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                  <text>12-The Daily Sentinel. MiHdteport-Pmn eroy , 0 ., Wt•dn•:sday, .J~n . :11 1n79 •
coal industry," Patton sairl .
He said Consolidated has
permanently laid off 719 men
in the past few years, "and
another 700to 800 jobs hang in
th e balance," awaiting the
EPA's decision.
James McEvoy , the new
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) utilities to meet strmgent new
VP.rbal fireworks erupted federal emission standards at head of the Ohio EPA, said
1uesday during U. S. their coal-burning power his stall has been meeting
w1th representatives of the
Environmental Protection plants.
Agency hearings on Ohio air
Possibilities being federal agency but have not
pollution when Jame s con sidered include allowivg reached agreement on
Friedman, an attorney for the utilities to burn low- em1ss1on levels to be required
Cleveland EUuminating Co., sulfur , non.Ohio coal, or methods to be employed.
"Our goal is to clean up tile
testified.
requiring them to b\lfn highFriedman,
a leading sullur Ohio coal and install air, " McEvoy added. " I hope
spokesman for the utilities in sc rubber!S to clean the some sort of compromise
their battle to prevent the em issionS; and requ ire solution can be reached to
EPA from forcing them to burning high-sulfur coal with accomplish this."
install scrubbers, was a combination of scrubbers
Several miriers ' wives
interrupted repeatedly by and other pollution control testified that they feared
their husbands would be la1d
shouts from the crowd o! equipment.
off
if the switch to non.Qhio
several hundred persons.
Ralph K. Patton , vice
During the day-long session president of Consolidated coal is allowed.
on cleaning up Ohio air , the Coal Co., Ohio's largest coal
utilities blamed EPA, the mining firm , urged the
miners heckled the utilities federal agency to take action
and the coa I companies quickly .
preached gloom and doom .
Patton said Consolidated
Friedman accused the EPA would lose 91.4 percent of its
of having made up its mind sales in Ohio if the utilities
long ago to require the switch to non.Ohio coal.
utilities to install the
" U you force Ohio utilities
expensive scrubbers.
to burn eastern Kentucky
The hearing was the .third coa l or southern West
called by the federal agency Virginia coal you will kill a
to hear testimony on its plans significant portion of the Ohio
to force Ohio 's seven major

Verbal fireworks
erupted Tuesday

Speed Queen

WASHER &amp;
DRYER
SPECIAL

pr .
(Not exactly as pictured)

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport. 0 .

IlTTEN II Mf.ETIN(;
.Ju~ m Wolf(·, Mrs. Onruw
.Jnl•n-;ml, M1·s .J:tr1l' Wa gnt'l".

Halph ani! ror» W&lt;'i&gt;h, and
William and (,uuist• Sh•wart.
membel's uf Rnri rH' ChaptL•r

IJ4 ,Order nf lht' F.aslern Sta r.
.altmule&lt;lthe dislrid rnt•t'ling
and st'h&lt;M&gt;l nf inslrudinn held
Tm•sday at Athens . Mrs.
Sh~ wart

was installed cts
pr ~t'SJJcht of distrid 25 (ur
1979.

SE;EK DIVORCES
Two suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
common pleas court.
· Filing were William W.
Hawk, Rt. 2, Racine,.against
Winifr ed
Lynn
Hawk,
Pomeroy; Pauline Von
Freinstein, Middleport ,
against Karl Von Freinstein,
west Columbia, S. C.

1I_

HERMAN W. REES
Mrs. James Rees, Sr.,
Rlleine, returned horne Sun·
day after a month's stay in
Mayslick, Ky . due to the
len gth]~ illness and death of
her father-in -law , Herman
Winchester Rees.
Mr. Rees was born on May
27, 1899 and died Jan . 14. He
was a prominent retired
fanner and land owne r in
Mason Counly,Ky. Surviving
are his wife, Anna Clift Rees,
three sons, James Scott Rees,
Sr., Raeine ; John Clift Rees,
San Angelo, Texas; and

