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•
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , F:eb. 15, 1979_ ,

·Prosecution
. NEW (\RK, . Ohio ( AP)
Tile prosecution planned to
restits case tOday in the trial
oiThaddeus C. Lewingdon for
three of central Ohio's so·
called ".22-&lt;:aliher killings."
· The trial was recessed
· early Wednesday when the
· defense asked for police
recOrds pertaining to three
other homicides.
Defense attorney Gary
Tyack asked for the records
after Columbus homicide

TO END MARRIAGES
· Janet M. Harrison, Mid·
. dleport and Ronald W.
.· Harrison, Rt. I, Middleport,
filed for dissolution of
· marriage. Rema Rae Lawson
· · was granted a divorce from
Clarence Arthur Lawson.
PATIENT TRANSFERRED
Damon Ferreil, Syracuse,
has heen transferred from
Holzer Medical Center to
University
Hospital,
Columbus. His room number
is 919 for those who wish to
send cards.

Committee. ..
(Contmued from page 1)
of eligible lands affected by
past coat mining. The U. S.
Soil Conservation Service will
provide technical and cost·
sharing assistance.
. Ruth . said, " The local
· Mei~s Coimty Reclamation
· Committee will screen the
.• applic11tioils and send the
. 'most .. ii~ely to the state
cilinmittee. The state com·
.mittee will evaluate the
applications aginst others
and assign a numerical

rating."
" Then within the next 60
days , financial assistance
will be approved for those
abandoned lands where
reclamation has the greatest
potentiaiior protecting lives
and property," Boyd con·
eluded.

r~sting

case

-------------------------- Cold front hits tonight
1 Area Deaths I
I

I

'

detective Steve Martin reminded attorneys that he is
WILBERT CHANCEY
testified for the prosecution. not trying the McCann
Wilbert
C. Q!ancey, 66,
Tyack indicated he believes murders. "We , have other
Ripley,
father
·of Charles F. .
the records would show dis- matters w dispose of, " he
Chancey,
Syracuse,
Meigs
crepancies between a taped said.
High
School
Athletic
Director
statement by Lewingdon and
Thaddeus Leviiogdon, 42, of
and Head Football Coach,
police descriptions of what Glenford, is being tried in
died
-wednesday at the
was found at the scene of the Licking County in connection
Jackson
General Hospital in
homicides.
with the December 1977
Ripley
following
a lingering
Part of Lewingdon's state- slayings of Joyce Vennilion,
illness.
ment was played to jurors 37, and Karen Dodrill, 33,
Mr. Chancey was a
Wednesday. On the tape, Le- both of Newark , and the April
member
of the Salt Hill
wingdon said hi~ brother . 1978 killing of Jenkin Jones,
Church.
He
was a retired
Gary killed Robert "Mickey" 77, of Granville . Gary
dairy
farmer
and a retired
McCann, 58, in McCann's Lewingdon, who became 39
employee
of
the Kaiser
home on Feb. 12, 1978, while Wednesday and is from
Aluminum
.
Co.
He was a
he himself was responsible Kirkersviile , also faces
·
f
ormer
sheriff
of
Jackson
McCann's charges stemming from
for
killing
County.
girlfriend,
Christine those deaths.
Besides his son, Charles,
Herdman, 2fi. He also said
addition, .
both
In
Mr.
Chancey is survived by
both brothers fired shots at Lewing dons are charged with .
his
wife, Nancy; three
McCann's 77-year -old the McCann murders, two
brothers,
Elliott,
and
mother, Dorothy, the other other Franklin · County
Howard,
.
both
of
Ripley;
W.
victim of the triple slaying, slayings and one in Fairfield
T.
(Biil)
Chancey,
The jury had heard about County,
while
Gary
three hours of the police con- Lewingdon has heen charged Wilmington, Ohio; a sister,
Gertrude · Monk,
Mrs .
versation with Lewingdon on with a lOth killing in Franklin
Olarleston,
and two grand·
Tuesday.
County . .
sons.
Tyac k said he is seeking all
Funeral services will be
summaries prepared by
·
held
at 2 p. m. Friday at the
Martin on the McCann
Vail
Funeral
Home in Ripley
murders, reports from the
·
with
the
Rev. Orland
Columbus police mobile
{Continued from page I )
Reynolds
and
the Rev. Don
crime search unit a!ld a copy
The embassy feared for the Heinzman officiating. Burial
of the taped transcript in safzty of its evacuees from
which Claudia Vasko of the time they left their homes wUI he in the Fairplains
Columbus implicated herself until they took off. With anti- Cemetery near Ripley.
;rnd two men in the killings. American feeling running Friends · may call at the
Charges against the three high among leftist supporters funeral home.
were later dropped.
of the revolution and
Licking County Common
thousands of weapons in their
Pleas Judge Winston Allen
Hospiial ~ews
hands, there was a strong
possibility of attacks on the
way to the airport or at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
field.
Admitted
Wiiliam
The British Embassy said ·Morris, Pomeroy; Naomi
Royal Air Force planes also Bentley, Middleport; Mary
were standing to fly out 500. Derenberger,
Pomeroy;
600 of the 1,600 Britons Gaye Fields, Coolvilie;
The Southern weal School believed left in Tehran. An James Gibson; Pomeroy.
District Board of Education embassy spokesman said he
Discharged - Genevieve
met in special session hoped the flights would begin Hill, Juanita Olapman, Oris
Wednesday night to discuss Friday or Saturday. •
Hubbard, Lela Easterday,
.furnace repairs at the Letart
U.S. officials in Washington
Clarenc.e Price, Sharon
falls School, sewage system said I, 700 of the nearly 7,000
Petrie.
repairs at the high school and Americans stU! in Iran were
the arbitration hearing ready to leave inunediately.
between teachers and the They said the government
Holzer Medical Center
board held earlier this month. hoped to reduce those
Discharges, Feb. 14
All board tnemhers, David remaining to no more than
' Loretta Adkins, Lena
Nease, Sue Grueser, Betty 2,000 government officials, Baker, Shannon Barrette,
Wagner , Dallas Hili and businessmen, teachers and Raymo~ Chad, Blake, Chad
Shirley
Johnson
were others.
Briggs, Harvey BrQwn,Jr,
present .
Before the revolution Joyce Casto, Mark Collins,
The board will meet in against Shah Mohammad . Nancy Collins, Glenna Davis,
regular session on Feb. 20. Reza Pahlavi moved into Bruce Davison, Jr., Bertha
high·gear last fall, there were Diehl, Robert Edwards, Jr.,
55,000 Americans in Iran .
The
evacuation was
planned because of the attack
on the embassy Wednesday
hy gunmen who killed one
Iranian employee, wounded
two Marine guards and held
Suilivan and 101 other
N
$5.99
Americans captive for
several
hours. They were
.._..._.._
$8.99
freed by Deputy Premier
Ibrahim Yazdi and guerrillas
loyal to the new government.
Some of the attackers
SALE
identified themselves as
.communiSts whle Yazdi said
they were "communists,
ultra-rightists and military
. personnel who all had one
objective: to give the world
the impression that chaos
prevails in Iran and give our ·
movement a bad name."
Yazdi stationed 40 of his
government's "Islamic
police" around the bulletpocked ·embassy compound
after the attackers were
driven out and the Ainericans
freed .

Plans •••

Problems
discussed

_____ ____

'

Plains should move "'uth of
Ohio tonight. Precipitation Is
expected 1o change to IIIOW
tonlghL as the low moves east
of the state.
T: avelers' advisories were
in effect in central aectlons
this morning and in northern
Ohio during the day for light
freezing drizzle .
The freezing drizzle started
falling in central Ohio
Wednesday night and spread

Gas firm disagrees

Executions.begin in Tehran

into a few areu of northern
Ohio thla morning.
Ught drizzle or rain fell
overt!!illt ..IP ..Jhe 10utbern
portion of the state but
precipitation amo~a~ll were
light.
Temperature~~

nmalned

steady or rOle lllowly early
today. Temperatures , at
daylreak rqed &amp;om 14 In
Toledo to 38 1n Cincinnati.
Fog alao covered 1110111 of
Ohio this morning and
reduced the vl,slbiUty to leas
than a mile in many areas,
the weather service said.

physically will be able to,
on
storage
depending
facilities, and that includes

Ohio gas."

.

Vehicle
Is demolished
now •
ln mishap

John Conti, a spokesman
Consolidated
in
for
Pittsburgh , said the finn in
a surplus situation because
exploration and contracts
begun 10 years ago are
reaching full potential.
He said Consolidated will
continue to honor e:dsting
contracts but Is reducing the
nwnber of new contracts for
gas. Conti had no information
on Ohio supplies specifically
but said the firm gets gaa
from about 23,000 wells in
Appalachia and that this will
remain more or less constant.
He said Consolidated gets
about 20 percent of its gas
from the Applachian region.

is business as usual,"

Leah Eichinger, Bert Fayne, Chaddock said. "Wt~ · do not
Michael Fortner, Jean have any planned cutbacks
Gaskins, Tomi Helm, on natural gas purchases and
Marlene Houck, Michael , during the summer we plan to
Paxton Kaiser, George Keirn, take all the gas that we
Jr., Janis Lucas, Effie Mays,
PEggy Mercer, Martha Mil·
chell, Alfred Moore, Ida NApEVENT CALLED OFF
per, Obra Reed, Charles
The
Bradbury
PTA
Saunders, Sr . , Opal
Saunders, Janis Shilot; Letha meeting . scheduled for this
Sims, Tinuny Smith, Gilberta evening has heen cancelled.
Starcher, Joseph Stewart,
John Taylor, ·Mary Vickers,
CORRECTION
.Jean Wallace, Joseph
Russell
Newlon, 65, 2112
Walters, Wilma · Wamsley,
Mt.
Vernon
Ave., Pt.
Tracy Whaley, · Mrs. Dane
Pleasant,
who
died Wed·
Williams and daughter.
nesday
is
.
s
urvived
by on.e
Births, Feb. If
sister,
Mrs.
Richard
(Luella)
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Neal, daughter, Henderson, Fick of Olester, not Mrs. Sick
as was reported.
·
W.Va.

LOCATION CHANGED
The lcicallon of tbe
awards dinner being
sponsored by tbe Pomeroy
Cham her of Commerce has
been cbaoged from Royal
Oak Park to , Meigs Hlgb
School cafeteria, Paul
Simon, president ao·
nounced today.
Simon · stated tbill lhe
supply of llckets are
llmlled and persons Interested In attending
should gel lhelr tickets as
soon as possible.
Tickets may - be pur·
chased at New York
Clothing Store, Simon's
Pick-A-Pair and the office
of lhe chamber. The tickets
ore $6 and the dinner Is
Saturday, Feb. 17 at 6:30
p.m.

AMONG HONOREES - Twin sisters Beulah Utterback and Freda Lieving wiil be
presented certificates of appreciation at the awards banquet Saturday, Feb. 17 to be held a t
the Meigs High School Cafeteria sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. Tickets
may be purchased at the New York Clothing House , Simon's Pick-A-Pair and the office of
the chamber.. Dinner is at .6:30p.m.
·

One auto was demolished ·
during a two-vehicle accident
involving a Rutland Twp.
truck Wednesday at I p.m. on
TR 41, one and one-tenth of a
mile west of SR 124 in Meigs
C&lt;lunty . .
The Gallia·Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports that
the · west bound truck
operated by BUster Barrett,
45, Rutland, and an east
bound auto driven by Roger
Adkins, 20, Racine, collided
in a curve on the township
road.
Both drivers claimed in·
jury, but were not lm·
mediately treated. .
There was moderate
damage to tbe truck. The
auto was ·demolished. No
citation was wued.
Officers were called to the
·scene of a two-vehicle mlahap
on Patriot Gage Rd., one and
three-tenths of a mile south of
SR 141, at 7:30 a.m.
The patrol reports that an
east botlnd auto operated hy
Torley Clagg, 48, Patriot,
turned left Into tbe path of a
north bound vehicle driven hy
· Roger Waugh, 16, Patriot.
Both vehicles Incurred
moderate damage. Clagg was
cited on a charge of failure to
yield.

•

2/'1•

'1.69

HOOKS
Knitting Worsted
Weight Yarn
100 Pet. Acrylic

THREE DAYS ONLY-FRIDAY, FEB. 16th
SATURDAY FEB. 17th· MONDAY FEB. 19th
OPEN· FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

OPEN FRIOAY Tll8 :00 P.M .

'

"THE DRIFTERS"

Introducing the World Renowned Ronny Love and. sounds of the
Drifters who have appeared in Europe, Bahamas, Japan, Canada
and the United Slates.
·
'
Four Musicians and Three Dynamic Vocalists.
The group is known .for its nostalgiC hils of the so:s and 60's, and
has superb up-Io-date Disco sound keeping up with today's DISCO
MANIA.
They have sold over 12,000,000 records.

r. Satuid.,

UPPER DECK .
AT THI PT. PLEASANT INN

In addition to the conc ert,
the band may be used at a
clinic by Leon Thompson who
is associate conductor for the
New York Philharmoni c
Orchestra. The clinic session
is entitled " The Music
Educator as a CondQctor."
The program for the
concert includes a .variety of
stYles. The Suite in E-Flat by
Gustav Holst, " Incantation
and Dance " by John Barnes
Chance, " How the West Was '
Won" by John Higgens, and
"The March of the Belgium
Paratroopers" by Leemans.
Baroguc Trans'l'wo
criptions will be featured on
the program. Concerto Inc.
by Viraldi for two Oats and
band with students Terri
Johnson and Karen Brown
playing solo parts and
Concerto in B·Flat by Handel
for harp with Mrs. ' Lucille
Jennings, assistant professor
of harp at Ohio University,
playing the harp solo.
This is the third time the
band has been selected for
the West Virginia honor. The
band was chosen in 19'1\. 1976
and 1979.

Transplant patient now home
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ·_ Dr. Jerry Young, the
only person in history to have three heart transplants,
came home on Valentine's Day, with a heart .pinned to
his sweater and his sense of hwnor intact. After
greeting his family, Young opened his jacket to expose
a 3-inch heart hearing the words : "My heart beats for
YOU."

Young turned a crank on the back of the heart and
it heganto buzz and jump. " That's exactly howl feel,"
he said. laughing.

Sugar prices could rise ·

NOW THROUGH FEBRUARY 17th

Dinner Resemtioft RecommMided lar FridiJ

Wahama high school's
band, under the direction of
Charles Yeago, is one of three
bands chosen for the West
Virginia Music Educators
Convention March 29-31 in
Huntington. Yeago received a
letter from Patri'ck. J . Fitz·
gerald, president of W. Va .
M.E.A. informing him of
the band's selection . .
The letter reads as follows :
"We are pleased to advise
thatthe Wahama High School
Band, under your fine
direction, has heen selected
as a 1979 W.Va. M.E.A. honor
band by the audition com·
mittee of the West Virginia
Music Educators. Hearty
congratulations to you and
your superb group. ,
"The ·caliber of instruction
exemplified by your audition
surely sets the highest
standards for all music
educators in West Virginia."
Ttie band will present a
concert on Friday, March 30
for the West Virginia Music
Educators. The concert will
be held at the Huntington
Civic Center.

Nationwise

WINTER CLOTHING

· Penn State University was
originally known as Farmers
High School.

The Entertainment and Dini~~~r Spot of iJ,., Area

•

I

r.1Ge

*Women's Coats

* Men's Winter Coats

* Junior Dresses

* UtUe ~ Suits

*Men's SWeaters

*Women's SPGIIsweai

* 8oJs Wirlter Clothing

* Men's Dress Shirts

*Children's Coats

*Women's Gowns

* Men's Knit Shirts

* Men's Flannel Shirts

*Women's Sweaters

*Children's Sleepwear

* Men's Spcri Shirts

*Pre-teen Spoilswear

·* UtUe Girk ·Sp0.1swear

*Woinen's Dress•
.

I

WASIDNGTON (AP) -The price of a 5-pound bag
of sugar, forced up almost 17 cents in 13 months by
govenunent action, could rise 5.5 cents more by early
next year under legislation before the House.
l3y raislng both domestic and imported raw sugar
.prices, the bill would hike the retail cost of soft drinks ,
camed goods and bakery products as well. But the two
House· committee chairmen who introduced the
legislation Thursday say many sugarooet and cane
fanners and processors, unable to make ends meet,
will go out of business unless they find some relief.

Judge wants to learn
MANSFIELD, Ohio ( AP) - Richland County
Co!)unon Pleas Judge Max Chilcote, whose courtroom
was bugged last week, wants to know more about the ·
use of electronic listening devices by the Richland
County sheriff's office.
Chilcote has ordered Sheriff Thomas Weikel to
submit an inventory of all bugging devices the
department has and to provide infonnation on how"
often the devices have heen used in the recent past.

First family tours village
·~ · ;·

'

•

*Women's ·Winter Robes *Girts' Dresses

I

!X'I'IJI.O) EL GRANDE, Mexico (APJ
President and· Mrs. Carter spent Thursday afternoon
touring a showcase agricultural village of the sort the
Mexical government hopes will keep its peasants down
ext the farm.
They vislted the village after Carter conferred •
\with Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo. He told
repocters the talk! had "gone yery well. And I think
Lopez Portillo wowd agree with that."

Endurance records sought'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Former Apollo
astrmaut Edwin Mitchell will he making another
space fllgbt - but not to the moon, and not 1n a
spaceship. Mitchell and two others will he trying to
establish distance and endurilnce records for hot air
balloollll'during a fllcht from St. Louis to central Ohio
during the weekend fl. Feb. 24.

ELBERFELDS 1N POMEROY
,,I

Tabriz have ended, the radio military officers of the shah 's co untry ;
Man u c hehr awaiting trial on ~barges of
said, and the government is ·. regime had heen convicted of Khosrowdad, head of the elite corruption and of torturing
in control.
crimes and · would be paratroopers; Mehdi Rahimi, and killing prisoners of
·.unconfirmed reports put executed. It gave no further martial law governoc of Teh- SAVAK. The charges were
th e casualty toll in ,abriz as details, and Khomeini r an, and R¥"11
Na ji, preferred by the old regime
high as 700 dead with spokesmen declined com- governorgeneral of the while the shah was still in the
thousands wounded . Tehran ment.
central city of Isfahan .
country.
Radio blamed ihe fighting on
The executions by a llknan
Each was riddled by at
Radio
Tehr an
also
" counter-revolutionary
firing squad were announced least eight bullets. The bodies announced that Prime
SAVAK agents " and said a by state radio accompanied were tra r.sferred from Minister Mehdi 13azargan
nightly curfew remained in bY martial music.
Kbomeini 's headquarters to and his Cabinet unanimously
effect.
The state radio said the Tehran's central morgue.
approved a decree con·
Thousands . of youths generals were convicted on
Nassiri appear~;~! on state fiscating all properties of the
marched in Tehran in char ges
of
"torture, television Monday night with ro yal family in Iran,
celebration of . the reported massacre of people, treason his · fac e bruised and including palaces, lands, and
victory in Tabriz .
w the country and earthly bandaged .· He had difficulty stock in banks, factories and
Three other generals were corruption. They were speaking because a mob businesses.
killed last weekend bY guer- sentenced to death and the pununelled his throat when it
The Cabinet also &lt;!_ecreed
rillas as Khomeini's forces verdic t was immediately , seized him SUnday at a that properties and wealth of
were taking over the country, carried out by Islamic armed ransacked army barracks. government officials will. be
but the government said the forces ." It also said their
The TV interviewer asked examined, along with that of
four jusl executed were " the property had been con· Nassiriifhe ever expected w former officials arrested on
first group of traitors" to be fiscated .
he tried by revolutionaries, corruption charges.
tried by revolutionary courts.
The
generals
were and the general replied : " In
There was no official esli·
It said Kbomeini attended the Nematollah Nassiri, chief of this world anything is mate of the value of the royal
SAV AK, the shah's dreaded possible."
properties in Iran , but unoffitrial.
Th e newspa per Ettelaat secret police and one of the
Nassiri had been held in a cia! estimates place their
said 26 other officials and most hated men in the. st oc kade since November
{Continued on page i2J

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN , Iran ( AP) - A
revolutionary flring squad
executed Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi's hated secret
police chief and three other
generals at
Ayatollah
Rub ollah
K homeini ' s
· headquarters during ' the
night. It was reported 26
·other officers and 'officials of
the old regime will he exec
cuted .
'
Fearful Ainericans were
packing their bags for a massive air evacuation set to
begin
Saturday .
A
preliminary flight took off
klday with 167 of them .
Teliran radio reported that
pro-Khomeini
forces
appealed for tear gas to
disperse an attacking mob
after a night-long street
battle in eastern Tehran. But
three days of fierce fighting
in the northwestern city' of

Wahama's band
chosen again

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

LATCH RUG KITS
Size 20"x27"
'4.44
Reg.
.. 24"xl6" ......._Reg.
_____.
~ '6.88
RUG YARN
Reg. 7Sc Skein

lly The Associated Press
SAMUEL•A. EBLEN
A brief mid-winter sample"
ATHENS - Samuel A. of warmer weather Is
Eblen, Sr.. 80. Rt. I, Me· expected to he blown away by
C.:Onnelsville, died Wednesday a blast of much colder air
afternoon at the Good sweeping into Ohio.
Samaritan Ho s pital,
Temperatures in the 3ll'l toAmesville.
day are to give way to high
Mr. Eblen was born in readings in the teens Friday,
Pomeroy, son of the late the National Weather Service
Samuel and Rose Dotson said.
Eblen.
A low pressure system
He was also preceded . in developing in the Central
death by a daughter, Betty;
sister, Nettie Edwards, .and
an infant sister , and one
brother, Harvey.
..
Mr . · Eblen
attended
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Pomeroy High School and C&lt;liumbia Gas Transmission
was a retired coal miner. He Co. took issue today with a
spent most of his life in report It Is reducing
Athens County.
.
purchases of natural gas in
He is survived by two Ohio and another firm said Its
daughters, Mrs. Clark contracts IVith gas producers
~ Loretta)
Edwards, in Appalachia are leveling
Columbus, and Mrs : Bill off.
{Carol) Potter, Canal WinJames C. Mitchell, who
chester. Three sons, Harvey operates a drilling company
of Malta, Ohio; Harohl of in southeastern Ohio, said
Columbus, and Samuel of Wednesday that Columbia
Athens; one brother, Da\'id, and Consolidated Natural
of Millfield; 12 grandchildren Gas Co. were reducing the
and 15 ~real-grandchildren. number of new hook-ups for
Funeral services will he Ohio wells by· 40 percent. He
Friday at 2 p. m. at the said both firms had lined up
Jagers and Son Funeral massive sources of gas from
Home, Athens, with the Rev. the southeast, the Middle
David Holdren officiating. East and Africa .
Burial will he in Greenlawn
But William Chaddock of
Cemetery at Nelsonviile . Olarleston, W.Va ., a spokesFriends may call at the man for Columbia Gas, said
funeral home after noon on ·today that this is not true for
Thursday.
his finn.
"So far ·as Columbia Gas ·
Transmission is concerned it

Emergency water trailers
ease critical shortages

KAREN PROBERT

JANA BURSON

JAMES B. PATTERSON

Three ·students named
citizenship winners
Daughters of the American
Revolution good citizenship
winners in Meigs County are
Karen Probert, Reedsville,
Jana Kay Burson, Shade, Rt.
. 1, and J ames Brent Palter·
son , Racine.
The three will be guests at
the annual charter day lun·
cheon of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, to be
held on March 9 at the Trinity ·
Church in Pomeroy.
At that time, they will be
presented good citizenship
pins and cerlific11tes by Mrs.
Wilma Sa rgent , DAR chair·
man.

School faculties selected
the students who took the test
on Ohio government. They
will now compete in state
competition .
Karen, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Probert , is a
senior at Eastern Hi gh School
where she is a member of the
National Honor Society, serv·
ing this yea r as president.
She is also on the annual
staff, a varsity cheerleader ,
vice president of the chorus ,
in the special school chorus .
She is a member of the'United
Methodist Church of Chester.
Daughter of Mr . and Mrs.

Testimony links
murder victims
NEWARK, Ohio {AP)- A Feb. 12, 1978; two other
link between victims in two Franklin County slayings and
counties of the so-called .22- . one In Fatrfield County.
caliher killin'gs was brought
Harry B. Walker, an
out Thursday in the murder in-..esti gator of the Ohio
trial of Thaddeus Lewingdon. Public Defenders office;
Lewingdon, 42, of Glenford, testified Thursday he had
is .on trial hete for the teamed that one of the goilO
December , 1977 slayings of dancers
in
McCann's
Joyce Vermilion, 37, and Colwnbus nightclub was the
Kareri Dodrill, 33, both of former Sarah Jones, grandNewark, and the April 1978 daughter of Jenkin Jones.
killing of Jenkin Jones, 77, of
Lewingdon's sister~in-law,
Granville.
Delaine Lewingdon, also was
He also has heen indicted in a gogo dancer in McCann's
the murders of Robert club at one time.
"Mickey ' 1 McCann, . 58;
She
is
married to
McCann's girlfriend , ThaAdeus' brother Gary, 38,
Christine Herdman, 2fi; and of Kirkersville, who also has
McCann's 77-y 'e ar-old been indiCted for the nine
mother,
Dorothy,
in
murders plus .a lOth in
McCann'S C&lt;llumbus home on
Franklin CoUl)tY.

ST . CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio
(AP ) - Ohio National
Guardsmen
opera t ed '
emergen cy water trailers in
Belmont County today w ease
a shortage made critical by
broken pipes lost under deep
snow and fr ozen g round.
Gov. James A. Rhodes declared a water emergency for
the county and ordered
National Guard trailers in
from Cambrid ge , New
Lexington, Marietta, Logan
.and McConnelsville.
County
Wat e r
Superintendent David Grum
estimated 5,000 persons wer e
affected by iow or no water
pressure in :..:.n area west from .
the county seat to the
Guernsey County line. He
said most of the 20,000
persons in the region live in
muniCipalities or villag es
with . th eir own wate r
systems.
He said the viilages of Belmont, Morristown and New
Athens were tnost severely
affected.
•
Grum said his llknan staff
has worked almost around
the clock for a week , walking
routes of rural water lines

Fred Burson, Shade, Jana is
a senior at Meigs High
SchooL She is president of the
Meigs Cha pter of t'he Nationa! Honor Society and
recei ved a National Merit
Letter of Commendation.
Jana is also listed in Who's :::::::::::::::::::::::::·:;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:::::·:;:;:;:::;:::·:::::::;::::
Who Among American High
FIRST TO FILE
School Students. She parTwo
Pomeroy officials
ticipated in the Ohio Univerhave
filed
pelltions of
sity Summer Scholarship
candidacy
for
nominallon
Program, is a member of the
to their
and
reele
ction
Marauder marching band,
posts.
the pep band, the concert
They are Clarence An•
band, and the jazz band.
drews,
Mayor, and Mrs.
She is a member of the
Jane
Walton ,
clerk·
Shade Methodist Church. Her
treasurer.
Both
are
hobbies include playing the
Republicans.
trumpet, reading and ice
Deadline for flUng of
skating.
candidates
for the June
James Brent Patterson ,
Primary elections in
first boy to receive the Good
Pomeroy and Middleport is
Citizenship award given by
I
n.m. March 22 .
the DAR in Meigs County , is
:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::·:::;:;:;:::::::::::·::::.
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Patterson1Racine.
He is president ·of the Nationa! Honor Society at
Southern Hi gh School where
he is a senior and. is the yearbook editor.
He bel ongs to the Modern
Musi c Masters , the Drama
Club, was an Ohio University
American History Contest
finalis t, and has appeared in
the junior and senior class
plays and variety shows.
· He was the Da nforth award
winner at Southern, was on
the tra ck team, and scholarship team, and s ings with the
Southern High School choir.
He attends the SuttonCarmel United , Melodist
Church and his hobbies are
guitar, photography, ~n&lt;i
reading . He plans to ailend
Rio Grande College where he
· .will major in elementary

looking for a major leak .
''My men are walking zorn·
bies almost from walking
trunk Jines in two feet of snow
or more for up kl 20 hours a
day," he said. "When a man
thinks he has a break he has
to move a pickup truck load
of snow and chop through a
foot or mor e of ice or frozen
groUnd.
" We have been walking this
. whole countryside where the
mains run, cross country,
along creeks and highways.
Some of these snow drifts are
waist deep . hut if we don't
stay on the line routes we
might miss the break ....
" As soon as we find her , it .
won 't take long kl fix, m aybe
six hours."
He said some small wa ter
line breaks were found and
corrected but that there is a
major disruption along 15
miles of trunk line between a
main pumping station and a
·
buried storage tank.
Frank Jewell, counly
disaster services director,
sa id two nursing hom es
experienced low water
press ure and that lack of
pressure at fire hydrants
could be critical in event of a
fire.
A third nursing home
thought to be affected was
found to have its own water
supply.
The situation apparently

SCHOOlS IN SESSION
AU Meigs County school
districts were open for
classes Friday. Schools were
clo sed in the Eastern and
Meigs Loca l districts Thurs·
day. The Southern district
was in session all day.

began in early January and
became critical last week.
City Water Superintendent
J ames Schrum sa id the
county began cutting back on
it s normal 150,000-gallon
daily supple ment to St.
Clairsville in early January .
He said city .customers
responded to requests to
conserve water and so far
th ere has been no curtailment
of water.
Grum blamed the problems
on excess ive r a in in
December which soaked and
softened the ground and then
severe freezing in January
that caused the saturated
earth to shift . He feels this
shifting ea rth may have
caused a major rupture in a
trunk line .
,
'
The county water system
normally processes about 1.5
million gallons of water daily.

No quorum,
no actions
Due to a lack of quorum, no
action could be taken during
a special meeting of Pomeroy
Village Co uncil Thursday ·
ni ght . Co un cil informally
discussed the vacancy
created by the resignation of
co uncibnan Larry Powell.
Attending were Mayor
Clarence Andrews , Bill
Young, Harold Brown and
La rry Wehrung , cotincibnen,
and Betty Baronick, council
woman who served as clerk
in the absence of Jane
Walton.
Mrs. Walton Is a surgical
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center.

No present emergency .

education

COLUMBUS, Ohto tAP) - Although there is no
emergency at the present time, heavy snowfalls and frozen .
streams are increasing the possibility of.flooding throughout
Ohio.
Local officials and residents of flood-prone areas are being
urged by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to take
necessary precautions to reduce damage in the event of
flooding .
'
"Serious Ooods could occur In Ohio if spring snowmelt is
accompanied by heavy rainfall," said Robert W. Teater, the
director of the department .
Flood damage in Ohio has been sharply reduced due to a
system of flood warning and proper planning, Teater
explained.
•
The Flood Plain Planning Unit of the department's
Division of \fater Is creating more public awareness of flood
hazards, he said.

CLEVELAND lAP)
Here are the numbers
drawn Thursday ·io the
Ohio Lottery: blue 040,
white 75, gold 7, winathon
87651.

CANDiDATES FOR BASKETBALL SWEETHEART - Candidates for basketball
"Swee!J:leart" at Southern High School are front, 1-r, Carol Morris; wri Chapman and
Kathy Adkins ; hack, Becky Crow, Debbie Brown and Bunni McGraw. The winner will be
crowned during halftime activities of the reserve game Saturday, Feb. 17. Southern hosts
Point Pleasant .
•
,!

�.,
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., F ridav. Feb. 16, 1979

Denw rift on debt payment
By Martlul Aa«le and Robert Walters
.
WASHINGTON (NEA) · The growing tension between the
Kennedy family and President Carter has produced a potentially serious rift in the Democratic party's supposedly unified
effort to pay off its IO.year-old debt.
The deficit, which totalled $8.3 million j.n the months im· ·
medialely following the 1968 presidential election, has been ' ·
gradually repaid during the past decade and now amounts to
slightly more than $1.4 miUion .
VirtuaUy all of the remaining amount is attributable to
charges incurred by two Democratic contenders in the 1968
presidential campaign - $1 million of Hubert H. Humphrey's
costs and $400,000 of Robert F . Kennedy's expenses.
Officials of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), cur·
rently controlled by President Carter's political operatives,
last year mounted a major campaign to wipe out the deficit
·
prior to the 1980 presidential election .
The key to that effort was a formal decision by the Federal
Elections Commission (FEC) to grant the DNC a special exempllon from the federal law governing campaign financing
allowing the solicitation of unlimited amounts of money fro~
wealthy supporters.
"Fat cuts" closely identif!ed with both .Humphrey and
Curt~r responded mth somewhat less enthusiasm than party
offiCials had hoped for, but their contributions nevertheless
havs been substantial. Donations and pledges now total about
$750,000.
.
But DNC offi~ials privately are bitter about what they view
as an unwarranted rebuff of their request for assistance from ·
Step~en SnJ!th, who manages the Kennedy family's financespohllcal, philanthropic and personal- from the New York City
offices of anorganizati.on called the Park Agency.
·
" Personally, I'd like to see report cards
DNC Chairman John C. White "ran Into a stone wall when he
many of them are unsuitable reading for
tried to contact Smith for help, " Says orie Curter political ally
who is a party leader.
"The Kennedys didn't produce a single contributor," says
another DNC leader, "so we 've earmarked aU the money
'!"""" """" ;; ;.
we've gotten so far to pay the Humphrey bills. We'll be damn- -;"
1
ed if we'll use Humphrey money to retire Kennedy's debt."
.
Sen. Edw11rd M. Kennedy, IJ.Mass., Smith's brother-In-law
.
was invited to a private White House luncheon held last sum:
me;.for "fat cats".believed to be likely supporters of the debt .o1
retirement campaign. But Kennedy's brief visit was derided
by one Carter political operative as merely "a cameo ap-

*'

~~I

Sermonette
..

banned
parents."

