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Ir-------------------------~
.
I
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
I than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor)
I and must he signed with the signee's addres.s. Nam es may
I be withheld upon publication. However, on request,
I pames will be disclosed. Letters should be In good taste,
I addressing' issues, not personalities.
·
I
.

'D-8- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, Sunday , Jpn. 6, 1980

Consulners .defy predicti-ons
NEW YORK (AP) - Conswners
economy·, "· commented a recent
once again defied predictions and
report issued by the government
&lt;l()elled their wallets and pocket- securities research unit of Merrill
books to spend more liberally than
Lynch &amp; Co. Inc., an investment
most ecommists expected during
company.
· the Chriatmas season.
Economists also point to a
Retail figures reported by major
relatively new attitude about in depo~r1rnent store chains this week
flation. With steady price increases
pon't represent aJI spending, but
continuing, people have become
analysts said they seemed to in- used to the idea that if they wait to
dicate better sales than expected in
buy an item later, theywilljl'obably
tight of a weakening ecim&lt;Jl'ly.
have to pay more for it. Thus saving
Overall sales for the month of
for major purchases has become
December at big depar1rnent stores somewhat less attractive than
were 'up about 8 percent from 1978, borrowing to bur them immediately.
which also was a slrong year. That
Merrill Lynch does expect concompa red with an estimated 6 per- sumers to contin ue to cut back on
cent increase in retail prices for the
debt burden in the months ahead.
year.
But several years ri unprecedented
Most economists still expect con- conswner spending ma y not be a
sumer spending to soften this year- dangerous !rend, it argues.
and some of that has already oc"It is far from certain that this ac:
curred for" home appliances and tivity has resulted in a deterioration
autos.
in the fina ncial condition of
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. recen- households. Indeed, one can argue
tly predicted a dramatic slowdown th.1 t conswners are in a better
in consumer credit expansion this
year. Net new mortgage fonnation,
which reached a record $160 billion
last year, i3 forecast to drop to $135
billioo in 1910, largely because of a
~percent drop in new housing construction, the report said.
"Real wages have been declining
for many months and debt loads
have riaen sharply," the Morgan
report said.
SPRINGFIELD, Di. (AP ) .While such projections are
Chicago teachers went home without
widespread, many experts also
paychecks for the second time, and
predicted such a spending 'slowdown
Gov. James R. Thom pson sa id early
last yee r and were proved wrong.
Saturday negotiations had failed to
Fooling the experts has become
produce a financial plan to avert a
almost commonplace in recent possible shutdown of the nation's
years.
third largest school system Monday.
•'The consumer sector has become ·
"All I can say is that at this point
a major enigma wrapped in a com· there is no agreement ... there are no
plicated puzzle called the U.S. vtlla ins, lhere are no heroes, there is

positi on overall than they were at
turning points ol past cycles and
whatever Imbalances seem to exist
~uc h as higher debt burden----can
reasonably he justified in today's in·
flationary environment."
In other bll9iness devlopments this
week: ·
- The price of gold shot up more
than $100 an OWJce in the first two
trading days of 198) and reached a
record $635 a n ounce in Europe
Thursday before falling back late in
the week.
- U.S. automakers reported that
their sales feU almost 10 percent in
mid-December, compared with 1978,
and Ford said it would tempcrarily
close II of its 13 auto production
plants because of sagging sales.
- Administration officials said
President Carter plans to seek a · ~
percent inct:ease in federal housing
subsidies for low income families in
the form of a $32 billion program .

WASHINGTON (AP ) - With Iran rlflc lally in defiance of a United Nations
deadline for freeing the-50 American hostages in Tehran, President Carter is
seeking inunedtate Security CoWlcil action to punish Iran through adoptioo
!1. economic sanctions.
Carter, brushing aside suggestions by U.N. Secretary General Kurt
Waldhelm t~t sanctions won't be effective, said through a spokesman Sun·
, day night that the council nwst take action ag!linst Iran ''without delay.
Waldheim was due to report today to the Security CoWlcil on his three-day
visit to Tehran last week. However, White House spokesman Jody Powell
and diplomatic sources in New York said the timing of a public meeting on
Iran was in dwbt because the United Nations has been occupied with the
question of Soviet intervention in Afghanistan.
U.N. observers indicated the council would do no more than adopt an agenda today concerning Iran, with work oo the sanctions resolution beginning
later in the week.
But wtth the hostage crisis now in its ninth week, and with the ad·

I ...?Jtt.F4/th,:_.__
Let's stop begging Happy new year ·
This is a brand New Year I And I
greet it with much optimism and
positive thoughts of my inner
t·--".
.,......gs.
With a 1100 ~ in my heart, 1 feel the ,
q~portunity iJ. a total new beginning.
For me it mlds the promise of all .
God's goodness of peace, Jove, joy,
good health, happiness and harmony, a greater wxlerstandlng, and
enlighteoment of an Increased
spiritual reawakenin~ of deeper
faith and new fulfiBment of SliDe of
my most cherished dreams. •
So by putting God •s power in aclion in this new year of 1980, my life
holds much in store fer me In some
of life's everyday situations. - MiJ1..
nie Doss.

Jan. 1, 19al
MARTY HOLBROOK

Marty Holbrook
Receives Degree

NEW HAVEN - Kenneth Martin
(Marly ) Holbrook, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Holbrook, New
Haven, gradnated magna cum laude
hls B.S. degree in Mining
Engineering Technology from West
Virginia Institute of Technology on
Dec.14.
A 1976 grft&lt;luate of Wahama High .
School and salutatoria n of his
graduating class, Marty o,vas a
member of the National Honor
Society and Key Club and lettered in
no agreement, mere IS no an·
football and basketball. He also was
notmcement, " a weary Thompson
named to Who's Who in American
told reporters after 16 oours of
High Schools.
negotiations with ll representatives
Mary received a full scholarship
of state and city educators, banks,
to
West Virginia Institute of
government and the Chicago
Technology
ami while there played
Teachers Union.
intennural
football
and water polo.
Thompson said the talks would
.
He
alsQ
was
selected1o
Who's Who in
resume today at hili executive
American
Colleges
and
Universities.
residence, where they began ThurMarty
and
his
wife.
the fonner
sday when Thompson had many of
Carletta
Gibbs,
daughter
of Mr. and
the officials brought in on state
Mrs. Carl Gibbs of New Haven, will
planes in an effort to solve the school
be residing at Accoville, W.Va.
crisis.
Marty has accepted an offer with the
Michael I. Brady, legislative
Elkay Mining Co., a division of
liaison for Chicago Mayor Jane Byr;
Pittston Coal Corp., where he will be
ne, complained the talks were
working
!n the engineering depari·
recessed prematurely. "The
men
I.
hangup, in my opinion, is that we're
not meeting all night," he said.
Thompson said "earlier this
evening I believed we had (an
city school employees would not be
agreement on a solution ) but we do
paid. The employees did receive the
not." He said agreement had been
checks due Dec. 21.
reached on providing short-term
About $83 million would have been
relief for the financially crippled
required to pay the employees for
school system, and for a long-!'ange
hothpaydays.
plan to improve its financial stan·
ding.
Closure of the schools would bar
about 480,000 p~ils from attending
But he said there still were "subclasses.
stantial " differences on intermediate steps to bridge the gap
between short-term relief and a
img-term solution.
Earlier in the dsy, the state
treasurer 's .office routinely invested
$100 million in state funds that had
been set aside ((I' poosible use in
paying Chicago's 48,000 public
school employees, who have not
been paid since Dec. 7. Jerome
Cosentino, state treasurer, said the
state would have lost more than
$100,000 in interest if the money had
not been reinvested.
Following that action, Catherine
Rohter, president of the Chicago
Board of Education, announced that
for their second straight payday,

Chicago teache~s
•
receive no pay

DearEditor,
Last night, I watched the ABC
New Year's Special by Dick Clark,
in hope that ol the thwsands before
the cameras some would raise a
banner saying "Free Our People
Now, " but none was raised.
In my heart a feeling of sadness,
anger, despair, irustration and
humilitation.
I'm sure the Iranians holding our
peq~le will show them a rerun of the
festivities, in details, pointing out
that there were no banners for their
release , and of the demoralizing ef·
feet it will have on the hostages.
How long must we be on our knees,
begging? When on your knees with y-:::::.:::::::::_ ___ ..........._
head downcast, it's unlikely you'll
see the blow that kills . Be it a man, ·
or a nation, can we not rise? Stand
proud? Andgoitalone?
Without begging our "sometimes"
friends? Those who without ol!r help,
what
money and Jives of our countryinen
past would today be listening in fear
they
of the hobiiailed boots of muer •s
Storm Troopers.
How soon they forget. We opened
our hearis, schools·, money, food,
Come see me . You may
country and gave our lives to these
be pl eased, loo.
''Friends. " Now they desert us, turn
onus.
]t1 ike Swiger
muer started with small coWJtrie8
as is Ruasia. The Russian Bear is at
992-4685
149 s. Third St.
your do(J'Siep now Iran. Will he say
Middleoort, 0 .
please? ltlinknot.
I grieve for our people held
hostage and for their families and
the agony they endure. There is
bqle. . I feel pride for the Dock
Workers who refused to load Iran
shi)ll . The fanners ol our country
who help feed die world who said,
''No More." So ID Iran, and its
people I say:
, Likeaiood UA11 J•IM
''Free Our People Now," or you
ndchbor,
wiJI unleash the American ~eq~le .
scateFann
A mighty country gooe berserk
Ia there.
with warriors filled with frem:Led ·
STATE FARM FIRE
and resistless fury upon you and
AND CASUALTY COMPANY
your country.
Horne OtfiO' Bloomingtor, ltliw
Sincerely, Bill Foster.

VOL. XXVIII

(USPS 145·960)

__;

WASHINGTON (AP) - American
,' 'BgrlbusineM" is reeling under
President Carter's decision to cut
back grain sales to the Soviet Union,
but the domestic market has two
days to brace for the Impact of 17
milUon unei)ICCted tdns of grain.
The Commodity Futures Trading
Cmunlssion has closed for today
and Tu!lsday the boards of trade in,
Chicago, Kansas City and Min·
neapolis as well as the Mid-America
Grain Exchange in Chicago to all
dealing in wheat, C(l'R, ilats,
soybeans, and soybean oil and meal.
Spokesman Dave Rosen said the
commissiooers' decision, made at
an emergency sessloo Sunday, was
based on their f~ ''that time
was needed for the public to
assimilate precisely what the administration was doing so that
everyone in the marketplace would
have a better idea about the true
supply-end-demand picture."
Carter, mdersooring U.S. concern
about Soviet intervention in
Afghanistan, announced Friday that
Soviet ~K~rchases of U.S. grain would
be llmlted this year to 8 mliJioo tons,
, ' ~minlnum required
a live·
year trade agreenielrt. The Soviet
Union bad onlered 25 mliJion tons for

·

A

under

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
-JANUARY·CLEARANCE SALE
'

.,

'

'

FURNI'tURE DEPARTMEN'I: -

3RD FLOOR

SAVE ·'200 ON K.ROEHLER
Linked to -Iran

'

SOFAS &amp; LOVESEATS

·'

~KROEHLER

.'2000FF

ALL

FLOOR SAMPLES
.DRASTICALLY REDUCED

20% to 50%

489 SOFA FLORAL MATA!-AS$E.. .............................:.............. SALE 1289

1

1569 SOFA, 8LUE
. .VELVET
'" ' . ·••••.. ~ ••.•.••.••..•..•..•. ..•••.~· · · · · · ········· •· ····SA.LE
. '369
1
798 SOFA RUST VELVET.INCLINER. ....................................... .. SALE '598
1729 SOFA OFF WHITE ............. ~ .... ..... ...
..
·
·.
SALE "'29
...............................
-_,
1
579 SOFA BROWN, GOLD, RUST... ...... ·.••................................ .SALE 1379
1
579 SOFA BEIGE WITH BLUE FLOWERS ................................... SALE $379
'496 SOfA BROWN NAUGAHYDE. .................-.. ~ .. :..................... SALE 1296
1
559 LOVESEAT RUST FUR. ...... .... .......... : ... : ....... ......... .. ... .... SALE 1359
1
598 LOVESEAT INCLINER. BEIGE V~NYL .................................. SALE '398

GROUP OF 12 KROEHL.R AND
'BERi&lt;LINE CHAIRS .
REGtJLAR PRICES' ·3~9 :ANI)' '349
.

Wllll·Aways.and Rocker
Recliners
In . nylon, velvets' and
vinyis.
I
.
,_
._

YOUR cHOICE .. •22900
J

•

NEW YORK (AP) -President
Carter's rise In popularity polls
may be linked not only to the
crisis on Iran but also to growing
skepticiBJil about Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy's actions · at Chappaquiddlck, according to a new
poll cornmissiooed by Newsweek
magazine.
The magazine reports in this
week's editions that a Gallup
Organization poll of 498
Democrats and Independents' in
December indicated that 55 per·
cent toougbt Kennedy ''acted im·
properly" in the 1989 automobile
accident that killed 281'ear-old
Mary Jo Kopechne. The figure
was up fr1111 48 percent in a
.similar poll last May.

,.

..

-·-

ROY.

1!81.
. Melvin S. Sjerven, senior editor of
"MIIIIog A: Baking News,~· BD IDdustry journal based in Kansas City,
said Sunday the decision to cut back
grain sales "can almost be
described as ooe that could virtually
destroy an industry.''
Sjerv~n said it will affect investors
and exporters In die futures market, ·
country elevator operators who have
purchased grain from the fanners
and hedged it in futures - even
bakers.
He said there are potentially
serious repercussions fer rural
banking, in which bankers lend
money to fanners to buy equipment
and accept grain as collateral.
"If that collateral goes down in
value, the banker gets cmcemed
and you've (the fanner) got to pay
back a certain amount of that loan.
Bankers can get very panicky about
that."
Not aJ1 experts approved tbe
suspension of trading. Robert
Wilmouth, president of the Olicago
Board ri.Trade,saidhe ''didn't think
~would be gained by closing
the iruirketihg for tw9 days," adding
there ate enough safeguards · to
aUowcontlnuedtradlng.
And on SUnday, Deputy Secretary
of State Warren Christopher said on
CBS' ''Face the Natloo" the ad·
ministration is preparing a new
gasohol program that would Wle
about 5 million tons of cm~ this year
and diminish the Impact of the curb
on Soviet grain sales.
Energy Department officials said
details of the ,program Ukely would
be annoWlced later this week.
Gasohol is a fuel mixture rJ. a bout 90
percent gasoline and 10 jlercent octane-boosting alcohol. One bushel of
com produces about 2.5 gallons of
alcohol.
mUCKS BROKEN DOWN
Bolb village owned trueb Ia
Pomeroy are brokea dowalllllll as a
result work Ia soow cleart\lg cannot

be carried oat, Pomeroy Mayor
·aareuee Alidrewl reports. He ll8ld
trucb wfii be baa oat 011 tbe streela
at oace when repain are eompleted.

Health department
survey being taken
During the month rJ. January 1980,
the Melg~~ County Health Depart·
~t will be conducting a survey to
fiild out what Ia known; and not
known, about high bloOd pressure in
Meigs County.
.
The Health Department would ap·
preciate your cooperation by rllllng
out the survey sheet dUring this
mooth. Results of. the survey will in·
fCI'IIl the Health Department regar·
ding what education the public needs
about high blood prei!Sure.
During this moot]), some people
have voJunteered to go house:tohwse, asking residents .to complete
(Continued 011 page 8) '

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1980

Cleveland pupils
return to class
CLEVELAND (AP) -Cleveland 's youth, who declined to give his
public school students began name_
Another JOOil Marshall pupil, .
trooping back this morning to the
schools that most of them haven't senior Linda Garcia, said she was
seen since their teachers went on glad to be back in school but constrike more than 11 weeks ago.
cerned about the amowt of work
Freezing rain, snowy streets and ahead in (l'der to graduate this year.
Teachers returned to work Friday
winds gusting up to 40 miles an oour
greeted the system's 92,1XX) students. after ending their pay dispute with
At least one John Marshall ffigh the debt-ridden school board. In the
Scl)ool student wasn t too happy longest work stoppage ever for the
about going back. ·n was nice " Cleveland schools, teachers bad
sleeping in in the morning," said the been on strike since Oct. 18.
· The Cleveiand Board rJ. Education
kept the system'S 146 buildln~. opeil
until Nov. 6, but only a handful ol
stude!U and teachers were in school
during that period.
Meanwhile, in Streetsboro, school
rlficials said a marathon, night-long
bargaining sessioo· cootinued this
morning in an effort to end a six -day·
old walkout by the 126~mber
Streetsboro Education Association.
RoWld-the-clock bargaining began
HUNTINGTON - Union workers
voted Saturday night to accept a new Sunday at the request of the school
three-year contract, ending a 60-day board. That re~J~est came after
strike at Heiner's Bakery in Hun· several hwxlred parents attended a
special meeting 'Saturday 'night and
tington.
criticized the board for hiring a·
Robert Agee, assistant manager
pensive substitute teachera .and
of the 7~ear-old company which
security
guards and for keeping the
has outlets in Charleston, Gallipolis
and The Plains, Ohio, said produc- system's five schools open when less
tion workers would be back on the than 10 percent of the distric.t 's 2,110
job Wednesday and sales workers students haw been attending
classes.
would return Thursday.
·
The major issues in the Street·
"You can tell the public that
Heiner '!I will be back on the shelves sbtl'o strike include a demand for
next Thursday,'' Agee said Saturday binding arbitration on grievances
and a demand that all new teachers
night .
Heiner's has some 2,000 customer be required to join the SEA.
stores, hospitals, schools and Teadlers want specific reaso111 for
being dismissed and are demanding
rEStaurants within a 1IJO.roile radius
that
teachers be allowed to make up
of HunUngt.on, Agee ssld.
the days they are on strllre.
The 165 m~hers of Retail,
The brealrthrough in the 'Ill-day
Wholesale and Department Store
Unioo Local21 went on strike Nov. 6. Cleveland strllre came last Wed·
nesday after the school board,
The walkout lasted lmger than any
of two previous strikes against the pressured by citizelll groups and a
conunon pleas court judge to find a
company, Agee said.
International union representative way to end the strike, made a pay
Roliert Ingles said Saturday's vote, raise offer which the 5,20(knember
which came during a two~our Cleveiand TeacherB Union accepted
by an overwhelming vote.meeting, :was 110-34.
The two-year pact Includes a 24
Bush and Agee said the new con·
percent
pay raise spread over ~
tract provides employees with im·
proved insurance and working con· months. Starting pay for a teacher
ditiCIIS. Both men said the new pact with a hacbe)(l''s degree . will In·
increases wl!l!es for production crease from t9,887 to $12,471, while
workers $1.60 an mur over the three· the salary fer teacbers on the top of
year life of the contrsct. It increases the pay scale who have a master's
wages for sales workers $24 a week degree will go from $20,558 to $25,930
during tile length of the coriract.
over the life of the contract.

Heiner's
strike
•
IS over

'

SNOW FUN - Sleigh riding became a popular activity with the
younger set in Meigs CoWJty Sunday after two days rl faJiing snow.
Amoog the youngsters enjoying the cold and the riding was Anna
Margaret Chapman rJ. Pomeroy.

Vandais hit Southern school
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
are investigating vandalism of two
windows at Southem ffigh School.
Deputies were notified of the incident Sunday night by Raymond
Pierce, school custodian. The
building was not entered, however,
tracks indicated a small vehicle bad
been parked behind the school.
Also under investigation is a hit·
skip that occurred at CBJpenter's
Pennzoil, Racine, sometime Satur·
day night or early Sunday morning.
An unknown vehicle struck and
damaged a pop machine that was
sitting outside of the buil,ding.

Winter storm
leaves 7 dead

Meanwhile, Syracuse Pollee &lt;llief
Miltoo Varian investigated a two car
accident Saturday at 7:25p.m. in the
village of Syracuse
According to Chief Varian Eric
Scott Dwming, ~. Norman, Okla.,
was traveling west on SR 124 when
he struck a stalled car In the rear
driven by Brian David Knapp, 22,
Syracuse.
A passenger in the Knapp vehicle,
Angela K. Barton, 17, P&lt;meroy,
claimed injuries but was not im·
mediately treated. There was
moderate damage to both vehicles.
Dunning was cited to Syracuse
Mayor Eber Pickens court oo
charges of failure to stop within
assured clear distance.

Columbia says help available
for expensive winter fuel costs

By 1be Anoclated Press
Authorities counted the dead from
weekend winter storms that
blanketed much of the nation as bliz.
~BORO, Ohio (AP) -The
Rising fuel costs android weather and the intimate knowledge that
zards howled over parts of the upper
joint murder .trial of two Greencoold combine to make this an ex· Columbia's &lt;;UStomer contact people
Midwest today, sending tern.
field teen-agers which was
pensive winter.
have of the various social agencies
peratureS plunging and raking the
scheduled to begin today has
Help is available, however, for thatcanprovldefinanctalaid.
plains with drlv!rw snow.
been postponed unW March 10 by ·
those who find it hard to meet the
Many customers fil:ld the budget
Snow was fcirecast today from nocffighland County Common Pleas
rising cost 1lf staying W8flll. This payment plan the best method of
them New England acr0111 the lower
Judge Darrell Hottle.
help comes from any sources, in· managing their gas bills, Clark aGreat 'Lakes and into the Dakotas .
Lance ~ller, 18, and Larry
eluding in lllllliy instances the folks plaina. With payments spread out
Rain was likely through the central
Don Penwell, 17, .bqth of
.who send the bills.
·
over the year In 12equal monthly in·
Gill! Cbast, the Carolinas arid the
HIDsboro, are charged in the
A recent report from the staJiments, customers know In ad·
Middle Atlantic states as tern.
. March lV/8 suffocation death of
American Gas Association (AGA) vance their gas costs, and can plan
peratures hovered around zero
Barbara Ilertno!1y.
reveals
that the nation 's natural gas accordingly.
aloog the central Canadian border.
. , A motion for separate trials has
"Evei'y year we see an Increase in
utilities
have an extensive number
Blizzard wa~ were posted
been widldrawn by defense atof programs designed to help the number of customers taking ad·
across North. Dakota, Minnesota,
Mostly clo!llly and cold with a W'LSCoosin and Michigan. A heavy
torneys, but HoWe has not ruled
residential customers pay their vantage of the plan," Clark says, ad·
chance ol snow flurries tonight and snow warnillg was in effect in lower
on two &lt;iller pretrtal motions.
heating bills. Colwnbia Gas of Ohio ding that approximlltely 38 percent
Tuesday. Lows tonight between 15 Michigan and storm warnings ex.
ls no exception.
·
of Columbia's residential customers
and 20.·Highs Tuesday near :.1. The · tended over the Great Lakes and in Columbia has a loog~tablished, nowparticipo~tein the plan.
cbapce of precipitation Is 30 percent toNeliYork. " ·
three'jlronged strategy aimed at
This year there was a net gain of
No traffic deaths have been
tonight and Tuesday.
helping customers pay their gas bills about 9,1113 customers in the ptan
Winds
gusted
up
to
114
D,Jph
as
the
reponed on Ohio's highways ·
ond retain thelrservlees.
over last year.
,
first major stonn of the decade blew
during the "WWterd, the state
.
'1n
fact,"
says
Roger
Clark,
Colwnbla
'
8
paynient
extension
•
into
Colorado
oo
Saturday,
crac~ng
Highway Patrol said thla mor·
ONEHOURLATE
residential
and
conunerclal
coBec·
policy
csn
allow
a
custOmer
to make
car
windshields
.and
shattering
winn1rw:
:
.
Classes In the Eastern and Meigs
lions
manage~
for
the
se~n
Colum·
partial
payments
on
an
WLpaid
dows
in
Georgetolm
ahd
other
The patrol coimts weekend
Local School Dlatricts began one
bla
Distribution
Companies,
"the
.
balance
unW
the
bUlls
current
The
•
traffic deaths In the state lrotn 6
oour later tjlan t11ual Monday due to mountain communities.
At least two people died in . major reason we 'wind up turning a amount of each payment Is agreed
p.m. Frida)i unui mldnl~t Sun·
inCleinent · weatl)er and road con·
customer off is that he woo 't talk to .upon by the customer and the gas
Washington
- ooe of ellpollure and
day. '
. ..
,
dltlons.\ Clalises In ~he Southern
us a~o!lt resolving ' .his payment · · company.
·
one
in
a
traffic
acCident
in
a
'l'he patrol said It has been
~ocal District w' re kept pn
problem. If he did, we probabiy
" "All we 1\re asking with the exruled that the death ~ Robert E. · I!Ciiedule.
· · ·
' · weekend oold !IDBP diet kept poWer
could
wor\t
something
out.
"
tended-!~Bl'Jl!ent
pial\ is that the
Companies
busy
as
people
turned
up
. Vall,54,ofRiclimond,WBlldueto
• 'Today .matked thefirst !JSe of a
Columbia
's
three
avenues
of
aid
customer
malfe
some
kind of effort
the
heat
to
ward
rl.f
temperatures
in
;, a heart . attack. and · not an
newplaris·tobefoUowedJnfheMeigs
iilclude
a
budget
payment
plan.
a
to
pay
his
bill,
that
he
try
to meet us
teens.
the
.automobile crash
Local School Disll'!ct to cq~e with
liberal
payment
extension
policy
halfway,"Carksays.
·. (Cootlnued on page 8)
L...:,+-- - - --..:...----.J · bad weather conditions. ·, ·· ,,

Trial slated

KROEHLER SOFAS AtfD LOVESEATS

enttne

at y
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 185

lt was not clear, however, whether the United States would be abj.e to
muster similar support for the fonnal adq~tion rl sanctions. A two-thirds
vote ol the I +member Security Council is required.
China and Zambia, for example, have said they were reserving judgment
on the sanctions issue even though they supported the United States in the
New Year's Eve vote.
In addition, the Security Council's rotation system has placed four new
members on the council and removed four others.
And U.S. officials have acknowledged privately that tbe American campaign to denounce the Soviet Union for its intervention in Afghanistan could
induce a Soviet veto on the Iran issue.
Also uncertain is the ilnpact of Waldheim's view that sanctions would not
be effective in inducing Iran to free the h&lt;m&amp;ges.
Despite these uncertainties, the U.S, ambassador to the United Nations,
Donald McHenry, has predicted that sanctions wiJI be approved.

•

•

Agribusiness reeling
under Carter's order

ltolneOWilefS

with S1ate l'arln
insUrance!'

ministration facing increasingly heavy pressure frc;rn Republican presiden·
tial candidates for decisive action, Carter apparently feels he can wait no
longer.
"The United Nations should go forward and do ~hat it said .•. it would do,"
· Powell told reporters &amp;Imlay night.
Carter and his top advisers received a report Sunday from Waldheim on
his Iran trip. Waldheim also told reporters that Iranian authorities believe
dley can count on outside support to overcome the effects of any U.N. move
to apply sanctions. · ·
On Dec. 31, the Security Council gave Iran until today to free the hostages.
In die event of non-cllllpliance, the council decided it should ''B dq~t effective measures" under articles in the U.N. charter authorizing economic
sanctions against nations found to be a threat to peace .
The resolution containing today 's deadline was approved 11 ~ with four
countries abstaining, including the Soviet Union.

e

"A lot of

are ,teased
at
can save

•

•

Carter seeks ilnmediate economzc sanctzons

. ,9~

·I

..

Weather

No traffic deaths

~

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

II

The goal of this policy Is to help the
customer .clear up cid debt without
incurring any new debt oo his con·
tinui~Wservice .

'1n other·wonls,'' Oark says, '11
the customer owes us f.IOO to begin
with and agrees to pay $25 a month
until lhllt tlOO Is paid ~f. he mlllt
pay the $25, plus whatever hill
present monthly gas lall comes to.
That way he Is always gaining oo hill
debt. "
.
If turning to the budget plan or the
extended payment plan Is not Ute answer, Columbia's cusl1111er contact
personnel are armed with lqfll"ll,lll lion about social service agencies1lnd federal and state a!!!!lstance
programs that may provide flnan·
cia! aid to tile customer.
"All of our cf!lees· have cootact
with the social service and welfare
agencies .In !heir areu. CUiltomfl'
contact ~e actuall,y go alit am
get to knOiv the people and pollclies In
these agencies and then .-e able to
pasa that lnforination along to llUI'
customers as needed," Clark •ys.
Colwnbla won't tum a Clilltorner'l
name over to agencies, he note., but
the co~ . will help tmee who
desire aid to make COIUct with any
agency that mlglt help.
:

J

�3-TheDallySenUnel,1Jflddleport·Pomeroy,O.,Monday,Jan. 7,19iiJ
2-The Daily Sentinel , Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 7, !900

·_Corttroversial call stands, Steelers champions· again

Watergate, Nixon resignation top stories
•

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
On June 17, 1972, five men were
arrested attempting to rifle files at
the headquarters of the Democratic
National Conunittee. Two years and
53 days later, Richard Milhot»
Nixoo became the first president of
the United States to resign.
The events set off by what Nixon
press secretary Ron Ziegler
described as "a third-rate
llurglary," the scandal generically
known as Watergate, has been voted
.overwhehningly the top news story
cl. the 1970s by Associated Press
editors ~nd broadcasters.
Nearly 80percent of the 700 voters
picked it as the stol)' of the decade
and it had a 10·1 edge over its
nearest c&lt;mpetitor - the energy
crisis. The end ofthe war in Vietnam
finished third, recent events in Iran
fourth, and 1978's Jonestown
massacre fifth.
Watergate often seemed more fiction than fact. It had moments of
tragedy and pathos, but it also had
its comedy.
It spawned a notable glossary of
words and phrases-"s!Dnewall",
"smoking gun," "enemies' list" '1.

am not a crook," "18'f.. minute gap"
''at this point in time ,"

six" ''Big Enchilada," "expletive

deleted,"

"The Saturday Night

Massacre," "the plwnbers, "J "a

cancer on the presidency. "
-The insiders : Haldeman,
Ehrlichman, Mitchell and Dean;
Colson and Magruder and Kalmbach
and LaRue and Higby and Strachan
and Sloan and Porter.
- And the victim, Richard M.
Nixon, who wanted to go down in
history as an international
st~~tesmen; who went down instead
the most disgraced president in
American his!Dry.
And it spawned a memorable cast
of characters:
- The mysterious spies: G. Gordon Uddy, E. Howard Hunt and the
four Miamians known as ''the
Cubans" (Gonzales, Martinez,
Barker and Sturgis);
.- The mysterious informer,
James McCord ;
- Thestemjudge,John J.Sirica;
-The gumshoes, Anthony
Ulasewicz and John CauHield;
-The fatherly Southern senawr,
Sam Ervin;
-The intrepid reporters, Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein

- The run-of-the mill politician
become statesman : Peter Rodino;
- The loyal secretary, Rose Mary
Woods ·
- Th~ loyal press secretary, Ron
Ziegler;
- The martvr. Elliot Richardson;
The !l)ening scene is the burglary;
it was in fact the opening scene for
the definitive Watergate movie Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman
as Woodward and Bernstein in "All
The President's Men." ·
The second scene is the 1972 election: the various activities that later
came to be known as the "White
House horrors" covered up as Nixon
sweeps triumphantly· to re-election
over Sen. George McGovern.
The third scene is the trial. The
Cubans, McCord, Uddy and Hunt
are convicted. But aside from a few
odd newspaper stories, nothing
shows beneath the surface of the
burglary.
In March 1973, things begin to'
unravel. Silica is suspicious; Me·
Cord nervous. McCord writes to
Silica; Nixon, Haldeman and
Ehrlichman huddle with Dean on
ways to contain the disclosures.
The spring of 1973: Dean turns
state's evidence; Haldeman and

IN WASHINGTON

Loophole

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters ·

semi -closed

WASHINGTON (NEA) -Congress
belatedly has closed a notorious
legal loophole that allowed retiring
legislators to pocket thousands of
dollars worth of campaign con·
tributions, then use the money to pay
their personal expenses.
But the revised law, rushed
through the House and Senate in the
closing days of the 19'19 session with
virtually no diha tes~ includes a
special exemption that allows all
current members of Congress to
continue the discredited practice.
The rules of both the House and
~nate have, for many years, in·
eluded a prohibition against con·
verting campaign donations to the
legislawrs •personal use.
The Senate, for example, fonnally
censured the late Sen. Thomas J.
Dodd, D-Conn., in 1967 for diverting
to his own use more than $100,000
collected through testimonial din.
ners and political solicitatioos.
But once a lawmaker resigns,
retires or is defeated, he or she no
l111ger is legally bound by the House
and Senate rules. The only ap·
plicable federa! statute says cam·
paign contributions ''may be used
for any ... lawful purpose."
Financing a backyard swimming
pool, a new car or a European
vacation are "lawful purposes" un·
der the law, so shrewd legislators in
the past have waited until their tenn
of office officially expired, then
claimed the surplus accumulated in
their campaign treasury.

Today in history
Today is MCilday, Jan. 1, the
seventh day of 19M. There are 359
days left in the year.
Today's highlight in hist&lt;ry:
On Jan. 7, 1953, President Harl)'
Truman announced the development
of the Hydrogen BOmb.
On this date:
In 1584, the Roman Catholic states
of the Holy Roman Empire adoJted
the Gregorian calendar.
lnl789, the first U.S. presidential
electioo was held.
In 1800, Millard Fiimore destined w become the 13th
American president- was born in a
little log cabin in Cayuga County,

rh.

"inoperative," "twist slowly, slowly
in the wind, " "Deep Throat," "deep

·

: In 1007, Britain declared a
blockade of the coasts cf France and
Napoleoo's allies.
:. In l!ll7, Nev. York and Londoo
~ere \linked by radi&lt;Kelephooe llfr·
vice.
: Ten yea!ll ago, Israeli jets at·
t¥cked militaJY and industrial
tilrgets near Cairo.

Fonner Sen. Gale W. McGee, D·
Wyo. , defeated in a 1976 bid for re·
election, pocketed almost $72,000 in
unused campaign funds. Fonner
Sen. Frank E. Moss, D·Utah, also
defeated in !976, last year claimed
the $857 remaining in his political
committee's bank accoWlt.
After Sen. James B. Allen, D·Ala.,
died in mid-1978, his widow, Mal)' on ·
P. Allen, directed that the $85,700 in
his campaign account be tran·
sferred to his personal estate. The
rnmey then was inherited by two
heirs- Mrs. Allen and the senator's
son.
At least five members of the
House who were defeated or retired
in 1!114 enriched their personal bank
accounts by claiming money from
their political cOI)llnittees, although
the donors presumably intended the
funds to be used to finance cam·
paigns.
.
The legislators and the amounts
involved were: Rep. Martha W.
Griffiths, D-Mich., $8,961; Rep. Ber·
tram L. Podell, D-N .Y., $:1,1&gt;68; Rep.
Kenneth J. Gray, D-Ill., $2,905; Rep.
Tom S. Gettys, D.S.C., and Rep.
John J. Rooney, D·N. Y., $4,406.
In one case, a man who never even
served in Congress used the same
technique to enrich himself. He was
Dr. William E. (Bud) Davis, a
Democrat who ran an unsuccessful
campaign in 1972 against Sen .
James A. McClure, R·ldaho.
In August 1974, almost two years
after the election, the treasurer d

Ehrlichman resign - ''two of the
finest public servants I have ever
known, 11 says Nixon. ·
Hearings begin before Ervin's
select committee on Watergate. We
hear about the ''plumbers" and the
break-4n at the office of Daniel
Ellsberg's psychiatrist ; the
1

'Enemies' List;" "The Huston

Plan" for massive mail opening and
wiretapping, wiretaps, the milk
fund. ITT, Howard Hughes, the CIA.
Then, in July , an obscure retired
Air Force colooel named Alexander
Butterfield meets with committee
staff in executive session. Almost &lt;i·
fhandedly, he mentions that' Nixon
had a taping system that
automatically recorded his con·
versations.
Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox
subpoenas the tapes. Nixon reflll!es,
claiming executive privilege. The
battle goes wthe courts, and Silica
upholds Cox. Tapes are released
sporadically. One of the most im·
portant, a conversation between
Nixon and Haldeman on June 20,
1972, has an .!8\'.&lt;-minute gap.
Cox persists, becoming more
aggressive in his quest for the tapes.
On Oct. 20, 1!113, Nixon tells Atty.
Gen. Elliot Richardson w fire Cox.

use ... ''

But buried in the middle of the
statute is an exemption specially
carved out for current members of
Congress. It states that the
prohibition is inapplicable to those
serving in the House and Senate ''oo
the date of the enactment" of the
new law.
The only clue w what transpired
behind the scenes comes from a
cryptic statement inserted in the
CoogressiCilal Record by Sen. Mark
b. Hatfield, R.Qre., suggesting that
the House was unwilling to accept a
total prohibition.
"The compromise," said Hatfield,
''was necessary winsure passage of
(the) bill."

Editorial opinions,
comments

While the hearings are still going
on, the US. Supreme Court orders
Nixon to tum over the full transcripts of 64 tapes. Three articles of
impeachment are voted.