SELDON FLEMMING
Seldon R. Flemming, 69, 503 Kathnor
Lane, Point Pleasant, well-known
businessman and civic leader, died
Wednesday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Active in community affairs,
Flemming was chairman of the City
Planning Commission of Point Pleasant
for 20 years and was a member and
past president of the Mason County
Chamber of Commerce. He also was c&lt;r
O\VTler of the Moore's stores in Point
Pleasant, Ripley , Pomeroy and
Marietta . He was chainnan o! the
Planning Commission since its inception.
He was born JuneS, 1909, at Marietta,
0 ., the son of the late Lucy and Edwin
Flemmin~ . He was a graduate of
Marietta College and worked with the
U.S. Agriculture Marketing Service in
Ohio, New York, Philadelphia and
Boston. He served as a captain in the

THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
of Middleport in the state of Ohio, at the close of Business on December 31, 1978 published in
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code,
Section 161.
Charter number 8441
Nat1onal Bank Reg ion Number 4
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Cash and due from depository institutions .. . .. . . . . . .. . .. . .. .. . . . . . . . .. . .. 1,468,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ................ . .. . .... .... . . .. . ...... .. ...... 2,428,000.00
Obligations of States and political
subdivisions in the United States . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. .. . . .. . . .. .. . . . 1,963,000.00
All otber securities ...... ... .............. .. . . . , .. . .. ...... .. . ..... ...... . . 30,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income ) .... ... .. , .... •... .. . . 7,152,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses .. .. . . .............. . .. .... 82,000.00
Loans, Net .. , . . .......... .. ..... .. .. . ........ . . .. ..... , ..... ..... .. . 7,070,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
assets representing bank premises. . . . .. . .. . . . ................ . .... .. . .. . 88,000.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises ... .. . ............................ 1,000.00
All other assets . . . . . . . .. . .. . ................... .. ........... . . ..... .. . .. . . 7,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . ... 13.055.000.00

IU

-c
-...
II

.
1

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps.,
and corps.. .... .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . .. . . . . .. . . 2,796,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals
prtnshps., and corps ...... . ................ . . ......................... 8,204,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ...... .. .. .. ..... ......... . ............ . 6,000.00
Deposits of States and political
subdivisions in the United States ............ ..... .................. .. .. . . . 468,000.00
All other deposits .. ....... : . . .. . . ... . ...... .. . ............ , ... . . , . . . ... . .. 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ......... .... . .. . . .. . .. ........ , . . .......... . .. 18,000.00
Total Deposits . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .......... .. .................... 11,497,000.00
Total demand deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .......... . 2,988,0QO.OO
Total time and savings deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . .... 8,509,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... $100,000.00
All other liabilities ................ . ........... .. ........ . ............. . .. .. 10,000.00
TOTAL UABILITIES (excluding subordinated
-:':-::-::::-:::::-::::notes and debentures ) . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. ..... 11,607,000.00

z

c

IIC

0

\ IIU
I

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness o! this statement o! resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the !J&lt;:st o! our knowledge and
belie( is true and correct.
.
·
RoseS. Reynolds
Rodney Downing - Directors
Bernard V. Fultz

.

)

hegemony or domination of State Cyrus fl . Vance rode 'lbc t wo co untrws " reafover others."
With the Chinese vice premier firm ed that they arc opposed
The communique called !rom his guest quarters at to effort s by any r:o tintr} or
ttie talks between Teng and 1 Blair House to a presidentia l group o f co untries to
helicopter waiting on the Mall estab li sh · hegemony or
Prcsid~nt Carter "cordial.
construct1ve and fruitful. " between the Washin gton •· domination over others.''
Teng was greeted at Monwnent and the Lincoln
Teng's Atlanta vi sit
Dobbins :Air Force Base, Memorial.
marked the ;tart of a crossout side Atlant a, by Gov .
The communique issued country tour as central to the
George Busbee and Atlanta by the United States and ( 'hlncsc leader' s state vts it as
Mayor Mayn~rd Jackson who C.'h ina noted the two s1des' h1s talks with Carter and key
gave him a key to the city. · "differing perspectives" on mem ber s of Congress
There will be a bit of
Teng left Washington after some int ernational areas. But
three days of high diplomacy it repeated the language often barb ecue · in Texas on
to ·see another side of used by the Chinese to in- Saturday , but Tcng won't be
America . His departure was dicate mistrust of, and op- spending a lot of time with the
muted but proper. Secretary posllon to, the Soviet Union ordinary people the &lt;lorn-

