of International
educating foreign students. Education, also show a thi[d
The role of' college campus of f_ore1gn students ~re _from
In the world is expected . ·to
nallons of tbe OrganiZation of
grow as oil-rich nations Petroleu.m Exporllng
continue to send their people Countnes.
here for training in
Iran IS now the Ja:gest user
engineering, business and the of U. S. education, w1th
life sciences.
nearly 37,000 students here.
"These countries have a Other oil nations in the top 10
new affluence and they need are Nigeria, Venezuela and
managers," says Sally Hyem Saudi Arabia. The rest of the
of Northeastern University's 10 . are C~nada, Japan,
International Student Center. Ta1wan, India, Hong Kong,
"They don't have neough and V1etnam, who~ 6,000
universities but they do have refugee-students are mcluded
oil."
'
in the Ulstitute's count.
The trend also · has
"Twenty
years
ago
university officials looking countries like Nigeria and
closely
at ·
foreign Saudi Arab1a wer.e nowhere
developments asking what to be seen when 1t came. to
effect Iran's iroubles or the compiling lists of fore1gn
new turn in U.S.·China students," Pam Wilson, an
relations might have on in~titute spokeswoman,
enrollment of
foreign pomted out.
students.
Foreign students are

'

One year ago : President
Ca rter proposed a Soviet-U.S.
agreement not to use nuclear
·material in space satellites,
after disintegration of a
Soviet capsule that caused
radiation in northern Canada.
Today' s birthdays: Actress
Vanessa Redgrave is 42 years
old.
Writer
Barbara
Tuchman is 67. Actor Gene
Hackman is 48.
In 1882, Franklin D. Roose\•elt was born at Hyde Park,
N.Y.
In 1948, Indian nationalist
leader Mohandas Gandhi was
assassinated in New Delhi.
In
1968 ,
Communist
guerrillas invaded the U.S.
P.:mbassy compound ·In
Sa igon, South Vietnam, and
wel-1\ killed in six hours of
fighting.
Ten years ago: President
Richard Nixon ordered the
Pentagon to come up with a
detailed plan to replace the
military draft with an aUvolunteer army .

The 16th birthday of Sherri
Hysell, daughter of Mrs.
Rosemary Hysell, Middleport, was c.ele~rated with
a party at her home recently.
Gifts were presented to
Sherri and refreshments of
pizza, cake and ice cream
were served.
.Guest!&gt; were An gie
Houchins, Allen King, Jeff
Peckham, April King, Angela
Payne, l.orra Wisecup, I~isa
Oiler, Jim Jeffers, Brenda
Hysell, Terry Gardner, and
Penny Hysell. The girls remained overnight for a
slumber party.

P.ICNIC

(Umit 16 Wonls-Sizes lllustlated Below)

.

WHOLE
SMOKED

To My Wife, Ann ...

To Mom and Dad •• ,

After 14 wonderful
years of marriage, I'm
still head-over-heels In
love with you!
. watter'z.

Wv couldn't have picked
a nicer pair cil parents in
the world! Have a
Happy Valentine's Day I ·
Mike and Sue

-

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J 1.

.09
LB.

·--·-··-·-·-·--·--·---,
WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM. AND BRING JT

1

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ARGO 17 OZ.

GREEN BEANS ............ .

09

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PEAS ................................... .
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YELLOW CORN.......... .
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. SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY .9 TO. 10 P.M.
. SUNDAY 10 TO 10

Accept Federal t-ooa Stamps- We Reserve The Right To Umit Qua1ntitiewt

'Pomeroy, 0.
•'

l,

.•

M

.,
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·

$459
FULLY ·COOKED CHICKEN ........................... ..
TRAIL BLAZER
(CHUNK STYLE) $369

FRIDAY
ONLY

4. -------"

69

l7 PIECES

DAIRY

Court St.

.

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4

I
I

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE

OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30 tiiS : OO
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until8 P.M.
Herman Grate ,
173-5592
Mason . W.Va .

MORTON NEW!! 60 OZ. SIZE

9
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BOLOGNA ... ~ ...~.
SUPERIORS

OR MAIL IT WITH $1.00 BY FEBRUARY 12TH TO THE
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PICNI~

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getting one. You'll feel yuod
giving one..

:rno

MASON FURNITURE

DOG FOOD..................~~..~~:.~~~ ..~3

SHOULDERS•......• ~u.

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and offer you a truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and best
wishes.

Digtal watch.

Several atylaa from which to
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Spoidll 0/gha/ WitCh. /on't It
time you took a look at one?

TRI·STA TE AREA

HYLAND

SLICED

SAY "I .LOVE YOU" WITH A
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om of ~~WHY too.

IN THE

GROCERY

r lhe · ~
9~€1D€L I

, he SpelcMI Digital Watch 11 an
tJCtrltPKill gift. 8ec:aute 11'1 not
jult a g#t of time, It' a an elegllnt

FOR THE BEST DEALS

FOR YOUR
!-++-FOOD BUDGET

You'.ll f~ goou
ROBERT COUNCIL
Second Class Petty Officer
Robert Council left Sunday
for Puerto Rico after spen&lt;hng a two week leave with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ja mes Council and family, of
m•Jr Rutland . Council has
been stationed in Puerto Rico
since Sept. , 1978 and expects
to be there until May. He
went into the Navy in June
1975 after graduating from
Meigs High SchooL . Mr. and
Mrs . Council and son·, Paul,
took Robe rt to Columbus Airport Sunday morning.

MASON FURNITURE

· "Where only the·best food is good enough"

; Shem Hysell
honored with
birthday party

Danelle
Tal6ott ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel
Talbott ,
celebrated her ninth bir·
thday Friday, Jan. 26,
wit h a party at her
Portland home .
Refreshme nt s were
served •and gifts were
opened by the honore:
guest.
,
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Sidney Manuel , Mr . .
and Mrs. Ed Hupp, Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Wolfe ,
Shawn and Craig, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Evans, Alicia ,
Ryan and Matt, Dave and
Danny Talbott, · Carol
Mo rri s, Debbi e Bryant,
Dolly Hill, Corinna Bass,
and Kendra Bass.
Sending gifts were her
paternal . grandparents,
Mr . and Mrs . Henry
Johnson, Wintersville, her
maternal
grand parents ,
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Magee
of Phoenix , Arizona , and
Mrs. Ruth Garces of Pittsburgh , Pa.

SHOP

\

'

Donette Talbot

looking ·to the United States schools are as well equipped,
for technical education at a however.
According to Mary Ann
time when the decline in the
Spreckelmeyer of the to S.
International ·
expected to drop college Communication Agency ,
enrollment by 25 percent in many smaller schools are not
l!'e next few years .. Schools ready to deal with problems
like Boston Un~verSity h~ve of cultural adjustment. "The
respo~ded
WJlh foreign problems come will) some
recruiting prog~.~ms . BU has institutions imfamiliar with ·
· ass1gned an_ .~ternational foreign students," she said.
" There are cultu ral
representative . to to~r
adjustments to be made on
Europe and t;'e M~deast .
The schools off1crals also both sides ; some- of these
met
. recenUy
with differences are exasperated
· representative~
of the by a lack of English."
It was an a pparent lack of
Peoples Repbul1c of China
and the Cuban government to experlence that led to the
try to develop student troubles of Windham College
last fall. The private college
ex~han~e programs.
.
We re . .not
ha vmg hired a Pennsylvania firm to
proble~ fillmg spots n?w, recruit students overseas. "·
but we re lookll1g to the 80s Some . !50 Iranians and
when . the . colleg~. age Jordanians signed up ; 70 of
population IS down, says them arrived at the school
Natalie McCracken of BU. before it closed .
Some students complained
ar" lt 's a .problem~ schools
. e womed about.
• that Windham did not fit the
Bl! - Which has 1 400 recruiters' pictures and withfore1grt students .- offers he ld tuition : A federa l
refresher courses III Enghsh investigation found Windham
to 1,000 students and teaching innocent of criminal intent
programs for families of and blamed overzealous
forergn students. Not all transIa tors.

.
•
·
Tuition,
oil
money· ~~s-:n~th:tteih;ou~:tt.wi:
POLLY$ POINTER$
·

,;. Calendar

. · u,..

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio ·

SHERR! HYSELL
Sherri Hysell, daughter of ·
Mrs. Rosemary Hysell, Mid- ·
dleporl, will enter the Holzer
Medical Center on Thursday
for minor surgery .

· 5-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan . 30, 197~
._.......... • - - - valions tO Paul Casci.
ST!VERSVILLE
Hill
Church will be open for
services at 7:30 each Tuesday
:
starting Jan. 30, with Rev.
~~
Jerry Hobnan as pastor.
. I
WEDNESDAY
Polly Cramer '
.
TIJESDAY .
LONG BOTTOM Com'
PAST MATRONS of munity Association WedPOLLY'S PROBLEM
- sht• buy a plasti c ungcr proPomeroy
Chapter
186 nesday, 7:30 p.m. Residents
DEAR POLLY - Is there lector at the drug store.
: Tuesday 6 p.m. with potluck urged to attend.
any way l can change the col- These are sold for use when a
. •upper at Athens County
MIDDI EPORT I 'l
' Savings and Loan
•
.1 eoary or of the blue ceramic tile in fing er is out of place, a nail
. POMEROY Chamber of Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at my bathroom to a salmon col- lost , etc. They come in dif·
~ Commerce meeting, noon tJhe homMe ofRMhr~ dEOwmersotn or' l h ave lived for years ferenl sizes and I feel sure
~ Tuesday at Meigs !nil.
ones. ,;s. 1c ar
. en -~ with blue tile in an otherwise one would work when used as
• PAST Commanders' ~evdlewM TheB ThoPmhil~rrdsl ' salmon-colored bathroom a thimbl e. At least it would be
Trustees and · t st
an
rs. en
son . o because I thought I could not an inexpensive try . - MIIRY
members will hlf!vere
discuss James Michener. For change the tile color. You are ANN
;. meet' .a at 7.30 a e ~
er roll call. members are to give
D.EJAR POLLY - Many
~.m. uesday either a corrunent on the pro- my last hope.- ROXIE
' at Drew Webster Post 39,
. ·
DEAR ROXIE - 1 have years ago I learned the
Ameri 8 Le 1 h
t
~ram or a modern novelist
seen some bathroom tiles following from an old poultry
c n
g on orne o
TIIURSDA y
, discuss proposed post home
EV ANGEI.JNE CHAPTER thai hiid been painted with an man. When a bit of an egg
.. hnprovemen~; caD reser- 172, Order of the Eastern epoxy ·pain! - some were shell breaks off mto the frysatisfactory and some were ing pan or a bowl simply
not. The directions (especial- remove it with another piece
ly for the drying period ) must ol broken shelL Shell ad~eres
be foll owed explicitly. Talk to to shell like mag1c. Some
your painter or your paint older . folks do.ubtless know
dearer and see what they lhrs hmt bull will bet many of
have to say about any ex- the newl ~weds do not. - BERperiences they have had with NICE
this.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY -A good
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. way to fill a pillow with foam
R.H. wrote that she could not is to open both ends of a 46 oz.
·
find
a thimble to fit on her juice can, put one end in the
Splled Queen
swollen finger . I s uggest that pillow and use the other end
as a funneL Slick the plastic
bag of foam down in the can
Star, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, and shake until the pillow is
regular meeting.
as full as you like. No mess
WEDNESDAY
and it is easy to do. - A. I..B.
SPECIAL meeting Ohio
DEAR POLLY - When my
Valley Commandery No. 24 son's fell-lined rubber boots
SPECIAL
Knights Templar. Order of gel damp on the inside he
the Temple will be conferred. slicks the nozzle to my hair
dryer in them and turns it on.
He finds this works better
than trying to dry them near
VISIT COLUMBUS
the furnace . - C0RINNE
pr.
Polly Will send you one of
Mr. and Mrs. Reina IJnd ,
Condor St., Pomeroy , were in her s igned thank-you
'
Columbus Monday with Mr. newspaper coupon clippers if
(Not exactly as pictured)
Und having an eye examina- she uses your favorite
tion at University HospitaL Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
They stopped enroule there her column. Write POLLY 'S
· for a visit with Mr. and Mrs . POINTERS in care of thi s
newspaper.
Mike Hammer.
Middleport, 0.

wJ:::st·

STEAK HOUSE

Citizens

Center. Meigs County girl
seoul day camp, Gallipolis
Stale Institute.
Volunteers also worked at
the County Fair Arts and
Crafts display, the Hea lth
Department , the Holzer

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6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday . Jan ~0. l!l79

FUNNY BUSINESS

t:sollen

'•,

F or Best R es
· ult s

. (Ali4/:).T 15 THE

MATT'ER, HARRY p

YA SEEM [)OWN

IN THE D.lMP6.