Again.''

,
'
•
;.
'
1

·,
,
;;

'
.,.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
''It indicated this is apparent in
recent lowering of Ohio's credit
some of the revenue losses Ohio is
rating in the international bond
experiencing," the budget office
market stemmed in part from state
said the latest edition of its "Budget
cash flow problems, the Ohio
Footnotes."
Legislative Budget Office says.
The same publication reported
· It quotes Moody's Investor Ser·
that the state's general revenue fund
vice, one of two nationally
stood at $52.5 million under
recognized bond rating firms, as
estimates as of the end of Novem·
saying that cootinued temporary
ber, while expenditures were $41.5
treatment of the cash flow problem
million over estimates.
"and recent debt policies, together
Moody'ssaid the Ohio has been ex·
with a relatively stagnant economy"
periencing increase financial
· were the reasons foritslowerrating.
pressures and that '1emporizing"
Moody's lowered the rating of
measures have been instituted w
Ohio's general obligation bonds
relieve them.
friiD AAA to AA, highway obligation
LBO said an example of "tembonds fr!ID AAA to AA, and Ohio
porizing" was the creation cl. a Total
Public Facilities Commission.bonds
Operating Fund to relieve the state
fromAAtoA,
of cash flow problems. This fund
The other major rating seryice,
allows the General Revenue Fund Standard and Poor's, lowered the
ooe part cl. the rota! fund - to exist
state's general obligation bonds
with a temporary negative cash
from .AAA to AA, facilities com·
balance.
mission bonds from AA w A, but
At no tilne, however, the budget
retained AAA ratings for highway
office said, can there be a negative
improvement and
highway
balance in the total fund. It said the
obligation bonds.
total fund had a positive cash balan·
The budget &lt;ifice said Standard
ce of $:ti2.2 million as of last Nov. 30.
Moody's also indicated that Ohio's
and Poor cited the state of Ohio's
school funding problems, such as the
economy as a whole in taking its ac·
closing of some schools f~r lack of
tion.
funds,
also affect the state's credit
Standard and Poor indicated that
the state's recent cash flow dif.
rating because a potential can be
seen for additional state l!llsistance
ficulties are indicative of slippage in
to the schools.'
economic growth, the budget office
The same is true of municipalities
said.
The company said the three main . within 'the state which rim into finan·
cial pnibleniS. and ·seek a state
economic indicators it reviewed bailout. The budget ' office said
income, population, and ·em·
Moody's observations on this point .
ployment - all have shown slower
"reflects ori the firlancial prOblems
growth in Ohio when compared with
Jf t.~e d ty of Cleveland."
the Pation or midwest region.
.1

Houston OUers have laDen, and
IDIIYbe the Pittsbllfl!h Staelers
shOuld j1111t !1st the Super Bowl 111
their 8Chedule.
'This WAS lbe Super Bowl as far .
as I'm concerned. Pittsburgh is
going and they're going to win,"
Oiler quarterback n.n Paatorlnl
said SUnday after be had a potential
touchdown 1111'S erased by IlK! cl.·
flclals alii Plttsburgb won the
American Football Cooference tiUe
game ,1!-13.
The actJial Super Bowl comes Jan.
20 in Pasadena, caJlf., wben first.
tlme-&amp;allst Los Angeles meets a
Pittsburgh team aiming for its foul'th title in six years:
·

Can the Rams . beat best Pit- leading 17·10 in the third quarter. of
first. down at the Steeler IIix and a
tsburgh? "Who knoWs? We haven't .the title rematch between the twn
chance!Dtie.
Paswrtni l&lt;ited the ball to Renfro
beaten then! yet, •• said Terry Brad- Central DlviBiflll rivals.
ow, a,..are the Steelef\1 are 0-3
"A TD would. have changed the
in the comer pi tl)e endzone. "We
ll(lain$ Los Angeles ·in the past
whole · CID)plenon of the game," . had you on that one," Paatorini later
said Renfro.
wid Johnson..
decade.
. Meanwhile, the question of
"There was -clearly a lot of
Renfro leaped and grabbed. He
whether Ho111ton is the.second best pressure on 1111 at that point. They had the ball as he tumbled beyond
team in the (!alne is a matter for -·had gained the momentum," said . the endline. "I thought right away
that he was out of bounds," said
debate - just like one of Pastorlnl's PittBburgb'sJoeGreene.
passes was unW. the referee settled
Earlier, Bradshaw had a first- Johnson.
tllqs by way~ IlK! back judge, side quarter pm~s stolen and returned 7li
"I knew I was very close," said
judge and field judge.
yardsforaloul:hdownbysafetyVer- Renfro.
.."One thing ·fl&gt;r sure, the score lllll Perry, who worked defensive
Une judge Donald Orr did not
stm.ls," Steeler comerbadt Rm magic in the Oilers' semifinal upset signaltouchdown. Renfro jumped up
JohliSOO said after the rullng that &lt;iSan Diego.
to appeal. Orr signalled an in·
Bradshaw countered with touch- completion.
receiver Mike Renfro did not have
After a confe~ce amoog the d·
control of the ball while inbounds on down tOBSes to John stallworth and
an apparent acoring pass.
Bennie Cwmingham w give Pit- ficials, referee Jim Tuimey upheld
The play ca~e with PittSburgh tsburgba 17·10 halftime lead.
the ruling. He cited Orr's claim that
In the third quarter, Houstol) had
·

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The battered Los Angeles Rams praised the ·

•
'
•
i:l

l.Drd, passed IlK! gauze and dldn \
s!Dp unW they had ended six years &lt;i
frustratlor;~. re.vlng the T~ Bay
Buccaneers tending to their woun&lt;m
at the end of a Clnlterella season.
The upstart Bucs, who !Mde It w
their first National Football Con·
ference tltie game with the same
starting Uneup that opened . the
lost all-Pro. defensive end
I.A!e Roy Selmon and linebacker
Cecil Johnson to ankle injuries,
quarterback Doug Williams with a
tom bicep and defensive end Wally
Chambers with a knee injury during
a !~'Gloss to the Rams Sunday.
Severe injuries weren't enough to
s!Dp the inspired Rama.
'1t'il hard to conceive what we'Ve
accomplished bere today," said end
Jack Youngblood, who played
despite a hairline fracture in his left
leg.
''That's the most inJuries we'Ve
had all year, but I would just say the
Rama out-hit us," Bucs' CQach John
Mckay said. ''We tried to knock a
couple of them out, but they'd lbnp
out and limp back in.''
Placekicker Frank Cu'ral booted
second-quarter field goals &lt;i 1~ and
21 yards and a fourth-quarter clincher .cl. 23 yards + despite a 111m·
string pull suffered in his kicking leg
last week. Halfback WendeD Tyler,

season,

;

who gained 86 yards rushing on 28
carries, played despite twisting a
knee that underwent surgery last
year.
"All year, everybody's been
playing injured on this team. We've
got.a lot of guys who are going to
need q~erations when this ~ over, "
said linebacker Rich Saul, who climbed .oot &lt;i a he~~pltal bed with a
raging fever the previous week to
play in the Rams' 21-19 uspet &lt;i

DBD.as.

I

The Rams, shedding themselves
of a hard.{uck chokers' Image that
dogged them through playoff losses
the last six seasons, were subdued
after the game.
'We've had sonwch frustration,"
Saul said. "We'Ve had ~t teams
who couldn t do it. Nobody thought
this team had a chance, but we kept
the faith in the Lord, and we feel be
showed ua wh~ we should have
realized before - that we couldn \
do it on our own."
''l'lle Lord wanted us Ia win," said
wide receiver Preston Dennard. "In
aD thole pm~t years, he was just
testing us. Today, he gave us our

reward. u
YOW1gblood sucked in breath sharply as he maneuvered through the
locker r01111. Grimacing ~th palB,
he said : '1 think it's IlK! type of thing
where If you're strong enough you
can block it out. I honestly believe

the good l.Drd blessed me with some
kind of bealing power that let me·
play today ."
"When you see Jack Youngblood
making those big plays, it helps us.
Hejustplayedaslongand as hard as
he could, " defensive tackle Larry
Brooks said as he watched
Youngblood hobbling.
With 72,003 Buc fans chanting and
roaring against them, the Rams put
together cl.fensive drive after drive,
only to faD short.
Third-year quarterback Vince
Ferragamo, displaying veteran
poise, hit Dennard for a 35-yard gain
to the Tampa Bay 4 wset up a firstand-goal late in the first quarter, but
the Rams settled for Corral's ISyard field ge~~l.
Late in the se'eolld . quarter,
F~rraganio hit four straight passes
tomovetofirst down at the Bucs' 13,
but again settl~ for a Corral field

goo!.
But while their offense/struggled,
the Ram! defense bottled up the run·
ning of hard-dlarging Bucs' fullback
Ricky Bell and kept up the pressure
m WllllamB, who complet.ed only
two of 13 passes before leaving the
. game in the third quarter with his
arm injury.
''We said, 'They are not going to
run on us,"' said linebacker · Jim
YoungblOod. ''And yoo couldn 1 have

a

better

exhibition

cl. pass

coverage."
"We just kept turning the screws,
turning the screws, .bearing down,
stopping the 111e play at a time, "
said Jack Youngblood.
Early in the third quarter, an apparent lll'fard touchdown pll&amp;'! from
Ferragamo w Dennard was wiped
out by an official's ruling that Den·
nard was out of bounds, and Corral
missed a 37-yard field goal attempt .
on the next play.
On the Bucs' next series, Williams
was injured when tackle Mike Fanning hit him as he threw, and he
joined Sebnon, Quunbers and John·
son on the Bucs' sideline.
·
Reserve quarterback Mike Rae
completed j1111t one of li.s first five
passes and was sacked by Fanning
on the next two series. Gains of 13
yards by Tyler and 12 by Cullen
Bryant around a lf&gt;..yard Ferragamo
completioo wtight end Terry Nelson
set up Co1T81's clinching 23-yard
field goal wlth8:09leftin the game.

I

co~mentary TVA leads
By William Steif
"We're meeting the demand for
l
We've had a lot of talk about solar
electricity at a less expensive SO ar Way
energy but it touk the Tennessee
price," Hemphill says. TV A reasons

Today's

Business mirror.

NEW YORK (AP) -Rather than
opportunity it may simply represent
a sort of financial thrashing about,
but there are outlets today for the
small investor's enthusiasms that
make the 1960s seem tame and
naive.
The 1960s were years of wild investment enthusiasms, of small·
investor specniation, of sudden for·
tunes and spectacular bankruptcies,
cl. celebrity money managers, c1.
''people •s capitalism:"
Most of the action, however, was
centered in stocks, either directly or
through mutual funds . . Only the
professionals, the infonned aDd the
courageous went in for "exotic" in·
vestments such as commodities.
Commodity investments now are
routine for many small inveswrs, as
are a dozen other investments they
shunned in the 1960s. Owning a piece
of America might mean dite{.'t
ownership d fannland rather than a
stock or bond. It might also mean
ownership d. gold, sliver or c!l)per.
If you invest; through mutual funds
today you doo 't simply sit dOwn and
doo.Jde which it will be: an income,
growth or speculative fund, That
was years ago when funds invested
mainly in stocks ..It won't do today.
Instead, your first choice is to pick .
a fund depellding upon its spacialty,
which · very often ~n't stocks
aliymore. Yoo.mmf.d!ilose among
money market funds or gold stock.'
funds or bond funM .or what liave
yop. You must pick a spectaJIZed
fund. .
i • ..~. ·
·,
.:
U, in an old.fashioned way · you

,.

plunge directly

into the stock

market, your choices are at I~
double what they were a decade and
half ago. But also you have at lealt
twice as much information available
wyou.
And that brings up the point of the
discusssion: Are investors better off
for having so much infonnation and
so many outlets today? Or are they
just playing the game at another
.
level?
The need of each decade is different. In 1980 the search is for a
place to put money where it won't
erode. But, can the the (l'dinary per·
son successfully ·make use of that
place? After paying purchase feeS,
rflaintenance fees, and federal, state,
and local taxes? .
The qUestion, finally, is whether
the sophistication, the tremendoosly.
expanded investment outlets, the ac·
cess to more research, the better
policing of markets and the like ·
makes investing li!Ore conslructive.
Or is tile ordinary small investor
just running about, tcying w escape
the agonies of iliflation and, as so
very often happens, managirig at
best to keep just one step ahead of
the dragon?

Five years ago, _after a ·'We~-lo~ ·
siege, North Vietnam captured IlK!
South Vietnamese provincial cap)IJI

of~:~:r~o, camb!XIia's Poi Pot ~=a:;~~~:=;::;
~ .

hoiJles now b$1ftC bulltare available I
at e&amp; a ~ thoullh llaDP,Idll aiilflan,l, 1

''they haven\ yet ~ ~. 10 1

we alii t1111111 prellm... ry."

.

. ..

.

'

~=::J:.dto~n::::

McKay continued w ~efend
Williams, who was under fire at
several times during an U)Hind·
down season.
''I don't think · he was so inef·
,fe.ctive," McKAy said. ''We had a
couple guys who don't understand
that if they blitz, you have w run a
different pattern. He has to get rid d
the football ...
Willimas had his arm in a sling,
and Chambers, Selmoo and Johnson
had their injured le!lll taped or
packed in ice.
·
The Ram trainers were busy with
Youngblood, Cu'ral and Tyler, too.
''My operated knee was twisted
during the game, but I had whang in
there because thre was no
tomorrow," Tyler said.
.
'1 figure that If I make it through
two more weeks, then· I'll have a
whole year to nurse It along," Corral
said of his luuns~ injury. ''I
didn't want W stal,'t nursing quite
yet."
The Rams, whoee 9-7 regular
season record was the worst of the 10
playoff teams, should be heavy on·
derdogs to defending champion Pit·
tsburgh in the Sll)lt!r Bowl. But
clearly, getting there was llll!st cl.
thefunforthe Rams .
"R's been a long six years," said
defensive end Fred Dryer. •'It's
finally here."

''I think the two ]lest teams In the
National Football League went at it
today, no doubt about that," 81!id
Campbell, who sat out IlK! previ01111
week with a groin pull.
The Rams will have sllll.etblng to
say about that.
"A lot of people have a tendency to
say the SU!ier Bowl was Wday, "said
Bleier. "'That means there will be
added presaure on the Steelers
because we go in with a no-win •
situation. We're supposed W win."
Greene's view: "Ge~ there iB
not our goal ... if we're not sue- ,
cessful In the Super Jiowl ..:... it waa
all for no~."
· Meanwhjle, Greene admitted the
taste of victory had been tainted by
the cortroverslal call.
"!was hoping it was a Cll' ,ect caD,
but I asked after the game and I was
told ... " Gre~ne said, his voice
trlll.lq cl.f.
He didn't say Who he asked bl&amp; the
inference was that he had been tOOl
the decision was in error.
'1 can\ take "Bny satisfaction in .
that call. That's what I'm sayq," .
said Greene. ''What do we say? Do
we say, 'Things like that happen. 'I ·
mean how do you explain that to the
Oilel'!l'

''Don't get me wrong. I feel damn
good that we woo. But I'm not in a
celebrating mood yet. It 'II come. I 'II ,
get happy -later."

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ed
Badger's written resignation was
due on athletic dlrecWr William
Jenike's desk today, although he
verbally quit bls job Saturday as
University cl. Cincinnati basketball
coach.
In quick. suceessl111 Saturday,
Badger told his wife, then Jenlke
and his players that he was quitting
after one year and 10 games with the
Bearcats, just hours bef9re his team
was wplay at Dayton.
Guard Junior Jolllsoo said' he ·
· •'thought we were going wget some
kind of game strategy" when
Badger called a team meeting
Saturday. ''Then he said circwrurtances beyond lis oontrol ·
caused him to resign.
''It seemed so sudden, so uilreal.
·Nobody said nothing. We all shook
our heads and walked out."
Sophomore reserve Doug
Schloemer said he expected Badger
to talk about academic problems
that had ce~~t two players their
eligibility.
''l'msureitcameasashockwall
of UB," Schloemer said. '1 tb:mght
we were having a 'meeting m the
eligibility ~. l didn't know What
wasgoingm."
Senior Jeff BenUey said he felt the
universii;y let Badger down •
''The only reason I'm playing is w
play for the guys1111be team, not the
university," Bentley said befOl'e the
Dsytm game, which
cinllati won
69-QI. '1 don't blame him a bit f&lt;r
resigning."
Univ'e rsity President Henry
Winkler issued a statement, calling
Badger ''B fine coach ... (whose)
coacltingabllitywillbemlsaed."
William Keating, a member of the
UC board cl. regents, said he was
"deeply disappointed" by Badg~'s
departure .because ''the basketball
JrDgram looked like the best area w
bring UC'B sparta pJ;Ugr&amp;m back to
Its pm~t glories. · FOl' reasons
unknolrn to me, it's now come to an
abrurt end."
.
Jenike, bowever • called Badger's

resiS!JBtlM ''a !IP.Vere nrnl&gt;lem, but
not the end cl. the world:·
''We wiD probably go Into a coon·
trywide search fOl' a new coach,"
Jenlke said. "If Coach ll!mamk
(top assistant Ken Banaszek, who
coached the BearcatB Saturday
night) wants to be considered, he
certainly will be."
Banaszeli, who had been both a
player and coach under Badger, said the aecwnulatlm of proble0111 •
plaguing the UC athletic pJ:'()gram
apparently finally got Ia Badger.
"He's proven in the pm~t that he
can cq~e with just about any .
situation, but I guess tbere were cer·
lain situations he felt be j111t couidn1 ·
deal with anymore so he said 'Good·
bye, ... said llanal!zek.
Cincinnati finlsbed 13-14 last
season, the school's first losing ef·
f!l't in 28 years, althCJ1141h tbe Bearcats are H this season after a slow
start and some tough gamea againllt
ranked oppollitlon.
Badger faced aeveral Jnbl.ema at
CindMati and admiUed frusli:atiM
early Utrr • - bolCBWJe &lt;i pocr
s..,port by alwnnt and tbe ctty.
Recruitlng ns made difficult by a
two-year National Collegiate
Athletic AJsociatlm probation,
which be Inherited.
Last January, Badger had to
suspend two players after a botiii
gift shop '1181 vandalized on a Bear· ·
cat road trip to St. Louis. LGelng two .
more players to grades apparently ' ·
was the crowning blow.