I feel strongly that

EdltO
•"****************'*'*'********-""~"'lt.l'
.rza
.•. l. Q n ln
• lO
• ns ;,

Livestock Report

Athens livestock Sales
10,1979
Feeder Steers (400 -800
; lbs .). Choi ce 78.50-84 .50;

r

"

Soturd~~:;.~;

. In I Samuel 20:11. we find tbe8e words : "Thou llhalt be
missed, because thy seat will be empty."
These are tralic words to con18nPI8te.
In Meigs County and in communities all acrosa tile lan!l
there are a grest many empty church pews week after week.
An empty church pew is truly one of the 118ddest and DIOIII ·
revealing sight.s imaginable. There Ia IIODletblng about that old
deserted bench that appears lifeless and ~d. Yet It speab
with a voice·, loud enough for all the world to hear.
An empty church pew says something about the members l
. of the church. It says something about the kind ol people we '
are, and the maMer of life we follow. It says something about
what we place our value on , and to what we pledge our ,
allegiance. It min'ors our character - clearly tmd ·•
w\mistakably.
:
An empty church pew also suggests something about the
church service itself. It whispers that It may be dull and
. listless when It ooght to be challenging and vital. It suggests
the spiritual climate Ia not what It should be. It Ia a sipllor
help, for more spirited participation by everyone Involved.
Then finally, an empty church pew 8IIIIOUliCea to all the
world just·how much we love our Lord. In essence, it Pl'oclaims
that we really don't care about the agony of Gethaemane or the
suffering of Calvary. We do not care that "God so lo.ved the
world." (John 3:16).
.
Yes, an empty church pp speaka loud and Clear.
Someon~ once remarktt!l, "The rule in the Arllly Is all
present and accounted for." The same rule shotild be effective
in the Anny of the Lord.
In Hebrews 10:24.25 we read : "And let us conotrl.or nn,.
another to provoke unto·love and to good works : not forsaking
the assembling of ourselves, as the maimer of some Is.''
There Is a church pew sam.Where in which you belong.
' 'Thou shall be missed, because thy seat will be empty.''
;
Don't let this be the story of your life. Let's be in church! Rev. Richard Thomas, pastor of the Alfred, Chester, Long •,
Bottom an!,! Tuppers Plains United Methodist Churches.
·•

MEIQS VARSITY BASKETBALL SQUAD Members of the Meigs Varsity squad are front , 1-r, Greg
Becker, Dan Thomas, Cliff Kennedy, Britt DOdson and

Although the luncheon hosted by the president was supposed
to have been secret, unwanted publicity forced the Justice
Department and FBI to conduct an investigation into allega.
lions that the party violated a seldom-enforced federal law
Attorney General Griffin B. Bell's recent report on that probe cleared Curter of any illegal activity, but raised questions
about both the thoroughness of the investigation and the ethics
of the president's aides .
·
Citing FEC recordS, the report identified only four lunch
guests as donors , giving a total of $155,000. Four other guests,
however, pledged to collectively contribute another $225 000 to
the debt retirement lund.
'
Federal agents assigned to the investigation Interviewed
DNC of~icials who·were fully a~are of the additional pledges,
yet Bell s report contains no mention of that money.
Among the luncheon guests who have not yet made dona·
lions was Armand Hammer, board chalnnan of the Occidental
Petroleum Corp., who three years ago pleaded guilty to
federal charges related to illegal political contributions.
Hammer illegally concealed a $54,000 donation to Richard
M. Nixon 's 1972 presid~nlial campaign fund , lied to a Senate
comnuttee about the gift and tried to have his contribution
listed as another man's gift .
·
But that undistinguished record didn 't disqualify Hammer
from hemg Carter's guest at the White House.
·

r--=

Names ••• .
in the news

ATLANTA (AP) - Billy Curter's wife, ::;you, has undergone
tests for phlebitis and was enjoying the "peace and quiet" at
St. Joseph's Hospital, a nursing supervisor says.
"She's up and around, sneaking to the snack bar and so
forth," nursing superyisor Sally Allen said Thursday.
. Mrs. Curter was admitted to the hospital Wednesday after
she c;omplalned of pain and swelling in her 'right leg, said a
hospital spokeswoman, who asked not to be identified. ·
The tests were conducted early Thursday, but the results
. had not been completed by late Thursday, Mrs. Allen said.
There was no indication how long Mrs. Curter would be hos.
pitalized or whether further tests would be needed.
NEWYORK ( AP) - Superman was there but he didn't come
to the rescue of Studio 54 owners Steve Rubell and Ian
Schrager when fire officials almost shut down the trendy dis·
co's Valentine party.
Christopher Reeve, star of film "Superman,". was ali-eady
inside early Thursday' when tbe owners were ordered to
remove $50,000 wotth of fountains , tulip beds and benches from
the disco's entranceway.
Rubel! yelled "harassment" as deputy fire chief Elmer
Chapman supervised the removal of the decorations by the
disco's busboys, some nearly undressed as CUpida, with curly
wigs and little angels' wings on their backs.
But the party continued inside and Schrager later admitted,
" I do not feel we were being harassed."
BRISBANE, Australia (AP ) - "lt' l got upset every time
some little groupie tries to get her photo taken with Rod, I
would end up with a lot of grey hairs," said Alana Hamilton of
reports linking rock singer Rod Stewart with former Miss
World Belinda Green.
Actor George Hamilton's former wife arrived in Brisbane
today to join Stewart, who is on a singing tour of Australia and
New Zealand.
•

Poet's Comer
A HAPPY REUNION
The stone has rolled away
Jesus went up to Heaven
What a reunion between Father and Son
He look my sin ; He look my pain
He gave me happiness and joy
The Lamb of God, the Savior of Man.

(400 -700
69·74.50 ; Good

Pipeline cannot fill
gap caused by Cl,ltoff

41 ·68.
Feeder Bulls (400-800 lbs . ),
Choice 7J.87.5Q; Good 59.7572.50.
Slaughter Bulls (Over 1.000
lbs . 1 58.50.
·
Slaughter Cows, Utilities
49·56.80 ; Canners and Cutters
~ 7 . 50 -47 ..

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Veal s Choice and Prime )

78-85.
Baby Ca lves (by the head)
By MARK POITS
about $2 to the going rate of case of an emergency - such 38-93.
&lt;Hogs)
AP Business Writer
$13.30 per 42-gallon barrel of as the oilfield fire in Saudi
Hogs (No . 1, Barrows and
NEW _ YORK (AP)
oil. The oil compani~ must Arabia two years ago. Deputy Gi lts, 200-230 lbs .) 52·53.25 .
Despite reports last year of a absorb that additional cost, Energy . Secretary John
Sows 43.25·48.
Boars 34.50.
possible glut, oil flowing CUrtis said.
O'Leary has likened the
through the Alaska Pipeline
Before political strife situation to "a dynamite train · Pigs (by the head) 25-49.
I Lambs)
has been allocated for U.S. closed Iran's oil fields late heading to"'ard a fire down
Slaughter Lambs 68-69 .
use and 'capnot fill the gap last year, that naUon was the tracks."
Ohio valley Livestock Co.
created by the Iranian oil producing about 5 percent of
Prices taken from the auction
cutoff, industry analysts say. the oil used by the United
of Saturday. February 10,
"Every bit of Alaska oil States and about 10 oercent ·
1979
that could be produced has used by the non-communist Saturday, Feb. 17
Trends: Cows 52 to 53
higher . Feeder cattle steady.
been marketed . It 's not world. Although oil from
Veals s1ead( .
sitting in tanks someplace," other nations has ,made up for
.
Tot a Head : 315
said Pitt CUrtis, a spokesman more than half of the former · B
·
B
d
0
1
Feeder Steers (Good and
for. Standard Oil Co. of Ohio, flow of Iranian oil, gov.
ermce e e so
chol.ce) 250 to 300 lbs. 65 to
100; 300 to 400 lbs. 60 .50 to 99 ;
which controls 53 percent of ernment officials' and
400 to 500 lbs. 63 to 97; 500 to
the oil reserves at Prudhoe analysts . are
urging
600 lbs. 60.50 to 82; 600 to 700
Bay, the pipeline's northern conservation to
avoid
lbs. 57.75 to 72.50; 700 lbs. and
end. "There never was . a problems if Iranian oll
up 49.50 to 65.75.
Feeder Hei fers : (Good l!lnd
production does not 'resume.
crude oil glut."
choice) 250 to 300 lbs. 61.50 to
The pipeline, an $8 billion
The
United
States
85; 300 to 400 Ibs. 57.50 to 85;
project, opened two years ago consumes about 20 million
400 to 500 lbs. 57.50 to 83; 500
and is pumping 1.2 million barrels of oil a day. About
to 600 lbs. 55 to 75; 600 to 700
February 17, 1979
barrels of crude oil a day into half . that is produced Be pat ient with yo ur impor tant . lbs. 57.75 to 65 ; 700 lbs. and up
the lower 48 states, abo~! 6. domestically, incl'uding plans th is com ing yea r. Thi ng s 47.25 to 70.
Feeder Bulls !Good and
percent of U.S. consumption . Alaska and offshore fields. may sta rt off too slowly to suit choice
) 250 to 300 lbs. 69.50 to
By law, Alaska oil cannot be About 45 percent comes from yo u and you cou ld want to 97.50; 300 to 400 lbs. 65.50 to
exported, except for small foreign countries other than chang£? the m. Hang in there - 95 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 62 .50 to 94:.
amounts to Canada and Iran, mainly Saudi Arabia. everyth in g will work itself out. 95; 400 to 500 lbs. 62.50 to 94;
AQUARIUS (Jan . Heb. 19) Be . 500 to 600 lbs. '61 to 86.50; 600
Me:Dco.
Experts say the cutoff of oil prepar ed to handle thm gs o n to 700 ibs. 53.50 to 82.50; 700
Oil from the North Slope from Iran is potentially as your owri today il an all y sud- lbs. and up 47 .75 to 62.
.
Slaughter Bulls (Over 1,000
flows through the pipeline to serious as the 1973-74 Arab oil de nly le ts you down . There is a
the A!aska port o!Valdez and embargo, especially if the possibi lity he mig ht. Fin d out ibs. ) 47.50 to 62.90.
Sla ughter Cows: Utilities 47
whic h signs yo u are compa tib le
IS shipped to pomts on the flow of crude oil from Iran
to
57 .90 ; Canner and Cutters
wilh by se ndin g for you r Copy
West Coast, where the supply does not resume within of
the all·new Astro·G raph" Let- 30 to 51.50.
Vea ls: Choice and prime
far outpaces demand. This several months.
te r lor 1979 . Mal l $1 fo r each and
led to fears of an oil glut last
The loss oflran.as a source a lo n g . se l f - addressed . 72.50 to 107 ; Standards and
Medium s 20 to 99.
of oil means a lack of reserve stampe d envelope to Astrasummer.
Hogs
. Larry Goldstein, an econo· oil that might be used in the graph . P.O . Box 489 . Radio Ci ty
Hog s: (No. 1. Barrows and
Station . N .Y. 10019 . Be sure to Gi lts, 200-230 lbs.) 49.25 to
m1st at the Petroleum
specify birth s1g n .
51.50.
Industry Research
PISCES (Feb. 2D·March 20) Be
Butcher . Sows 43.50 fo 47.
Foundation, an industry
.'' Marrunon' ' is no"t found in ex tr emely. cognizant of details
Butc her Boars 32 to 37.25.
group, said the tenn "glut" the Old Testament but is to day if yo u're involved in any
Pigs (by th e head) 17.50 to
was misunderstood. "All it said to have been the name · type o f co mplicated financ ial 52.
means is that the local mar. for " riches" Brl'!Ong the tra nsac tion . The fine print can
pack a wa llop .
ket on the West Coasi can't Hebrews. As a well-known AR
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) IES !March 2t·Aprll 19)
· absorb all it gets, so you send Phoeniciah trade word, it is Wh en making a,g reements Direct hogs ( Fed..State) :
used without change in New today . guard agai nst. a tend- Barrows and gilts .25 higher,
it elsewhere."
The extra oil - about Testament Greek. Milton ency to give up more than i s demand good. U.S. 1·2, 200.
made Mammon the demon necessary Be fair and equ ita500,000 barrels a day - is of
230 lbs. country points, 54.511cupidity, one of the fallen ble - but atso se nsible .
shipped by tanker through angels.
54.75,
few at 55, plants, 55TAURUS !April 20-May 20) Pul
the Panama Canal to the Gull
import ant tas ks at the top al 55.50. u.s. 1-3, 230,250 lbs.
and
East
coasts.
.. ... ye cannot serve God your age nda today and take country points, 53.75-54.50,
Transportation costs add and Mammon." Matt. 6: 24. care of them fir st You lose plants, 54.25-55.25.
stea m and interest as the day
Rec eipts Wednesday :
wanes .
Actuals
7290 ,
today's
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Your
7000.
estimates
' reaso ning is ve ry logica l and
Cattle, from Columbus
progress ive today , but yo u
cou ld run into problems in Producers Livestock Co·
att emp ts to translate your operative Association, 1·3
ideas into ac ti on
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Silu- higller. Slaughter steers _and
atio ns you manage for oth ers yearlings, choice ~.50, top
~oda y yo u will ha ndle very of 69.10, good ~. BuDs
effic ientl y, but you· re no t likely market steady-2 higher, 60
to co me o ff as we(l in a dm inis~ and down .
tering you ~ persona l affairs .
Veal calves, choice and ·
LEO !July 23·Aug. 22) Thi nk
100 and down.
prime
pos itive ly to day. but do be
Sheep
and Iambe steady,.
real isti c, Th ere i s a fine line
bet ween wishful thi nki ng and 3.50 higher, old sheep -41.50
opti mism which you must not and down .

ASTRO.GRAPH

Be.rry's World

Sciatica is
.a symptom
DEAR DR. LAMB - The
doctor has told my husband
he has sciatica, as he has so
much pain in his right leg and ·
1\ip. Do you have any in· ,
formation on 'this problem ·
that you can give me?
DEAR READER- Sciatica ,
Is a nonspecific term. It is
related to pain in the hip,
down the back of the thigh,
sometimes to the back and
side of the calf, and to the
foot. Basically, it 's a symp.
tom and you have to look
beyond that to see what is
causing the problem.
The pain can be. caused
from some irritation or in·
flammation of the sciatic
nerve wipch runs to the areas
I mentioned. In about 90 per·
cent of the cases of
''sciatica," the Problem is
related to the spine itself.
Thi&amp; can be either because of
arthritis, disease in the in·
travertebral disc or some
disease in the sacroiliac joint.
· Pain is usually the most
prominent symptom. Depen·
ding upon which nerves are
involved, there may be lack
of sensation, tinglings and
other syinptoms including the
sensation of "pins and
needles." It's not necessary
to have these symptoms,
however, and still have irrila·
lion of the sciatic nerve with
pain.
How should it be treated]
That depends entirely upon
what is causing the irritation
of the sciatic nerve. If it hap·
pened to be external com·
pression of the nerve, for any
reason, some of these can be
corrected. A good example
here IJiight be a ruptured disc
in the lumbar spine area . '
Most cases are benefited by
physiotherapy, ·others re·
quire surgery.
The next time you see your
doctor ask him what's causing the sciatica and perhaps

he 'll have time to discuss that
with you as well as what
might be done in your hus· '
band's particular case.
'Since sciatica is often caus·
ed by osteoarthritis,! am sen·
ding you The Health Letter
number 4-10 to give you more
i!lformation about this com· .
mon problem. Others who ·
want this issue can send 50
cents with a long , stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
it. Send your request to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB- Please
explain an abdominal
aneurysm. Can it be seen
visibly? I have a lurilp the
size of a marble about five in·
ches to the right of my navel
and have had for four years.
My family doctor says it
might be a cyst. I am con·
cerned because my father
died of an abdominal
aneurysm at age 57. I am a
male, age 47.
.
DEAR READER - An
aneurysm of the abdominal
aorta means a saccular
dilatation of the main artery
in front of the spine. It supples .all the abdominal
organs. This saccular dilata·
lion occurs because the wall
of the aorta weakens.
You can see or feel an abdominal aneurysm if · it's
large enough, and some .of
them can become fairly
large. You may not see smaU
ones except with X·ray
studies. Since the aorta is just
in front of the spine, there are
a lot of abdominal organs in
front of it. Wben an abdominal aneurysm becomes
visible, it's usually a fairly
central, rounded mass. It's ·
not something you'd expect to
see as far as five inches to the
side ofthe navel.
I have no way of knowing
what your lump may !Je, but
it could be a small, fatty
tumor or a cyst, as your doctor has suggested.

Hunches or long shots should
not be allowed to take preced·
ence ove r your practica lity
tod ay. Gambles cou ld prod uce
se rious goo t~ up s.

The more you give God
Your reward lies in Heaven
Happy a person where his treasure is
He wants you now
He says come home and enter in the Gates of Pearl
With the Lamb of God, the Savior of Man

LIBRA !Sept. 29-0ct. 23) Enjoy
yourself today becau se _yo u are
entitled to " · but strive to do so
as inexpensively as possible.
Su ppress extrava gant urges .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)

He look my place on a Cross at Mount Culvsry
He died instead on Golgotha hill.
But I'll live in Heaven with Jesus, for with Jesus I've been set
free
When we stand before the Son and lake our crown we have woo
What a reunion in Heaven one day
So live for God in your life and go to Heaven on that day
With the Lamb of God, the Savior of Man
·.
Chorus:
He took my place on a Cross at Mount Calvary
He died instead on Golgotha hill
But I'U live in Heaven with Jesus
For Jesus paid the cost.

Kee p spec ific objectiv es in
mind today H you ho pe to
perforni prOductively . Go off on
tange nts and it' ll be extremely
difficult to get back on th e '
track .

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc.
!tl Some imporlani intormallon
may be relayed to you loday. 11

" According to tonight 's schedule, EVERY·
THING is a take-off on 'Animal House'."

By Patly He•ler

Box • B, bcbie, Ohio 45771
\

'--------;:------...:..---;--'--...J

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' The Daily

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FUNNY BUSINESS

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Sentinel -

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DEVOTED TO THE
INTEIIEITOF

'••
_,

MEIGS.MASON AI!EA

-,,

ROBERT HOEFIJCII
()ty Edllor

DAVII) BUSKIRK
AmrtlliQ Mau1er
Publi•hed dally en'ept Saturday•
by The Ohio Volley PubU..I&gt;ng
Company·MulUmedla, Inc.,
111
Court Sf., Pomeroy, Ohio 45719.
Businea Office Phone 112- me.
Edllorlal Phone 9112-21~7.
.
Second class postage' paid at
Pmiti'O)', Ohio.
1
National adverttJlng represen.
tatlve, Landon Auoclatea, 8101
Eudki Ave~aevetand~.,Oillo 1411~. 1

, Till"lt"s-.~n1int'l.

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!USPS lf5.,.)

would be a mistak e to try to
Subscrt on rates: ueUvered by
commit it to memory . Jot it
carrier w
availllble 75 centa per
down tor luture reference.
· week. By Motor Route.where carrier'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Z·Jon. 19) ,......, IIIII available', One monlb,
·Busines s situations you per· . 13.2$. ll)l 'fboll In Ololo and W. Va.,
One v"'!, 127.50; Six lllOillha;
sonally co ntrol should prove
' 14.50; ;l'nret month1, ...SG;
profitable toda~. However, il · .EisewherYa2.1111
year: Six IIIOIIIhl
outsiders edge irlto the ac t the
.• 11.00; '!lt!ree month•. tt.OO.
pic tur~ cou ld change .
Sutl!ICrlpt.loo price includet Sundly
!N EWSPAPER ENTERPFUSE ASSN.)

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cross.

VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

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JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL SQUAD .Members of the Meigs Junior Varsity squad are front 1-r
Mike Miller, Chris Judr,e; back,_ Jeff Wayland, B~ia~

Swann, Tony Scott; Todd Snowden and David Kennedy.
Absent were Kevin Smith and David Iarmarelli. Th e coach
is Jesse Vail.

Upset-minded Gophers lose, 74-68 sPORTS

..

H*************************************•*'***•~ lbs.
Go~~e~~~O·rJelfers
), Choice

pearance."

Chuck Kennedy; back, Bob Ashley, Steve Ohlinger , Tom
Hawley, Ray Andrews. and Rick Blaettoar. Absent.was
Chris Yeauger. Coach of the squad Is Ron Loflan.

••

, ,'J If

·-- ~ .
&gt;

-'

By SCOI'T PAPU..LON
AP Sports Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
Th ·e victory- s tarv e d
Minno:s&lt;&gt;ta Gopher~ had the
equalizers. to Ohio Slate,'s
Herb Williams and Kelvm
Ransey Thursday mght , as
theyhoundedthe 171J_I-ranked
Buckeyes until the fmal seconds m their bid for an upset.
But the Gophers ~ad no.an·
swer for reserve Mike Clme,
who came. off .the ~nch to
score 14pomt.s, mclu"ding four
crucial f~ee throws . m the_
BuckeyeS ~4-68 B1g Ten
lnumph, which kept them
lied for first place.
"Mike hail a great game
, tonight ," said hi s coach ,
. Eldon
. Miller. "He works
hard, but then, aU our players
work hard."
·
Williams look team scoring
honors with 26 points and the
6·10 cente r added 12
rebounds, but Minnesota 's
Kevin .McHale scored a

ga~e-high 28 pomts, and
hauled down 13 rebounds.
Ohio Slate's flashy Ransey
had 20 points, but freshman
Darryl Mitchell responded
mth 17 for !fie Gop~ers.
When It came to Clme, however, Mmn eso ta had no
counter.
The 6-4 guard, a three-year
letter-winner and one of only
two semors on the Y.outhful
Buckeyes, dro~ed m _two
free throws with time expired
at the e~d of the firm half. to
give . Oh10 Slate a f1ve-pomt
C~IOn at 35-30. .
H1s fast-break JUmper put
the Buckeyes ahead by seven
with less than seven minutes
to play in the second half and
he also scored the final two
points .of the game, hitting
another pair of free throws
with 22 seconds left which
settled the issue.
"We just cannot get over
the hump," said Minnesota·
Coach Jim Dutcher; who saw

~SEo cage statistics

his . club lose ~~ seventh
straight game. I told the
· players, 'We' re not playing
bad baskeiball , we're just not
playing winning basketball."'
Dutcher praised · Williams,
who seemed to get every key
basket and rebound the Buck·
eyes needed.
"I hope the Cavaliers like
him and talk him into some·
thing . "
said ' Dutcher,
ref~rrmg to the fact he'd like
to see Williams, _who is only a
sophom ore, si gn a pro
coo tract , possibly with the
Clevela nd e ntry In the

Nat ional
sociation

Basketba ll As.

Bald win-Wallace shoots for a
perfect Ohio Conf e
" Herb '~ a great player· 1 season and Rio G drence
don't have to tell you ~ys wrap up the r~~deO~~n
1
10
t hat," Miller said to Conference title
reporters. "He 's a complete
The races ~ the Mid·
player, but his game is still in American, where Toledo and
his future, be cause h e's still a Central Michigan share the
developing player."
lead, and the HoosierThe victory left Ohio State Buckeye, where Defian ce has
at 10.3 in the Big Ten tied a one-half game edge on
with Iowa, which drop~d 9-4 Hanover, won't be decid ed
Purdue into a lie for second for at least another week.
with surging Michigan Sta te.
Ba ld win-Wa ll ace ca n
Minnesota .is 4·9.
breeze through the Ohio
Meanwhile, in Ohio college Conference regular season
basketball t his Wee kend , with 12 consecutive victllries
· with a decision over invadi g
n

An0 th er Fm
• Iey Kuhn
•' s.
co u rt ·b attle h egm
.

By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Two
years ago , Bowie Kuhn
publicly warned · owner
Charles 0 . Finley that he
would carefully review "any
player assignments of the
Oakland club which involve
substantial payments of cash
til the Oakland club."
That'•s why Kuhn ha s called
Finley and the New York
Yankees on the carpet today .
to explain the attempted sale
this week of two minor league
players by Oakland to the
world champions for a cool
half million dollars. .
Finley 's explanation will be
simple.
"I did it because I need that
money to meet my payroll,"
the A's owner said Thursday;
explaining the sale of catcher
Bruce Robinson and pitcher
Greg Cochran for $500,000.
" These two players are minor leaguers. Lusing them
.won't hurt my club at all. .
When George Steinbrenner
offered me $500,000 for these
two, I had to accept it. I
thought I made a pretty good
deal."
It would certainly seem·
, that way. Robinson 's major
league experience is limited
to 84 at bats with Oakland last
.
season;whenhe hit. 250.He

1978.7f BOYS' HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
. (lncludesga!llesthrough Feb. 10)
· OVERALL SCORING
NAME- TEAM
FG FT PTS !G) AVG.
Rick Penrock, Nelsonville-York 189 110 488 (15) 32 .5
Jim Hart, Federal Hocking
161 22 344 (17) 2M
Dan Spencer. Eastern
144 49 337 ( 111 19.8
Dick James, Ironton
127 47 31 3 ( 16) 19 .6
Herb Epling . Belpre
126 48 300 (16) 18.8
Von Taylor, Kyger Creek
137 45 299 (16) 18.7
Sam Smith, North Gall Ia '
125 30 280 (1 5) 18.7
Rob Norma n. Well ston
137 30 304 (17) 17.9
Todd Blake. Belpre ·
112 49 273 (16 ) 17.1
Dave Burgess, Mill er
128 44 300 (18 ) 16.7
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
NAME- TEAM
FG FT · PTS (G) AVG.
Rob Norman, Wellston
113 23 249 ' (13) . 19.2
DickJames. lronton
96
43 235 (131 18.1
Dave Lehman, Logan
64 45 173 (11) 15.7
Dave Evans, Jackson
62 56 180 (12) 15.0
David Mathews, Athen s
76
36 188 (13) 14.5
Gary Bentley, Athens
74 27 178 (13) u .2
Joe Fletcher. Iron ton
78 24 180 · (131 13.8
Greg Becker, Meigs
· 66 42 174 (13) 13.4
Jim Harris. Gall ipoli s
73 22 168 (13) 12.9
Joel Gordon, Waverly
59 32 150 1121 12.5
SOUTHERN VALLEY ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
NAME- TEAM
FG FT PTS (G) AVG.
Dan Spencer, Eastern ·
87 33 207 (lOJ 20.7
Von Taylor. Kyger Creek
72 26 170
(91 18 .9
· Sam .Smlth , North Gall Ia
65 8 148 . (8) 18 .5
Paul Shaffer, Hannan Trace
SO 27 127
(8) 15.9
Greg Nelson, ~uthwest ern
52 36 140
(91 15.6
Gene Layton. 5liuthwestern
57 35 151 (lD ) 15.. 1
Stacy Winston: ~orth Gallia
54 11 119
(8) 14.·9
Tim McComas. North Ga ll ia
48
17 119
(B)
14.9
JeffGqebei.Eastern
56
29 141 (1 0) 14.1 ,
Dave Foreman. Southern
45 19 . 109
(9) 12.1
SCOR'tNGMARGIN
Team
Margin
TEAMS RANKED
Ironton
. 14.8
DEFENSIVELY
Southern
12.3 TEAM
Pis. G Avg .
Athens •
1) .4 Waverly
826 17 48.6
Waverly
11.2 . Point Pleasant 666 13 51.2
Nolsonvllle-York
11.1 Nels .- York
834 16 52.1 Gallipolis
485 13 37.3
Gallipolis
8.1 Gallipolis
896 17 52.7
Athens
457 13 35.2
· 7.7 Ironton
861 16 53.8 Waverly
Point Pleasant
447 13 34.4
Ale xander ·
4.8 Athens
961 17 56.5 Wel lsfon
434 13 33.4
Belpre
4.2 VInton County
075 17 57.4 Logan
407 13 31.1
876. 15 58.4" J ackson
~ ll er
~2 .· Southern
397 13 30.5
Southwestern
O.B Federal Hock)ng 996 17 58.6
Meigs
336 13 25.8
Logan
.
·0.5 Alexander
' 1060 18 58.9
Persona l Fouls
North Gall Ia
-0.7 Logan
951 16 59.4 Team
No. G Avg.
Vinton County
·1.0 Eastern
1055 17 62.1 Meigs
190 13 14.6
!\l!lpre
994 16 62 .1 Jackson
Eastern .•
-3 .2
209 13 16.1
Wahama
-4.0 Southwestern ·10'10 17 64.1 'Waverly
2.16 13 16.6
1025 16 64.1 Athens
·4.2 Kyg er Creek
Federal Hocking
223 13 17.2
Warren
-4.7 Miller .
1158 18 64.3 Gallipoli s
239 13 18.4
Kyger Creek
-9.3 Warren
1029 16 64.3 Ironton
243 13 18.7
Meigs
-13.0 North Ga ll ia
1041 15 69.4 Well ston
245 13 18.8
980 14 70.0
.Trimble
-14.0 Wahama
Logan
249 13 19.2
1211 17 7f 2
Wellston
·14.8 Meigs
Individual Leaders
1227 17 72.2
Jackson
·16.8 Trimble
Field Goal Percentage
1193 16 74,6 Name, T.
Hannan Trace
·25 .2 Jac&lt;son
FGM-A Pet.
Well ston
1278 17 75.2 Gordop, Wav.
59· 97 .608
TEAMS RANKED
Hannan Trace 1200 15 80 .0
Holsinger.
W
av.
59·106
.557 ..
.
OF FE.NSIVEL Y
Mathews,
Alh.
76-137
.555
.
.
.
.
--. TEAM
Pis. G Avg .
)ames. Iron.
96- 179 .536
(Includes games of Feb. 10)
Southern
1060 .15 70.7
Clark.
Logan
63·118
.534
Team
Statistics
North Go lila
1031 15 68.7
"
Free
Throw
Percentage
.
Field
Goal
Percentage
Ironton
1097 16 68.6 .
FTM.A Pet.
Team
FGM-A Pet. ..arne, T.
Athens.
1154 17 67. 9 Waverly
45-51 .882
331-661 .525 lehman. Log.
Mill er
121 5 18 67. 5
Boeker , M.
41.61 .689
Athens
366·789
.464
Belpro
1061 16 66.3
36·33 .679
Ironton
397·859 .462 Ma'thews , Ath .
Wahoma
924 14 66.0 Gallipolis
T. Evan s. J.
42-63 .667
331.n1
.451
Southwestern 1103 17 64 .9 Logan
D.
Evans,
J
.
58·88
.659
306-693
.442
Alexander
1146 18 63.7
·
Rebounds
Wellston
331·781
.431
Nelsonv ille- York
No. G Avg.
Meigs
270·704 .384 Name , T.
1011 16 63.2 · Jackson
G&lt;:rdon , Wa v.
1.17 12 9.B
284·744
.382
Gallipolis
1033 17 60.8 ·
Clarke.
Ga
iT.
124
13 9:s
Fre-'
T
_
h·
r
ow
fl
rcentage
Wellston
1026 17 60.4
109 12 -9.1
FTM-A Pet. Gordon. iron .
.Waverly
1016 17 59.8 Team·
116 13 8.9
Logan
~
171 ·258 .663 Cameron , Gall.
Warren
954 16 59.6
Chonk o, Alh.
106 13 8.2
.
Waverly
137-211
:649
Eastern
1001 17 58.9
.. • 179·286 .626 Holsinger, Wa v. 106 13 8.2
Loaan
· · 943 16 58.9 Meigs
To be Included among
Gallipolis
1il6·234 .624
POTnt PIMsant 766 13 56.9
Indivi dua l leaders, a player
Athens
1
56·252
.619
Meigs
· ·
990 17 58.2
115·187 .615 must have made an aver age
Tr imble
990 17 58.2 Well ston
Ironton
·
134-219 ·.612 of three goals per game
Jackson
925 16 57.8
Jackson
168-294
.571 played ' by his team and -or
VInton County 958 17 56.4
attempted an av~r a ge of
Rebounds
Kyger Creek
877 16 54.8
three free throws per game
Team
.
No.
'G
Avg
.
Hannon Trace · 822 15 54.8
played·by his team.
Ironton
490
13
37.7
Federal Hocking 924 17 54.4

.

.

•

.

.

spent m os t of t he year
playing at Vancouver of the
Pacific Coasl League and
hatted .299. "! got $400,000 for
him ," said Finley. Cochran,
who was not even on the A's
major league roster, spent
1978 at Jersey City of the
Eastern Lel\gue where he
was 1().13 with a 3.41 earned
run average . .The Yankees
paid the other $100,000 for
him.
' ' Wh e n G e o r ge
SteinbreiU'ler asked me what
I wanted fo r these two. I told
him $500,000, not expecting

him to agree ," said Finley .
" But he did. I accepted
' immediately, before he had a
chance to change his mind. 1
needed the money and
George had it. I spent $228,500
on players in the June, 1978
free agent draft (of high
school
and
. college
prospects)."
The sale was completed on
Feb. 3, the day the Yankee
deal with Minnesota for Rod
Carew fell through. Carew
was subsequently traded to
California and Steinbrenner,
finding· himself with some
excess cash, turned to
Finley's shop, where he has
Thursday's Colle ge
Bas ketball Scores
done business before.
Bv The Associated Press
In June, 1976, Steinbrenner
East
attempted to purchase Vida
Bentley 92· Ma ssachusetts Blu e from Finley for $1.5 mil72
Fairfield 71. Hofstra 65
lion. Kuhn blocked that deal
Holy Cross 73, New as well as Finley's sales of
Ham ps hi re 5~
.
Joe Rudi and Rollie Fingers
Lafayette 71. Fordham 61 to Boston for $2 million more.
Niaga ra 11 2, Colga te 64
Noire Da me 86, Manhallan
In February 1977, the com63 .
missioner approved the sale
· Robert Morr is 71, E. of Paul Lindblad by Oakland
Tennessee St. 55
to Texas for $400 ,000 · but
Rulger s 88. Selon Hall 67 ·
Vermont 70, St. Mi chael's wa rned that he would
61
ca refully scrutinize future
Will iam Pate r son 83, player sales by the Oakland
Rutgers Camden 69
owner. Last January, Kuhn
South
E. Kent ucky 93 , w . Virgini a blocked the sa le of Blue to
91
·Cincinnati for $1.75 million
Fairmon t 87, She pherd 67 and at the time cited his
Florida Southern 102, Cent . ea r lie r wa rn ing .
Blue
Florida 90
Ga rd n e r . Webb
,
eventually
was
traded
toSan
121
Limes tone 82

Wittenber g, the pre-season
favor ite. The Yellow Jackets
a lready
ha ve
t::e
championship wrapped up.
Rio Grande's Redmen try
to boost their league record to
12·1 by winning against
visiting Ti ffin · tonight.
Malone (9·3), the only other
team still alive in the MidOhio title chase, is home for
Mo unt . Vern on Nazarene
Saturday.
In the Mid-America n,
Toledo entertains third-place
Ball Slate, while Central
Mic higa n awa its Western
Michigan. The leaders are 9-2
in th e league while the
Cardinals are 8-4.
In other Mid-America n
con tests Sat urda y, Miami
plays at Bowling Green in the
regionally televised ma tch
(PBS-TV , 12 noon EST), Ohio
Unive rsity is at Easte rn
Michigan, and Kent State at
Northern lllinois.
Elsewhere among Ohio's
ma jor sc hools, Cincinnati
visits Florida State in the
Metro Conference, Dayton
entertains Rollins and Xavier
plays at Valparaiso.
Defiance ( 11·31 ha s gone
ahead of Hanover (1().3 ) in
t he ir Ho os ier-Buckeye
strugg le. Defiance is home
for Anderson and Hanover
entertains Wilmington. The
big game will be Hanover at
Defian ce Feb. 24.
In other Ohio games Saturday, Akronisa t Wright State,
Gannon at Youngstown State,
Shaw at Central State, Dyke
a t As hlan d, Capita l a t
Denison, He idelberg a t
Kenyon, Marietta at Wooster,
Ohio
Nort hern
at
Muskingum, Ohio Wesleyan
at Moun t Union, Oberlin at
Otterbein, Ea rl ham at
Bluffton, Findlay at Taylor ,
Thiel at John Carroll , Hiram
at Washington &amp; Jefferson,
Case Reserve at Bethany,
Walsh at Ohio Dominica n,
Tiffin at Eastern Kentucky
and Cedarville at Urbana.