15 words or Undt'r
Cash

Ida)'

Clwr~t!

1.00
1.50
I.M
l .OO

2d!l.y~

3day:s
lidll.ys

1.25
1.90
2 25
:J 15

F..ach wortl ovt!r the mimmum 15
words i.!l 4 cenl&lt;i per wurd per W.y ,
Ads nmn! n~ ol~r th.:tn conse..·utivt!
dtlys Will be ch1:1rged at the I day

rate-.

In memory , Card of Tha nks ttnd
Oliiluttry 6 ct!fll'l per word, ._, 00
nummwn. Cash tn 1:1dvance

MOOile Home Sitle~ ttnd Yard sales
are &lt;K'CI!pled unly with cash with
order. 25 L'ent chl:lrge for ~o~ ds ct~rry­
lng Box_ Number In CYre of The Senbnel.

The Publbher r eservet~ the r~ght
to edtt or reject any ads deenlt!d objedtonYI The Publisher will AUt be

re.spun.s1ble for mOre thtm one incurred insertion
Phone 992-2156

NOTICE

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs . Herbert Roush
Mr. · and Mrs. Bill Hoback,
Mrs. Margaret Gloeckner
attended an Aglow Workshop
for board members in
Columbus a recent Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Drew Fisher
and family, who lost their
mobile home by fire, are now
living in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Donohew.
Mrs. Roy Donohew un·
derwent surgery for a brain
tumor at St. Joseph Hospital,
Monday. Cards will be appreciated.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bowers
of Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Bub Barnette and children
were guests of Mr. and-Mrs.
Bob Spencer Sunday.
Mrs. Bessie Stilts · is 'a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Donohew visited Mrs. Roy
Donohew at St . Jqseph
Hospital Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hoback
and
Mrs.
Margaret
Gloeckner visited Mrs .
Donohew Sunday.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert
Roush visited Mrs. Wilma
Anderson
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital Sunday.
Cindy Roush and Edward
Roush visited Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp and Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Hupp at Portland.

Stiversville

News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Don Runnel
and Artie, Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Ohlinger and family, Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Warth and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Evans
and
daughter ,
Pomeroy, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Evans and family
a recent Saturday evening.
Jim Ritchie, Brian and
Ronnie Burkhammer ,
Minersville, visited Mr. and
Mrs. R. R. Durst and Tom,
one day recently.
Mrs. William Long and
fa!her , Robert Sneed, spent a
week in Columbus recently
with Mrs. Emma Blanken·
ship and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wolfe
visited their son, Terry who is
a s urgical patient at Holzer
Medical Center, on Tuesday.
Mrs. Ada VanMeter was a
dinner guest of Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Lehew and Elaine a
recent Sunday.
Mrs . Irene Hupp has
returned home from a visit
with her daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy W. Proffitt and
family of Canton and a
week's vacation in Florida .
LeOta Birch, Mrs. Mike
Evans and Matthew, and
Diane Ward called on Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hunnel and son,
Pomeroy, a recent Friday .
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel of
Long Bottom visited her
parents, Mr. and ·Mrs. Dan
Talbott and family on Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Louis DeLuz
were callers at the home of
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Abels,
l.Dng Bottom.
Troy , Ward was an over·
night guest of David Bryant
recently .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
L'EADUNES
Mondlly
Noon on &amp;lurday
Tuesdl:ty
thru Frtday
4P.M.

thed Hy before puWJcahun

IIJ j()VIN\, lllf'lnn ry nl n1y
hwl-&gt;ond (, ., ,, r f v\'111'&gt;
pov, t·cl uwoy tl yt•nr s ogo
30 1~11 Sorl ly tn l'&gt;~(&gt;rl hy
Dorothy oi1CI t:'omi ly

.

rifo,,r
wl rn
Jon
w1 l c

4P.M

.

r) I Q ?;.1 .:1 -1

li.. . . . .

•

-

.

wanted to R e nt

I WA NT to than~ rn y mony fnf'nd s
l or oil th«:&gt; cmd!', fl ower!. , l(&gt;f
tf'r ":o
ol
c nc ouro grm e 11t .
tf'lcphon«:&gt; r oll "- and p ray ers .
M os t o f ·all a !&gt;peCiol thank s to
our Pmo tor Re ll' 0 Dell Manl ey
who &lt;ome to Colurnhll" to be
W1th my family during my open
heort surgery . Al so th (_'!' dona
lion o f money from our In
depenrlen l Holmess Churt: h
Mrs Opol Borr

TWO BI"DROOM hou -" P. ho ilr ~ 01
nporllnl'nf pH•Ivrohly ''' thf'
M1cl&lt;'il&lt;'p0r t
Qr C' O, · w 1lh
IC'O!&gt;OilOble rent 99'/ "IH14

Notices

- ---

GUN SHOOT Rac 111~ Gun Club
hery Sumlay I prn Fat:t ory
ch o~e gun s on ly .
GU N SHOOT Ror in e Vo hmtoe r
F1r e Dept hery Sa turday 6 ·30
pm ol th tm bu dciing 1n Boshon
Foe tor y choke gun s only

'

~RH

CA NOY rnakrng class a t Oi's
Condy ond C a~ e Suppl ies Spr mg Vo ll ey Pl aza 1 4d6 '1134 l or
rcgrsh ation It'!' fu n and cos y
You II be a rno:H~d a! what you
COil do

· . _ ~a!lt_et! lo Buy __

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transm\ssion
Repair
Phone 992-5682

..

'

TWO · BEDROOM mobiiP h om~
11f'Of Dex ter ncar No I M'ine
.- q9:J 5858

organs, Story &amp; Clark
Piann. Slllts &amp; Service.
(New &amp; uud• . service on
Current Saln .

H11mmond

'

&amp;

HAMMOND ORGANS
Tyree Blvd., Rlclne, Ohio,
Ph~ne
t4t-2111. Even1ng

APPlt:S FIT ZPATRICK Orchard
State Rt OB9 Ph o.ne W•lk&lt;' sv 1i l(.&gt;
669 3785

A New Home Buill?

'

'

""'

. Ftoor$ . Paneling &amp; Trim .

Quality Work You Can
Depend On ....

'

· Spedelillnl In
Woodstove, Oil urn•c•
&amp; Flrepl•c:e Flues
Phone : 742 -3110
Kim Whi1e , Proprietor

11 -9· 1 mo.

I·

R~NOLD'S

El£CTRIC MOTOR
SHOP

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
For

·1-12-1 mo.

...
....-·
...

,~

•• JO ,.

'•

J&amp;L

Fairview
News Notes

::•

I

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

I I
J
IDESAUBI

,·

INSURANCE AGENC

~~

Now arrange the circled lett ers to
form the su rpnse answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon .

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-LONG SHOT

---

-

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

-

'

"•
••

......•
~

~ .:.

IOU S PI'NT ALL
1HAT DOU GH ON
FOOD FOR A DAME
YOU DO~'l IJJEN KNOW ..

1

I Jumbles

HEAVY TRULY DUGOUT IMPED E
Th e best way to b e stttl ng - PREITY

Answer

...·',,•

by THOMAS
ACROSS
I Alliance
5 Skin af-

•

Yl!S$1~, INSI!:At:ll&gt;. MY NON-RHYMING
TEA, 'IOU acrr 'rOI.JRSELF A CUP OF MY
· F"AMOUS MISH'TY MUSCLE MIX ...
'YOU l.UCKY I

AASCAL , '&lt;OU .

/).~~~~~:s(~~~

5 Goulet
~~lt-J&lt;)
6 Imitated
1-:_~~[::tlln amazement 7 New Mexican
India n
1
14 Sem1aquatic
rodent
8 Be influ·
ent1al
..._.'T"'~-"15 Tongue9 "From Here
lashed
19.P.,- !' 11 Go wrong
to - "
IK Capek play
10 Notched
19 Eth1op!an
16 Sandwich
fare
lake
19 Hl·f;
20 All gone
22 The " U"
fe-•ture

..••
~

.... ••

-..

·~

~

•
,•

•

7:oo-cross-Wits 3;

Newlywed Game 6, 13;

Por ter

9 :QO-Movle "Viva Knieoyel! !" 3,1 5; Charlie' s Angels

JOSEPH
2 Theater box
3 Fragra nce
I Prop for
Edward H.

6,13 ; One Day AI A Time 8,10; 9:30-Jeltersons
8,10; Vanishing Flock 33.
10 :00--Vegas 6,13; Kaz 8.10; News 20; Energy War 33.
10 :30-Ral Palrol 17; Turnabout 20.
11 :Oo-News 3,6,8, 10.13,15: ,Dick Cavett 20 ; Hogan 's
Heroes 17.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,15; Po llee Woman 6, 13; Rock
ford Files 8; Movie " Rio Conchas" 10; M ovie
"Killen with a Wh ip" 17.
12 :4()-Mannlx 6, 13 ; Ko iak 8; 1·00--Tomorrow 3;
1:25-Movle 'Only Two Can P lay" 17; 1 :50-News
13; 3:45-Movle " Passport to China" 17.
·

Murrow

nictions
II California

5:30-Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co . 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:00- News 3,6,8, 10,13,15 ; Andy Grlttl th 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6:30-NBC News 3, IS ; ABC News 13, Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News B, 10; Over Easy 20; My Three
Sons 17.
Wagoner 8; News 10; Love, 'American Style IS;
Footsteps 33; Edward the Ki ng 17; Big Green
Magazine 33.
7:30-Dolly 3; ; Mat ch Game PM 6; Muppet Show 8:
The Judge 10; That's Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom
15, MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20; College Basketball
33.
e :oo-ctrcus Highlights 3,15; Elghl Is Enough 6,13;
Incredible Hulk 8, 10; Great Perlormances 20; NHL
Hockey 17.

~~-~-

~

City
12 Narcotic

Yesterday's Answer

%0 Tranquilizer
21 One kind .
of love
23 Mount Calif.
24 OVerflow
with
:!&amp; Hair-dryer

38 Newspaper Tuesda y, Jau. 30
section
31 Indigence
3Z Canal: Sp.
33 Dutch
Oswald
cheese
3&gt; Producer
Hi ken

.BRIDGE
Jacoby and Alan Sontag

The good-bad former ways

~-

~'four

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

.'Birthday

SALE PRICES

-

NORTH
•A K976

+ K 973

27.Recent
28 Sanction
29 Siouan
30 Love story
31 Wee fish
36 Part of
1
a rosary
I :17 Fly
38 Russian

WEST

-f-+-1. 1082
•109513 2
..-f-+-+-1• 8 5
-1-+-+-~1

'

•'

.

..'

'.'

•

,.

''

I

l

--=~~~~~~i~~~~~~:~~~~~~:::~~~~'~g~~~~~==:::::r!:!,:~L
I· ! 0

Tt-t,..,E~

OH, 170CIDR, I 170N'T
KNOW HOW 'TO 'THANK
YOU ENOUGH . . -~

WHOA ,11-IERE,
MRB. WRIGHTi
NOT50FA5T !

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

FIRST OF ALL1 }VUR HUSBAND 18 NOT
OUT OF 17ANGER1 YET! SECON Dl.Ytf
11-iERE .wiY BE BRAIN DAMAG~
111ATI~ IRREVER?ii3LE , _ _,.,

VJHTTSJ
VFU UBE

WSBV

OEBHM

WSBVD'P
OFP

H

DBJ

.

Opening lead : ¥4

club t oward her hand. East

ducked and E linur took her

queen
The ace and kmg of hea rts
were played nex t while t wo
clubs were jetllsoned from
dummy.

East' s firs t discard was
the jack of clubs. His second
was the deuce of diamonds .
That discard produced the
overtrick sin ce it made the
whole diamond suit good,
but East had seen that his
only chance to beat s ix
would be if West held the
diamond queen .

Ask tiM !XDCI'II

LP

UHMB

'

SNPBD

RBHE ' V

EB·

1-30-B

• 2
'f

K Q 10 6 5

• AJ913

+ A2

In this sample A is By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

apostrophe
s, three
the length
o f etc
t he Smg
words
all
u
sed for the
L's, Xand
'for formation
th e t wo O 's,
le lare
etters.
hints. E ach day the code l e tters are d tfferent

H

dumm y's hig h hearts a nd
spades a nd noted that East
had to chuck a club on the
second ha nd . T hen 'he led a

You hold :

One lett e r s im ply stands for anot h er .