e

Repairs
eligible
deduction

Mayor's Court
Seven defendants forfeited"
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
They inctuded Jelfrey
Roush , New Haven , $370,
posted on a pharge o! driving
while intoxicated, and $500
post ed on an assault charge;
Virgil Phillips, Middleport,
$30 , illegal turn; James
McDougle, Pomeroy, $3 2,
speeding; Frank Miller ,
Zanesville, $50 disturbing the
Ilface ; $100, intoxication, and
$200, destruction of property;
Mary Bacon, Middleport, $30,
speeding ; Michael Stewart,
Cheshire, $38, speeding, and
Clifford Icenhower ,
Pomeroy, $50, driving while
under suspension.
~

•.

improvements

were

\

NO. 203

~till

the

prol etariat
Instea d. he will be seeing
captain s of in~ ustry. space
offidul s

and

newspaper

lm ~inc ~s tlt •Bl~. \~ u rth

millions

&lt;&gt;f do ll ars.
"'l11e Cluncsc intend to pay
lor cver)1hmg they bu y,"
saal a U.S . official.

Two-way trade - ~t a
publiohcf' on his trip to
Atlanta, llouston and Seattle. record $1 billion 1n 1978 - IS
He will tour plants that turn expected to spurt to an
out Ford autos, oil·dnlhng _ estim ate $1 6 billion and
eq uipm en t and jumbo perhaps even beyond as a
Jetliners befor e leavmg for . result of Tcng's tour . say U
S. orficials.
home Monda y mornmg.
The v ice pre mi er wil l
f,lc wi ll be sizing up
Amer ican assembly lines for travel about in a very unadaptation to Chinese needs. prolctari;m li mousine and
And he and his aides will be rest in fancy hoteb that
arrangmg the guidelin es of would be as unrccogmzable

•

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

LOUISVILLE, Ky . (AP) - An Ohio chemical
waste firm is expected to begin work this week to
remove more than 1,000 drwns o! hazardous materials
from a southwest Jefferson County farm. State
environmental officials have signed a contract with
Newco Chemical Waste Systems o! Ohio, Inc. to
remove 1,1116 full and empty drwns !rom the farm .
Kentucky Natural Resources Secretary Eugene
Mooney said the contract is for about $20,000,
depending on how many truckloads it takes to remove
the barrels and how long the job takes. The contract
includes 274 filled ~~rums and 832 empty ones, he said.
The firm also will remove contaminated straw and dirt
from the farm .

Darvon not that effective
WASHINGTON (AP) -A group of drug experts
says Darvon appears no more effective than common
aspirin and says abuse .of the popular prescription pain
reliever has been implicated in a number of deaths.
The Senate Small Business subcommittee. on
monopolies was to hear further vieWpoints today on the
drug, once the most popular pain reliever prescribed
by doctors.

Kidnapping never discussed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Patty Hearst's fiance,
Bernard Shaw, says the couple have never discussed
what happened during her fugitive life after she was
kidnapped by the Syrnbionese Liberation Army in
February 1974.
"!told her I had no interest in it," Shaw, a 3().yearold policeman said Tuesday during an interview in his
parked police car. "I told her I felt she was not guilty of
anything , and that's the most important thing." .

Materials buried today
WILLIAMSBURG, Ohio (AP) - Material declared
hazardous by Kentucky officials, who ordered it out of
the state, was scheduled to be implanted in a landfill
here today amid protests from at least two sources.
However, Ronald Reinke, sales manager-chemist
for Newco Chemical Waste Systems of Ohio, said there
was no danger of contamination from the firm's
Clermont Environmental Reclamation Inc. landfill.

60 percent ·approved

WESTERN SHIRTS
•

'1595
Made with ex.tra long tail, lined collar,. box pleated front, tapered
with box sleeve opening, pointed Western flap pockets, pointed
Western double yoke - pre-shrunk: Si~es 14'12 to 17.
'

cuff~

Be sure to see all the other styles Men's Western Shirts, Men's and
Boys' Depl. - lsi Floor.