·

Th e Daily Sentinel

I

Bobca.ts snap
losing streak .
Led by Jon Thompson's 27
points, Coach Keith Carter's
Bobcats
Kyge r· Creek
snapped an eight game losing
· streak Thursday afternoon,
72-59 over Elk Valley of
Kanawha County, W. Va.
Thompson ha d 12 fie ld
goa ls and three foul shots
while teammate Von Taylor,
senior fo rwa rd, kept his
season average with a 19
point effort .
The Bobcats, in winning
t~ci r third game of the year.

Local Bowling

led 16·11 at the end of the first
period and 31·29 at the half.
When the third canto en·
ded, the Bobcats held a four
point advantage, 49-45, but
won gojng away with a 23
point fourth period.
Pacing the E lk Valley
attack were Mike Whit e and
Mike Tucci with 23 and 20
points respectively.
K,Yger Creek, 3·14, closes
ils regular season tonight
against Harman Trace.
Next Tuesday night, -the
Bobcats meet North GaUia In
the Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs High School.

Tri .(ounty League
Feb. 7, 1979

Te.am

Box Score

Pts.

Roach Gun Shop
Eag les Club
· Bi ll 's Body Shop

22
22
20

Elk Valley (5 9) - White 8] . 2J ; Connor 1-2-4,· Tucci 9·2-

20; Chandler 1-0-2; Evans 1·3·

~ox -p. J. J and Curt is 2-0·4 .
Tota ls 22-15-59.

5:

· Colum bia Nat . Li te
20
Kyger Creek 17 2)
H &amp; R Firestone
20 Westfall 11 -3; Taylor 9-1-19 ;
Pomer oy Cement Block
16 Thompson 12·3·27: Smith 5-l ·
High indivi dua l game - Ed
11 ; Gi lm ore2-0-4; Misner 1-0Voss 236; Bill Radford 222 ; 2; David Sands 2-0.4; Barr J.
M ose Norman 219.
0-2. Totals 33~- 72.
Hig h individu al J games By Quarter s:
Bill Radford 594 ; Ed Voss
Elk Va ll ey
11 29 45 59
578 ; Dale Davis 540.
• Kyger Cr eek
16 "31 " 72
High tea m game - Bi ll's
Body Shop 974 ; H &amp; R
F iresto ne 883 ; Co l umb ia
For •II your home
Nationa l Life BBl .
Entertainment and
High team 3 games- Bil l 's
Appliance Needs
Body Shop 2480 ; Colu mbia
Nat iona l Li fe 246 I : H &amp; R
Fires tone 2426.
DOXOL

SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
IV &amp; Apeliance
Gas Servtce

Nails were so preCIOUS in
the early West that buildings
were often burned down to
salvage the nails.

Racine, Ohlo
Chester, Ohio

HERE'S THE 015.
•

Francisco last Ma r ch for

Georgelow n, Ky. 83.
Cum ber la nd ao. ot
Hampton Ins!. 73, Fayette.
ville St. 66
illi nois St. 77." S. Alabama
70
·
Jac &lt;sonvill e St. 89. Troy 85
Norfolk St. 120, Shaw 62
NC.Charlotte 85, Georgia
St. 60
Old Dom in ion 72, Va ..
Comm onwea lth 71, of
S. Mississippi 86, Samford

seven players.
Ironically, on e of the
players F inley received from
the Giants in the Blue dea l
was
outfielde r
Gary
Thomasson, who later was
traded to the Yankees. On
Thur sctay,
New
Yo rk
swapped Thomasson to the
Lo
1 tJ d
f
s Arige es o gers or
15
catcher Brad Gulden, who,
Tenn .. Chattanooga 78, E. like Rubinson, was a standout
Carolina 77
receiver in the Pacific Coast
Tenn. Temple 9'/, Sewanee. League last year.
79
Wak e Fo rest 77, Ga.
Finley said he hoped for
Southern 69
Kuhn 's appr ova l after
Midwest
. today's hearing. "I need that
Cln cinn a I) 88, Tula ne 66
money to keep my checks
Creighton 87, Bra dley 81
E. Illinois 82, N. M ichigan

64

from

bouncin g,,

explained.

Illinois 81. Wiscon s in 64

he

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means it'll start work
whe n you do. Every lime.
2. 'A "no-thumbs:· fully
automatic chain oiler
lets you concentrate on
cutting . Not ojling.

Hot chamber magne·

5. It's been designed to

SlUm die-casting makes the last at leam twice as long a.5

housing tougher. And the
whole saw lighter,
4. Balanced fuel and oil
tank capacities keep you
from having to refill one
when there's still plenty
in the other.

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6. And by lasting twice as
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'

�&amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb. 16, 1979
4-The Dailv Sentinel, Middlenorf -Pomeroy, 0 .. Friday, Feb: !6, 1979

.

·

··

By KEN RAPPOPORT
guard made two free tnrows.
AP Sporlll Writer
Then
UCLA 's , Kiki
Those Hollywood endings Vandeweghe stole . the
are all the same: It's UCLA inbounds pass from Artzona
every time it seems
State's Tony Zeno and was
By Will Grimsley
Hard to beat any..;here _ fouled by Zeno in . the
AP Correspondent
but almost impossible at resulting action . Vande~egbe
Fortwomenwhomake - andmade - ~elrllvingwiththelr
home _ the second,..anked made two sl:tots to tie tbe
legs, it was an unusual experience for Dave Jennings and Jim
Bruins turned an apparent game at 83 with seven
Taylor to be pulling oars in the rowing row-off of the Super loss into a victory at Pauley seconds to play. .
Stars competition in the balmy Bahamas.
Pavilion TIIUrsday · night,
Blake Taylor nussed a ~
Taylor, the superbly conditioned old running back of the beating ·Arizona State ~ foot shot for the Sun Devils
Green Bay Packers, unleashed a mighty finishing apurl and with
some
lategame with five seconds to play and ·
beat out Jennings, of the New York Giants, by a whlaker,
theatrics.
Zeno fouled Holland on tbe
The disappointed Jennings pulled,hls boat ID shore and, head
, 'We had the game rebound.
down, started dtsconsolately toward the lOcker room.
absolutely
won "
said
"There was no doubt that
" That's okay, Dave," sympathizedmustachioed Ben David· Arizona State c;,;ach Ned Brad Holland was fouled, "
son, the former Oakland Raider. "At least you lost to another Wulk stunned by the dra- said UCLA Coach Gary
football player."
,
mati~ turn of events. "It·was Cunni.ngham . "The only
" l'm not a football player," replled Jennings bitingly. "I'm a
completely disheartening to question . ~as, had lime
punter."
lose
Ever thin
was · expired?"
Then the National Football League's fourth best kicker hapPening at
oth~ end of
It hadn't - and the call
turned to a friend and added :
the court and we couldn't get went
UCLA 's
way .
"It's funny, but nobody considers \IS kickers to be athletes- any Information to the W he reu po n, H o 11 and
neither punters nor field goal kickers. Because we get into the )
Ia ers ,
converted both shots with
game only to do our specialty and don't have much contact, P ~hat· ha ened
was many UCLA fans hanging exthey look upon us as fat cats.
certainly enot.ft. to frustrate pectantly at the rim of the
"I really resent it. After all, we are as much a part of the
any coach
court. Holland sank the first
gameasanybody.Alotofpeoplesayquarterhacksalsoarenot
The.SU0Devilshadan83-79 sh?l of the one~nd-&lt;&gt;ne situathletesbecauseofthewaytheyarecoddled.Butthat'salotof lead with nine seconds left
allan for the wmnmg pomt,
but fouled Roy Hamilton ai then put in the other while the
baloney ."
Jennings, a 6-foot-4, 205-pound athletic specimen out of New
this point and the UCLA UCLA fans swarmed around
York~s St. Lawrence University, put lila money where his
him at the foul 1iPP
mouth was by beating out some of foothall's most talented per·
formerstogalnthefinalsoftheannualSuperStarsevent.
.

:I:'

J:.

•·we JUSt have to '!lake it
exciting, I guess," satd Vandeweghe .
. Elsewh~re, to~anked Indiana State remamed undelea ted after 24 games,
beatin_g Southern Illinois 69·68 ; thirdranked Notre Dame
blasted Mahattan 86-63; No . 8
Mtchtgan State stopped
lnd~ana 59-47;
No. .9
I,ouisvllle tnpped St. L~UIS
71!-62; No. 14 Iowa turned
!lack No. 13Purdue 7f&gt;-72 and
No. 17 Ohto State stopped
Minnesota 7~ .
UCLA , the Pac-10 leader
with .a n 11-2 ~ecord and 19-3
overall, tratled 40-27 at
1halft!flle before rallying to
take the lead lat~ in the
game. Then the Bru~s lost lt
for a ~hll~ b_efore theu' heartstoppmg fmish.
.
"Luck was just wtth us
!Dnight," said Cunningham.
"I felt my team thought the •
game was over (when they
were do"!~ by four points in
the last nme seconds.) But I
never fell we were out of the
game . I never do . I've seen

teams win like that_in the last
":fCOI1ds. For one of the. few.
times this year, everythmg I
planned In the end worked
out.
· " It was one of the greatest
victo~ies
. I've
,ever
eXPerienced m college.
Larry Bird scored 20 points
and Steye Reid sank two free
throws m the final14 seconds
tD seal Indiana Stale's vict~ry
over .Southern Illinois .
" We feel .we .are ·as. good as
anyone on a gtven rught and
on a neutral court and, on this
night, better than UCLA, "
said Indiana State Coach Bill
Hodges after the game at
Carbondale, m.
Hodges said the criticism
his team has· received about
pl~ying . a soft schedule is
unJustified.
"The people who are saying '
that haven't done their research," he stated . "Purdue
is as tough as ~nyone in the
nation to beaton its home
court,
.a
task
we
accomplished early in the
year."

1

I US •

Blrd'a point total moved Conrad's !!&gt;fool jumPer at
him . past _Notre Dame's th~ . buzzer gave Old DoAustin Carr mto etghth pll;tce mttnon a 72-71 overt!"!•
~the NCAA all.tlRle scormg victory
over Vlrgtn~a
list.
Commonwealth; ·Ronme
Kelly Tripucka's 18 points ·Perry's 32 points triggered
led a balanced attack as Holy Cross over ~e~
Notre
Dame
defeated Hampshire T.h58 and lllinolS
outmanned Manhattan in the defeated Wisconsin . 81~ as
second
game
of
a Mark Smith scored 14 points.
doubleheader at New Y~rk's
Also, Frank Johnson scored
Madison Square Garden. 15 points as Wake F~rest de·
Rutgers beat Seton Hall~ lea ted Georgia Southern 77in _the first game 11': James 69 ; Pat CllrD'!Iings scored 28
Batley scored 29 pomts and points , leadmg .Clncmnah
grabbed 9 rebounds.
over Tulane~; Ron Jones
Earvin "Magic" Johnson Bli«! Derrick Mayes combined
scored 15 points to lead Mich- for 39 points ID pace Illinois
igan State past Indiana ..The State over South ·Alabama_77Spartans scored etght 70; Ken Williams' · 27 pomts
straight points to break a 36- led Houston over Texas Tech
30 halftime tie and never 103-89; Keith smith had a
were headed._ .
ca,reer-bigh 22 points to lead
. Darrell Griffith scored 15 ·Mtchlgan over Northwestern
points and Larry Williams 78-67; James Tillman scored
added 14, leading Louisville 34points, including the gameover St. Louis, nailing down winning jumper with ll
the Metro Conference title for
seconds left, ID lift Eastern
the Cardjnals.
.
Kentucky over Wesi'Virglnia
"It's the most aggresstve 93-91 and Mike Gray and
and hardest we've played in
Johnny High teamel\ for 48
2-3 weeks," said Louisville points as Nevada-Reno held · ·
COach Denny Crum . "We had
off a late San Francisco )
been in a mental slump.
charge to heat the Dons 87-83.
Defense . is a mental thing .

;.;. .

"Kickers even take some razzing from the other players,"
Jennings said. "Butit'sall part of the game. I work out as hard
as anybody. ! run, play racquet ball, lift weights. I keep in top
shape."
Who among our high-priced professional sports stars are the
·
best all-around athletes?
It's a question that Dick Button, the former world and
Olympicflgure skating king, hoped IDsettle when he conceived
the Super Stars idea in 1973 and sold it to ABC-TV and Mark
McCormack's TransWorld International Group.
The package became more of a TV spectacular than a hardnosed contest but from its inception it has attracted some of
the world's best athletes and considerable fan interest. Tbe
1979 finals will be concluded on ABC-TV Sunday 2-3:15 p.m.
EST.
·

·

.

.

BY GARY CLARK
Jeff Goebel and Brian
Bissell calmly sank seven of
eight free thr,ow attempts in
the waning seconds Thursday
night to give the Eastern
Eagles a narrow 60-56 win
OV'lJ: the Wahama White
Falcons in a rescheduled
game from last Friday
evening.
E 1 ·
d
The age VIctory avenge
a one-point 67..00 Wahama
triwnph in the two teams
initial contest earlier this
season at Eastern.
The loss dropped the White
Falcons season record to 5-10
and virtually defeated any
hopes of 8 •500 year. Five
contests remain on the locals
card with the Ravenswood
Red Devils scheduled as the

.

·
over in the final16 minutes to
threaten to make the game a
runaway.
With the start of the final
ebeig~t minuktes, Wahtamth.a
gan to rna e a run a
e
visitors by outscoring the
Eagles l0-41D trail by four at
52-48 with three minutes
remaining .
The • White
Falcons cut the lead down to
twoat55-53butacombination
of costly Wahama turnovers
and some clutch foul shooting
by Goebel ad Bissell gave
·
Eastern the victory.
.
Although the Eagles'
placed four men in double
figures, it was Wahama's
Tim Roush who came away
with game high scoring
honors with 17 points.
Eastern's Dan Spencer was
the game's top rebounder
with 16.
Following Roush in scoring
was Gary Rlchrads with 15,
while Todd Rawlings notched
1 ~. Rick Bal11itz, the White

next oppooent.
Eastern outscored the
White Falcons by a 17 •14
margin during the first
period with Todd Rawlings
and Tim Roush notching six . Falcons leading scorer, was
points .each for Wahama, held to just 3 points on the
while Dan Spencer and Brian night which is' well below his
Bissell added . six markers 15 .4 per game average .
Scoring for the winning
Eagles showed Brian Bissell
apiece for the Eagles.
In somewhat of a low
...
wi
5 in
scoring second canto, and·uene Cole th 1 po ts
Eastern added 10 its lead by each while Spencer added 12
and Goebel 11 .
winning the quarter, 14-10
f
Leading rebounders or
and take a 31-24 lead into the
Wahama were Vince Weaver
dressing room at the half.
wi
Wahama continued to trail with 11 and~ Roush th 7·
Team statistics show
the visiting Eagles following Eastern with a 41 percent
intermission and feU behind shooting mark from the floor
by 10 at 48-38 as the third while converting on 67 perquarter came ,to an en&lt;). cent from the line. The
While Spencer and Bissell Eagles had a total of 34
carried the Eastern scoring rebounds and committed iust
load In !he first half, Gene five turnovers.
Cole and Jeff Goebel took
Wahama shot 8 dusmal 34
percent from the field and a
poo r 56 percent from the
charity stripe. TheBendArea
team hauled down a total of
33 rebounds while com·
milling 11 turnovers.

Mike Lum
now Brave

· ATLANTA ( AP) - There 's
more ID baseball than money,
Mike Lilm says.
Lum said Thursday !hat he
turned dOwn a $1 million,
three-year package from a
Japanese team· to return to
WEAVER FROM THE BASEUNE- Vince Weaver
the Atlanta Braves, where he
(15), Wahama, sc~red two field goals against Eastern,
played from 1967 unW 1975.
includiilg this one along the baseline. Guarding is Leonard
Lum was traded to the CinMyers (35) of Eastern.
cinnati Reds in 1975 for utililyman Darrel Chaney. The
lefthanded first baseman and
outfielder hit .267 in
occasional action with the
Indiana St. 69, ·s: Hlinois-68
Thursday's Sports
Reds last year and became a
Ind . St.-Evans ville 60 ,
Transactions
e..
t
Indiana SE 56
By The Associated Press
u-ee agen ·
Iowa· 75, Purdue 12
BASEBALL
" The Japanese offer was
Louisv ille 78, St. Lou is 62
National League
unbelievable," Lum said,
M ic higan 78, . Northwestern
ATLANTA BRAVES - " Butmoneyisn'teverything,
' 67
Mich .- Dearborn 63, Bethel, Signed Mike Lum. outfielder. It's imports.nt , but not as
CINCINNATI REDS Ind. 62, ot
Michig'an St . 59, Indiana A7 Signed Ray Kni9ht. infielder. Important as being happy."
LOS ANGELES DODGERS
The Braves announced that
Mo. Baptist 60, Logan Coil.
- Traded Brad Gulden , Lum was signed to a three55
Mo.-St. Louis 87, McKen- catcher, to New York (All - year pact. Terms were not
for Garv Thomasson, outled
dree Coli. 85

Cage Scores

Ohio State 74, Minnesota 68

Oral Roberts 91, Tulsa 86
W. Illinois 78. N. Iowa 67
Wichita St. 125, Drake 96
' Southwest
East Texas 74, Howard
Payne 72
,
Henderson St. 93, Arkan sas

In the reserve tilt the Little
Falcons insured themselves
of a winning season with a 6845 win over the Baby Eagles.
The victory gives Coach
Lewis Hall's Charges an 11-4
record which includes nine of
11 t'
' I
thetr
ast
ou mgs.
Peanut Harris, York
Ingels, add Larry Gibbs
paced the winners with 18, 17

revea

Hockey

League.

. SOCCER
Amer1can Soccer League
Tech 75
Houston 103. Texas Tech 89
COL UMBUS MAGIC Ted
Celeste
New Mex leo · St. 85, · W. Named
president.
Tex .. St. 75 ·
COLLEGE
·Ouachita Baptist 72, Cent.
. XAVIER, 'Ohio - Named
Arkansas 55
SW Texas St. 81 , Texas A&amp; I J 1m McCafferty as91stant
vice president for student
80
Wyoming ta&lt;i. New M ex ico pevelopment.
63
Far West
Colorado St. 61, Te•as-EI
Paso 60

m h1s

·
and 13 points reSpectively.
Tim Dill was the lone Eagle
in double figures with 13
markers to his credit.
Wahama returns to action
on Saturday night when they
entertain
Ravenswood
followed by a rare Mondy
night contest against Spencer
also slated for the IQCals
home floor in the regular
season home finale.
EASTERN (60) FG FT TP
Bissell
·
6 3-S 15
Cole
5 fHI 15
Spencer
Goebel
Bowers
Eynon
Matthews
Totals

o-o;

David Sisk 4).0.G; Jeff
Fowler 1~2; Scott Barnitz 40-8; Totals 33-2-911,
Score by Quarters:
1 2 3 4 Tot
Eastern
} 8 15 5 17 45
Wahama '. 19 19 20 10 68
22 16-24 60
·
•
6
3
1
I
0

()..() .12
f&gt;-7 11
3-4 5
()..() 2
IHl 0

WAHAMA(56)
.
Roush
7 3~ 17
Richards
7 1-2 15
Rawlings
5 0-1 10
Weaver
2 2-2 6
Sayre
1 3-S. 5
Barnltz
1 1·2 3
Totals

RESERVE GAME
EASTERN (45)
Tim Dill 5-3-13; Rick Long
3-1-7 ; Paul Sprague 346;
Mike Bissell 3~; Greg Cole
1·2..4; · Tony Kennedy 2~;
John Riebel 0·4·4; Ken
Chapmari 0-1-1; Charlie
Ritchie 4).0.G; Totals 17-11-4-5.
WARAMA (Ill)
Peanut Harris 94-18; York
IngelsB-1-17; LarryGibbsG-113; Mike Buzzard 3411; Joey
Roush 2+4; Todd Kitchen 0-

I

COVER GIRL - This picture of Stacy Talisha Davis,
. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jason Davis, Route 3, Pomeroy,
was selected for the Hollywood Spotlight PhoiD Magazine
which assembles pictures of babies for advertisers. Stacy
. received a certificate and a CQJ&gt;Y of the magazine featuring her picture on the cover.

23 10-18 56

Score by Quarters:
l234Tot
17
14 17 12 60
Eastern
14 10 14 18 56
Wahama
Total Fouls • Wahama 21
Easte111 18
Officials - Mike Rogers and
Virgil Wilkins

Today's gaJDe!!
.
SEOAL
Athens at Waverly
Logan at GallipoliS
Wellston at Jackson
Meigs at Ironton
TRI·VALLEY
Warren at Belpre
Federal Hocking at VInton
County
Trimble at Nelsonville-York
SVAC
North ; Gallla at Southern
' (makeup game)
Non-League
Point
Pleasant
at
Ravenswood
Hillsboro at Washington CH
SATURDAY
Ironton at Portsmouth
Point Pleasant at Southern
· (makeup game)
Ravenswood at Wahama

LEBANON RESULTS ,
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) _ :
Glow slogged to a four-length
victory in the $900 featured
pace mile on a sloppy track
Thursday , night at Latonia.
· The winner paid $5.80, $4.60
and $3 for a time of 2:15. •'
Early Skip placed, paying
$5.20 and $3.40, and Reed's
Benji returned $3 for show.
The 7-7 double of Lindworth
Tirtte and Noble Joker paid
$15.40.
The crowd of 1,063' bet
$99,050.

·'

Seed and Milling

:HEADQUARTERS
;

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{~.~~~t· .

·~

.•.·,·

W L T Pis GF GA

"
'J I ;;i

'"
''"

Mexican government Is
spreading delicate nets over
the tops of the palm trees to
enclose the world's largest
avlacy.
The gigantic bird cage,
which will occupy an entire
foursquare-mile island near
this new resort clty, is
sponsored by Fonatur, the .
Mexican Fund f~r .TOUI'isln
Development.
No doubt, since this is a
tourist project, among the
tucam, cockatoos, flamingos,
giant herons and plumed
. egrets, they already have
bagged tlvit · absurd exotic
species known as the snow
bird.
The snow bird is what
·makes the kookaburra blrd
laugh and the Iguana go bugeyed.
MlgraiDry in ita habits, the
snow bird heada aouth for the
winter as t10011 as the snow
Dies. As early as November,
large flocks make their way
from such inclement climes
• as
Chicago,
Toronto,
Minneapollil, Boston, New .
· Y~rk, :etc. to dwell In the
concrete Cllffa of the subtropics. Florida used to be the
-w bltd's winter haunt, but
changing weather patterns
bavelorced the flocks farther
and farther Into Mezo·
America. Their winter
nesting grounds are now
distributed all along the
Pacific and Caribbean Ut·.,.tilii,'dOWil the length of the

·o..~•·

·..·~
T

Winnipeg at Birmingham
Saturday's Games

Quebec at New England
Winnipeg at Cincinnati
Sunday's Games

Quebec at Cincinnati
Edmonton at Birmingham

Seeds • Bird Seeds - Oyster ·shells and Grit Fertilizers- Lime- Cement &amp; Mortar • Stock
Salt - Water Softener - Remedies · · ' SaiJ. ~ .
· Utters - Vaccine ·. Roofing - Paints - Red
Brand Fencing - Baler and Binder Twine •
Sprays - Gates.

' "'

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SUGAR RUN MILLS
992-2115

Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy .
tt N:t

New England at Winnipeg

NOWAPPEARING
'

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~

111ft

,.,,n

BLUE

{,.,;..
•. ~J t
I, J~
' " O.

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~

SOUL

'0 ~

By HUGH A. MuuJGAN
. AP Special CorreapoadeDI
CANCUN, Mexico (AP) On a tiny Caribbean lsland
swept by the trade winds, the

World Hockey Association

Winn.
26 21 6 58 208 195
New Eng . 25\17 7 57 204 174
Edmon . 28 21 0 56 198, 162
Quebec 25 21 · 4 54 184 169
Cincin : 22 26 5 49 187 194
Birm.
20 27 4 44 183 206
1
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled
Friday's Games
Edmonton at New England

.

"

E

••

decision.

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E
lo

F.eed Purina!
. Sib. bag .
· PURINA WILD
BIRD FOOD

Free W"dh
Pun:h• of Feeder

MODERN .
SUPPLY
J99 W. Main St.

Phone 992-2164 ·
Pomeroy;' Ohio
The Store With
"All Kinds of Stuff"
For Pets-StablesLarge &amp;Small Animals
Lavvns-Gardens.

5

3 P.IECE 1 VOCAL

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FROM
PORTSMOU'I'H, OHiO .

10-2

FRIDAY and
SATURDAY· · ·

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

Pomeroy; 0.

Alfred

o

Social Notes

Carpenter
Personals

ThiS lightning system -in -a·boX includes : •.
• 2 3/B·Inch lag bolls
·
11114 or 2lC 12·i nch mourtting bracket

With Dau&amp; Wead

t

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117110.w;tt deluxe white mercury lamp
This tiifure is banaste..., " :&gt;dVe5 you up to 11,2.00 on

3
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replacement bulbs.

•

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By PhiH Kerns

UO·Inch, 7-strand No. 16cables
1 optlcai assemblY

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$3495
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CHESTER, Q.

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weekdays 7:~·5:00 P.M.
Sat.7:301114 :ooP.M.

'

R.lR. lXfMPTbli~o:o~--1 R. C. BOTTll NG CO.
1
MILLST·REET
Middleport, Ohio
992-3542 or 992,3344

I

I

Why It Happened

PEOPLE'S lOMB

a

I

Me and my

takes on new comforts I

Area Light

"

the life and works of Saint
David, the Patron Saint of
Wales. In addition to the
festive banquet which in·
eludes several Welsh foods,
celebrants will be treated to a
musical program presented .
by a quartet from the Ohio
State University and will be
invited to join in the
tra.ditlonal singing of Welsh
hymns, led th1s year by D.
Merrill Davis, the well-known
conductor from Jackson.
This annual St. David's
Day Banquet, sponsored by
the Welsh Singirig Society of
Columbus, wiD be held on
Saturday, March 3, at the
Fawcett
Center
for
TolllOrrow, 2400 Olentangy
River Road, Colwnbus. The
banquet begins at 6:30 p.m.
Tickets are $6 .50 and
reservations may be made
either by mall to Marian
Davis, 1542 Elmwood Avenue
(43212) or by phone to Carl ·
Burnside, 471-1794. By the
way, you don 't have to be
Welsh to enjoy this outstanding evening of music
and fellowship !

lush livin ___

Outdoor

SPECIAL!

POLLY'S POINTERS

1-!~~~!!~--------------J

1 top tiood

•.=

with a rich tradition of music,
songs and poetry.
Every year in the month of
March , · Welshmen all over
ihe world gather to celebrate

Plans for a George
Washington cherry tree bake
sale to be held on Feb. 22
were made when the Racine
Firemen 's Auxiliary met
recently at the annex.
The sale will be held in
front of the Racine Home NationaH Bank and aU items at
the sale will contain cherrys
Polly ~ramer ~
in some form.
Mrs. Gene Lyoits, Mrs.
Cressa Shain, and Mrs. Ruth
came in, washed them a nd
Shllin were appointed to Carpet has o spot
then filled one with shampoo
represent the Auxiliary on
and the other with rinse. Now
the village council grievance
DEAR POLLY- Our dog they have to squirt it out a litcommittee. Mrs. Cressa had an acci\lent on the living tle at a time. I have really
Shain presided at the meeting room carpet. I absorbed the saved money and the kids
with Mrs.. Jean Johnson urine with paper towels a nd have not complained. -MRS.
leading in the pledge to the then used a white vinegar J.N .
flag, and Mrs. Beulah Auther- solution on the stain. My proDEAR POLLY- Many cute
.son in the Lord's Prayer. blem is that the spot is lighter things that baby does are
Mrs. Ruth Shain had the ' in color than the moss green quickly forgotten as well as
secretary's rep()rl, Mrs. Gene of the rest of the carpet. How occasions like the dale of his
Lyons, the treasurer's report. can I get rid of this' - MRS. first tooth, first step or word.
The birthdays of Mrs: ' L.M.
I jot them down ori a big block
Beverly Cwrunins, Mrs. Kay
DEJAR MRS . L.M. - Ac- calendar so they can be
Roberts, and Mrs. Maxine cording to a booklet put out entered in the baby book
Rose were observed. Mrs. by one of the rug cleaning in- later.- MRS. W.L.
Cummins won the door prize. stitutes, this is one of the
Refreslunents were served to most serious of household
those named and Mrs. Mae stains. The dyes in wool floor
Cl&lt;!land, Miss Debra Lyons, coverings are sensitive to the 1
Mrs. Enuna Lyons, Mrs. chemical reaction of urine, ·
Oretha Snider, and guests, but color changes are held to
Mrs. Maryln Burleson, Vicki a minimum if the stain is
and Tina , Texas.
treated at once.
Such a stain should be immediately treated with
se veralppli ca ti ons o f
lukewarm water that is then
INTERIM PASTOR
The Rev . Fred Sams of the absorbed with a clean cloth .
Presbytery at Columbus is in- Then squeeze on a solution of
terim pastor of the Mid· ·~ cup white vinegar mixed
dleport and Syracuse with I I&gt; cups lukewarm
Presbyterian Churches. He . water. Absorb a~d then dry
will serve in that capacity un- thoroughly with a pad of
til a full-time minister is paper towels or cloth .
This is effective in most
secured. •
cases but where a color
change occurs no treatment
can restore the color. A proVISIORS
Mr. and Mrs . Dwight fessional rug cleaner might
Wallace and daughter, Nan- be able to improve its looks
cy, were in McConnelsville by spot dyeing the stained
over the weekend to visit portion.
My cwn children who have
Mrs. Wallace's seriously ill
mother, Mrs. G. C. Knox, who household pets have always
is confined to the Morgan had good luck , ·and little color
change, whe n they imCounty Care Center.
mediately douse such sta ins
withclub soda.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My three
MUZZLELOADERS
teenage children go through a
TO MEET
SAVE YOUR R.C., NEHI,_.UPPER 10,
seemingly endless amount of
A meeting of the Meigs shampoo and cream rinse.
Muzzleloaders Club has been
. DIET RITE &amp; DADS ROOT BEER
The bottle s have large
set for 9 p.m. Wednesday at
mouths so they pour on much·
the Jones Boys, W. Main St.,
more than needed. I saved
BOrnE CAPS FOR ~RITY
Pomeroy . All interested
two bottiE&gt;S that hand lotion
persons are welcome.

~

PEOPLE'S
TEMPLE

REG. '43.95

made here

What do Tom Jones,
Richard Burton and Dylan
Thomas ail have in common ?
They a Uhail from the land of .
Wales ... a beautiful country

By Mrs. Cbas. Woode
Mr. and Mrs. Glen R. Cline
Sunday School attendance celebrated their 55th wedding
on Feb. 11 was 45, the offering anniversliry at ttre Senior
$39.00. Worship services were Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
held with an attendance of 22 They were married Jan. 17,
with Rev . Thomas speaking 1924.
~:~:~:~:. from
I Peter 1:3-15 on the
Relatives here · are an.Garaffm Reef to Hmduras
subject "What Makes A nouncing the October birth of
and beyond, where they•have Church Great 1" . Spec~! a son, Michael Charles, to
frightened off the crocodiles, music was presented by Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Price
bush masters, scorpions 1111d and Mrs. Thomas. Rev. (Rebecca Dye) of Columbus.
other defenseless creatures Thomas is on radio th1s week Local grandparents are
unable ID survive in an
at 1D:t5 a. m. On Monday maternal grandmother,
environment of lighted tennis. evening !he books were to be Madge Blackwood, and
courts and all night audited at the Follrod· maternal great-grandfather,
discoth!!Ques.
Robinson home.
Dale Dye. Four .brothers,
Snow birds usually travel in
Feb. 2ll the UMW will meet David, Chad, Nick and Dan,
large, amorphous flocks, at the Follrod·Robinson welcomed the new baby.
,1
OPTOMETRIST
.
known as charters and tour home ·at 8 p. m.
Mr. and Mrs. John David 'I1 OFFICE HOURs:l:lo to 12, Ho 5 I CL.OSE
groups, or ln pairs known as
Gillogly and sons vacationed '1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
couples. A few high flyers of
in Florida.
both sexes make the trip
MRS. CHARLES MOORE
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Stout
alone. These are called
Mrs. Charles Moore of Tup- are annollilcing the birth of a
Swinging singles and are pers Plains is recuperating daughter, Teresa Ann, oil
believed to have a strong from ~nt surgery at Grant January 20 at O' Bleness
mating instinct.
· Hospital, Colwnbus.
Memorial Hospital. GrandThe snow bird usually
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
abandons ita young in winter
Granville
Stout, local, and
but the female of the species donnitory fees at Colgate last Mr . and Mrs. Robert Keirns,
retains a strong maternal semester, but he didn't have Athens
greatRoute;
an uninterrupted view of the
instinct. Ornithologists have
grandparents Include Mr.
recorded some qf Its piteous laundry."
The winter cycle of the and Mrs. C. B. Dwelley,
long-distance walls:
,
A"'latllla, Fla., and Mr. and
"If your mother ls ao · snow bird was never better N.rs. William LaFollette,
charted than In the classic
wonderful with children why
Collier's cartoon that showed MiWield, Ohio. The Stouts
did she let the twins put
an eldery hibernating pair have another daughter,
butterscotch sauce on their
perched on chaise lo~es of Carrie Sue.
fried eggs!"
Guests . of Mr. an~ Mrs.
"Bruce got sent home by a luxury resort watching the Walter Jordan and ·sons
sun go down oo Miaini's high
the !l'lnclpalfor riding bill l!lrise hotels over the plaintive during the weekend were Mr.
apeed bike into the girls'
and Mrs. Tkd Gilkey and ·
capUoo:
lockeroom."
Crystal,
Albany, and Mr. and
"Sid' I wish you'd
atop
In its winter nesting
.
Mrs.
Norman
Shaner, Jody
saying 'another 80 bucks shot
ground, the snow bird is a
and
Kevin,
Athens
Route
to hell."'
cautious, finicky feeder :
"Are the enchillades the
ones like pancakes or
eggrolls ?"
"Skip the fringe Cll my
,margarita, I'm on a salt.free
diet."
On the sunniest of days, the
snow bird remains shrilly
critical of ita new perch:
The Secrets of Jim Jones
"Our suite cost more for
· Revealed
two weeks than Gregg's
The Untold Story-

Dusk To Dawn

..