SOB

A K86

+ Q 64

CRYPT.OQU01'ES

NOT ONLY HAVE YOU
ESTABLISHED HIS
IDENTil'Y BUT YOU'VE
NURSED Hllv\
BACK 'TO
HEALTH .

SOUTH ,
• Q 943

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
M--i--i-1 Wesl North East
2+
Pass 2 •
Pass 4 NT
Pass 3+
Pass 6 NT Pass Pass
Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wor~ it :
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

S

EAST
• J 765
.. 7 '
• J4 3 2
• A J 10 2

• Q 10

39 Church
official
, 40 Biblical
! country
; DOWN
; I Prattle

.Ju.ST'
DAY.!

•'

+ 85

•

river
'
•

1-30-A

• AK
• QJ

I

- -- - ---,.---- -- -

Mixed pair events in the
early days were featur ed by
male chauvinist overbid·
ding . If the male had a good
lady partner he might let her
play the hand .
Ms. Elinor . Murdoch who
still plays good bridge found
her self the declarer at s i•
notrump after some rea I
overbidding by her partner.
Not that most pairs didn 't
get to the good notrump
slam, but Elinor managed to

VSTFPLSD. VSFEIB
FDMDSJD
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : TAKE TIME TO DEUBERATE;
BUT WHEN THE TIME FOR ACfiON ARRIVES, STOP
make an ovPrtrirk
THINKING AND GO lN.-ANDREW JACKSON
QJ 1979 King Features Syndtcate , Inc.

With opponents not bidding you open one heart.
Partner bids one spade. You
go to two diamonds and he
raises you to t hree . A New
Mexico reader ask s what we
r ecommend n ex t.
We r ecommend a cue bid

of four clubs. There may
well be a dia mond slam in

the offing.
I NEWSPAPEH ENTE HPJUSF: ASSN . ~

(For a copy of JA COBY MOO·
ERN, send $1 ' to ~ " Win at
Bndge. · ca re of lhis newspaper. P 0 Box 489. Radio City
Sta t1on. New York . N. Y. 10019.)

....
BARNEY

Housing

Headquarters

..

~Greek

~·

-

m

She started by cashmg

in BTU'slli•ei&lt;!lfllflrl"....
' 21 Hackneyed
,. 25 Malay law
· \ 26 "Love in
.

Bernice Bede Osol

i

r XXX] t XI XI )
{Answers tomorrow)

, 1 ~ Ye ste• days

.....•

ASTRO•GRAPH

••

A

Jumble Book No. 13, conta ining 110punles, Is available tor$1 .7S postpald
tromJumbla,c/othls newspap er, Ball34, Norwood, N.J 07EI48 Inc lude your
name, address, zip code and make checks payab le lo Newspaperbooks

Sal

~--

PrintS'lSWer here.·

,..----

All TMESE GRDCf~IES •-.
YOU'RE STOCKIW HER
PlACE UP, BUT YOU
DD N'l EVEN KHO&gt;V IF
SHI''ll LIVE '"

- -------· - --·

'

Elec. Co. 33; Movie "Ten Little Indians" 17.
1:DO-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15
1:3()-Days of Our Lives 3,15; As the World Turns 8.10;
2:QO-One Lite to Live 6,13.
2·3o-Doctors3,15; Guiding Light 8.10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:QO-Anolher Wor ld 3, 15; General Hospllal6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17.
3:3()-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnlstones 17; Over
Easy 20; Rainbow's End 33.
4:00--liilster Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15 ; Merv
Grlltln 6; Porky Pig a: Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space Glanls 17.
4 30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is . 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
·
5·QO-I Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Six
Million Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunc h 1S; I Dream of
Jeannie 17.

AN

SNOW
TIRE SALE

.

WHAT THE ~ANANA
PLANTER 'THOU5HT
HIS WORKERS WEI&lt;:E.j

..

- -- - ----~

Pomerat Landmark

12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for Tomor row 8,10;

...

0.

- --- - - - --

-

byHenriArnoldandBob Lee

"~

HZ·Z174

-

~

Thomas Remembers 20.

11:30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; News
4; Love of life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33; 11 ·ss-e-CBS
News 8; House Call 10; News 17.
l2:oo-Newscenter 3; jeopardy 15; News 6, 10; Young
&amp; the Reslless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love
American Style 17.

Unscramble these four Jumble s,
one 1e11gr to each square , to form
tour ordinary words .

·:.."'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. ·

Sunrlse Semester l 0.

6:oo-PTL Club 1S; 700 Club 6,8 ; 6.l5-Chr lstopher
Closeup 10.
6:3()-Romper Room 17; 6 : ~5-Mornlng Report 3;
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6:55Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7· QO-Today 3,15; Good Morning America 6,13;
Schoolles 10; Three Stooges-Little Rascals 17;
7: 15-Wealher 33.
7:3()-Famlly Altair 10; B:OQ-Capt. Kangaroo B. io;
Sesame St. 33; 8: 3()9:00--Merv Griffin 3; Emergency One 6; Ph il Donahue
15,13; Hogan's Heroes 8: Match Game 10: Lucy
Show 17.
9 :3()-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
10:0D-Card Sharks 3.15; Edge of Nlght6 ; All In The
Family 8,10: Dating Game 13; Movie " Blindfold"
17.
.
10:3()-AII Star Secrets 3,1S; Andy Griffith ; Price I!·
Right 8,10; S20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :QO-High Rollers 3,15; Happy Days 6,13 ; Lowell

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~'-!l ~

l,_a.

'