BYGreJBalley
Logan shot a sizzling 59 percent of that openlni! period and the score
Ita the old adage goes, the name d. their shots, canning 25 of 42 field was knotted twice. The Eagles and
the game is to put the baii.tbrougb goaJatte~q~ta.
Marauders were trading buckets ·
lbe hoop. And that's just what the
Just the night before, Meigs shot a .and foul shots evel)' trip up the
Meigs Marauders did Saturday dlsmal29 percent from 1be floor in a
colll't.
night as they captured their first win ·lois to Ironton.
Early in the scond qUarter Meigs
CO
Fana saw a torrid first period that Opened a nine-point lead, 2H7, and
&lt;i the -son, a well-deserved and
hard.fought 57-48 victory over the ended 18-16 in favor of Meigs. Un- right after the half led 39-26. But
BOOTOO (AP) -Spring training
visiting Belpre Golden Eagles.
believable as It may seem, the lead early in the fourth quarter Belpre
is only eight weeks away, but maj&lt;r
. The Marauders &lt;i ce~~ch Ron actually changed hands 16 limes in . narrowed the margin 49-45 before
league o'IV!IIlrs and IlK! Players
Meigs outscored tbe Eagles 8-4 for
Association are locked in a cold War
themargincl.victory.
overanewbasicagreement.
Belpre was 11-2 going into the conA memo outlining Initial demands
test and one of tbo!le wins was a vic- by the owners and the players, .and
tory over powerful Athens. The win
made available w The Associated
Saturday marked the first game this
Press, indicates the two sides are
season .lbatMeigshasoutrebounded
aboot as far apart as the United
their opponents. Meigs picked off :ti
States and Russia.
errant shots to just 21 fll' Bel]re.Bob
!Jna8ine a player such as Claudell
B)' GEORGE STRODE
fr8!hman aark Kellogg's 15. Kelvin As!ey led Meigs in the rebounding Washington earning the same pay as
AP Spol11 Writer .
Ransey had , 14, marking the 73rd
department with nine ck,&lt;ms whne
slUggers Jim Rice and Fred Lynn
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -It took straight game that he's been In
Crawf«d had five forthelosers.
for their first five years in the major
three players -lint Herb WUllams, double figures.
FOl' the second night In . a rent
leagues?
then Jim Smith and finally Jim
''It's prett;y difficult to aing)e out
junior Dave Kennedy led Meigs in
That's one of the owners'
Ellinghauaen ~ to slow Joe Barry 1111)'0111!! in t!U game,". said Oblo
scoring 811 he poured in 19 points.
proposals.
8 whilhite
Carroll.
State Coacb Eldon Miller. He tben
~le Ohihlqederin lnOettedThete1amlr:
Imagine players with the right tn
7 demand!Dbetradedafterjustthree
Ita a result, IIeCOIId.:ranked Obio cited Williams, Kellogg,
.,..,eye PP ·
•
State Birares the Big Ten basketball Ellinghausen and Ransey for their . · d.· l7 free thJ:'()ws ands both teams
yearswithaclub?
lead today with Michigan and contributions.
'
wel'l!whlatledf~ 14fouls.
That's one cl. the players' deman·
Wlscllllin. The B~ trimmed
Purdue, 8-2 overall and J.1 in the
Bewflponlre 'swaa ledrkein scorhilinEpgllby
ds.
13 rna rsw e
CarrollandhiBNo.8Purdueteam- league,appearedbeadedf&lt;rvictory
Cra
~
Initial demands in labor
11111ei 8741 Saturday night w join with a 45-3'7 lead and less than 14. and B. Joseph !l&amp;Ch had 11 · Sexton
negotiations often are euggerated,
the Wolverines and Badgers at ~ in minutes left. But that's.when Miller added 10 and the team hit 7 of 15 free
but some· by both club owners and
IlK! conference.
·
inserted Wllllama in the lineup, eveli throws. The Eagles netted 21 of 48 the players this time around appear
"l'hey did a gOod job on Joe thoogh be had four peraooals. He shots for 43 percent. Meigs Travels
preposterons.
-cellellt
job
"
scored
.__
quick
field
goals
•A
_
_.
to
Jackson
Friday
and
!hen
on
Satur·
The owne... have built a war chest,
Barry in fact an
;
'
·
..
'
"'u
w .,,..
day entertains Walratna.
.
ported! • "bout $1 5 mJW
And
said Purdue Coach lee 1\ose. ''It's themarglntofour.
Not a man on either team
..
hit
re
Ya
· .
on.
hard w get the ball Into him wlien
''ThCIIe were two mighty big
the association, led by )lard-nosed
. theyplaysuebfinedefeiJse."
basltets,"saidRAIIIe. "After he came doobe figures Saturday nl,ghtaa the
negotlatorMarvlnMDler,isshowlng
ltstartedoutasaduelbetweentlre back, we took the ball at him three
Baby Golden Eaglea from Belpre
no fear, determined w add to the
leilgue's two best c\enti!ta and tlines and dldnt get a thing. 111at took a 38-2l win over a steadily im- many coocessions (lbtained at the
American ~tes in the Spar- wasv~poc!r~.Hepunlsbed proving Meigs Marauder re~~erve
bargainlngtableinthe19'/0s.
tacade this summer, the 7-foot-1
uatonlgllt." .
.
811118datMeigsHigb.Meigsledll-9
No oite In bflleball wants to talk
Carroll ~ lbt 6-10 Wllli1111111. But' · PunlUe next faces visiting Dlinois, at the end r4 the first periOd- but then about a strihe, such as in 19'12, or a
·tllltdldll'tlastlong.Wllllamaplcked
whlleObioStatetakesatriptolowa Belpreopeneda1~l4 halftlmelead.
lockout, but mll'e than a few club
up thtee fouls in IlK! firllt haH and
Thurllday night..
shBetslpre b:l~_?,!CIItcl. itsallleedad ~n fo~ ~ecutives are worried about· a
0
• four 'persoi)8i.l, with more than 17
Akron \Wn an 8$-79 decision over
as e- was c
or
pe~~sible shutdown of spring training
IDillltes lef~.
Murray SU.te in the Ohio VaUey eon• fouls. Belpre actuallY hit more foul camps unless Jrogress is made In
As en Indepenlfent Insurance
.'1 didn't look at It as me against
ference. Cleveland State ·routed shots than .they did field goals. The negotiations.
agency,
our prlmar.Y function Is
Virginia Military . 102·82~ winners, now Il-l on the year, sank 16
Miller !Did The .AP in. a telephone
Joe Banoy. If you start doing that,
to provide policies which afford
financial protection In case of
you jwrt ruin tbe whole team !!Ul; Youngstmm ~te edged Gannon 86- of 23 free throws and .cashed. in on intel'view that the 12'flllge memo be
loss.
23
cept, "said WIIHama. He came back
112, Ashland fell to Sellarmine 105-85 j~mt elevl!ir cl. field goal attempts. sent to the union's members,
But, we also have a vital In·
in the !ut li mlnuf.eli wilcore 10 d.
and Central State mastered Indiana That stat also shovrs th!lt the.visito.r s generally iB .; report on a meeting II
terest In I"" pr!IYentlon, as
1!is 14 points, rallyq the Buckeyes Slate-EvBII!VDle 59-liB.
took lb~ same number of foul shots the association's executive board ..-----.-------.,..-1 Slloulcl our clients. We encourage
. care, cautiOn and !lafety ......
fromanelght-polntdeflclt.
•
~they i!idfieldgoal tries.
Dec. 4-liln New York while baseball
preventive measures which can
"He'll ~ !!est ceu I 'V6 played "Iii the Cllio O&gt;liference, favored
Maigs now U on the year was led he)d il!r annual winter meeting in
Anrioliric!nv the Revised
keep that cor accident from hap·
paning; that bUilding fire from
by far in college," said Wllllains.~1
Wittenberg defeated otterbejn82.al,
In sco~: J~=and, ~ Toronto..
Offlce5chtdulul
starting, that hOine , burglary
ICOU!ed him In Ruasla this sumMlr8kingum beat Capiisl fl)-88 in
Miller .
ke
. whoeac
''The minutes were mailed to
. Dr.MIIteoP.Doyo,Jr.
from being committed. ·
,
mer."'l'he Ohio State jiidor '!Ill a overtime, Marlette nipped Baldwin· neUed six pcjnta. ·Bishop paced about l,OOOassociaUdn.members, so
MldJ~i-t~3h~:···
Pre\ientlon 111ves life, limb and
JIO!Ver ft!lirard, wlllle Carron ·Wallaee ~. Heidelberg oiltscored Belpre"wlthnine pointa.
~llf. hard!~ can be cOIIsidered con·
Effective Jonuory 1HO
property .... and helps control In·
eurance costs lilld premiums.
Glinted in the pivot in the Spar· Denison 7N1, Kenyon bopped Ohio
Meigs hitliil Jllllt nine ell 3il shots fidential or secret, "MIIJt\' &amp;~~id.
,
· · Monclly
When losses . do occur~ our .
tacade.
.
WesleYan 70-64; Wooster bestMOIDit ~~-~f_;.'llth~.
. 1 nt and call111ld. sill · ~.."te;~f' ~~ldnto = i t "a~
· 1, ::,O,OOJ :,'M,
policyholders can count .on pro· ..
Carroll only sank six: qf 19 field
Union'16.1l3ani!.Ohi0Northi;medged .. ,....., •~ '"" ·
· ·
:... ..... · or.....
ac~y
tectlng end HrVIiiiJ In time' fOnd
• T1111sdoy, NoOffke
1
· nwc~. aut·we still lilY - preven' ·
platleiili*, but a , Nor.~ free · 'Oberlin81:69.
By~i's i·' ··
&lt;i IlK! memo. \However, . 'lbe ~ ·
Wtd~IUy
lion Is the bHt pOlicy.
·.
Unw .)l!lrformance pve . hlln a
· · Melli 11 37 47 57
.ll&amp;iiJ_. ~ 1o 8 . capy througb
', 10-11,10
2
1
·~ 21 point~,. The Big Te!l's
In the·. Hocilier:auckeye Coo•
• Belpre UI3i '48
~ another source · •
.
·
··
, '~it!,',t:y.M·
.
lfll acorinJ champion fprced
ference, Defiance llllulecl Blufftcrl • aeiPr• ·(:., . _ cri!Wiorcl 6+ 131
Molt ~!l)e~,
by
·'
: · •••·IIIlO
7
.I
W!Dtema,SmlthandEllingl)aueento . ~'h. Andei"liOII·.lmoeked off Fin• · Epling 4·3'1\J p 1 rsons ).0·2; ·Sex1on . ~er'l,r wuce ..-.14, COOl~ cl. a . ·
2:G0- :WP.M,'
'
.
'
~ a coulblned . 12 l!llrson.l , d!aJ l).n ·and WiJIDID&amp;ton defeated H·IO: Josepl! s-1·11: L09ue l-11·2; · repOl'tpn vartq cliacultcq by ino'::~roo
1
fouls
· ·
·
' •· Manchester.,·'l7. ·
·,, Peters 0·1·1; L:. J,9il!Ph ':O;() '.and ~ &lt;Jlvidlialclabp~eprH llallvill
2:00-S:Oi
~
1
,:-.
Stale, ~1 overall, eounte~
'Mid.()blo OU!iference game. ~· · ·· •=.~-~~1iT,o'e.~s ~l'n'~r 9:o.1.e: 'at ·the ezecullve .bolard meetlnl·
··
. saturday
· 9fNI43
Qurell with balance. Six Buckeyes
Malone · W~ . Rio Grande 7140,...; · Ashley ~-~·101 snow•n J·H:, Swann ~r,• lt also CGIIIBIM a t the
~lictpt '.:··~~': Satur· ..
102W.Maln
-. iecndrroiDIIKtbliPoiJ.lp.F\)Urof' . ~rville defeat "fallllll-82, aiUI
H ;J;. 51111.111 H.O; K"'nedv 8·3·19_, aseociation clalnw ~- both the
d.lyol.tllemanttt.
._ remw,oy
•·"·""'" ttiem~ .~~~~~bubleal!lires.le4by · Tlfflnbdtoht6Doniinlcan7t-. . , · ~otatan-7-57 •
·. ,.
~~~l~erna~_ofltar)dth~()'II'Del'tl. · . .~.iiiiilli.,l
, .-.-._.._.......

Baseball talks
reach Id War

Their bids average out to $30.50 a
square foot. That me.ans these
houses, including the lots they stand
on, will range in price from $35,000w
$80,000.
In January, says Hemphill, the
average, conventional, all-electriC
house of 1,600 square feet will have
an electric bill of about 'ISO a month.
That's based oo today 's rates, which
are sure to go up.
·
''If the solar homes work the way
we expect," he adds, "their resideD·
tswillpayabout$50amonthontheir
flectric bills."
A $100-a-month saving can help
any family's econ&lt;my.
Hemphill notes the 42 homes are
''non ·high • teclmology." They just
us~ simple ideas to save electricity.
Examples: An overhang 111 windows
facing south, so the home gets the
lower winter sun but avoids the
higher sununer sun; styrofoam
around ,the c111crete slab at the
home's base, cutting heat loss 32 to
42 percent; a tw~r entry ·haD
that's eBBentially an airlock; a
sliding wooden shutter over glass . :.
doors, reducing heatlcl!lsalhird.
'
TVA will auction Off itB 42 homes. !
There already are 106 persons in· I
terested in the hoilse at Union City,
Tenn. As part &lt;i itS.sales contracts
TVA will pay each new owrier a .
$2,500. '~nconvenience fee" because '
the walls win be inst'rwnented and '
oceasionsRy TVA· will send in ex· i
perts!Dtestenergysavings. •
1
Each Iiome IS de$gned wheat·and l
cool passively. Ea!:h has ,a heat
collecWr -· window, greenhouse,
skyUght or glass covering over ·a
thermal wall - to store beilt. Heat (
Pllll1lS provide · baCkups for e:i- '
trem~ly cold or extremely hot days. · 1
The homes . have ·wood-burning t
swves and effidelt fireplacea. .
l
Hemphm says that afta' test1r\g
the.42hoines, 'I'VA Is likely tostaita l
widespread ~gn wget peq~le l
In its area wbuild homes .Cil tliellli '
'Jines. He ' figures . lhat. Withers 1
Adkins, the ~vjlle,balled chief J
IIJ"clitecl of IlK! · 42 "cmea, , hai I
lrOiiglltthe cort.of solar-proofing w
a hout 50 cen!4 aliQuare foot. Comlnil; I
1111 line soon 'fill be a · si.JijJIIr 1t
program for factory-bullt' eolar l
· hom~!&amp; Cllllting t22,11GQtota7,000. ,
'
. For. more informatlav, write Fran.! '
~ter, Sblar App~tiOIIII Branch, l
1

regime fell , w ·Vielni!rrieae-bacl(ed
rebels.
·•
. Today's birthday: Cartoonist .
Charles Addams is 68.
,

Matt

Badger resignation due ,today

Meigs upsets Belpre, 57-49

Valley Authority w start the ball
this way:
- ...;. ...... . - Cost of new electrical plants,
rolling.
Last May, TVA's Robert F. Hem· either coal or nuclear, will raise the
phil! Jr., the utility's direcwr d
average rate paid by all electricity
energy conservation and rates, got
users.
the go-ahead to commission TVA ar·
-Much of the rising demand for
chitects to design 11 different single· electricity comes from new housing.
family solar homes.
-So if an electric utility,like TV A,
The houses range from 1,008 to can figure out a way of lessening the
2,226 square feet and .42 of them are demand, all buyers of electricity will
now being built in five of the seven
benefit.
states TVA serves - Tennessee,
''Electric utilities should .think of
Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi
themselves as salesmen of energy
and Virginia. Three houses already services," says Hemphill. 'They
are completed and the rest will be turn electricity inw light, heat,
finished by the end of February, cooling and shaft power. U we can
Hemphill says.
spend to meet some of the demand
What's an electric utility, started for electric heating and cooling,
l)y the federal government and still a evel)'one profits."
Nine general contractors sub·
federal entity, doing building solar
homes?
mitted winning bids on the 42 homes.

Renfro was juggling the ball 1)1 he
field goaL After Guido Merkenll flllll·
went out Replays showed Renfro
bled 111 the ned Oiler aeriea, Pit·
touched both feet inbounds, but they
tsburgh went 45 yards lor a tlludl·
did not reveal whether he Juggled
down that came 111 a "fard nm by
the ball. ·
· Rocky Bleier with 54lii!COilds left.
"He did not have posseBBiM," said
· The Oilers never threatened after
Tunney.
-··theRenfrocalL
The Oilers settled f&lt;r a field goal,
''That was the lrey play right
and Pittsburgh put the game away
there," said Paswrinl. "A toudl· · ·
with a 10-pointfourth,quarter.
downtheremlgbthavetumedthings
BradshaW - W&amp;t(:jie(f thti RenfrO around."
play from the sideline.
But Oiler Coacb Bum PbiillpB
"When 1 first saw it, 1 thought it didn't complain, just as be dldn\
was a touchdown," Bradshaw llere last year when Houston~ 34-6
said. "But 1 didn't care. If they • to Pitts~urgb In the same title pme
scored we were gonna BCOre again. played mfreezq rain.
'
"Even after llook at the fllma,I 'Ill
~c::i't.~d w stq&gt; us - and they not going to blame the cl.flclals," he
On their first drive of the foorth said. 'They'l'e human. We had 59
quarter theSteelersmoved 55 yards other minutes in the game to beat
before
Bahr kicked a 3~ard Pittsburgh and we didn't."
Pittsburgh held NFL-t"\~Shing
·

.B attered Rams meeting Steelers in Super. Bowl

And, of course, Richard Nixon's
memoirs.

•.

Ohio Perspective

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him.

•

Davis' campaign ccmmitteee wrote
to federal cl.ficials disclosing that
"after paying all hills and reporting
all expenditures and contributions,
the amount of $16,903 was turned
over to the candidate."
The Senate considered legislation
to change the law on Dec. 18, two
days before it recessed for the year.
With no publicity and no debate, the
bill was passed by a voice vote in
less than 10 minutes.
The measure was presented on the
House floor on Dec. 31, the final day
of last year's session. Mter less than
20 minutes of desulwry discussion, it
was approved by a voice vote.
Referring to surplus campaign
contributions, the new law says :
"No such amounts may he con·
verted by any person to any persooal

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PJDI""'l'""l11BmURGH AP- The cmtrover!llal call stands, Ule gutsy

Then, fiqally, the ''smoking sun,"
one cl. the tapes the Supreme Coort
orders released, a June Zll1972 tape
with Haldeman suggesting to Nixon
ways to head cl.f the investigation.
The president not only knew details
of the burglary, he participated in
plans to cover it up.
Now Nixon tells the nation he no
longer has political support and is
resigning, On Aug. 9, having waved
his final victory wave, Richard
Nixon flies off into history.
For the participants, the results
are mixed. Nixon, commonly
believed to be the "unindicted coconspirator" in the coverup in·
dictments handed up w Sirica, is
pardoned by his succi!S4or, Gerald
Ford. Many other administration
operatives, including .Haldeman,
Ehrlichman, Mitchell, Dean and
Colson, set:Ve jail terms.
But they also capitalize on their
exposure to publish their own versions of Watergate: Dean's "Blind
Ambition," Haldeman's ''The Ends
of Power," Ehrliclunan 's novel,
"The Company," Colson !s ''B&lt;rn

Richardson refuses and resigns;
Deputy Atty . Gen. William
Ruckleshaus also refuses and is
fired. Solicitor Gen. Robert Bork
finally does the hooors. The whole
thing is named ''The Saturday Night
Massacre. "
Impeachment resolutions are
filed. Nixoo bows to. pressure and
names a new prosecutor, Leon
Jaworski, a former president of the
American Bar Association. The
Judiciary Committee begins im·
peachment hearings. The edited
tapes keep comi~ and the country
reads private conversations of its
president and his aides, replete with
deleted expletives,
The House Judiciary Conunittee
works slowly, slowly, but finally, in
july, 1974, begins televised final
hearings. Congressmen and wcmen
open their consciences to the nation.
Rep. Tom Railsback, R-Ill., weeps
as he decides to vote to impeach a
president who has campaigned for

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Buckeyes defeat
. ·Boilermakers

C
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in

'n*lled

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PREVEtmoN.

BEST POLICY

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�3-TheDallySenUnel,1Jflddleport·Pomeroy,O.,Monday,Jan. 7,19iiJ
2-The Daily Sentinel , Mi~dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 7, !900

·_Corttroversial call stands, Steelers champions· again

Watergate, Nixon resignation top stories
•

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
On June 17, 1972, five men were
arrested attempting to rifle files at
the headquarters of the Democratic
National Conunittee. Two years and
53 days later, Richard Milhot»
Nixoo became the first president of
the United States to resign.
The events set off by what Nixon
press secretary Ron Ziegler
described as "a third-rate
llurglary," the scandal generically
known as Watergate, has been voted
.overwhehningly the top news story
cl. the 1970s by Associated Press
editors ~nd broadcasters.
Nearly 80percent of the 700 voters
picked it as the stol)' of the decade
and it had a 10·1 edge over its
nearest c&lt;mpetitor - the energy
crisis. The end ofthe war in Vietnam
finished third, recent events in Iran
fourth, and 1978's Jonestown
massacre fifth.
Watergate often seemed more fiction than fact. It had moments of
tragedy and pathos, but it also had
its comedy.
It spawned a notable glossary of
words and phrases-"s!Dnewall",
"smoking gun," "enemies' list" '1.

am not a crook," "18'f.. minute gap"
''at this point in time ,"

six" ''Big Enchilada," "expletive

deleted,"

"The Saturday Night

Massacre," "the plwnbers, "J "a

cancer on the presidency. "
-The insiders : Haldeman,
Ehrlichman, Mitchell and Dean;
Colson and Magruder and Kalmbach
and LaRue and Higby and Strachan
and Sloan and Porter.
- And the victim, Richard M.
Nixon, who wanted to go down in
history as an international
st~~tesmen; who went down instead
the most disgraced president in
American his!Dry.
And it spawned a memorable cast
of characters:
- The mysterious spies: G. Gordon Uddy, E. Howard Hunt and the
four Miamians known as ''the
Cubans" (Gonzales, Martinez,
Barker and Sturgis);
.- The mysterious informer,
James McCord ;
- Thestemjudge,John J.Sirica;
-The gumshoes, Anthony
Ulasewicz and John CauHield;
-The fatherly Southern senawr,
Sam Ervin;
-The intrepid reporters, Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein

- The run-of-the mill politician
become statesman : Peter Rodino;
- The loyal secretary, Rose Mary
Woods ·
- Th~ loyal press secretary, Ron
Ziegler;
- The martvr. Elliot Richardson;
The !l)ening scene is the burglary;
it was in fact the opening scene for
the definitive Watergate movie Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman
as Woodward and Bernstein in "All
The President's Men." ·
The second scene is the 1972 election: the various activities that later
came to be known as the "White
House horrors" covered up as Nixon
sweeps triumphantly· to re-election
over Sen. George McGovern.
The third scene is the trial. The
Cubans, McCord, Uddy and Hunt
are convicted. But aside from a few
odd newspaper stories, nothing
shows beneath the surface of the
burglary.
In March 1973, things begin to'
unravel. Silica is suspicious; Me·
Cord nervous. McCord writes to
Silica; Nixon, Haldeman and
Ehrlichman huddle with Dean on
ways to contain the disclosures.
The spring of 1973: Dean turns
state's evidence; Haldeman and

IN WASHINGTON

Loophole

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters ·

semi -closed

WASHINGTON (NEA) -Congress
belatedly has closed a notorious
legal loophole that allowed retiring
legislators to pocket thousands of
dollars worth of campaign con·
tributions, then use the money to pay
their personal expenses.
But the revised law, rushed
through the House and Senate in the
closing days of the 19'19 session with
virtually no diha tes~ includes a
special exemption that allows all
current members of Congress to
continue the discredited practice.
The rules of both the House and
~nate have, for many years, in·
eluded a prohibition against con·
verting campaign donations to the
legislawrs •personal use.
The Senate, for example, fonnally
censured the late Sen. Thomas J.
Dodd, D-Conn., in 1967 for diverting
to his own use more than $100,000
collected through testimonial din.
ners and political solicitatioos.
But once a lawmaker resigns,
retires or is defeated, he or she no
l111ger is legally bound by the House
and Senate rules. The only ap·
plicable federa! statute says cam·
paign contributions ''may be used
for any ... lawful purpose."
Financing a backyard swimming
pool, a new car or a European
vacation are "lawful purposes" un·
der the law, so shrewd legislators in
the past have waited until their tenn
of office officially expired, then
claimed the surplus accumulated in
their campaign treasury.

Today in history
Today is MCilday, Jan. 1, the
seventh day of 19M. There are 359
days left in the year.
Today's highlight in hist&lt;ry:
On Jan. 7, 1953, President Harl)'
Truman announced the development
of the Hydrogen BOmb.
On this date:
In 1584, the Roman Catholic states
of the Holy Roman Empire adoJted
the Gregorian calendar.
lnl789, the first U.S. presidential
electioo was held.
In 1800, Millard Fiimore destined w become the 13th
American president- was born in a
little log cabin in Cayuga County,

rh.

"inoperative," "twist slowly, slowly
in the wind, " "Deep Throat," "deep

·

: In 1007, Britain declared a
blockade of the coasts cf France and
Napoleoo's allies.
:. In l!ll7, Nev. York and Londoo
~ere \linked by radi&lt;Kelephooe llfr·
vice.
: Ten yea!ll ago, Israeli jets at·
t¥cked militaJY and industrial
tilrgets near Cairo.

Fonner Sen. Gale W. McGee, D·
Wyo. , defeated in a 1976 bid for re·
election, pocketed almost $72,000 in
unused campaign funds. Fonner
Sen. Frank E. Moss, D·Utah, also
defeated in !976, last year claimed
the $857 remaining in his political
committee's bank accoWlt.
After Sen. James B. Allen, D·Ala.,
died in mid-1978, his widow, Mal)' on ·
P. Allen, directed that the $85,700 in
his campaign account be tran·
sferred to his personal estate. The
rnmey then was inherited by two
heirs- Mrs. Allen and the senator's
son.
At least five members of the
House who were defeated or retired
in 1!114 enriched their personal bank
accounts by claiming money from
their political cOI)llnittees, although
the donors presumably intended the
funds to be used to finance cam·
paigns.
.
The legislators and the amounts
involved were: Rep. Martha W.
Griffiths, D-Mich., $8,961; Rep. Ber·
tram L. Podell, D-N .Y., $:1,1&gt;68; Rep.
Kenneth J. Gray, D-Ill., $2,905; Rep.
Tom S. Gettys, D.S.C., and Rep.
John J. Rooney, D·N. Y., $4,406.
In one case, a man who never even
served in Congress used the same
technique to enrich himself. He was
Dr. William E. (Bud) Davis, a
Democrat who ran an unsuccessful
campaign in 1972 against Sen .
James A. McClure, R·ldaho.
In August 1974, almost two years
after the election, the treasurer d

Ehrlichman resign - ''two of the
finest public servants I have ever
known, 11 says Nixon. ·
Hearings begin before Ervin's
select committee on Watergate. We
hear about the ''plumbers" and the
break-4n at the office of Daniel
Ellsberg's psychiatrist ; the
1

'Enemies' List;" "The Huston

Plan" for massive mail opening and
wiretapping, wiretaps, the milk
fund. ITT, Howard Hughes, the CIA.
Then, in July , an obscure retired
Air Force colooel named Alexander
Butterfield meets with committee
staff in executive session. Almost &lt;i·
fhandedly, he mentions that' Nixon
had a taping system that
automatically recorded his con·
versations.
Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox
subpoenas the tapes. Nixon reflll!es,
claiming executive privilege. The
battle goes wthe courts, and Silica
upholds Cox. Tapes are released
sporadically. One of the most im·
portant, a conversation between
Nixon and Haldeman on June 20,
1972, has an .!8\'.&lt;-minute gap.
Cox persists, becoming more
aggressive in his quest for the tapes.
On Oct. 20, 1!113, Nixon tells Atty.
Gen. Elliot Richardson w fire Cox.

use ... ''

But buried in the middle of the
statute is an exemption specially
carved out for current members of
Congress. It states that the
prohibition is inapplicable to those
serving in the House and Senate ''oo
the date of the enactment" of the
new law.
The only clue w what transpired
behind the scenes comes from a
cryptic statement inserted in the
CoogressiCilal Record by Sen. Mark
b. Hatfield, R.Qre., suggesting that
the House was unwilling to accept a
total prohibition.
"The compromise," said Hatfield,
''was necessary winsure passage of
(the) bill."

Editorial opinions,
comments

While the hearings are still going
on, the US. Supreme Court orders
Nixon to tum over the full transcripts of 64 tapes. Three articles of
impeachment are voted.

Again.''

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OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
''It indicated this is apparent in
recent lowering of Ohio's credit
some of the revenue losses Ohio is
rating in the international bond
experiencing," the budget office
market stemmed in part from state
said the latest edition of its "Budget
cash flow problems, the Ohio
Footnotes."
Legislative Budget Office says.
The same publication reported
· It quotes Moody's Investor Ser·
that the state's general revenue fund
vice, one of two nationally
stood at $52.5 million under
recognized bond rating firms, as
estimates as of the end of Novem·
saying that cootinued temporary
ber, while expenditures were $41.5
treatment of the cash flow problem
million over estimates.
"and recent debt policies, together
Moody'ssaid the Ohio has been ex·
with a relatively stagnant economy"
periencing increase financial
· were the reasons foritslowerrating.
pressures and that '1emporizing"
Moody's lowered the rating of
measures have been instituted w
Ohio's general obligation bonds
relieve them.
friiD AAA to AA, highway obligation
LBO said an example of "tembonds fr!ID AAA to AA, and Ohio
porizing" was the creation cl. a Total
Public Facilities Commission.bonds
Operating Fund to relieve the state
fromAAtoA,
of cash flow problems. This fund
The other major rating seryice,
allows the General Revenue Fund Standard and Poor's, lowered the
ooe part cl. the rota! fund - to exist
state's general obligation bonds
with a temporary negative cash
from .AAA to AA, facilities com·
balance.
mission bonds from AA w A, but
At no tilne, however, the budget
retained AAA ratings for highway
office said, can there be a negative
improvement and
highway
balance in the total fund. It said the
obligation bonds.
total fund had a positive cash balan·
The budget &lt;ifice said Standard
ce of $:ti2.2 million as of last Nov. 30.
Moody's also indicated that Ohio's
and Poor cited the state of Ohio's
school funding problems, such as the
economy as a whole in taking its ac·
closing of some schools f~r lack of
tion.
funds,
also affect the state's credit
Standard and Poor indicated that
the state's recent cash flow dif.
rating because a potential can be
seen for additional state l!llsistance
ficulties are indicative of slippage in
to the schools.'
economic growth, the budget office
The same is true of municipalities
said.
The company said the three main . within 'the state which rim into finan·
cial pnibleniS. and ·seek a state
economic indicators it reviewed bailout. The budget ' office said
income, population, and ·em·
Moody's observations on this point .
ployment - all have shown slower
"reflects ori the firlancial prOblems
growth in Ohio when compared with
Jf t.~e d ty of Cleveland."
the Pation or midwest region.
.1

Houston OUers have laDen, and
IDIIYbe the Pittsbllfl!h Staelers
shOuld j1111t !1st the Super Bowl 111
their 8Chedule.
'This WAS lbe Super Bowl as far .
as I'm concerned. Pittsburgh is
going and they're going to win,"
Oiler quarterback n.n Paatorlnl
said SUnday after be had a potential
touchdown 1111'S erased by IlK! cl.·
flclals alii Plttsburgb won the
American Football Cooference tiUe
game ,1!-13.
The actJial Super Bowl comes Jan.
20 in Pasadena, caJlf., wben first.
tlme-&amp;allst Los Angeles meets a
Pittsburgh team aiming for its foul'th title in six years:
·

Can the Rams . beat best Pit- leading 17·10 in the third quarter. of
first. down at the Steeler IIix and a
tsburgh? "Who knoWs? We haven't .the title rematch between the twn
chance!Dtie.
Paswrtni l&lt;ited the ball to Renfro
beaten then! yet, •• said Terry Brad- Central DlviBiflll rivals.
ow, a,..are the Steelef\1 are 0-3
"A TD would. have changed the
in the comer pi tl)e endzone. "We
ll(lain$ Los Angeles ·in the past
whole · CID)plenon of the game," . had you on that one," Paatorini later
said Renfro.
wid Johnson..
decade.
. Meanwhile, the question of
"There was -clearly a lot of
Renfro leaped and grabbed. He
whether Ho111ton is the.second best pressure on 1111 at that point. They had the ball as he tumbled beyond
team in the (!alne is a matter for -·had gained the momentum," said . the endline. "I thought right away
that he was out of bounds," said
debate - just like one of Pastorlnl's PittBburgb'sJoeGreene.
passes was unW. the referee settled
Earlier, Bradshaw had a first- Johnson.
tllqs by way~ IlK! back judge, side quarter pm~s stolen and returned 7li
"I knew I was very close," said
judge and field judge.
yardsforaloul:hdownbysafetyVer- Renfro.
.."One thing ·fl&gt;r sure, the score lllll Perry, who worked defensive
Une judge Donald Orr did not
stm.ls," Steeler comerbadt Rm magic in the Oilers' semifinal upset signaltouchdown. Renfro jumped up
JohliSOO said after the rullng that &lt;iSan Diego.
to appeal. Orr signalled an in·
Bradshaw countered with touch- completion.
receiver Mike Renfro did not have
After a confe~ce amoog the d·
control of the ball while inbounds on down tOBSes to John stallworth and
an apparent acoring pass.
Bennie Cwmingham w give Pit- ficials, referee Jim Tuimey upheld
The play ca~e with PittSburgh tsburgba 17·10 halftime lead.
the ruling. He cited Orr's claim that
In the third quarter, Houstol) had
·

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The battered Los Angeles Rams praised the ·

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l.Drd, passed IlK! gauze and dldn \
s!Dp unW they had ended six years &lt;i
frustratlor;~. re.vlng the T~ Bay
Buccaneers tending to their woun&lt;m
at the end of a Clnlterella season.
The upstart Bucs, who !Mde It w
their first National Football Con·
ference tltie game with the same
starting Uneup that opened . the
lost all-Pro. defensive end
I.A!e Roy Selmon and linebacker
Cecil Johnson to ankle injuries,
quarterback Doug Williams with a
tom bicep and defensive end Wally
Chambers with a knee injury during
a !~'Gloss to the Rams Sunday.
Severe injuries weren't enough to
s!Dp the inspired Rama.
'1t'il hard to conceive what we'Ve
accomplished bere today," said end
Jack Youngblood, who played
despite a hairline fracture in his left
leg.
''That's the most inJuries we'Ve
had all year, but I would just say the
Rama out-hit us," Bucs' CQach John
Mckay said. ''We tried to knock a
couple of them out, but they'd lbnp
out and limp back in.''
Placekicker Frank Cu'ral booted
second-quarter field goals &lt;i 1~ and
21 yards and a fourth-quarter clincher .cl. 23 yards + despite a 111m·
string pull suffered in his kicking leg
last week. Halfback WendeD Tyler,

season,

;

who gained 86 yards rushing on 28
carries, played despite twisting a
knee that underwent surgery last
year.
"All year, everybody's been
playing injured on this team. We've
got.a lot of guys who are going to
need q~erations when this ~ over, "
said linebacker Rich Saul, who climbed .oot &lt;i a he~~pltal bed with a
raging fever the previous week to
play in the Rams' 21-19 uspet &lt;i

DBD.as.

I

The Rams, shedding themselves
of a hard.{uck chokers' Image that
dogged them through playoff losses
the last six seasons, were subdued
after the game.
'We've had sonwch frustration,"
Saul said. "We'Ve had ~t teams
who couldn t do it. Nobody thought
this team had a chance, but we kept
the faith in the Lord, and we feel be
showed ua wh~ we should have
realized before - that we couldn \
do it on our own."
''l'lle Lord wanted us Ia win," said
wide receiver Preston Dennard. "In
aD thole pm~t years, he was just
testing us. Today, he gave us our

reward. u
YOW1gblood sucked in breath sharply as he maneuvered through the
locker r01111. Grimacing ~th palB,
he said : '1 think it's IlK! type of thing
where If you're strong enough you
can block it out. I honestly believe

the good l.Drd blessed me with some
kind of bealing power that let me·
play today ."
"When you see Jack Youngblood
making those big plays, it helps us.
Hejustplayedaslongand as hard as
he could, " defensive tackle Larry
Brooks said as he watched
Youngblood hobbling.
With 72,003 Buc fans chanting and
roaring against them, the Rams put
together cl.fensive drive after drive,
only to faD short.
Third-year quarterback Vince
Ferragamo, displaying veteran
poise, hit Dennard for a 35-yard gain
to the Tampa Bay 4 wset up a firstand-goal late in the first quarter, but
the Rams settled for Corral's ISyard field ge~~l.
Late in the se'eolld . quarter,
F~rraganio hit four straight passes
tomovetofirst down at the Bucs' 13,
but again settl~ for a Corral field

goo!.
But while their offense/struggled,
the Ram! defense bottled up the run·
ning of hard-dlarging Bucs' fullback
Ricky Bell and kept up the pressure
m WllllamB, who complet.ed only
two of 13 passes before leaving the
. game in the third quarter with his
arm injury.
''We said, 'They are not going to
run on us,"' said linebacker · Jim
YoungblOod. ''And yoo couldn 1 have

a

better

exhibition

cl. pass

coverage."
"We just kept turning the screws,
turning the screws, .bearing down,
stopping the 111e play at a time, "
said Jack Youngblood.
Early in the third quarter, an apparent lll'fard touchdown pll&amp;'! from
Ferragamo w Dennard was wiped
out by an official's ruling that Den·
nard was out of bounds, and Corral
missed a 37-yard field goal attempt .
on the next play.
On the Bucs' next series, Williams
was injured when tackle Mike Fanning hit him as he threw, and he
joined Sebnon, Quunbers and John·
son on the Bucs' sideline.
·
Reserve quarterback Mike Rae
completed j1111t one of li.s first five
passes and was sacked by Fanning
on the next two series. Gains of 13
yards by Tyler and 12 by Cullen
Bryant around a lf&gt;..yard Ferragamo
completioo wtight end Terry Nelson
set up Co1T81's clinching 23-yard
field goal wlth8:09leftin the game.

I

co~mentary TVA leads
By William Steif
"We're meeting the demand for
l
We've had a lot of talk about solar
electricity at a less expensive SO ar Way
energy but it touk the Tennessee
price," Hemphill says. TV A reasons

Today's

Business mirror.

NEW YORK (AP) -Rather than
opportunity it may simply represent
a sort of financial thrashing about,
but there are outlets today for the
small investor's enthusiasms that
make the 1960s seem tame and
naive.
The 1960s were years of wild investment enthusiasms, of small·
investor specniation, of sudden for·
tunes and spectacular bankruptcies,
cl. celebrity money managers, c1.
''people •s capitalism:"
Most of the action, however, was
centered in stocks, either directly or
through mutual funds . . Only the
professionals, the infonned aDd the
courageous went in for "exotic" in·
vestments such as commodities.
Commodity investments now are
routine for many small inveswrs, as
are a dozen other investments they
shunned in the 1960s. Owning a piece
of America might mean dite{.'t
ownership d fannland rather than a
stock or bond. It might also mean
ownership d. gold, sliver or c!l)per.
If you invest; through mutual funds
today you doo 't simply sit dOwn and
doo.Jde which it will be: an income,
growth or speculative fund, That
was years ago when funds invested
mainly in stocks ..It won't do today.
Instead, your first choice is to pick .
a fund depellding upon its spacialty,
which · very often ~n't stocks
aliymore. Yoo.mmf.d!ilose among
money market funds or gold stock.'
funds or bond funM .or what liave
yop. You must pick a spectaJIZed
fund. .
i • ..~. ·
·,
.:
U, in an old.fashioned way · you

,.

plunge directly

into the stock

market, your choices are at I~
double what they were a decade and
half ago. But also you have at lealt
twice as much information available
wyou.
And that brings up the point of the
discusssion: Are investors better off
for having so much infonnation and
so many outlets today? Or are they
just playing the game at another
.
level?
The need of each decade is different. In 1980 the search is for a
place to put money where it won't
erode. But, can the the (l'dinary per·
son successfully ·make use of that
place? After paying purchase feeS,
rflaintenance fees, and federal, state,
and local taxes? .
The qUestion, finally, is whether
the sophistication, the tremendoosly.
expanded investment outlets, the ac·
cess to more research, the better
policing of markets and the like ·
makes investing li!Ore conslructive.
Or is tile ordinary small investor
just running about, tcying w escape
the agonies of iliflation and, as so
very often happens, managirig at
best to keep just one step ahead of
the dragon?

Five years ago, _after a ·'We~-lo~ ·
siege, North Vietnam captured IlK!
South Vietnamese provincial cap)IJI

of~:~:r~o, camb!XIia's Poi Pot ~=a:;~~~:=;::;
~ .

hoiJles now b$1ftC bulltare available I
at e&amp; a ~ thoullh llaDP,Idll aiilflan,l, 1

''they haven\ yet ~ ~. 10 1

we alii t1111111 prellm... ry."

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McKay continued w ~efend
Williams, who was under fire at
several times during an U)Hind·
down season.
''I don't think · he was so inef·
,fe.ctive," McKAy said. ''We had a
couple guys who don't understand
that if they blitz, you have w run a
different pattern. He has to get rid d
the football ...
Willimas had his arm in a sling,
and Chambers, Selmoo and Johnson
had their injured le!lll taped or
packed in ice.
·
The Ram trainers were busy with
Youngblood, Cu'ral and Tyler, too.
''My operated knee was twisted
during the game, but I had whang in
there because thre was no
tomorrow," Tyler said.
.
'1 figure that If I make it through
two more weeks, then· I'll have a
whole year to nurse It along," Corral
said of his luuns~ injury. ''I
didn't want W stal,'t nursing quite
yet."
The Rams, whoee 9-7 regular
season record was the worst of the 10
playoff teams, should be heavy on·
derdogs to defending champion Pit·
tsburgh in the Sll)lt!r Bowl. But
clearly, getting there was llll!st cl.
thefunforthe Rams .
"R's been a long six years," said
defensive end Fred Dryer. •'It's
finally here."

''I think the two ]lest teams In the
National Football League went at it
today, no doubt about that," 81!id
Campbell, who sat out IlK! previ01111
week with a groin pull.
The Rams will have sllll.etblng to
say about that.
"A lot of people have a tendency to
say the SU!ier Bowl was Wday, "said
Bleier. "'That means there will be
added presaure on the Steelers
because we go in with a no-win •
situation. We're supposed W win."
Greene's view: "Ge~ there iB
not our goal ... if we're not sue- ,
cessful In the Super Jiowl ..:... it waa
all for no~."
· Meanwhjle, Greene admitted the
taste of victory had been tainted by
the cortroverslal call.
"!was hoping it was a Cll' ,ect caD,
but I asked after the game and I was
told ... " Gre~ne said, his voice
trlll.lq cl.f.
He didn't say Who he asked bl&amp; the
inference was that he had been tOOl
the decision was in error.
'1 can\ take "Bny satisfaction in .
that call. That's what I'm sayq," .
said Greene. ''What do we say? Do
we say, 'Things like that happen. 'I ·
mean how do you explain that to the
Oilel'!l'

''Don't get me wrong. I feel damn
good that we woo. But I'm not in a
celebrating mood yet. It 'II come. I 'II ,
get happy -later."

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ed
Badger's written resignation was
due on athletic dlrecWr William
Jenike's desk today, although he
verbally quit bls job Saturday as
University cl. Cincinnati basketball
coach.
In quick. suceessl111 Saturday,
Badger told his wife, then Jenlke
and his players that he was quitting
after one year and 10 games with the
Bearcats, just hours bef9re his team
was wplay at Dayton.
Guard Junior Jolllsoo said' he ·
· •'thought we were going wget some
kind of game strategy" when
Badger called a team meeting
Saturday. ''Then he said circwrurtances beyond lis oontrol ·
caused him to resign.
''It seemed so sudden, so uilreal.
·Nobody said nothing. We all shook
our heads and walked out."
Sophomore reserve Doug
Schloemer said he expected Badger
to talk about academic problems
that had ce~~t two players their
eligibility.
''l'msureitcameasashockwall
of UB," Schloemer said. '1 tb:mght
we were having a 'meeting m the
eligibility ~. l didn't know What
wasgoingm."
Senior Jeff BenUey said he felt the
universii;y let Badger down •
''The only reason I'm playing is w
play for the guys1111be team, not the
university," Bentley said befOl'e the
Dsytm game, which
cinllati won
69-QI. '1 don't blame him a bit f&lt;r
resigning."
Univ'e rsity President Henry
Winkler issued a statement, calling
Badger ''B fine coach ... (whose)
coacltingabllitywillbemlsaed."
William Keating, a member of the
UC board cl. regents, said he was
"deeply disappointed" by Badg~'s
departure .because ''the basketball
JrDgram looked like the best area w
bring UC'B sparta pJ;Ugr&amp;m back to
Its pm~t glories. · FOl' reasons
unknolrn to me, it's now come to an
abrurt end."
.
Jenike, bowever • called Badger's

resiS!JBtlM ''a !IP.Vere nrnl&gt;lem, but
not the end cl. the world:·
''We wiD probably go Into a coon·
trywide search fOl' a new coach,"
Jenlke said. "If Coach ll!mamk
(top assistant Ken Banaszek, who
coached the BearcatB Saturday
night) wants to be considered, he
certainly will be."
Banaszeli, who had been both a
player and coach under Badger, said the aecwnulatlm of proble0111 •
plaguing the UC athletic pJ:'()gram
apparently finally got Ia Badger.
"He's proven in the pm~t that he
can cq~e with just about any .
situation, but I guess tbere were cer·
lain situations he felt be j111t couidn1 ·
deal with anymore so he said 'Good·
bye, ... said llanal!zek.
Cincinnati finlsbed 13-14 last
season, the school's first losing ef·
f!l't in 28 years, althCJ1141h tbe Bearcats are H this season after a slow
start and some tough gamea againllt
ranked oppollitlon.
Badger faced aeveral Jnbl.ema at
CindMati and admiUed frusli:atiM
early Utrr • - bolCBWJe &lt;i pocr
s..,port by alwnnt and tbe ctty.
Recruitlng ns made difficult by a
two-year National Collegiate
Athletic AJsociatlm probation,
which be Inherited.
Last January, Badger had to
suspend two players after a botiii
gift shop '1181 vandalized on a Bear· ·
cat road trip to St. Louis. LGelng two .
more players to grades apparently ' ·
was the crowning blow.

BYGreJBalley
Logan shot a sizzling 59 percent of that openlni! period and the score
Ita the old adage goes, the name d. their shots, canning 25 of 42 field was knotted twice. The Eagles and
the game is to put the baii.tbrougb goaJatte~q~ta.
Marauders were trading buckets ·
lbe hoop. And that's just what the
Just the night before, Meigs shot a .and foul shots evel)' trip up the
Meigs Marauders did Saturday dlsmal29 percent from 1be floor in a
colll't.
night as they captured their first win ·lois to Ironton.
Early in the scond qUarter Meigs
CO
Fana saw a torrid first period that Opened a nine-point lead, 2H7, and
&lt;i the -son, a well-deserved and
hard.fought 57-48 victory over the ended 18-16 in favor of Meigs. Un- right after the half led 39-26. But
BOOTOO (AP) -Spring training
visiting Belpre Golden Eagles.
believable as It may seem, the lead early in the fourth quarter Belpre
is only eight weeks away, but maj&lt;r
. The Marauders &lt;i ce~~ch Ron actually changed hands 16 limes in . narrowed the margin 49-45 before
league o'IV!IIlrs and IlK! Players
Meigs outscored tbe Eagles 8-4 for
Association are locked in a cold War
themargincl.victory.
overanewbasicagreement.
Belpre was 11-2 going into the conA memo outlining Initial demands
test and one of tbo!le wins was a vic- by the owners and the players, .and
tory over powerful Athens. The win
made available w The Associated
Saturday marked the first game this
Press, indicates the two sides are
season .lbatMeigshasoutrebounded
aboot as far apart as the United
their opponents. Meigs picked off :ti
States and Russia.
errant shots to just 21 fll' Bel]re.Bob
!Jna8ine a player such as Claudell
B)' GEORGE STRODE
fr8!hman aark Kellogg's 15. Kelvin As!ey led Meigs in the rebounding Washington earning the same pay as
AP Spol11 Writer .
Ransey had , 14, marking the 73rd
department with nine ck,&lt;ms whne
slUggers Jim Rice and Fred Lynn
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -It took straight game that he's been In
Crawf«d had five forthelosers.
for their first five years in the major
three players -lint Herb WUllams, double figures.
FOl' the second night In . a rent
leagues?
then Jim Smith and finally Jim
''It's prett;y difficult to aing)e out
junior Dave Kennedy led Meigs in
That's one of the owners'
Ellinghauaen ~ to slow Joe Barry 1111)'0111!! in t!U game,". said Oblo
scoring 811 he poured in 19 points.
proposals.
8 whilhite
Carroll.
State Coacb Eldon Miller. He tben
~le Ohihlqederin lnOettedThete1amlr:
Imagine players with the right tn
7 demand!Dbetradedafterjustthree
Ita a result, IIeCOIId.:ranked Obio cited Williams, Kellogg,
.,..,eye PP ·
•
State Birares the Big Ten basketball Ellinghausen and Ransey for their . · d.· l7 free thJ:'()ws ands both teams
yearswithaclub?
lead today with Michigan and contributions.
'
wel'l!whlatledf~ 14fouls.
That's one cl. the players' deman·
Wlscllllin. The B~ trimmed
Purdue, 8-2 overall and J.1 in the
Bewflponlre 'swaa ledrkein scorhilinEpgllby
ds.
13 rna rsw e
CarrollandhiBNo.8Purdueteam- league,appearedbeadedf&lt;rvictory
Cra
~
Initial demands in labor
11111ei 8741 Saturday night w join with a 45-3'7 lead and less than 14. and B. Joseph !l&amp;Ch had 11 · Sexton
negotiations often are euggerated,
the Wolverines and Badgers at ~ in minutes left. But that's.when Miller added 10 and the team hit 7 of 15 free
but some· by both club owners and
IlK! conference.
·
inserted Wllllama in the lineup, eveli throws. The Eagles netted 21 of 48 the players this time around appear
"l'hey did a gOod job on Joe thoogh be had four peraooals. He shots for 43 percent. Meigs Travels
preposterons.
-cellellt
job
"
scored
.__
quick
field
goals
•A
_
_.
to
Jackson
Friday
and
!hen
on
Satur·
The owne... have built a war chest,
Barry in fact an
;
'
·
..
'
"'u
w .,,..
day entertains Walratna.
.
ported! • "bout $1 5 mJW
And
said Purdue Coach lee 1\ose. ''It's themarglntofour.
Not a man on either team
..
hit
re
Ya
· .
on.
hard w get the ball Into him wlien
''ThCIIe were two mighty big
the association, led by )lard-nosed
. theyplaysuebfinedefeiJse."
basltets,"saidRAIIIe. "After he came doobe figures Saturday nl,ghtaa the
negotlatorMarvlnMDler,isshowlng
ltstartedoutasaduelbetweentlre back, we took the ball at him three
Baby Golden Eaglea from Belpre
no fear, determined w add to the
leilgue's two best c\enti!ta and tlines and dldnt get a thing. 111at took a 38-2l win over a steadily im- many coocessions (lbtained at the
American ~tes in the Spar- wasv~poc!r~.Hepunlsbed proving Meigs Marauder re~~erve
bargainlngtableinthe19'/0s.
tacade this summer, the 7-foot-1
uatonlgllt." .
.
811118datMeigsHigb.Meigsledll-9
No oite In bflleball wants to talk
Carroll ~ lbt 6-10 Wllli1111111. But' · PunlUe next faces visiting Dlinois, at the end r4 the first periOd- but then about a strihe, such as in 19'12, or a
·tllltdldll'tlastlong.Wllllamaplcked
whlleObioStatetakesatriptolowa Belpreopeneda1~l4 halftlmelead.
lockout, but mll'e than a few club
up thtee fouls in IlK! firllt haH and
Thurllday night..
shBetslpre b:l~_?,!CIItcl. itsallleedad ~n fo~ ~ecutives are worried about· a
0
• four 'persoi)8i.l, with more than 17
Akron \Wn an 8$-79 decision over
as e- was c
or
pe~~sible shutdown of spring training
IDillltes lef~.
Murray SU.te in the Ohio VaUey eon• fouls. Belpre actuallY hit more foul camps unless Jrogress is made In
As en Indepenlfent Insurance
.'1 didn't look at It as me against
ference. Cleveland State ·routed shots than .they did field goals. The negotiations.
agency,
our prlmar.Y function Is
Virginia Military . 102·82~ winners, now Il-l on the year, sank 16
Miller !Did The .AP in. a telephone
Joe Banoy. If you start doing that,
to provide policies which afford
financial protection In case of
you jwrt ruin tbe whole team !!Ul; Youngstmm ~te edged Gannon 86- of 23 free throws and .cashed. in on intel'view that the 12'flllge memo be
loss.
23
cept, "said WIIHama. He came back
112, Ashland fell to Sellarmine 105-85 j~mt elevl!ir cl. field goal attempts. sent to the union's members,
But, we also have a vital In·
in the !ut li mlnuf.eli wilcore 10 d.
and Central State mastered Indiana That stat also shovrs th!lt the.visito.r s generally iB .; report on a meeting II
terest In I"" pr!IYentlon, as
1!is 14 points, rallyq the Buckeyes Slate-EvBII!VDle 59-liB.
took lb~ same number of foul shots the association's executive board ..-----.-------.,..-1 Slloulcl our clients. We encourage
. care, cautiOn and !lafety ......
fromanelght-polntdeflclt.
•
~they i!idfieldgoal tries.
Dec. 4-liln New York while baseball
preventive measures which can
"He'll ~ !!est ceu I 'V6 played "Iii the Cllio O&gt;liference, favored
Maigs now U on the year was led he)d il!r annual winter meeting in
Anrioliric!nv the Revised
keep that cor accident from hap·
paning; that bUilding fire from
by far in college," said Wllllains.~1
Wittenberg defeated otterbejn82.al,
In sco~: J~=and, ~ Toronto..
Offlce5chtdulul
starting, that hOine , burglary
ICOU!ed him In Ruasla this sumMlr8kingum beat Capiisl fl)-88 in
Miller .
ke
. whoeac
''The minutes were mailed to
. Dr.MIIteoP.Doyo,Jr.
from being committed. ·
,
mer."'l'he Ohio State jiidor '!Ill a overtime, Marlette nipped Baldwin· neUed six pcjnta. ·Bishop paced about l,OOOassociaUdn.members, so
MldJ~i-t~3h~:···
Pre\ientlon 111ves life, limb and
JIO!Ver ft!lirard, wlllle Carron ·Wallaee ~. Heidelberg oiltscored Belpre"wlthnine pointa.
~llf. hard!~ can be cOIIsidered con·
Effective Jonuory 1HO
property .... and helps control In·
eurance costs lilld premiums.
Glinted in the pivot in the Spar· Denison 7N1, Kenyon bopped Ohio
Meigs hitliil Jllllt nine ell 3il shots fidential or secret, "MIIJt\' &amp;~~id.
,
· · Monclly
When losses . do occur~ our .
tacade.
.
WesleYan 70-64; Wooster bestMOIDit ~~-~f_;.'llth~.
. 1 nt and call111ld. sill · ~.."te;~f' ~~ldnto = i t "a~
· 1, ::,O,OOJ :,'M,
policyholders can count .on pro· ..
Carroll only sank six: qf 19 field
Union'16.1l3ani!.Ohi0Northi;medged .. ,....., •~ '"" ·
· ·
:... ..... · or.....
ac~y
tectlng end HrVIiiiJ In time' fOnd
• T1111sdoy, NoOffke
1
· nwc~. aut·we still lilY - preven' ·
platleiili*, but a , Nor.~ free · 'Oberlin81:69.
By~i's i·' ··
&lt;i IlK! memo. \However, . 'lbe ~ ·
Wtd~IUy
lion Is the bHt pOlicy.
·.
Unw .)l!lrformance pve . hlln a
· · Melli 11 37 47 57
.ll&amp;iiJ_. ~ 1o 8 . capy througb
', 10-11,10
2
1
·~ 21 point~,. The Big Te!l's
In the·. Hocilier:auckeye Coo•
• Belpre UI3i '48
~ another source · •
.
·
··
, '~it!,',t:y.M·
.
lfll acorinJ champion fprced
ference, Defiance llllulecl Blufftcrl • aeiPr• ·(:., . _ cri!Wiorcl 6+ 131
Molt ~!l)e~,
by
·'
: · •••·IIIlO
7
.I
W!Dtema,SmlthandEllingl)aueento . ~'h. Andei"liOII·.lmoeked off Fin• · Epling 4·3'1\J p 1 rsons ).0·2; ·Sex1on . ~er'l,r wuce ..-.14, COOl~ cl. a . ·
2:G0- :WP.M,'
'
.
'
~ a coulblned . 12 l!llrson.l , d!aJ l).n ·and WiJIDID&amp;ton defeated H·IO: Josepl! s-1·11: L09ue l-11·2; · repOl'tpn vartq cliacultcq by ino'::~roo
1
fouls
· ·
·
' •· Manchester.,·'l7. ·
·,, Peters 0·1·1; L:. J,9il!Ph ':O;() '.and ~ &lt;Jlvidlialclabp~eprH llallvill
2:00-S:Oi
~
1
,:-.
Stale, ~1 overall, eounte~
'Mid.()blo OU!iference game. ~· · ·· •=.~-~~1iT,o'e.~s ~l'n'~r 9:o.1.e: 'at ·the ezecullve .bolard meetlnl·
··
. saturday
· 9fNI43
Qurell with balance. Six Buckeyes
Malone · W~ . Rio Grande 7140,...; · Ashley ~-~·101 snow•n J·H:, Swann ~r,• lt also CGIIIBIM a t the
~lictpt '.:··~~': Satur· ..
102W.Maln
-. iecndrroiDIIKtbliPoiJ.lp.F\)Urof' . ~rville defeat "fallllll-82, aiUI
H ;J;. 51111.111 H.O; K"'nedv 8·3·19_, aseociation clalnw ~- both the
d.lyol.tllemanttt.
._ remw,oy
•·"·""'" ttiem~ .~~~~~bubleal!lires.le4by · Tlfflnbdtoht6Doniinlcan7t-. . , · ~otatan-7-57 •
·. ,.
~~~l~erna~_ofltar)dth~()'II'Del'tl. · . .~.iiiiilli.,l
, .-.-._.._.......