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

'

•

111

AtJ&lt;mta

Ford

•v
ACE DOORS - There are garage door s and garage
doors, but the epitome of them , or at least near the top In
Meigs County are those of Mr. and Mrs. Durward ·
Cumings, Route 3, Pomeroy . The Cumings ' garage doors

reduce wage rates ; limit
employment in a public job to
18 months, and encourage
private industry to participate more with the
government in creating new"
jobs.
"CETA's record over the
last two years has not been
unblemished ," Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall said
in presenting what he dubbed, "The New CETA."
"Any program as large,
diverse and decentralized as
CETA
will
encounter
problems," he said. "But I
strongly
believe
that
government can .- and
should ~ learn !rom its
mistakes. Particuiarly in a
time of tight budget doll~rs,
we cannot afford to continue
wasteful and ineffective
programs."

Most o! the changes were
ordered by Congress last fall
when · It approved a three-

feature pamtings which turn them into aces from a deck of
playing cards. The aces were painted free hand by
Durward with no particular idea in mind. He has ca rried
out a fa ce card "bit" on several porch boxes at the home.

Director applicants sought
"M' e1gs
County received until4 p. m. on Feb.
Commissioners announced · 9.
Forms may be obtained
today they will begin taking
applications immediately for from th e Commi ss ioners'
a
County
Welfare office and returned to the
Administrator I (Director ). commission clerk no later
Applica tions w111
be than Feb. 9.

A list of requirements for
the
position· includes
developing and implementing
eoticy
and
general
proced ures; preparing all
statistical and fiscal reports;

refl ected on the one-month-

chairman of the Ford Motor
Co . Jnd .I Paul i\usun ,
chainnan of the Coca-Coli:!

old ties with the United States
and said "the honeymoon will

C'ol . whi ch has JU St acquired
at least a temporar y
monopol) on soh drmk sales
m Chma

Pleas Judge John C. BaFon
sentenced Swearingen to a
term of 2-5 years in a proper
state penal institution.
Swearingen was rem a nded

l'ontmuc."

With President Cart er. he
signed scientific, cultural and
consula r agreements in the

East Hoom of the While

Tcng was certain to run
mto demonstrations along the
way , from support ers of
Taiwan as well as Com·

atomic part1cle accelerator

murusts who find h1rn too

for h1 gh - · energy physics

House.

Among oth er thmgs, these

w1ll allow l'hma to buy an
l Contm ued on p£tge 12 1

undoctrinatre for the1r ta st es

15 CENTS

Commissioners
hear problem
train in g

program

co mmuni ty
activities; make speeches,

to the custody of Sheriff
James J . Pro!!itt pending h1s
remova l to the Medical and
Reception Center, Columbus,
later this week.
Jur ors

were

Ca rol

F.

vot e for such an expt·ndJturc I
want to see a &lt;:o py of th e
rcq utrcment · ·

Buehl stated he wou ld
check tho tnattcr and report
back later.

County Engmcer Wesley
Buehl. who is supervising lh e
plat map project , advised the
board that 10 percent of the
grant money would have to be

Buehl and eomrnJss1oncrs
also di ~(· ussed the need for a
major d1tching proJeCt On
county roads .
' !11(' engineer agree d t hat
such a proJ ect \\as bt~d l y

spe nt for a t raining progr am

needed and that hiS depart-

for employes workin g on the
project.
Hi cha rd J ones. Commission Pres ident . sa id he
could not understand why th e

lhl' proJect thi s spnng
Bob llailey. EMS coo r-

advised

of

Ucin ~

such

a

requirement. sint:e emplo) e~
ha ve·nu w been work mg on the
progra m some th ree mo nths

ment would be undertakun:(

dtn&lt;:ltor . dJsc ussrd billings of

Sl:OJ-:MS for

I(S

contrat1

scnitcs t,o Mc1gs C ount~ .
Rn il ey \\las in structed to

contat1 th e SEOEMS office
a nd verify the Decembe r

"This is the fl r;1 t1me I

billing and inform the i.Joaru
of the outcome.