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

---

ft j'Jji\Ml f8}'if

!&lt;.•

~

( HIP
WOOD
Po les
max .
Competitive Prices
diame ter 10" on larges t end . , HAV LARC.t: ROUND bol es S20.
IN THE
Cellulosic (wood' fiberl
51/ pP.r ton Bunrl led !i lob 510
Home Remodeling
Square boles . S1 M .M Co rn
18 Years EKperience
per
ton
Delivered
to
Oh10
General
RepairS
er
.
985
4131
985
353·1
shell
Thermal insulation
C~~rG~Nc~b~~~~g~roT.
Will Make
Pol let Co . ~I '1 Pomer oy .
Masonary Work~ '
Service
Calls
G ~AVH Y TRACTOR and mower
Save JO pet. to so pet.
9&lt;11 2089 .
ROBERTA C . O'BRIEN
'
Hoy l or ~ a l e 9~9 2'308
on holing cost
PLA INT I FF
TI MBIR POMfROY F o r ~s t Pro651 Beech Street
Experlon~nd
vs .
~eed s'o' tll e
duns Top prr ce fer standing G~AI N FED beef
fully lnsu
ONEITA BAKER HUTTON ,
Middleport,
I
014 378 b3 11.
sow timber Co li qq1 596 5 or
ET Al ,
Fru Est.
I
992-7583
992-2356
Kent Han by 1-440 !:1570.
DEFENDANTS
HAV $ ?5o bole . 94 9 1514 .
CaU't'l1.-"liiJ.
10 Years E•perience
NO. 16,6U
'
1-4-1
mo.
(
Pd.)
'
'
- . l 1-3·1 rnQ;
]·19·1 mo.
OL D F U RNITU~f . icr bo)( es , brass ONf FURNAn MASTE~ wood
LEGAL NOTICE
~'
..
beds 1ron bed s cl es ~ s . e tr ..
.
Pursuant to an or der of s:ale
burne r
reg}llor $495
now
comp le te hou sehol ds Wrlle
issued by the Court of
$400 OnE:' au to . Rad iant w ood
Co mm on
P l eas.
Meig s
M 0 Mil ler Rt 4 Pom eroy or
hC'o ter . reg
SI 99 q 5
now
- - - cou nty , Ohio . 1 wit! offer for
r oll ~(rl 7760
$170.00 3 Coal Master. sla ve s.
Mobile
Real Estate lor Sale
- - -Homes
- _ .._ for
- Sale
--.
sa l e a t publ ic auction on the
woorf or cool . regu lar S37H, SS.
OL D COINS pcx ~et wa tches.
17t h d ay of February , 1979, at
r~ow S:JOO. Gravel y Troclor
10 A .M on the Court Hous e
cl ass r ing s. wedding hand s.
ADOLPH
G ru eser
Soles . :1 10 Condor . Pomero y. l ' 1 ACRi;: . 12 x 60 mobtl e home FORM~R
steps , Pomer oy, Ohio , the
cl iomonds . Gold or si l ver Co lt
Wa~hinglon St ., Albany, 0 .
near O e ~eler . 992 5851:1
res1dence locat ed in Out ·
follOWi n g des cr i bed real
99'} 29 75 .
Roge r Wam sley. 747 1331
·
Pllone698-6173
chtown . M iners,.ill e Appro•
estate, to -wit ·
Si tu ated in Oliv e Town ship , WANT TO huy o ld 115 ond 78 BROWNING MARK IV CB anten na.
David Coleman
10 acres good garden. l ots of
tower . 7 rotOr s w otl tneter.
- ·Me1gs County , Ohi o, Being 111
wood , two stories wi th Iorge
ph on og rdph
r eco rd s
Coli
Agenllor\
Fracr1on 35. Sect 10 n 27, Town
0 -104 Twee ti e H~rd rn1k e
Real
Estate
for
Sale
fr onr porch .
t ', bath . 2
qcr; b370 or Contact Martin Fur ·
MOT
I
R
I
STS
INSURANCE
-·
---4, Range 11 Oh iO Co mpany' s
linear Call Li ttl e 81 1 Baby o,w ~
bedrooms w1 th sleep•ng enclos mture
COMP(&lt;NlES and SANDY
Pu r cha se; b eginn ing at th e
mg 25' h1ke ' 197B Cut lc!.s HOMESITfS f or sole 1 acre ond
ed proch count ry lukhen . d in &amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
up Midd leport near Rutland
southwes t corne r of said . WA NHO TO buy · ole! jewelry
Colors . e)jce llent COil clitt'o n
ing room , li vi ng room , so lrm
fra ct ion , thence north to a
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio.
Ca
ll
992
•74t:l
l
.
Coli qq:z 5161 or wr i te Kay
94q
1705
.
windows , nat ural ga s furna ce .
I me ma d e as a dillision line by
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
Ceci l 87 S ?nci, Middleport .
T HR~f BEDROOM !rome home in
unl1ni shed bo semen1. deep
John H01 k 2nd. Sur veyor ,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;,
OH
-------MrP dl eporl. Co li 99'2 3457
bet we en the said sam uel
rock w alled open welt w 1th
BUSINESS
.
Osbor n an d William Osborn , WA NT t:O TO buy U ~ed po r ta ble
sheltered cover . also cislern
FARM FOR so le Hou se 2 barns
1-26-1 mo.
r un n 1ng east and west ,
Drupes ond carpet ing includ ed . .
sowi ng machi ne 9c,l:l .57fl0 or
trail er Lor ge pond, 10 ce res or
th ence we st to t he wes t lin e of
99'.J
2529
4
to
5
good
bu1
lding
spots.
Tup
82 acre s 142 2500
said section ; th ence south 106
pe rs Plo1n s wa ter. Oh1o Power
rod s to the sou th lin e of sa id
ROAl fSTATE LOANS · VA
No
Cobl e TV, General Tel ephone .
fr ac tio n; thence east 134 rod s
Business Services
Yard Sale
. SNOW TIRES
money
down
(e l ig ibl e
Pr1 ce $25.000 Coli Willi ~m
to the sou th eas t corner of said
VctNens)
FHA
·
A
s
low
as
3,,..
trac110n
and
place
of
ON SALE AT
~u ssel l at 992 -56 14 , Charles
BRADFORD. Auc lioneer . Com
I~ YOU hove o se r vic e to o ff er
b eqmnmq .
down (oil non-Veteren s and
POMEROY LANDMARK
Grueser of 992-22 11 or Wolfer
plete Service . Phone 949-2487
wont to buy or se ll ~o m e lh 1 ng .
denerol pub lic) To Purchase
Grueser
of
99:1-3270.
lm·
or 949 -2000. Raci ne, Ohio, Cnll
SERVICE STATION
11 is intend ed to con vey all
oc&gt; loo ~ 1ng lor war~
or
rea l e!!&gt; fo te or refmo nce . 30
med1c1e
po
ssession
Br
adford .
the said l an d so uth of said
whatever
you'll get results
YEARS TERM&gt; IRElAND MORdiv isi on l in e as af or esaid wi th
foster with o Sen tinel Wont Ad
HOUSE
AND
lot
lurniture.
ElWOOD
BOWERS ~EPA I R
TGAGE CO 77 E. Sto fe St .
t he exce pt ion of that pa rt out
Co11992 2156
hou sehold goods 760 Laurel
Sweepers, tOaster s, Iron s. all
of !he n or theast part deed ed
Ath ens . Phone 014-592 3051 .
St ... M 1ddleport.
small appliances Lawn mower.
to Samuel Ward .
. .
. ..
•
3' ' acres in Pomeroy Secluded
nex t lo Stol e Highway Garag e
Reference Vo l 11 2 page 348
CORNER
tOT
located
ol
intersec
·
·Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Pets for Sale
wooded oreo on lop ol hdl
Me.gs Co unty Deed Records
on Route 7
. - - - - -· ti on of SR 124
7 and 33 10
TERMS O F SA LE : Cash 10
Overlooks n ver Water . e lec RI
SING
STAR
l&lt;
ennr
ls
Boarding
Pomeroy
.
Oh1o.
991-2449
or
SEWI
NG MACHINE Repairs ser·
· Phone992-2181
hand on day ot sa te ; to be sold
tri c availabl e 992 -3886
and gro omi r1 g , all breeds
992 -1342
vice, all makes , 992-1284 . The
su bject to r eal esta te taxes
C h esh ~re . 367 0291 .
U LOTS ON Peacoc k Ave '
du e a nd payab l e
Fabri c Sho p .
Pomeroy .
CON DITIONED m b,.e d hoy $1.25
The r ight is reserved to
Pomeroy. O hro OYer 3 ocres of .
Authorized Singer Sal es ond
Alt
WHIT!:
lull
blooded
German
2873
hole.
742
r e1ec t any or a ll b i d S.
pnvocy . 992-2342 or 992 2 4 ~9 .
Servrce. We sharpen SCissors
Shepard puppi es . "I wceRs old
.... .
Property
apprai s ed
at
.
EIGHT FOOT truck topper 36"
:J04
773
-596/
Cli
fton
~AIRV I EW HE IGHTS 6 year old all
S5 .005 00
l:XCAVATING, do1 er, looder' ond
h1gh , $13~ Pa u l l•se . Success
electric home , 3 bed r.oom . I' 1
ba ck hoe work dump trucks
Rei
,
Ree
d
svil
l
e
OH
JAMES J . PROFFITT.
both . love ly lomily room w tth
and to-boys for h1re: wi ll ha ul
·
Auto
e~s - ~ ~
~14
b6"/
-3544
SHERIFF OF
wood
b urn 1ng stove
lull
fil l dirt to so il, limestone and
-- By Mrs. Herbert Roush
ME I GS COUNTY , OH 10
carpet ed goroge 1 cere Near
grovel Coli Bob or Roger JelI 975 CADI LLAC HDORAOO lull fARM~R S NllO-a few form ers m
Mr . and Mrs. Russell
th 1s croo to try ACCO SfED
Mergs Hg•h Sch oo l To see, colt
fers, doy phone 992 7089. night
Obrien &amp; O'Brien
pow er . air , cl e an E• cel lent
Roush , Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
992-b287
G ree t savi n gs Write or col i co lphone 992 3525 or 992· 5237
Attor n ey tor P laintiff
condition Phone 99/ -7462
---- - - - - - - - lect. Stan Coakley , Rt . I
Russell, Mandy and Michael,
niought for today : PolitiEXCAVA TING , d ozer , backhoe
1969 OHIVE~Y JHP 2-whee l
Ki
l
lb
uck,
OH
446
37
.
(
lJ
16
.
23,
30,
3tc
visited Mrs. Edna Roush at cians do more Iunny things
ond d itcher. Charles R. Hal ·
drive , $.&lt;:100 13 week old ' pure
2lb-27 b 4584 .
Racine and also visited Mrs. naturally than I can think of
held . Bock
Hoe Se r vice .
b red gree t done. $100 19711
216
E.
Second
Streeo
TWO PIECE gr een li v1ng ro om
Rulfond . Ohi o. Phone 742 -2008.
Husv uorno WR . mo torcycle
Wihna Anderson at Veterans doing purposefully - Will
su1! e . V~ry good cond 111on
YOUR CHANCE - To own
S300. Co ll74 2 2406
Memorial Hospital.
HOWERY
AND
MAR TI N
Ex·
Rogers, American hwnorist,
Herold Osbprne 985-3915
a neal litt le location for a
coveting
sept ic system s,
Wednesday,
Jan.
31
1970 DODGE VA N !::xcellent co n
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel 1879-1935.
small business and live
APPRO X 90 acres ol cool ond
dozer. backhoe . dump truck ,
dil lon low m1l eoge . 53500 In
and son , Tim, visited Nancy
upstairs .
Wonderful
f ores t land
Ad tocent to
l imestone, grove l. bl acktop
gels F ~rn iture Store 992 . 2~35
and Rick Holsinger Monday
opportunity on Main Street.
PoQev ille OH Write Box 243 ,
pov1ng , Rt . 143 . Phon e I (6 14) 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
197b CHRYSlER CORDOBA . lull
Syra cuse. 0H 45779 .
Sma ll amount down.
at Mt. Moriah.
098 733 1.
I
Btds w tll be rec etve d at the
.
.
..
power , AM -FM stereo tope .
r 's Off tee unt tl 4 :00 ·
NEED STORAGE? - Out
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel of Mayo
BATHROOMS
A
ND
K1tChen
s
cr u• se . control . reor w ind ow
P .M . F rtday , Feb r u ary 9 ,
of high water in Middleport
JUST LISTED - 2 family
Long Bottom spent Sunday 1979 , 237 Rac e Str ee t for th e
remodeled. cerom1c l1l e. plu m·
del ogge r. l01r co ncli tion . $3200 .
and one in Pomeroy. Both
home on good street in
bing . ca rpen try . and gen era l
992 0124 .
with Mr. and Mrs . Joe fo !I OWI!lQ
have
nat
ura
l
gas
heal,
city
Middleport.
2
kitchens,
2
Used Tru ck : no lat er t han
maintenance. 13 years exManuel and Tim .
1978 FORD BRONCO Custom ,
water , an d e lectric.
baths, a ll rented. Exce llent
' 1974 mo d el ; 1 Ton , F l atbe d
perience 9Q2 -36B5 .
under
10 , 0 00
m 1l es.
Du mp ; 350 cu . ln . VB or
Mr. and Mrs . Ernest Bush
1.9 ACRES .,- One of the
Investment .
JUST
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complefe
l ent , 4 speed tra nS ·
30~ 773 9132ofter0pm
$13,000 .00
finer older homes around,
and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence equiva
miss ion , Stake Body , Low
Service . Phone 992 -2478.
wilh
4
bedrooms,
2
baths,
NEED
MORE
ROOM?
HEADQUARTERS
1974 DATSUN 010 si a tion wogon
Bush were s hopping in M ile age ; Heater
--·-- - We have just the p lace, 3
fu ll basement, and garage AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
Good
condit ron .
$1500
Tne Villaq e reser ves the
Gallipolis recently.
For all vour Appliaftce
bedrooms , bath , dining ,
In Syracuse.
can cel led? Los t you r operators
rtgh t to acce pt o r re iect an y
9915465 off er 5.
Needs.
Mr . and Mrs . Russell o r all btds
January 31 , 1979
license? Phone 992-2143.
ROCK SPRINGS - Only 13
fireplace. full basement,
Many happy experiences are II.JTf ~L CAMINO Closs1 s SS auto .
Roush visited Mr. and Mrs .
large 2 car garage and
years old . 3 ~droom frame
t -C ELECTRI CAL Contractor se rvGene Grate,
tra ns .. low mil e og f e~ecellen t
likely fro m s hort p leasure tr ip s
Eddie
Hupp
Tuesday
workshop. $23,500.00.
home. Enclosed bath,
•ng Ohio Valley reg1on . S1x
c 1e r k · Tr ea su rer
condition S.dSOO Call 985-4287
Whi Ch you will be takmg !hts
NEAR SCHOOL - 1 floor
modern kitche~. and utility
evening.
Village of
days a week , 24 hours service
alt
er
5pm
JACKW.
yea r. Check the trave l folders
plan, 3 bedrooms, bath,
room . Rea l Handy for
M idd leport
Em ergency cal ls . Colt 882 -2952
' CARSEY
and keep a SUitcase handy.
197 4 AM JEEP
George Hill
n) 23, 30. 2tc
commuter .
basement.
2
lots,
porches,
or 882 -2305
'Mgr.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~0-Feb . 19)
2.&lt;:1 7 1961
28 ACRES - Lays well
other features $27,300.
Phone 992-2181
Good news IS try tng to get
MOBILE HOME repai rs Furnaces .
with pas t ure and plenty of
LARGE
LEVEL
LOT
1975
CHEVROLET
MAUIIU
A
C
elet:tncol work . p ipes sowed,
thro ugh to you tod ay . Be s ure
gas
heal,
3
bedrooms.
llrewood.
Has
a
modern
Nat.
· P S . P 8 tilt steering whee l
SIDE GLANCES
by Gill Fox
to check ~~o ur mailbox and also
p
l~ ~bi_n ~ ~~- 5_85_8 _ _
double wide l'lome and a log
$3.:100 9.&lt;:19 2111 alter 5:30.
bath, part basement, other
retu rn any ph one c alls wh tc h
Services Offered
house
.
East
end
of
the
features.
$11,000
.00.
~
-~- --- - -- ~cam e in whi le yo u were out.
county on a good country
HOUSE AND MOBILE
WILL CAR!: lor ihe e lder ly in our
Gettmg al ong with other s 1S
HOME- All renled, lots of
road. ·
·
home . Phone 992-7314 .
one of the sec ti ons you' ll enJOY
news
in
the
house.
2
lots.
ENORMOUS-10
rooms
In
tn you r 1979 Astra-Graph LetWATt::R WHL drdhng Wil lia m T
Give Away
a 5 year old home. With 5
Located In Middlepo r t .
ter. Get yo urs by maili ng $1 fo r
Grant 742·2879
S15,SOO.
•
nice bedrooms. Just right FEMALE DALMATION. 1 year old .
eac h and a long , selffor a family . Has a large
TRH TRIMMING and re moval
TO THE MAN WHO
add ressed , s ta mped envelope
Shots To good home in coun·
742 3167 Of 742 257:l
dining and slid ing glass . 1 rr__!92 ·7 1_~2 ._ _ __
PLANS TO SELL - REAL
10 Astra-Graph . P.O. Box 489 . things today , you 'll find it . No
doors to the sundeck.
Radio Cily Sta1 1on, N Y. 10019 ad9erse s iWallo n will dare 10 WILL CARt: for elderly person m
ESTATE
IS
OUR
ADULT FEMALE English Bulldog
Be sure to specify birth sign .
darken yo ur doorway.
Modern kitchen and large
BUSINESS,
NOT
A
pri ... ate home in Pomer oy .
brown and white . Very gentle
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) A VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You
cor
ner
lot
.
SIDELINE.
MEIGS
CO.'S
Ell'erything furn i shed , but
__
c~II_M.?rrs_:~ l~~.:..:'..:3~-o211 _
goodwill Investment can pay can look for those you've gone
OLDEST FULL TIME
J PERCENT DOWN 'PLUS
medk oti on. S2SO per month
yo u hand so m e dividends out of your way for In the past
CLOSING COSTS BUYS TO GQOD home . Mole dog. Long
REAL ESTATE BROKER.
Col l992 6017.
hair . Block ond white, 2 years
today . Follow your 1nstincts if to treat you 1n an exceptiona lly
YOU A HOME. V. A.
REALTORS
old: 992-5992 ,
!hey take yo u in th is direct ion . generous !ashton today It's WAHR AND mi se haulin g Ca ll
NOTHING
DOWN,
JUST
HENRY
E.
CLELAND
SR.
99'J 5858 .
.
.
.
ARIES (March ~1-Aprll 19) Your the ir chance to repay you .
CLOSING
COSTS.
CALL
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
SEVEN WEEK o.l d puppies . Cute: ·
ent husiasm tor lhmgs yo u are LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
ASSOCIATES
992-3325.
Fother Husky . 5 mole , 3
vt tatl y mtereste d in makes peo- social stand 1ng Is at a peak
Mobile Homes for Sale
G . Bruce Teaford
KATHY
CLELAND
fema le. 992 -2941 .
p ie wa nt to get involved in today. Others will lind you a Helen L. Tuford
LEONA CLELAND
FIVE FEMALE puppies . Heinz 57 . 7
them . You won 't even have to most pleasant and frie ndly per· 1907 TOTAl EUCTRIC mobt le
Sue P. Murphy
weeks old. 992-2779.
_d.o a s elling JOb
son to be with .
horn e , fur nished . 3 bedr.,
Associates
TAURUS IAprll 20·May 20) If SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22 •..
wos hE:'r and · dryer A ir condi THREE PUPP IES . Part Chihuohuo
there is something you really This c ould be a red-letter day
t,oned I lot . :no It , frontage.
and terrier mixed . 8 weeks old .
want that someone e lse ca n lor you where your work or
512,000. Phone 742 2826
985·3884
help you get , toda y is the day ca reer iS concerned . SomeALL WHITE ADULT long ha ired '
to pul oul lhe word This thi ng especially nice could ! 955 Proir1e Schacher , ;18 x 8, I
male cot , gentle, li! ter trained.
bd'
pe rson Is quite receptive . .
happen .
Yellow and white small female
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) This SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23-Dec. IC~bS General. 60 )( 12 , 1 bdr .
cot, litter trained . Two month
shou ld be a day to your liking . 21) Your w it and wisdom make l &lt;fb8Eicona . 51)(17 , 2bdr .
OWN.ER
MUST
"SELL.The
owner
u~
onos
196Gl 8uddy 60)( 1:2 , 4 bdr.
ol d cute all black female kitten.
Y.bu' ll be m ingling w ith tots of you a fun person to be around
char·m ing 2 story stone home in Middleport
197[tSyl vo W~e12 , 2 bdr.
M~1gs
Humane
Society ,
peopl e who have, varted lnler- today, and you make a tasting lt17PCnstiP. , 00,-12 , 2 bdr. ,
9'12·2592
must sell now so she is offering this fine
est , thus curtng any boredom Impression on others. They'll
Jt)"!:J Arlington , !&gt;0 ..., 12. ') bdr ,
home for a low, low price of S20,00I!l There
you may ha ve felt .
want to see you again .
1~73Ridgewood , 70)( 14 J bdr .
CANCER (June 21.July 22) A CAPRICORN (Oec. 22·Jin. 11) 1973 Kirkwood . 50 " 12. 'l hdr
are 2 bedrooms (1 is extra l.arge), spacious
development that might seem Good fortune can be yours
Irving room w·fir_tplace, formal dining, eat·
IU S MOHIU HOME SAlf ~
QUite insi gn iftcant may turn out · today for tw o _reasons . ~e·
Pl PII A SA NT 'wV
in kitcheJ1 , baflt IN -shower, garage &amp; a king
For Sale or Rent
to be something extremely tor- cause of Y&lt;?Ur mtelllgent ap675 44'14
. ~i·zed yard . Good location on Mill Sl . Call the
&amp;111t~• NU 1~ . 111 ..... U • • • ••
tu nate for you . This could b e in groach to thmgs , a.nd because
BUSINESS' BUilDING 22' x- 31' in
Wi~eman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
your care e r area .
ame Fortune adds the finishSyracuse
Oh1o.
Phon e
''We were out of coffee so I heated thai
191'!H TRAi lt-R 11' • 00 a-. 1s S3SOO.
LEO (July 23-Aug.
Because inif l.ouch ,
4'46-3643 ,
992·5249.
1
cl~"''"' I " 'l&lt;! ii iOI' Cn ll ;'.12 :IW "'
mocha-flavored Ice creaml"
you look fo r the bright s ide o f
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AS SN I