Baseball talks
reach Id War

Their bids average out to $30.50 a
square foot. That me.ans these
houses, including the lots they stand
on, will range in price from $35,000w
$80,000.
In January, says Hemphill, the
average, conventional, all-electriC
house of 1,600 square feet will have
an electric bill of about 'ISO a month.
That's based oo today 's rates, which
are sure to go up.
·
''If the solar homes work the way
we expect," he adds, "their resideD·
tswillpayabout$50amonthontheir
flectric bills."
A $100-a-month saving can help
any family's econ&lt;my.
Hemphill notes the 42 homes are
''non ·high • teclmology." They just
us~ simple ideas to save electricity.
Examples: An overhang 111 windows
facing south, so the home gets the
lower winter sun but avoids the
higher sununer sun; styrofoam
around ,the c111crete slab at the
home's base, cutting heat loss 32 to
42 percent; a tw~r entry ·haD
that's eBBentially an airlock; a
sliding wooden shutter over glass . :.
doors, reducing heatlcl!lsalhird.
'
TVA will auction Off itB 42 homes. !
There already are 106 persons in· I
terested in the hoilse at Union City,
Tenn. As part &lt;i itS.sales contracts
TVA will pay each new owrier a .
$2,500. '~nconvenience fee" because '
the walls win be inst'rwnented and '
oceasionsRy TVA· will send in ex· i
perts!Dtestenergysavings. •
1
Each Iiome IS de$gned wheat·and l
cool passively. Ea!:h has ,a heat
collecWr -· window, greenhouse,
skyUght or glass covering over ·a
thermal wall - to store beilt. Heat (
Pllll1lS provide · baCkups for e:i- '
trem~ly cold or extremely hot days. · 1
The homes . have ·wood-burning t
swves and effidelt fireplacea. .
l
Hemphm says that afta' test1r\g
the.42hoines, 'I'VA Is likely tostaita l
widespread ~gn wget peq~le l
In its area wbuild homes .Cil tliellli '
'Jines. He ' figures . lhat. Withers 1
Adkins, the ~vjlle,balled chief J
IIJ"clitecl of IlK! · 42 "cmea, , hai I
lrOiiglltthe cort.of solar-proofing w
a hout 50 cen!4 aliQuare foot. Comlnil; I
1111 line soon 'fill be a · si.JijJIIr 1t
program for factory-bullt' eolar l
· hom~!&amp; Cllllting t22,11GQtota7,000. ,
'
. For. more informatlav, write Fran.! '
~ter, Sblar App~tiOIIII Branch, l
1

regime fell , w ·Vielni!rrieae-bacl(ed
rebels.
·•
. Today's birthday: Cartoonist .
Charles Addams is 68.
,

Matt

Badger resignation due ,today

Meigs upsets Belpre, 57-49

Valley Authority w start the ball
this way:
- ...;. ...... . - Cost of new electrical plants,
rolling.
Last May, TVA's Robert F. Hem· either coal or nuclear, will raise the
phil! Jr., the utility's direcwr d
average rate paid by all electricity
energy conservation and rates, got
users.
the go-ahead to commission TVA ar·
-Much of the rising demand for
chitects to design 11 different single· electricity comes from new housing.
family solar homes.
-So if an electric utility,like TV A,
The houses range from 1,008 to can figure out a way of lessening the
2,226 square feet and .42 of them are demand, all buyers of electricity will
now being built in five of the seven
benefit.
states TVA serves - Tennessee,
''Electric utilities should .think of
Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi
themselves as salesmen of energy
and Virginia. Three houses already services," says Hemphill. 'They
are completed and the rest will be turn electricity inw light, heat,
finished by the end of February, cooling and shaft power. U we can
Hemphill says.
spend to meet some of the demand
What's an electric utility, started for electric heating and cooling,
l)y the federal government and still a evel)'one profits."
Nine general contractors sub·
federal entity, doing building solar
homes?
mitted winning bids on the 42 homes.

Renfro was juggling the ball 1)1 he
field goaL After Guido Merkenll flllll·
went out Replays showed Renfro
bled 111 the ned Oiler aeriea, Pit·
touched both feet inbounds, but they
tsburgh went 45 yards lor a tlludl·
did not reveal whether he Juggled
down that came 111 a "fard nm by
the ball. ·
· Rocky Bleier with 54lii!COilds left.
"He did not have posseBBiM," said
· The Oilers never threatened after
Tunney.
-··theRenfrocalL
The Oilers settled f&lt;r a field goal,
''That was the lrey play right
and Pittsburgh put the game away
there," said Paswrinl. "A toudl· · ·
with a 10-pointfourth,quarter.
downtheremlgbthavetumedthings
BradshaW - W&amp;t(:jie(f thti RenfrO around."
play from the sideline.
But Oiler Coacb Bum PbiillpB
"When 1 first saw it, 1 thought it didn't complain, just as be dldn\
was a touchdown," Bradshaw llere last year when Houston~ 34-6
said. "But 1 didn't care. If they • to Pitts~urgb In the same title pme
scored we were gonna BCOre again. played mfreezq rain.
'
"Even after llook at the fllma,I 'Ill
~c::i't.~d w stq&gt; us - and they not going to blame the cl.flclals," he
On their first drive of the foorth said. 'They'l'e human. We had 59
quarter theSteelersmoved 55 yards other minutes in the game to beat
before
Bahr kicked a 3~ard Pittsburgh and we didn't."
Pittsburgh held NFL-t"\~Shing
·

.B attered Rams meeting Steelers in Super. Bowl

And, of course, Richard Nixon's
memoirs.

•.

Ohio Perspective

I

him.

•

Davis' campaign ccmmitteee wrote
to federal cl.ficials disclosing that
"after paying all hills and reporting
all expenditures and contributions,
the amount of $16,903 was turned
over to the candidate."
The Senate considered legislation
to change the law on Dec. 18, two
days before it recessed for the year.
With no publicity and no debate, the
bill was passed by a voice vote in
less than 10 minutes.
The measure was presented on the
House floor on Dec. 31, the final day
of last year's session. Mter less than
20 minutes of desulwry discussion, it
was approved by a voice vote.
Referring to surplus campaign
contributions, the new law says :
"No such amounts may he con·
verted by any person to any persooal

.

~'

PJDI""'l'""l11BmURGH AP- The cmtrover!llal call stands, Ule gutsy

Then, fiqally, the ''smoking sun,"
one cl. the tapes the Supreme Coort
orders released, a June Zll1972 tape
with Haldeman suggesting to Nixon
ways to head cl.f the investigation.
The president not only knew details
of the burglary, he participated in
plans to cover it up.
Now Nixon tells the nation he no
longer has political support and is
resigning, On Aug. 9, having waved
his final victory wave, Richard
Nixon flies off into history.
For the participants, the results
are mixed. Nixon, commonly
believed to be the "unindicted coconspirator" in the coverup in·
dictments handed up w Sirica, is
pardoned by his succi!S4or, Gerald
Ford. Many other administration
operatives, including .Haldeman,
Ehrlichman, Mitchell, Dean and
Colson, set:Ve jail terms.
But they also capitalize on their
exposure to publish their own versions of Watergate: Dean's "Blind
Ambition," Haldeman's ''The Ends
of Power," Ehrliclunan 's novel,
"The Company," Colson !s ''B&lt;rn

Richardson refuses and resigns;
Deputy Atty . Gen. William
Ruckleshaus also refuses and is
fired. Solicitor Gen. Robert Bork
finally does the hooors. The whole
thing is named ''The Saturday Night
Massacre. "
Impeachment resolutions are
filed. Nixoo bows to. pressure and
names a new prosecutor, Leon
Jaworski, a former president of the
American Bar Association. The
Judiciary Committee begins im·
peachment hearings. The edited
tapes keep comi~ and the country
reads private conversations of its
president and his aides, replete with
deleted expletives,
The House Judiciary Conunittee
works slowly, slowly, but finally, in
july, 1974, begins televised final
hearings. Congressmen and wcmen
open their consciences to the nation.
Rep. Tom Railsback, R-Ill., weeps
as he decides to vote to impeach a
president who has campaigned for

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Buckeyes defeat
. ·Boilermakers

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PREVEtmoN.

BEST POLICY

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5-The ~tly Sentinel, Middl~.Pomeroy, 0 ., ~onday, J~. 7,1911 ,
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4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o . ,Monday, Jan . 7, 19111

Health ·Review

The Meigs County Retii-ed Senior
seals 'are placed in the· front door
Volunteer
Program is inthxlucing window apd on the refrigeri!(C!f.door
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the ''Vial. of Life" program to the
to alert medical teams that the
citizens of Meigs Councy.
knowledge regarding.the Individual
one person to anolher by direct conThe vial ·of life is a medical alert · can he found iJl1mediately .00 utiliztact or by use of brushes,' combs or
device which includes all vital
ed In an emergency crisis . The vtal
hats which the lice attach them- medical history, medieatioo, etc., of
I~ designed to give emergency crews
selves to. The eggs hatch in about 10 an individual. It is placed In the in- a head1start when they respooo to
days aoo mature in about two ' dividual's refrigerator and erange
calla fer help.
weeks. The adult Jives for about one
The RSVP volunteers plan to
month. During that one' month
make the vial fi life available to all
period, the female lays five to 10
residents of Meigs COunty, although
eggs per day .
their primarY CUloem at this time
QUESTION : How can I kill the
are persons who are elderly, Infirm,
lice present on my child's head and
homebound and/or handicapped.
prevent them fnm spreading to
The vial is free -of charge and Is
other members of the family?
available ID the public through the
ANSWER: The most common
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
treatment is the use of one percent
Residents may stop by the center
benzene h~achloride (Kwell)
and pli" up a vial, or may telephone
shampoo. Lindane, an insecticide, is
the shampoo's ingredient which kills
''Cookie Olympics " Is the theme of
the lice. The rich lather is kept in the
'
infected hair for the prescrihed the 1!110 Girl Scout cookie sale to
period of time in order to kill both take place Feb. I throughFeb. 16.
By Mrs. Francis Morris
the adult and the eggs. The Junior, senior and cadette scouts
Rev. and Mrs. Paul SeUers cl
destroyed eggs should be removed will be taking orders for seven
Gilboa spent several days over the
with a special li~thed comb. varieties of girl scout cookies baked
holidays with their sonin-law and
Parents should watch closely for the by the Little Brownie Bakers during
da~ter, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
maturing of eggs that may not have . the sale dates to be delivered March
Eynon aoo daughter. They called m
17-28.
bem killed.
Mrs. Francis Morris Saturday afThe varieties are Granola with all
All family members, including
ternoon.
adults, should be cheeked and natural ingredients; Samoa, a
Senior Airman and Mrs. Robert
treated if necessary. Contaminated chocolate, cannel and cocoout
Stemple and baby of San Berwashable clothing and sheets should cookie; thin mints, a chocolate mint
nardino, Calif. are visiting her
be laundered using a 20 minute hot coooe; Do-Si-Oos, a peanut butter
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simwash and machine dried at a hot sandwich; Vanchos, vanllla and
pson and his parents In Parkertemperture. Clothing . needing dry chocolate cremes; Tagalongs,
sburg, W.Va., while he is on leave.
cleaning can be taken ID a chocolate covered peanut butter patMr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie, Jeff
professional cleaners or stored in a ty, and Trefoil, shortbread.
and Jozie, of Gallipolis
Phil
The sale goal is 47,000 cases er , M:KEDzie and fiance, Miss Kim
plastic bag for a month. Washable
Items can alao be treated with Kwell 571,000 boxes in the Black Diamond
Parlin of Ohio State University were
shampoo. Because federal law Girl Scout CoWICU.
Christmas dinner gueslll rl. Mr. and
!X'ohibits dispensing the shampoo
Cost is $1.50 ~r box withe the cost
Mrs. Roy Rime.
without a prescription, patients breakdown being as follows: pro·must visit a physician to be treated duct· cost, 58 cents per box, troop
profit, :II cents pet:box, bonding, one
for head lice.
cent per bo:r, and' Cmmcil profit, 71
cents per box. . ·
The cookie sale is a tradition
which dates back the oorly 1930's
Brian and Angela, Ernestine and profits from the cookies glve
By Melody Roberti
Hayman, Paige, Beth, Ginger Girl Scoufll on opportunity to raise
The
Irene
Starcher family spent
Hayman, Roberta Larkins, Sadie funds for their troop activities, for
Christmas
with
Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Larkins , Mr. and Mrs. Martin camp develo!Dlent and for services
Sparks and family, Maaoo, W. Va.,
Nesselroad, Mr. and Mrs. stanley to troops.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young, Paden
Wells, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neulzling
City, W. Va.
and Jay, Jenny Newlun Travis and
Parkers entertain }or
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Tracie, Ruby Brewer, Janie Fitch,
Adams have been Mr. and Mrs.
Lila Ridenour, Floyd, Matt, KeUy ,
D!lvid Evans and family, Athens,
Shirley Salisbury, Adam, Aaron, holidays with dinners
,
Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Evans and famlly,
Phyllis Larkins, Emerson McDole,
Mr. and Mrs: Wilber Parker enter- Colwnbus, Mrs. Retta Ware aoo
Sanuny Ralrden, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
tained with two dil)ners during the daughters, Hebron, 0., Da.Je Evans
Bissel and Melody Roberts.
holiday season. · ,
and daughters rJ. Logan, M(. and
On Dec. 23 they hnsted the
Mrs ...Ronnle Hewitt, Bemald and
Michaels with 1J Chrisbnas dinner Kate Bobo, · Mr: and Mrs. Paul
aoo gift exchange. Present were Hauber and Scott, an local.
Samuel Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Mr. and Mrs. Garth !inith spent
MONDAY
Michael, Matthew, Klinberly and Christmas with Mrs. Ruth Stethem,
RA~ CHAPl'ER 1.34, Order of
Todd. Gary Michael &amp;Sed tbe bless· also · Mr. aoo and Mrs. Roland
the Eastern star, 7:30 Monday night ing.
Stethem. . .
at the Temple. Obligation night will
On Dec. 30, the annual Pearl
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. JO'!
be observed. New officers are to
Parker families' holiday dlnlier was
Bissell
and Kenneth have been Mr.
meet with the inStruction committee
held at their home. Present were
and
Mrs.
Joe A. Bissell, MaaCil, W.
before chapter opEns.
mr. aoo Mrs. Howard Parker, April
Va.,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Tom Gruenoveld'
MEIGS COUNTY SALON 710, and Aaron, Homer Parker, Suzy
Twuny
and his parents of
and
Eight and Forty, 7::tl Monday night Carpenter, Mr. aoo Mrs. Herbert
Michigan,
Mr.
and Mrs. Mike
at the Riverboat Roam of the Athens Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Marim
Bissell,
of
the
Columbus
region.
County Savings and Loan Co. Parker. Preceding the dinner, Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
steve
Holter aDd
Members are to take sale proceeds Wilber Parker asked the blessing.
family
c1.
Columbus
spent the
along with botUe caps.
The house was deeocated In keep- holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
ing with the Christmas season. The
SPECIAL MEETING of Meigs
Holter, Judy and Mark.
table centerpiece was an arra~e­
Athletic Boosters Monday, 7 p.m. at
The &lt;ltrlstmas program of the U.
ment of red silk roses and natural
high school. All interested persons
M. Church was well attended.
greenery. During the holiday
urged to attend.
The Golden Rule Suntll!y School
season,
the Wilber Parkers received
LEI'ART FAU.S PTQ Monday
class cl the Long Bottom Churches
O!ristmas pictures of their daughter
7:30p.m. at the school.
held tbeir Christmas dinner at the
and
her family, Martha, Joe and
TUESDAY
Methodist Church basement recenWill Poole, San Antonio, Te:ras, and
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday 7:30
tly. A turkey dinner with all the
talked
to their sons, Eric and Ed- · trimmings was served after the
p.m. Display of art.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for Retar- ward, of near Seattle, Washington,
mee~. A fruit basket was given to
ded Citize111 first meeting cl the new Eric Isba~ the ho.!lpital for more
all the slut-ins of the class. Atsurgery on lis left heel which W&amp;s inyear at the Meigs Inn, 7 p.m.
tending were Mr. and _Mrs. John
jured in an accient last March. His
Tuesday.· The association is to
Br;ewer, Hazel Curtis, Mr. and Mrs.
promote the general W!!.lf~.t. of per- address is St. ·Cllarles Hospital,
Joe B•ll and Kenneth, Bill
·
soos wilh mental retardatim. Allin· Beoo, Oregon, 97701.
H01111elton, Margaret Browil, Irene
terested individuals ar:e urged to atStarcher, Jerry Starcher, Dora
Salisbury honor roll
tend ID discuss the future directions
Qiapln, Leona Hensley, Mae Mccl programs for persons with mental
Peek.
The honer roll for the first sl:r
retaldation witlin Meigs County.
Mrs. Janet Hannem cl Coolville
weeks ~riod at the Salisbury
The public is invited.
was a recent caller at the HensleyElementary School was announced.
McPeek home. &lt;llriatmas guests of
MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS, 7:30
Making
a
grade
of.
"B"
er
above
to
the
hcme were Mr. aoo Mrs. Joe
Tuesday In the band room. All
be
named
to
the
hmer
roll
were
:
Biaselland Kenneth.
parents of band members urged ID
First Grade -No gradea,glven firMr. and Mrs. Paul hauher and
attend.
family )Jave been callers at tbe home
PORTLAND PTO meeting, 7 p.m. st grading period.
Second Grade - Tract Bartels,
of Ora SinClair at Sumner. Visiting
Tuesday at the school.
Melanie Beegle, He~ Caruthers,
the Hauber home have been Mr. aoo
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
KeUy Douglas, Wallace Hatfield,. Mrs. David Dailey and Rae Lynn,
CLUB, 7:30 Tuesday at the home of
Jay Hwnphreys', Kristin King, MarMr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnston,
Mrs. Cora Beegle. Ro!l call is fer
sha King, Deanna Norris, Michael
Jr. and Jeremy of Portlaoo, Mr. and
everyone to take a specimen of a Parker, Sandra Whaley. ·
Mrs. Doug Hauber, Tim and Kim,
dried material for an arrangement. , Third Grade - Marc Corsi, Wesley
Mr..and Mrs. Clyde Adams, Mr. and
Marianna Mitchell to give a pro- Young,
.
Mrs. T0111 Hayman, all local, Tracie
gram on contrived flowers. "'Let's
Fourth Grade - David Beegle, Sue • and Kathy Ware, Hebron, 0 ., Joyhce
Go Creative" will be the. theme of Ellen Fry, Lisa Frymyer, Audra
and Andy Bal~ tleveland.
the arrangement for the month. Houdashelt, Kevin V. King, Shannon
It is reported that the step-lather
Mrs. Pat 'fttoma will be the judge.
Slavin, Angela Sloan, Tamra Vance.
cl Mrs. Sue Hayman, Even Countlss
Fifth Grade. - Lin Olase, April
POMEROY CHAPI'ER 186, Order
of Pound, VIrginia passed away
Clark; Todd Cullwns, Darla King,
of the Eastern Star, 7:30 Tuesday
une:rpectedly Dec. 26.
Phillip ~g, Brenda Sinclair.
night at the P&lt;meroy Masooic TemGuests of Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Sixth Grade - Rose Barnhouse,
ple. lnstrucUon conunlttee will perBall over the boUdays were Mr. and
Jodi Harrison,, ,Rod . Harrison,
form.
Mrs. Doug Ball and family, Mon.
Darren Hayes, Angels Patterson
THURSDAY
.tgc;mery, W. Va., Joyce and Andy
ELEANOR CIRClE, Thursday, Cindy Sauters, Tim 'Sloan, Ani~
Ball, Cleveland, MJ:. and Mrs. BID
7:30 p.m. at the Heath ·United Smith.
Whitlock and famlly, Cleveland.
MeUiodlst Clwrcb, with Donna Byer,
Helen Byer and Gmce Jcimson as
hollteslles. There Will be a white
elephant sale.

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By Robert G. Stoclullal,
D .O., Pb.D.

Assistant Profeuor ol
FamDy Medlclae
Oblo Ulllvershy College
Of Osteopatllle Medlelae
HOW TO DETECT HEAD LICE
&lt;Edltoc's note: While Dr. Lamar
Miller is on vacation, Dr. Robert
Stockmal will continue as guest
columnisl)
QUESI'ION : My child's classmate
was sent borne from school because
he had head lice. What do head lice
look like and how do I know if my
child is Infested?
ANSWER : The head louse is an insect which is grayish-white, nat,
slender and roughly the size ol a
pinhead. It is fairly active and can
be seen moving about. The female
Jays eggs · on the person's hairs
where they are finnly attached.
Although the eggs are quite small,
they are glistening white and can
abo be seen with the naked eye.
Parents should suspect the presence
of head lice when a child is observed
repeatedly scratching his head. The
wound produced by the bloOd
sucking louse becomes irritated and
ltciiY, causing the carrier great
discomfort.
QUESI'ION : How are head lice
spread from one Individual ID
another?
ANSWER : The head louse is ez:.
elusively a Iuman parasite. It is
more common among groups In
crowded quarters and individuals
with poor personal !IYgiene, but It
does not respect a person's social
status. The lice are transferred from

'Cookie

Olympics'
Feb. 1-16

By Melody ROUBh
The Long Bottom Community
Assoc. held ita secmd annual Christmas dinner for members and
families Dec. 28 in the coiiUDunity
Bldg.
Grace was given by Sammy Hairden. Mrs. Ernestine Hayman was in
charge of preparing the turkey and
dressing for the .dinner that most
members brought in covered dishes
and many desserts.
After the dinner coocluded, a short
busines session got underway with
the ptesident of the association,
Mrs. Leona Hensley, )l{eSiding.
Pledge of Allegiance, the Lord's
Prayer and a reading from the scripture was then given. Mrs. Mae McPeek gave a re)llrt of the inlriutes
from the last meeting. Mr.i: Er·
nestlne Hayman gave the
treasurer's report. And a list of
payments that were made also a llst
of those who had doll8ted money.
Also she gave a report on the
proceeds from a recent bake sale
~oo bazaar.
.
After the meeting em eluded, a gift
ez::change got underway. The group
was later entertained by Francis Andrew, Pearl Powell, Teresa . aoo
Brian Collins, Mary Ellen Andrew .
from Pennsylvania.
Attending were Mae McPeek;
Leona Hensley, Harlan Ballard,
Marjorie Brewer, Hazel Artis, Dora
Crispin, Francis Andrew, Nellie Andrew, Pearl Powell, Mary EllmAndrew, Mr. and ~ - Larry ColJins,

Rutland Honor roll
RU'l'LAND - The l)onor roll for
the first six weeks period at the
Rutland Elementary was an- ·
nounced. Students making the honor
roll received a ''B" average or better In all subjects. Students' names
In capital letters received all "A's. "
Secooo Grade - Angle Black, .
SheUy Black, Usa Darst, Billy Doczl, KIM EBIJN, Billy Haggy, Julie
Hatfield, Jimmy Hysell, ShaW!!
Lambert, Robby . Richmond,
RACHEL ROBISON, Terra
Schoonover, Angie Russell, BECKY
STILTNER, NATAUE TROMN,
Albert VanCooney, Tooy VanMeter, .
Sandy MarcuiD, Nicole Hartwell,
Angel Henderson.
Third Grade - Sherri Blair, Chad
Carson, Scott Edmonds, Sharm Fetty, Lori Fry, Joe Hall, ·Janelle
Hysel~ Sheila Hel'Miricks, Stacy
Hysell, · Tracy Hysell, Tracy
Michael ~ Vicki Priddy, Martha
Ne~. Melissa Pettry, J. R.
Walker, SABRINA WilSON. •
FOI!!'t!! Grade - Cilthy Blelllng,
~ Mlcbilel'" Bartrum, SCott Geyer,
· Mandl Fry, David Pettry, Mike
. ~llsh,. John Sisson, P. J .
Smlllwood, LISA MilLER, tom
::. I..auclermllt, Stephanie Mllan,

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··' · Fifth Grade - Mlcbelle Peterson

· Loretta NcWak,JanetHyselJ, Reglna

Eblla, Mandl Black, Dianna Slek,
Diana Wilbmlon, Denny Weiilh,
· · U. Sellrles, Ruth Porter, Dayld
• Rumloo, Mike Searlel.
:, lbth ·Grade - Mindy McDonald,
; Sberry Willoli, G~ Kellllt!IY,
:ITodd Dlaf. ~ lfi:Ge!, HYin

. Mahr; Quia Black, Derm stafford,

:, D. R. Smith, Rebecca Jllrchf.ield.
:: Primary E.M.R. - Tina Romine,
1' Marty HutiDn, Peggy Estep.
Ivy . l!'rederlct,
; · E.M.R. : Charole~ Pallerson, David Dunkle,
:- Missy Riggs.

M~igs

aoo one will be delivered to their
home.
The program, according to RSVP
persOnnel was made'
pGasib' by
j'
contribuUon from the RaveiiiiWood
Employes Charities , Kaiser

a

Co.

U.S.D.A.

Aiuminwn . liJl(l atemicai Corp,
Ravenswood ..The donation was used
ID purchase all of the .suppliea to do
5,000 vials, enabling the RSVP to InItiate the projjram at no CO!It to in·
dlviduals who partiCipate.

iflLLSHIRE
.· REGULAR
OR' i'OLISH

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Kings Island auditions
slated
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·CRiSPYSERVE

KINGS ISLAND, Ohio - Dan L.
Schultz, Director of Uve ·Shows at
Kings Island, announced today the
fanilly entertainment center will
hold'auditlons for new perforJD(!rs In
10 cities, beginning Tuesday,

_Janaary 15.
The citiesanddatesare:
Akron University, Akron, Music
and Theatre Aris Building, 2-li p.m ..,
January 15 ; Ohio state University,
Columbus, Drake Union, 12 noon-t
p.m., January 16; University of
Dayton, Dayton; Reichert Hall, 12 ·
noon-6 p.m., January 22; Butler
University, Indianapolis, Ind.,
Atherton Student Center, 2.0 pm·.,
Mrs. Ura Morris s)ientNewYear's
January
23 ; University of Louisville,
Day with Mrs. Anna Hilldore In
Louisville,
Ky., student Union, 2-6 .
Syracuse.
p.m.,
January
24 ; University ri. KenMrs. Helen Simpson returned
tucky,
Lemlgton,
Ky., Student
home after spending ten days over
Union,
2-6
p.m.
January
25; Kings
the holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
American
Heritage
Musk: '
Island,
Brian Simpson and famlly in
Hall, 2-0p.m.,January 26.
Baltlmure.
Others are: Bowling Green State
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley spent
University, Bowling Green; Student '
Jlfl few days over Christmas with Mr.
Unioo, 2-6 pm., JI!Jluary 28; Univer'Wand Mrs. Steve Badgley and
sity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.,
children In Columbus aoo Mr. and
Michigan Union, 1.0 p.m., January
Mrs. Brian Simpson and family In
29 ; and Indiana University;
Baltlmure.
Bloomlngron,
Ind., Memorial Union ··
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis and
Solarbun,
12
noon-t
p.m., January
daughter, Sue, of Lorain spent
30.
Christmas holida;,s with his parents,
A second audition for teclmicians,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Curtis.
guardettes,
and Hanna-Barbers
Mrs. Zella Taylor went by aircharacters will be held at Kings ,
plane Dec. 20 to visit her son, Mr.
Island on February 2 and 3, 10 a.m.
and Mrs. Lewis Talbott at Danville,
m.they brought her horne Saturday. to6p.m.
In !9al, there will be openings for
Melvin Weaver of Franklin spent
.
170
Jive shows positions at Kings
the weekerid 'lfith Mr. and Mrs.
Island.
These include singers, dan·
Douglas Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
cers,
musicians,
stage managers,
Adams and Mr. and Mrs'. Edison
supervisors
and
technicians. The
Brace.
salaries
range
from
$150 to $215.
Mr. . and Mrs. Bob Birch and ·
All
auditions
are
limited to two
daughtem cl Bellevue visited their
minutes
and
11_n
dccompanlst
will be
parents, Mr. ar.;J Mrs. Elza Birch
provided.
Performers
should
briilg
and Mrs. Emma Salser over New
sheet music in the correct key.
Year 's bolldaJ.
Singers will be expected to perform
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Simpson and
me alow and one fast song. Dancers
baby and Miss Carol Franklin cl
should prepare a short exemplary .
Seymour, loo. spent New Year's
dance routine. Musicians will play a
weekend with their grandmothers,
brief prepared selection and may be
Mrs. Gretta Simpson, Racine, and
required
to slghtread. Varlecy perMrs. Marguerite Winebrenner, Midfanners
and
groups should prepare
dleport.
'
.
exemplary
routine .
a
brief
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simpson and
Minimum
age
for
the
positions
is 16.
chlldren, Senior .Ainnan and Mrs.
In
1860,
Kings
Island
wlllfeature
a
Robert Stemple aud'baby, and Mrs.
variety
of
live
shows
around
the
Greta Simpson spent New Year's
Day with Mr, and Mrs. Glenn Sim- park. For more information about
the auditions, can or write Kings
paon in Waverly, CJJ.
ProducUons, 1906 Highland Avenue, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Ralpll Shain of An·
Cincinnati, Ohio 45219, (513) 241ti~ty spent New Year's with her
111119.
mother, Mrs. Gamet Ervine.
Appro:rlmately 120 attended New
Year's Eve service at the First BapVl'Jri'SHERE
tist Church.
.
Mrs. Edith Sauer, Gahanna,
The home of Mr. aoo Mrs. ..,. former resident of Middleport, spent
Roderick Grimm was decorated for
Thursday here visiting Mr. and Mrs.
the holiday season for tbe December
Wllbl8' Koenis and son, Reed.
meeting rl. the Booster Sunday
School class of the First Baptist
Church. Mrs. Grlmn, teacher of the
Heinkel Corp. demonstrated the
class, served a Chrlstmls supper to
first plane powered by a rocket
18, Including Mr. Grlnun and Rev.
engine for Adolf Hitler and Hermann
Walker, who had grace. The meeting
Goering in 1939. But it wasn t until
opened with group singing "0 Cune,
1~ that Germany fielded the first
All Ye Faithful" and prayer by Mrs.
operational jet fighter for combat, .
Marie Walker. Scripture was Luke 2.
the Messersclunitt Me-262.
Mrs. Helen Simpson read a hymn
story on ''Hark the Herald ~els
Sing" by Cliff Barrows with singing
by the group. Members brought
readings for the !X'ogr&amp;m'u folloW! :
"What II the Quiib.nas Spll'it, ·~ "A
b
Pnmised Girt," "Jesui Loves Me,"
'
"Christmas Is the 'l'lme;" ''Girt for
the Klng1" ','Let Us K;eep Christ·
0118," "God's Girt cl Love," "Little
Ioffor • 10141 program to IIIIi&gt;
Angel," "Christian Nurture," •'God
prottct your family's woy olllvlng
Gave His Son," "let Us Be ~et." .
and buUd ftnandalMCWttyforyou~
"A Chrlstmu Prayer;" "It's Christ·
retlrtmo.[lt voan. e-n mo .1!&gt;1 iltllfls
0118," "Ught a Candle," ' 11111
MilE SWIGER,
CbriBtmall Roae." The group sang
,Middle
ort, 0. - 992-6685·
"Silent Night! Holy Night!" aoo
program cl01ed With · The Lord's
~tote Fonn lWoettd
Accident Auuranc:e
Prayer In uniSon. Gifts from Wider a
Compon,
lighted tree ilere e:rchanged alMI the
ttome Olfce
~ ~~om·ung'On, Klinois
group enjoyed singing carols.

SANDWI~H

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED .IN THEPOMEROY AREA
FOR 'TH£
DAitY SENTINEL·
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WEEKEND VI8ITORS

Mrs. Lucille Clay of.Pomeroy had

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STEAK ......~~.~.

LOI

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VAUGHAN'S

9 -11 CHOPS

$ 29

Lb.

••••••••••••••••••
..'' .

DON'T
MISS

Middleport, Ohio

•,

.THESE
.JANUARY

r.

I

SEVERAL VARIETIES
FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

,CHRISTMAS
CANDY

BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

DUNCAN HINES

SALE DATES
JANUARY 7-1

QUANTITY RIGHTS
' RESERVED

1980

ASSORTED VARi e'!'tES

lf2 PRICE

c

MONARCH

'

: ""

.

,_

·:,.,;

.-·

''·'

'

'

61h OZ. CAN

OIL OR WATER PAC

'

2% MILK ........ ~~.~...$1 69
.GARVIN'S

PORK &amp; BEANS

PEACHES

16-~z. $
Cans

·

.10%-oz.
' Cans

RCH HALVES

COITAGE CHEESE ~N~z. 79~
IFREEZER VALUES I

210 SIZE

CAMPBELLS
CHICKEN NOODLE

VEGET ABLES ..3 ~~:: $1 °0

$ 00

ll((x til

HEAD
LETTUCE

II

3

't
••

It
I

FOR •. $ ·

00 ·

I

9
,a:ti
GLA~IER C'-UB
~. 0 ., , 139
ICE tiEAM ..................... em.
·

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I

'I
I

'

G·RAPEFRUIT

t

I

'I'

32 SIZE

'

$ 00

I

'

.

U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO

WASHINGTON STATE

POTATOES

·.10

RED DELICIOUS

AP,PLES

L8S.

'

ALL GRINDS

100
. SIZE ·

1 -Lb.

.621h ~RAVG.sg~

TANGERINES

Can

.TINES

9(

1.20 SIZE

10

fOR

A.ORIDA HAMLiN
.,

TANGELO.S

MAXWELL HOUSE,

.•.

I

l '. MARSH
. WHITE
!.

.

96-oz.
Bottle

'

00-10·01

ORANGES
.