have been adv1scd of such a
reqmrement lt would seem

HenrY Well s. and Jim Housh,

At t endin g

we r e

to me that 1f some F ,500 was

CommiSSIOners. &lt;mel

t o be spent to train employes

Hobstettcr. Clerk

such traming should have
taken place before the work
developmg and implementing began , not after the program
an annual budget; direct, is approximately one-half
implement and monitoring completed," Jones sa1d.
Conlin uing Jones stated,
county welfare programs;
"
It
appears to be another
select, train and promote
burea
ucratic waste or taxpersonnel ; participate m

various

Swearinge_n found g.u ilty
After deliberating 31
minutes, a Meigs County
Petit Jury Wednesday found
Don Swearingen, 21, Ht I,
Rutland, guilty of breaking
and entering
Swearingen was charged
with the Novem ber 1978
breaking and entering of the
Ja ck E. Warner property on
Lambert Hollow Road m
Sci pio Township.
Meigs Count y Common

On Wednesday, hiS last full
day 1n Washi ngton, the 74year·old Cni nt·sc lea der

Il l,

mtsswn.

pay er s money, and before I

maintain co nta ct with
representatives of sta te
departments and county
officials.
Applicants must have
knowledge o! (I) budgeting,
(2) inventory control, (3)
management, ( 4) employee
A dinner m eeting to di se uss
training and development,
improvements
to th e po&gt;1
(5) supervision, (6) public
home
was
held
Tuesday
ni ght
relations, 17) office practices
at
Drew
Webster
Post
39,
and
procedures,
(8 )
American Legion Home.
government structure and
Some 18 directors, past
process, (9) sociology and or
commander s a nd interested
social work , ( 10) ability to
post mem bers attended the
deal with some abstract but dilUier,
pr epared by Pau l
mostly concrete variables,
Ca~i. Dramagc was con( 11) understand tec hni cal
manuals, (12) establish a sidered the number one
friendl y atmosphere and priority necessary for the
reso lve com plaints !rom home.
i\ committee composed of
angry
citizens
and Charles
Swatzel, Char les
government officials.
Hayes and Rod Karr was
M inimum
class
requirements for the position named to study solutions and

hnprovements
outlined for
Legion home

Jo11es,

Mary

Dedication
set Feb. 10
Masons of the 12th Masonic

Distri ct will put 1n a busy day
on Sa turduy. F ell 10. when
Dunicl F. Icema n. grand
master of Oh w Ma son s.
d cd il' &lt;:~tcs
the tustorica l
marker in f run t of Mornmg

Dawn Lodge 7, l:alilpolls.
The Gallia i\cadcmy band
w111 be on hand for the event