-

CAPI'AIN EASY

•

Pti&gt;NE 742·2328'

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31 ,1 979
Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55-

5 : ~5-Farm

•
,.,

Contact '

MI XED CONDITION ED hoy Very
g o od
q ua lit y
Oe l 1vt&gt; ry
ovo ilobl e. Ph on o 99/ -7101 or
99'J 3309

-

Tops - Ceilings
(SUspended, Texture) · Tile

Century Service

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy,O.
Call992-7113
For Free Estimates·

12-31-1 mo.

Thinking Of Having

'

~

.....

Formica

Counter

THE SWEEP with
19th

1fter S P .M.' Wukends
after 12 noon.

.

BliOTT
APPUANCE li

SUNDINS

COAL LIMt STONf . san d grovel .
col n um chloride . l c rtd1 1er. dog
food . an d oil types of sol! Ex·
re l stor Salt Work s Inc . E Main
St . Pomeroy 997 389 I

,

Annsbong Carpeting

SALES REP. FOR

For Sale

Ceramic Tile

BVA

,.

-:Cust~m Remodeling-

Tomorrow 3; News 13.

1: ~5-NBA Basketball 17; 4:oo.-News 17; ~ : 2()­
Maverlck 17: 5:2()-World at Large 17.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 30,1979
6:3o-NBC News 3,15: ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20, My Three Snons 17.
7:00--Cross-WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6,13 : Please
Sland By 8: News 10; Love American Style 1S;
Carol Burnett 17; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20 ; Student
Afla lrs Inquiry 33.
7:3()-Hollywood Squa res 3; Lei' s Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6: ; Price Is Right 10; Donna Fargo
13; Americanization of Elias 1S;·Sanford &amp; Son 17;
MacNett .L.ehrer Report 20.33 .
8·00--Mark Twain's Amer ica 3,15 ; Happy Days 6,13;
Republican Response to lhe Slate of the Un ion 8, 10,
NBA Basketball 17 ; Sounds Iage 20.
8·3()-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ; When The Boat Comes ln
· 33: 9:0()-Movle "The Triangle Factory Fire" 3,15:
Three's Company 6,13: Movie "Big Jake" 8, 10;
National Geoqraphl c. 20.
9:3()-Taxl 6,13; Energy War 33; 10 :00-Starsky &amp;
Hulch 6, 13; News 20 . .
10:3()-Like Ills 20: ll :OQ-News 3,6,8,10,13.15; Dick
Cavell 20; Geraldine Fitzgerald al Reno Sweeney
33.
11 : 1s-Hogan's Heroes 17; 11 · 3o-Johnny Carson 3,15;
ABC News Closeup 6,13; Ba rnaby Jones 8: Movie
"City Beneath the Sea" 10.
,

..
""

- Room Additions1:

""

-·....~·.

. -

TELEVISION
VIEWING

AGAINST
EQUITY
AMEF'liCA?
A WIL.D
OUTBUF'IST

....

AL TROMM OONST.

-

20th Century Know -How .

....."':·-·

DICK TRACY

Your HeadquarteiS For

LoWIHY

PETE SIMPSON

.

- -----

'

4-,.:f4..

TWO BfDROOM . kit che n l ur nrsh
r&gt;rl , ap l Ca ll bet orP B 0 111
9q-; 2:/H8

and bo th in
L or~g sv ill r
Re f ert&gt;nce on d
cl epqst t John Sheer s Bo )j bJI
Mrddlcpo• t 3' , m ile~ ~ ou t h of
Midd lepo r t an Ht 7

!

.

Don't l et a ch imney fire put
damper on your life

!i

Coli ...

J A NO 4 H¥ l urn1 shed and un
l1n n i ~herl
opt s · Ph oni"
yq') 5d:J .4

ROOMS

Chimney
Sweeps Guild
Insured

·

'4 mite off Rl. 7 ,I!Y·.,.II on
St. Rl. T24 tow1rd Rutlond,
0.

COUNl RV M0131l f Hom r Port.: .
Rout r 3:1 , •1orth o f t'Oill eroy .
la rge lo t!&gt; Co li 99'1 7479

INCOM t TAX S(.&gt;rll' icc Fede ral
and Stoi C' Ta xes . 99'1 'nn for
opp l s. or !'Ce Wo tlrln fblin
~ I 000 l aurel Cltff Hci
INCOM t TAX Se r ~~c e Fed c-rol
011d Stotc Wol lacf! Russell
Bradbur y Call 992 722H

ROGER HYSEll.
. GARAGE

For Rent

fOUR

-

..

11 :45-Mo vle "Wednesday 's Child" 17; 12: 4~Movle
"The Thief Who Came to Dinner" 8; · I ; ~

7-TIIe Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 30, 1979

Busin-e ss Services

HACINI
1.-.nHIIr
~ h .... pol d clng wr •cu "'9 r olla •
hid• n rl y nh ..dm11cr r rom~ •cl

'

SW1day
Friday wrternoon

.

~()IJNO

Card of Thanks

----

Sentinel
Classifieds:
.

Lost and Found

In Me_mory

WANT AD
CHARGES

u se

.'

.'·

ONL'{ THE ~'AVEST OF
EMERGENCIES COULD
FORCE filMTO TURN
BACK FROM HIS MISSION

GOOBLE
GOOBLE
GOO

GOOBLE
GOOBLE
GOO

�•
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo'!·P~meroy , 0 , Tuesday, Jan 30, 1979

Hostages overpower gunman, one dies today

Stronger ties heads agenda
pollc) toward Tatwan The
By ROBERT B. CULLEN
admmistratwn hoped h1s
Associated Press Writer
responses would help blunt
WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter and Vtce the cntictsm 11 has drawn
Premier Teng Hsiao-pmg of over the dectsion to nor·
Chma , pulling astde the malize relations wtlh Pekihg
Details of Monday's talks
vexmg problem of dealing
with the Sovtel Uh10n, shtfted at the White House were
thei r attenllon today to spa rse
It was clear, however, that
strengthenmg ties between
th
e Sov1et Union was
tbetr two diverse coWltnes
A smllmg Teng amved at discussed And sources m·
the White !louse promptly at dicated the administratiOn
9 a m for hiS third meetmg was relieved the emphasis of
With Carter Within 24 hours the talks was sh1ftmg to
After previous discussions of btlateral matters
Teng S81d he and Carter
global
and
regiOnal
problems, the talks were reached "an understanding "
scheduled to shift to the about Soviet matters at a
future of Sino-American morning meetmg, but did not
trade and actentific, technical say whether Carter agreed
w1\h hts hardline vtews
and cultural exchanges.
The first frutt of the talks
Carter, as he posed wtth
Teng lor photographers at the was an exchange of tn ·
White House, adopted the vttattons Carter was ulVIted
Chinese leader's e~~~gmalic to Pekmg and Chmese Pr·
response when asked what mier Hua ' Kuofeng was invtted to Washington. Both
they would talk about
"Many 11\ings, from the accepted, although no dates
earth to the heavens," he said were set.
On the other hand, the two
wtlh a smlle, repeatmg what
Teng told reporters alter
their first talks Monday
morning.
Teng later faced a senes of
meetmgs on Captlol Hill and
(Contmued from page 1)
questiOns about China's
Ja ycees of the month
awards -went to Bill Young,
June, frog JWDp ; Charles
Wayland, July, frog ttcket
sales; Mike Kelly, August,
dilly dunker, Bob Haggy,
September, grass cuttmg,
Greg Gatrell, October, punt,
pass and kick, Dav1d Fox and
John Kaull, November,
haunted house , Bill Young,
December, food baskets Bill
Young was named the Jaycee
of the first quarter and Greg
Gattrell lor the second
quarter
Young received Jaycee
International Senatorial
Award, the highest given
by the Jaycees, with Herb
Schul, district director,
making the presentation
~
Springboard awards for
Now we can cover your
activation durmg the ftrst 60
msurance temtory better
days of membership "ent to
than ever, because now we
Carl
Gheen, Jeff Russell,
can prov1de you w•th fme
John
Davts,
Richard Knapp,
products from 1he Kemper
Joe
Anthony,
George
Insurance Compames We'll
Francts,
James
Schmoll,
Bob
fond the roght auto,
Schmoll
and
Mike
Kelly
homeowners , bus1ness and
Speak-up
awara s- for
other Insurance coverages
presentmg a one minute 1ce
to meet your needs.
breakmg about sell and a
Rtl!&lt;esmting·
three minute speech on
FEDERAL
KEMPER
another toptc went to Bob
INSURANCE
Schmoll,
Mtke Kelly, Bob
COMPANY
Arms, Ken Searles, John
Kauff, Carl Gheen and Dave
Jenkins
Spark plug awards lor
acttvatton and partictpat10n
for Jaycees of at least one
year membership went to Blll
Young, Dave Jenkins, Mike
Mullen, Dav1d Fox and J. R.
Hunnell
Spoke awards went to Bob
8111 Quick ie
Schmoll,
M1ke Kelly, Dav1d
Joanne Sta"cher
" Across from the cour
J enkms, John K;l~ff and Ken
thouse 1n Pomero y
Searls
UO'I

Awards

THE CAVALRY
IS RIDING
WITH US
NOW.

--

DAVIS

INSURANCE
AGENCY
~o1o11

We aim to please
when it comes to
auto loans. You 'II
drive away in that
..,..,_.....:::IQI'-n~·~ car in no time,
,then pay back at
low bank rates.
Come see!