We Stock Many
Sizes and Styles
Choose One Soon I

DEARRELEN.
This is to Mrs. Rev. TRO who has trouble with receiving
magazines she didn't order.We had a similar problem with unwanted encyclopedias, bills that came with them . After
numerous letters and returns to the publishers, my father
finally sent them a, bill for storage!
We haven't received another book or dun since. - J.V.L.

.-....---~ -E's

c•

BIRD FEmER

· DEARRELEN:
Our daughter has had a lot of trouble with her lf&gt;..year-&lt;&gt;ld
son. Sbe wants ID send him to us, and we want him, but He wrote liS the other day sending a contract to sign . In It he
stipulates that he'll live with us lf we allow him to 1. smoke
marijuana; 2. stay out all night on l\'eekends and until II p.m.
during the week; 3. have girls in his bedroom: 4. drink beer
and wine. He added he'd (probably) forego hard stuff if we
stock beer in the refrigerator, and he's willing ID waltfor his
own car until he's 17,ifhecan use ours in the meantime.
He's threatened to run away if he can't come live with us, but
be won 'I unless we sign the contract. I'd feel guilty the rest of
my life if he left home and got in trouble or killed or in jail
because we didn't take him in. Do we sign and keep -HOPING
FOR THE BEST?
DEAR HOPING FOR THE BEST:
If you sign this junior playboy's contract, you're asking for
the worst!
TeD him you'll be fair , as always, but if he li\res at your
house, he'll live by your rules, not his! (Since when does he
think it's a seller's market on uppity grandkids1)
Should he run instead, why feel guilty? It's his choice -and
besides: he probably won't strike any more trouble than he'd.
risk in your town, given his demands . - H.

~~;=~m:;;.::llt~d;:~~~~=~~ ili~;t:=::=::ri~~(

.· ,·.~

..

that this year the theme of the
Baptist women will be
changed from 'Women nf
God' yes! to the therpe of " All
God's Children".
New officers will be installed at the May meeting
with Naomi Stobart in
charge. The next president
was "Love," with the will be Martha Lou Beegle;
readings "Where There is secretary, Ura Morris ;
Love", "Speak Words of assistant secretary, Dorothy
Love" and "He Loves You". Badgley; vice president of
Ahymn, 11 Love Lifted Me," interpretation, Helen Slack;
was somg by the members. vice president of missions,
Prayer by Helen Simpson. As Nondus Hendricks; vice
a love gift is given from both ' president of Christian ser·
circles at each meeting, vice, Gretta Simpson; vice
Martha Lou read what the president of leadership
Lillian
Love Gift means and what It development,
Hayman.
is used for . Love gift is used
The love gift was presented
for mission work. Martha Lou
to
Nondus Hendricks who had
closed the program with
a
reading " Love Never
prayer.
FaUeth"
. -The amount given
Business was carried on by
$158.70.
was
Mary Kay Yost. She report~d

The Bertha M. Sayre
Missionary Society of the
Racine First Baptist Church
met at the church on Friday
evening for the February
meeting. The meeting was
opened with the program
given by Martha Lou Beegle. ·
The theme of the program ·

'

-· .;

.

"In these days when there
is so much preoccupation
lth '
lt' " st
t to
w money, s JU grea
get S(!rnebody who really
wants to be here," said
Braves owner Ted Turner.
hose!'
1
The Braves c
tve payers in this year's free-agent
draft. The other four signed
with other teams.
Lum could find himself the
Braves'
· starting
first'
Fresno St. 55, lrV" ine 44 .\..
Long Beach St . 92, Utah St.
Loyola
Mary·
baseiTll)n.
If
catcher
Biff
Sea ttle 103,
88, ot
Pocoroba does not come back
mount 61
Nev .-Reno 87, San Fra nSo. Colorado86, Western St. from shoulder surgery in
cisco 83
64
'
time for opening day April 6,
N . Arjzona 84, Gonzaga 65
S. Ca lifornia 70, Arizona 67
Pacific 62, · Fullerton 52
UCLA 8.;, Arizona St. 83 . Ule Braves are likely to put
Peef?!!:dlne. 78, Portland 69
UC-Santa Barbara 93, San Dale Murphy, last season 's
Regis 66, Adams State 6 I Jose St. 86
regular ficst baseman ,
Santa. Cla.ra 90, St: Mary 's
Weber St. 56, idaho 45
behind the plate.
f9

Bertha Sayre Society met

Steve Krafcisin scored 17
points to lead Iowa over Purdue. Ohio State defeated Minnesota as Herb Williams
scored 26 points and grabbed
12 rebounds.
In other games, Calvin.
Garrett's 30 points led Oral
Roberts past Tulsa 91.$;
Kevin McKenna's .19 points
powered Creighton ·over
Bradley 87-81 ; Tommy

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

•.•

DEARRELEN.
Please tell me. what other states have laws against marital
rape. I know Oregon has because of the Rideout case which the
woman lost last DeCember. Does this verdict mean that wives
probably won't have a chance of getting their husbands con•
victed1
I didn't realize it before, but forcible sex is what my husband
does to me every time. I'd like 1D have us move tD a state where
he can be prosecuted, if that's poaaible. -TIRED OF IT
DEARTIRED :
.
Oregon, Iowa, Delaware and·New Jersey have revlaed their
statutes so that neither marriage IUlr cohabitation are
, defenses against rape. Whether there will be many convictiorr.
: under these laws remains to be seen . Don't count on a move to
' get your husband prosecuted!
And if you like him so Httle that you want him jailed, why
don'tyoufilefordivorce• -H.

J:f~~s~t, w~ t~~~h~din~~.~

·

EYED

, HOCKEY
Lum, 33, said a promise of a
National Hockey League
job
in
the
Braves
WASHIN GTON CAPITALS organization
when his
- Sent Gord Sm1th , defen.
f'
seman, to Hershey of the playmg da.ys are over 1gured
American

..

WINTER'S HERE
BE PREPARED

Transactions

fielder .

0

. •By Helen Bottel!\

RAPE OR CONJUGAL RIGHTS?

l
d
{4
w.
h
.
:~ryu:~~~~~ir~~ :~c~o::ngtsa~.~~: Eag es · e e~ .ot . a am· a ~~~~a;~~P.~~i:;~~~~~
.
::~~':n':·~:n:.~~ ~e::go~~~ Swanp, Tony Dorsett

Welsh
music
lovers
to
gatker
P/atJs for
Helen Help 1
bake sale in Columbus for sing festival

t=:=:=:::::::=:=:=:::::=:=:=:=:::=:=:=:::::=:=:=:=: :::;: :=::::::;:;::=:=::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::=:=:::::::::::::::=::;::=:::::::::=:=:=:=:==·:·:::::::=::::::::;:~r

,

UCLA edges Arizona State, 85-8g ..

snorls World

Today'•

.

11111:3301
,_

AT TltE

MIDDLEPORT

BOOK STORE
'·

nylon face velvet
sofa, chair and ottoman

sale

•74900

When you can get this much comfort and style at such a low
price, that's value! Fashioned with deep channel tufting,
you'll be literally surrounded by lu xury. Generous attach:
ed pillow-back and reversi bl e ! np oee~ ' r. qshions o.re bunyan!
p olyes te r w1anoed lH'•t' ·

BAKER FURNITURE
o.

�&amp;- The DailYSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb. 16. 1979

Toda}' s Topic:.