.

\

~

f

·100 SIZE ·

,

.10

$,.

CHOPP!O BROCCOLI. CORN,
M.tXED VEGETA8LES OR PEAS

FRIED CHICKEI ..... 2

MED. WIDE OR FINE.

~

FRESH CRISP

IKofdl.

BANQUET

NOODLES·.·........ n~·~~---~~.~~····
•

'

FROSTY ACRES

••••••••••
MONARCH

I'

CARDINAL

MONARCH .·
MONARCH

,.,•
,.

Qtrs.

FISH

CATSUP 3/$1 00

'·

'

MARSHMALLOWS·~~ :~ oi · 59c

14 .0Z. BTL

'

..

KRAA JET PUFFED

PEANUT
BOnER ,~~~z.

'•

I'

I·

limit twO with 110.00 purch..e

JIF

\

.. CALL, 992-2156 .
BEtWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5'PM

-1

Ol;

.

79

I

'i
I
!
•I '

ATTENTION:

.

LB. $179
············· -- -··

...fti=·
.•

•

. ' ' .•·

8
9
SPREAD
...............
2/8
KAHNS ALL MEAT
49
WI
EN
ERS
...............
!-!1:. '1
KAHNS ALL MEET
49
BOLOG.NA ........... }.~-~?.'1

··ranee

ute

xs:....~~2

.

BAC.
O
N
............
~;.
8
9
~
KAHNS

Askmenboat

..

• aui.tmas.w"kend .visltors, Mr.
and Mt&amp;: Q&amp;y Bush, Gene arid :Marlha, Westerville; Mr. aoo Mrs. Ken·
neth Brewer, Tere$1 and : Kenny1
Mra. Bill Tye, ColurnbWI; Mr. and
Mra. De11oey Smith; Jr., Rllcl~~~:, and
Pvt. Rict Bush, Fert McOellan,
Ala.

· , ·. · .

·.

Racine Social Events

Long Bottom Community Association news

.:patrlci!l McGee.

RSVP· introduces 'Vial of Life ' to

. '. '

. . .,.. 1/,12110
' Ooocl at C•,dlnt~l
lll ow•l lh•• l toJH

.-

---~

.........

·-

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�'

'

5-The ~tly Sentinel, Middl~.Pomeroy, 0 ., ~onday, J~. 7,1911 ,
.·
. . . .
',_.

4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o . ,Monday, Jan . 7, 19111

Health ·Review

The Meigs County Retii-ed Senior
seals 'are placed in the· front door
Volunteer
Program is inthxlucing window apd on the refrigeri!(C!f.door
'
the ''Vial. of Life" program to the
to alert medical teams that the
citizens of Meigs Councy.
knowledge regarding.the Individual
one person to anolher by direct conThe vial ·of life is a medical alert · can he found iJl1mediately .00 utiliztact or by use of brushes,' combs or
device which includes all vital
ed In an emergency crisis . The vtal
hats which the lice attach them- medical history, medieatioo, etc., of
I~ designed to give emergency crews
selves to. The eggs hatch in about 10 an individual. It is placed In the in- a head1start when they respooo to
days aoo mature in about two ' dividual's refrigerator and erange
calla fer help.
weeks. The adult Jives for about one
The RSVP volunteers plan to
month. During that one' month
make the vial fi life available to all
period, the female lays five to 10
residents of Meigs COunty, although
eggs per day .
their primarY CUloem at this time
QUESTION : How can I kill the
are persons who are elderly, Infirm,
lice present on my child's head and
homebound and/or handicapped.
prevent them fnm spreading to
The vial is free -of charge and Is
other members of the family?
available ID the public through the
ANSWER: The most common
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
treatment is the use of one percent
Residents may stop by the center
benzene h~achloride (Kwell)
and pli" up a vial, or may telephone
shampoo. Lindane, an insecticide, is
the shampoo's ingredient which kills
''Cookie Olympics " Is the theme of
the lice. The rich lather is kept in the
'
infected hair for the prescrihed the 1!110 Girl Scout cookie sale to
period of time in order to kill both take place Feb. I throughFeb. 16.
By Mrs. Francis Morris
the adult and the eggs. The Junior, senior and cadette scouts
Rev. and Mrs. Paul SeUers cl
destroyed eggs should be removed will be taking orders for seven
Gilboa spent several days over the
with a special li~thed comb. varieties of girl scout cookies baked
holidays with their sonin-law and
Parents should watch closely for the by the Little Brownie Bakers during
da~ter, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
maturing of eggs that may not have . the sale dates to be delivered March
Eynon aoo daughter. They called m
17-28.
bem killed.
Mrs. Francis Morris Saturday afThe varieties are Granola with all
All family members, including
ternoon.
adults, should be cheeked and natural ingredients; Samoa, a
Senior Airman and Mrs. Robert
treated if necessary. Contaminated chocolate, cannel and cocoout
Stemple and baby of San Berwashable clothing and sheets should cookie; thin mints, a chocolate mint
nardino, Calif. are visiting her
be laundered using a 20 minute hot coooe; Do-Si-Oos, a peanut butter
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simwash and machine dried at a hot sandwich; Vanchos, vanllla and
pson and his parents In Parkertemperture. Clothing . needing dry chocolate cremes; Tagalongs,
sburg, W.Va., while he is on leave.
cleaning can be taken ID a chocolate covered peanut butter patMr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie, Jeff
professional cleaners or stored in a ty, and Trefoil, shortbread.
and Jozie, of Gallipolis
Phil
The sale goal is 47,000 cases er , M:KEDzie and fiance, Miss Kim
plastic bag for a month. Washable
Items can alao be treated with Kwell 571,000 boxes in the Black Diamond
Parlin of Ohio State University were
shampoo. Because federal law Girl Scout CoWICU.
Christmas dinner gueslll rl. Mr. and
!X'ohibits dispensing the shampoo
Cost is $1.50 ~r box withe the cost
Mrs. Roy Rime.
without a prescription, patients breakdown being as follows: pro·must visit a physician to be treated duct· cost, 58 cents per box, troop
profit, :II cents pet:box, bonding, one
for head lice.
cent per bo:r, and' Cmmcil profit, 71
cents per box. . ·
The cookie sale is a tradition
which dates back the oorly 1930's
Brian and Angela, Ernestine and profits from the cookies glve
By Melody Roberti
Hayman, Paige, Beth, Ginger Girl Scoufll on opportunity to raise
The
Irene
Starcher family spent
Hayman, Roberta Larkins, Sadie funds for their troop activities, for
Christmas
with
Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Larkins , Mr. and Mrs. Martin camp develo!Dlent and for services
Sparks and family, Maaoo, W. Va.,
Nesselroad, Mr. and Mrs. stanley to troops.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young, Paden
Wells, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neulzling
City, W. Va.
and Jay, Jenny Newlun Travis and
Parkers entertain }or
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Tracie, Ruby Brewer, Janie Fitch,
Adams have been Mr. and Mrs.
Lila Ridenour, Floyd, Matt, KeUy ,
D!lvid Evans and family, Athens,
Shirley Salisbury, Adam, Aaron, holidays with dinners
,
Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Evans and famlly,
Phyllis Larkins, Emerson McDole,
Mr. and Mrs: Wilber Parker enter- Colwnbus, Mrs. Retta Ware aoo
Sanuny Ralrden, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
tained with two dil)ners during the daughters, Hebron, 0., Da.Je Evans
Bissel and Melody Roberts.
holiday season. · ,
and daughters rJ. Logan, M(. and
On Dec. 23 they hnsted the
Mrs ...Ronnle Hewitt, Bemald and
Michaels with 1J Chrisbnas dinner Kate Bobo, · Mr: and Mrs. Paul
aoo gift exchange. Present were Hauber and Scott, an local.
Samuel Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Mr. and Mrs. Garth !inith spent
MONDAY
Michael, Matthew, Klinberly and Christmas with Mrs. Ruth Stethem,
RA~ CHAPl'ER 1.34, Order of
Todd. Gary Michael &amp;Sed tbe bless· also · Mr. aoo and Mrs. Roland
the Eastern star, 7:30 Monday night ing.
Stethem. . .
at the Temple. Obligation night will
On Dec. 30, the annual Pearl
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. JO'!
be observed. New officers are to
Parker families' holiday dlnlier was
Bissell
and Kenneth have been Mr.
meet with the inStruction committee
held at their home. Present were
and
Mrs.
Joe A. Bissell, MaaCil, W.
before chapter opEns.
mr. aoo Mrs. Howard Parker, April
Va.,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Tom Gruenoveld'
MEIGS COUNTY SALON 710, and Aaron, Homer Parker, Suzy
Twuny
and his parents of
and
Eight and Forty, 7::tl Monday night Carpenter, Mr. aoo Mrs. Herbert
Michigan,
Mr.
and Mrs. Mike
at the Riverboat Roam of the Athens Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Marim
Bissell,
of
the
Columbus
region.
County Savings and Loan Co. Parker. Preceding the dinner, Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
steve
Holter aDd
Members are to take sale proceeds Wilber Parker asked the blessing.
family
c1.
Columbus
spent the
along with botUe caps.
The house was deeocated In keep- holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
ing with the Christmas season. The
SPECIAL MEETING of Meigs
Holter, Judy and Mark.
table centerpiece was an arra~e­
Athletic Boosters Monday, 7 p.m. at
The &lt;ltrlstmas program of the U.
ment of red silk roses and natural
high school. All interested persons
M. Church was well attended.
greenery. During the holiday
urged to attend.
The Golden Rule Suntll!y School
season,
the Wilber Parkers received
LEI'ART FAU.S PTQ Monday
class cl the Long Bottom Churches
O!ristmas pictures of their daughter
7:30p.m. at the school.
held tbeir Christmas dinner at the
and
her family, Martha, Joe and
TUESDAY
Methodist Church basement recenWill Poole, San Antonio, Te:ras, and
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday 7:30
tly. A turkey dinner with all the
talked
to their sons, Eric and Ed- · trimmings was served after the
p.m. Display of art.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for Retar- ward, of near Seattle, Washington,
mee~. A fruit basket was given to
ded Citize111 first meeting cl the new Eric Isba~ the ho.!lpital for more
all the slut-ins of the class. Atsurgery on lis left heel which W&amp;s inyear at the Meigs Inn, 7 p.m.
tending were Mr. and _Mrs. John
jured in an accient last March. His
Tuesday.· The association is to
Br;ewer, Hazel Curtis, Mr. and Mrs.
promote the general W!!.lf~.t. of per- address is St. ·Cllarles Hospital,
Joe B•ll and Kenneth, Bill
·
soos wilh mental retardatim. Allin· Beoo, Oregon, 97701.
H01111elton, Margaret Browil, Irene
terested individuals ar:e urged to atStarcher, Jerry Starcher, Dora
Salisbury honor roll
tend ID discuss the future directions
Qiapln, Leona Hensley, Mae Mccl programs for persons with mental
Peek.
The honer roll for the first sl:r
retaldation witlin Meigs County.
Mrs. Janet Hannem cl Coolville
weeks ~riod at the Salisbury
The public is invited.
was a recent caller at the HensleyElementary School was announced.
McPeek home. &lt;llriatmas guests of
MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS, 7:30
Making
a
grade
of.
"B"
er
above
to
the
hcme were Mr. aoo Mrs. Joe
Tuesday In the band room. All
be
named
to
the
hmer
roll
were
:
Biaselland Kenneth.
parents of band members urged ID
First Grade -No gradea,glven firMr. and Mrs. Paul hauher and
attend.
family )Jave been callers at tbe home
PORTLAND PTO meeting, 7 p.m. st grading period.
Second Grade - Tract Bartels,
of Ora SinClair at Sumner. Visiting
Tuesday at the school.
Melanie Beegle, He~ Caruthers,
the Hauber home have been Mr. aoo
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
KeUy Douglas, Wallace Hatfield,. Mrs. David Dailey and Rae Lynn,
CLUB, 7:30 Tuesday at the home of
Jay Hwnphreys', Kristin King, MarMr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnston,
Mrs. Cora Beegle. Ro!l call is fer
sha King, Deanna Norris, Michael
Jr. and Jeremy of Portlaoo, Mr. and
everyone to take a specimen of a Parker, Sandra Whaley. ·
Mrs. Doug Hauber, Tim and Kim,
dried material for an arrangement. , Third Grade - Marc Corsi, Wesley
Mr..and Mrs. Clyde Adams, Mr. and
Marianna Mitchell to give a pro- Young,
.
Mrs. T0111 Hayman, all local, Tracie
gram on contrived flowers. "'Let's
Fourth Grade - David Beegle, Sue • and Kathy Ware, Hebron, 0 ., Joyhce
Go Creative" will be the. theme of Ellen Fry, Lisa Frymyer, Audra
and Andy Bal~ tleveland.
the arrangement for the month. Houdashelt, Kevin V. King, Shannon
It is reported that the step-lather
Mrs. Pat 'fttoma will be the judge.
Slavin, Angela Sloan, Tamra Vance.
cl Mrs. Sue Hayman, Even Countlss
Fifth Grade. - Lin Olase, April
POMEROY CHAPI'ER 186, Order
of Pound, VIrginia passed away
Clark; Todd Cullwns, Darla King,
of the Eastern Star, 7:30 Tuesday
une:rpectedly Dec. 26.
Phillip ~g, Brenda Sinclair.
night at the P&lt;meroy Masooic TemGuests of Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Sixth Grade - Rose Barnhouse,
ple. lnstrucUon conunlttee will perBall over the boUdays were Mr. and
Jodi Harrison,, ,Rod . Harrison,
form.
Mrs. Doug Ball and family, Mon.
Darren Hayes, Angels Patterson
THURSDAY
.tgc;mery, W. Va., Joyce and Andy
ELEANOR CIRClE, Thursday, Cindy Sauters, Tim 'Sloan, Ani~
Ball, Cleveland, MJ:. and Mrs. BID
7:30 p.m. at the Heath ·United Smith.
Whitlock and famlly, Cleveland.
MeUiodlst Clwrcb, with Donna Byer,
Helen Byer and Gmce Jcimson as
hollteslles. There Will be a white
elephant sale.

.

By Robert G. Stoclullal,
D .O., Pb.D.

Assistant Profeuor ol
FamDy Medlclae
Oblo Ulllvershy College
Of Osteopatllle Medlelae
HOW TO DETECT HEAD LICE
&lt;Edltoc's note: While Dr. Lamar
Miller is on vacation, Dr. Robert
Stockmal will continue as guest
columnisl)
QUESI'ION : My child's classmate
was sent borne from school because
he had head lice. What do head lice
look like and how do I know if my
child is Infested?
ANSWER : The head louse is an insect which is grayish-white, nat,
slender and roughly the size ol a
pinhead. It is fairly active and can
be seen moving about. The female
Jays eggs · on the person's hairs
where they are finnly attached.
Although the eggs are quite small,
they are glistening white and can
abo be seen with the naked eye.
Parents should suspect the presence
of head lice when a child is observed
repeatedly scratching his head. The
wound produced by the bloOd
sucking louse becomes irritated and
ltciiY, causing the carrier great
discomfort.
QUESI'ION : How are head lice
spread from one Individual ID
another?
ANSWER : The head louse is ez:.
elusively a Iuman parasite. It is
more common among groups In
crowded quarters and individuals
with poor personal !IYgiene, but It
does not respect a person's social
status. The lice are transferred from

'Cookie

Olympics'
Feb. 1-16

By Melody ROUBh
The Long Bottom Community
Assoc. held ita secmd annual Christmas dinner for members and
families Dec. 28 in the coiiUDunity
Bldg.
Grace was given by Sammy Hairden. Mrs. Ernestine Hayman was in
charge of preparing the turkey and
dressing for the .dinner that most
members brought in covered dishes
and many desserts.
After the dinner coocluded, a short
busines session got underway with
the ptesident of the association,
Mrs. Leona Hensley, )l{eSiding.
Pledge of Allegiance, the Lord's
Prayer and a reading from the scripture was then given. Mrs. Mae McPeek gave a re)llrt of the inlriutes
from the last meeting. Mr.i: Er·
nestlne Hayman gave the
treasurer's report. And a list of
payments that were made also a llst
of those who had doll8ted money.
Also she gave a report on the
proceeds from a recent bake sale
~oo bazaar.
.
After the meeting em eluded, a gift
ez::change got underway. The group
was later entertained by Francis Andrew, Pearl Powell, Teresa . aoo
Brian Collins, Mary Ellen Andrew .
from Pennsylvania.
Attending were Mae McPeek;
Leona Hensley, Harlan Ballard,
Marjorie Brewer, Hazel Artis, Dora
Crispin, Francis Andrew, Nellie Andrew, Pearl Powell, Mary EllmAndrew, Mr. and ~ - Larry ColJins,

Rutland Honor roll
RU'l'LAND - The l)onor roll for
the first six weeks period at the
Rutland Elementary was an- ·
nounced. Students making the honor
roll received a ''B" average or better In all subjects. Students' names
In capital letters received all "A's. "
Secooo Grade - Angle Black, .
SheUy Black, Usa Darst, Billy Doczl, KIM EBIJN, Billy Haggy, Julie
Hatfield, Jimmy Hysell, ShaW!!
Lambert, Robby . Richmond,
RACHEL ROBISON, Terra
Schoonover, Angie Russell, BECKY
STILTNER, NATAUE TROMN,
Albert VanCooney, Tooy VanMeter, .
Sandy MarcuiD, Nicole Hartwell,
Angel Henderson.
Third Grade - Sherri Blair, Chad
Carson, Scott Edmonds, Sharm Fetty, Lori Fry, Joe Hall, ·Janelle
Hysel~ Sheila Hel'Miricks, Stacy
Hysell, · Tracy Hysell, Tracy
Michael ~ Vicki Priddy, Martha
Ne~. Melissa Pettry, J. R.
Walker, SABRINA WilSON. •
FOI!!'t!! Grade - Cilthy Blelllng,
~ Mlcbilel'" Bartrum, SCott Geyer,
· Mandl Fry, David Pettry, Mike
. ~llsh,. John Sisson, P. J .
Smlllwood, LISA MilLER, tom
::. I..auclermllt, Stephanie Mllan,

·

.

··' · Fifth Grade - Mlcbelle Peterson

· Loretta NcWak,JanetHyselJ, Reglna

Eblla, Mandl Black, Dianna Slek,
Diana Wilbmlon, Denny Weiilh,
· · U. Sellrles, Ruth Porter, Dayld
• Rumloo, Mike Searlel.
:, lbth ·Grade - Mindy McDonald,
; Sberry Willoli, G~ Kellllt!IY,
:ITodd Dlaf. ~ lfi:Ge!, HYin

. Mahr; Quia Black, Derm stafford,

:, D. R. Smith, Rebecca Jllrchf.ield.
:: Primary E.M.R. - Tina Romine,
1' Marty HutiDn, Peggy Estep.
Ivy . l!'rederlct,
; · E.M.R. : Charole~ Pallerson, David Dunkle,
:- Missy Riggs.

M~igs

aoo one will be delivered to their
home.
The program, according to RSVP
persOnnel was made'
pGasib' by
j'
contribuUon from the RaveiiiiWood
Employes Charities , Kaiser

a

Co.

U.S.D.A.

Aiuminwn . liJl(l atemicai Corp,
Ravenswood ..The donation was used
ID purchase all of the .suppliea to do
5,000 vials, enabling the RSVP to InItiate the projjram at no CO!It to in·
dlviduals who partiCipate.

iflLLSHIRE
.· REGULAR
OR' i'OLISH

.,
••
SAUSAGE ............ ~·......

Kings Island auditions
slated
. for 10 locations

aoo

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Social Calendar

'

to

LongBottom
News Notes

.

.

·CRiSPYSERVE

KINGS ISLAND, Ohio - Dan L.
Schultz, Director of Uve ·Shows at
Kings Island, announced today the
fanilly entertainment center will
hold'auditlons for new perforJD(!rs In
10 cities, beginning Tuesday,

_Janaary 15.
The citiesanddatesare:
Akron University, Akron, Music
and Theatre Aris Building, 2-li p.m ..,
January 15 ; Ohio state University,
Columbus, Drake Union, 12 noon-t
p.m., January 16; University of
Dayton, Dayton; Reichert Hall, 12 ·
noon-6 p.m., January 22; Butler
University, Indianapolis, Ind.,
Atherton Student Center, 2.0 pm·.,
Mrs. Ura Morris s)ientNewYear's
January
23 ; University of Louisville,
Day with Mrs. Anna Hilldore In
Louisville,
Ky., student Union, 2-6 .
Syracuse.
p.m.,
January
24 ; University ri. KenMrs. Helen Simpson returned
tucky,
Lemlgton,
Ky., Student
home after spending ten days over
Union,
2-6
p.m.
January
25; Kings
the holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
American
Heritage
Musk: '
Island,
Brian Simpson and famlly in
Hall, 2-0p.m.,January 26.
Baltlmure.
Others are: Bowling Green State
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley spent
University, Bowling Green; Student '
Jlfl few days over Christmas with Mr.
Unioo, 2-6 pm., JI!Jluary 28; Univer'Wand Mrs. Steve Badgley and
sity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.,
children In Columbus aoo Mr. and
Michigan Union, 1.0 p.m., January
Mrs. Brian Simpson and family In
29 ; and Indiana University;
Baltlmure.
Bloomlngron,
Ind., Memorial Union ··
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis and
Solarbun,
12
noon-t
p.m., January
daughter, Sue, of Lorain spent
30.
Christmas holida;,s with his parents,
A second audition for teclmicians,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Curtis.
guardettes,
and Hanna-Barbers
Mrs. Zella Taylor went by aircharacters will be held at Kings ,
plane Dec. 20 to visit her son, Mr.
Island on February 2 and 3, 10 a.m.
and Mrs. Lewis Talbott at Danville,
m.they brought her horne Saturday. to6p.m.
In !9al, there will be openings for
Melvin Weaver of Franklin spent
.
170
Jive shows positions at Kings
the weekerid 'lfith Mr. and Mrs.
Island.
These include singers, dan·
Douglas Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
cers,
musicians,
stage managers,
Adams and Mr. and Mrs'. Edison
supervisors
and
technicians. The
Brace.
salaries
range
from
$150 to $215.
Mr. . and Mrs. Bob Birch and ·
All
auditions
are
limited to two
daughtem cl Bellevue visited their
minutes
and
11_n
dccompanlst
will be
parents, Mr. ar.;J Mrs. Elza Birch
provided.
Performers
should
briilg
and Mrs. Emma Salser over New
sheet music in the correct key.
Year 's bolldaJ.
Singers will be expected to perform
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Simpson and
me alow and one fast song. Dancers
baby and Miss Carol Franklin cl
should prepare a short exemplary .
Seymour, loo. spent New Year's
dance routine. Musicians will play a
weekend with their grandmothers,
brief prepared selection and may be
Mrs. Gretta Simpson, Racine, and
required
to slghtread. Varlecy perMrs. Marguerite Winebrenner, Midfanners
and
groups should prepare
dleport.
'
.
exemplary
routine .
a
brief
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Simpson and
Minimum
age
for
the
positions
is 16.
chlldren, Senior .Ainnan and Mrs.
In
1860,
Kings
Island
wlllfeature
a
Robert Stemple aud'baby, and Mrs.
variety
of
live
shows
around
the
Greta Simpson spent New Year's
Day with Mr, and Mrs. Glenn Sim- park. For more information about
the auditions, can or write Kings
paon in Waverly, CJJ.
ProducUons, 1906 Highland Avenue, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Ralpll Shain of An·
Cincinnati, Ohio 45219, (513) 241ti~ty spent New Year's with her
111119.
mother, Mrs. Gamet Ervine.
Appro:rlmately 120 attended New
Year's Eve service at the First BapVl'Jri'SHERE
tist Church.
.
Mrs. Edith Sauer, Gahanna,
The home of Mr. aoo Mrs. ..,. former resident of Middleport, spent
Roderick Grimm was decorated for
Thursday here visiting Mr. and Mrs.
the holiday season for tbe December
Wllbl8' Koenis and son, Reed.
meeting rl. the Booster Sunday
School class of the First Baptist
Church. Mrs. Grlmn, teacher of the
Heinkel Corp. demonstrated the
class, served a Chrlstmls supper to
first plane powered by a rocket
18, Including Mr. Grlnun and Rev.
engine for Adolf Hitler and Hermann
Walker, who had grace. The meeting
Goering in 1939. But it wasn t until
opened with group singing "0 Cune,
1~ that Germany fielded the first
All Ye Faithful" and prayer by Mrs.
operational jet fighter for combat, .
Marie Walker. Scripture was Luke 2.
the Messersclunitt Me-262.
Mrs. Helen Simpson read a hymn
story on ''Hark the Herald ~els
Sing" by Cliff Barrows with singing
by the group. Members brought
readings for the !X'ogr&amp;m'u folloW! :
"What II the Quiib.nas Spll'it, ·~ "A
b
Pnmised Girt," "Jesui Loves Me,"
'
"Christmas Is the 'l'lme;" ''Girt for
the Klng1" ','Let Us K;eep Christ·
0118," "God's Girt cl Love," "Little
Ioffor • 10141 program to IIIIi&gt;
Angel," "Christian Nurture," •'God
prottct your family's woy olllvlng
Gave His Son," "let Us Be ~et." .
and buUd ftnandalMCWttyforyou~
"A Chrlstmu Prayer;" "It's Christ·
retlrtmo.[lt voan. e-n mo .1!&gt;1 iltllfls
0118," "Ught a Candle," ' 11111
MilE SWIGER,
CbriBtmall Roae." The group sang
,Middle
ort, 0. - 992-6685·
"Silent Night! Holy Night!" aoo
program cl01ed With · The Lord's
~tote Fonn lWoettd
Accident Auuranc:e
Prayer In uniSon. Gifts from Wider a
Compon,
lighted tree ilere e:rchanged alMI the
ttome Olfce
~ ~~om·ung'On, Klinois
group enjoyed singing carols.

SANDWI~H

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED .IN THEPOMEROY AREA
FOR 'TH£
DAitY SENTINEL·
'

'

.

'

WEEKEND VI8ITORS

Mrs. Lucille Clay of.Pomeroy had

'

'

'

..

I

,

•

r

,

~

.

..

'

STEAK ......~~.~.

LOI

\ \

VAUGHAN'S

9 -11 CHOPS

$ 29

Lb.

••••••••••••••••••
..'' .

DON'T
MISS

Middleport, Ohio

•,

.THESE
.JANUARY

r.

I

SEVERAL VARIETIES
FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

,CHRISTMAS
CANDY

BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

DUNCAN HINES

SALE DATES
JANUARY 7-1

QUANTITY RIGHTS
' RESERVED

1980

ASSORTED VARi e'!'tES

lf2 PRICE

c

MONARCH

'

: ""

.

,_

·:,.,;

.-·

''·'

'

'

61h OZ. CAN

OIL OR WATER PAC

'

2% MILK ........ ~~.~...$1 69
.GARVIN'S

PORK &amp; BEANS

PEACHES

16-~z. $
Cans

·

.10%-oz.
' Cans

RCH HALVES

COITAGE CHEESE ~N~z. 79~
IFREEZER VALUES I

210 SIZE

CAMPBELLS
CHICKEN NOODLE

VEGET ABLES ..3 ~~:: $1 °0

$ 00

ll((x til

HEAD
LETTUCE

II

3

't
••

It
I

FOR •. $ ·

00 ·

I

9
,a:ti
GLA~IER C'-UB
~. 0 ., , 139
ICE tiEAM ..................... em.
·

t.

I

'I
I

'

G·RAPEFRUIT

t

I

'I'

32 SIZE

'

$ 00

I

'

.

U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO

WASHINGTON STATE

POTATOES

·.10

RED DELICIOUS

AP,PLES

L8S.

'

ALL GRINDS

100
. SIZE ·

1 -Lb.

.621h ~RAVG.sg~

TANGERINES

Can

.TINES

9(

1.20 SIZE

10

fOR

A.ORIDA HAMLiN
.,

TANGELO.S

MAXWELL HOUSE,

.•.

I

l '. MARSH
. WHITE
!.

.

96-oz.
Bottle

'

00-10·01

ORANGES
.

.

\

~

f

·100 SIZE ·

,

.10

$,.

CHOPP!O BROCCOLI. CORN,
M.tXED VEGETA8LES OR PEAS

FRIED CHICKEI ..... 2

MED. WIDE OR FINE.

~

FRESH CRISP

IKofdl.

BANQUET

NOODLES·.·........ n~·~~---~~.~~····
•

'

FROSTY ACRES

••••••••••
MONARCH

I'

CARDINAL

MONARCH .·
MONARCH

,.,•
,.

Qtrs.

FISH

CATSUP 3/$1 00

'·

'

MARSHMALLOWS·~~ :~ oi · 59c

14 .0Z. BTL

'

..

KRAA JET PUFFED

PEANUT
BOnER ,~~~z.

'•

I'

I·

limit twO with 110.00 purch..e

JIF

\

.. CALL, 992-2156 .
BEtWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5'PM

-1

Ol;

.

79

I

'i
I
!
•I '

ATTENTION:

.

LB. $179
············· -- -··

...fti=·
.•

•

. ' ' .•·

8
9
SPREAD
...............
2/8
KAHNS ALL MEAT
49
WI
EN
ERS
...............
!-!1:. '1
KAHNS ALL MEET
49
BOLOG.NA ........... }.~-~?.'1

··ranee

ute

xs:....~~2

.

BAC.
O
N
............
~;.
8
9
~
KAHNS

Askmenboat

..

• aui.tmas.w"kend .visltors, Mr.
and Mt&amp;: Q&amp;y Bush, Gene arid :Marlha, Westerville; Mr. aoo Mrs. Ken·
neth Brewer, Tere$1 and : Kenny1
Mra. Bill Tye, ColurnbWI; Mr. and
Mra. De11oey Smith; Jr., Rllcl~~~:, and
Pvt. Rict Bush, Fert McOellan,
Ala.

· , ·. · .

·.

Racine Social Events

Long Bottom Community Association news

.:patrlci!l McGee.

RSVP· introduces 'Vial of Life ' to

. '. '

. . .,.. 1/,12110
' Ooocl at C•,dlnt~l
lll ow•l lh•• l toJH

.-

---~

.........

·-

~--

�.

&amp;- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 7, !980

7:-The DallySentlnel, Middleport-P~meroy, 0., Monday, Jan. 7, 1980

Your Best Buys Are i'outtd i11 the Scntittel Classifieds
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
- PROBATE DIVISION ·
ELIZABETH ANN LUCAS
Administratri• With the
Will Annexed of the Estate
of Ralph R . . Carman,

Deceased,

Plainlill,

-VS•

MABEL C. CARMAN
Whose last kno~n address
is Wheeling, W. Va. Oth er -

wise unknown,

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD ·
MINISTRATORS, EXEC ·
UTORSAND ASSIGNS, IF
ANY, OF EACH OF THE
FOLLOWING o
ARTHUR
CARMAN,
Deceased,
ALBERT
CARMAN ,

Deceased,

RALPH R . CARMAN,
a.k.a. Ralph R . Carmen ,

Deceased.

MARGARET CARMAN
DAVIS, Deceased,
MARGARET
DAVIS
SMITH,"Oeceased,
HENRY
CARMAN,
Deceased,

ELMER
COFFMAN,
Deceased,
MARY CARMAN' COFF ·

MAN, Deceased , ,

HELEN
COFFMAN
BAIER, Deceased,
ELMER
CARMAN ,

Deceased,

Defendants.

NO. 22319
- SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS
ABO\IE
NAMED o
You are hereby not ified
that vou have been nam ed
Defendants in a le ~a l ac ·
tion entitled: "E lizabeth

Deg . west 51 4· 10 teet lo a
stake ; thence sou t h 66 1/:l
Deg. west 115 8·10 feet to a
stake ; thence along the
road to the place of begi n
ning ,
Being the S(lm e Jot or
P.arcel of land convey ed to
John Baum , Sr. by Minnie
Kautz and husband by deed
dated June 2, 1916, and
re-corded in Vol. 113 , page

486 of the Deed Records of
Meigs County , Ohi o.
Bei.ng a portion of th e
real estate conve yed by
Irene McDowell .and Jdck
McDowell to Ka r l Grueser

by deed dated June I , 1945,
and recorded In V ol . 158,
Page 257 of the Deed
Records , Meigs · Coun t y,

Ohio.
Referen ce

Deeds : Vol.
263, Page 389 ; Vol. 263,
Pa9e 225 Deed Record s,
Me1gs Cou nty , Ohio .
and the demand of the
Compla i nt is to sell Defen dants ' interest in th e

above .

You are required to an ·
swer th e Com pla int with in
twenty ·eight days after th e
l ast publication of this
notice, namely , by not later
than the 11th day of
February ,
19 80 , or
judgment by default will be
r ender ed against you.
Elizabeth An n Lucas
Admi ni strator with
th e Wil l Annexed
of the Est ate of
Ra lpt1 R. Carman,
Deceased
Crow, crow and Porter
Attorneys for P laintiff

1121 3, 10, 17, 24,3 1 Ill 7,
14, 71

situated 1n the County of

Northeast corner of a lot
deeded
by
Fr ederi c k
Schreiner
to
Gehart
Schoneberger, tht!t'lce Nor ·
fh 80 Dep . East, 45 feeT;

thence a ri9hl angles to

this line and 10 a Southerly

direction 35 teet ; !hence at
right angle·s fo the line 1asf
mentioned and
in
a
Westerly di rect ion 45 feet
to a point in the East line of

15 Words or Under
CUb
Owge
lday
1.00
l.lii
1.50
UK!
3.00

2days

Jdays
&amp;days

Tue1day, Jan. 8

ASTRO·GRAPH
Befnice Bede Osol

~'-Your

.qJjrthday
January 8, 1980
lady Luck is going to take an
active rote In helping you get
things started this coming year.

t'cr Sale

1972 LYNN HAVEN 1-4K65 j

COAL .
LIME STONE ,
sand , gravel, calcium

1970 Vlndale 12x63 wilh ex ·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon t2x60 3 bdr .
1973 Skyline
12•-55 2

chloride,

bedroom

1.90'
2.26
3.75

F.ach word over the minirnwn
15 w-ords iJ 4 ~nts pe[" word per

bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12•52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBI LE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675 ·4424.

day . Ads~ otheUhancon­
sec utive days Will be charged at
ln

~mory ,

Giveaway
C.ard of ThanJt.s

and Obituary : 6 cent&amp; per word,
&amp;3.00 minimwn. Cash in ad·
vance .
Mobile Home sales Hnd Yanl
sales artt accepted cmly with
cash with order. 25 ~nt charge
for ads carryi]lg Box Nwnber In
C8reof'I'he Sentinel.

The Publisher reserves the'
right to edit or reject any ad:J
deemed obj ectiona l. The
Publisher will not be resporulble
for more than one incorrect In·
serttoo.
Phone 992·2156

H EAL THY

DOGS, pup·
pies, shots, wormed . Husky

e lkho und, - s}lepherd,
Pomeranian , Engl ish Set ·
rer , m ixed breed. Humane

Society, 9'12 ·6260 .
PUPS TO GO to good
home . Make nice pets for
children . 992 ·5557 .
THREE MAL E puppies, 8
weeks old . 99n8SJ .
PURE

WHITE

kitten ,

NOTICE

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thruFMday
4P.M.

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614 ·
698 ·3290 . Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
·boots. Children's $15.50 .
Adults $29.00.

Friday aftt-moon

Card of Thanks

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor . 614·367·7220.

. HILLCREST KENNELS.
the lady who · called my
Boarding, a II breeds. crean
home to tel l me my house
indoor-outdoor facilities .
was on fire . God bless you_
Also
AKC
registered
Thank you . Dave, Ruth
Dobermans . 614·446·7795 .
Campbell and family .
ONE redtick coon hound, 2
trained beagles, 3 white
Notices
English bulldog puppies, 3
rabbits, 2 does, 1 buck . 742·
MEIGS
COUNTY
2521 .
HUMANE SOCIETY. 992 ·
6260. Pets available for
adopt ion and information
GIVE A CUTE liveable pup
service .
Investigative
a future . Adopt an orphan
Agent .
fr o m · your
Human e
SOciety . Shots, wormed .
Donations appreciated .
GUN SHOOT EVERY
99'1-6260.
SUNDAY I PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
1 want to sincerely thank

Auto Sales

Ra cine
Dept .

Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
At their build ing in Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

sai d - Schoneber~er's lot;
thence along sa1d Gehart
She may even heve a lew advenGU N SHOOT every Sunday
Schoneberger 's East line t o
turesome activities planned as
12 :00. Factory choke only .
the place of beginnin g, ex · ' well.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
ceptino .the ·coal and other
CAI&gt;RICORN (Dec. 2:1-Jon. :Ill)
~nerals and the right t o
Rutland . Proceeds donated
Your concepts and their applicamlhe the same without in - tions have tremendous wortt1
to Boy Seoul Troop 249.
cumbrance to the surface.
and will be treated with the
and, the right to fence said
respect they deserve wt1en pre1 PAY highest pr ices
lot
sented to others. Find out more
possible for gold and silver
Being the same property ol
what lies ahead lor vou In the
convered ' to the said year
coins, r ings, jewelry, etc.
following your birthday by
Rober 0 . Schmoll from the . sending
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
for
your
copy
of
Aslrotrustees of the St. Paul 's
Shop, Middleport.
Evangelical and Reformed Graph letter . Mail $ 1 lor eacn to
Church of Mi nersv ille , Astra-Gr aph , Box 489 , Radio
Station , N.Y. 10019. Be sure
Ohio, by deed dated City
ATTENTION:
(1M ~
to specify birlh date.
February 161h. 1948, a1 od
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
AQUARIUS
(Jan.
20·
Feb.
19)
recorded in Deed Book No.
pay cash
certified check
Situations having an air ot mys161-'- Page 185, M eigs Cou~ ·
for antiques and coflec ·
tery abou t them or with glamoty ueed Records.
t ibles or entire estates.
PARCEL 2: Beiog the rous overtones should bring you
good luck tod ay. Ttley "ll add
Nothing too large . Also,
following described real
some excitement to your lite es
guns , pocket watches and
estate, sit uate in 100 acre
lot No. 301 in Town 2 and well.
coi n collections . Call 614 Renge 13 in the said County PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) An
767 ·3167 or 557 ·3411.
undertaking . about which you
of Meigs, near the school
may have been a l•ttle dub ious
house on said 100 Acre lot
BUYING U.S. SILVER
No . 301 , described as wilt work out fan tastically well
folloWS i that Is to say:
today, !hanks to the cooperation
COINS DATED 1964 OR
Beginning at the Southeast
you'll encounler.
EARLIER
IANY
corner of a lot be longing to ARIES (Merch 21 -Apri119) PresAMOUNT! . OON 'T LOSE
Frederick
Schreiner,
ent your ideas to anyone who Is
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
deceased ; thence along the
tn a position to develop them
UP TH E PHONE AND
East line of said lot 150 teet One. it pul to work . could turn
DIAL
614 · 992 ·5113,
to the Northeast corner of
out to be extremely valuabl e.
BROWN'S .
the Schreiner lot ; th ence
TAURUS (April 2~Ma, 20)
North about 80 Deg . East 80 Things cou ld be brightening for
feet; thence South parallel
you materially today because ol
IN COME TAX SERVICE .
with the west line of Phillip
lhe inlervention ot a trlend. The
1
Quarterly , Federal and all
Bear s lot to the street r un- favor cou ld be a r eally big one.
state income tax reports
ning . towards the Ohio GEMINI (May 21-Junt 20) You
RiYer ; thence along said
will be pr epared by ap could be exceptionally lucky for
Street 80 feet to the place of
yourself, as well as for those witt1 · pointment . 992 -2272 or see
beginning .
wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff.
whom you come in contacl
Excerting and reserv ing loday.
because of your cleverRd ., Pomer oy .
the coa and other minerals
ness.
therein w ith the right to
(Juna 21-JuJy 22)
mine the same without in· CANCER
You're not fooled today Into
cumbrance to the surface
lhlnklng the grass Is greener In
a,,_, _
Jnd right of
someone else ' s back~ard .
way aJony any m1neral
ORDINANCE
Because ol this you'll a~~:perlence
seam ere hereby reserved .
NO. 509
the
greatest
pleasures
with
your
And being the same land
ORDINANCE PROHIBI·
loved
ones.
deeded March 12Th . 1868 to
TING
PARKING
OF
Jacob Massar by V . B . Hor · LEO (Juty 23-Aug, 22) Helpful
MOTOR VEHICLES OR
contacts
and
your
dear
thinking
ton and c . A. Horton and
LOADED VEHICLES ON
Is the perfect recipe for putting
recorded in Record of
PAVED PORTION OF C.
together
en
extremely
successful
Deeds of Meigs County,
AND 0 . RIGHT-QF·WAY
Ohio, \lol. 33, "Pages 376 and day. You'll achieve thai wt1tct1
THAT LAYS BETWEEN
377 . .
you anvlslon.
·
SYCAMORE
STREET

or

Federal

Phone

Veterans Admin .

669 ·

APPLES - ROM E beauty
apples at S--4 per bu , Best for
apple butter . Ca ll 669 ·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orc hard, SR
689.

I

Housing

&amp;

Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

•

Hours9-1 M., W., F.
Other limes by appointment,
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

Help wantE)d
EXPERIENCED

ta x
prepare~a nled. 1-lourly
rate and bonus pl~n - Full or
part -t -ime hours . capital
Finance Services . Phone
992 ··2111 today . Equal Op ·
portunity Employers . M ·F.

STOCK
CAR .
Howe
chassis, 350 4 bolt main
Chevy, Franklin quick
change rear end. motor
built to maximum, alt new
parts. New and extra tires.
Extra parts and r i ms.

$5,0110. Can be seen on a
Saturday, Twp. Rd . 27,
Dexter, at Slater's residen·

Need a receptionist who
is a good accurate
typest, good in short·
hand, knowledge in
bookkeeping helpful but
not essential, must have
good personality and
like to meet people.
Also need a good recep tionist who is a good
typest and has a
knowledge of bookkeep·
ing.
Good fringe benefits .
Apply in person al
Pomeroy Landmark in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
992·2!81 . Interviews will
be arranged.
"

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. S10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992 ·2689.
OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M .D.
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca 11 992 ·7760.

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

OHIO.VALlEY
ROOFING

H. L WRITESEL

Roofing, gut1ers, and
downs pouts.
Free

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleiN1ing and painting.
AU work guaranteed',
FrV!I-E11lmaw
Reasonatple Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
11 ·14-mo.

ROOFING

work

All

collect,. Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
~97 ·2745.
12 -7-1 mo.

1976 1h ton pickup truck in
good condition . 992 ··5786

from95p.m .
1975 4-dor Ford 'Landau ,
P.S., P.B., all power . E•·
cellenl condiTion. $2495.
call9'12·5304or 9'12 ·2238.

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomero y. Large lots. Call
992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furn ished ap
ts. PhOne 992 ·5434 .
TWO BEDROOM trailer.
Adults only 992 ·332-4.
TWO BEDROOM furnished
apt., $165

mo . plus uti lities .

I child , n o pelS . 949·2377, or
after 5p .m . 949·2875.
HOUSE FOR RENT , Mid·
dleport. Completely fur
nished . Also, sleeping
rooms, refrigeration and

TV . ca II 9'12· 7791 weekdays
after -1.
12•60

TWO

BEDROOM

mobile honie . Racin e area .

-992 ·5858.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) By all

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furniture . Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992 ·6370.
PAYING $14 .50 ANO UP
FOR SILVER DOLLARS,
$13.20 FOR SILVER
CHANGE, GOLD COINS
AN.D MISC . ITEMS AT
HONEST UP· TO ·DATE
PR ICE5. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARGER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH . OR CALL 992 --3476 AF ·
TER 5:00P.M.

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

let Us

Remodeling ·

Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold weather

•New Kitchens
*Bathrooms
*New Home
*Add Ons
*Remoldings
•Free Estimates

•-7

I JELGUN I
I KIJ

CAPfAIN EASY ,
&lt;

Y'~EE .. CHRIS'S FATHER WAS

A ZOO~OEiliST•. MAYBE THAT'IP
WHERE CH.Rii!' GOT HIS LOVE
' OF ANIMA~Jr l

HIS O~D MAN
WA5 INTO WILDLIFE ·

THAT~

P~ESfRVATION ~ONG

Siding
Brick Work

t
I J

IJ

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Block Work

Cheap Rates
Qua I ity Service
Call 992-2852
· or 992-7235

Guaranteed Work
Free Eslimales
Aller 5 P.M. 992·5547
12·13·2 mo. pd .

12·13pd .

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of

Lost and Found
LOST :

Snowville

Female

blu e

pool kits. Do-it -yourself or

area .
t ic k

lei us install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, tnc.
992·5724.

coonhound. If seen,c all
Paul Phi II Ips at 742 2209 .

BRAOFORD, Auc tioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949· 2487 or 949-2000. racine,

Rejll Estate for Sale

Oh io, Critt Bradford .
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower.
Nexl to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

.
BEDRO.OM

THREE
home
on a big lol. Can be par ~ ·
tiaiiY financed . Call Guido
Girolami . 992·5786, 10·6. No

realtors.

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. ScolchQuard . 992·
6309or 742·2348.
WALL PAPERING
painting . '742·2328.

608 E .
MAIN . .
POMEROY,O.
.. 992·2259
WOULD
YOU
BE·
LIEVE - A beautiful
kitchen with a bar and
dining
area,
3
bedrooms, a family
room, a rec. room, a TV
rooma nd a new swimm ·
ing pool tor only
$39,500 .00.
STOP PAYING RENT
let someone else
make your house payment ,f or you . Large
brick
duplex
In
Syracuse . Live in part
and renl_part. 528,000.00.
HANDYMAN'S
SPECIAL - 2 apart·
menl frame In Mid ·
. dleport . Always has
renters. On a corner lot.
$10,900.00.
.
WOODLAND
HOMESITES Ap·
prox. 2.5 acres. some lots
surveyed, water and
electric available, road
develOPed to properly .
$27,500.00.
LO\IELY 2 story
home overlooking !he
river . Has 3 bedrooms,
rec . room. full basemen), and equipped kif·
chen. $l5, 900.00. •
WE HAVE , READY
BUYERS FOR YOUR
PROPERTY.
LIST
WITH US.
REALTOR
Henry E. CLelana, Jr.
'192-6191
ASSOCIATES ·
Jean Trussell 949·2668
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742·2474
OFFICE PI!ONE
'192-2259

BORN LOSER

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCI NG ·\IA· FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAY/y\ENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614·592 ·3051.

HOBSTIDER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISTING - Ex ·
ceptlonal buy. 2 homes
on Beech Grove Road.
Both in e•cellenl shape.
Live In one and rent the
other . Situated on 10
good acres. Call tor all
details. Good Income
producing property,
MIDDLEPORT - Ex ·
ecullve style 5 bedroom
' home. 2 full baths.
modern kitchen, family
room, living room and
full basement. Many
nice features to this
home. Call for an appt,
NEW LISTING - 2.41
acres across from
Eastern High . Very ·
good building site. Ask ·
ing $7.000.00.
RUTLAND Total
electric, 3 bedroom,
brick home on M8in
Street. 1'12 baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room.and full basement.
Asking S-43,500,00.
NEW LISTING - Cozy
3 bedroom home In
Syracuse on . Cherry
Street. Living room, kit·
chen, bath and basement. Small lot wllh
building. A real buy al
only $10,000 .00. Beller
check this one oulll , •
NEW LISTING - Quail:
!y buIll new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, utilitY
and living room , Kif·

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

HOMES FOR SALE

WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOW
AS 5% DOWN AND 30·YRS. TO PAY

LANDMARK

u••••• .

c·hen

has

garage

dl sposal
and
dishwasher . Situated on
a IIHie oYer an acre.
Must see to appreciate
workmanship. Sells for
$.45,600.00.
:
Our homes are selling,
, We · can help put
qualified buyers find
financing. Call · us ana
Rtal
alsc'uss your
Eslato problems, we'll
be gl&lt;la to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
·Phont742·2f03·,
Velma Nlclnllcy, Assoc.
PhoneJtHOH
George Hollstetttr Jr.
a roker "2·5739

4

CALL 992·2342

s.

12't&gt;~,

WI.~

WATC-H 'buR

Roger Hysell

BRIDGE·

~L.OU5'(

CHRI5TM/IG
TIPt ........:::.

)

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

!
l

Garage

,l
i

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

i

Partner's signal misread
Alan: "One time when it is
likely to go wrong is when
NORTH
1 ~1
your partner opens a suit -and
• Q 10. 2
you attempt to tell him to
y AJ4
+-Tosh;;;;ilt 10 a specific suit rather
t965
tnan play a high card to sug+AKQ
gest that partner continue and
WEST
EAST
a low card to suggest tha t he
+KJ
+A 8 6 4
shift to some other suit."
¥53
¥6
Oswald: "East played his
tAKJ841
• Q 10 2
ten of diamonds at trick one.
+8 13
+J9752
West read this as a come-on
SOUTH
and continued whereupon
• 9 73
South took his ten tricks
"K Q 1098 72
quickly and chalked up game
• •7
and rubber. East felt that his
10 6
ten had called for a spade
shift since West knew that
Vulnerable: Both
South
was goinll to ruff the
Dealer: West
second diamond. '
West North E11st
South
Alan: " I agree with East
It
Obi.
2t
1•
that West should have led his
Pass
Pass
Pass
king of spades at trick two.
However, I would have played
the deuce of diamonds, not the
ten. "
Opening lead:+ K
Oswald: "Naturally. You
have raised diamonds. You
want your partner to shift and
there is no way that you can
want a club shift so that deuce
By Oswald Jacoby
cannot be a suit preference
and Alan Son lag
signal."
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
Oswald: "The suit preference signal is a valuable tool
(For a copy of JACOBY
when used properly but like
most modern expert conven- MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspations it c an boomerang
against its user and hit him per, P.O. Box 489, Radio City "
Station, New York, N. Y.
right in the face if not used
10019.)
properly."

~
r-7

. . ,; ; :;,;,. ! liiiilil~~..~~
I HOPE HE
Etil'OYS THE
FLOOR SHOW,
THEN ...

OO·Ifc

WILL 1-tAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

IT'S THE

QUIET! LOOt(

THING HE'S GOING 10 ~'~vI
FOR A ~ONG TIME! _....---!,.;~=::_..

ABOuT YOU'
WHAT DON'T

LETS iQ_! .

'iOU

SEE?.

MACHINE

+

'

all

''

makes . 992 ·22.84.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sha r pen
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator 's license? Phone
9'12·2143.

WE'D SETTER GATH5~ UP
THtS FRUrr; Ya., AND
~ ON OUR WJI:t'!

Real Estate for Sale

216 E. 5ol'!"'d Slr"l
MOBILE HOME - 3
bedr-ooms, 2 b8lhs, fore ·
ed air heal, stove.
refrigerator, and other
furniture . 7/8 of an acre

Do 40u thin!~,
he's a devil-

near Harrisonville.
4 ACRES - Near Mid·
dleport on hard road.
Two trailer hookups, a
one bedroom trailer and
large uti lilY bldg ,
$925.00 OOWN - Bal .
about like rent , J
bedrooms., natural gas
furnace, basement and
nice lot.
RANCH - Woodburn ·
;rig fireplace, l•rge win·
dows, view of !he river,
full basement and front
porch. $1,000.00 DOWN,
BUS. BLDG. - Or a
cheap, 2 bedroom home
with bath, and nat. gas
tor only $11,000 .00. 51•
Hundred down .
WHERE CAN YOU
GET MORE
FOR
YOUR MONEY THAN
AN INVESTMENT IN
PROPERTY.
992·332S OR ~2-3176

donke~?

t'lcru•"w
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Sillij!

ACROSS

~ome

people

qet

Prime or
grade A -

DOWN
1 Whip

11 Put OJ1 lbe
market again 2 European
13 Arabian
capital
monarchy
It Quiescence
15 Fence in
18 Baron's hue
17 Morrow
or Damone
18 Attire
20 Spanbh
queen
21 -to
(total) .

WINNIE

EV/lRYTHINe/

41

5 MIWm
18 House wear

\ +h:o~'c all'

8UT WAIT... I

to Separate

· stomach

stranqe
ideas.

CAN EXPlAIN

38 Barbara -

1 Blrd's

WENOY15 RIGHT, RJLKS.
THE5E ARE HER
!=RIEN1?.5. THEY HELPED
HER MOVE. 1HE PAIZTY
WA5 1HEIR II?EA!

S Emulated ·
lbe Titanic
crew
t Skin growth
5 Halt
8 Gary Cooper
role
7 Snake
8 Leave
the ship
9 "Hamlet"

Yeotenllly'• AMwer
1Z Rotted away Z7 Valjean's
II Nevada city
nemesis
u Wrinkle
zt Under!1 Hoards
ground
!2 Victor Herbert worller
heroine
13 Brainstonn
Z3 Hardy
14 Camper's
heroine
Item
Z3 "Old Man - M Gardner

setting

23 Actor

Is Dead"

ousing
Headquarters

UTropical
fruit
Z3

SAVE ·oN :CA'RPET .
DRIVE A'\111\.E
SAVE A LOT '

Measuring

deVice ....,
(Brit. '!':) "i'
ZIField
( .

2'7 Kidded

'

.l

ZIA Caesar

2t BIWard shot
31 His: Fr.

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

I PUllED AN

*4!!up

: ARM MUS.C.tE

~ THIS MORNIN~

•' DOC, Al\l. '--

Cuh&amp;Carry

b-1--.+--i--+.-

31 "-Got a

SET DOWI\I, ELVII\IEY,
AN' I'Ll TAKE A
LOOK AT IT

Crush on

ITWUZN'T MV
ARM MUSCLE
I PULLED

You"
32Tend
to junior

35Gas used

.SAlE ON ALL .

as fuel

3'1 French

ltf STOCK·

wtlter

38 Dutch coin

.,~,~UP

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

. 1nste.llldwlllt PIG f r "

A X Y D L B A A X ·a
It L 0 N G F E .L L 0 W

GOOD REMNANT
SELt.CTION
6'X12' to 12'X16'

$3811)
·

up

. and_

can 742-2211

. One letter simply otlinda for ·onotber. In tbla Simple A II

,.
;!

~

•

..ed for the three L's, X for the 1wo O'a, ·etc. SIDIIt letten,
1pootropbee, the lenatb and formaUon of the words 1re 111
hints. Each diy the code letters are dllferent.
__

"·.

CRYPTOQUOTIS

't

f

•

'RU'II.AND . r
:FURNITURE :·
· -' ·Ruitand, o:
J.;;;;,o,.;.;,;;;.;.;;;.;.;;;.:.;;-._
.....;

J".

·UOQIVV _U.NIO' Q
KVPK Z A

AUJI

.

Q W·l

.-

--.--.!-1.' , -

~

t

KY -1

S0 X R X SVK Y

RG .KOZQWUON.-MUO WSDDKYJ
Yellerday't Ct-yptoqaote: UTTLE MINDS ARE TAMED AND
SUBDPED BY MISFORTUNES,; BUT GREAT MINDS RISE

.

&lt;'

R -0

XIRX•p

'

-

. . ABOVE IT.- WASIUNGTON
IRVING .
.
-

n Bauble

Donahue

'

. I

HUMBLE

Monday, Jan. 7

RACINE, 0 .
949·2748 or
992-7314
12·28-Pd.

and

PIANO TUNING . Lane
Daniels. New phone num ·
ber, 7-42 · 29~1. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

BLOODY

Jumble Book No. 12, cont1lnlng 110 puuf••.l• lnltabl• ror S1 .75 pollplld
tromJumbl1, cloth I~ n1W1p1per, Bo~~: 3.4, NorwOOd, N.J.07848-1nc:fudt your
n•me, 1dd~1.., zip coct. lnd mlkt checks p1yable to Nawap•perbooh.

Scissors.

FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
9'12-7559 .

TWEET

.. HE 'S NOT HOME YET ..

work', ·. dawn

service,

I XI I I ][ I J XJ

Answer : " Can I borrow your t~wn mower?" -

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Repairs,

gested by 1he above ca~oon .

(Answers toinorrow)

spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

SEWING

Now arrange the circted Jeners to
form the surprise answer, as sug-

Saturday·sl Jumbl,es: SYLPH

RuTland.

Concrete Finishing

WHAi "THE MEAL
Mi~HT 65 WHEN
THEFI!i:'e&gt; SPAGHETTI,

tYIVELT

8i.JSY CAREER WOMAN
,, I GU!S:.* THE POOR
I&lt;ID'i!' SPENT A LOTTA
TIME: ALONe l

&amp;E:FOR! TH!! ENVIfl:OI&gt;J·
MEt.JTALI!&gt;T5 GOT
EXCITE!' ABOUT IT!

1~·(Pd . l

RIGHT--AND

HIS MOTHER5 NOW A

l '4 mile off At. 1 by .pass ,
on St . Rt . 114 toward

Additions

- AND
BUTTERNUT
The 30 feel by 40 feet of means take the leadershiP; f.ole In
AVENUE
AND IIET·
Services Offered
any dealings today lnvblvlng
above described land
WEEN THE NORTHERN
others. Lady Luck guides you. so
heretofore deeded to the
PORTION OF THE TWO WILL DO odds and ends,
WANTED TO BUY o lawn
you shouldn't make an~
German Prolestanl Church
PARKING LOTS AND paneling, floor tile, ceiling
and garden tractor . In good
of Minersville, Ohio , "is mistakes.·
SOUTHERN BOUNDARY tile . Fred Miller, 992-6338.
hereby reserved. and ex · J!BAA (S.pt. 23-0ct 23), Your
'condition. Phone 992 -5247 .
ON MAIN STREET IN
cepted in this transfer .
h\l nct1es and insight s are .
THE
VILLAGE OF
POMEROY, OHIO.
The ·atoresaid ;eal estate extremely valuable today. Tru st
BE IT ORDAINED by
being the same real estate tt1em to steer you toward wh o
Real Estate for ·Sale
lhe Council of the Village of
HOTPOINT
conveyed to Florence Car - you shou ld be with and what you
Pomeroy, Ohio, all mem ·
men who was also known should be doing.
and
bers. concurring thereto :
as Florence Kerman, by SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No"- 22) This
Sec. 1. That the VIllage of
Jacob Massar and wife by · is one or those unusual limes
Pomeroy, Ohio hereby
deed recorded i n Deed when others are willing lo give
prohibits any motor vehicle
Book 93 al Page 296 of the you almost anything you wanl In
or loaded vehicle of any
Meigs County Deed Recor - return for a kindness you render
type, weighing more than
them. Make your deal now.
ds .
Headquarlers
6,000 pounds to park on !hat
PARCEL
3o
T h e SAG!ITAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
AppliAnces
paved·
area
of
the
C.
and
o
.
following Real Estate Something tlUite sizable could be
Safes.&amp;
Service
rlght·of·way
laying
bel·
situate In !he Vi llage of placed in your hand s today. but
ween Sycamore Street and
Minersville, Me igs County , il calls for you to use your smarts
Butternut Ave., in the
Ohio, anc more par · . in developing il . You·re more
POMEROY
Village of Pomeroy and the
11cularly descr ibed as than up 10 it.
northern portion of , the
follows : Being sixty 1601
(NEWSPAI•(A ( NI[APfitS6 ASS N I
parking lots and !he
feel off !he westerly side of
t;"?.., _Jack W. Carsey
LIKE NEW - Qu iet country living in fhis tree
southern right -of-way line
GASOHOL TEST
Lol No. 53 In MinPrsvllle,
bedroom , 2 bath ranch . Over an ac·re of ground with
of Main Street in the
~
Mgr,
Meigs County! Ohio, known
OMAHA, Neb. (AP)
·Village of Pomeroy, Ohio.
, a s plit rail fence , garage and ~orkshop . Fireplace,
and qeslgn• ed as sub.
Phone991·2:111
Sec . 2. That any one
Gasohol is being _ test
" B"OO llelng slxly (60) feet
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00.
·
v iolating this Ordinance
fronting on Cliff Street and mal\eted here and in Des
~~
--,:=--:-:--shall be fined not less Than
running In a oortherly
POMEROY - ·A beautiful little starter home · or
For Sale
$25.00 nor morlf than $50.00
direction at right angle Moines and Council Bluffs.
rellremenl couple . Two bedroom and bath. Large
tor each vlole-tlon thereof.
wllh said Cliff Street Two
Phillips Petroleum said
living room
nice kitchen . Full baser:nent.
Sec.
3.
This
Ordinance
is
hundred .c200) feel .
CURED
firewood,
$17,500.00.
hereby dec lared to be an
. Deed Reference: Vol. the gasohol - 90 percent
reasOnably prloed . 742 ·
225.L Pave 579, Meigs Coun · unleaded gasoline and 10 emergency necessary tor
254-1 .
the public saf~&gt;ty and public
MIDDLEPORT ~ 2 be&lt;lroom brick only 1 block
ty uee&lt;l Records .
welfare of !he village of
PARCEL
~ :
Th e percent ethanol - is being
from town, low u ~H ities . A barga in at $12,500.
. Pomeroy, and is to go Info
following descr ibed ·real
evaluated for its handling
ZENITH television for par effect
Immediately
.
.
estalesiluate In the Stale of
RUTLAND ~ 2 homes on Salem Street. 'rake your
ts . 992·7015.
Passed: December 17th,
Ohlp, County of Meigs and properties and cust001er
choice or buy both and r~ntlhem, $12,000each.
1979.
Townsh iP of Sullon and acceptance, because li is
Clarence Andrews
Village of M inersville and
UTILITY
TOOl.
chest
'
tor
Mayor
bounded and described as one possibility for inpickup, S75 , Inquire at 400
follows : Beginning at the creasing supplies of motor
Lasley St .. Ppmeroy , OH . ·
H. D . Brown. Jr;
south carne• of a two acre
President
lol deedtld b\1 V. B. Horton . ,fuel.
ATTEST :
Bill C~ilds, Branch M~nager, ~ome 992· 2449
to Danlol DeWolfe In 100
BLACK
DIAMOND '
The
test
program could Jane Walton
Roaney Downing, Broker, Home 992·3731
•ere Lot No. 301 Town 2,
llnement,
Shaklee
organic
Clerk
Range 13 of !he Ohio Com · be e.pandedit'rnmlfS"are
Rawlelgh
' produ c ts ,
, NUbDLEPORT, OHIO
,
pan\" s Purchase ; Thence favorable, the company
produ cts . 992 ·7825.
(12) 31 (1) 7, 2tc
Nor h66Deg . East ' "lfeet
to" stak~ . thence North 45 said.

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

Kl]

SIDING

Gutter

N. L CONSTRUCTION

evenings .

MARTIN'S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience in buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur niture . One piece or com plete household . Gold ,
silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razo rs , pocket
knives and other old items.
Call 992·6370.

'

MONDAY,JANl4RY 7,1910

I DAHYN .,

.;reP.

ANTIQUE POCKET wat·
ches. Willing to pay lOP
dollar . Call 1·592 ·2973
OLD COINS, pocket wat ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver. Call J . A . Wamsley ,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens , OH . 592·
6462.

~

Prfntanswerhere: [

ce.
1974 Plymouth Scamp ,
custom interior, 6 cyl.,
auto ., $1900 or trade. 7.12·
2451.

I (J

10·19·1 mo.

'

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney , antiQues. 26 N .
2nd, Middleport, 0 H. 992 ·
3161.

elnsulation
eStorm Doors
eStorm Windows
•Replcicement Win -

dowS ·

perience. call Athens,

NEED lWO
OFFICE GIRLS

IORRAM

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM:

Aluminum Siding

CALL 992-7544

Pets for Sale

RISING STAR Kennel .
Boarding . Call 367 ·0292 .

SUnday
jP.M.

Fire

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or ·
chard, ~State Route 689 .
Wilkesville,

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

guaranteed. 20 years ex-

the day before publication

SHOOT .

food, and· all lypes of salt.
Excelsior Salt Wor ks, Inc.,
E . Main St. , Pomeroy, 992 ·
3891.

Television
Viewing

Unscramble thf!Se lour Jumbles,

one Jetter to each Square , to lorm
lour ordinary words.

Business Services

1

Estimates .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Volunteer

dog

NI CE PIG S for sale. Wor med , c as trated. 949 -2857 .

Humane Society . 992-6260.

GUN

fertilizer,

3785.

the 1day rate.

Monday

PROBATE COURT
DFMEIGS
COUNTY, OH 10
ESTATE OF EDNA KEN ·
Ann Lucas, Administratrix
NEDY, DECEASED
With the Wi l l Annexed of
22932
th e Estate of Ralph Ca r · . case No.
NOTICE OF
man, Deceased,
Vs.
APPOINTMENT
E l il:abeth Ann Lucas ,
OF FIDUCIARY
eta I. " in the Cornman Pleas
On January 2, 1980, in the
Court of Meigs County, Meigs
County Probate
Ohio
Probate Division,
Case No . 22319, the demand Court, Case No. 22932,
Robert Arthur Winn, 2740
being tor the sale of the en · Crone
Road, Xenia, Ohio
tire interest in the real
45385
was
appointed
estate
hereinafter
Executor of the es tate of
described in order to pay
Edna Kenned~, deceased,
the debts of the decedent,
late of 525 South Broadway,
Ralph R. Carman 1 and the
costs of administration . M iddl eport , Ohio 45760 .
The real estate is desc ribed
Robert E. Buck
as follows :
Probate Judge
PARCEL
1o
The
Clerk
followinQ Real Estate 1117. 14, 21. ltc
Mei9s, In the State of Oh1o,
and 1n the V illage of Miner sville, to·wit : Being a p art
of 100 acre lot No. 301 in
Town No. 2, Range N o. 13,
in said County of Meigs,
particu larly described as
follows : Beginning at the

WANT AD
CHARGES

'ft\1\JNl

fi!}'if ~ THATSCRAMBLEOWORDOAME
~ ~ ~Ul,~ o.
byHer,;iArnoJd8ndBoblee

DICK TRACY'

••

Mobile Hqmes - Sale

.'

'

'

-

JoOO-Cross-WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Muppet Show li; MacNeil Lehrer Report 33; News 10;
Hometown USA -13;
Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp; .
Son 17; Dick Cavell 20.
7:30-Little House on the Prairie
3, 15; Newlywed Game 6; Joker's
Wild 8; Fall)IIY Feud 10; All In .
The Family 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20.
8:00- laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 ; ·
WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10; Mark .·
Russell 20,33; Big Ballles 17.
8 : 30-Poiillcal
Debate
3,6,8, 10. 13, 15,20,33.
9:00-College Basketball 17.
10 : 00-NBC News Special 3,15;
Family 6,13; Lou Gr-ant 8,10.
10o30-" The Single L1fe" 3,15; News
20; Poldark 11 33.
11 :00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Last of ·
the Wild 17: Dick Cavell 20.
11 :31f-Tonlghl 3,15; Barney Miller
6. 13 ; Movie " Buck &amp; the
Preacher" 10; Movie "ThJ. Rare
Breed " 17; All -Star ' Swing
Festival 33.
11 : 4()-Harry 0 8; 12 : 05--Pollce
Story 6,13.
12 oSG-McCioud 8; 1100-Tomorrow ·
3; News 1S.
1: 15- News 13; 1:35- News 17;
I : 4()-Movle "Los! Battalion" 17.
3:25--Untouchables 17; • o2s-&lt;lpen
Up 17.

"

·'
,
"

TUESDAY,JANUARY 8,1tao
5"45--Farm Report 13; S:SG-PTL
Club 13.
6:00-700 Club 6,8; Health Field 10;" ·'
PTL Club 15; 6:25--World al .
Large 17.
6o31f-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17; 6:4.&gt;-Mornlng Report
3; 6 : Slf-Goocl Morning, West ·.
Virginia 13; 6:55--News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning '
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLillie Rascals 17.
'
7: 15-A.M . Weather 33; 7 : 31fFaml1y Affair 10; Mister Rogers
33.
.
7: 55- Chuck White Reports 10; .'
8: 00- Capt .. Kangaroo 8, 10; Family Affair 17; S~same St. 33.
8o31f-Romper Room 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8; One Day At A Time
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
Show 17.
9o30-Bob Newhart 8; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
10 : 00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of '
N ighl 6; Beat lhe Clock 8.10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"The Roots of Heaven" 17.
10 :3 0- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith . 6 ; Whew 8,10; 10:55-House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp; : .
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ; ,
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST. ·
20 .
12 :00-Newscenter
3;
News
6, 8, 10, 13 ; Mindreaders 15;
Pearls 33.
12 :30-Ryan' sHope6,13; Search lor _·.
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15; · ·
Elec. Co. 20,33 .
•
12 o4()-Movle "Deadline U .S.A." 17. . ·
1:00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; 411 My _ :
Children 6,13; Young &amp; !he
Restless 8, 10.
: 30-As The World Turns 8,10;
2:00-Doclors 3, 15; One Life to
Live 6,13; 2:25--News 17.
.
2:30-Another World 3,15; Guiding ·. ;
Light 8,10; Gigglesnorf Holel 17 .
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; I Love : :
Lucy 17; Poldark II 20.
3: 31)-{)ne Day Af A Time 8; Joker's ,
Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over '
Easy 33.
,
4 :Oif-Speclal Treat 3, 15; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Speclreman · ·
17.
. '
4:31f-Pelllcoal Junction 8; Br•dy
Bunch 10; Tim &amp; Jerry 13;
Gllllgon's Is. 17.
5oc»-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8;. Mlsler Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33; Mary Tyler ~
Moore 10; Merv Griffin 15; My
Three Sons 17.
5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; Elec. Co. 20; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again . 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
·,
6:«»-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News ·,
6; C•rol Burnell 17.
•,
6:31f-NBC News3,15; ABC News13; ·· ·
Carol Burnett 13; CBS News :
8, 10; Bob Newhart 17; VIlla ·'
Alegre 20; Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
.,
7:DO-Cross-WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough :
8; B. B. Beegle 6 ; MacNeil- •
· Lehrer Report 33; News 10; ·:
Newlywed Game. 13; Love ..
Amerlc•n Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavell 20. ·
7:30-Thal Nashville Music 3;
• Newlywed Game 6; Joker' s Wild
8; Dick Cavett 33; Hollywood
Squares 10; Sha Na Na 13; All In ·
The Faml1y.17; Abbott &amp; Costello : :
15; MacNeil-lehrer Report 20.
8:00-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3, 15; Happy Days 6,13; White :
Shadow
8, 10;
National •
Geographic 20; Movie "Wild In
the Country" 17; Nova 33.
8o31f-One In 4 Million 6,13; 9:00Juke Box Awards 3,15; Three' a
Company 6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0
World 20 ;
National
8, 10 :
GeograpHic 33.
,
9:31)-Taxi 6,13; 10:«»-Hart to Hart ·
6.13; Paris 8,10; News 20; City :
Notebook 33.
10:30-Search lor the Nile 17; Over
Easy 20; College Basketball 33 .
11:00-:News 3,6,8.10,-1 3,15; Dick
Cavett 20.
,
1u~- Tonight 3, 15; Movie "Having •
Babies" 6,13; Barnaby Jonts 8; ~
Movie "Fright" 10; Movie "Mr. :
Smith Goes to Washington" 17. ,
12 :41f-Movle ,"One Qf My Wlvts Is ··
. Missing!' 8; 1:00-Tomorrow 3; · ·
· News 15,
.'
1' 30-News . 13; 2: 15- News 17; · ·
2 ' 20.:.-Movle ' 'Chi'c_!lgQ. Syn ; •

dlcate" 17.

~

- 4:05--Mnv ie "Combat S~ued" 17; •
S:(O-'tove, American StYle 17,
f/

., ·,

.

�.

&amp;- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 7, !980

7:-The DallySentlnel, Middleport-P~meroy, 0., Monday, Jan. 7, 1980

Your Best Buys Are i'outtd i11 the Scntittel Classifieds
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
- PROBATE DIVISION ·
ELIZABETH ANN LUCAS
Administratri• With the
Will Annexed of the Estate
of Ralph R . . Carman,

Deceased,

Plainlill,

-VS•

MABEL C. CARMAN
Whose last kno~n address
is Wheeling, W. Va. Oth er -

wise unknown,

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD ·
MINISTRATORS, EXEC ·
UTORSAND ASSIGNS, IF
ANY, OF EACH OF THE
FOLLOWING o
ARTHUR
CARMAN,
Deceased,
ALBERT
CARMAN ,

Deceased,

RALPH R . CARMAN,
a.k.a. Ralph R . Carmen ,

Deceased.

MARGARET CARMAN
DAVIS, Deceased,
MARGARET
DAVIS
SMITH,"Oeceased,
HENRY
CARMAN,
Deceased,

ELMER
COFFMAN,
Deceased,
MARY CARMAN' COFF ·

MAN, Deceased , ,

HELEN
COFFMAN
BAIER, Deceased,
ELMER
CARMAN ,

Deceased,

Defendants.

NO. 22319
- SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS
ABO\IE
NAMED o
You are hereby not ified
that vou have been nam ed
Defendants in a le ~a l ac ·
tion entitled: "E lizabeth

Deg . west 51 4· 10 teet lo a
stake ; thence sou t h 66 1/:l
Deg. west 115 8·10 feet to a
stake ; thence along the
road to the place of begi n
ning ,
Being the S(lm e Jot or
P.arcel of land convey ed to
John Baum , Sr. by Minnie
Kautz and husband by deed
dated June 2, 1916, and
re-corded in Vol. 113 , page

486 of the Deed Records of
Meigs County , Ohi o.
Bei.ng a portion of th e
real estate conve yed by
Irene McDowell .and Jdck
McDowell to Ka r l Grueser

by deed dated June I , 1945,
and recorded In V ol . 158,
Page 257 of the Deed
Records , Meigs · Coun t y,

Ohio.
Referen ce

Deeds : Vol.
263, Page 389 ; Vol. 263,
Pa9e 225 Deed Record s,
Me1gs Cou nty , Ohio .
and the demand of the
Compla i nt is to sell Defen dants ' interest in th e

above .