FRIENDLY BANK "
Walk -Up Teller Wmdow

Open Friday Evenmgs, S to 1 p.m .

lilitens ,alional Ba·nk ':
IIIISLEfliiRr
01110

jq@{J

5

/

l1

~6
•
I

Member F. O.l."C.
Deposits ln.surance to $40,000.

stdes decided not to tssue a
)Otnt
commumque, or
statement of shared vtews,
after Teng leaves Washmgi&lt;Jn
Thursday for Atlanta ..
Houston and Seattle.
The differences between
Teng and Carter over policy
toward the Snvtets were only
thinly vetled m their public
statements Monday, as
car~er welcomed Teng With
an honor guard, a state
dinner and an entertamment
gala at the Kennedy Center
In his toast at the state
dinner, Teng satd, "We v1ew
our bilateral relatwns m the
contest of the overa ll m·
ternatlonal sttuat1on ''
And he remmded Carter
that the Umted States and
Chma had only recently
pledged themselves to ftght
agamst any effort to establish
" heg emony"
tn
As1a
" Hegemony" IS the word the
Chtnse use to describe Sovtel
aspirations
Teng's vtews were not at all
veiled man mtervte" he gave
to T•'lle magazme and
published Monday
He called the Snvtet Umon
"the true hotbed of war " In a
broad reference to Europe,
Japan, Chma and the Umted
Statos he sa1d, "If we really
want to curb the polar bear,
the only realistiCthmg for us
IS to urute ''
The Amertcan sources, who
asked not to be Idenllfied,

said Teng was not proposmg
any formal alliance m hts
pnvate eonversattons w1th
Carter And they made no
secret of the fact they would
have preferred hun to tone
down hiS ant1-Sovtet rhetoric
The officials favor locusmg
the talks on other issues
"We've had one day of talks
A wouldn't say there 's
anythmg we ought to ptck out
and comment on," Secretar)
of State Cyrus Vance satd
Monday rught,
Carter, m hts toast to Teng,
indtcated the admm1stratton
IS st1ckmg to liS poliCY of
even-handedness m dealmg
w1th Moscow and Pekmg
He dtd not use the word
" hegemony " Instea d, h1 s
speech focu sed on the
Arnertcan " lo ng · t e rm
commitment to a world of
diverse and independent
nat10ns,"
the
ad·
mmtstratwn 's descnpllon of
Its policy.
And
he
em pha sized
Amertcan willingness to help
m Teng 's program of
modermzmg Chma through
trade, credit and SCientifiC
and academic exchanges
The admm1strat10n has
satd 11 will not sell Chma
arms or allow weapons
manufactured m Europe wtlh
Amer~can components to be
sold to the Chmese. But the
admimstratwn says 11 IS up to
the NATO alltes to decide
whether to sell their own

weapons to China, as France
and Great Bntam are con·
s1denng
lbc Soviets have reacted
warily to the U S · Chma
norm allza tron
State
Depa rtment offtc1als have
satd they thmk that warmess
might have contnbuted to the .
delay m a SALT II treaty
Some offictals think the
Sovtet · endorsed mvat1on of
Cambodia, Chma's ally, by
Vtetnam was meant to show
that the Soviets would not be
mturudated by the t1es between the Umted States and
Chma
,
The admmtstration has
decided tts best course IS to
try to improve relations wtth
both countrtes and that
openly "playmg the China
card" against the sov1ets will
BILL SMITH, who retires We&lt;lnesday after 31 years m the Ohto extension service, is
only provoke them mto
at Sunday's party in the Rio Grande College dinmg hall More than 200 friends
pictured
dangerous reactwns
applauded
him and heard tributes from many associates With hun are his wife, Dorothy,
To the Chmese, however,
and, at the left, Manon Caldwell, who ser.ved as master of ceremomes
the Snv1et threat 1s extremely
dangerous The Soviets, wtth
43 dtvtstons along the Chmese
border, have spoken In the
past of launcmg a pre·
emptlve strtke agamst the
Clunese
was spreading partly cloudy
and western New York.
By The Associated Press
The history of enmity and
sktes
through California and
Skies
in
the
Southeast
were
A West Texas frontal
mistrust between the two system today spread freezmg clear early today, but ram the Pacific Northwest, with
natwns 1s hundreds of years drizzle across North Texas showers were forecast lor an some ram along the coast of
old In recent years, Chma's and Oklahoma and snow from area from the Florida Oregon and light snow m the
claun to hundreds of square Colorado
to
Western Panhandle and Georgia to the Cascades
miles of Snvtet terntory has MISSOuri.
Bitler cold persisted m the
·Central Gulf Coast states,
wtdened the schism, as has
The heaviest snowfall was and Alabama restdents ex· Northern Plams, where
their riva lry lor leadership of reported in Kansas and peeled up to 3 mches of new heavy snow accumulations
and sub-zero temperatures
the
world's
Marxist Mtssoun, With some areas snow
movement
'
reportmg up to 9 mches of ' The mid-Atlantic Coast have choked roads and
new snow Monday. Another states reported clear sktes stranded ranchers and
four Inches were expected with t emperatures above livestock for weekS.
Temperatures around the
today before the storm moves freezmg , and New England
was partly cloudy, also wtlh nation at 2 a m EST ranged
eastward tomght
Authorities m North Texas temperatures above freezmg from ·25 at Bozeman and
absolve her from guilt lor and Oklahoma reported IceA Pacthc Coast cold front Butte, Mont., to 60 at Key
partlctpatmg wtth three SLA glazed highways and power
West, Fla
members m the Aprill5, 1974, lmes Forecasters sa1d sktes
armed robbery of a San ov er the Southwest were
JUDGE APPOINTS
Francisco bank It sunply clearmg , but light snow
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (API cuts short her sentence, lmgered earlv today m the
The Metgs County Sheriff's
Two
JUdges
were
appomled m
although she would have been northeastern Mountams of.
Department
mvesttgated a
the
Dayton
area
Monday
by
eligible for parole m July •
New Mex1co.
car-truck accident Sunday at
Gov James A Rhodes
MISs Hearst and her
Light snow was also
Judge W Erwin Kilpatrick, 3 35 p m. in Chester Town·
captors, William and Emily reported throughout the
Harris, eluded authorities for lower Great Lakes Reg1on who has been a Dayton ship, Fairview Addition
more than 19 months before and the Ohto Valley wtlh Muruc1pal Court JUdge smce Road No personal injuries
they were arrested on Sept. more expected, and freezmg 1971, was named to the Mont· were reported.
According to the report
gomery County Common
18, 1975 m San Francisco
drtzzle was falling m Ohio Pleas Court, effective Feb 9, vehicles driVen by Rodney E
She said at her bank robFrecker, 22, Middleport and
to replace Stanley S Phillips
bery tnal she was forced by
Leonard
C. Lyons, 30,
Phillips was elected to the
threats of death to jom the
Pomeroy,
collided on the
2nd
District
Court
of
Appeals
SLA and participate m the
snow
covered
road m a blind
last
November
robbery. She was 19 when she
curve
Alice
0
McCllum,
an
atE1ght defendants were
was kidnapped
There was moderate
Attorney George Martmez, fmed and four others for· torney and instructor at the
damage
to the Frecker
Dayton
University
Law
felled
bonds
m
Meigs
County
who represents Miss Hearst,
School, was appomted by the vehicle and severe damage to
sa1d Monday she would leave Court Monday
to
replace the Lyons car No citations
Fined by Judge Charles governor
Pleasanton shortly alter 7 30
were tssued
a m ( PS'I') Thursday He Knight were Paul D. Welton, Ktlpatnck.
said she would hold a news Pomeroy , Nola Swtsher,
conf erenc e at the prison Middleport, James Laven·
der, Mason and John
before leavmg
McArthur, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs each, speed, Larry E
Spencer, Racme, $10 and
Judgment given 'costs, failure to yield from BODY LANGUAGE SPOKEN
private drive , Wtllie Causey,
In small claims court on Coolville, $10 and costs, left of
Thursday, Jan 18, Smith center, Teddy Osborne, Rt 1,
Nelson
Motors,
Inc. l Reedsville, $150 and costs,
Pomeroy was awarded fi ve days confmement,
defautl judgments according license
suspend ed stx
to Judge Charles Kmght
months, DWI, fiv e days
Judgments were awarded confmement, dr1vm2 under
agamst the followmg, Harold suspensiOn; Loutse DeLong,
Davis, Minersville; Irwm Rilcme, $25 and costs, 30 days
Cremeans, Coolville, Ada confinement suspended,
Harper, Pomeroy, Mtke InsuffiCient funds
Gnfhth, Pomeroy' Ran·
Forfeiting bonds were
dy Mills, Syracuse; Roy Elizabeth Most, Rt. 1, Shade
Newell, Middleport and and John E Smith, NaJarre,
Gerald
Shoults,
New 1 Ohio, $35.50 each, speeding,
Lexmgton
Brice Jarvis, Wellston ,
Judgments were awarded $35 50, msecure load , James
agamst Phillip Follrod, D. Hardwick, Grove C1ty,
Pomeroy ; Malcolm Gum· $100, permtltmg mmor to
ther, Syracuse; Franklm operate vehtcle
Hendnx, Syracuse; Reva
Patterson, Rutland , and
Mam Devietro, Syracuse.
On Thursday, Jan. 25,
Olympic Gifts
Pomeroy Nallonal Bank was
As late as 1912, at
awarded a default judgment
agamst Michael Pooler, Stockholm, Sweden, vtctors
Reedsvtlle; We lker' s of the modern Olympic
Ashland, Pomeroy, was Games were crowned with
awarded a default judgment wreaths fashioned · from
agamst Richard and Nancy leaves m addition to receiV·
Jeffers, Pomeroy; and Metgs mg trophieS and medallions
Tire Center was awarded Olymptc chammons m Berlin,
default judgments against Germany,m 1936were awardHerald White, Middleport, ed oak-tree saplings, smtably
Paul D. Mttchell, Langsville potted for replantmg m the
and Harry Ptckens, Jr., victor's homelands
Racine
·
•

-

By JOHN W. REID
Associated Press Writer
PINEVILLE, W. Va (AP) - State police stormed a
restaurant early this mormng alter hostages apparently overpowered a gunman who had held them for more than e1ght
h?urs, authonlies satd.
One of the hostages d1ed at an area hospital shortly after
he was freed, accordmg to Trooper B L. Baker Police sa1d he
had been shQ! about an nour before the 4 a m. stormmg of the
restaurant They did not tdenhfy hun.
Two other umdenllfled hostages were wounded when they
overpowered their captor, pollee sa1d Th'ey were taken to

Just before m1drught 1\lesday, Church had released a fifth
nearby hospitals, but their condillons were not unme&lt;hately
ho;tage , Wayne Beam of Summersville Beam was the
available
"The hostages got a chance there and jumped the !ella," employer of the other four hostages, authorities sa1d The f•ve
Jiad been staymg at the Mountam Motel and Restaurant near
Said pollee Capt B. H Cassell
MOle than three dozen law officers had been pOised to rush th1s town of 1,200 m southwestern West V1rgm1a The s1ege took
the restaurantm a tear-gas attack, Cassell sa1d, but the acllon place at the restaurant
R1ghard G Rundle, Wyommg County prosecutor, sa1d he
on the part of the hostages came before that plan was put mto
was
grazed m the hip by a stray bullet early th1s mormng He
effect
Taken mto custody were Freddie Church, 36, and h1s 18- sa1d the gunman was firmg from the restaurant
year-old wtfe Nancy, of nearby Keyrock Authontles descnbed md1scrumnately
Church had threatened to kill the five hostages at 9 p.m
Church as a former mental pat1ent who was angry at the state
Tuesday and gave authorttles a ftve-hnur rlP;\d hnP ~n .,P rnu1rt
Welfare Department

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL. NO. XXIX

NO. 202

Army

Among those expected to
accompany M1 ss Hearst
when she IS released IS her
ftance , Bernard Shaw, 30, a
San Franctsco pollee offtcer
who once was her bodyguard
The couple had planned a
Valentme's Day weddmg, but
Shaw sa1d Monday they were
postponmg the weddmg unbl
they could be marned m a
church
The Rev Ted Dumke, who
led the campa1gn for her
clemency, sa1d Monday the
couple were now constdermg
marrymg on St Patrick's
Day
Meanwhile, prison offictals
satd Mtss Hearst was transferred Monday to an tsolated
room, away from the 300
other women at the pnson
Duty
officer
Darell
Hainlme satd she was moved
"to be on the safe stde,"
because of threats agamst
her by other prisoners
In granting the com·
mutation, Carter agreed w1th
a Jushce Department
recommendatiOn that she has

"been
pumshed
sub·
stanllally," as a ktdnap
vtctun and durmg 22 months
m prison It sa1d she needed
no more rehabilitatiOn for her
pumshment
"She will be a law-abtdmg
cit1zen," the department
predicted
''I'm really grateful that he
was so courageous," M1ss
Hearst satd of Carter's
decision "It would have been
so simple for hun to JUst leave
everything the way 11 was
I thought I'd be spendmg
another Feb 4 m pnson "
Mtss Hearst, whowill tum
2!i m three weeks, satd she
was "grateful for all the
support from so many people
I'll never know and never
meet, " referrtng to the
dozens of pollttctans, mov1e
stars and newspaper edttortal
wrtters who called for her
early release
The commutatiOn does not

Frontal system spreading drizzle

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Ruth
Buffmgton, Pomeroy; Mona
Neal , Middleport , Dav1d
Sorrell, Dayton , Mark Clme,
Pomeroy, Rodney Bailey,
Middleport; OtiS Casto, Long
Bottom , Belva Groce, Long
Bottom
DISCHARGED - Cindy
Carpenter, Wilma\ Anderson,
Beverly Thomp ~on , Lee
Cadle, Monte Wolfe, Marcille
Ailmg

"If the IRS
calls you i
we11 go
with you.
No extra charge~'
When we prepare your return, we stand
behtnd our work So tf the IRS should call
you In, H&amp;R Block will go along With you at
no charge. Not as your legal representative,
but to answer any questions about how your
taxes were prepared That s another rea·
son why we should do your taxes . which·
ever form you use, short or long.