A .L'Pa.m ·l·ly· .L'veud

orchestra to per.'j1orm
I
Calendar
·
l
I
at Marshall. Un~versity Feb. 20

~~:tr\~~n~ti~~~:~,.w~;;
~~~~ ·. rt.-So--c-.I.-al--1 S•4'Lamb says "it 's literally
'J m'nhon~1'
:r
J
!

impassible to dig it up" from
1
1
the landfill where poli ce . 1
believe it's buried.
"He ~ ng like a canary/'
David
and . Norman !
By CHRIS ROBERTS
•'RIDAY
.
AsS&lt;Iclated Press Writer one investigator said . 'lhe :Johnston face live counts of
OXFORD, Pa. (AP) - The other dead men - like Little mw-der . Tbey are accused in
POMEROY CHAMBER of
yellow Volkswagen Rabbit Bruce, implicated in the ring ever y
killing
except Commerce Friday at noon at
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. -· Series programming , ac· Include Brahm's " Plano marldng hls 22nd se&amp;!IOII as
tw-ned off the country lane - also had talked, or were Crouch's. The three Johnston Meigs Inn.
The Columbus Symphony cording to Nancy P. Hinds!ey Concerto No. 2, Opus 83, " the symphony's music
the night of Aug. 30, 1978, and about to, in hopes of leniency brothers also are charged
RETURN JONATHAN Orchestra will perfonn at 8 MU cultural events coor· with noted pianist Bela director, has been ,acclaim_ed
onto the cindered driveway from the laW'. Their with attempted homicide in Meigs Chapter, Daughters of p.m. Tuesday', Feb. 20, in the dinator.
Szilagyi as guest soloist. Also for his "~uperb musiclamlnp,
beneath the maple trees executions bought silence. Bruce Jr.'s case.
Am erican
Revolut.ion , Keith-Aibee Theater as part
The program for the on the. program will be imaginative programming
" It was hillbilly justice,"
frontin g the
sJeeping
"These hillbillies have no Friday, 1:30 p.m. In River of the Marshall Artists Columbus · Symphony, con- Barber's "Overture to SchoQ! and interpretive sensltlvUy.''
said one law enforcement moral code. They're a violent Boat room of Meigs Branch of Series' Community (Baxter! ducted by Evan Whallon, will for Scandal" and Berlolz'
farmhouse .
For the past U years
A boy and girl in love official. "They' ve always type of people. They just the Athens County Savings
Whallon has been music
"Harold in Italy."
been a strange people. They don't understand the type of and· Loan. Program tracing
stepped out into the rain .
Szilagyi will present a director of the Chautauqua
And from behind the buShes end an argument with a knife morality we do, " said a law ancestors . Silent Auction .
plano
master class at Mar- Opera Association. A guest
wax paper placed on a 'cookie
two assassins opened fire. or a gun . They deal with their enforcement offic ial, who Hostesses Mrs. Dale Dutton,
shall
University
on Monday, conductor for the Pittsburgh
sheet. Chill just until finn The girl screamed and ran . oivn. And there's never a requested anonymity.
Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Mrs.
Feb.
I9,
at
2
p.m.
in Smith Opera for Its . past t~o
15 to 20 minutes. Invert onto
Robin MiUer, 15, died on a witness. "
"Little Bruce and Jamie Everett Hayes, Mrs. Charles
Recital
Hall.
The
free
class is seasons, Whallon. will be
another sheet of wax paper.
A family friend says Bruce lived with the mother and Lewis and Mrs. Robert D.
bed inside, a bullet in her
guest conductor for l!fveraJ.
open
to
aU
interested
students
Carefully peel off original
pretty face. Her boyfriend, Sr. "is a moral man who were brought · up by a Craig.
of
plano.
European orchestras this
wax paper. Using a :W.-inch
Bruce Johnston Jr., 20, was doesn 't hold with drinking grandmother and an aunt.
FUND . DRIVE for new
tickets
for
Reserved
seat
spring.
heart-shaped cookie cutter,
found by an ambulance and swearing. His word is his They didn't begin hanging building, 30x40 two story, for
Pianist Szilagyi is artist-in:
By
Ceelly.Brownstone
cut out 6 hearts. RechiU until the concert may be obtained
attendant dazed and bleeding bond. But he won't be double- around with Big Bruce until the
at
the
residence
, at
Keith-Albee
Theater
or
Capital
Racine Volunteer
Associated
Press
really finn - 5 minutes or so.
beside her. There were eight croSsed."
from
the
Marshall
Artists
University
and
recipient
of
they were teen-agers ."
Emergency Squad underway.
Food
Editor
.
Serve the chocolate hearts
Bruce Jr. had testified
bullet wounds in his cbest and
Series
Office,
Room
2W23
many
awards
in
national
and
Mrs . Steffy said that Donations can be sent to the
COMMI'ITEE
LUNCH
over scoops of the ice cream.
head , but somehow he lived. before the grand jury while in J ame s' birth certificate squad at Racine, Ohio.
Memorial Student Center. International competition.
Egg
!'nd
Sprouts
Salad
Makes. 6 servings.
prison
on
a
burglary
charge.
Police have charged the
Loge
and orchestra seat Szilagyi has been featured
bears the name Johnston, but Grounds for the building
With Homemade
hoy's father , Bruce Johnston Wben released, he came back that Bruce Sr. was in prison
tickets
are available for $9 soloist with the Seattle
Mayonnaise
By Ceelly Brownstone
provided by Racine Village
Sr., a stone-faced man with to this area because, as one before James' birth and "Big
each
and
balcony tickets -at . Symphony, ·Boston " POPS"
'
Countil. Camisters are in Rolls
Associated Press
Coffee
roots in the Tennessee hills, policeman said of him and Bruce is not Jimmy 's bu siness houses also for
$7.
Balcony
seats for· youths and the Symphony of the Air.
HOMEMADE
FOod Editor
with helping plan his son's Robin: "! think the two kids dadd)'." '
under
17
years
of age will be
MAYONNAISE
contributors.
LIGHT FARE
execution. He's also charged were very much in love. He
available
at
$3.50 each.
Police say Bruce 'Johnston
MIDDLEPORT . Masonic .
Adapted froin an 1899
Spinach Pie
with the murders of Miss wanted to be let out of prison Sr. , 39, began stealing in knee Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, annual recipe. ,
Rolls
·
MarShall
students
with !D
Carrot Pickles
Miller, a stepson and four to be near her ."
Tea
and
Activity
Cards
will be
pants and came here with his inspection 7,30 p.m. Friday
1 large egg yolk
Cookies
After the ambush, Bruce family from Tennessee some- at temple in the Master
other men.
admitted
free
.
SPECIAL MEETING
% teaspoon ·salt
SPINACH PIE
They say two of Bruce Jr.'s Jr .. accompanied by shotgun- time in the 1950s.
Ranked
among
the
top
A
special meeting of the
M
D
All
M
st
White
pepper
or
cayenne
to
This combination of
Authorities contend that
ason egree.
a er
uncles, David and Norman toting U.S. marShals, was
regional orchestras in the Middleport Masonic J4dge
Mason
s
invited.
taste
ingredients
yields
Midestem
Johnston, were behind the flown here on Oct. 24 to testify over the past IO ,years the
nation , 1 the 96-member 363, Fa&lt;AM, will be held at the
flavor .
SATURDAY
% teaspoon sugar
bushes that August night against his father in a Johnston gang lias pulled off
9-inch pie shell, baked 7 Columbus Symphony per- . temple at 7 p.m: Tuesday.
BEAN Dinner Saturday,
'iz teaspoon dry mustard
when Robin " got in the way. " burglary case while 12 hundreds of robberi es,
fonns more than 65 concerts Work w11J be In the entered
¥• teaspoon onion powder minutes and cooled
Bruce · Jr., known in this policemen stood guard in the stealin g cash fro m store 4:30 t o 7 p.m. at Ml.ddlepo·rt
each
season. Whallon, now apprentice degree. All
· Temp le by Meigs
II&gt; tablespoons lemon juice
I small onion, finely
ntigrant.lleavy, mushroom- courtroom. For three hours safes, antiques and cars from Masomc.
Masons are invited.
chopped ( 'I• cup)
salad oil
growing country as "Little "Little Bruce" talked, country estates, and tractors Chapter, Order of DeMolay. · I%cup
tablespoon rice wine
I cup coarsely grated
Bruce," had testified earlier av0iding the steady stare of and other equipment from Bcans sa lad , dessert and
Mozzarella
cheese ·
fa
rms
in
southeastern
corn
b~ead,
$2;
public
invited
'
vinegar.
that month before a federal the man who gave him his
ket
ill
b
n
sale
at
In
l~uart
deep
bowl,
with
2
large
eggs
.
~
grand jury in Philadelphia name and who is his spitting ·Pennsylvania, Delaware and . and t1c s w e o
an electric beater at .lowest.
I tablespoon flour
Mary Ia nd . Fe n c i n.g the door.
about his dealings with "a image.
yolk,
speed,
beat
together
the
I
teaspoon salt
But
when
a
lawyer
clan of thieves" police said
Missionary meeting of the
oper-ations stretched to
SUNDAY
pepper, sugar, mustard,
P.astor Jim Broome opened
'I•
teaspoon pepper
mentioned
Robin
Miller,
the
was headed by his father.
Middleport
Church of the the meeting with the song,
Arkansas, police said.
.
MEIGS Genealogy Society, onion powder and 'f..
1iz pint plain yogurt
He talked because, as his youth's eyes met the face of
The Johnston brothers now 2 p.m. Sunday at Meigs
blespoon of the 1emon JUICe
· ·
!O'()unce bag fresh spinach, Nazarene was held Wednes- "Peace Uke a River" foUowmaternal grandmother, stone, then turned red with are in jail. "Little .Bruce" js Museum , Butternut Ave. , ta
until blended. Still at lowest cooked lightly and liquid day night with a program in ed by two •specials in song,
Harriet Steffy, put it : "He tears. "She's dead," he cried. enrolled in a federal witness Pomeroy·, all Interested in
· a dr'bbl
observance of Vallmtine's nLove J.Jfted Me", and "I
spe ed , beat 1n
1 e (no pressed o)lt
A month later he would prote c tion program, family histories invited. morethan
knew that his Daddy had
Day.
\Heaspoon)ofthe
Saw the Light" by George
2 tablespoons grated
doings with Robin. So be went testify that he started telling beginning a new life under a Meeting will be cancelled in oil at a time; make sure each
Judy White described for Luster.
Parmesan
Cheese
police "anything they wanted new name in a new place.
against him and told ."
case of inclement weather. dribble is incorporated before
Over the bottom of the pie the group the "black heart", . Seyeral from the c.ongregato know about my dad "
Mrs. Steffy said " Little
MONDAY
adding the next but do not shell sprinkle onion and lull of hate and envy, while tion gave testimonies followRACINE Elementary PTO overheat. By the time 'f.. cup
Bill White described the ed by a closing altar of
' If you feel that you because he and another man Bruce" called the other day.
"got Robin drunk, took her to "He said he's doing all right. Monday 7:30 p.m. at of the oil has been added the Mozzarella. Beat eggs "white heart", a heart of love prayer
•
.
are paying too much
slightly ; add flour, salt and
a motel and left her to awake Shotupthewayheis,hedon't elem e ntary
and
rejoicing.
school.
mixture
will
be
very
thick;
pepper and beat to blend. Add
for
your
auto,
the next morning without any want to worry me, but you Babysitting provided.
business, ' or clothes on."
can't help it. I love Little
BLOODMOBILE at gradually beat In the ·yogurt and beat to blend. Cut
remaining lemon juice and up_the spinach coarsely and
Bruce Jr.'s ,stepbrother, Bruce and I )oved Jimmy.
ho!Jleowners
Pomeroy ' Elementary .• the vinegar. Beat in the stir in. Pour into pie shell.
•I
James John&gt;ton, 18, never
insurance
"Little Bruce talks a lot Monday 1:30 to 5:30.
il
remaining % cup o· , as Sprinkle with Parmesan.
got
a ·chance to talk ., He
Give Us A ca II
•
and
about
MIDDLEPORT
BUSINESS
previously,
by
dribbles
. Bake on rack below c~nter in
about
Jimmy
Buy, build or
vaniShed Aug. 13, the day
Robin
,
They
were
going
to
get
and
Professional
Women's
Makes
I
¥•
cups.
a
preheated
301Hlegree
oven
before he was scheduled to married, they were. I tell him
remodel your
IT DOESN'T COST
for 25 minutes. Let ·stand 5
testify before the grand jury 'you got to forget it.' start a Club, 7:30p.m. Monday at the
By CecUy Brownstone
minutes before cutting.
new life. Because you won't Colwnbia Gas Co. of Ohio.
in Philadelphia.
ANYIHING 10
EVENING REFRESHER Adapted from "Louisiana
Last Dec. 30, state police be traveling with the ones you Final plans.will be made for
Mulled Wine
Nuts Entertains" (The Rapides
dug up his body near Chadds traveled with before. "
Heart Sunday, Feb. 25.
OOMPME!
MULLED WINE
Symphony Guild, Alexandria,
Ford. Also unearthed were
Compare and Save
Repeated on request.
La.)
th e bodies of Dwayne
%
cup
sugar
Lincoln, 17, and Wayne
.Class scheduled
SOUTHERN 11110 . ·Sampson, 20, both of the
.,
3 strips lemon rind (a few
By Ceclly Brownstoae
inches
long)
Associated Press
Oxford
area.
They
had
been
RIO
GRANDE
You
can
Mr. and Mrs. William B.
INSURANCE SERVICES shot in the head.
I stick cinnamon
Food Editor
learn
the
dances
that
are
Ledlie, Langsville, are an12 whole Cloves
LUNCH FARE
In addition to being nouncing the birth of their sweeping the nation.
~
1 bottle (about a quart) dry Cottage salad
Toast
charged in his stepson' s first grandson, seven pound,
The Rio Grande College
red
wine
Cupcakes
Beverage
death, Bruce Sr. is accused of four ounce, Christopher and Community College
ERIE
Bring the sugar, 11h cups
CO'ITAGE SALAD ·
murdering
Lincoln, Charles Merrill, born to Mr. Office
See the lender who
of
Continuing
EAIE
·
water,
the
lemon
rind,
cinYou·
can add minced pars.
INSURANCE sllvlcl
Sampson,
Sampson
'
s
. . . ..
and Mrs. John Merrill of Education will offer a disco namon and cloves to a boil,
knows agriculture ...
ley If It's on hand.
brother, James, 24, Gary Columbus, on January 19, at class as )iart of its comGROUP
stirring until sugar dissolves;
8 ounces creainsty!e cOtCrouch, 30, of Elkton, Md., University
Hospital, munity offerings.
your Land Bank team.
boil
gently
for
about
10
tage
cheese' (small curd)
and Ro!lilt Miller.
Starting February 19 and
Columbus.
minutes. Strain. Add wine
l-3rd cup mayonnaise
992-6681
Crouch :s body was dug up
Paternal grandparents are continuing for five Monday
1-3rd cup commercial sour
Dec. 1. Police said be was an Mr. aud Mrs. Donald Merrill, nights through March 19, and heat until just under the
AGENTS
informant in the probe. Columbus, and the paternal' Eastern High School in Meigs boiling point. Makes about cream
JOHN KAUFF
James Sampson's body never great-grandfather Is Mr. County will be fiUed with the !Yo quarts - 10 servings.
1 scallion, minced
OAVE JENKINS
Romaine
with sliced
latest
in
disco
sounds.
Baker, Columbus. Mr. and
By Ceclly Brownstone
tomato
,
cucumber
and
Hours
for
the
course
will
be
Mrs. Ledlie also have two
Associated
Press
avodaco
,-------------------~ granddaughters, children of 7:31)-9:30 p.m.
Food Editor
Whisk together the cheese,
Instructor Mild&lt;i Casto, of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ritter
DII'!NER
FARE
·mayormaise,
sour cream and
PURIC HEARING
of Vicenza, Italy. Mrs. the Mikkl Casto Ballroom Pork Chops
228 UPPER RIVER RD.
Yams
scallion.
Serve
as a topping
Studio,
Point
Merrill is the former Shirley Dance
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Cornbread for the vegetables. Store any
Pleasant, W. Va., will teach Spinach
Ledlie.
Notice is hereby given that there witt be a public
Beverage remaining cheese mixture in
the latest steps, including Fruit
hearing on Thursday, the 22nd day of February, 1979,
RICH
CORNBREAD
the refrigerator.
beginning at 2:00 P.M. at the Common Pleas Court
"The Boston Bus stop" and
Quick
and
easy
to
make.
Room in the Court House in Pomeroy, on the State Plan
"The SpaniSh Hustle."
for Social Services in Ohio una.r Title XX of the S'ocial
Butter
Thought for today: Sin and
Casto states the goal of the
Security Act, tor the year beginning July 1, 1979, which
2
large eggs
dandelions are very · much class as '' ... teaching students
state plan includes the plan for Meigs County, Ohio.
1
cup self-rising stonealike. To get rid of them is a to dance and making them
The object of !hi$ hearing i$ to highlight pertinent
ground
white cornmeal
lifetime fight, and you never look good on the dance floor ."
information regarding Social Services , problems and
l&gt;
CliP
commercial sour
quite win it - William Allen
needs and to elicit public comment, suggestions and
Cost for the five sessions is
recommendations relative to the county's proposed
While, American writer, 1868- $35 per student or $60 per cream
socia I services plan .
8,-ounce can creamstyle
1944.
couple.
Interested persons and organizations are urged to
yellow
corn
There Is no age limit and
attend.
Preheat
oven to 450
students should bring a pen
degrees. Tum l&gt; cup ('I•·
· In 1959, the Los Angeles and notebook to class.
MEIGS COUNTY WB.fME ADVISERY BOARD
Rams got running hack Ollie
Registration for this or any pound stick) butter into a 9Matson from the Chicago continuing education class at inch black iron skillet and
Cardinals for seven players Rio Grande can be made by place in oven just until ·
Mamq D. Welltel, Olaimill
and two draft choices.
calling Bernie Murphy, Of- melted. beat eggs slightly;
fice of Continuing Education, add eornmeal,' the l&gt; cup
Rio Grande College and melted butter and the sour'
· THE FOLLOWING MEiGS COUNTY
· Community College, 245-li303, cream ; stir to blend. Stir in
or by attending the first class corn to distribute evenly. Add
INDEPENDENT INSURANCE AGENCIES
I tablespoon butter to the
session.
skillet and place In the oven
BE CLOSED Mdfo4DAY, FEB.UARY 19th
to melt butter and have pan
very hot ; swirl melted butter
"PRESIDENTS DAY"
over the bottom of the pan ;
add the cornmeal mixture.
Bake until browned - 20
. In 1871, the Franco- :minutes. Let stand a few
Prussian war ended in a minutes, then cut into 6
wedges; remove carefully
defeat for France.
In , 1967, 13 American with a wide metal spatula, ·
be!icopters were shot down in scraping bottom to get up
•
fighting over South Vietnam . . crust. Serve at once. Makes 6
.
.
In 1968, New York Sen. servings.
Robert Kennedy announced
•
By Ceclly Browtlitone
he
would
seek
the
Ass..,tated Press
Democratic nomination for
Food Editor
president.
VALENTINE PARTY
Ten years ago: The lunar
new year was observed in Sundaes
· Coffee ·
VIetnam with a truce broken
VALENTINE
only by minor skirntishes.
'•
SUNDAES
Five years ago : The
Chocolate hearts top ice
foreign ministers of Egypt cream.
and Saudi Arabia arrived in · \1 cup semi-sweet chOc·washington for talks · about olate pieces
Open·
6100 A.M.
· ·
the Arab oil embargo against
11
tablespoon ·white
the United States.
vegetable shortening
you~One year ago: Japan and
II'. pints S1fawberry lee
Olina signed a $20 billion cream
trade pact in Peking.
Stir together tile ebocotote
. ' J'odafs birthday: British and shortening over hot
movie director John Schlesi· water until melted. Spread
nger is 53. ~
into a 9 by 6-in~h rectangle ~n .

a

Ohio's oil, gas drilling
boom now coming to close

l

!

Missionary meeting held

Announce birth

....-

.

BilL QUICKEL '

ELEANOR '1110MAS

MANNING. WEBSTER

HONOREES - The five persons pictured above will be honored at an
awards banquet to be held Saturday, Feb. 17 at the Meigs High School
cafeteria. 'lbe banquet is being sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of

Commerce. Tickets may be purchased at the New York Clothing House,
Simon's Pick-A-Pair or the office of the chamber. The dinner Is at 6:30
p.m.

WARSAW, Poland (AP}A
count had been 10.
mysterious explosion ripped
Warsaw authorities
ordered movie. houses,
·throlll!h a crowded savings
theaters, cabarets and other
bank at Warsaw's busiest
entertainment
intersection Thursday, killing
establislunents to close on
32 persons and injuring
Friday because of the "tragic
dozens, the state news agency
catastrophe," PAP said.
PAP reported.
AI the time of the ntidday
It said 48 persons were
blast, an · estimated 20().300
hospitalized and 30 were
persons were in the bank,
treated and released.
which
serves very few
"According to Information .
foreigners because it lacks
obtained late in the evening,
the catastrophe killed 32 foreign . exchange facilities .
persons.
There
are ' Polish army rescue squads
used jackhammers into the
difficulties in identifying the
night to cut through the conbodies," PAP reported
crete floor of the building.
nearly eight hours after tbe
The were seekin g other
explosion.'Its previous death

victims feared trapped in the
cellar.
Forty ambulances took victims to hospitals , and
Warsaw Radio issued an
urgent appeal for blood
donors. HospitalS refused to
say how many victims had
been treatect.
The cause of the explosion
at the state..-un PKO bank
was not immediately known ,
PAP said.
" It Is impassible to say now
what caused the explosion,"
said a police officer at the
scene. He rejected the possibility that someone had in. tentionally exploded • homb .'

to work? 'Then come to The

Falcon's Parkkette's new dining
facility - V. mile below the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge In
Clifton, W.Va.
at

roLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) There's enough recoverable
coal in just one five-county
portion of Ohio's coal flellm to
supply tile state for 20 year.s,
·according to what state"
.officials are calling their
most accurate estimate yet.
Recoverable coal reserves
'in parts of Belmont, Monroe,
Guernsey,
Noble
and
Washington counties are
estimated at 1.1 billion tons,
according to an Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources survey released
Wednesday , At current use
rates of 50 to 60 mllllon tons
annually,
recoverable
reserves In the area would
last two decades.
Despite
the
huge
abWKiance of the resow-ce,
only a fraction will probably ·
ever be rl!covered despite
Increases in technology, a
state energy official says.
Charles Morris of,the Ohio
Department of Energy said
there Is seven times as much
coal that may never be dug.
· He said the vast majority of
Ohio coal reserves are in
deep mines, and that means a
suhotanlial amount of coal
must remain in the ground
just to serve as piUars to
support the mine roofs.
· He also said that no matter
bow much sophlatleated tech-

nology ·is developed to reach
some
presently
unrecoverable reserves, the
cost of obtaining the coal will
outstrip . any realistic price
for selling it.
Once the coal is out of the
grol!lld, there still may be
problems, he said, because
Ohio coal contains so much
sulfur it runs afoul of the U.S.
Environmental Protection

plan to allow the utility to
conlinue to burn Ohio coal.
Under the agreement, the
utility would use a coal waShing method to reduce the
sulfur content.of coal before it
is burned, Irlngi1!g it in compliance with federal cleanup
requirements.
A nwnber of details of the
agreement remain to be
negotiated.

Agency.

Energy Director Robert S.
Ryan said his department is
involved in research to find a
solution to burning high
sulfur coal. CUrrent antipollution
technology
equipment Is fine for cleaning
smoke produced from low (1
percent} sulfur coal. But
Morris said it just doesn't
work very well for Ohio coal
which runs as high as 4
pereent sulfur.
"II Ohio 'Is going to make a
significant contributi.on to
lessening this nation 's
dependence on foreign oil,
then we're going to have to
use Ohio coal," Ryan said.
"We are now closing in on
the technology for doing this.
It's just a matter oftime," he
said.
Meanwhile the federal EPA
and tbe Colwnbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co. agreed in
. principle Wednesday to a

STARTS
FRIDAY

Mullen Insurance Agency
Nationwide Insurance (P. J. Pauley)
·Davis Insurance 'Agency
Downinf(hilds Insurance Agency

Fairview
News Notes

OUIERWEAR

•WINTER

!.

learned of the death of Anna
Turner
Kendall
at
Springfield . Survivors in·
dude two daughters and
families at Springfield, along
with two sisters, Hazel
Turner Slater, Millersport,
spent a few days with Mrs. and Alice Turner Phillips,
Columbus; eight brothers,
Jessie Weber.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy Tom and Wayne Turner,
spent a couple of weeks in Rutland ; Henry Turner,
Lakeworth, Fla., with Mr. Pom eroy Rt . (Dyesville) ;
and Mrs. Don Matlack. They Glen , Joe and Frank Turner,
were accompanied by Mr. AI bany; Kenneth Turner,
and Mrs. Ernest Fisher, Somerset, and Warren G.
Turner, Columbus. Most of
Wooster.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nice and the Turner family were
Mrs. Opal Eichinger were reared in this community.and
called to Youngstown Sunday are well known here.
Metta Fisher is reported to
by the death of Mrs. Irene
be
improving satisfactorily
VanM eter, former Ir ene
from
)ler broken hip and is
Harris of Syracuse. Funeral
able
to
he about now.
services and burial was held
Monday in youngstown.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen
and Mrs. Enna Cleland were
supper guests recently of Mr.
and Mrs. J. S. Davis, Tuppers
Plains, after attending the
funeral of their cousin Phyllis
Rowan. Other guests were
Mr. arid Mrs. David Davis
and Davy, Mr. and Mrs.
Deryl Well and Amy, Mrs.
Lynn Johnson and Mr. Clay
Green.
Mr. and Mrs . B. K.
Ridenour ate spending
sometime in Florida visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. Oris
Frederick at Winter Haven.

I Group
60"

SI.EEPWEAR

KNITS

prices for oU and gas spurred
a boom in well drilling In Ohio
dw-ing the last three years.
Drilling was especially active
in Cosho cton, Guernsey,
Muskingum, Tuscarawas and
Washington counties.
More wells ( 255) were
drilled in Gue~y County
than in any other county in
the state lh 1978, according to
the Ohio Department · of
Natural Resources.
·
Michell said Ohio drillers
aim for two layers of
sandstone underlying -much
of the state. The Clinton
Sandstone is deeper and
generally has a higher
production . The Berea
Sandstone is easier to drill,
but results In a little lower
production . He said. an Ohio
well may cost anywhere from
$50,000 to $150,000, but that
the likelihood of profitable
old flat rate charge.
production is good.
Most of the testimony asks
Ted DeBrosse, . assistant
a third category be created chief of the Department of
that would either exclude Natw-al Resow-ce's Division
these institutions from the of Oil and Gas, said
measured rate service or manufacturing
companies
place a limit on their bills, interested in securing
according to Steven BraSh , reliable supplies of natural
gas also helped stimulate
conunission spokesman.
There already is one ex- drilling.
ception from the billing
DeBrosse said the impact
system . Schools have a of the Natw-a! Gas Policy Act
ceiling on their bills equal to of 1978 may discourage
the old flat rate charge company drilling. The act
($26.10 a month in Colwnbus) extends price controls to
because federal and state Intrastate gas, and he said
laws require them to conduct companies may find less
an "affinnative attendance expensive supplies in other
program,' ' meaning they states.
must call students' homes to · Mitchell believes any deverify absences, Brash said. crease in gas drilling may
Written testimony will be . last a minimum of six to nine
accepted for 15-30 days after months. However, he sees no
the hearings, and the hearing decline in demand for Ohio
examiner is expected to oil. Even though more gas
make a recommendation to than oil is obtained from Ohio
the commission two to three wells, he said, demand for oil
months after that, BraSh should continue to help the
drilling indostry in the State.
said.

SPRING
IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER

mobile
home
IMPROVEMENTS
NOW'S THE TIME
We have the very best awnings and
underpinning money can buy. These are
Urban Industry products and you may
qualify for financing with just 10 percent
down ;md the balance over a 48 month
. '
perioif.

KINGSBURY HOME
SALES &amp;PARTS
ACCESSORIES
CENTER
"Located in the former
I Egg Building in
OV

Minersville, Ohio.

.

.

..

They're good meals ...t good de a's!

... ..:s:.=rTaC=t.'a~-:~~
Sh&lt;f~ only 89~!

~ ''"'"'""' "$ 11'\)

'

'100

Yd..

I Group Assorted

FABRICS ....... vd. 50•
' TRIMS ........... yd. 10•
il.....s,

9:30 to

Drop in l!n.d Browse

s.oo

:Mon:lhru Sat.

. . 9:30to 1:00
FrldiY

better lerve

'

Chester
Notes
News
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) A steady parade of local
officials is stopping by the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio hearing room this
week to voice complaints
about measured - rate
telephone service.
The three-day hearing,
which concludes Friday, is
being held to determine if
relief from the rate structw-e
is due non -residenti al
customers of Oh io Bell
Telephone Co.
. Under the system, non·
residential customers are
charged a base monthly rate
plus a fee for each call in
excess of 80 per month.
The rates vary throughout
the Ohio Bell system, which
serves more than 2.5 million
customers in the state.
In Columbus, for example,
a non..-esidential customer
would be charged $15.20 a
month plus 9 cents a call over
the 80-call limit. If the
customer makes 90 calls one
month, he would be charged
$15.20 plus 90 cents for the 10
calls over the limit, or a total
of $16.10.
The city utility directors
and officials of various
hospitals, libraries and
universiti es testifying
generally are saying they
make enough ~ails each
month that their bills are
higher under measured rate
than they would be under the

&amp;
PREVIEW OF
SPRING MATERIAL

•WINTER

V. D. Edwards lnsuranc;e AaenCJ
Reuter-Bropn Insurance Service

Morris said the current
survey is the best yet. Prior
estimates ranged from a 100.
to..'iOO.year supply, but no one
really had any good idea how
much coal was underground.
He said coal is produced in
26 Ohio counties, but the
results of the present survey
cannot be related to coal
reserves in other areas.

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Frazier, Gallipolis, spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
Harold GiUog!y and family .
Goldie Gillogly , Albany,
joined them for dinner. The
Fraziers also called on other
relatives in the area.
Laura Krebs fl ew to
Florida and spent a week
visiting her sons, Harley and
Errol Pickett and other
relatives. While she was
there, Harley flew her to the
Bahama Islands and other
places of interest.
Mrs. Ruth Swisher, who
had been with her sister,
Maude Holcomb, is again
going for therapy on her
wrist.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Quivey, St rasburg, were
recent guests of his mother,
Martha Mays. Martha Mays
is somewhat improved after
her
most
recent
hospitalization but goes for
treatments each week if the
weather pennits.
Mrs. Ora Cottrill reported
that her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Jordan and Clay
William, were recent guests
and will be living in Georgia
where he has employment.
Her grandson, Clay William,
is spending some time with
her .
Mr . and Mrs. Walter
jordan, Joshua and Jeremy,
were guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey,
Albany. The Gilkeys, who
have been in Florida for soine
time, expect to return there
for a longer stay.
Relatives here have

Transmission Co. and
Consolidated Natural Gas Co.
have lined up massive
quantities of natw-al gas from
southeastern .producers and
producers in the Middle East
and Affica.
"They hat·en 't decreased
the price, but I think the rate
of , increase has definitely
stopped as ha s .the ability to
hook up ,'' )\1itchell said .
''Just beCause you drill a
well , you may not have a
place to sell the gas."
Mitchell said the Arab oil
embargo and Sharply higher

PUCO hearings
drawing crowds

Gigantic
Winter
Sale

SPORTSWEAR

Dale C. Warner Insurance

I

Personals

Experts said the bank had no
gas heating but did not rule
oot the cha nce that . an
underground gas pipe had
exploded.
The blast gutted the
modern two-story glass and
aluminwn building, leaving
· only the roof and supporting
pillars standing.
Cash, typewriters, office
equipment and bits of
twisted, jagged aluminum
and glass were blown up to 30
yards away by the blast,
which appeared to have
occurred on the ground floor
or in the basement.

By Clarice Allen
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Myers
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp have received word of the
of Portland spent Sunday birth of a daughter to Mr. and
with Mr. and Mrs. Russell · Mrs. · Anthony Westjohn
Roush and family. David (Linda Myers), Oceanside,
Roush was a recent visitor of Calif., on Jan. 29, and has
the Roushes.
been named Traci Marie.
Cindy
Roush
spent Grandparents are Mr. and
Saturday evening with Mrs. Mrs. Bruce Myers, local, and
Joe Johnson at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Westjohn
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel of of
Illinois.
GreatLong Bottom spent Sunday grandparents are Mrs. Doris
with Mr. and Mrs . Joe Koenig, Tuppers Plains, and
Manuel and Tim.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Myers ,
Friends were sorry to hear Silver Ridge .
of the death of a fonner
Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
resident, Mrs. Paulette Laura J ean spent Friday
Ritchie VanMeter.
night and Saturday in
'Mrs. Inez Roy of Racine Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
visited her mother, Mts, Ett Charles Eichinger and
Warner.
Suzannah.
Miss Lucille Smith has
returned home after spending
several weekS in Akron with
Mrs. John Reuter.
Mrs. Martha Rose is
spending several weeks in
Phoenix, Arizona , with her
son Roger and family.
Mr. Roscoe Hollon has been
returned home after unENDS
dergoing surgery at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
FE.B. 24, 197t,
Mr ..Otis Casto is a patient
at University Hospital,
Columbus, having undergone
heart surgery there last
week.
Mr. and Mr~. Raymond
Wii!'On, Rochester, N. Y.,

•WINTER

to

•

~enter

Five counties could supply state

PLANT WORKERS

served fast to you before going

EDISON HOIIS1'ErtER

Explosion kills 32 persons

ATTENTION

Qo you want a good breakfast

A. R. KNIGHT

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) The gas half of Ohio's oil and
gas drilling boom Is coming
to an end, according to an Industry official.
James C. Mitchell says the
two largest buyers of Ohio
natural gas have so much of it
. they are reducing the number
of new hook-ups- for Ohio
well ~
by . 40 percent .
Mitchell's American Petroel
drills in southeastern Ohio,
particularly in Washington
and Noble' counties.
Mitchell said Columbia Gas

.

'N..r Stifflers
In Pvmerqy
i

2nd Street
Pomeroy, 0 .
992-258((

OnlheT
Middleport. 0 •

______________
lyour . .la

.._

DIAl' at:

.,......__,

�•

•

.••

Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Fritlay. Ft•b 16, 1!lin

,u

MEIGS TIRE
C£NTER, INC.
TRINITY CHU~CH . Ro•. W , H

rerrln . pastor. Bob Blick Sunday

.chool supt. Church School, 9 15
o.m .; worshtp serviCe, 10 30 am.
Cboir rehearsal , Tuesdo)l . 7 30
p.m . under direction of Al ice
Ne-ase.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THf
NAZARENE Corner Union and
Mulberry, Rev ,CI~de V Hender·

son pastor , Sunday school 9 30
o .,., .. Glen McClung , supt morn
ing worship , 10:30 a.m., evemng
serv•ce. 7 30. mid-week service

Wednesday . 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH

326 E Moin St , Pomeroy The
lev Robert B Groves , ntctor
Sunday servtces . 11 am morntng
proyer

{Holy

Commun•on

first

MIOOL!PORT

THE

SALVATION ARMY ,

115

Jutternut Ave , Pomeroy Envoi'
and Mrs Ray Wintng. ofticers in
charge
Sunday - holiness
meeting, 10 a m .; Sunday School.
10·30 a .m Sunday scMool lea~r .
YPSM, Eloise Adorns 7 30 p m. ,
solvafton meet tng, various
speakers and rTtUS IC spec1als.
Thursday l•J o m to 2 p m .
Lodies Home league all women
invtted; 7 30 p . m . prayer meeting
ond Bible study Bob Estep.
feoder . Rev
Noel Hermon ,
teoch.r .
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP -

TIST CHAPEL , Route 1, Shade fJostor Bobby Elkms
Sunday
school , 5 p m .. Sur1doy worship ,
5:,.5 p . m .: Wednesday prayer ser·
vice , 7 :30p.m.
•
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH

OF CHRIST 200 W Moin St Jerry
Poul. minister. phone 992-7666.
Conservative, non -mstrumentol.
Sunday worship, 10 am,; Btble
study . 11 a .m ; worship 6 p m
Wednesday Bible study 7 p m.
OLD DtXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN

CHURC,H, Re-v . RolpM Smtth,
pastor'. Sunday school , 9:30 am. ,
Mn. WOI'Iey Francis superinten·
dent Preaching se~ites first &amp;
th~rd Sundays following Sunday

School.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,

Preoching q 30 o .m , l~rst and second Sundays of &amp;och month ;
thl(·d and fourttl Sundays eoch
month, worshtp service at 7 30
p m Wednesday evenings at
7·30. Pra~er and Btble Study
SEVENTH -DAY

ADVENTIST,

Mulberry Heights Road , Pomeroy.
P-astor. Albert Olttes. Sabbath
Sctlool Superintendent . Rtto
White. Sabbath School, Saturday
afternoon at 2:00, with Worshtp
Service follow1ng ot 3 IS
RUTLAND

FIRST

BAPTIST