You are required to an ·
swer th e Com pla int with in
twenty ·eight days after th e
l ast publication of this
notice, namely , by not later
than the 11th day of
February ,
19 80 , or
judgment by default will be
r ender ed against you.
Elizabeth An n Lucas
Admi ni strator with
th e Wil l Annexed
of the Est ate of
Ra lpt1 R. Carman,
Deceased
Crow, crow and Porter
Attorneys for P laintiff

1121 3, 10, 17, 24,3 1 Ill 7,
14, 71

situated 1n the County of

Northeast corner of a lot
deeded
by
Fr ederi c k
Schreiner
to
Gehart
Schoneberger, tht!t'lce Nor ·
fh 80 Dep . East, 45 feeT;

thence a ri9hl angles to

this line and 10 a Southerly

direction 35 teet ; !hence at
right angle·s fo the line 1asf
mentioned and
in
a
Westerly di rect ion 45 feet
to a point in the East line of

15 Words or Under
CUb
Owge
lday
1.00
l.lii
1.50
UK!
3.00

2days

Jdays
&amp;days

Tue1day, Jan. 8

ASTRO·GRAPH
Befnice Bede Osol

~'-Your

.qJjrthday
January 8, 1980
lady Luck is going to take an
active rote In helping you get
things started this coming year.

t'cr Sale

1972 LYNN HAVEN 1-4K65 j

COAL .
LIME STONE ,
sand , gravel, calcium

1970 Vlndale 12x63 wilh ex ·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon t2x60 3 bdr .
1973 Skyline
12•-55 2

chloride,

bedroom

1.90'
2.26
3.75

F.ach word over the minirnwn
15 w-ords iJ 4 ~nts pe[" word per

bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12•52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBI LE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675 ·4424.

day . Ads~ otheUhancon­
sec utive days Will be charged at
ln

~mory ,

Giveaway
C.ard of ThanJt.s

and Obituary : 6 cent&amp; per word,
&amp;3.00 minimwn. Cash in ad·
vance .
Mobile Home sales Hnd Yanl
sales artt accepted cmly with
cash with order. 25 ~nt charge
for ads carryi]lg Box Nwnber In
C8reof'I'he Sentinel.

The Publisher reserves the'
right to edit or reject any ad:J
deemed obj ectiona l. The
Publisher will not be resporulble
for more than one incorrect In·
serttoo.
Phone 992·2156

H EAL THY

DOGS, pup·
pies, shots, wormed . Husky

e lkho und, - s}lepherd,
Pomeranian , Engl ish Set ·
rer , m ixed breed. Humane

Society, 9'12 ·6260 .
PUPS TO GO to good
home . Make nice pets for
children . 992 ·5557 .
THREE MAL E puppies, 8
weeks old . 99n8SJ .
PURE

WHITE

kitten ,

NOTICE

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thruFMday
4P.M.

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614 ·
698 ·3290 . Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
·boots. Children's $15.50 .
Adults $29.00.

Friday aftt-moon

Card of Thanks

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor . 614·367·7220.

. HILLCREST KENNELS.
the lady who · called my
Boarding, a II breeds. crean
home to tel l me my house
indoor-outdoor facilities .
was on fire . God bless you_
Also
AKC
registered
Thank you . Dave, Ruth
Dobermans . 614·446·7795 .
Campbell and family .
ONE redtick coon hound, 2
trained beagles, 3 white
Notices
English bulldog puppies, 3
rabbits, 2 does, 1 buck . 742·
MEIGS
COUNTY
2521 .
HUMANE SOCIETY. 992 ·
6260. Pets available for
adopt ion and information
GIVE A CUTE liveable pup
service .
Investigative
a future . Adopt an orphan
Agent .
fr o m · your
Human e
SOciety . Shots, wormed .
Donations appreciated .
GUN SHOOT EVERY
99'1-6260.
SUNDAY I PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
1 want to sincerely thank

Auto Sales

Ra cine
Dept .

Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
At their build ing in Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

sai d - Schoneber~er's lot;
thence along sa1d Gehart
She may even heve a lew advenGU N SHOOT every Sunday
Schoneberger 's East line t o
turesome activities planned as
12 :00. Factory choke only .
the place of beginnin g, ex · ' well.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
ceptino .the ·coal and other
CAI&gt;RICORN (Dec. 2:1-Jon. :Ill)
~nerals and the right t o
Rutland . Proceeds donated
Your concepts and their applicamlhe the same without in - tions have tremendous wortt1
to Boy Seoul Troop 249.
cumbrance to the surface.
and will be treated with the
and, the right to fence said
respect they deserve wt1en pre1 PAY highest pr ices
lot
sented to others. Find out more
possible for gold and silver
Being the same property ol
what lies ahead lor vou In the
convered ' to the said year
coins, r ings, jewelry, etc.
following your birthday by
Rober 0 . Schmoll from the . sending
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
for
your
copy
of
Aslrotrustees of the St. Paul 's
Shop, Middleport.
Evangelical and Reformed Graph letter . Mail $ 1 lor eacn to
Church of Mi nersv ille , Astra-Gr aph , Box 489 , Radio
Station , N.Y. 10019. Be sure
Ohio, by deed dated City
ATTENTION:
(1M ~
to specify birlh date.
February 161h. 1948, a1 od
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
AQUARIUS
(Jan.
20·
Feb.
19)
recorded in Deed Book No.
pay cash
certified check
Situations having an air ot mys161-'- Page 185, M eigs Cou~ ·
for antiques and coflec ·
tery abou t them or with glamoty ueed Records.
t ibles or entire estates.
PARCEL 2: Beiog the rous overtones should bring you
good luck tod ay. Ttley "ll add
Nothing too large . Also,
following described real
some excitement to your lite es
guns , pocket watches and
estate, sit uate in 100 acre
lot No. 301 in Town 2 and well.
coi n collections . Call 614 Renge 13 in the said County PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) An
767 ·3167 or 557 ·3411.
undertaking . about which you
of Meigs, near the school
may have been a l•ttle dub ious
house on said 100 Acre lot
BUYING U.S. SILVER
No . 301 , described as wilt work out fan tastically well
folloWS i that Is to say:
today, !hanks to the cooperation
COINS DATED 1964 OR
Beginning at the Southeast
you'll encounler.
EARLIER
IANY
corner of a lot be longing to ARIES (Merch 21 -Apri119) PresAMOUNT! . OON 'T LOSE
Frederick
Schreiner,
ent your ideas to anyone who Is
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
deceased ; thence along the
tn a position to develop them
UP TH E PHONE AND
East line of said lot 150 teet One. it pul to work . could turn
DIAL
614 · 992 ·5113,
to the Northeast corner of
out to be extremely valuabl e.
BROWN'S .
the Schreiner lot ; th ence
TAURUS (April 2~Ma, 20)
North about 80 Deg . East 80 Things cou ld be brightening for
feet; thence South parallel
you materially today because ol
IN COME TAX SERVICE .
with the west line of Phillip
lhe inlervention ot a trlend. The
1
Quarterly , Federal and all
Bear s lot to the street r un- favor cou ld be a r eally big one.
state income tax reports
ning . towards the Ohio GEMINI (May 21-Junt 20) You
RiYer ; thence along said
will be pr epared by ap could be exceptionally lucky for
Street 80 feet to the place of
yourself, as well as for those witt1 · pointment . 992 -2272 or see
beginning .
wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff.
whom you come in contacl
Excerting and reserv ing loday.
because of your cleverRd ., Pomer oy .
the coa and other minerals
ness.
therein w ith the right to
(Juna 21-JuJy 22)
mine the same without in· CANCER
You're not fooled today Into
cumbrance to the surface
lhlnklng the grass Is greener In
a,,_, _
Jnd right of
someone else ' s back~ard .
way aJony any m1neral
ORDINANCE
Because ol this you'll a~~:perlence
seam ere hereby reserved .
NO. 509
the
greatest
pleasures
with
your
And being the same land
ORDINANCE PROHIBI·
loved
ones.
deeded March 12Th . 1868 to
TING
PARKING
OF
Jacob Massar by V . B . Hor · LEO (Juty 23-Aug, 22) Helpful
MOTOR VEHICLES OR
contacts
and
your
dear
thinking
ton and c . A. Horton and
LOADED VEHICLES ON
Is the perfect recipe for putting
recorded in Record of
PAVED PORTION OF C.
together
en
extremely
successful
Deeds of Meigs County,
AND 0 . RIGHT-QF·WAY
Ohio, \lol. 33, "Pages 376 and day. You'll achieve thai wt1tct1
THAT LAYS BETWEEN
377 . .
you anvlslon.
·
SYCAMORE
STREET

or

Federal

Phone

Veterans Admin .

669 ·

APPLES - ROM E beauty
apples at S--4 per bu , Best for
apple butter . Ca ll 669 ·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orc hard, SR
689.

I

Housing

&amp;

Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

•

Hours9-1 M., W., F.
Other limes by appointment,
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

Help wantE)d
EXPERIENCED

ta x
prepare~a nled. 1-lourly
rate and bonus pl~n - Full or
part -t -ime hours . capital
Finance Services . Phone
992 ··2111 today . Equal Op ·
portunity Employers . M ·F.

STOCK
CAR .
Howe
chassis, 350 4 bolt main
Chevy, Franklin quick
change rear end. motor
built to maximum, alt new
parts. New and extra tires.
Extra parts and r i ms.

$5,0110. Can be seen on a
Saturday, Twp. Rd . 27,
Dexter, at Slater's residen·

Need a receptionist who
is a good accurate
typest, good in short·
hand, knowledge in
bookkeeping helpful but
not essential, must have
good personality and
like to meet people.
Also need a good recep tionist who is a good
typest and has a
knowledge of bookkeep·
ing.
Good fringe benefits .
Apply in person al
Pomeroy Landmark in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
992·2!81 . Interviews will
be arranged.
"

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. S10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992 ·2689.
OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M .D.
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca 11 992 ·7760.

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

OHIO.VALlEY
ROOFING

H. L WRITESEL

Roofing, gut1ers, and
downs pouts.
Free

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleiN1ing and painting.
AU work guaranteed',
FrV!I-E11lmaw
Reasonatple Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
11 ·14-mo.

ROOFING

work

All

collect,. Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
~97 ·2745.
12 -7-1 mo.

1976 1h ton pickup truck in
good condition . 992 ··5786

from95p.m .
1975 4-dor Ford 'Landau ,
P.S., P.B., all power . E•·
cellenl condiTion. $2495.
call9'12·5304or 9'12 ·2238.

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomero y. Large lots. Call
992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furn ished ap
ts. PhOne 992 ·5434 .
TWO BEDROOM trailer.
Adults only 992 ·332-4.
TWO BEDROOM furnished
apt., $165

mo . plus uti lities .

I child , n o pelS . 949·2377, or
after 5p .m . 949·2875.
HOUSE FOR RENT , Mid·
dleport. Completely fur
nished . Also, sleeping
rooms, refrigeration and

TV . ca II 9'12· 7791 weekdays
after -1.
12•60

TWO

BEDROOM

mobile honie . Racin e area .

-992 ·5858.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) By all

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furniture . Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992 ·6370.
PAYING $14 .50 ANO UP
FOR SILVER DOLLARS,
$13.20 FOR SILVER
CHANGE, GOLD COINS
AN.D MISC . ITEMS AT
HONEST UP· TO ·DATE
PR ICE5. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARGER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH . OR CALL 992 --3476 AF ·
TER 5:00P.M.

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

let Us

Remodeling ·

Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold weather

•New Kitchens
*Bathrooms
*New Home
*Add Ons
*Remoldings
•Free Estimates

•-7

I JELGUN I
I KIJ

CAPfAIN EASY ,
&lt;

Y'~EE .. CHRIS'S FATHER WAS

A ZOO~OEiliST•. MAYBE THAT'IP
WHERE CH.Rii!' GOT HIS LOVE
' OF ANIMA~Jr l

HIS O~D MAN
WA5 INTO WILDLIFE ·

THAT~

P~ESfRVATION ~ONG

Siding
Brick Work

t
I J

IJ

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Block Work

Cheap Rates
Qua I ity Service
Call 992-2852
· or 992-7235

Guaranteed Work
Free Eslimales
Aller 5 P.M. 992·5547
12·13·2 mo. pd .

12·13pd .

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of

Lost and Found
LOST :

Snowville

Female

blu e

pool kits. Do-it -yourself or

area .
t ic k

lei us install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, tnc.
992·5724.

coonhound. If seen,c all
Paul Phi II Ips at 742 2209 .

BRAOFORD, Auc tioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949· 2487 or 949-2000. racine,

Rejll Estate for Sale

Oh io, Critt Bradford .
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower.
Nexl to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

.
BEDRO.OM

THREE
home
on a big lol. Can be par ~ ·
tiaiiY financed . Call Guido
Girolami . 992·5786, 10·6. No

realtors.

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. ScolchQuard . 992·
6309or 742·2348.
WALL PAPERING
painting . '742·2328.

608 E .
MAIN . .
POMEROY,O.
.. 992·2259
WOULD
YOU
BE·
LIEVE - A beautiful
kitchen with a bar and
dining
area,
3
bedrooms, a family
room, a rec. room, a TV
rooma nd a new swimm ·
ing pool tor only
$39,500 .00.
STOP PAYING RENT
let someone else
make your house payment ,f or you . Large
brick
duplex
In
Syracuse . Live in part
and renl_part. 528,000.00.
HANDYMAN'S
SPECIAL - 2 apart·
menl frame In Mid ·
. dleport . Always has
renters. On a corner lot.
$10,900.00.
.
WOODLAND
HOMESITES Ap·
prox. 2.5 acres. some lots
surveyed, water and
electric available, road
develOPed to properly .
$27,500.00.
LO\IELY 2 story
home overlooking !he
river . Has 3 bedrooms,
rec . room. full basemen), and equipped kif·
chen. $l5, 900.00. •
WE HAVE , READY
BUYERS FOR YOUR
PROPERTY.
LIST
WITH US.
REALTOR
Henry E. CLelana, Jr.
'192-6191
ASSOCIATES ·
Jean Trussell 949·2668
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742·2474
OFFICE PI!ONE
'192-2259

BORN LOSER

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCI NG ·\IA· FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAY/y\ENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614·592 ·3051.

HOBSTIDER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISTING - Ex ·
ceptlonal buy. 2 homes
on Beech Grove Road.
Both in e•cellenl shape.
Live In one and rent the
other . Situated on 10
good acres. Call tor all
details. Good Income
producing property,
MIDDLEPORT - Ex ·
ecullve style 5 bedroom
' home. 2 full baths.
modern kitchen, family
room, living room and
full basement. Many
nice features to this
home. Call for an appt,
NEW LISTING - 2.41
acres across from
Eastern High . Very ·
good building site. Ask ·
ing $7.000.00.
RUTLAND Total
electric, 3 bedroom,
brick home on M8in
Street. 1'12 baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room.and full basement.
Asking S-43,500,00.
NEW LISTING - Cozy
3 bedroom home In
Syracuse on . Cherry
Street. Living room, kit·
chen, bath and basement. Small lot wllh
building. A real buy al
only $10,000 .00. Beller
check this one oulll , •
NEW LISTING - Quail:
!y buIll new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, utilitY
and living room , Kif·

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

HOMES FOR SALE

WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOW
AS 5% DOWN AND 30·YRS. TO PAY

LANDMARK

u••••• .

c·hen

has

garage

dl sposal
and
dishwasher . Situated on
a IIHie oYer an acre.
Must see to appreciate
workmanship. Sells for
$.45,600.00.
:
Our homes are selling,
, We · can help put
qualified buyers find
financing. Call · us ana
Rtal
alsc'uss your
Eslato problems, we'll
be gl&lt;la to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
·Phont742·2f03·,
Velma Nlclnllcy, Assoc.
PhoneJtHOH
George Hollstetttr Jr.
a roker "2·5739

4

CALL 992·2342

s.

12't&gt;~,

WI.~

WATC-H 'buR

Roger Hysell

BRIDGE·

~L.OU5'(

CHRI5TM/IG
TIPt ........:::.

)

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

!
l

Garage

,l
i

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

i

Partner's signal misread
Alan: "One time when it is
likely to go wrong is when
NORTH
1 ~1
your partner opens a suit -and
• Q 10. 2
you attempt to tell him to
y AJ4
+-Tosh;;;;ilt 10 a specific suit rather
t965
tnan play a high card to sug+AKQ
gest that partner continue and
WEST
EAST
a low card to suggest tha t he
+KJ
+A 8 6 4
shift to some other suit."
¥53
¥6
Oswald: "East played his
tAKJ841
• Q 10 2
ten of diamonds at trick one.
+8 13
+J9752
West read this as a come-on
SOUTH
and continued whereupon
• 9 73
South took his ten tricks
"K Q 1098 72
quickly and chalked up game
• •7
and rubber. East felt that his
10 6
ten had called for a spade
shift since West knew that
Vulnerable: Both
South
was goinll to ruff the
Dealer: West
second diamond. '
West North E11st
South
Alan: " I agree with East
It
Obi.
2t
1•
that West should have led his
Pass
Pass
Pass
king of spades at trick two.
However, I would have played
the deuce of diamonds, not the
ten. "
Opening lead:+ K
Oswald: "Naturally. You
have raised diamonds. You
want your partner to shift and
there is no way that you can
want a club shift so that deuce
By Oswald Jacoby
cannot be a suit preference
and Alan Son lag
signal."
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
Oswald: "The suit preference signal is a valuable tool
(For a copy of JACOBY
when used properly but like
most modern expert conven- MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspations it c an boomerang
against its user and hit him per, P.O. Box 489, Radio City "
Station, New York, N. Y.
right in the face if not used
10019.)
properly."

~
r-7

. . ,; ; :;,;,. ! liiiilil~~..~~
I HOPE HE
Etil'OYS THE
FLOOR SHOW,
THEN ...

OO·Ifc

WILL 1-tAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

IT'S THE

QUIET! LOOt(

THING HE'S GOING 10 ~'~vI
FOR A ~ONG TIME! _....---!,.;~=::_..

ABOuT YOU'
WHAT DON'T

LETS iQ_! .

'iOU

SEE?.

MACHINE

+

'

all

''

makes . 992 ·22.84.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sha r pen
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator 's license? Phone
9'12·2143.

WE'D SETTER GATH5~ UP
THtS FRUrr; Ya., AND
~ ON OUR WJI:t'!

Real Estate for Sale

216 E. 5ol'!"'d Slr"l
MOBILE HOME - 3
bedr-ooms, 2 b8lhs, fore ·
ed air heal, stove.
refrigerator, and other
furniture . 7/8 of an acre

Do 40u thin!~,
he's a devil-

near Harrisonville.
4 ACRES - Near Mid·
dleport on hard road.
Two trailer hookups, a
one bedroom trailer and
large uti lilY bldg ,
$925.00 OOWN - Bal .
about like rent , J
bedrooms., natural gas
furnace, basement and
nice lot.
RANCH - Woodburn ·
;rig fireplace, l•rge win·
dows, view of !he river,
full basement and front
porch. $1,000.00 DOWN,
BUS. BLDG. - Or a
cheap, 2 bedroom home
with bath, and nat. gas
tor only $11,000 .00. 51•
Hundred down .
WHERE CAN YOU
GET MORE
FOR
YOUR MONEY THAN
AN INVESTMENT IN
PROPERTY.
992·332S OR ~2-3176

donke~?

t'lcru•"w
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Sillij!

ACROSS

~ome

people

qet

Prime or
grade A -

DOWN
1 Whip

11 Put OJ1 lbe
market again 2 European
13 Arabian
capital
monarchy
It Quiescence
15 Fence in
18 Baron's hue
17 Morrow
or Damone
18 Attire
20 Spanbh
queen
21 -to
(total) .

WINNIE

EV/lRYTHINe/

41

5 MIWm
18 House wear

\ +h:o~'c all'

8UT WAIT... I

to Separate

· stomach

stranqe
ideas.

CAN EXPlAIN

38 Barbara -

1 Blrd's

WENOY15 RIGHT, RJLKS.
THE5E ARE HER
!=RIEN1?.5. THEY HELPED
HER MOVE. 1HE PAIZTY
WA5 1HEIR II?EA!

S Emulated ·
lbe Titanic
crew
t Skin growth
5 Halt
8 Gary Cooper
role
7 Snake
8 Leave
the ship
9 "Hamlet"

Yeotenllly'• AMwer
1Z Rotted away Z7 Valjean's
II Nevada city
nemesis
u Wrinkle
zt Under!1 Hoards
ground
!2 Victor Herbert worller
heroine
13 Brainstonn
Z3 Hardy
14 Camper's
heroine
Item
Z3 "Old Man - M Gardner

setting

23 Actor

Is Dead"

ousing
Headquarters

UTropical
fruit
Z3

SAVE ·oN :CA'RPET .
DRIVE A'\111\.E
SAVE A LOT '

Measuring

deVice ....,
(Brit. '!':) "i'
ZIField
( .

2'7 Kidded

'

.l

ZIA Caesar

2t BIWard shot
31 His: Fr.

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

I PUllED AN

*4!!up

: ARM MUS.C.tE

~ THIS MORNIN~

•' DOC, Al\l. '--

Cuh&amp;Carry

b-1--.+--i--+.-

31 "-Got a

SET DOWI\I, ELVII\IEY,
AN' I'Ll TAKE A
LOOK AT IT

Crush on

ITWUZN'T MV
ARM MUSCLE
I PULLED

You"
32Tend
to junior

35Gas used

.SAlE ON ALL .

as fuel

3'1 French

ltf STOCK·

wtlter

38 Dutch coin

.,~,~UP

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

. 1nste.llldwlllt PIG f r "

A X Y D L B A A X ·a
It L 0 N G F E .L L 0 W

GOOD REMNANT
SELt.CTION
6'X12' to 12'X16'

$3811)
·

up

. and_

can 742-2211

. One letter simply otlinda for ·onotber. In tbla Simple A II

,.
;!

~

•

..ed for the three L's, X for the 1wo O'a, ·etc. SIDIIt letten,
1pootropbee, the lenatb and formaUon of the words 1re 111
hints. Each diy the code letters are dllferent.
__

"·.

CRYPTOQUOTIS

't

f

•

'RU'II.AND . r
:FURNITURE :·
· -' ·Ruitand, o:
J.;;;;,o,.;.;,;;;.;.;;;.;.;;;.:.;;-._
.....;

J".

·UOQIVV _U.NIO' Q
KVPK Z A

AUJI

.

Q W·l

.-

--.--.!-1.' , -

~

t

KY -1

S0 X R X SVK Y

RG .KOZQWUON.-MUO WSDDKYJ
Yellerday't Ct-yptoqaote: UTTLE MINDS ARE TAMED AND
SUBDPED BY MISFORTUNES,; BUT GREAT MINDS RISE

.

&lt;'

R -0

XIRX•p

'

-

. . ABOVE IT.- WASIUNGTON
IRVING .
.
-

n Bauble

Donahue

'

. I

HUMBLE

Monday, Jan. 7

RACINE, 0 .
949·2748 or
992-7314
12·28-Pd.

and

PIANO TUNING . Lane
Daniels. New phone num ·
ber, 7-42 · 29~1. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

BLOODY

Jumble Book No. 12, cont1lnlng 110 puuf••.l• lnltabl• ror S1 .75 pollplld
tromJumbl1, cloth I~ n1W1p1per, Bo~~: 3.4, NorwOOd, N.J.07848-1nc:fudt your
n•me, 1dd~1.., zip coct. lnd mlkt checks p1yable to Nawap•perbooh.

Scissors.

FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
9'12-7559 .

TWEET

.. HE 'S NOT HOME YET ..

work', ·. dawn

service,

I XI I I ][ I J XJ

Answer : " Can I borrow your t~wn mower?" -

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Repairs,

gested by 1he above ca~oon .

(Answers toinorrow)

spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

SEWING

Now arrange the circted Jeners to
form the surprise answer, as sug-

Saturday·sl Jumbl,es: SYLPH

RuTland.

Concrete Finishing

WHAi "THE MEAL
Mi~HT 65 WHEN
THEFI!i:'e&gt; SPAGHETTI,

tYIVELT

8i.JSY CAREER WOMAN
,, I GU!S:.* THE POOR
I&lt;ID'i!' SPENT A LOTTA
TIME: ALONe l

&amp;E:FOR! TH!! ENVIfl:OI&gt;J·
MEt.JTALI!&gt;T5 GOT
EXCITE!' ABOUT IT!

1~·(Pd . l

RIGHT--AND

HIS MOTHER5 NOW A

l '4 mile off At. 1 by .pass ,
on St . Rt . 114 toward

Additions

- AND
BUTTERNUT
The 30 feel by 40 feet of means take the leadershiP; f.ole In
AVENUE
AND IIET·
Services Offered
any dealings today lnvblvlng
above described land
WEEN THE NORTHERN
others. Lady Luck guides you. so
heretofore deeded to the
PORTION OF THE TWO WILL DO odds and ends,
WANTED TO BUY o lawn
you shouldn't make an~
German Prolestanl Church
PARKING LOTS AND paneling, floor tile, ceiling
and garden tractor . In good
of Minersville, Ohio , "is mistakes.·
SOUTHERN BOUNDARY tile . Fred Miller, 992-6338.
hereby reserved. and ex · J!BAA (S.pt. 23-0ct 23), Your
'condition. Phone 992 -5247 .
ON MAIN STREET IN
cepted in this transfer .
h\l nct1es and insight s are .
THE
VILLAGE OF
POMEROY, OHIO.
The ·atoresaid ;eal estate extremely valuable today. Tru st
BE IT ORDAINED by
being the same real estate tt1em to steer you toward wh o
Real Estate for ·Sale
lhe Council of the Village of
HOTPOINT
conveyed to Florence Car - you shou ld be with and what you
Pomeroy, Ohio, all mem ·
men who was also known should be doing.
and
bers. concurring thereto :
as Florence Kerman, by SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No"- 22) This
Sec. 1. That the VIllage of
Jacob Massar and wife by · is one or those unusual limes
Pomeroy, Ohio hereby
deed recorded i n Deed when others are willing lo give
prohibits any motor vehicle
Book 93 al Page 296 of the you almost anything you wanl In
or loaded vehicle of any
Meigs County Deed Recor - return for a kindness you render
type, weighing more than
them. Make your deal now.
ds .
Headquarlers
6,000 pounds to park on !hat
PARCEL
3o
T h e SAG!ITAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
AppliAnces
paved·
area
of
the
C.
and
o
.
following Real Estate Something tlUite sizable could be
Safes.&amp;
Service
rlght·of·way
laying
bel·
situate In !he Vi llage of placed in your hand s today. but
ween Sycamore Street and
Minersville, Me igs County , il calls for you to use your smarts
Butternut Ave., in the
Ohio, anc more par · . in developing il . You·re more
POMEROY
Village of Pomeroy and the
11cularly descr ibed as than up 10 it.
northern portion of , the
follows : Being sixty 1601
(NEWSPAI•(A ( NI[APfitS6 ASS N I
parking lots and !he
feel off !he westerly side of
t;"?.., _Jack W. Carsey
LIKE NEW - Qu iet country living in fhis tree
southern right -of-way line
GASOHOL TEST
Lol No. 53 In MinPrsvllle,
bedroom , 2 bath ranch . Over an ac·re of ground with
of Main Street in the
~
Mgr,
Meigs County! Ohio, known
OMAHA, Neb. (AP)
·Village of Pomeroy, Ohio.
, a s plit rail fence , garage and ~orkshop . Fireplace,
and qeslgn• ed as sub.
Phone991·2:111
Sec . 2. That any one
Gasohol is being _ test
" B"OO llelng slxly (60) feet
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00.
·
v iolating this Ordinance
fronting on Cliff Street and mal\eted here and in Des
~~
--,:=--:-:--shall be fined not less Than
running In a oortherly
POMEROY - ·A beautiful little starter home · or
For Sale
$25.00 nor morlf than $50.00
direction at right angle Moines and Council Bluffs.
rellremenl couple . Two bedroom and bath. Large
tor each vlole-tlon thereof.
wllh said Cliff Street Two
Phillips Petroleum said
living room
nice kitchen . Full baser:nent.
Sec.
3.
This
Ordinance
is
hundred .c200) feel .
CURED
firewood,
$17,500.00.
hereby dec lared to be an
. Deed Reference: Vol. the gasohol - 90 percent
reasOnably prloed . 742 ·
225.L Pave 579, Meigs Coun · unleaded gasoline and 10 emergency necessary tor
254-1 .
the public saf~&gt;ty and public
MIDDLEPORT ~ 2 be&lt;lroom brick only 1 block
ty uee&lt;l Records .
welfare of !he village of
PARCEL
~ :
Th e percent ethanol - is being
from town, low u ~H ities . A barga in at $12,500.
. Pomeroy, and is to go Info
following descr ibed ·real
evaluated for its handling
ZENITH television for par effect
Immediately
.
.
estalesiluate In the Stale of
RUTLAND ~ 2 homes on Salem Street. 'rake your
ts . 992·7015.
Passed: December 17th,
Ohlp, County of Meigs and properties and cust001er
choice or buy both and r~ntlhem, $12,000each.
1979.
Townsh iP of Sullon and acceptance, because li is
Clarence Andrews
Village of M inersville and
UTILITY
TOOl.
chest
'
tor
Mayor
bounded and described as one possibility for inpickup, S75 , Inquire at 400
follows : Beginning at the creasing supplies of motor
Lasley St .. Ppmeroy , OH . ·
H. D . Brown. Jr;
south carne• of a two acre
President
lol deedtld b\1 V. B. Horton . ,fuel.
ATTEST :
Bill C~ilds, Branch M~nager, ~ome 992· 2449
to Danlol DeWolfe In 100
BLACK
DIAMOND '
The
test
program could Jane Walton
Roaney Downing, Broker, Home 992·3731
•ere Lot No. 301 Town 2,
llnement,
Shaklee
organic
Clerk
Range 13 of !he Ohio Com · be e.pandedit'rnmlfS"are
Rawlelgh
' produ c ts ,
, NUbDLEPORT, OHIO
,
pan\" s Purchase ; Thence favorable, the company
produ cts . 992 ·7825.
(12) 31 (1) 7, 2tc
Nor h66Deg . East ' "lfeet
to" stak~ . thence North 45 said.

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

Kl]

SIDING

Gutter

N. L CONSTRUCTION

evenings .

MARTIN'S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience in buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur niture . One piece or com plete household . Gold ,
silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razo rs , pocket
knives and other old items.
Call 992·6370.

'

MONDAY,JANl4RY 7,1910

I DAHYN .,

.;reP.

ANTIQUE POCKET wat·
ches. Willing to pay lOP
dollar . Call 1·592 ·2973
OLD COINS, pocket wat ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver. Call J . A . Wamsley ,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens , OH . 592·
6462.

~

Prfntanswerhere: [

ce.
1974 Plymouth Scamp ,
custom interior, 6 cyl.,
auto ., $1900 or trade. 7.12·
2451.

I (J

10·19·1 mo.

'

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney , antiQues. 26 N .
2nd, Middleport, 0 H. 992 ·
3161.

elnsulation
eStorm Doors
eStorm Windows
•Replcicement Win -

dowS ·

perience. call Athens,

NEED lWO
OFFICE GIRLS

IORRAM

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM:

Aluminum Siding

CALL 992-7544

Pets for Sale

RISING STAR Kennel .
Boarding . Call 367 ·0292 .

SUnday
jP.M.

Fire

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or ·
chard, ~State Route 689 .
Wilkesville,

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

guaranteed. 20 years ex-

the day before publication

SHOOT .

food, and· all lypes of salt.
Excelsior Salt Wor ks, Inc.,
E . Main St. , Pomeroy, 992 ·
3891.

Television
Viewing

Unscramble thf!Se lour Jumbles,

one Jetter to each Square , to lorm
lour ordinary words.

Business Services

1

Estimates .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Volunteer

dog

NI CE PIG S for sale. Wor med , c as trated. 949 -2857 .

Humane Society . 992-6260.

GUN

fertilizer,

3785.

the 1day rate.

Monday

PROBATE COURT
DFMEIGS
COUNTY, OH 10
ESTATE OF EDNA KEN ·
Ann Lucas, Administratrix
NEDY, DECEASED
With the Wi l l Annexed of
22932
th e Estate of Ralph Ca r · . case No.
NOTICE OF
man, Deceased,
Vs.
APPOINTMENT
E l il:abeth Ann Lucas ,
OF FIDUCIARY
eta I. " in the Cornman Pleas
On January 2, 1980, in the
Court of Meigs County, Meigs
County Probate
Ohio
Probate Division,
Case No . 22319, the demand Court, Case No. 22932,
Robert Arthur Winn, 2740
being tor the sale of the en · Crone
Road, Xenia, Ohio
tire interest in the real
45385
was
appointed
estate
hereinafter
Executor of the es tate of
described in order to pay
Edna Kenned~, deceased,
the debts of the decedent,
late of 525 South Broadway,
Ralph R. Carman 1 and the
costs of administration . M iddl eport , Ohio 45760 .
The real estate is desc ribed
Robert E. Buck
as follows :
Probate Judge
PARCEL
1o
The
Clerk
followinQ Real Estate 1117. 14, 21. ltc
Mei9s, In the State of Oh1o,
and 1n the V illage of Miner sville, to·wit : Being a p art
of 100 acre lot No. 301 in
Town No. 2, Range N o. 13,
in said County of Meigs,
particu larly described as
follows : Beginning at the

WANT AD
CHARGES

'ft\1\JNl

fi!}'if ~ THATSCRAMBLEOWORDOAME
~ ~ ~Ul,~ o.
byHer,;iArnoJd8ndBoblee

DICK TRACY'

••

Mobile Hqmes - Sale

.'

'

'

-

JoOO-Cross-WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Muppet Show li; MacNeil Lehrer Report 33; News 10;
Hometown USA -13;
Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp; .
Son 17; Dick Cavell 20.
7:30-Little House on the Prairie
3, 15; Newlywed Game 6; Joker's
Wild 8; Fall)IIY Feud 10; All In .
The Family 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20.
8:00- laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 ; ·
WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10; Mark .·
Russell 20,33; Big Ballles 17.
8 : 30-Poiillcal
Debate
3,6,8, 10. 13, 15,20,33.
9:00-College Basketball 17.
10 : 00-NBC News Special 3,15;
Family 6,13; Lou Gr-ant 8,10.
10o30-" The Single L1fe" 3,15; News
20; Poldark 11 33.
11 :00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Last of ·
the Wild 17: Dick Cavell 20.
11 :31f-Tonlghl 3,15; Barney Miller
6. 13 ; Movie " Buck &amp; the
Preacher" 10; Movie "ThJ. Rare
Breed " 17; All -Star ' Swing
Festival 33.
11 : 4()-Harry 0 8; 12 : 05--Pollce
Story 6,13.
12 oSG-McCioud 8; 1100-Tomorrow ·
3; News 1S.
1: 15- News 13; 1:35- News 17;
I : 4()-Movle "Los! Battalion" 17.
3:25--Untouchables 17; • o2s-&lt;lpen
Up 17.