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

I
61a E MAIN ST
POMEROV,O
Open9A M to
6 P M Weekdays.
9·5 Saturday
PHONE 1'92 3795

2nd-BROWN ST
MASON, W VA
OPEN TUJ'S

Mishap probed

BOY DIES
DALLAS (AP) - An 11·
Y.ear-old boy who was stabbed
through the eye with a
screwdriVer two weeks ago
has died In a hospttal,
aQthor~ties say Hts mother
has been charged in the case
Pollee mvesttgators satd
they learned Clifford Cecil
Gradi died Monday, moments
before doctors at Baylor
Medtcal Center began
emergency surgery on his 8·
year-old sister Aimee Gene
Gray, who was wounded in
the same attack Jan 12 She
was listed in critical con·
dit10n

THURS &amp; SAT .

9A M -5 PM.

PHONE 773-9128

What 1lid you do w1th the
hour lost last sprmg that you
~ot b:tck a few days ago, rx"'Pl to~l k ab&lt;ll' ilt ?

ACTIONS FILED
Unda L Ray filed for
support m Metgs County
Common Pleas Court agamst
Harry G. Davtdson
Debbie Carl, Middleport
and Rodney Carl, RD ,
Pomeroy, filed for dissolullon
of marriage
BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
Tueoday
Long Bottom, 3-3.30 p.m.;
Reedsville, Reed's Store, 4-5;
Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh
HoQsing, 5 30·6; Chester,
Methodist Church, 6.45·7 1~ ,
Baum Addition, 8-3 30
Thursday
Head Start, Racme, 2·2 30
p m., Portland, Post Office,
3-3·30;
Racme,
Home
National Bank, 4-5; Wagner's
Hardware, 5·6; Syracuse,
Swimming Ppol, 6:15-11 :15

.

Shirnng surrounds you m lastmg beauty on Verona's
after '5 dmner dress Rosewood's elegant 01ana .

fa bnc 15 perfect for an easy mooded lovely ElastiC
warst 1s so comfortable, You 'll"never even know
you are weanng rt, except for the compliments you

will get
Be1ge, Ins, Nectar 6·16,412- Pptote
Many New Styles Dresse$ - Coats ·SPOrtswear Arrlv·

JngDa!IY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,,

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1979

15 CENTS

Stmon commented that he
would like three chamber
members volunteer to work
on the mdustnal sttes m·
formatiOn compi led by
Jenni n gs Ass ociates,
Columbus, through an Appalachian Regional Develop
ment grant secured by the
Buc keye Htll s- Hoc km g
Valley . Regional Develop·
ment CommiSSIOn
Fred Crow said sites could
not be developed unttl a new
highway is built connectmg
Me1gs County wtth the new
brtdge at Ravenswood
Crow also indicated that
Tuppers Plams Site could not
be developed until a sewage
system 1s avatiable He m·
dicaled there was opposlllon
agamst all of the 14 sties
proposed exce pt at F1ve

Points
" It will take a lot of work by
people w1llmg to devote tune
to the project," Crow state'&lt;!
He also added that tnps to
Columbus and West Vtrguua
Will be necessary
GUEST SPE,\KER
Gues t speake r Tuesda)
was Boyd Ruth of the Soli
Conservation Service, who
show ed slides on the
reclamation of gro~nd at
Pageville that began last
May, 1977
The I'agev1lle proJect was
the first such pro ject m the
State of Oh10 Ruth com
ll!ented
Ruth explained that 60
acres 10 the Pagev1lle area
had been reclaaned The area
has been seeded Wllh grass
and oats He added that 99

percent of the erosiOn m the
area has been stopped
The Pagcv11le project was
done b) the State Division of
Natural Resources and was
called "land reborn ..
Bo) d fu rth er explamed a
new program sponsored b)
the Sn1l ConservatiOn Service
called Rural Abandon ed Mm e
Program RAMP
'!11e new RAMP program
can help reSidents protect
r homes threatened
by landslides or floods caused by
past coal mmmg
The Surface Mmmg Control
and ReclamatiOn Act of 1977
authoriZed the Secretary of
Agn culture to establish the
Rural Abandon ed Mme
Program The Soi l Con·
servauon Serv1ce SCS ad·

Meigs' record budget broken down

County Court

byVI~A

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

BY ~TIE CROW
Ttckets for th e annual
awards banquet sponsored by
the Pomeroy Chaml&gt;er of
Commerce are on sale at
Stmon's Ptck-a-Pau , New
York Clothmg House and the
chamber office accordmg to
Paul S1mon, cham ber
president
The event will be held at
Royal Oak Park Feb 17
begmnmg at 6 30 p m
Tickets are $6 each.
Meeting Tuesday at Metgs
Inn, Sunon told chamber
directors that honorees will
be Eleanor Thomas, B1ll
Qutckel, Ju dge Manmng
Webster, Edtson Hobstetter,
A R Kmght , Beulah Ltevmg,
Freda Utterback and Tn cta
Adlela
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

ij

ELBERFELD$

en tine

at

Banquet tickets available

President commutes ternl
SAN AGER
Associated Press Writer
Sl\N FRANCISCO (AP ) Patrtcla Hearst wtll be free
for her weddmg, blessed by a
prestdenllal decree cuttmg
short her 7-year priSOn term
" I haven't made any plans
right now It came as such a
surprise that 11 Will take some
time to adJust to 1t," the
elated newspaper hetres s
smd Monday after President
Carter commuted her bank
robbery conv1ct10n.
She IS scheduled to leave
the Federal Correctional
Inst•tutton at Pleasanton on
Thursday, four days before
the f1fth anmversary of her
ktdnappmg by members of
the Symb1onese Liberatwn

•

talk w Brenda Mayhew, a welfare case worker, officials sa1d
Rundle sa•d the welfare worker had accused Church of
child abuse Church also complamed about food stamp policies
and lack of money to pay medical b1lls, Cassell sa1d
Church's mother sa1d her son hadn't been himself since the
1972 Buffalo Creek flood m Logan Counthy that killed 12!i
persons
Freddie was m the Buffalo C1eek flood He helped pull
children out of the water and the poeple that lived near hun It
did somethmgto him He JUSt hasn 't been hmJSelf smce," she
sa1d

NO METERS UP - The early bird not only gets the worm, but m Pomeroy he also gets
free parking On the lower parkmg lot m Pomeroy there are some SIX parking spac es along
the parkmg lot wall which have no meters Consequently, early mormng motorists - ftrst
come, first served- can park at the spots and ha•'C free parkmg Meter Patrolman Kenny
Hoffman says that some meters were vandalized and recently when the meter heads were
returned to the poles after havmg been removed due to a flood scare, the gap of poles
wtthout meters evolved It's all gomg to come loa screanung half, however New meters for
the poles have been ordered Motonsts lucky enough to get the spots every day probably will
agree that 1t was great whtle 11 lasted

51 vehicles damaged

A trail of broken car
wmdows was slashed through
Pomt Pleasant Monday mghl
by umdentthed mdivtduals
believed to be ndmg m a pick·
up truck
The wmdow-breakmg spree
has resulted m damage to ~1
vehicles at last count , and
that number may m e as
phone calls contmue to come
m, accordmg to Poml
Pleasant Pollee
Ctly Police have received
reports of broken car WID·
dows from 41 mdivtduals
while the Ma so n County
Sheriff's Department was
not1fed of broken wmdo~ s by
10 other car owners.
The mctdents apparently
occurred between the hours
of 8 15 p m and midnight,
according to the tun es of the
reports . The route followed
by the vandals extends from
Meadowbrook AdditiOn on
Sand Htll Road through town
to North Mam Street and
First Streets
Several Witnesses reported
seemg a red and white pickup
truck, bearmg t em porary
Ohio tags, m the areas where
the vandalism occurred It 1s
also reported that police
pursued a truck matchmg
lhts de scription wht ch
crossed the Shadle Bridge
apparently enroute back to
Ohio.
The list of persons repor·
ling broken wmdows last
night and this morning in·
eludes several county and
City Officials
Vehtcles wtth brok en
wmdows and where they
were parked are
L W Getty, Mt. Vernon
Avenue; Ruth L Cromley,
Monroe Avenue; Lawrence
and Betty Fowler, Lincoln
Avenue , Letha L. Wamsley,
Lmcoln Avenue; Michelle
Morrison, Lmcoln Avenue;
Golden Herdman, Lincoln
Avenue; Barry M Hamm,
Lmcoln Avenue , Maxine
Williams, Uncoin Avenue;
Oden C. Austm Sr., Lincoin
Avenue, Clara Proffitt,
Lincoln Avenue.
Harold Stewart, First
Street ; Kenneth Adkms,
~

Jefferson . Kathenne Pullms,
Mam Street, Patty Weaver ,
Heck's parkmg lot , Beverly
Rickard, Jefferson Blvd ,
Helen Sayre, VIand Street ,
Donna Staats, F' trst Street ,
Archie Whtll, Poplar Street,
Wtlh am Robbms, F~rst
Street
Gary Rickard, J efferson,
Harry K~pp , North Mam ,
Betty Van Natter , North
Mam , Michael O'F'iory ,
North Mam, !rna McDamel,
North Mam , Jun Sturgeon.
First Street, Martha Clark,
22nd Street, Denstl Osborne,
F'1rst Street; Jun Roach, 22nd
Street , Dean FraZier, Mt
Vernon Avenue
Ray Whttman, Park Dnve,
Raymond Bates , Mam
St reet , Melvin Johnson.

The Me1gs County Com·
mtsswners have approved a
record budget of $2,226,767 for
1979
wht ch
mcludes
$982,108 95 m general fund
expendit ures, $700,286 m
highway department funds
and health and welfare ap-

Flurries
•
•
contznuzng
By The Associated Press
Scatte red llurnes are
expected to contmue tomght
and Thursday over porlwns
of southern Ohio, With very
l i ttle
add il tona l
accumulalion The rest of the
state Will be mostly cloudy
Colder temperatures are
forecast for tomght and
Thursday, wtth the lows
across the state tomght m
smgle dtg1ts and the highs on
TI1ursday m the 20s
Accordmg to the Natwnal
Weather Service , the next
stg mf1 ca nt snowfall wtll
move mlo Oh10 Saturday or
Sunday'.

Walnut Stredet , Mark
Kearn s , Maple Avenue,
Lester Errett , Meadowbrook
Dnv e, David Simpson,
Maple Avenue , Charl es
Pickens, Kanawha Street,
Charl es Mu sg rave, Oak
Street , Jack Fowler, Mt
Vernon Avenue
F' S Furbee, Mt Vernon
A;cnue, Janet Hall, Lmcoln
Avenue, Carl Walden, 28th
Street , W Va and Ohw
YMCA, 28th Street , Btll
Peck , Birch Avenue; c E
Cook, Birch Avenue , Bertha
Thomas, Lmcoln Avenue, . :::::::::::::::::::::::::::':'::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tommy Holland, Mt Vernon
SCHOOL OUT
Avenu e, Denstl Reynolds,
Schools of the Me1gs and
Mad ison Avenue, Thelma
Eastern Local School
Elliott, Madtson Avenue, and
DistriCts were open lor
Evelyn Hartley, Madison
classes today and Southern
Avenue
Local Schools were closed.
Snow fell overnight and
was eontlnuing Wednesday
morning . Afternoon
kindergarten classes in the
Meigs Local School Distrtct
were cancelled.