CHURCH Suter
Harriett
Worner , Supt . Sunday School .
am , morning wQrship,
10·45o. m

•=30

THE HILAND CHAPEL •. Geo•ge
Cct~to, postor . Sunday School ,
9·30 a.m.· evening worship, 7 30
Thur$doy evemng prayer service,
730pm

POMEROY

FIRST

BAPTIST.

Oovid Mann , mtntster , Willtam
Watson, Sunday school supt Sunday school 9 .30 am morning
worship 10:30 o m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 2B2

Mulbarry Avttn Pomeroy, Pa,..tl
t Silver, Pastor , Woodrow T Zwtl·
ing. Sunday school superinten·
dent . Sunday school, 9 30 o .m ;
morntng worship 10:30. evening
worship , 7 00 p m Midweek
prayer servtee, 7 00 p m.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER,

Dexter Rd .. langsville, Ohto, Rev.
Clyde Ferrell. Pastor Sunday
School
11
o m
Saturday
preochtng services 7 30 ' p .m .
Wednesday avanmg Btble study
ot 7 30 p .m.
5AITH TABERNACLE CHURCH,

lailey Run Rood Rev . Emmett
Rawson pastor Handley Dunn,
supt Sunday school . 10 a .m . Sunday even tng se rvice 7:30, Btble
teaching ] 30 p m Thursday
OVESV ll ·
COMMUNITY
CHURCH , Rog r C. Turner , p0$10r.

Sunday school , 9:30 o m , Sunday
f'M)f'ntng worshtp, 10 30. Sunday
evening service 7 30
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH OF
(HRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION,

lawrence Manley. pastor, Mrs
Russell Young , Sllndoy School
Supt . Sunday School 9:30 a .m .
E-vening worship , 7 30, Wednes day prayer meettng, 7,30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD

Rt:x:ineRav . W. H. L,kins,
pastor. Mormng worship, 9',,.5
o..m .. Sunday scnool , 10 45 a .m .;
evening worship, 7 Tuesday 7·30
p m ., ladies proy&amp;r meeting,
Wednesday. 7 :30pm . YPE .

r

MIDDLEPORT

FIRST

BAPTIST ,

MIOOlfPOMT

FRHWILL

BAP

TIST , Corner Asn and Plum . Noel ,
Herrman , postor Saturday even·
tng service, 1 30 p tn Sunday
School. 10:30 a .m.

Dwight l. Zovitz, director
HARRISONVIl. lE
PRESBYTERIAN , Rev
Ernest

Stricklin, pastor Sunday church
school . 9 30 o .m , Mrs Homer

L...

tupt ,

morning

worship.

10.30.

This Sunday

Pomeroy, Ohta

••• IT STILL
DOESN'T

TELL. US

FEW WEfKS
FROM NOW,
HEAD

WHERE
THE

TELLER

DATA
BANKS

These Messages

We Fill Doctors'
PrtKrlptlons
tt2·2f55

Pomeroy

...

WILL BE
LONG GONE
-AND SO

Of Our Religious Heritage

I

Are Sponsored Each .Week By The Followilig:

Pomeroy, OIIID

USED CARS.

«So;
.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

~~

4

,

lilY Riggs

St. Rt. 7

AND WHAT

Home lite Sews
Ph . 98J.J308
'
Chester

.

Chister

Robert T Bumgarner ,
Orrector

CAP!'AIN EASY

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

HAPPEN~ TO

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CARS T' ~PELL THAT OUT
A fl iT MOI&lt;e, BANANNIS. -·
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GENTLEMEN,
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WE 'RE'
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EKTREMEI.V UNPLEA5ANT-·

'Whlrtpooi

ROSEBERRfS
PENNZOIL

I TilUST YOU WON'T
OIIJI:C.T TO TWO 5UCH
ATTRACT IVS 6UARD5
8E-IIJ6 POSTE'D OUT·
YOUR DOO!Ot~

DfPENDIN&amp;
ON YOU!

APPUANCE II

POMEROY CLUSTfR

S.les--~rvJc!·AccesooriH

Rev James Corbitt

~20

POMEROY Sundoy School 9. 15

a m Worshtp servtce IO·JO om
Choir rehearsal. Wednesday , 7
Rev
Robert McGee
p .m
minister
ENTERPRISE . Worshtp q om
Church School 10 a m
•
ROCK SPRINGS. Worstlip 10
a .m Church Sctlool 9 ISd m

E. Main 5!.

Ph. 941·9130

RACINE
FOOD MARKET
Tile Store

FLA TWOOOS , Worship , ll o .m
·Cfturch School 10 o m

•

SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

WlthAHtarl
Racine
Pll. 941·2626

UMYF6:30 p .m .

.,,.
FOOZYl'OUii!

MY 8!.JNDIN6 SPeliiO 15 Re"-LLY
SliC~l BUT SIOFPIHG 15
ANO"THER: ,;;,oCI(!

CAPe~ lOOSE
NOW!

P. J. PAULEY,

Rev . Robert Bumgarner
HEATH
Robert Bumgarner
Pastor
Worshtp 10 ·30 o m
Church School 9 30 a m UMVF 6

.

''

510 N. 2nd

212W. Main

MIDDlEPORT CLUSTER

AGENT.
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, o.

pm

804W. Main
IH-2318 Pomeroy

Rutland Solem Center Charge
RUTLAND, Wilbur Hilt . Pastor
Worship 10 :J0 am Church School
930om
SALEM CENTER. Church School
9 . ~So m. worshtpqo m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER

Rev Harvey l&lt;och Jr
ASBURY , Worshtp 11 a m
Church School 9 50 o m. UMW
fint TueJday. ' Brble Study Thurs
730pm
FOREST RUN Worshlp q o m
Church School10 o m
MINERSVILLE , Wor5hip 10 am
Church School 9 o m

Copy n~hl 1979 Ketsler Adverlistng Service

am . Worship servtee 7·30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Rev Oovid Horns
Cluster leader
Rev Steven Wtlson
Florenc&amp; Smith
Hiltor1 Wolfe
Associates
BETHANY (Dorcas). Worsh1p
9 00 a m Church School 10 00
am
,,
CARMEL

Insurance
.SeiVices

314 E. Main

192-5130 Pomeroy

Ctiuch School 9 30

a .m . Worship-·ffl·JO a m 2nd and
4th Sundays
APPLE GROVE , Sunday School
9 30 a m Wonhtp 7 30 p m I st
a11d 3rd Sundays . Preyer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fellowshtp
supper ftrst Saturday 6 p .m . UMW
2nd Tuesdoy.7 30 p m
EAST LETART Chruch School 9
a . m Worship servtce 10 am .
.Prayer meellng 7 .30 p m .
Wednesday UMW first Tuesday
730p m
RACINE WESLEYAN

CROSS
SONS STORE
Groceries-

General Merchandise
Racine 941-3550

Attend The Church

LETART FALLS

Chu"h School
10 om Worshtp service. 9 am ;

This Sunday

NORTHEAST CLUSTER

lONG BOTTOM Sunday School

at q.30 a .m Eventng Worshtp at
7.30 p .m. Thursday Bible Study,

7 30p.m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School9 30
o .m Morning Worship 10 30 a .m.
Evening Worshp 7·30 p .m Btble
Study Wednesdays of 7 :30p.m.
ALFRED , Sunday School ot 9 4S
o .m Morning Worsh1p at II a .m .
Wednesday
Ntg~t
Prayer
Meettng, 7 30 p.ft'!
ST. PAUL , (Tuppers Plains) .
Sunday School 9 00 a m . Morntng
Worship at 10·00 o.m Monday
Night Btble Study 7·30 p .m .
United Methodist Women , second
Wednesday of eoch month , I 30
p .m .
SOUTH BETHEL (Sol••• Ridge)

Sunday School 9:00 o m. Morntng
Woship tO 00 a m Wednesday Bi·
ble Study , 7.30 p.m ·

ZION

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST

Pomeroy-Harrisonville
Rd ,
Robert Purtell , pastor, Btll
McElroy. Sunday schoolsupt Sun·
day school, q 30 a .m ; mormng
worsh ip and communion, 10 JO
o.m ; Sunday worsMip service, 7
p m . Wednesdar, evening prayer
' meeting and Btb e study , 7 p m

MIDDlEPORT. Sunday school.

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Pine Gro-ve. The Rev . WUI!om
Mtddlesworth, Pastor . (!lurch
services 9 30 o m Sunday School
10 30om

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO ,

CHRIST. Mr. OonoldRoley, pastor
Sunday school , 9· JO o m . wor ·
ship serll'lce, tO 30 o m Sunday
services , 1 p m . youth group.

BRADBURY

CHURCH

OF

l3:3t-3B

SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

pm.

Rev R1chard W Thomas
Pastor
Duane Sydenstrtcker
John W Douglas
Charles Domigan
Assoctafes
JOPPA , Wonhtp q 00 am
Church School 10 00 o m
CHESTER , Won hip 9 o m
Church School 10 a .m Bible
Study, Wednesdays , 7 30 p .m
(Communion ftrst Sunday each
month)

Scnplures selecled by The

John

MORNING STAR Wo"h1p 9 30
a .m .: Churcl-l School 10 ·30 a m ,
Mid-Week Service Wednesday B
MORSE CHAPEL , Worshp I 1
o m., Church Schoal9 30 am
PORTLAND , Worship 7 30 p m ,
Church School 9 30 o m
SUTTON. Church School 9 30
a m . Worship 1st ond 3rd Sundays
~.
,
10:30o m

People keep teaching their
children to say their prayers at
bedtime; but how many do it
themselves?
Maybe sometimes they pray in
the darkness, silently, so that no
one will know. But why the sec·
recy? Because prayer is a very
deep, personal kind of expres· Sunday

- Sundor

school 10 o .m , worship , 11 a .m .
Choir practice , Thursday , 8 p m

Fulton·Thompson
Tractor Sales, Inc.

D

SYRACUSE Chu.ch School 9 00

9:30a. m., Rtchord Vaughan , supt.
Mc;w-ningworshlp, 10 30.
SYRACUSE . Morning worship 'I
o . m , Sundoy school , 10 o .m Mrs .
Sampson Hall , supt
lev Bobby Porter, pastor Sun·
cloy school , 10 a .m .; Sunday war·
~h~ l1 a .m .; Sunday evening

Service

KERMIT'S KORNER

Middleport

PHARMACY

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH

Corner Sheth and Palmer , the Rev .
Mark McClung Su(ldoy sc~ool,
TUPPERS PlAINS, Wanhlp 9
9 15
am .:
Don
Wilson , a . m . Churc~ Schaol10 a m
superintendent . lacy
Borton .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , •••asst . sup! Morning Worship , · vices eoch Sunday 9·30 o m
10· 15 am. Youth meehng, 6 p m , George Pickens. pastor with
evening worship
7 30 p.m . preoch ing on f11s1 and tl'lird'-Sun ·
Wednesday n1ght B1ble study and doy of month . Oliver Swain, Supt .
prayerservJce , 7.30p m
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mid·
Rev Keith Eblin , pastor. Sunday
dleport , Sth and Moin George School . 9 :30 a m . Leonard
Glote , minister Mike Gerlach. Gtlmore , first elder; ever'ling &amp;ersupermtendent . Terry Yankey , vice , 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
youth minister Bible school, 9:30 meeting. 7 ·30 p .m
om .; morning worship , 10·30
IEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
am .; e\lening worship, 7 30. OF CHRIST , Duane Warden ,
prayer service. 7 p.m. Wednes- minister. Bible don 9 30 a m
ckly
morning worshtp , I 0 30 o m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
evening worsh1p
6 ·30 p .m
NAZARENE , Rev Jim Broome. Wednesday 81ble study, 6.30 p .m .
pastor: Bill White, Sunday school
NEW STIIIERSVIllE COMMUNIsupt. Sunday school, 9 30 a .m., TV Church Sunday School aer
tnorrting worship, 10 30 a .m .: vice , q ~5 o m Worship service
SW1doy evangelistic meeting. 10:30 Evangeltsltc Servict, 7:30
7 ·00 p .m. Prayer meeting. p . m
Wednesday
Prayer
Wednesday ,
7
p . m . meeting , 7 ·30

UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN'
!oiiNISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY,

GIFTS

Pll. 992-2101
Pomeroy

PfNT!COSTAl.

Th ird Ave the Rev Will rom l&lt;ntl·
tr.l pastor Rooold Dugan S'un·
doy School Supl. Classes lor all
ages ; cventng servtce 7·30 Blblo
sludr , Wednesday 7 30 p m .
yout 1 services Friday 7 30 p m

hovr '" ponsh house followtng
the service.
pester. Bible school. 9:30 a .m.:
morntng worship , 10·30 a .m. ;
Yout., meetings, 6:30p.m , even·
ing worship 7-30.. Wednesdol'
night _prayer meeting and Btble
s,tudy, 7.30 p.m .

'
CLOntiNG HOUSE

Attend the Church
qf Your Choice

Complete
Automotive

HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH ,

provtded. CoHee

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
212 W Main StJohn McArthur.

NEW' YORK

Church &amp; Office Supplies

Johll F. Fultl, Mgr.

Ne a r Long Bottom . Ed.,el t-tort
po•lor Sunday school 10 o m
C'hurch
7 , 30 p . rn.,.· prayP.r
meeting , 7 :30 p m Thursday

$undoy of each month) and ser·
mon Churd1 church schoot and
nursery core

-

utrv1ce 7 p .m , Wrdnt"(doy Foonl
ly Trottng Hour 7 p rn W£&gt;cinrsdoy
worshtp !.E"rvtce 7 30 p '" ,

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

SOMEONE
WHO 15
STRIKING
BACK AT
THE
SPECII=IC
IN STITUTIONS
WHOSE

Farm Machinery

Ave. 9925101

Pomeroy

The truth is that more of us
sens.e the reaching of our souls
toward God than have yet openly
admitted our religious need.

992-3325

Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.

Why wait? In church you can
pray alone or with others ... in
darkness or in light. But always in
peace . _ . reaching toward God.

461 S. Third, Middleport
"2·3196
-

Cable TV Systems, Inc.

Soetety

17:22-3 4

12:1-21

13:1-14

For The Best In TV Viewing
992-2505

15:1-13

14:1-23

Of Your Choice

FIRE &amp; SAFID
Equipment

WINNIE

Sales-Service

This Sunday

Fire Extinguishers

Fire Dept. Equip.
~utland 742-7777

PIZZA SHACK

Ken Grover
Bakers of

Attend The Church

Middlepon

of Your Choice

915-4155

Good Broad

Corry Out
126 E. Main

WINNIE 'S SISTERIN·LAW!

_ SOON ..
• DCCTOR, W14EN
M A Y I TAKE
MY HUSBAND

VERY500N1
MRS. WRI GHT.

HOME?

I'M

This Sundav

"2-6304

Wednesday , 7 p m ., Roy Adorns , Wors htp
lO 30 am
Su nday
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST . Rev Earl loy leader
even tng serv tce 7 p. m Wednes
Shuler , pastor Sunday school
CHURCH OF JfSU S CHRIST day evenmg prayer servtces 7 30
9 30om .; Church &amp;ervtce, 7 p m .. Located ot Rutland on New l1mo p m
youth meettng , 6 p m 1uesdoy Bt · Rood neKf to Forest Acre Pork
BETHlEHt;M BAPTIST Rev Earl
ble Study , 7 p m .
' ~e\1 Roy Rouse , poste r , ~a bert Shule r , pa s tor Wo rshtp servtce
RACINE CHURCH Of THE Musser Sunday School s.upt Sun 9 30 o . m Sunday school , 10 30
NAZARENE Rev . John A Coft
day school 10 30 a . m ., worshtp om Btble Study and prayer se r·
man , pastor Frank lin Imboden , 7 30 p m .Btble Study , Wednes vtce Thurs do,y 7 30 p rn
chotrmon of lhe Boord of Chris - day , 7 30 p m Saturday ntght
CARLETON CHUR CH Ktngsbury
lion Life Sunday School 9 30 proyer service ] 30 p m
Rood Gory Kmg pastor Sunday
a.m.. morntng worship , 10 30,
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN school , 9 30 a m , Rolph Carl
Sunday evening worsM1p, 7 30 Roger Watson , pasto r, Kenneth supertntendenl eve ntng wor!ohrp
p m Prayer meeting
. Wednes
Byer, Sunday school supt Morn ] 30 p m
Proy e r meetmg
1
day 7 30p m •
tng worship 9 30 om, Sun - wedn esd ay , 7 30p' m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Don l
dayuMool 10 30 o m
evenrng
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Walker , Pasto, , ~ Ronnte Salser , service 7.30 Wednesday Bible Bruce Smtth pastor Wallace
Sundoy school supt . Sunday Study, 7 30 p m
Damewood . Supl Btble School
school, q 30 om mormng war ·
MT
UNION BAPTIST
Don 9 30 o I'Yl
Pre ochtng servtee
ship. 10 ~0 am . Sunday evening Wdson
Sunday
sc hool 10 450 m. Noevemng5erv1ce
worshtF. , 7 .30, Wednesday even - supenntendent Sunday school.
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST
1ng Bib e study 7 30.
9 ~5o m ., eventng worshtp , 7 30 CHURCH , Rev Herbert Atlmg
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev R p m Prayer meettng , 7 30 p m pastor . Sunday School 9 JO o m
0 Browr1 pastor Sunday School
Wednesday
Morntng servtee
10 30 om
9 30 a m ., morning ,worshtp
TUPPERS PlAINS CHRISTIAN Evangelistic service 7 p m Prayer
10 45, youth servtce, 6 ·45 p m ., CHURCH, Eugene Underwood · ond prmse servtce Thursday 7
evening worship , 7 30 p m , pastor , Howard Coldwell Jr , p m
prayer and praise Wednesday
Sunday School Supt
Sunday
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISS10N at
7 30 p .m
School Q 30 om Morning Ser· Bold Knob
Rev
lawren ce
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, ~ev
mon , 10 30 am Sunday evemng Gluesencomp, Sr , pastor , Roger
Marvin Markm , pastor, Steve l tt · servtce, 7 p m
Willford Sr . Sunday sc hool sup!
tie Sunday school sup! Sundoy
LETART
FALLS
UNITED Sunday school 9 30 a , evenmg
"hoof . 10 o m , mornmg wor · BRETHREN , Rev Freelond Norrts , worshtp , 7 30 p m
Pray er
sMtp, II om Sunday evenmg pastor, Floyd Norris , su pt Sunday meel tng , Wednesday 7 30 p . m
worshtp, 7 30. Prayer meeting school 9 30 o m . mornmg ser Vouth meeting Sunday 5·30 p rn
and Bible study, Thursday , 7 ;.lO mon, lO 30 om , Prayer serv1ce, wtlh Don ond Martho Meadows in
charge
p m youth servtce . 6 p m Sun · Wednesday 7 30 p m
doy
CHESHR CHURCH OF THE
WHITE 'S CHAPEl, C'oolvUie RO
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD. NAZARENE , Rev Herbert Grote , Rev Roy Dee te r , pa5tor Sundoy
Rev Danny R Cook , pastor Sun- polilor Worshtp serv1ce, ll o. m school9 30om, worship service
day school , 9 30 o m ., worship and 7 ·30 p. m Sunday School , 9 30 10 JO a . m B1blc study and prayer
service . I 1 o m . evening service. o m Charles 8tssell , supt Prayer serv1ce, Wednesday , 7 30 p . m
7·00. youth '-ervtce, Wednesday , meeftng Wednesday 7 30 p .m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
7 OOJ). m
.
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF larry Coleman, poslor, Herb
lANGSVIllE
CHRISTIAN CHfflST, Gabriel Mzrs , pastor Bt- Elltot! , Sunday school supt. Sun
CHURCH Robert Muner. pastor. ble Sunday School 9 30 o m mor- day sc hool , 9 30 am , morn tng
Sunday school , 9 30 o .m , Roy nlng church 10 30 a m Sunday war5htp and comumon , lO 30
Stgmon, sup!. ; morni ng worshtp , e-vening servt&lt;;e
7 00 p m am Sunday even ing service , 7
10·30, Sunday even ing service Wednesday service 7 30p .m
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
7 30. mid· week service. Wednes·
lAUREl CUFF FREE METHODIST CHURCH , Amos Ttllts pastor
day 7 p m .
CHURCH . Rev floyd F Shook . Donny Ttllt s Sundoy Sctlool Supt
' SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE pastor, lloyd Wrtght , Sunday Sunday Sc hool 9 30 om , war·
NAZARENE . Rev
Dole Boss, School Supt , Mornlng Worsh tp sh1p scrv tee . 11 o m , Sunday
pastor. Bob Moore
Sunday 9 ·:)0 am ; Sunday School 10 20 1 even tng serv1ce , 7 p m Proyer
School supt .. Sunday school. 9 30 om Wednesday. Proyer and Bt- meet1ng Wednesday , 7 p m
am , morntng worship, 10 45 ble Study 1 30 p .m , Svndoy even- WMPO Rod to broodrost , Sunday
am , evongeln,tlc service 7 p m ing worshtp 7 30 p .m ; Chotr Prac morntng 7 ·45 '
Wednesday servtces - prayer tice Thursday , 7 p .m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
and protse 7 p m.. Nozorene
DEXTER CHURCH OF· CHRIST NA ZA RENE , Rev Lloyd 0 Grimtn
youth 7 p m
Oo1ly prayer Charles Russell. Sr . min ts ter. Jr , pastor Sunday schoo l 9 30
mn(lttng , 8 30om Men{s prayer Rick Macomber o:; upt , Sundoy am · wor shi p servt ce 10 30 a m
mevting Saturday . 7 p m
sc hool , 9·30 om worship ser- Brood rosf lt ve over WMPO; you ng
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN vic"' 10 30om Bible Study TuPs- pe o ple ' s
se rvtce
7
p m
CHRIST, Elden R Blake, pastor day 7 ::10 p m
Evongeltst1c se rv1ce. 7 30 p rn
Sunday School 10 a.m Robcn
IUOHGANIZED CHUPCH 01· w,,dnesd oy service 7.'J(1 f~ rn
Reed, supl , Mormnp sermon 11 JE SUS CHJI ISt Of LATTiiR DAY - FIRST SOUTHfRN BAPTIST (o r
am Sunday night servtce~ Chm· ~AitJTS Portlcnd Rn c,nn Rom1. 11('1 ('I I s(_~rnnd anrl A n d 0 r sor~ ,
Iron f.r'1dflOVor 730 f rri f"ong Wtlltam Roush , poo,l nr Phyllts Mmnt • Pm !nr Fronk Low th e r
5-ervtce, 6 p m Preaching S.Jo 1 St,...b.a rt Sunday Srhool Supt S1111 Stmdoy o:o{ hoo l 9,45 0 m . wm ·
p m Mtdweek Prover meeting,·. rloy Scha.ol 9.30 o . m Mor.nt(1~ d_Hf\ s('rvtcr II om onrl 7 :10

YOU -POOR CON FUSE[? DEAR.
-mE DOCTOR SAYS YOU
HEAR EVERY WORD, YET
YOU DON'T KNOW II"
HERE TO HELP
YOU • . • OI&lt;. HARM
YOU.

B UT YO U'RE: HEIR

AUNT__ AND

MARK VSTORE

Eallnor

Let us capture the story
of your Wedding.

Chester. Ohio 45720

216 ·Second

Saturday
Friday
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
Romans
Romans
•
Romans
•
Romans
•
• Acts • Acts •
11:1-30

•

•

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

sian? Because we reveal ourselves
•
through ,it?

Attend The Church

Third

Wedn~sdoy 7 p m

Amencan Bible

Deul! Tractors, New Holland

p m
Weekly Btble
Wednesday . 7 30 p .m

Study

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST ,

Mtller St , Mason , W Va Aurtee
Mtck pastor Sunday Bible Study
10 o n\ Worshtp 11 0 m and 7
p m Btble Study Wednesday 7
p m , Vocal music .
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD ,

Duddtng lone Mason , W Vo
Chester Tennonl , Pastor Sunday
School q 45 am , Chtldren's
Church 6 45 p.m. Voung People' s
Servtce 6 45 p m Evangelistic
Servtce 7 30 p. m. Women's Mis·
ston ory Counctl 10 o. m ftrst and
thtrd Tuesdays Prayer and Btble
S!udy, Wednesday , 7 30 p m
HARTFORD' CHURCH O F CHRIST

IN CHRISTIAN UNIO~ . The Rev
Wdltam Campbell. J1Qstor Sunday
School , 9 30 o m , James Hughes ,
supt , evening servtce, 7 30 p m
Wednesday eventng prayer
meeting , 7 30 p m Vouth proyer
service each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW

BIBLE

CHURCH

letart . W . Yo , Rt I , Rev Charles
Ha rgraves, pastor . Wor s h1p serVICes , 9·30 a .m ., Sunday school.
11 o m , evenmg worshtp, 7 30
p m
TuesdoY. cottage prayer
meet mg and Btble study, 9 30
a m Worship servtce , Wednes day , 7 30 p .m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now
loca ted on Pomeroy Ptke . County
Rood 25, near Flatwoods Rev
Blackwood , pastor Servtces on
Sunday at 10 30 am and 7 30
p m with Sunday school 9 30
am Btble . study Wednesday .
7 30p m
INDEPENDENT

HOLINESS

CHURCH INC - Pearl St , Mrd ·
Rev. O'Dell Monley,
dl e port
pastor , Sonny Hudson , Sunday
schoo l supt Sunday school, 9 30
a .m , event ng worship , 7 30 p m
Prayer ond pra i'e servtce
Wednesday , 7:30pm
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD -

Poslor Dennis Boles
Sunday
School. 10 o.m .. worshtp service .
11 .30 o . m. and 7 30 p.m PrQyer
meellng . Wednesday , 7,!30 p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
QF JESUS CHRIST

Eider Jomes
Mtllb'r Btble study . Wednesday .
7·30 p m . Sunday School , 10om .
Sundo y night ser-vicO, 7 .30 p m .
POMEROY

WESLEYAN

HOliNESS
Harrisonville Rood:
DewA y Ktng, pastor , Edison
Wnovcr , O&lt;;!'. rsfottl Henry Eblin,
J1 ~ u nday srhoo l supt Sunday
-,c hon !. q 30 o m, morning wa r~ htp 1 1 o m Sunday eventng s.er
•11re 1 30 prayer meet1n9 . Thurs day , 7 3Up m

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF

GOO Not Pentecostal. Rev .
George Oder , pastor Wa rshtp
service Sundoy Q 45 a m Sun·
day school 11 o m worship se r·
vtce . 7 30 p m Thu.rs.doy prayer
meettng , 7.30 p m
MT HERMON United Brethren
Church Sunday School Q 30 a m
Wor s hip ' se rvice 10 45 o .m
Preachtng servtces every Sunday
alternating w1th C E. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7.30 p m. Rev
James leach, poste r . Oov1d
Holter. loy leader. ·
JEHOVAH'S WlfNESSES, I mUe

east of Rutland , junctton of Route
124 and Noble 'Summrl Rood (T ·
174 ) Sunday Btble lectu re, 9 30
o.. Watchtower study, 10 30
a . m .; Tuesday , Btble study, 7 and
8 15 p m ; Thur5day, theocrolic
school , 7 30 p m , serv1ce
meeting , B 30 p m
RUTLAND

FREEWILL

BAPTIST

Church - leland Holey , pastor .
Sunday school, 10 am . even•ng
service , 7.30 p . m . Prayer
meeltng , Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOO of P•ophecy ,

located on lhe 0 J White Rood
off htghwoy 160. Sunday School
10 o.m Superintendent John
Loveday Ftrst Wednesday n1ght
of month CPMA ser-vices , second
Wednesday WM8 meeting, thi rd
through fifth youth servtee
George Croyle, pastor,
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -- 570

Gran! St . Middleport, Rev Don
Bloke , pastor Sunday school.
9:30 am ., morntng worshtp ,
10 ·30 a . m. ; eventng worship , 7
p.m , Wednesday evening Bible
sludy and prayer meeting , 7 p .m
Afttliated wtth Southern Baptist
Convention.
BRADFORD

CHURCH

OF

Pau l D. Welton , pastor. Phone
992 2825 Soturdoy evemng Mass ,
7 30, Sunday Mass , 8 and 10 a .m ,
Conlesston Saturday, 7-7 30p m
VICTORY BAPTIST ·- On lhe

FOREST RUN BAPTIST -

NORTH

BETHEL

Ur ; tod

Met~?dtst

Church, Rev Charles
D~~ JOn, pastor Sunday School.
9 ;so a m , Worship Servtce , 10 45
a . m. 1 Sunday Bible Study, 7 00
p . m .;
Wednesday
prayer
meettng , 7·30 p m.

CHRIST- Gabnel Mrot pastor
Sunday school, 9 30 a .m .. morn·
f!OUSE OF PRAYER AND
tng church , 10.30 a . m . Junior
church p'?o-'g rom under directiOn PRAISE Liberty A· ·~ .. post Burger
of Koren Mroz for children 2-10 , 1 Chef. Pomeroy . James Am pock ,
during regular church hour in • postor. Sunday sc hoc..' 10 a .m ..
church basement . Sunday even I morntng worShip , 11 a .m Even·ing ser-vtce, 1 p .m ... Wednescjgy iri'g worshp, Sunrloy, -..,,qsdoy and
l:rt doy . 7 30 p.m.
servtce, 7 ~ p m
lJt ' 1fLINr' l' M SOUTI-IERN BAP·
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER George's Creek Rood . Church TIST c~u . l" 'L, R.: ute I , Shade.
school , 9 30 a m , morning wor - Pastor Don Bloc 1. .Affiliated w11h
ship, 10·30 , evening service , ] Southe-1"' Baptist Con'lf'rtlton.
Sunday school. 1:30 r I I" ' •
'ay
p m . Prayer meeting Wednesday
&lt;Tl .
•
worshtp, 2:30 p.m. Th1.1raday
ST. • AUl LUli&lt;ERAN CHURCH . 9vening Bible study , 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL
ASSEMBLy ,'
Corner of Sycam('te ond Second
Route
12,., WUiiam
Sts. Pomeroy The RP.W . William «octne,
Middlesworth. Pastor. Sunday -tobock , pastor . Sunday school.
School at 9.•5 o.rn . and Churc/'1 10om , Sunday ever1lng service,
6 30 p m Wednesday eening ser.
Servtces ll o m
SACRED HEART , Rev Fothe! ,.,ce, 7.

BRIDGE

DISPOZ -A
DIME

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Outsmarting the opponent

INSERT ,-1'\_ fl\
10 ~

NORTH

'-0 I!J

2-l6--A

+ K 10 7

•tdO
t KJ432
• 10 8 6
WEST

EAST

• 965
• Q975

• Q432
• J62

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+ J9752

Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, Feb . 16,
the 47th day of 1979 There are
318 days left in the year.
Today's highlight m
history .
On this date in 1959, Fidel
Castro was sworn in as the
premier of Cuba after the
overthrow of the Batista
regime.
On this date:
In 1804, a force of American

servicemen under
Lt
Stephen Decatur shpp~d inlo
the North African porl of
Tripoli and burned a U.S.
frigate that had been
captured by pirates_
In 1846, the first Texas stale
legtslalure met in Austm.
In 1862, during the Civil
War ,
about
15 ,000
Confederate so ldiers
surrendered at Fort Do·
nelson, Tenn

WHO DRINKS
wrn-~

HIS

FlN~ER,AND

YOU,
61R.

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TI-!ANK

" '

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SOUTH

Rev

Nyle Borden, poster Corneltus
Bunch , superintendent Suoday
school, 9 30 o m .. second ond
fourth Sundays worshtp service at
2 30 p.m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth
and Motn St , Mtddleport , Rev .
, Colvin' Minnts ~ pastor Mrs Elvm
Bumgardner , supt
Sunday
school, 9 30 a.m ; worshtp ser1 vtce, 10 45o m

Friday, Feb . 16

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Route 7 bypass. James E Keesee
pastor Sunday school 10 o .m ,
morntng worship , 11 a 1m , even·
ing serviCe, 7
TRINITY Chrisltan Assembly .
Coolville Gtlbert Spencer ,
postor. Sunday school q:30 o .m ,
morntng worship 11 o m. Sunday
evening service
7·30 p m .,
mtdweek pray.ar se rvtce Wednesday , 7.30p.m.
MOUNT Olive Communtty
Church law ren ce Bush , pastor,
Be ltte Ptgott , Sunday school sup!
Sunday School and morntng war
ship, 9 30 am Sunday evening
servrce 7 p m
You th meeting
and Btble study . Wednesday . 7
p m.
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason ,
meet ol United Steel Workers
Unton Hall. Railroad Street ,
Mason. Pastor , Rev Joy Mitchell .
Morntng worshtp Q,45 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 o .m Prayer
meeting Wednesday , 7 30 p m

+3

Bm50NHl6
HE:AD.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
West Nortb East Soutb
Pass I+
Pass a•
Pass 3t
Pass t•
Pass 4 NT
Pass 5t
Pass 6t
Pass Pass Pass

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By Oswald Jacoby
r - : . . - - - - - - - " " - . , . - - - - - - - • n d Alan Sontag

I BEEN SORTIN' MAIL
AN' LOOK IN' AT.ZIP CODES
TILL I'M PLUMB WORE
TO A FRA'ZZLE

BUT I'M TAKIN'
ME A BODACIOUS
VACATION NEXT
WEEK, SNUFFY

WHAR 'BOUTS
'IE GOIN:
URIAH?

The student won the club

DOWN TO
SUNNY

lead with the queen and
continued
with the king.
331qo!r The Professor
ruffed,
drew trumps, played ace,
king and another heart
which he ruffed in &lt;lnmmy,
1 ruffed dummy's last club
and his last heart and was
ready to look for the queen of
spades.
He wasted little time In the
He simply led
king and then
against East.
did you figure that
asked the student. "I

I

l'T'S AL.L IHS'
A Mame reader wants to
TIMe W5 HAVS!
know what you bid m response to your partner's
openmg notrump (16-18 _:.;V;;::~'\jr=:.:.r'--t-'"T"""'"'' Now anange the circled letters to
rorm the su'J)rlse answer, as sug points).
·
'- .A
gested by the above cartoon.
We just raise him to four.
We have 16 points, but our
distribution is 4-3-3-3 and our
Prlntanswerhera:
spot cards are about as
small as possible. We only
(Answe,.lomorrow)
want to be m a slam lf he
Jumbles
OUNCE PARTY HOMING PEWTER
holds a max1mwn.
Yester"'~v· s
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Answer How lhal craz~ llghfei always acted altho

-K-E.....,.L_L_I_Y__,

1

ll I I )

I

{For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send S1 IO ' "' Win at
Bndge , •• care of th,. newspa·

per. p_0 . Box 489. Radio City
Station . New York. N Y. 10019)

Wetgh ·in -""WAYOUT"
Jumble- No. t2.conlllnlng t10pualto, lo IYIII-I«It.7,pootpalcl
tromJumble,afothll.....,.plr,loxM.Not u.caii.N.J.07141.1nciludeyour ·
nlrM, ecldrtlt, zip codt 1nd m•k• check• per• bitt to Newap.pertl a ak1 .

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10-The DallY 5entmel Mtddleport-Pomerov 0 • FridaY. Feb 16, 19'79

For Best Re-sults Use Sentinel Classifieds

TELEVISION
VIEWING
6 00-News News 3-:r.lO, 13,15, ABC News 6, Andy
Griffith 17, Hodgepodge Lodge 2(), Studio See 33
6 31&gt;-NBC News 3,15, ABC News 13, Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8, 10. My Three Sons 11, Over
Easy 20 33
7 00-Cross Wits 3. Newlywed Game 6,13, Sha Na Na
8 News 10 Lave, American Style 15 Carol Burnett
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7 31&gt;-Hee Haw Honeys 3, Sl 98 Beauty Show 6, Fam lly
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The Country 15. Sanford &amp; Son 17, MacNeil Lehrer
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8 00-Diff rent Strokes 3, 15, Makin' It 6,13, Wonder
Woman 8,10 Washington Week In Review 20,33,
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8 31&gt;-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3,15 What's Happen! ng 6 13,
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9 00-Turnabout 3 15, Movie "Shampoo" 6, 13,
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9 31&gt;-Hello, larry 3 15, Turnabout 20, MacNeil
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10 GO-Sweepstakes 3 15, Dallas 8,10 News 20, When
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11 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3 15, Baratta 13, Movie "Five
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12 00-Gong Show 8 Monty Python 33, 12 31&gt;-Juke
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12 41&gt;-lronslde 13 I 1)0--Midnlght Speclal3, 15, Movie
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1 40-News 13 2 31&gt;-News 3, 3 00-Mavle "The Pink
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3 40-Mavle The Marrying K""d" 17, 5 oo--Movle
Jigsaw J

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17,1979
5 40-World at Large 17, 6 GO-Sunrise Semester 10,
6 11&gt;-Discovery 17, 6 »-Saturday Report 3 US
Farm Report 10, Kentucky Afield 13
6 40-News 17 7 00-Go USA 3 Matters of Life 6, Mr
Magoo 8 Public Polley forums 10, Animals,
Animals Animals 13, Three Stooges Little Rascals
17
7 30-CIIIIwood Ave Kids 3, Dusty's Treehouse 6,
Porky Pig&amp; Frlends8, Pink Panther 13, Vegetable
Soup 15
8 00-Yogl s Space Race 3,15, Scoaby's All Stars 6, 13,
Popeye 8 10, Cliffwood Ave Kids 17
8 31&gt;-Fanlasllc Four3,15, Partridge Family 11, 9 01&gt;9 00-Godzllla 3,15, Bugs Bunny 8,10, Star Trek 17,
9 31&gt;-Superlrllends 6,13
10 00-Movle ' Flying Leathernecks" 17, 10 31&gt;-Dalfy
Duck 3 15, Tarzan 8 Movie "Don't Raise the
Bridge' 10
11 00-Fred &amp; Barney 3,15, Fanglace 13, Vegetable
Soup 6
,
11 »-Jetsons 3, 15, Action News far Kids 13
12 GO-Buford 3 15, Weekend Special 6, 13, Spaee
Academy 8 College Basketball 20, Movie "The
Fighting Kentuckian' 17
1~ 31&gt;-Fabulaus Funnies 3, American Bandstand 13
Fat Albert 8, PTL Club 15
1 00-Big Blue Marble 3, Aware 6 Fishing with
Roland Marlin 8 In The Know 10, Capitol Beat 33
1 3f)--Mellnda's Blind 3, Columbus Bowling Classk 6
Bob Jones 8, 30 Minutes 10, Mario &amp; the Magic
Movie Machine 13 So The People May Know 33
2 00-Stu Aberdeen Basketball 3, VIewpoint 8, Trl
State Today and Tomorrow 13, Movie "Back to
Balaan" 17 Garden Spot 20, When The Boat Comes
In 33
2 31&gt;-College Basketball 3, Sports Afield 6, College
Basketball 15 Gale Catlefl Basketball 8, Auto
Racing 13 Other School System 20
3 GO-Outdoors With J ullus Boros 6, Gunsmoke 8,
Austin City Limits 20. Great Performances 33
3 31&gt;-Pro Bawling 6,13
4 GO-Nashville On The Road 10 Auto Racing 8, Movie
The Commancheros" 17, Beethoven Festival 20
4 31&gt;-Movle ' The Three Stooges In Orbit" 3, Sports
Spectacular 8, Pop Goes The Country 10, Golf 15
5 00-Wide World of Sports 6,13, Dally 10, Growing
Years 20 Lowell Thomas Remembers a3
5 »-Porter Wagoner 10, Wild Wild World of Animals
33
6 00-News 3,10, Concern 8 God Has The Answer 15,
Wrestling 17, Crockefl's Victory Garden 20, Over
Easy 33
6 31&gt;-NBC News 3, , News 6, CBS News 8.10,
Newsmaker 79 13, Ohio Journal 20. West VIrginia
Outdoors 33
7 GO-Abbott &amp; Costello 3, Hee Haw 6,8, Bugs BuMy
10, Forsyte Saga 20, Film Makers 33
7 31&gt;-We Think You Should Know 3 Please Stand By
10, World War II g G I Diary 33
8 00-Chlps 3. College Basketball 15, Lave Boat 6,13,
Once Upon A Classic 20,33, While Shadow 10, Hee
Haw Honeys 17
8 31&gt;-Marty Robbins Spotlight 17
Shakespeare
Plays 20 Turnabout 33
9 OO-BJ &amp; the Bear 3 Movie 'Murder by Natural
Causes" 10, Dolly 17, Skating Spectacular 33
" 9 31&gt;-Fantasy Island 613, That Nashville Music 17
10 01&gt;-Rockford Flies 3, 15, Spider Man 8; Pop Goes
The Country 17 Movie "Man on the Roof" 33
10 31&gt;-Nashvllle On The Road 17
11 GO-Porter Wagoner 17, News 6,8 ,10,13,1S
11 1~ABC News 6,11 »-Saturday Nllght live 3,1S,
Movie • The Terrarnauts" 6, Movie "The Young
Stranger' 8, Movie "The Out of Towners' 10,
Movie 'Grave of fhe Vampire" 13, Don Kirshner's
Rock 17
1 oo-Mavle The War Wagon" 3 Movie "Point of
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1 31&gt;-Mavle The Devil at 4 O'clock" 17, 2 31&gt;-News
3 ABC News 13
3 01&gt;-Movle "Dark Victory" 3, 4 11&gt;-12 0 Clock High
11, 5 DO-Movie 'Charlie Bubbles" 3, 5 11&gt;-World
at Large 17

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT

PROBATE DIVISION
GALLI A COUNTY OHIO

IN THE MATTER OF THE
ESTATE OF EDNA MAE
RHODES , DECEASED
NO 22585
NOTICE

Nottce •s hereby g1ven that
on the 16th day of January
1979 John M P1 c k ens f1led 1n
th s Courr under Docket M 12

No

copv

35 92

an auth en t•cated

of the

le tt ers

of

ad

mm•strat•on Issued by tile

Orphan s Court of
County

sy lva n•a

Sta te

of

relating

Case No 2:2600

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On February 5 1979 in the
Meigs County Probate Court
Case No 22600 Frank W
Porter Jr
P 0 Box 486
Pomeroy Oh10 45769, was
appointed Adm inistrator of
the estate of Els1e M Decker
deceased late of Box 1-49
Syracuse OhiO

Beaver

WANT AD
CHARGES

t o the

M annmg 0 W ebs t er
Probat e Judge

15 words or Under
Charge
Caol1
1110
1211
1:10
190
UJ
%25
3 75
~ 110

J dH)'

2 days
3day:~

6 days

EIK:h'\rord over Lhe minimwn 15
words ls -4 cenb per word per tbiy
Ads rwmmg other than consecutive
days W1U be charged at the 1 day

'""'In memory C.rd of Thanks and
Obituary 6 cenb per wuid $3 00
nurwnwn Cash In advance

Moblll!' Home sales and Y11.rd g)es
are accepted only with hsh with

order

~

cent charce for ads carry·

lflt! Box Number In Care of The Sen
line!

The Publisher reserves the right
to edit or reject any ada deemed ObJectional 'l'be Publbher will not be
responsible for more than one inC()!'
rect insertion
Pllone 992 2156

LOST IN Flotwoodo;; T('xoo;;
nt n ty oreo Block lcmq
adu lt mole co t M1 ~; smg
Jon 12 Call ~85 4344
5 30

Not1ce 1$ llereby g1ven that
on February 17 1979 at 10 00
A M a public sate will be held
at
105
Un1on
A11enue
Pom t;!: r o y, Oh10 to sell for
c a sh tile followmo collatera1,
to wlf
1973 Monte Carlo ser~al No

1H57K31462332

The Farmers Ban}( &amp;
Savings company Pomeroy,
Oh1o reserve-s the right to bid
at this sale

(21 "

15 16 Jtc

hem
smw
oftr.r

l OST LETAR T Fol!s Brown and

•
•

..•'.

re r 247 'lb72

t l"

LOST SLACt&lt; mole nwu tered cot
wh1tf' flea collar An swers to
Sen Mu lberry Ave vtcln.ty
991 b()d0

---

-

.,..._

Pets for Sale

-

--

---~

TWO AKC reg 1stered Peku ese
pups $90 each Second house
behmd S1lver Run Freewtll Bop
t sf Chu rc h Stanley Alesh~r e
99'1 2251

-- - - - -

-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADIJNES

1975 DATSUN PICKUP good con
dii1on
Good tires
low
m1leoge Runs good m snow
1970 FORD three (luorte r ton 4
speed goo d cond1t1o n $745
1951 Chev ro le t I 1 ton flat
bed $48S 742 3093
I 9n FORO CUSTOM F 150 truck

302 eng ne

1

ton auto

PS

1978L TO II 4 door wh te blue m
teno r rod o auto P S o1r
35 1 engme $2500 74'2 3154