"

·'
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"

TUESDAY,JANUARY 8,1tao
5"45--Farm Report 13; S:SG-PTL
Club 13.
6:00-700 Club 6,8; Health Field 10;" ·'
PTL Club 15; 6:25--World al .
Large 17.
6o31f-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17; 6:4.&gt;-Mornlng Report
3; 6 : Slf-Goocl Morning, West ·.
Virginia 13; 6:55--News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning '
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLillie Rascals 17.
'
7: 15-A.M . Weather 33; 7 : 31fFaml1y Affair 10; Mister Rogers
33.
.
7: 55- Chuck White Reports 10; .'
8: 00- Capt .. Kangaroo 8, 10; Family Affair 17; S~same St. 33.
8o31f-Romper Room 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8; One Day At A Time
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
Show 17.
9o30-Bob Newhart 8; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
10 : 00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of '
N ighl 6; Beat lhe Clock 8.10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"The Roots of Heaven" 17.
10 :3 0- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith . 6 ; Whew 8,10; 10:55-House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp; : .
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ; ,
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST. ·
20 .
12 :00-Newscenter
3;
News
6, 8, 10, 13 ; Mindreaders 15;
Pearls 33.
12 :30-Ryan' sHope6,13; Search lor _·.
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15; · ·
Elec. Co. 20,33 .
•
12 o4()-Movle "Deadline U .S.A." 17. . ·
1:00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; 411 My _ :
Children 6,13; Young &amp; !he
Restless 8, 10.
: 30-As The World Turns 8,10;
2:00-Doclors 3, 15; One Life to
Live 6,13; 2:25--News 17.
.
2:30-Another World 3,15; Guiding ·. ;
Light 8,10; Gigglesnorf Holel 17 .
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; I Love : :
Lucy 17; Poldark II 20.
3: 31)-{)ne Day Af A Time 8; Joker's ,
Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over '
Easy 33.
,
4 :Oif-Speclal Treat 3, 15; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Speclreman · ·
17.
. '
4:31f-Pelllcoal Junction 8; Br•dy
Bunch 10; Tim &amp; Jerry 13;
Gllllgon's Is. 17.
5oc»-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8;. Mlsler Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33; Mary Tyler ~
Moore 10; Merv Griffin 15; My
Three Sons 17.
5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; Elec. Co. 20; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again . 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
·,
6:«»-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News ·,
6; C•rol Burnell 17.
•,
6:31f-NBC News3,15; ABC News13; ·· ·
Carol Burnett 13; CBS News :
8, 10; Bob Newhart 17; VIlla ·'
Alegre 20; Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
.,
7:DO-Cross-WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough :
8; B. B. Beegle 6 ; MacNeil- •
· Lehrer Report 33; News 10; ·:
Newlywed Game. 13; Love ..
Amerlc•n Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavell 20. ·
7:30-Thal Nashville Music 3;
• Newlywed Game 6; Joker' s Wild
8; Dick Cavett 33; Hollywood
Squares 10; Sha Na Na 13; All In ·
The Faml1y.17; Abbott &amp; Costello : :
15; MacNeil-lehrer Report 20.
8:00-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3, 15; Happy Days 6,13; White :
Shadow
8, 10;
National •
Geographic 20; Movie "Wild In
the Country" 17; Nova 33.
8o31f-One In 4 Million 6,13; 9:00Juke Box Awards 3,15; Three' a
Company 6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0
World 20 ;
National
8, 10 :
GeograpHic 33.
,
9:31)-Taxi 6,13; 10:«»-Hart to Hart ·
6.13; Paris 8,10; News 20; City :
Notebook 33.
10:30-Search lor the Nile 17; Over
Easy 20; College Basketball 33 .
11:00-:News 3,6,8.10,-1 3,15; Dick
Cavett 20.
,
1u~- Tonight 3, 15; Movie "Having •
Babies" 6,13; Barnaby Jonts 8; ~
Movie "Fright" 10; Movie "Mr. :
Smith Goes to Washington" 17. ,
12 :41f-Movle ,"One Qf My Wlvts Is ··
. Missing!' 8; 1:00-Tomorrow 3; · ·
· News 15,
.'
1' 30-News . 13; 2: 15- News 17; · ·
2 ' 20.:.-Movle ' 'Chi'c_!lgQ. Syn ; •

dlcate" 17.

~

- 4:05--Mnv ie "Combat S~ued" 17; •
S:(O-'tove, American StYle 17,
f/

., ·,

.

�.

I

8-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 7, 19M!

Non-aligned members see:k4J.g. withdrawal

Area deaths

could get the General Assembly to Radio Kaliul continued normal tran•
take the matter u p In an emergency smlsslons for at least one and a haU
se98lon, which would prolong the · hours after these IIIUIOUIIce~ts
GEORGE IV. HACitE'IT
ty. Mr. and Mrs. Story resided at.113
publicized international con- were first heard. Nothing In these
George W. Hackett, 86, died Sun- Cottage Road, Webster City, Iowa,
broad&lt;JIIts from Kabul confirmed
demnation d the Russians.·
day evening at his resldenceat528S.
50096.
cootent of the Soviet broadcast
the
Eighteen .U.N. members spoke in_
Second Ave., Middleport, following a ..
disseminated
In Afghanistan's
the council debate Sunday, the
CARLTON B. BARNHART
lln&amp;ering illne111.
HOSPITAL NEWS
JIB(Ile.
''
second .~ ol the debate, and ooJy
Mr. Hackett was born Aug. 1, 18!1!
Carlton B. Barnhart; 62, Rt. 2,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
The council was scheduled to
Guysville, (Bethany Ridge) died
In Bancn:it, W. Va., a son of the IaIll
Saturday Admissions-Opal Cum- three communist nations - East
reswne
the debate this morning.
Gennany, C7Jechoolovakia and VietSaturday evening at St. JMeph
Michael and Maude Meadows
mins, Pomeroy.
Fifty-one
countries endorsed the
Hackett. Besides his parents, he was
Hospital, Parkersburg , following an
Saturday
Discharges-Lena nam - defended the Soviet action.
request
for
the Afgban debate, the
U.S. Amb-a ssador Donald
preceded In death by two brothers, a
extended illness.
Heibnan, Rudy Stewart, Mary
most
ever
to
bring an issue before
Mdlenry, the first speaker Sunday,
sister, an infant son, a grandMr. Barnhart was born in Rome
Longenette, Herbert Rose, Oweft An·
the
cotDicil.
Most
of them _were exsaid Soviets authorities made a
Township, Athens County, the son of
daughter and a son-in-blw.
dersm, Amy Souder.
pected to speak.
"terrible miscalculaUon" In sending
Surviving ·are ·his wife, Rhoda
Zora Ludewick Barnhart, Rt. 2,
Sunday Admissions--Carl Schultz,
The coiDicil is operating with 14
troops
across
their
southern
boroer
Ingram Hackett ; two soos and
Guysville and the lafe Isaac BarJr ., Racine; Thomas Young,
rrembers,
one short of Its full mem- '
into Afghanistan.
daughters-in-law, Michael and
nhart. He was also preceded in death
Belpre ; Michael Reitmire,
bership. The General Assembly has
He rejected Soviet claims that
t.ucme Hackett, Fort Myers, Fla.,
by two brothers and one sister.
Pomeroy; Minnie Riggs, they were invited In by the Afghan
been
deadlocked since late October
and George and PhyWs Hackett,
He attended Kenney Memorial
Langsville; Jonathan Dickens, government lind said the Kremlin
in
trying
to choose between ColomMiddleport; four daughters, Mrs. R. Wesley~n· Church, Athens, was
Pomeroy.
bia
and
Cuba to fill the Latin
had engineered the co~ Dec. 'l1 in
R. (Mary) Pickens, Pomeroy; Mrs. member of Carpenters Local and a
Sunday Discharges--Carl Staats,
seat va&lt;Jited by Bollvis
American
the Afgban capital that resulted in
(Continued from page I )
Don (Barbara) Mullen, Middleport;
life long resident of Athens County.
Lessie Handley.
Dec.
31.
The
assembly was to vote
the overthrow and executioo d
YVoone Scally, Middleport, and · In addition to his mother he is surthe form. Students from all three
again
today.
President Haflzullah Arnin and his
Mrs. Joe (Rose) Tribble, St. Albans,
vived by his wife, Marcia Hornsby
school districts will be asked to have
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
replacement by Babrak Karma!,
W. Va., 19 grandchildren, 14 great- Barnhart; one son and daughter-in- their parents, relatives and neighDISCIIARGES JAN. 4
whom
the Soviets brought back from
grandchildren, and sewral nieces law, Robert L. and Patricia Barbors complete this f(J'IIl.
POMEROY :... OOAD Senior
Nancy Aeiker, Molly Baisden. exile in Czechoslovakia.
nhart, Rt. 2, Guysville; two grandand nephews.
The forms will also be available at Charlotte Burton, Stacey Clark,
Nutritioo
Program Menu for Jan. 7
"Are we to believe that President
Mr. Hackett was a veteran of children, Robert l. and Amky Bar- various public places and agencies
· Freda Dile, Mary Elliott, Goldie Amin invited Soviet troops to come
through Jan.ll:
World War I having served in com- nhart, Rt. 2, Guysville.
in Meigs County. All forms should be
Frederick, MRs. Dmnl' Gilbert and
Monday -Meat balls in muahroom
bat inGennanyand France. He was
Funeral services will be held
returned to the Meigs County Health daughter, Louise Hftwkins, George into Afghanistan In ocder to oversee
gravy,
buttered carrots, cole sla.,.,
his own downfall and his awn
a member of Drew Webster Post 39, Tuesday at I p.m. at the White Department, 2:J6 West Second St.,
Plantz
Jr.,
caroline
'Rhea,
Beverly
lemon
pudding, clmamon crwnb
execution?" McHenry asked.
American Legion, and the Disabled
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Pomeroy, by January 28.
Smith, Sam Triplehorn, Jack
topping, bread, butter, mllk.
He said radio transmitters inside
Rev. David W. Holdren officiating.
American VeteraiiS.
Below is a cq!Y of the survey. If Wheatley, Tanya Woodard.
Tuesday - Ham and navy beans,
the
Soviet
Union,
purporting
to
be
Mr. Hackett bad worked for the
Burial will be in Wires Cemetery,
you have not filled one out, please
BIRTHS JAN_.4
beets, buttered spinach, Ice
Harvard
Radfo Kabul, broadcast the first
New York Central Rallrood for 49 Bethany Ridge . Friends may call at
complete it and return it to the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Sturgill,
son,
cream,
cornbread,
butter, milk.
word of tbe coup, and ''the real
years and nine months before bis
the funeral home today from 2 to 4 Meigs County Health Department.
Wellston;
Mr.
and
MrS. Kerry KefWednesday
Liver
and onions.,
retirement and he was a member of and7to9.
QUESTIONNAIRE FOR 11IE
fer, daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
buttered
peas,
tossed
salad,
French
the Brotherhood ol Locamotive
MEIGS COUNTY
MrS. Garrett Bowman, daughter,.
dreaslng, · chocolate cake, white
EXTENDED
FORECAST
SQUAD CALLED
Engineers.
HEALTil DEPARTMENT
Crown City,
Wednesday tbrougb Friday, a
icing, bread, butter, mllk.
He was a member d Sacred Heart
The Middleport Emergency Squad Township: .... . .......... . . ... ..
Thursday - Bed roast - bu~;;red
DISCHARGES
JAN.
5
cbance
of
flurries
In
lbe
11011beast
Church, Pomeroy, where services answered a call Sunday to Sycamore
Age : . ..... .. ........ .. .. .. .... ..
Alta
Bates,
Marvin
Bates
Sr.,
Wednesday.
Falr
Tlmnday.
A
potatoes,
atewed tomatoes, fruit
will be conducted at II a.m. Wed- St. for Elodia Webb wbo was taken
(Please circle oae answer.)
John
Blanksenship,
Charles
Camcbance of ~or snow Friday.
cocktail, butterscotch cookie,
ne&amp;day with the Rev. Father Paul
to Veterans Memorial !lospital
I. Do you know what blood
lien,
Betty
Duncan,
MrS.
Cheater
Hlgb.s
from
tile
upper
2011
to
the
biscuits, butter, mllk.
Weltoo dflclaling. Burial will be in where she was treated and then pressure is?
Elliott
and
daughter,
Sherman
mid
30s
Wedoelday,
warmiDg
to
Friday - Baked steak, mashed
Sacred Heart Cemetery. l!osary
returned home by the unit.
I. yes 2. no
Graham,
Mp.
James
Hudson
and
lbe
mid
3011
to
mid
4011
by
Friday.
potatoes,
gravy, buttered green
aervices will be conducted at 7 :30
2. Do you have your blood pressure
MEETS WEDNESDA \'
son,
Jimmy
Jenkins,
Matthew
Lows
In
tbe
teeDa
Wednesday,
beans,
fruit
gelatin, bread, butter,
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions checked at least once a year?
Jenkins,
Lola
Marcum,
Ryan
ruing
to
the
2011
by
Friday.
milk.
Home where friends may call after 7 Club will meet in regular session at
I. yes 2. no
McKinney, Joan Miller, Cynthia
Coffee, tea, and a choice of whole
this evening.
3.
Do you know blood pressure can
noon Wednesday at the 1\feigs Inn.
Newsome, Janet Pitchford, Wyatt
milk or buttermilk served dally.
be related to heart disease, stroke oc
Roach, Robert Roberts, Mrs.
Please register the day before ybou
NOELSI'ORY
kidney disease?
SEEK LICENSES
Stephen Shulaw and daughter, Mrs.
plan
to eat. Pomeroy, 992-7888. The
Relatives here have received word
I. yes2. no
Marriage licenses were issued to
MEETING POSTPONED
V'tnson stapleton and son, Thomas
Racine
Satelli~ Is temporarily
ol the Saturday evening death d
4. Do you know being overweight,
Herman J. Ferrell, 44, Middleport,
A meeting of the Meigs County
Stapleton, Lawrence Sutton, Jamie
clMed.
Noel Story, 86, at Webster City,
and Mary Jane Scaggs, 45, Mid- ·
Fair Board scheduled for this or eating too much salt may affect
Tillis, Rooald Williams.
Iowa.
dleport; Wijllam Robert Ralph, 3&amp;,
evening has been postponed until someone 's blood pressure?
BIRTHSJAN.5
The fonner Meigs Countian died of
I. yes2. no
Middleport, and Joyce Melanie Hall,
Jan. l4.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Long, son,
a heart attack.
5. Where have you heard anything
28,
Middleport; Donald Ray Eynon,
GaDipolis Ferry; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Story, the former
about blood pre111ure?
19,
Minersville, and Diana Lynne
THURSDAY SESSION
Harold McAfee, son, Grinun's LanAnna Thoma, recently celebrated
I. TV .2. radio 3. newspaper 4.
(Continued from page 1)
Bollinger,
20, Minersville; Mark
The Meigs County Humane
ding; Mr. and Mrs. Joe McConahy,
their 6lith wedding amiversaty.
Harold
Hawk,
:!!,
Tupper8
Plains,
In
Maryland,
where up to 9inches
Society will meet at 7:30p.m. Thur- Other----daughter, Gallipolis. •
Besides bis wife, he is survived by
6.
Did
you
know
that
the
Meigs
and
Jennifer
Lee
Gainer,
:!!,
Reed·
of
snow
fell
over
the weekend, d51ay at the Riverboat Room of the
DISCHARGES JAN. 8
IJve children. Local surviV(J'S InCounty
Health
Deparbnent
has
a
Meigs Branch, Athens County
ficials reported five deaths, inSherry Adkins, Christopher sville.
clude two sisters-in-law, Mrs.
blood pressure program?
cluding the death of a !knonth-old
Savings and Loan, W. Main St.,
Collins, Luther Ferguson, Mrs. Billy
Georgia Thoma and Mrs .
I. yes 2. no
Pomeroy.
girl wbo apparently got excited at
Byerly
and
daughter,
Beulah
HickWilhelmina Thoma, both d Cbester,
Comments: ................ .. ..
END MAIIRIAGES
the snow and toddled outside into lbe
man,
Brenda
McWhorter,
Mrs.
Arand several nieces and nephews.
If you have any questions con~ERVEGAMEEARLY
In Meigs CotDity Coounon Pleas
freezing weather. One man was
tlwr
Morris
and
son,
Mrs
Harry
PatFuneral serviees will be held
Eastern's varsity will play at cerning this survey, or if you would
ton and son, Phyllis Ritchie, Betty Court Teresa· W. Huffman, Rl 3, charged with murder when a
Wednesday. The body ill at the
Point Pleasant Tw:sd&amp;Y night. The like to volunteer, please call . the
Pomeroy, Jl1ed for divorce against shooting Incident followed a
Robinson, James Slagle, Mrs. Dale
!'cater Funeral Home at Webster Cireserve games begins at 5:&gt;15 p.m.
health department at 99U626.
Brady Huffman, Jr., Racine.
anawball-throwing, police said.
VIckers and soo, Terry White.
-l---------------~----------------,
BIRTIIJAN.6
Tammy Kay Gilkey was granted a
And in Iowa, the resumption of
Mr. and MrS. William Roush, soo, divll'ce from Mark GOkey oo classes at Iowa State University was
charges d extreme cruelty.
t'Jostpooed due to wi!lter weather for
Syracuse.
·
just the second time in the school's
history. Officials said there were a
rash of auto accidents as ~ to 3 in- ·
ches of snow fell, but reported that
many
people were home to watch
May
and Jana Kaye Bursoo were mmed
pro football playoffs.
May 1 -The Meigs Local Board of valedictorian and salutatorian,
Temperatures across the nation
Education hired an educational con- re!ipeclively, of the senior class of
early
today ranged from 18 below
sultant to help study the 42 ap- Meigs lfigh School. Karen Probert
zero in GlasgoW, Moot., to 66 in
plications on file for the superin- was named valedictorian and Deb- Brownsville, Texas.
tendent's pooitioo created by the bie Spencer, salutatorian, d the
resignationofSupt.CharlesDowler. graduating class d Eastern High
May 2 - A connection ban was ' ScbooL
placed oo the TUppers Plains area
May 17- Brice Hart was named
by the Ohio EPA, preventing home valedictorian, and Terri Ann Zirkle,
construction in the area, and salutatorian, 'for the 1979 class of
causing the Meigs County Com- Southern Higb School.
missionerstotakelegalactim.
May 18 - Meigs County ComMay 3 -Herman London resigned
missiooers received a petition
!rem his pool with Syracuse ViUage requesting that the county operate
Coimcil, in order to take a position 8.'1 Forest Acres Park in Rutland Townmanager d London Pool through ship.
1900.
May 20 - Graduation exercises
May 4 - It was a night of en- were held for 9t seniors at Southern
tertalilhtent as the Southem Local HighSchool.
High School presented a variety
May 21 -Pothole repair work was
show, and Meigs Hlgb School juniors delayed by tbe disrepair of equipand seniors presented four one-act rnent neceSsary for the Job.
plays.
PCIIIeroy Village Councll.took action
May 5 -Meigs lfigh School band to repair the co~ctllr. Meanwhile, ·
students were honored with the an- an around-the-clock tnvestlgatloo
nual Band Banquet.
was being conducted by the Gallia
May 7 -National Hospital Week and Meiga Sheriff Departments of
was hegun at Veterans Memocial an apparent double.ftomicide.
H~ital with activities promoting a
May 22 - GraduaUon ceremonies
national campaign to contain health were held at Meigs Hlgb School for
care costs.
180 members of the 8enior class. ·
May 8 - . Street maintenance
May 23 - The Meigs County Coniworkers for Pomeroy Village began missioners approved a f,!,264,210
pothole repair work, starting on project budget for the coostruclim
MulberTy Ave. and progressing d a school for the mentally retarded
· throughout the village.
and an adult workshop in Meigs
May 9 -- The Ohio Department of County.
Transportation announced that
May 24- Poppy Day for the Ladies
earlier plans to pave three Pomeroy Auxiliary ol Drew Webster Post 39 ·
blocks were now · "out of the was conducted In POOleroy.
queatloo" due to street width and
May 25 -The secmd Poppy Day
monetary conditions.
was held by the auliliaty. Tbe small
May 10- Twenty .five Meigs Coun· red flowers were distributed in
If you get a Social Security, Railroad
ty senior citizens participated in the memory of men who lost their lives
Retirement, Military Retirement, or other
mock disaster held over a trl-county
In our natlcn 's wars.
... puts 10 gallons of
government check, you can have it
, area. The Pomeroy, Middleport,
May 26 - Gramatioo exercises
moisture
into the air of
deposited directly into your Farmers
Syracuse, Rutland, and Racine were conducted for
'111 Eastern
your home every 24
Emergency Squads took part in the
Hlgb School Seniors.
·
Bank account. - You 'II feel a lot safer
hours. Two speed fan ,
_drill,
with
those
not
making
fUlll
May
'l1
-Drew
Webaler
·Poat
39,
· about your check not getting lost or
automatic shut off.
· standing by .to answer authentic American. Legloo, held Its amual
stolen. Sign up for Direct Peposit
•
Memorial Day progrma and parade
calls:
at the Farmers Bank now.
May 12 -The annual •Hike-Bike'' In downtolv:n Pomeroy.
,
On~ ~ggoo
for the mentally retatded waa 'held,
May 29 - Meigs COunty cOm·
with hUndreds of children alld adult~~
mlsslmen(were requea111d to make
partiCipating.
,
.
a
change in the superlnt~r~dent and
0
. , .. ,..
,, VIsit
Elberfelds
May 14 - MlacDeport's loog· , ot11er pei'BOIIIIel at the Meigs County
planned nursing home project, was.: Highway Department... . . , ; 1 • , , ., • 1 11 • Wa retiou'e end see · our
disbanded.
May ~ - Richard Lee Roberll, ·'corll'ptete · line · of ·Home ··
May 15 - The Pomeroy Chamber . ~lpil ol Backeye Cent'ral High . ,,!lu'mldlfiers~
. of Conuner~ wnglven.pennlsllon
School, New Washlngtm;Ohlo, wu ·
by the ·Meigs lAICal ' Board, of 8!Dpl'7ed lis .the new I!Uperlhtendlllt ·
Ed!~eatlon to 118!! the Pomeroy
o( Eailtern Local School'!. RObarts
Stadium for aome acil'Vlties during
filled !be vacancy left by the
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Five
nonofl!igned Security Council members circulated a draft resolution
calling for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from
Afghanistan as the United States
called the Soviet lnterventloo a
''dangerous breach d peace and
security" and a "terrible
miscalculation.''
Sponsored by Bangladesh,
Jamaica, Niger, Zambia and the
Philippines, the resolulioo did rut
mention the Soviet Union by name
but "deeply deplored" the armed Intervention in Afghanistan.
Soviet Ambassador Oleg

Pomeroy council approves $555,000 budget

Troyanovsky told reporters he
would , ~to the resolution if it came
to a vote. A majority d the coWICil
oc of the U.N. membership then

.

BY KATIEQWW

Pomeroy Council Mdnday night as
an emergency measure by a 4 to 2
vote approved appropriations
totaling more than $555,000for 1980.
Voting ilo on the issue were Betty
Baronlck and Larry Webrung . ·
They were opposed to apprdpriatlng •10,000 to the mini-park
fund feeling that the money should
be used on streets.
Othet me111bers fe,lt that if funds
were not appropriated the village
would lose a 50.00 grant from the
Bureau d Outdoor Recreation. The
total appropriation W&amp;$ $565,008.15.

Included in the appropriation was
a five percent acr&lt;IIS the board
salary increase for all clty employes.
,
Council agreed not to exceed tbe
budget and to cut e:rpenses when
necessary.
BROWN RELECTED

In other business, council reelected Harold Brown as president of
council and name&lt;f Jack Krautter as
street superintendent.
A contract was received from
Burgess and Niple Engineering for
the extension of the sewage system
from Krogers to Kerrs Run at a cost

Health •••

e
(USPS 145·960)

VOL XXVIII NO. 186

KarT , Harold Brown, and Wil,liam
fines from $1 to $5 in order to bring in miles.
COMMITTEE APPOINTMENTS
Young.
more revenue. No action was taken ,
Mayor Clarence Andrews named
-Ordinance committee, Lou,
however,
· Wehrung also suggested that the following committees for 1980 · Osborne, Harold Brown, and Larry
with tbe lira! one listed to serve as
Wehrung. - -Utility committee,
streets not be scraped unless cinders
'Miliam Young, Betty Baronlck and
are to be placed inunediately chainnan. --Building cmlunittee,
Harold
Brown,
Rodney
Karr
and
LouOsbome.
·
following that procedure.
Betty
Baronick.-Street
comThe
meeting
was opened with
Council also discussed purchasing
mittee,
Larry
Wehrung
,
Rodney
prayer
by
Mayor
Andrews. At·
chains for the village truck.
·
Karr,
and
William
Young.--Park
tending
were
Mayor
Andrews,
Betty
The report d acting Police Chief
committee,
William
Young,
LaiTy
Baronick,
Larry
WehriDig,
Harold
Harry Lyons for the mooth of
December showed the department Webrung, and Betty Baronick. - Brown, Rodney KarT, Lou Osborne,
answered 257 complaints, made 63 Finance committee, Betty Baronick, and William Young, council memarrests, collected $1,927.50 from the LaiTY Wehrung, and Lou Osbor- bers, Jane Walton, clerk, Donnie
Safety committee, Rodney
Ward and Randy carpenter.
parking meters and drove 4,350 ne.-

of. $lil,600 for basic service by the
engineer. The old contract called for
basic service ala cost ol $23,000.
Council accepted the haaic service
cootract in the amount of$16,&amp;10.
Council under· emergency
rreasure passed an ordinance to fix
aalarles and wages.
.
William Young, councilman,
sugge.ated that guardrail be placed
oo Pl~t Ridge and a manhole on
Mulberry Ave., near the school be
raised.
Larry Weh!'ung, cowacilman,
suggealed raiSing parking meter

at y

TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1980
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EXTENDED FORECAST

Tbunday lllroagb Saturday :
Fair Tbunday 81ld Friday. A
e.baoce of raiD Saturday. Hlgbs
from the mid 3011 to the mid 4011
'lbunday and !rem the mid 4418 to

lbe mid 5GB Friday and Saturday.
Lowl belween 15 and Z5 early
Tbunday, wU1111og to tbe 30s by
Saturday moflliDg.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight, and Wednesday. Lows tonight between 15 and
20. Hlgha Wednesday in the low to
mid :Ml!l. The chance of precipitation
is 10 percent tooight and 20 percent
Wednesday.

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Commissioners reject
request for pay /like

the

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resignation d Clark Lees.

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MASON - Vandals struck
Wahama High School and entered
Beale Elementary School during the
weekend, causing exte111ive damage
to five buses and breaking many
windows in the building.
The Incident at Waharna was
reported to the Mason County
Sheriff's Department Saturday
morning, 10:25 a.m. by Dewey King,
a bus driver, and is under the investigation of Sheriff's Deputy G. M.
Kearns, and Mason Pollee Chief D.
C. Slayton.
According to the pollee report, five
buses were damaged, including
broken windshields, slashed tires,
broken headlights and side windows,
and busted control panels. The fire
axes were taken from the buses and
reportedly . used to break out window8 in the gymnasium and senior
high school, and !Ire extinguishers
were set off Inside the buses.
Two windows in the gym were
broken, as well as the glass in the
senior high door and principal's
office.
Damage to U.e buses alone was
approximately $2,000 according to
Tom Roach, assistant director of
transportation for the Mason Caunty
Board of Education. Roach said this
estlmste was rougb, and actual
damage wDI not be known until the
bus parts are replaced.
An AMC Spirit, owned by
Riverside AMC Jeep, Gallipolis, and
being rented by a local resident, was
parked at the high school aM also
received damage. According to
Police Chief ' Slayton~ headlights,
both front and back windshields and
three side glasses were broken In the
car.
Three fire axes taken from the
buses were found Inside the hall ol
the senior high. Chief Slayton stated
the vandals did not enter the school.
Mason County SherUf' s Deputy
Adalee Hart .Is investigating the
breaking and entering at Beale
Elementary, which was reported to
the olflce Monday mom~ by a
custodian, Violet Nibert.
According ,to Deputy Hart, the
incident occurred sometime het-

FoDowing a lengthy discussiQII
was set at 18 and one-half cents per
Friday the Meigs County Com- Q.lile.
missimers Monday by a 2-1 vote
Attending were Richard Jones,
agreed to keep the salaries d the of. Henry Wells and Cbester Wells,
lice personnel at the county highway cmunissloners, .and Mary · Hobgarage at the Te level they were stetter, clerk.
In 1979.
Henry Wells made the motion to
keep the salaries of the «fice per- .
SOIUlel at the same level per pay 8ll
they were in 1S'/9 and to be paid 27
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Ayatollah
pays in 1991 and to appropriate a Ruhollah Khomeinl decided to go Intotal of $38,981.50 in the K~ account to seclusion at the end of the week,
fll' a fall 366 calendar days. ·
closing his doors to all vis.itors for 15
Voting for the issue was Henry days amid mounting communal
Wells liJid Richard .Jones. Chester violence·. He asked that demonWells opposed it.
strations be cancelled Wednesday in
The issue was discussed with Qom, and revolutionary gus rdsmen
Wealey Buehl, county engineer. there were stopping and searching
Buehl said he had originally asked suspicious cars.
for a $624 per year raise for each of
The office of the 79-fear-old leader
tbe the employes. and that he still
of the Iranian revoluti111 said he was
wanted them to have it.
very tired and beginning Saturday
a.eater Wells agreed that they would rest at his hOOle In Qom, ·the
should have a $624 raise, but that:lt Sblite Moslem holy city 100 miles
should be ba$ed on 26 pays instead of south of Tehran.
27. . '
In 'othet business, Buehl was
authorized to prqceed with the
neceSIBry work.needed to repair a
$1,iiiiO~llTED
allp on Maceumber Hill.
Pomei'Oy ~ 2171,.Fraternal ()-••
Buehl reported that he would sub- der of Eagles, Is proud to allnotmce
EMERGF)NCY RUNS
,,
· '.itllt' ·a· requeSt ' 'tO' 'the · IAAit'd' fit! · ' 'aat dooations ·tot.allnc .•
hlve·····-·'TbeMiddlejlOrtEmeraency Squad
payment of a portion of the coil! of beef! . made to. the following
was call~ to '111 North .~ond at 9:31
Oper&amp;tiori ~the enclneer'll.offlce at organizations t)JrqUSli tl!e eft:orts of
a.in. Tueaday lor Hubert Ste~rt
,tl)e next board meeting.
..
. . the group's public games program. , who was taken to Veterans
. · ('.ommlsslQ!iers approved a per- Tlie donations . _Include.. Eagles · MemOrial ~Ia!.
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for.n.,CI! bmd of Marjorie Reuter memorial lund, $600; Eagle Malt · On Monday the fire ~partment
.liB (\eputy clerk ol county court for ·, Baer heart fund , $1100; Jiluinle
was .calle&lt;qo CIINtnut Ridge near
thepurpoae,Q!taking bonds.
. Durante fund, $1600; and Eagle canChealllre where an abandoned home
Mileage rate for county employes cer fund, $1:1JX!.
wllll'dastroyed .bY flnt, .· ·'

Will be secluded

You'll feel a lot safer.

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Additional funds
may .be tJ'vailable

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - More
money would be available to help
low -income Ohioans pay their winter
heating bills if the state Controlling
Board approves the use of $39.8
million in federal funds for this purpose.

Cootrollers are reviewing Welfare
Department plans for distributing
Ohio's share of Supplemental
Energy AssiStance funds, approved
late last year by Congress. •
The WeUare Department has
suggested the money be
automatically distributed to about
356,000 households which received
Aid to Dependent Children, general
relief and food stamp payments this
month.
An Individual would get a one-time
swn of ~. while families of two or
more would get a $126 payment,

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ween the dismissal of classes Friday
and Monday morning. She ltated the
doors d two mobile classrooms were
forceably entered, but nothing had
been reported mi,&lt;lsing as of Monday
morning.

$300,000

budget
approved
Harold Roush and Oris Smith have
been reelected president and vice
president, respectively, as a result
of the annual organizational session
of the Meigs County Board of
Education.
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Both Roush and Smith were
reelected to serve on the board for
the next four years and were given
their oath of vffice by County
Superintendent Robert Bowen.
other county board members are
George Perry, Bob Burdette and
Harold Lohle.
At the organlzatiooal meeting, the
board apprqved a 19M! budget of
Pi0,923.78 and Issued bus driver certificates to Paulette McGrogan,
calhyMOITisand June Yost.
Uabillty insurance was purchased
for board membe111 and meetings
were set for the first Tuesday of
each month, beginning In February ,
·
at7p.m.
A service fund for members to attend training sessions, workshops,
meetings, etc., in the amount of
$4,000 was established. Pay was set
at $40 a meeting not to exceed 12
meetings a ¥ear.

Starts conunitment
A 18-year old Pomeroy youth committed to the Ohio Yooth Commillllon by Judge Robert E. Suck,
has been taken to the Buckeye Youth
Center by juvenile dflcer cart R.
fbaell.
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·
The yOilth was placed on probatioo
by Judge Buck Iii November for the·
breaklrig of a window" at the K and C .
Jewelry Siore In Pomeroy and
tald~ eight watches.
The youth received a suspended
comrnlirnent to ~ _co.mml.sslon for
that ~fense, but since has been
found to· he In violation d that
proll!ition.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

For heating bills

Damage ext'Rnsive
iil WHS vandalism
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Have your che~k
- de~sited directly
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Into your account.

May 16Weekend.
- Deborah· Ellen Danner
l----~--:.~~~~~~---~P~O~M~E~R~O~Y:_,~0~.--~M~e=m~be:r~F~D~Ic:.___!____+l Regatta

PICKUP BEGINS THURSDAY
Mae Cleland, clerk of the village of
Racine, announced tod!IY that the
viDage truck has been repaired and
garbage will be picked up Thursday
In the village.

VANDALS DID EXTENSIVE DAMAGE to five buses w!Vch were parked at Wahama High School during the
weekend, lnclu411!g broken windows, wln!lshields, headlights, and busted control panels. Windows in the senior high
school and gymnasium were also brok~n. Fire extinguishers were set off Inside the buses, and fire a1tes from the
buses were found In the hall of the senior high. Shown in the picture above is one of the damaged buses. Shown below
is a broken windshield from a bus.

1979-news highlights

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, Oh1u

Winter stornl

Farmers
Bank

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Four people shot
CHICAGO (AP) -Five people
were killed and a young girl was
abducted Monday in three
shooting incidents that appeared
to be linked, pollee said.
Four people also were injured
in the incidents on the city's North Side. The dead were identified
as William Pagan, 4.1, Juan
Jiminez, 38 and Aida Pagan, 38,
all shot al a delicatessen; a
woman who was shot in an apparent tavern robbery; and an
armed man who confronted offleers in an alley.

Pleas not guilty
CINCINNATI (AP) - Samuel
Burson pleaded innocent Monday
to a charge of endangering his
three children by bolding them
ouUide the third.floor window of
his apartment, officials said .
Burson, ~1. of Cincinnati, was
arrested late Sund~y. ' Police
alleg~ tbl! t he held his three
children, ages 6, 3 and 11, out the
window as punishment.
Hamilton County Municipal
Crurt Judge Donald Schott set
bond at $25,000 and continued the
case for trial until Jan. l7.

Sales resume
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) - Sales
resumed Monday at Ohio's
burley tobacco market, with hundred pound averages down
slightly from the pre-Ciristmas
closing on Dec. 18.
Sales Monday were 533,900
pounds for $798,450.62, or·$149.53'
per hundred pounds. The
previous closing average was
$149.85.

Elvis' birthday
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AI') - In
years JIISt, the flowers began
triekling in days ahead d time,
building to a flood of carnations
and. roses· by the time Elvis
Presley 'II birthday.rolled around.
Added to the floral'
·arrangements of guitars, hearts,
hound d~ and Croi!Ses were hun. cr~ ~ rlllles broUght by fai)S
from all over the world.
Today, on whlit would have
been Presley's 45th birthday, the
scene will be repeated.

Welfare Director Kenneth Creasy
told the board Monday.
Automatic payments would also
he made to elderly and disabled persons receiving Supplemental
Security Income.
Panel members questioned
Creasy about bow the syltem would
be coordinated with Ohio's existing
$36 million energy credits progi'Bm
to avoid duplication.
Rep .· Myrl Shoemaker, D·Boumeville, and , Sen. William
Bowen, D.Cincinnati, pointed out
that lawmakers had not been consulted about preparation of the plan.
Copies d the proposal were to be
delivered to board members today.
Federal approval of the Ohio plan
Is expected this week, Creasy said.
Barring state delays, such actioo
could aUow checks to be mailed as
early as Feb. !.
In other business, controllers learned the state is expected to record
an $18 million surplus In state
education funds by June 30 as a
resull ot updated pupil enrollment
figures.
The money represents unused funds IJ'iginally appropriated to Ohio's
more than 600 schOol districts on the
basis ri enrollment estimates made
(Continued on page 8)
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Armed bandit
robs Kroger's·
An undetermined amount ol cash
was stolen from Kroger's this morning during an armed robbery of
that Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
supermarket.
CaDed to the scene at 7: 17 a .m.,
Gallipolis City Police report a white
male d light build entered the
facility, apporached the cashier's office and confronted store employes
Betty Snodgrass and Byrdell Forth
with a bolt action, ,:zlcallibre rifle.
The subject then, reportedly, ordered !be store persormel to place
the contents of the safe in a money
bag. After relieving the two of the
store receipts, which were placed In
a white money bag, the ai'!Ded bandit ordered the Kroger employes to
. move toward the rear of the
building. The man then left the store
ahd fled in an unidentified vehicle In
an unknown direction.
According to a report filed with
city police the man, wbo was
wearing a stocking mask, was
dressed in a black leather jacket,
brown corduroy pants and brown
high-top suede j)oob.

·Woman holds
police at bay
A· New Haven woman, Olarlene
Sarnsell, 30, has been charged with
destruction of property following an
Incident around 4 a.m. today in the
New Haven police staUon.
The woman was arrested by PU.
Joey Parsons, who was meeting this
morning with Mason County
Proaecutllr Dan Roll to detennlne if
other charges will be filed.
Accorc!lng to sources, M$. Samsell
apparently broke open the door to
. the police station which w• empty
at the time, and entered the
bulldlilg.

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Police officers, ~rted ~ her
presence by the open door, were held
·at bay fill' a short time by the woman
who 18d a gun in her possE&amp;slon, It
wasreporled,
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Full details of the incident were
unavailable at pres~ time.
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