AnnuaI rep ort
••

ssued to da'y

•

pnsoner s

Deputies served 868 papers
from the co urts and m·
vest1gated 1,076 compiamtsoffenses Compla mts m·
eluded one homi cide, two
anned robberies, 23 assaults,
75 breakmg and entermgs,
248 larceny, 13 motor vehicle
thefts, 131 acts of vandalism,
~0 acts of mailbox vandalism,
19 death calls , -mn e
spotllghtmg calls, 17 trash
dumpmg calls, 39 anunal
complamts, 58 domesllc
calls, 24 acts ot trespassmg;
stx acts of forgery and 361
miscellaneous complamts.
The department has SIX
field deputies, four deputy •
dispatcher • Jailers, one m·
vest1gator, one deputy •
secretary, one cook, and one
custodian
One field deputy, an m·
veshgator , two dispatchers
and a custodian are paid
through CETA funds ':'he
department IS asSisted by
(Contmued on page 8)

Sa lary, $20,000, sala n es,
employes, $16,600 , supplies,
$500 , equipment, $200 , travel,
$300, allo\\ances, $10,000
Total, $4 7,600
County Plannin g Com
mtsston - sa lanes, em
ployes , $1,250 , contracts,
repairS, $1 ,250, expense of
commiSSIOn members, $150
Total, $2,650
Common Pleas Court salar), $3,563 83, sa lanes,
employes, $8,244 45 , suppli es,
$250, equipment , $1, 000
attorney fees $10,000, JUrors'
fees, $1,500 , witness fe es
$1 ,500 transcnpts, $1 500,
t ravel. $300 , ex penses,
fore1gn JUdge $600, other
expenses, $300, jury com·
mission employes, $1600,
suppli es, $300 eqUipment,
$200, advert lsmg- and prm·
tmg, $100, other expenses,
$1,000 bureau of support,

$9,572 travel , $4 000, othe1
expenses $1,600 Total ,
124,646 77
Probate Court - sala1y
offiCial $3,563 82, salalJCS.
employes, $6,876 27, supplies,
$3,000, Jurors' fees, $300
witness fe es, $300 , tran·
scn pts, $200 , ex pen ses,
foreign JUdge, $150, other
expenses
$500
Tota l,
$14,890 09
Clerk of Courts - salary,
offlCIBI. $12 ,000 . sa lan cs,
employes. $26,216 40 sup·
pli es, $3,500 eqUipme nt ,
$500 contracts, repair, $500 ,
travel , $250, advert1smg and
prmt, $65 , other expenses,
$200 Total, $43,231 40
Coroner - sa lary, offlcwl.
$6,000 salancs, employes.
$500 , supplies, $50 contracts,
services $1500, other ex·
pcnscs. $650 Total, $8,700
County co urt - salary,
salanes, employees, $7,000, official. $10,500, salanes,
supplies, $300 eqUipm ent emp loyes, $19,332 36 , sup·
$500, tr avel, $300 other pli es. $2,500, cont racts,
expenses, $200
Total repa1rs, $400, Witness fees,
$200, other fees (deputy
$40,258 28
J uvemle Court - employe bo nds!, $1,200, other ex·
salanes, $7,324 77 JUror fees, penses , 1counse l ), $3,000
$500, wtln ess fees, $500 1 otal, $37,132 36
Board of Elect iOns ex penses, foreign JUd ge
$150, other expenses, $1,000, sa lary, offiCia ls, $7,200 ,
Juvemle probation depart salan es, employes, $29,870 ,
ment , salari es, emplo yes. supplies, $3,600 , equipment ,
$37,700 contract servtces,
$1 610 , travel, $362; other
Total
expen ses, $1, 100
$87,442
Blllidmgs and Grounds mamtemmce and operatmn,
con tracts, repairs, $1,000 ,
contracts services, $35,000
rotai, $36,000
ProtectiOn to Property and
Persons - Shenff salary,
operated by Harold Erwm offi Cial , $13, 000 sa laries,
60, CrQwn Ctty, backed from emplo)es, $71,050, overtune,
a prtvate dnve and struck a $1,950 , supplie s, $20 ,000,
parked vehicle owned b) eqUipment $4,500, contracts,
Warren Berry , Gallipolis repairS, $3 ,500, con\racts,
Both vehicle s mcurred se rvtces $1 ,700, tra1mn g
school, $1 ,000 fee s, $200,
moderate damage
ailowa nces, $6.500, travel
$200, adverttsmg and prm·
lin g $300. other expenses,
$1 000 Total, $124,800
Recorder - salar), of·
hc1al, $11,500 , salanes
1Contmued on page 8 I

Patrol reports

three accidents

Th e Galha-Me tgs Post,
Highway Patrol, mvestigated
a on e-vehicle accident th1s
mornmg at I a m on Story's
Run Hd , two m1les west of
SR 7
Officers report that an east
bound auto dnven by Michael
Harnson 21, Middleport ,
went out of control, passed off
the left Side of the roadway
, and struck an embanltinent
There was moderate damage
to the vehicle
POINT PLEASANT, W.
The Ga lha· Meig s Post
Va (AP) - The Department mvesttgated two accidents
of Highways may ask for a 'iuesday
new set of btds on repatrs for
The patrol mvesttgated a
the Shadle Bndge over the one-vehicle mishap on Little
Flucr1es tomght w1th a low
Kanawha River here.
Paregon Rd , one and three·
around 15 Partly, cloudy
The lowest· btd was $1 19 tenths of a mtle south of SR
Thursday w1th a high m
mtlllon and the state had 790, at 3 30 p m
An armed robber took $198 upper 20s Chance of snow 50
estunated the cost "ould be
Officers report that a west Tuesday mght from Les' percent tonight , 10 percent
$900,000, according to Ga_ry bound auto operated by Janet Carryout on the outsktrt• of Thursday
Chernenko, a spokesman for Caldwell, 18, Crown Ctly, had Mason
the Htghways Department
The robber, who entered
stopped on a hillcrest
Area residents have con·
the
establishment around 10
The vch1cle slid off the left
JURY SEATED
tended that the bridge ts &gt;~de of the roadway ond p.m , was described as bemg
Jurors were bemg seated
unsafe and a Mason County struck a tree There "as a tall, whtle male, wearmg an
shenff's deputy sa1d he fell mod erate damage to the army Jacket and blue jeans thts mornmg m the case of the
through a hole m the bndge auto
He reportedly bud long hair State of Ohio versus Donald
s~ can ngen, 21, Rt
1
up to his shoulders wh1le
The patrol was called to the and wore a baseball cap.
Rutland
Swearin
gen
dtrectmg traffic.
State Police Trooper F A
scene of a two-auto accident
The department plans to on Kerr-Bethel Rd , one and Backus 1s mv est1gatmg He allegedly broke mto a cabm
dec1de this week whether to tM·tcnths of a m1le east of was not · availab le thts owned by Jack Earl Warner
accept the bid, Che1nenko SH 160
mornmg lor any addll!Onal located on Lambert Hollow
Road
smd
Offlccr&amp;report that an auto mfornMtlon

New bridge
Accordmg to a report
released by Mason County
Shenfl James J Proffitt, the
shenff' s dep artm ent pa id
$12,399 35 mto the county's
general fund m 1978
Fees were receiVed from
the fo llowing courts for
shen ff's fees for servtces
rendered, $9,224 35 , from the
vtllages of Pomeroy, Mid·
dleport, Racine, Syracuse
and Rutland for housing
prisoners under contract Y(llh
the county commtsslOners,
$3,045 ; collected for copies of
accidents reports and offense
reports, $130
The department, durmg
1978, mvesttgated 282 traffic
accidents compared to 229 m
1977. It mvesttgated one fatal
accident, 55 deer or other
ammal related accidents, 28
injury acctdents and 198 non·
injury accidents
Deputies booked 750 per·
sons mto county Jail com·
pared to 683 m 1977 and
se rved 9,218 mea ls to

propnat10ns totaling $449,319,
makmg up the maJor outlay
'Followmg 1s a breakdown
of the appropnallons
GENERAL FUND,
Board of Co unty Com·
mlsstone rs - salartes, of·
ftctaJs, $30,200 , salanes,
employ es, $14,057 88 , suppli es , $1,800 , eqmpm ent,
$5,000, con tracts, repair ,
$500, travel and expenses of
COffiffi iSS IOners, $1,000, ad
vcrt1smg and prmtmg, $200,
other ex penses, $6,000,
microfllmmg s uppli es,
$3,000, eq uipment, $600
Total, $62,357 84
Co unty Auditor - Salary,
$18,000, salanes, employes,
$40,000, supplies, $7,000 02,
eqUipment, $500, contracts,
repa1rs, $500, travel, $400 ,
advert1s1ng and prmtmg,
$.100 other expenses, $500,
assesSing personal property,
sa lan es, $1,520, appratsmg
real property , $2,000 Total,
$70,720
Co unty Treasurer
salar) , $12,000, employes
sa ianes. $19,876.51, supplies,
$5,000 equipment, $500,
contracts, services, $300,
travel $500, advert1smg and
pnn\lng, $700, other ex·
penses, $500 Total, $39,376 51
Prose cutmg Attorney -

bids may

be sought

Carryout

robbery
nets $198r

Weather

•

mmtsters U1r prog1am and

w1ll help partic!p.mts deve lop
plans fo r thelt
land and offer th em long
t&lt;rm cost sha1 mg to put the

1 eclarnatwn

pla ns to work
People " ho O\~n or co ntrol

non fede1 ai land that has
been mmed for coa l rna) be
ellg1b ie for cost shanng To
qua hl ), areas must have

been abandoned before Aug
3 1~ 77, and left unreclauned
01 in adequately recl,auned
Mme operators and their
permittees \\ho are legally
responsible for recla m1mg
abandoned mmed lands are

not ellg1ble The program
also excludes most of the
mmed la nds for whtch the
reclamation bond "as for·
fe1ted to the state
'Ibe gove rnment's sh are o£

rcclamatwn costs w1ll range
f!om 25 to 100 percent ,
depending on the acreage to
be reclauned, the proposed
usc, and whether the benefits
are mostly onsite ipnvate l or
offstte !public )
The greate r the offs1Le
bcncf1t s the mor e th e
gov ern me nt will pay To
ensure program funds are
Widely diotnbuted. the law
dictates that no smgie land·
owner can rt!cetve fman cmg

for reclaunmg more than 320
acr es
Because funds ar e hmtted

RAMP "'" concentrate on
the more severe problems
fir st The local conservatiOn
dt st n ct or rec]amatwn
committee wtJl re\ 1ew each
applica tiOn for cost sharmg
and suggest a fundin g
pnoritv SCS will ass1gn a
pn ont y and mform the a ~
phca nt m wntmg
Pe r son s mtcrested ln
s1gmng for asststance may do
so lx'gmmng March I
Mlcn d1ng we re S1mon,
Crow Huth Ph 1l Kelly , Dave
Jcnkms. B1ll Mayer, Billy Joe
Spencer Mr and Mrs Virgil
Teaford Leo Vaughan, Stan
Houdashcll Wesley Buehl, N
W Compton, Hank Cleland
and 1 am Bearhs. secretary

Big crowd
commended
Popuianly ol ICasternSo uthern athletic contests
was agam pomted up
Tuesday mght when cage
teams of the two schools met
man unportant SV AC contest
at Eastern
Between 2!iO and 300 fans
hned up at the Eastern ticket
office as early as 4 30 p m
Tuesday to buy their tickets
An estimated 1,100 fans were
on hand for the contest
Eastern Supt Clark Lees
reports a crowd control plan
was put mi&lt;J effect
Three pollee officers were
employed for the evemng
Admmistrators as well as
fa culty members were
stationed at varwus pomts m
the aud1tonum
Lees reported there was
one mc1dent durmg the game
and one afterwards Both
were ,brought under control
unmed!alely by the pollee
offtcers.
"We had a darn good crowd
control
plan ,"
Lees
commented He commended
students of both schools and
players of both teams on tbetr
conduct
"It was a htghly emotional
evemng,
but students
controlled themselves well",
Lees stated
There was, perhaps, a
handful of people who
became too emollonal, but all
m all, 11 was a wonderful
eve nmg of entertamment ,
Lee concluded
'

....

I

-~

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