Harold Hysell

Tuesday
thru Friday

&lt;PM

1

SUnday
&lt;PM
Frtdiy afternoon

IN LOVING memo ry of Isabelle
Cozart who passed away Feb
17 )q77
Th e roll ng stream of hfe 1'o !ls on
But shll the vacant cho1r
Re calls th e love th e vo•ce th e
smtle
of the one we loved so dear
Sadly
m1 ssed by hu sba nd
chrldren and grondch ldren

Nottces
GUN SHOOT Rocme Gun Club
Every Sunday I pm Fm:: tory
choke guns only
'

CLERK WANTED
For
busy
electrtcal
construction office tn New
Haven, W Va
Payroll
necessarv.

Please

reply
stahng
expertence and tr:am1n9 t~:
ClVES CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
Electrtcal Division
P 0 Box 1088
Auburn Maml! 04210

GUN SHOOT

£or Ren
=-" 't' - - - -

_

CO[JNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Lo rge lo ts Coll99 '2 7479

In Memory

expertence

-:--:~_:_:_

- - - -

the day before publication

Ronne Volunteer...

F1re Dept Every Saturday 6 30
pm at thetr bu1ldtng 1n Boshan
Factory choke gun s only

FREE CANDY moktng class at D1 s
Candy ond Coke Supplies Spr
1ng Volley Plaza 446 :113.4 for
reg stratton Its fun and easy
You II be omozed at what you
con do
RACINE FIRE Dept 1s now occep
t ng sealed b1ds on 1961 GMC
panel truck os ts We hove the

nght to re1ect all btds Bt~s wd l
be acc epted dunng the month
of Feb
1979 Send b1ds to
Roe~ne Volunteer F1re Dept
Be»&lt; 246 Rocrnc For mor e 1n
fo rmat on coll949 2050

·- - =-

BAUROOM
DANCE CLASSES
AT ROYAL OAK PARK

For More Information
Ca11992 2622 after 5 P.M

Wanted to Buy
CHIP

WOOD

Pole s

ma x

d1ameter 10 on largest end
$12 per ton Bundled slob $10
ton Oeh \lered to Oh1o
Pollel Co
Rt 2 Po.meroy
992 2689
per

TIMBER POMEROY
duc t s Top pnce
sow t1mber Coli
Kent Hanby 1 .446

Fores t Pro
for stondmg
992 5965 or
8570

,.

OLD FURNITURE ICe bo xes brass
bed s ron b~ds desk s etc
co mplete households
Wr1te
M D M1ller Rt 4 Pomeroy or
co II 992 77liJ
OLD COINS pocket watches
clas s nngs weddmg bond s
d1omof'1ds Gold or si lver Coli
RogerWomsl~y -~~~31
WANT TO buy old 45 a nd 78
phonograph records
Ce ll
9q2 6370 or Contact Mortm Fur
mture
WANTED TO buy old 1ewelry
Coli 99'1 5262 or wnte l&lt;oy
Cect l 87 S 2nd M ddleport

OH

TWO BEDROOM totchen furn sh
ed opt Ca ll befor e 8 om

997 1288
LARGE HOME
m
992 2205 bef ore 5

Pom eroy

TWO BEDROOM tra ler
only 9Cjl2 337-4

Adults

---- -- -- For Sale
COAL LIMESTONE sand grovel
cofc •um ch londe fertdtrer dog
food and a ll types of soft Ex
ce lstor Salt Work s Inc E Mo n
St Pomeroy 9q2 3891
FROSTY S CB Rad1o Equ1pment
Every thmg n lwo way rod o
antenna and o ccesso r~ es
Phone Portland Bd3 2181 Open
even1ngs unlll 8 Sunday 2 t 116
CHAIN SAWS used good cond1
t1on most
hove 5evero
l Wtll F1f
trade
for
onythmg
es
992 7494
RUTLAND HARDWARE 1 doors
from Rutland Post Off1ce
Phone 742 2255
I
delu~ee
can1 ster vacuum clea ner w th
power nozzle and attachments
$69 Q5 1 Sunbeam 1ndoor ou t
door vacu um cleaner 1 , h p
motor $39 95 1 laboratory
s1nk
and
cob1net
Al so
Mon sf eld closet combmohon
the New Water Saver bolh

.

S86 95
MF 135 gas tractor MF 150 gm
tra ctor MF 11 35 tractor w1th
cob and AC Gehl 95 MX
gnnder m xe
Gehl
1070
mower condd oner
Shmn s
Tractor Sales 034 458 1630
l eon WV
SALE RENT or hne MF 200 B
Carwler dozer MF 7 11 sktd
steer loader Shmn s Tractor
Sales 304 458 1630 Leon WV
REDUCE SAFE and lost w1th
GoBese Tablets &amp; E Vop water
ptll s Nefso n Dr\Jg
BROWNING MARK IV CB antenna
tower 2 rotors watt meter
D 104 Tweet e B~rd m• c I near
Co IlL ttle 81t 949 2265
HAY FOR sole Round boles S'lO
Square bales $1
985 3537

9854131
FIREWOOD FOR sole q95 3505 or

985 3537
FIREWOOD

FOR

JOHN

DEERE

sole
M

1H57K31462332

The Farmers Bank &amp;
savtngs Company Pomeroy,
Oh10 reserves the right to btd
at this sale

' 12)

,4

15 16 Jtc

Atr, auto , P

Annstrong Carpeting \

EWOTT
APPUANCE II
220 E . Main Streot,
Pom....,y,O
CaiiH2-7113
For Fret Estlmalef
11 9 1 mo

$25 a
dozer

bl4 696 1135
USED TIRES GE cassette recorder
Head cleaner Allen w renches
Wonted to rent tro1ler or opt
m Me gs Co Al so odd fObs
742 2909

-

BUY YOUR 197~ Gravely now thru
March I and save up to $600
$100 down holds til Apnl 15th
Gravely Tractor Soles and Ser
v ce 204 Condor St Pomeroy

992 2975

_~obl_I_~H_!!mes for Sale
19b7 TOTAL ElECTRIC mob le
home
furn 1shed
3 bedr
washer and dryer Atr cond•
honed 1 lot 210 It frontage
$12 000 Phone 741 1826
195S Pro1r1 e Schooner 28 x B

bd•
1965 General 60 K 12 2 bdr
1968 Elcona 52x12 2 bdr
1969 Buddy 60 ){ 11 4 bdr
1970 Sylva 60 x 12 2bdr
1970Costle 60 x 12 2bdr
1973 Arl ngton 60 )( 1':J 2 bdr
t973 R1dgewood 70 )( 14 3 bdr
1973 K rkwood 50 x 12 2 bdr
B B S MOBILE HOME SAlES
flT PLEASANT WV
675 442 ..

REYNOLD'S
ElfCTRIC MOTOR

SHOP

1973 FORD MAVERICK•••••• : ••• s1495

651 Beech Street

992-2356
1 4 1 rna [Pd )

acre lot Garage workshop
Must see too opprec1ote1 'T P
area Phone61d t:J67 3109

-

WHilMER BLACK D•omond L n
ment Rawle1gh Product s Also
M cNess prody cts 1924 E Ave
Goll. pol.s Oh•o 45631 Across
from Sm1th Bu• ck goraQ(I
Telephone 6U 446 9516
FOR SALE for parts 1970 Pont1ac
Bann ev lie 455 4 bbl Runs
perfect $250 Phone 992 6270
for mformolton or see at 143 ,
Butternut

8 pool table three fourths mch
slaie top Se t of pool boll!ii and
rock plus 4 slicks Cost $1850
new w1ll sell for $450 Phone
992 9976 after 4pm

----

P.AINO
EXCELLENT cond111on
Pecan fm1sh $500 247 2401
after 3 w eekdays
boles for

Bd3 2524

For a11
Needs

SALE PRICES
JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr
Phone9't2111

sa le

after 12

ocift•t let a chlmniy fire pul

_ ,Real Estate for Sale

~·''THE

3

1ttll CentUI'y Service wit"

ot res 1n Pomeroy Secluded
wooded oreo on top of h1ll
Overlooks nver Woter elec
tnc avotloble 992 3886

VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

2ottt Century Knew How_.
S,ecllllllntll

WoontDv•, 011 Fyrftace

&amp;J'Irepltlce Flue•

.

-

~-::-:::-:~~;;;:::li!!S""l

proved, l lf2 story frame 2
bedrooms, bath fireplace,
carport
storrns
$.400 00
down plus c los1ng Total

pnce $8,000 00
NEW LISTING - 1 story
frame 3 bedroomsr bath
all etectr1c abovt 112 acre
utll1ty room $18 500 00
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot lots ot remodel1ng 3 or

4

bedrooms,

2

baths

natUral gas hot water heat,

(low gas bills) HERE IS A
BUY
481f2 ACRES - New 1978
Mobile Home
(e)(pando
ltvmg roomJ add a room

ldx36

deck wtth seattng

capac1ty Here IS a genutne

bargalft at $48 000 00
WANT A BUSINESS• We have several, and one
to su1t your needs I am
sure Call on these
and every other lund of
house 1magmable Buyers

waiting with ready cash
CALL NOW AND LET US
SELL YOUR PROPER
TY
REALTORS
HENRY E CLELAND SR
HENRY E . CLELAND JR
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992 2259 992 61~1 992 2568

3325
216 E SitcOIId Street
NI;W LISTING -

5 acres

1n the woods on good road
with school
and ma1l
routes Modern 4 bedroom

home wtth 2 baths

fu11

basement formal dlnmg
w1fh f~replace Hot water
heat and 2 car garage

want only $58,000 00 for a
qu1ck sale

NEW

be~--·

LISTI.,~

e~ ~
Wcuer

D£1l0\1lG

4
large

1""
~ .. public
and one half acre

near Guysv11!e S18 500
NEW
LISTING
Renovated 3 bedrooms,
closets
ntce eat m ktt
batl'l, full basement, 011 fur
nace on mce lot Want
$23 500
NEW LISTING 3 33
acres right on the Oh1o
R1ver
Summer

playground wtth hookups
for twotra1lers $14,900

NEW LISTING - &lt;'1der
home cn""-,D.:uniJG lUI
ed 1~&amp;\C ~'"""'
th
drill~, emu 1'/1 acres of
land Need $35 000
NOW IS THE TIME TO
PUT YOUR ~ROPERTY
WITH US TO SELL
992 3325 Wtll get you the
best results

HELEN L, GORDON 8
AND SUE P MURPHY,
REALTOR ASSOCIATES

Ho11sing

T1le
Form1ca
Counter Tops
Ce11i119s
&lt;Suspended, Textural T1le
Floors Panehng &amp; Trtm

Ceramtc

'

I

"•"

FIVE YEARS OLD- Beautllul4 bedroom home with
large eat In ktfchen, 2 baths TV room, all nicely
carpeted, large ullllty room and many more extras
Natural gas forced air furnace Plenty of garden space
on 1 acre ot land Priced right $36 000
CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom house w'"' ruu
basement arid 2 baths Not gas heat, approx 1 acre
land and larqe storage building Price $21,500
Aclil:AGE- wtt~largeceet born near Pomeroy
SPACIOUS 81 LEVEL - This may be your dream
home II hos a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass doors Lorge living room and
family room, and to finish this well.tald out ~orne we
have live bedrooms, utility room and garage Very low
heating bill Red barn like storage building Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt 7
Asking $55,000
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION- Good lifo story house
completely carpeledwlt~ ~ becfroams, dining room and
laundry room Also almost new 2 car heeled g~rage
This home Is nicely located In Portland and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500
LOTS - 1 Atre and up near Pomeroy
5tA(RES FREE GAS-Good 1Vz story house wtrh lull
basement large pond llocked with llah Priced tor
quick sale $40,000
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, almost new
kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted, laundry room, all
Insulated, natural gas heat, utility building, 2 lots
l$21,500 00
Talk to • local reel "tate 1g111t before trying to 1111
your home His experience un help you. We netd
mony "tJJ" of praP.If'ly, give us • call
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE949 2311
or NANCY JASPERS, .\SSOCIATIMf-:NM

"I
•'
••
.~

,.'
~

...
...3
:""
....
...•

~

......

."'.
...

27320 Montgomery Rd
Laii9SVtlle, Ohto
614 669-424S Evenl119s
2 Moles East
of Wtlkesvtlle
2141 mo

Sweepers toa sters 1rons oil
small opphonces Lawn mower
ne)(t to State H1ghway Garage
on Route 7
SEWING MACHINE Repo rs ser
v1ce all makes 992 2284 The
Fabrtc
Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed S1nger Soles ond
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors

- -- -- - -EXCAVATING dozer loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for h re w1ll haul
f II d1rl to so1l limestone and
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers day: phone 992 7089 n1ght

phone
992 3525 a• 992 5232
1
---.--~--EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d tcher Charles R Hot
Sock Hoe Serv1ce
f eld
Rutland Oh1o Phone 7-42 2008
--- --

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

--

covotmg
sept1c systems
dozer backhoe dump truck
hmestone
grovel
blacktop
povmg Rt 143 Phone 1 (614)

698 7331 o• 742 2270
BATHROOMS ..&amp;.NO K1tchen s
remodeled cerom1c tile plum
b1ng carpentry and general
mo1ntenonc e 13 y ears e)(
pe_n!n5_.e_ ~2 3685 _ _ _ _

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Servtce Phone 992 2478

----------AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE boon
cancelled? Lost your operators
hcense? Phone 992 2143

--

-------

E•c ELECTRICAL Contractor ser11
1ng Oh1o Vo lley reg1on S1x
doys a week 24 hours serv1ce
Emergency colts Coli B82 2952
MOBILE HOME repotrs Furnaces
electncol work p1pes sawed
plumbing 992 5858

----------WALLPAPERtNG AND pomt ng
.

Call742 2328

1974 BUICK REGAL ............ 51695

1974 CHEVY LUV............... s1195

992 5858

PIANO TUNING for home and
school Lone Don1els ossoCIOte
of Elberfeld s and 8rumcord1
Company
Phone
Mus1c

992 2082

SAVE ON
CARPmNG

DRIVE AIJI1I.E
&amp;
SAVE AlOT
A GOOD SELECTION OF
END&amp; ROLL BALANCES
9'Jt12'-12'x12'-12'x 15'

1973 FORD CUSTOM F-100 ••••••'895
V 8 auto

That the Mayor of sa1d
V1t1age
IS hereby em
powered and d~rected on
behalf of the V1llage to enter
mto agreements w1th the
D 1rector of Transportation
necessary to complete the
plannmg and construct1on of
this 1mprov ement

SECTION

yd

24 Rolls of Carpet tn Stock
&amp; 100's ol Samples to
Choose From
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE
Call742 2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smoth

RUnAND

FURNITURE

l&lt;utland

n

furniture

Nice seledions of used

furniture
nf

~t

•

sland

1972 CHEVY .................... '695
Auto

P S

P B

1966 CADIUAC .................. 5395

1 mile north

Sign)

9' &amp; 12' aJHJftED

See the Grate Family

2 Dr

RIEBEL'S USED CARS

SECTION IH &lt;AuthOnty to

UNBI.£UM RtKiS
112.95 &amp; UP

3 A large building full
botaultful carpet

1972 FORD 4 DR LTD •••••••••• 1095
1973 MAZDA RX2 ............... s495
5

An emergency CWC:tnance
enacted by the VIllage of
Pomeroy Me1gs County
OhiO 1n tt'le matter of the
herematter descr!beC:I 1m
provement
under
the
supervision of the O.rector
of Transportat 1on
WHEREAS the D.rector of
Trensportat on
1s
con
S1der1ng 1mprovmg a port on
of the public highway wh ch
1S descr 1bed as follows
By applymg an asphalf
concrete surface course on
USR33 {East Ma 1n Street )
between Nye Avenue and
Sycamore Street Length
7603 2 feet width 26 feet
approxtmately th1ckness
1 25 Inches Total length 1 44
m lies "
NOW THEREFORE Be 1t
orda1ned by the Council of
the Village of Pomeroy
Oh10
SECTION I (Consent)
That 11 1S declared to be '"
the publiC interest tllat the
consent of sa1d Village be
and such consent 1S hereby
gl\l'en to the O.rector of
Transportation to construct
the above descnbed 1m
provcment 1n accordance
w1th plans
spec1f ca11ons
and est1mates as approved
by the Director
SECTION II ( Cooperattonl
That sa1d V llage hereby
proposes to cooperate w1tll
the state of Oh10 1n the cost
of the abo'e descr~bed
1m provem ent IS follows
A lump sum of Three
Thousand Collars ($3 000 00
which includes the cost of
rais1ng
the
ex 1St1ng
castmgs
SECTION 1111
That
the
amount
of
$3 000 00 i s hereby ap
propr ated for the 1m
provements of the highway
1!15 descnbed here 1n abov-e

RUMND FUUtRURE
I

good shApe

2 door fully equtpped

4Cyl 4speed

ORDINANCE NO 499
ROUTE NO U5R 33
DATE OF ENACTMENT 12 4 78

WATER AND m1sc: hauling Cal l

INE OFFER YOU •
1 Two full floor•411f all new

1974 PINTO STA. WAGON.......51495

4 Wheel dnve •;, ton, LWB V 8 4 speed

.'
.,
•

·-

"'

IV

(Traffic

Control
S1gnats
and
De111cesl
That traffiC control Sig nals
wilt not j be mstalled on the
project without pnor ap
pro1.1al by the State
SECTION V (Mamtenance
and Parkmg)
That upon completion of
sa1d 1mprovement Sllld
VIllage wtll thereafter keep
said highway open to t raff1c
at all t1mes and
(a) Ma l ntam the im
provement in accordance
Wtth the prOVISIOnS Of the
stetutes relat1ng thereto and
make ample flnanetal and
other proviSIOns for such
ma1ntenance and
(bl Ma lnta•n the r1ght of
way and keep It free of
obstruct1ons 1n a manner
satisfactory to the Stat~ of
Ohio and hold sa1d right of
way tnv•olate for public
highway
purposes
and
perm it no signs posters
billboards roads1de stands
or other private installations
within the r.ght of way
limits and
(c) Place and maintain all
traffic
control
devices
conforming to the Oh1o
Manual of Uniform TraffiC
Control Devices on the
lmpro11ement In compliance
with the provisions of
Sectton -4511 11 and related
sections of the OhiO Revised
Code
(d) Regulate parking In the
following
manner
No
parking on traveled portion
of highway

SECTION VI (Right of
Wly
Utility
R earrengement 1nd Saving

the St•t;e of Ohio Harmless
of D•magesJ
(a) Th.at all eKlstlng street
and public way r•aht of way
within tt'le VIllage which is
necessary for the aforesaid
Improvement, shall be made
available therefor.

\bl That the Municipality

will acpulre anY. add itional

I

r1ght of way requ .red for the
constructiOn of tile afore sa 1d
1m provem en t
(cl That arrangements
have been or will be made
w1th and agreements ob
tamed from all publiC utilitY
compan es whose lines or
structures will be affected
by the sa1d mprovement
and sa d c ompan1es ha\le
agreed to make any and all
necessary plant removals or
rearrangements m sucll a
manner as to be c lear of any
construct10n called for by
th e plans of sa d 1m
provement and sa1d com
pan1es have agreed to make
s u ch
necessary
rear rang em e11fs
1m
med1ately after not•f•cat1on
by said V l lage or the
Department
of
Trans
portat1on
(d) That 1t 1s hereby agreed
that the Village shall at 1ts
own expense
make all
rearrangements ot water•
ma•ns serv1ce lmes f1re
hydrants
va lll e boxes
san1tary sewers or other
muntc pally owned ut1 1 11es
and or any appurtenances
thereto
whtch
do not
co mply w1fh the prov s1ons
of D.rect ve 28 A whether
ns1de or outs1de the cor
porate l1m1ts as may be
necessary to conform to the
sad 1mprovement and sa1d
rearrangement s sha ll be
done at such t1me as
requested by the Depart
ment of TransportatiOn
Engineer
(e) That the construction
reconstruct on
and or
rearrangement of
both
publiCly
and
pr1vat ely
owned ut l1t•es refer red to
10 subsect1ons (c) and (d)
above shall be done 1n such
a manner as not to mterfere
unduly With the operation of
the contractor constructmg
the 1mpro vement and all
backfill1ng of trenches made
nece ss ary by such ut1 1 ty
rearrangements shall be
performed 1n accordance
w1th the prov sons of the
Oh10 Department ot Trans
porta l on Con struct on and
Mater al SpecificatiOns and
sha ll be sub1ec tto approval
by the State
(f) That the ins t e-llatlon of

TRUCKS

all util1ty factllt1eS on the
r1ght of way shall conform
w th the ret~u~rements of the
Federal
H1ghway
Ad
rn1n1Strat on Poi1CY and
Procedure Memorandum 30
4
Ut.t1ty Relocat1ons and
Ad1ustments
and
the
Department
of
Trans
portat1on s rules on Ut1l1ty
Accommodat on
(g) That sa1d VIllage
hereby agrees that the said
Department
of
Trans
portatlon of the State of
Oh10 shall be and 1S hereby
saved harmless from any
and all d(\mages or~ c1a1ms
thereof ~ 4i ris1ng from or
growmo out of the cer
ltflcatton or obl1 ga t ons
made or agreed to 10 Sec
t1ons (a) { b) (c) (d) and
(e) here nabove
Th s ord 1nance 1s hereby
declar ed
to
be
an
emergen&lt;:y measure by
reason of the need for ex
pedlttnQ
h j ghway
m
provem ents to promote
highway
safety
and
provided 1t rece1ves the
aff.rmaftve 110te of two
thirds of the members
elected to Counc11 11 shall
take effect and be 1n force
1mmed1ately
upon
1ts
passage and approval by the
Mayor otherwise 1t shall
take effect and be '" for ce
from and after the earliest
period allowed by law
Passed December 4 1978
Attest Jane Walton
Clerk
Clarence Andrews
H 0 Brown
Pres1dent of council

CERTIFICATE OF COPY
STATE OF OHIO
V1llage of Pomeroy 55
C•unty Meigs
I Jane Walton as clerk of
the V1llage of Pom ero y
Oh1o do hereby cert i fy that
the foregoing IS a true and
correct COP.'i of ord1nance
adopted bY the legislative
Authority of the said VIllage
on the 4th day at oecem'ber
1978 that the publication of
such ordinance has been
made and certified of record
accord1ng to taw that no

1976 CHEVY WV PICKUP....... s2895
Auto

26,000 mt

1974 FORD COURIER ........... !1895
Aufo

Chester, 0. - Ray Riggs

99 2 5342

FUNDS RECEIVED
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) The Ohto Department of
Natural Resources
bas
recetved $!,550,000 from the
state Controllmg Board to
build a new manna at Salt
Fork State Park m Guernsey
County
ConstructiOn ts to start thts
sprmg and be completed by
fall The new facthltes wtll be
m the northern part of the
2,952 acre reservotr and will
complement an extsttng
marma

Jane Walton
V1llag e of
Po meroy Oh o
Th e atorego~ng 1S accepted
as a bas1s for proce ed1 ng
w t h th e Improvement
h er e m descr bed
For
tile
Vil l age
of
Pomeroy Oh iO
Attest Jane Walton
Clerk
Clarence Andrews
Da te Dec 5 1978
12 1 9 16 2tc

ABOUT A

16 Jewtsh
month
19 Ohve genus
22 Insh
tsiands
23 Drwn roll
2~ Insptre
25 Dry wme

l uxury mtenor

lo cal

1995

1

P B atr, vmyl top

1

3395

V 8 P S P B a1r dual gas tanks Loca l ow n er

4295

1

1977 CHEV. C-10 PICKUP
V 8 P S P B rad 10 loca l owner
OPENTIL6P M
Except Thursday &amp; Saturday tll5 DD
Closed Sunday

PAT HILL FORD
See Rocky Hupp Darrell Oodnll or Pat H1ll General
Manager for a Good Deal on a New or Used Veh1cle

992 2196

MIDDLEPORT, 0

MODIFICATION OF OR
DINANCE NO JCJB
ORDINANCE NO 493
MODIFICATION OF THE
ORDINANCE GRANTING A
FRANCHISE TO OPERATE
A COMMUNITY ANTENNA

TELEVISION

the land
29 D C chambE!r
30 A Dah need
31 Quaffed
36 Machine
dtsk
37 Browbeat

AND RELATED SERVICES

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE

COUNCIL OF POMEROY
OHIO
That th e e&gt;&lt;1St1 ng fr anch1se
ord1nan&lt;:e be modified and
cha ng ed to ncrease tile
r eason able rates cha rg ed t o
subscr b er s by the Com pan y
(M dwest Cor pora t 10n D B A
PoiJTVu~w
Cabl e T V~ b y
mod ty1ng and c hang1ng
Sec t iOn 12 Sub sec t1on B t o
a ll
p r ev1o u s
r emove
l angua ge r elat ng to rat es
and
replace
w th
tile
follow n g
Gr an t ees sha ll c llarg e
re asona b le cust omer rat e s
and sha ll flea copy of such
rates wlfh Coun c il such
charqes to be as fo l ows
Pnva t e re s dence s ng e set
scrv ce $7 per month
Sen or Cll tens Serv •ce
Hom e 10 wh ch t he head Of
the househo ld s 65 years o r
older
H eaO of Ho use
be ng
de te rm med
by
dc f1n lions o f th e U
S
Bu r ea u o f th e census and th e
U
S
Int ern a l Reve nu e
Serv1ce l 75 percent of th e
r egu la r m on thly rate
D sa bli1t y Spec 1al Serv1ce
Home n Wh1ch the head of
th e househO ld
as d efin ed
above
s cer t1f1 ca te as
permanently a nd totall y
diSab l ed under de f 1n1t1 on s of
the u
s Depa r t men t of
Health
Educal on
and
We f ar e or 1S suffer1 n g !ro m
con ne c t ed
a serv tc e
dsa blldy
e'xceed1ng
60
percent a s defin ed by the U
S Veterans Adm.n1Strat1on
75 percent of the r eg ul ar
mon th v rate
Each add t tonal se t m each
dwe lm g un1t s m g l e famil y
r es dence $1 per month per
sel
Ad d1t1on a1 se rv1 ces for
fr equency modulat1on (FMl
and or s tereo rad10 or other
broadcast ng $1 p er month
per set
Com m erc 1al rates
apa r't
men t r ates and rates for
m ul h tam ly dwell ngs and
underground
Will
vary
Widely and no fi xed rat es are
th ere for e applicable
Any adjustment of th e rat es
set forth her e1n sh all b e only
w1th the approval of Coun
c I

1977 Ford Mustang ••••••••••••• s3295
Clean &amp; ready for deltvery

1976 Pontiac Grand Lemans •••••$4195
Staf1onwagon no wornes

on

t h1S car

1975 Buick Apollo 4 dr•••••••••• $2895
A great family car

1974 Datsun Pickup ............ s2995
Th1s truck IS equ1pped w1th 4 cyl &amp; automat1c trans

1975 Pontiac Grand Prix ........ s3695

A great economy car w1th a low pnce

mr-+--+-

"Your Friendly Dealer"

Be 1f further orda.ned
Tha t th1 S mOdlf1Cat10n ot
ordm ance sh all
b eco m e
effe c t 1ve upon the 1n lt1ation
of WI C G Chan n el 17 and
Chr1sf hln Broad cas tmg as a
part .of t he cable telev1S10n
serv1 c e available 1n th e
V1 !a ge of Pomer oy and
Th at m all other r espects
ex st ng
n the~r en t r ety
w1 th1n sa•d ordmanc e that
sa •d prov1s on s s llall be
con t1nu.ng ur,der the term s
and cond t on s set forth
ther em

Don f forget you owe 1t to yourself to check w1th us
before you buy any car New or Used We can save you
money See or call one of These Fr~endly Salesmen J

D Story f.av Doug las or Bill Nelson

Smith Nelson Motor, Inc.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It·
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

992 2174

One letter stmply stands for another In thts sample A Is
used for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes, the length and formalton of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are different
I'RVPTOOIIOTF.S
RTSVIHMIN

LY

M

- - SOEY

.

SDO E Maon

DT

BLWW

EVVF

AHTMY

R T S•

-YKTVRVHT
HVVETJTWY
Cryptoq11ole: I HAVE DISCOVERED THE ART
OF DECEIVING DIPLOMATS I SPEAK THE TRtml, AND
THEY NEVER BELIEVE ME -CAMILLO Dl CAVOUR
© 1979 King Features Syndlcale, Inc

Pomeroy,O

..-----------.
MEIGS I

PASSED NOV 20 DAY OF
1978
H 0 Brown
Pres1dent of Co un c il

I

Multtple sclerosis is a
chrome, crtpplmg disease of
the central nervous system
It is neither hereditary nor
contagtous, but 1t can be
devastatlllg to MS perstJns
Multiple sclerosiS should not
be confused wtlh muscular'
dystrophy
a muscular
disease ~ whtch has tis m·
cepbon m chtldhood and ts
largely hereditarv

I Equipment Co. 1

I

I1

Pomerov, o.
Ph. 992-2176

CABLE

TELEVISION

L1m1ted 2 Dr Loaded &amp; 1n hp top cond1t1on

I

SERVICE

TO POINTVIEW

1977 Buick Electra 225 ......... !6895

27 Worked

group
33 Scrap
34 Engage
m combat
35 Powder
37 House,
m Naples

Yeslerday's

4095

rad10

1975 FORD F250 RANGER PICKUP

NEW ONE!

Yesterday's Answer

32MD 's

VIHMIN

V8 P S

1976 Plymouth Duster ...........s2695

DT

stereo

•1

1974 FORD GRAND TORINO 2 DR

2 Dr H T Looks good and runs good

YV

V ery n1ce

()wner

~r;,

1974 Ford LTD............. On~ $1795

VH

P B AM FM a1r v myl roof loca l owner

Va P S P B

~.t:;. ~

HOW

26 Forever

UHVAHTEELJT

s

1976 FORD ELITE 2 DR

FAMILY A HEADACHE?

The cleanes1 &amp; headac he free

AHTMY

4595

1

Pomeroy

25 Sort

I TMET

VB P

power wtndows

NEW &amp;
USED AUTOMOBILES

common

M

5295

18 000

1977 FORD LTD 4 DR

CHECK SOME
OF OUR
HEADACHE FREE

i,--+--+-1-

11

a 1r viny l roof loca l owner

m des

IS YOUR PRESENT CAR
GIVING YOU AND YOUR

~

- day
27 Kukla
and Olhe's
frtend
28 Allegiance
29 Frequented

V 6 P S AM FM

1

Open Evenmgsunhl6 00-hiSp m Sat

(SEAL)

23 Less

1977 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR

"You'll Ltke Our Quallty Way ol Dotng Busmess'
GMC Fonanctng

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 In repose
1 Urban
39 Hot spot
eyesore
~0 Destgnated
5 Concord
41 Band leader
and others
DOWN
11 Money m
1 La) out cash
Monterrey
2 Embankment
12 Chtpmunk
3 He has a lot
or muskrat
4 Wk day
13 Umfonn
5 Breeder
14 Verdi's
6 Atltred
ftrst opera
7 Punchbowl
15 Wrtter
drink
BWJtline
8 Beauty
16 lntnrudate
parlor
17 Sea Fr
offermg
18 Dectphered 9 Hannony
20 Black
10 Fabled
cuckoo
21 WingUke
22 Table
stakes word

5195

1

V 8 P S P B rad1o Local owner less than 13 000

Karr &amp; VanZandt

985-4100

~

1978 FORD LTD II 2 DR

Pete Burr•s

See one ol lhese courteous salesmen
Marvm Keebaugh or George Harns

RIGGS USED CARS

..

MANY LOW-MILEAGE,
ONE-OWNER TRADE-INS
SHOP OUR BIG LOT TODAY

Drive Home A Winner

w 1fh topper

.
proceedmgs
referendum upon such or
dmance hav e been ta ke n
and that such ordmance and
cert1f1cate of publ1cat1on
thereof are of record m
Ordmance Re&lt;:ord No 499
IN WITNES S WHEREOF
I ha\le hereunto subscr~bed
by name and affrxed my
off1c1al seal th1S 4th day of
December 1978

Used

1973 OLDS 88 ROYAL HT SED........... 11595
1974 OLDS 98 LS SED.................. 12595
1973 BUICK REGAL CPE•.:~~. ~! 1 :'.a.~~ .... 12195
1973 CAD. CPE DEVILLE .................. 11595
1973 FORD TORINO SEDAN ...• •........• • 11395
1975 DATSUN 210 CPE................... 11295
1976 PONTIAC CATALINA SEDAN.......... 12995
1975 CHEV. CAPRICE WAGON ........... . 13395
1977 CHRYSLER NEWPORT SED.......... 14795
1976 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED.......... ••.•• 14195
1973 BUICK ' LS SEDAN .................. 11695
1975 OLDS 98 LS SEDAN .................. '4195
1913 OLDS TORO~ADO .. ........ .•. .•..• 11995
1974 OLDS ROYALE CPE... ...• •• .•... •..• '1995
1974 CAD. SEDAN DEVIUE ............... '2495
1974 CHEV. IMPAlA CPE................. 12495
1973 BUICK CENTURIAN CPE............. 11595

P B clean

1974 DODGE POWER WAGON ••• S3695

Main Street

WATER WELL dnlllng W1111om T
Grant 742 '2879

742 2211

PS

atr

Std

CS I Rev 1 JO 73
PUBLIC NOTICE
NAME OF STREET - East

- --

ROOR
'3.49 &amp; '3.99 sq

Auto

B , Hatchback, Railey wheels

TRUCKS

,_..

WILL CARE for lhe elderly m our
home Phone 992 7314

atr

runabout rad1o

~

Services Offered

m

2 dr

Tuppers Plains. Ohio

Pit. Hl-!174

992 2581

P B aulo

1975 FORD GRAND TORINO .... 52495

St. Rt. 7

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

--- - -

PS

1974 FORD PIN10 ..............$1395

See Roger Rtebel
985-3345 or 667-3463

e

Monlgomt!J
Trailer Sales

4 Dr

1975 OLDS STARFIRE ••••••••••• !2295

2 7 l'fiO

TRACTORDRIVEN
PTOALTERNATORS
from 15,000 to
7S,ooo watts

1976 FORD TORINO ............ 52195
Auto

'l

1 12 1 mo

on a

USED CARS

20r HT,AIR PS,PB

v 6, auto , P S , P

1

a

Air

1974 FORD TORIN0.4,D.'o ,w."~~~ ••• , s1295
1973 MERCURY MONTEGO.~~~ ... sags
1975 FORD GRAN 10RINO ••••••s1995

•

Pti)NE 742-2328

949-2862' 949-2160

·~ IIUNTERS

2 Dr aUto Pr S vmyl roof

Quahty Work You Can
Depend un ..

o• 882 7305

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

2111moPd

-Room Add1t1ons-Custom Remodehng--

BRADFORD
Auct1oneer Com
plete Serv1ce Phone 949 2487
or 949 2000 Roc1ne Oh1o Cntt
Bradford
HWOOD eoWeis- fif'PAIR _

,m

992·6011

AL TROMM OONSJ.

Bus mess Servtces
I'IEW LISTING - VA ap

•New Home
*Add·ons
•Remoldtng

2 51 ma

New, repa1r.
gutters and
downspouts.
Wi11dow clean mg
Gutter clean mg
Free Est1mates

SWEEP

REAL ESTATE Loons Purc~a se and
,ttone 7•2·3110
ref monee 30 year term s V)\
t'fnt Wtlltt~ Preprlllor
No money down (el g ble I
5 1 mo
veterens) FHA A s low os 3 : 4.-----4:i!"-!!!!1;~.,-~
per cent down ( non veterens )
Ireland Mortgage Co
77 E .,...!1eal Estate for Sale
State Athens 614 59'2 3051
HOMESITES for so le I acre and
FAIRVIEW HTS b year s old AU
up M1ddleport neor Rutland
elcctnc ho me 3 bedr
1 '
Call992 7481
both love ly fom ly room w1th
wood bur ng stove
fully THREE BEDROOM frame home 1n
carpet ed garage 1 acre Near
Middleport Coli 992 3457
Me1gs Htgh School 992 6287
FARM FOR sole House 2 barns
o ffer b
tr01ler Lorge pond 10 acres or
B7 acres 742 2566

noon

Roofing

lnsurtcl
• ••mper on your life -

1

PIANOS

H. L Writes el

Mem•erol
Cbltnney
Sweo-s Gllllcl

1

C. R. MASH

Tyree Blvd - Roctne, Olilo
Phone 949 2118 evenings
alter 5 p m Weekends

Middleport, 0

TWO BEDROOM mob1 le f1ome on

ORGANS

&amp; Famous Name Braud

Sales Rep. For
Sundms
Hammond nrgans

18 Years Experience
Will Make
Service Calls

Heaclq11arters

HAY

,GARMiE

s

PAT HILL
FORD

SEDAN

radtal I ~res

4 or , wagon, 6 cyl auto P

--1'

Hammond

~

-------

BARGAIN

tas.r:

S2495

1973 HORNET SPORTABOUT••••• s1495

Washtngton St, Albany, 0
'!lo mile ott Rt. 7 PiY-peslllll
Phone 691.6173
- st. Rt. h4 towara Rutland,
Davtd Coleman
0
Agentfor
MOTIRlSTS INSURANCE
Auto&amp; TrucK
COMPANIES and SANOY 1
Ref)ilir
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
l(lso Transmission
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio
AUTO,
HOMEOWNERS,
Repair
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
Phone
992-5682
BUSINESS
1 26 1 mo

PETE SIMPSON

ZENITH ALLEGRO stereo w1th AM
FM rodto and tope player
Phone 992 3132 Or 99'2 3119

ROUND

INSURANCE AGEN

s ,P

0 ••••

ROGER HYSElL

•'

WE WANT WIGWAMS!

PUBLIC NOTICE
Not 1ce 1S hereby g111en that
on February 17 1979 at 10 00
A M a pvbllc sale wdl be held
at
lOS
Union
A\lf!'nue
Pomeroy OhtO to sell lor
cash the follOWing c ollateral
to w1t
1973 Monte carlo, ser1al No

PUPPIE S MOTHER
German
r
Shepard
Block w •th whtte
opws and brown 3 w lh no
to Is App arently good watch
d ogs Reody to go Blue tro 11er
on lot at 106 Bnck St Pot;neroy

3 AND 4 RM lurm shed and \Jn
furni s h e d
opt s
Phon e
9q') 5434

p1ckup truchlood 94q 2129

Starting
Friday Eve., Mar. 2

--

- _A
_uto Sa~l._e==-s_ __

P 8 A C 7d7 7826
Monday
Noon on Saturday

-

. _GJ~ A'!!_~--

1974 OLDS cunASS •••••••

'

---"-

qa5 3979

NOTICE

AUCTION
F~/DAV
7p m
T' ucklood s of new merchond Sft
ol Oh1o R1ver Auct1on 537 H1gh
Sl M1ddleport Oh o

it:,:I

1975 HONDA CVCC CIVIC ••••••• s2495
4 Or wagon, 4cyl, 4sp

.

Your Headquarters For

-------Auctton

~-

RISING STAR Kennels Boord ng
and groo m ng
all breeds
Chesh1re 367 0'192

Business Services

If VOU hove o scorv1c+:&gt; t o offer
wcm t to huy or sf'! ll someth1ng
Or! looktng fnr worl-:
or ,
w! otevP
yvu II gr&gt;t ,,. ,11-.
fm t&lt;&gt;r w1 t h o Sflnl n&lt;'l Wo ''Ad
lol 9Q'J 115b

wh •te '" ale Port Beagl e port

(21 9 16 23 lie
PU 8LIC NOTICE

to n

us

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

I

Yard Sale

Lost and Found

Mann.ng D Webster
Probate Judge Cler:k

Penn

Esta te of Ed na Mae Rhodes
Not 1ce s further given that
all cr ed 1to rs of sa1 d estate
wh o des1re to assert t he r
11en s on the real estate of sa 1d
decedent located 1n Hus state
sh a li present the r &lt;:la 1ms
duly sworn to to th1 s Cou r t
W1fh1n SIX mon th s after th-e
fll ng of said l etters In till s
Cour t or the~r sa d l•ens sha ll
fore Ver be deemed barred
a nd ca n ce led

(21 9 16 23 lie

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ELSIE M
DECKER DECEASED

I

.

FRIDAY, FEBRUAI&lt;Y 16,1979

5 3~ arol Burnett &amp; F rlends 3, News 6, Sanford &amp;
San 8 Elec Co 20, Mary Tyler Moore 10 Odd
Couple 15 Beverly Hillbillies 11, Doctor Who 33

-'

.'

1

ATTEST
Ja ne WaIt on

CLERK OF COUNTIL

I A PPR OVE D 20 t h day of
Nc ember 1?7B
Starting Dec 2, our store I Claren c e A nd .. t?w r.
I bours Will be a 5 Man Fn I MAYOR
Closed
Saturday and 1 ACCE PTED
I Sunday.
I CABLE TV BY Paul Gerard
R !Chard N ewe ll
1ts
1tntornaltonel New Idea 1 tor
Manager Dill e 20 N ov 78
Equopmonl 1 (2 1 9 1A 2tc
1Harvester
P~lf~TVIEW

__________...

FISCALOFFICER S
CERTIFICATE
Expene11tures for State H1gh
wayS
W1th1n MUMICipilll
Corporations
Note Th1s ce rt1f 1rate sha 1
be made w 1th sea l aff•xed m
duplicate and f 1l ed w1th th e
D str. c t Dep uty D recto r
Oh1 0 Department of T ra ns
JOrla t on
I hereb y ce rt1ty t hat 7' 2
percent fund s rece •ved as
set forth 1n Sec 5735 28 Oll 10
Re v1sed
Code
are
as
IOI OWS
{ 1) Ava tab le and
Anti Cipated n
t sea l year
{3) Funds comm1tted for
other ma nt enan ce
0
{ 4 ) Ava 1l ab le fo r
ex p end tu re
6 760 76
{5) Fu nds anc c1pa t ed
fo r use on
Res urfa c1 ng Route No
33 pro 1ect &gt;&lt;
3 ooo 00
x - N ot l ess than ( 4) above

IN WITNESS WHEREOF
I h ave hereunto se t my ll an d
and off c1al seal as f sea
o ff1 cer th s 5th day of
De c ember 197B
Cla r ence Andr ews
(F,scal Off ce r s Sea l )
FISCa l Off 1ce r Of
Pomeroy Oh o

FlSCALOFFICER S
CERTIFICATE
llereby ce rtrf y tlla t the
m on ey
to w1t
$3 000 oo
requ1red for th e pay m en t Of
1h e cost oth er than t hat part
ther eo f assumed by th e
St ate of Oh iO t or th e 1m
provement of that port1on of
US Ro ute No
JJ
l y 1ng
w 1thm the cor porat e I m1t s
of t he V II age ot Porn er oy
Oh1o
mo r e part.cular y
d esc r.b ed as f ollows apply
an asplla 1 con cret e sur
f ace co ur se on Us R JJ
( East Ma n Slreet) between
Nye Avenue and Sycamor e;
Stree t L eng th 760 3 2 fee t Wid t h 26 feet appr o x1ma t e
th ic kness 1 25 n ches Tot al
length 1 4d mil es has been
law f u ll y appropr~ated for
such purp ose and 1S 1n the
t r easury to t l'1e cred1t of or
has been lev ed placed on
t he dup11 ca te and n p ro cess
of coll ec t on for th e ap
p ropr1 a te tu nd a nd n ot
app ro pr~a ted for any o th er
purpose
or 1S betng ob
ta tne d by sa le of bond s
ss ued on account o f sa1d
mprovement w h ch bond s
are so ld and '" pr ocess of
del1very

1 furt h er certdy 11lat thi S
ce r t ifi cate was m ade sealed
and fil ed w1th tt1 e leg,sla t•ve
author~ty of Pom eroy Oh o
aft er
sa1d
1eg1s l a t1\le
aut hor lt y passed t he or
rcso1u110n m
d nance
con n ect ion w1th th e W1fll1n
descr~bed pro 1ec t
and that
t hi J ce rt 1f cafe was for t h
w 1f'h r ecorde d 1n th e recorct
of proceed1ngs of sai d
au thor.ty
l eg sla t 1/e
namely
Leg1s la t 1ve
Author1ty s Journal

IN WI T N!:SS WHER EQF
1 have her eunto se t m y hand
a.nd off1c 1al seal as sa1d
f1 sca l o ff1c er thi S 5th day of
December 1978
Jao e Walton
F ISCa I Offtcer Of
Pomeroy Oh10
{F s "'Off ,....,r s sea l )

en

9

16 2tc

January's name comes
from the two-laced Roman
god, Janus, who looked
forward mto the future and
backward into the past
I

�12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Frirlay, Feb. 16, 1979

.

Mcintyre anniversary will
be obse~ved this after,;oon

'SaturdaY
Night
Fever'
voted
album
of
year
.

his own, taking song of the and Karl Richardson .
best rhythm and blues song On My Mind" and combined David Frost was n&lt;minated and boxer shorts. His iniasing
year and record of the year
The two-man, tw()-wornan award for songwriter Paul with Waylon Jennings for the in the spoken word category, trousers were produced on a
for his mellow love song, disco group A Taste of Honey Jabara.
best group vocal, " Mamas but was aced out by Orson dry cleaner's ha~er and
Barry Manilow, named Don 't Let Your Babies Grow Welles' recent album of the Martin put them on to
"Just the Way You Are."
- ,who scored · a hit wiUt
But in addition to album of "Boogie Oogie Oogie" -was best male pop performer for Up To Be Cowboys." Dolly soundtrack to "Ci,tizen renewed guffaws.
Martin also won the best
the year, brothers Robin, something of a · dark-horse his
di -s c o-flavored Parton won as best female Kane."
comedy
recording award for
Barry and Maurice Gibb also winner in the new artist " Copacabana."
seemed vocalist for " Here You Come
Comedian Steve Martin
.
the
second
year running. This
won best pop vocal by a group category, beating out more surprised the tune had won Again."
took the stage to present the
year's
winning
effort was "A
arid best arrangement for traditiooal r!)Ck performers him his first Graituny.
Another nominee was boUt pop male vocalist award,
Wild
and
Crazy
Guy."
voices, both for "Stayin' El~ Costello, the Cais, Toto
While disco artists were an absentee and a loser dressed in a tux~do jacket
Alive," and producer of the and Chi' is Rea .
present to collec_t their _win. former .President Richard
year, an honor the veteran · Disco queen
Donna nings, many honored ·per- Nixon. The album of Nixon 's
Australian ·rock musicians Summer, clutching . the formers were absent, televised interviews with
shared with Albhy Galuten victrola-&lt;lhaped trophy , she including Joel and Anne
earned as best female Murray, whose "You Needed
rpythm and blues performer Me" won the best pop female
for "Last Dance," applauded performance award.
A trio of long-time stars !he record academy for
(Continued from page I)
coming around to the disco all n()-shows at the ceremony
~ear
worth
at several billion
In Tehran, the U.S. Embas- Iranians, journalists, and craze that has swept the - took ·top country honors.
By GEORGE GEDDA
dollars.
The
shah
and
his
Willie Nelson was named top
Associated Press Writer sy's announcement of the "always a few who like to see country in the last year.
vice chairman of the council.
By R. Gregory Nokes
evacuation
was
terse
:
'
'We
adventure.''
male vocalist for "Georgia fa,mily also are estimated to
"Last
Dance"
also
won
the
WASHINGTON (AP ) Garvin. told a meeting of
have foreign investments
Associated Press Writer
A well-&lt;Jrgllnized Jefti$1 eleIran's new government has cannot protect American
Ute
council Thursday that its
running as high as $20·billion
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
promised its cooperation in lives in Iran. You are allowed ment helped Islamic leader
economic
eonsultants believe
but these are not affected by group of prominent business
the planned U.S. evacuation one suitcase per person. Ayatollah Khomeini oust the
the
slowdown
will extend
the decree.
leaders has parted company
of up to 5,1100 Americans, but Evacuation planes will begin · Iranian monarchy, but is now
over
several
quarters.
The
Before leaving Iran the with the Carter adposing a challenge to Khoofficial,s say they are worried flying 17 February."
common
definition
of
I shah transferred .title of all ministration on Ute outlook recession is negative growtha
Mehdi Bazargan, prime meini's efforts to restore 1
that Iranian leftists may try
I
I
his personal holdings to a for the economy, saying a
'minister of the Khomeini order in Iran.
to disrupt the operation.
foundation
that was to use · mild recession this year is a in the GroS$ National Product
Leftist
leaders
,
government,
has
ordered
"There are a Jot of loose
for at least two consecutive
IRMA
HICKS
them
for
the
good of the virtual certainty.
ELSIE M. CHAMBERS
guns around," said a Sfate safe passage for evacuees to disappointed in the limited
quarters, or six months.
Mrs.
Lester
(Irma)
Hicks,
people.
The
institution,
called
The
Business
Council
said
Mrs . Elsie Marjorie
Department official who the Tehran airport and said ro Je given them by the
But Garvin said the
the
Pahlavi
Foundation,
overall
growth
of
.
the
91,
died
unexpectedly
Thursgovernment,
have
been
the government will provide
Middleton Chambers, 87, died
asked not to be identified.
recession
need not be a major
day
morning
in
Columbus.
valued
the
holdings
at
$233.95
economy
will
be
Jess
than
I
exhorting
their
followers
to
Thursday night at her North
Plans are for at least two enough guards for theSlle was the daughter of the million .
percent during 1~79, with a disappointment. ·
civilian airliners chartered movement of 1,000 persons a refuse Khomeini's call to turn Fourth Avenue home in
"The prospect of Oat or
late
John
and
Maria
Fife
of
The
monarch
and
his
slowdown
beginning about
In
their
arms
and
to
defy
day
.
Middleport.
from Pan American World
moderately
declining activity
The U.S. goal is to reduce appeals to end the strikes that
Mrs. Chambers was born Uleshire. She was preceded immediate family moved midyear. Unemployment will
Airways to evacuate some 800
over
the
next
few quarters
Americans Saturday from the number of Americans in have paralyzed Ute country. June 9, 1891 in Middleport, a in 'deaUt by one sister, Mrs. Thursday from Marrakech, increase by about I million need not be discouraging If it
daughter of the late Thomas Elza Scott; two brothers, Morocco, to Rabat, the persons to 6.8 pe'rcenl of the
Tehran's Mehrabad Airport Iran from the estimated 7,000
still
there
to
2,1100.
That
would
and
Mary Jane Davis Mid- Ross and Adam Fife, at! of Moroccan capital, and settled labor force, up from 5.8 could be looked upon as an
which has been closed by
unavoidable result of a
Cheshire. She is survived by in at a government guest percent now, it said.
compare
with
45 ,000
dleton .strikes.
determined
program to
one
son,
Harold
of
Columbus.
house
,
A
cor_respot:Jdeni
for
·
And
the
council
said
inShe was also preceded in
Meanwhile, Pan American Americans in Iran before the
reduce
Inflation
and achieve
Funeral
arrangements
will
the
London
Daily
Telegraph
fiation,
which
was
9
percent
death by her husband,
offic.tals said they were turmoil began. A State
moderate
growth
for the
Partly
cloudy
and
cold
reported
that
be
Saturday,
10
a.m.
at
the
"men
around
last
year,
will
decline
only
sending one of their Boeing Department spokeswoman tonight. Low near 'zero. Marcus R. Chambers in 1975i
longer
term,"
he
said.
Schoedinger
funeral
home
in
the
shah"
told
)Jer
the
modestly
to
slightly
above
7.5
71!1 jeUiner.s to Tehran today said the 2,000 who would Mostly sunny Saturday. High a sister, Mrs. Genevieve
Garvin also said the conto evacuate most of the remain behind _ include around 20. The chance of Sherman in 1978, and by three Columbus. Nieces and monarch thinks pro-Moscow percent and remain at that sultants were unanimous in
nephews
attending
will
be
communists
will
soon
take
level
through
1980.
skeleton
staff$
for
the.
U.S.
brothers, Thomas, Clarence
airline's 90 personnel in Iran,
precipitation is 20 percent
Mrs. Charles Roush, Mrs. over in Iran and he 'will ·have
The council's forecasts ' believing the recession would
plus any other Americans embassy and various private tonight and near zero and Earl.
Thursday were cOnsiderably end in 1989. But he said nearly
A retired school teacher Alva Kall, Bill Scott, to live out his life in exile.
who.could get aboard the 183- American companies, Saturday.
The shah h;ft Jan, 16 follow- more pessimistic than those half feared that the
Americans married to
having taught in the Mid- Cheshire, Mrs. H. T. Hysell,
seat plane.
dleport
schools,
Mrs. Addison and Wesley Scott, ing Khomeini's year-long of the administraiton, which slowdown, combined with
campaign
to
end has maintained that a slow progress in reducing
Chambers was a member of GaUipolis.
"corruptive" Westernizing recession can and will be inflation, would "induce an
the Middleport First United
impatient government to
influences
on
Iran's avoided this year.
POLICE MAY STRIKE
FLORENE FiNNICUM
Presbyterian Church and the
shift
to mandatory wage and
traditionally
conservative
As
recently
as
last
CINCINNATI (AP) Middleport Literary Club.
Florene V. Finnicum, 48, of
price
controls."
Islamic
society.
December,
the
council
was
,
RISH Cincinnati's police today
Surviving are a son and Mason, died Thursday at the
In
other
economic developUnconfirmed
reportS
put
agreeing
with
the
adthreatened to strike if a wage daughter-in-Jaw, Ret. Colonel Holzer Medical Center.
ments:
the
casualty
toil
in
the
past
ministration
estimate
that
PLUS FREE t:l'STO~If'&amp;\Tl'RES!
settlement is not made soon. Robert M. and Troy C. . She was born Feb. 17, 1930,
- The lidmlnistratlon'iJ
"We are about one inch Chambers, Houston, Tex.; in Hartford, W. Va., to the three days of fighting in the economy should grow beDesign your own cluss_rint;
trade
office said agreement .
Tabrlz,.
Iran's
fourth
largest
tween
2
percent
and
3
percent
away from a strike," said two grandchildren, David M. late Harry. C. · and Virginia
has
been
reached with
city,
as
high
as
700
dead
with
in
1979.
· Specialist Elmer Dunaway, Chambers and M. Carol Powell Gibbs.
representatives
of .the textUe
t'ir1·hursl
thousands
wounded.
Radio
The
council
used
the
word
l\1u Mrul
· president of the 930-member Chambers, also of Texas; a
She was a sales clerk at the
umlt •r sto llll'
unde r l lolllt'
industry
to
help
revitalize
the
Tehran
blamed
the
fighting
setback
rather
than
Fraternal Order of Police. sis~er,
Mrs.
Walter Shoppers' Mart in Mason.
industry,
a
move
that
is
on
"counler..-evolutionary
recession,
perhaps
out
of
He made the remark early . (Vivienne) Waddell, _MidSUrviving are her husband,
expected
to
win
its
support
SA VAK agents" and said a deference io President Carter
this morning after emerging dleport; a brother and stster- Floyd Franklin Finnicum
Sunlih•
from
a
meeting
with
in-law, Dr .. Davis C. and Mason; and two daughters: nightly curfew remained in · who wamed last December for a proposed new world
Encru sting
untl r r ~ hfl'\t '
negotiators for the city of Charlotte Middleton, Dayton, Mrs. Roger (Judy) Eblin, effect even though the revo- that recession forecasts could trade agreement.
- Officials of the Chamber
400,000 a'nd a federal and several nieces and Middleport, and Elizabeth luliooary forces had regained "become a self-fulfilling
Chuit•t• uf :U.
of
Commerce urged Congress
control.
prophesy."
mediator.
ad i\·ttit•s
nephews.
Diane Finnicum at home· a
IHII1\I"
to
cut
an additional $10 llilllon
Some
65
trucks
loaded
with
Carter
made
that
, Funeral services will be son Floyd Michael 'of
from
Carter's
proposed 1980
food
and
other
commodities
statement
during
a
speech
to
8HI.~ G IN THI S c\0 TO Gt:T Till ~ OFFER WHEN
held ~t 2 p.m. Sunday at the Hart fond; three g;andbudget
to
help
cOmbat inYO U OI!DER YO UH SlLII!l UM KIN G.
were
reported
dispatched
'
to
the
Business
Council,
which
Hawhngs-Coat~
Funeral children, Regina, Amber, and
flation.
Tabriz.
now
has
done
an
about-face
GUARDSMEN
Ho!ll." _\Vtth Ertc Chambers Matthew also survive along
- Output of the nation's
The U.S. government hoped in its outlook. The council is
"'"""''"' Y'"' "''"'
ORDERED
IN
offtctatmg.
Burtal wtll he m with two brothers William
CLASS RINGS , . . . _ _
industry
Jncreased only 0.1
to
start
evacuating
an
organization
of
about
200
NEW ORLEANS lAP)
Riverview Cemetery. Gibbs New Haven ~nd Lloyd
Americans Saturday, using leaders of the nation's lop percent In January, the
rtAt
Hundreds
of National Friends may call at the !Gibbs: Mason.
'
~
Guardsmen and state police funeral home any time after 2
Funeral services will be two Boeing 747 jumbo jets corporations. Its opinions and smallest monthly Increase in
from
Pan advice to the government are a year.
were ordered into New p.m. Saturday. The family 1:30 p.m. Monday at the chartered
- Business inventories
World
Airways.
usually taken seriously by
American
H-874
Orleans . today as the will receive friends from 6 to ·Foglesong Funeral Home,
increased
by 0.6 percent In
About
800.
were
expected
to
policymakers.
\k:::oo:=~~~::&gt;&lt;::&gt; 212 E. Mloln, Pomtrov::o::~~~~~ possibility of a second police 9 p.m. Saturday.
Mason, with the Rev. Grorge
December,
a small gain that
leave
on
the
first
two
flights.
"No
one
foresees
a
deep
strike in a week threatened
Hoschar officiating.
:
was
considered
as a positive
Pan
American
sent
a
setback,
certainly
nothing
the city's Mardi Gras
Burial will follow at the
economic
development.
Boeing
71!1
to
Tehran
from
like
1974-1975,"
said
Clifton
C.
festivities.
Evergreen cemetery.
WALERDeLAY
The Teamsters - affiliated
Friends may call from 2-4 Bahrain today and it took off Garvin Jr., chairman of
Walter _DeLay, 59, of Colpolice union has given · the umbus, a former resident of p.m. and from 7-9 p.m. for Frankfurt, West Germany _Exxon Corp. who also is a
city until 7 p.m. to make an Pomeroy, died Thursday Sunday at the funeral home. shortly after noon carrytng
most of its 90 employees in
acceptable contract offer.
morning at Grant Hospital
SQUAD CALLED
Iran · plus any · other
after a several months ilThe
Middleport emergency
Americans who could get
MOTIVE SOUGHT
lness.
squad
ISSUES
DISCUSSED
was called to 72 S.
aboard the 183-seat plane.
CINCINNATI (AP ) Son of the late Elmer and
-Hospital News
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Third
Ave., at 6:58 a.m.
The airport was heavily
Police were holding a 40- Marcia Pullins DeLay, he is
Friday
The
president
of
the
National
for
Rue who was
guarded by guerrillas loyal to Institute of BuDding Sciences taken to Tom
year-&lt;lld man in connection survived by his· wife, Esther Veterans Memorial Hospital
Holzer · Medical
with the fatal shooting of a DeLay, one daughter, two
Admitted
Timothy Khomepni.
in Washington, D. C., will
Six U.S. Air Force C-130 discuss "Current Issues Center.
case worker in a crowded ngrandchildren, and a sister, Brewer, Reedsville.
At 7:45p.m. Thursday the
welfare office Thursday and Mrs. Audrey DeLay ThompDischarged Ronald transports and five HH53 Affecting the Building In- unit went to tl!e home of Mrs.
Green
Giant"
were trying to determine the son, New Albany, and a Coats, Terry Proffitt, Sarah "Jolly
helicopters
were
being
sent to dustry" Tuesday, Feb. '!/, at Elsie Chambers, Fourth Ave.
motive.
brother, Millon DeLay of Congo, Emma Jacobs,
Mrs. Chambers was dead
the NATO base at Incirlik, ·MarshaU University.
" We just have not Oregon. Mrs. John Smith of Evelana Pauley.
'upon
Gene
C.
Brewer
will
speak
the squad's arrival.
Turkey, 850 miles from at 7:30 p.m. in Room 154, ·- At 11:49
established a definite Pomeroy is his aunt.
a.m. Thursday Ute .
Tehran, In case they were Smith Hall. The lecture is
motive," said Homicide Sgt.
Friends may call at the
.squad
answered
a call for the
Holzer Medical Center
needed for the airliftv
Thomas Oberschmidt.
Rutherford Funeral Home in
Pomeroy
squad
to 299 .
sponsored
by
Ute
Marshall
Discharges, Feb. 15 .
The U.S. government
He said police wo'utd search Worthington, from 2 to 9 p.m.
Mulberry
University
College
of
Ave.,
for
Levenna
,
Hamilton County Welfare Friday. Services will' he held . Erell Atkins, Robert ' expects some 5,000 of the Business and the Marshall Ebersbach who was treated
records to determine whether Saturday at the church in Blackston, Charlotte Blain, 7,1100 Americans still in Iran Foundation, Inc. A reception at her home.
Paul Burnette, Paul Butcher, to leave the country. It
the man was a welfare Powell.
Ronnie Carmichael, Phyllis arranged the evacuation will follow.
recipient . .
During his 40 years with the
Cochran, Chad Dodson, Carol airlift after scores of
building.
industry, Brewer
1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . .·· nonahue, _Johnny Edwar~, renegade gunmen stormed has served as president of the
Allen Elltott, Edna Eilts, · the U.S. Embassy in Tehran
Something New At Our Drive-Thru Window
SQUAD RUN
Justin Halley, Arius Hurt, Tuesday
and
held ·u . S. Plywood Corp., director
of
the
Sherwin-Williams
Co.,
The
Pomeroy
emergency
Ralph Jeffers, Audra Keller, Ambassador · William
and
board
member
for
The
squad
was
caUed
to Breezy
rs. Thomas Lyons and son, Sullivan and 101 Americans
Federal
Home
Loan
Bank
of
Heights
at
5:05
a.m.
Friday
avid Martin, Clyde Mount, prisoner for several hours
San
FranCisco
and
the
Wells
During the ye ar we so metimes forget
for
Everett
(Peg)
DaUey
who
ulu Murray, Louise Neal, before Ute revolutionary govwas taken to Holzer Medical
regory O'Brian, Mr~. Greg ernmenl freed them. Two Fargo Mortgage · Investors.
to tell our customers th at we think
The lecture Is open to the Center. ·
Li~er and '!&amp;ughter, Zelia Marines were
slightly public.
they're 'doggone wonderful .'
Pulhns, Ferns Rice, Letssa wounded in the attack
Robson, Mrs. Myrl Samons
·
Th erefore , wfve proclaimed this period around
"St . Valentine's Day" our "Customer Appreciation ,
and
Mary
Saunders,
Candyson,
Scaggs,
Arnold
Shapr,
·
~
Time" ... a lime to let you know that you're
Anthony Williamson, George
Wires, Wilma Withers.
uery important to us . . and to extend our
sincere thanks for yo ur patro nage .
,:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
By _YARDEN A ARAR
Associated Press Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - The
Bee Gees, whose best-&lt;i~elling
soundtrack for the film
"Saturday Night Fever" was
shut out of last year's
Academy
Award
nominetions, were vindicated
with four prizes at this year's
Grammy awards .
·
"Saturday Night Fever"
was voted album of the year,
and the Bee Gees took home

three other Grammys as
disco music .came of age at
the 21st annual awards by the
National
Academy
of
Recording Arts and Sciences.
Billy Joel was the
roadblock that kept disco
sound from sweeping the
niusic industry 's most
prestigious awards at the
nationally televised
ceremonies Thursday night ·
The New · York singerwriter scored a mini-&lt;;;weep of

Executions.

New government will help

Leaders feel

•
recession

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

Area Deaths

Weather

~9~~\l)lt':\1 ®(;1.\.~S

JOHN ROBERTS

tfelers

.,
,

yoU'RE1 SO .

1)0GGONB NIG&amp;!

1------------------------------.
.
ELBERFELD$
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE

. THANK YOU FOR BANKING WITH US!

ROAST BEEF OR ROAST HAM
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

'
pomeroy
nationa
'bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

SANDWICHES
.•.

Our Roast Beef and Roast Ham Sandwiches start with
specially selected USDA inspected meats. The meat is
sliced thin and STACKED HIGH on a sesame seed bun.
There is plenty of lean meat nutrition that the entire

family

needs .d~ily .

Try Our Drive-Thru ln•lanl Seroice!

.

FDIC

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday tbrougb
Tuesday: BecomiDg cloudy
and continued cold SUnday.
Warmer Monday with snow
or rain poulble. Becoming
fair Tuesday. Highs mainly
In the zts SWldaY and In the
30s on Monday and
' Tuelday. Lows In tbe teeaa
Sunday and Tuesday, and
to ibe 21111 Mooday.

.
CLASSES CANCELLED
The baton and gyrlmastics
classes of Mrs. Gloria Buck
Wallace scheduled for tonight
and
been Saturday
car.celled.morning have
'

"'"'

Crow's Family Restaui-ant
Ohio
, _ _ _ _ _,.._Pomeroy,
____
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

SAVE 1f2
MEN'S - BOYS' - GIRLS' • WOMEN'S
WINTER WEARING APPAREL
0.

SALE CONTII~UES SATURDAY, FEB. 11TH AND
~~NDAY,

FEB. 19TH

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM - SATURDAY AND MONDAY nL 5 PM

_ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

PAR~N~S NIGHT was observed during the GaUipolis
Blue Devtls final home basketball game Friday night. Prior
to Ute_varisty lilt between GAHS and Logan, parents and
•, --·.. guardians of all reserve and varsity players, cheerleaders

and managers were introduced. The .Blue Devils made it a
complete success with their seventh straight hardwood
VIctory, 68-08 over the visiting Chieftains.

•

unba
VOL. 14 NO. 3

tmts

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

two of their children, Henry Bell and
Kate, were born .
Later returning to Ga llipolis,
Alexander purchased property
including parts of City Lots 95 and 96 on
Third Ave. and Court St. Here he
operated a tin shop that was inherited
by his son, George, when he died ; and
his daughter , Kate, had a millinery
store. ,
Century Old
According to local tax duplicates
the house at 74 Court St. was built a
century a go in 1878 or 1879.
Alt xander Mcintyre purchased this
property in 1863, from Charles Creuzet
who was born in Lyons, France in 1793.
He came to this country in 1803 and
shortly after his marriage in New York
City started for the West and set tied in
Gallipolis. Creuzet was a successful
merchant and is known to ha ve
manufa ctured th e fir st cigar s in
Continued on Page 1\-2

. GALUPOUS - GaUia County Mcintyre's childhood home at 74 Court
Htstortcal Society today (Sunday ) will St. The Harri sons purchased the
ffi{lfk the 95th birthday anniversary of historic site in July of 1978, remodeled
oscar Odd cfntyre , with a lecture
tt , and had open house Dec. 31.
during the 2 p.m. meeting by Tom ·
National Register
Saunders, columnist for "French City
Harrison, who is a first cousin of
Vigrlettes."
Bill Northup, is hoping to enter the
St . Peter's Episcopal Church, next property in the National. Register of
door below old Holzer Hospital on
Historic Places,
Second Ave., will be the place for the
During open house, . Mrs. 0 . 0 .
meeting, as usual.
Mcintyre was escorted to the Court St.
. · History Written
duplex by the Harrison family , and she
At the same lime, Mrs. William 0.
expressed herself as pleased that the
Northup has finished a complete
house was being remodeled . She
summary of the history of 0. 0 . broW!ht oictures of Odd and his sister
Mcintyre's childhood home. She is the Kate.
sister of Doris Ann Harrison, the wife of
Here's what Mrs. Northup wrote:
Stanley E. Harrison.
·
PART ONE -7t Court St~efore
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison who reside
0. 0. Mclniyre came
in Vienna, Va., are the om{ers of 0 . 0 .
to Uve there.
Mcintyre's childhood home at 74 Court
Alexander Mcintyre, born in
St. The E. Harrison .
Scotland, came to America, settled
Mr. and Mrs. 'Harrison, who reside
early in Gallipolis, and married Mary
in Vienna, Va .. are the owners of 0 . 0.
Joan. They moved to Kentucky where

•

••

tnttnt

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1979

MIDDLEPORT POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Rio student held on murder .charge
Michael Bane, 19,

Regatta plans outlined
at chamber meeting
POMEROY - Plans for the
annual Big Bend Regatta were
outlined when the Pomeroy Chamber •
of Commerce mel Friday at noon at
the Meigs Inn.
Bill Quickel, general chairman
told members that a new amusement

company has been booked for the event
which will be held June 21-24.
The McGuffey Amusement
Company of Vienna, W.Va. will offer
nine rides, will have a search light that
can be seen for 35 miles and will also

Young crusaders
picket NY theatre
By RUTH LANDA
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A group of
young antkrime crusaders picketed a
Times Square theater showing the "The
Warriors" on Saturday, charging that
the movie glorifies youth gangs and
provokes violence.
The film that portrays gang warfare
in New York City has been linked to at
least ' three incidents of violence including two fatal attacks in
California.
On Saturday, a 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld man died
of injuries he received after being shot
in the head at a drive-in theater in
Palms Springs, calif., where the movie
was playing. Earlier in the week, an ISyear-old was stabbed to death in the
lobby of a Ventura, Calif., theater.
Both theaters canceled the movies
after the violence, and Paramount
Pictures, producers of the $5 million
film, authorized 200 theaters across the
country to take whatever security
measures necessary to protect patrons,
at company expense.
But Pa ramount vice president
Gordon Weaver has dismissed the
incidents as "isolated cases," saying
the studio does not see the film as "inflammatory."
In New York, 12 youths terrorized
and assaulted subway passengers in the
theater district after viewing the film
Friday night. They jumped turnstiles
and harassed terrified bystanders

before they were subdued by police.
Saturday's demonstration at the
Times Square theater showing the film
was carried out by members of the
"Magnificenll3," a Bronx-based group
that patrols a subway train they call the
" muggers' express."
They say 'the film creates the
impression that "gangs rule the city"
and provide an outiet ior youngsters
who want to belong.
"This movie is . going to start a
trend, " said "Magnificent 13" leader
CurtiS _Rock Sliwa, 23. "Right now it's
cold, you're not going to see anything on
the street ... But at the crack of spring,
this movie i§ still going to be alive."
He described the film as "violence
from front to end, lacking a plot," and
charged, "II preaches organized gang
VIOlence and leaves you with the
thought Utat organized gangs can rule
this city. The bad guys are cops and the
good guys are gangs. Where is everyone else?"
'
- Sliwa said the majority of persons he ·
had seen in line waiting to see the film
were "under 18" even though the movie
is rated "R," mearili:tg under-aged
persons should not be allowed in.
" We ask them, 'Why did you come to
,see it?' and they say, 'Kids are talking
about it at school, it's one of the biggest
things on their minds,"' he said.
"There's a lot of glamour. Kids have
a lot of energy to burn, and gangs give
them a sense of family."

Public hearing slated F eh. 22
GALLIPOLIS - A public hearing on
Tille XX will be held from 3~ p.m.
Thursday at the Gallia County Welfare
office on upper Third Ave.; according to
announcement made at the monthly
meeting of the Gallia County Council on
Ute Aging, Inc.
President Forrest S. Borden of the
Gallia County Senior Citizens Center,
where the Council held its meetin!l, urged that recipients of Title XX aid
especially should attend.
Bardell will chair the hearing.
With 19 attending' lbe Council
meeting featured these other items of
discussion:
• Mrs. Jean Niday, director,
reported that •bad weather had
prevented van trips to Crown City and
Waterloo, but efforts were made to ·
keep doctors' appointments or to
change appolntnient dales.
• Information and referral continues
with Mrs. Viola Carter.
• Outreach involves delivery of
meals to shut-ins, and purchase of
groceries arid medicines for elderly

feature a fireworks display.
Quickel commented that the
amusement CQmpany is a very clean
outfit that will offer first class rides.
This year .lhe Regatta will feature
two parades, al mini-parade on Thursday, June 21 and a larger parade on
Saturday, Jufc 23.
·
Kyle Allen will he in charge of the
P. A. Denney, a small excursion-boot·
Bill Grueser 'fill be in · charge of th~
carnival; Jim Frecker parade
chairman; Ralph W~ry, taient show;
D~ve Jenkins, the frog jump; l'at
0 Brten, the tennis tournament· Niese!
DuVall and Merri Ault in charge of the
visiting queens.
Bill Mayer wlll .be in charge of the
art show, and Greg Gatriell in charge
of the "eat a thon."
There is a possibility that there
will be an antique car show to be held
at the mini-park. The Rio Grande
Chorale will again be featured as well
as the Air Force roCk band, "Flying
C1rcus.''
Quickel observed that prizes of
$200, $100 and $50 will be awarded first
second and third place winners in th~
talent show. He also noted that $200
will be awarded to the best band.
Quickel added that all signs point
to a very good Regatta.
Attending were Paul Simon
presideJlt, Boyd Ruth, Hank Cleland:
Fre~ Crow, Wesley Buehl, Kyle Allen,
Quickel, Merri Ault, Bill Mayer, Rev .
Robert Graves and Phil Kelly .

Ohio Senate
honors Owen

-~

.,

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Senate has
honored Richard S. Owen upon his
retirement as publisher and president
of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. for his
·dedication "to safeguarding the
pubHc's right to know"' and conunending him "for his many years of
outstanding contributions to the State of
Ohio."
Senate Resolution No. 65, authored by
Sen. Oakley C. ·Collins, read that
" Richard S. Owen has compiled an
outstanding record of community service and has continually displayed a
rare insight into ~ommunity issues,
working diligently toward solutions to
pressing problems facing southeastern
Ohio today "
"His dedicated and continual professional guidance," the resolution, which
was passed Feb. 15, read, "has been
.largely responsible for the growth and
prosperity of the newspaper industry in
. Meigs County and southeastern Ohio."
1

unable to get out, using the shut-ins'
money.
·
• Weather has handicapped
hOmemakers' assistance, but will
resume when roads are passable.
• Health services have included
blood-pressure measurements for 10 '
people at Centerville and 22 at Crown
City, with transportation furnishilil to·
the sites.
• Nutrition report showed the serving of 1,532 meals in January of which
~I were home-delivered, 422 'served at
Vmton, and 509 at the Senior Citizens
Center.
• Mary Kathem Smalley fourcounty director, and Arlene 'Tracy
COMMISSION TO MEET
Gallia County cobrl)inator, asked that
GALUPOLIS - The Gallipolis
$2,0011 be included for RSVP in the
City Commission will hold a special
Council's budget. • President Borden's · meeting Tuesday, Feb. 20, at 8 p.m.
appointment of Hughes Price as one of
Items on the agenda include
two Equal Opportunities officers .was
request
of approval of appointment of
approved.
officer Michael Tucker to position of
• Ethel Robinson reported on the acinvestigator, 'rirst reading of an
tiyities of the advisory committee.
ordinance to purchase recreallon
• E. Ray Bailey repot:ted on the perequipment and uniforms and
Continued on Page A-2
permission to buy a used pick-up truck.

Gallipolis, victim
in dorm shooting
RIO GRANDE - A Rio Grande
College student, John D. Montgomery,
22, Zaleski, 0., is being held on a charge
of murder in connection with the
Saturday morning death of Michael
David Bane, 19, Gallipolis.
Bane sustained a fatal shotgun
blast to the chest shortly before 3 a.m.
Saturday, while visiting in room 213 of
Moulton Hall, a Rio Grande dormitory .
MICHAEL BANE
According to the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department, the shot whic.h
killed Bane was one of three rounds
fired in ·the second floor room of the
college dormitory room occupied by
Montgomery.
According to a statement prepared
by the college, at approximately 3 a.m.
Saturday, an unidentifi ed student
frantically notified the resident
GALUPOLIS - The Automobile Club
director of Moulton Hall that a serious
pf Southern Ohio has added Thaler Ford
injury
had occurred and that an· amto its list of emergency road service
bulance
was needed.
garages, -according to announcement of
The
resident director went to the
Charles Clark, division manager.
room,
found
that Bane, a form er
Clark said that the telephone
student
of
the
college, had suffered a
numbers are 446-3575 in the daytime
gunshot
wound,
and then contacted the
and ~46-0054 at night and on weekends.
Southeast Ohio Emergency Medical
The emergency service, Clark said,
Service.
·
does not cover maintenance or repair,
SEOEMS
notified
th e Sheri ff' s
but it does include taking care of flat
Department
of
the
reported
shooting at
tires, battery failure, delivery of
3:0~ a.m.
·
gasoline, key service, and winching and
Deputies Timothy Brumfield and
towing within the Gallipolis area .
Preston
Mustard arrived at the enGallipolis has one of the nine offices
trance
to
the
residents' hall at 3:11 a.m .
in the 11 counties served by the Auto
Montgomery
was immediately
Club of Southern Ohio, an affiliate of the
taken
into
custody
on
the ground floor
American Automobile Association
by
Deputy
Mustard,
while Officer
(AAA) . Gallipolis has had a triple-A ofBrumfield
went
to
the
sec9nd fl oor
fice for over 2Q years.
room
to
check
on
the
victim.
Thaler Ford will help out the other
Brumfield notified the Sheriff's
emergency station, Bane's Amoco on
Department
at 3: 15 a.m. that a fatal
Lower River Rd .
shooting had occurred.
Bane was pronounced dead at the
scene by Gallia County Coroner Donald
Warehime at 3:47 a.m.
Special Investigator Herman
Henry of the Bureau of Criminal Investigation was called in to' aid in the
case at 4:18a.m.
Deputy Brwnfield said Saturday
morning that Bane's body was found
sitting upright on a couch in MontGALLIPOLIS - Th e Red Cross
gomery's
room. with both feet propped
Regional Center bloodmobile will be at
up
on
a
drawer
of a desk . Brumfield
Grace United Methodist Church next
said
the
desk
drawer
had been placed
Thursday from noon to 6 p.m..
on
the
floor
for
use
as
a
table, or stand,
Thelma Shaver, Gallia County blood '
in
the
room.
chairman, said that it is the responAccording to the deputy, Bane's
sibility of healthy persons to give blnod
levi
shirt was unbuttoned, revealing a
for people in need of it.
quarter-sized
wound to the chest.
Donors must be no younger than 18
The
size
of
the wound, a sheriff' s
years of age and no older than 66,
department
spokesmun
said, indicates
although by parental consent 17-yearthat
the
fatal
shot
was
discharged at
olds may donate blood. Consent slips
point
blank
range.
·
will be available at the church the day
Two
other
shots
had
been
fired into
of Ute bloodmobile visit.
the ceiling of the dormitory room .
Brumfield said that both shotgun blasts
had penetrated the ceiling tile leaving
small points of entry, with no visible
pattern of shot distribution.
County school board
Recovered from the room was a 32
inch, single shot, 12 gauge shotgun ;
will meet Tuesday
three spent cartridges (one from the
gun's chamber, two from the floor ):
and two unfired shells on a desk in the
GALLIPO[JS - The Gallia County
room.
Local Board of Education will meet at
Sheriff James M. Montgomery said
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the central office
on Jackson Pike.
·
Items on the 'agenda for
CLOSED MONDAY
consideration include action on
GALLIPOLIS - Postmaster
resolutions for a proposed bond issue, .. Richard Bane a!Ulounced Saturday
employment of certificated and
thai the Gallipolis Post Office will be
classified employees and other
closed Monday in observance of
pertinent matters.
President's Day.

Galli. polis firm
.
added to list

Bloodmobile to
· visit Gallipolis

•
i.

Saturday morning that, as of that time,
it was unknown which of the three shots
fired in the room had killed Bane.
The gun, which was tentatively
identifi ed as belonging to John Monigomery, was reportedly being kept in
the dormitory room by the college
student.
John Montgomery was booked and
incarcerated in the county jail on a
charge of murder at 4:56 a.n1 . Saturday .
As of late Saturday afternoon. no
apparent motive had been ascribed by
department investigators in the alleged
murder .
Bane's body, which had been
removed from the scene early Saturday, wa s to be trans port ed to
University Hospital in Columbus for an
autopsy Sunday morning.
Ba ne was employed at the
Superamerica Station, Gallipolis. He
was a t977 graduate of GaUl a Academy
High School and attended Rio Grande
College fo~ two years.
In high school, he was a member of
the choir. At Rio Grande College,_he
assisted in all the talent shows, the
Grande Chorale, and gave special
assistance to the ligpting.effects of such
programs.
He has received much recognition
for his art work and poetry. Several of
his articles were published in the Rio
Grailde "G randion."

Prior employment incl udes Bane's
Filling Station, Bob Evans Sausage
Shop, and the Rio Grande cafet eria. He
had been with Superamerica for two
months.
He was .born July 22, 1959. son of
Gary and Shirley Thomas Bane,
Gallipolis. Both survive, along with one
brother, Greg, also of Gallipolis. His
grandparents are , Mr . and Mrs.
Maurice Bane, Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Esther Thomas, Point Pleasant .
He wa s a member of Grace United
Methodist Church. "
Services will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday
at Gr~ce United Methodist Church. The
Rev . .lames Clark will officiate.
Burial wUJ follow in Mound Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Waugh-Halley·Wood Fun eral Home
from 4-9 p.m. Monday. If friends so
desire,
contributions., may
be
made to Grace United Methodist
Church building fund or the Greater
Cincinnati Northern Kentucky Chapter
of the National Hemophilia Foundation,
Cincinnati.

Emergency unit is
sought for vill.qge
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service is
mte~ested in placing an emergency
medical service unit in Tuppers Plains
to provide emergency medical
assistance for that part of Meigs
Coun\Y.
However, the people of the
Tuppers Plains area would have to
p~ov_ide . the m~npower . Anyone
wts!t!ng to take the E.M.T. training is
asked to contact for more information
- Terry Deem, 667-3933; Richard
Spencer, 667~130 ; Clifford Longenette, .
667-3890, or Charles Weber, 667-6335 .

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