wh1ch IS open to a ll Masons
Pi erce, Kay Ryan, Sharon
and their wtves, Ga llipolis
Mtch ael , Vicki Houchins,
Mutilated child
residents and d1gnitari es. ,
Helen Swartz , Patricia s·.
At r·oo p m .. Mason s and
Pape, George II Per ry ,
th
e ir wives wi ll h osl a
succumbs today
Robert B. Burdette, Howard
reception for Mr. Iceman at
S. Stevenson, Jane Swatzel,
th e Rio Grande Co ll ege
DALLAS [AP ) - An 6- Jack L. Clark and George F.
Cafeteria . The dinner is also
year-old Dallas g1rl, severely Wolfe.
open to members of Job's
Daugh ters. the Ha inbow
Survey underway beaten in an attack that also
caused the death of her
Girls and DeMolay.
The Eastern Local Board of brother , died early today.
The Grand Master will
Education will surv ey
A spok~sma n at the Dallas
present awa rds fo r the out•"
parents in the Arbaugh County Medical Examiner's
sta ndin g Job 's lJaught er.
AddiUon near the Tuppers offi ce announced the death
Hainbow G1rl and D~Molay
Plains School regarding and sa id an autopsy will be
make recommendations
m
e mb er.
Th e
Ma so ni c
are as follows : thr"' courses
possible changes in school performed.
- ~~
Considered
the
second
Scholarship
Aw
ard
will be
in management • supervls10n
bus service.
Aimee Gray had be en
or three months experience ; prionty it e m in im- present ed
Any parent s who do not hospitalized in criti cal
Ticket s for the dinne r are
one course in public re lations provement s was t h e inreceive a survey letter should condition !rom multiple inor one month experience; one sta llation of additional $5 and reser vations should be
contact the superintendent's juries . including a skull
heating -air conditioning and made with the r espective
Sheriff James J. Proffitt course in office practices and insula
office and request that the fracture and punctur ed
tion.
secretary of each lodge 1n the
r eport s deputi es a re in - procedures or one month
survey letter be mailed to lungs.
A
post.
member,
Dr.
Clyde
four counties making up the
experience;
one
course
in
vestigating the theft of a set
them.
Clifford Cecil Gradi, 11, tlie of wrenches from a truck goverrunent or one month Ingels, was reported confin ed di st rict, Me1gs, Gallia ,
girls's brother. died Monday own ed by Clarence Atherton , experience; one course in to Holzer Medical Center.
Lawrence and Jackson.
of injuries he suffered in the !.ong Bottom.
social work and or sociology
Jan. 12 beatmgs. Police said a
The t ruck was parked at or one month experience; one
screwdriver had been di-iven Old Town Creek, the theft course in speech or one
into h1s skull through an eye. occ urred sometime between month
experience
or
Kathleen Gradi, 32, mother 2:30p.m. Tuesday and 8 a.m. equivalent.
of the children, is bemg held Wednesday.
Meigs County has
in lieu of $200,000 bond on a
without
a lull time ·
year exten!ion for CETA.
The department received a
CETA , the largest public charge of attempted murder. complaint from Ray Miller, since the resignati of
jobs program since the Great Dallas County prosecutors Portland that a 1979 15 hp Barbara Shuler, arlier thi
Depression olthe 1930s, has a went before a grand jury Evinrude motor, gas can and month . The offi is being ru
budget of $10.3 billion this Tuesday to present evidence two life jackets were taken by a veteran e ploye, Mr .
year to create 625,000 jobs in an attempt to upgrade the from his boat tied up on the Norma Louise well.
and provide other assistance charge against her.
Ohio Hiver at the John
to the unemployed.
Proffitt Landing The inThe Carter administration
• d dents are under In - Rep. James will
has hailed CETA lor helping
vestigation .
reduce the nation's jobless
Cloudy tonight and Friday,
attend session
rate. But the program also with a few flurries tonight.
'· State Representative Ron
PRICES DROP
has come under att ack !.ow near 10 and high Friday
Jam es 1D-Proctorv ill e)
HIPLEY,
Ohio
(AP)
because of Widespread in the mill 20s. Chance of
alUiounced
today that he will
Both
volume
and
prices
abuses that have mcluded • snow is SO percent tonight and
attend
a
meeting o! the
declined
in
the
la
st
full
week
theft, ernbezdement, k1ck· 2D percent Friday.
of sa les at Ohio 's only burley customers of Buckeye Rural
backs, the' hiring of ineligible
tobacco. Total sa les Wed· Electnc Cooperative Feb. 4,
people, distribution of CETA
nesday were $136,590.30, for a at 2 p. m. at Rio Grande
jobs for political and other
hundredweight average of College.
improper purposes and bad
SCHOOLS OPERATING
$126.68.
.
Hepresentative James said
management:
•
Jill
schools
of
Meigs
County
Sales for the week were he will discuss his findmgs
Although no acc urate
·estimates are available, it is were open for classes today. 956,194 pounds for $752,0 lli.53, r egarding t he continuin g
believe d that millions of However , some buses in the an average of $126.48 per , study of operations of
UNUSUAL CHARACTER - Most people make
Buckeye Rural Co-Op. All
fed eral dollars hav e been three districts were unable to hundredweight.
snowmen,
but in this case it is a ~now teddy bear. It was
make
their
entire
routes
due
customers
of
Buckeye
Rural
The
market
will
not
reopen
skinuned from local CETA
made
by
Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Jacks, Syracuse, and their two
to
additional
snow
which
fel,
l
Electric
until
Monday.
it
will
close
are
welcome
to
'programs because of fra ud
daughters, Chasily and Candy.
ovrrnig ht.
aftC'r Sfl lcs -Tucsday .
attend .

Deputies

checking

complaints

CETA overhaul announced
By OWEN ULLMAN
AP Labor Writer
WASHINGTON (AP )
The Labor Department today
announced an overhaul of its
CETA public jobs and
training program in an attempt to eliminate shoddy
management, fraud and
· other abuses that have
. plagued the $10 billion
· program.
Key changes in CETA which stands for Com·
prehenslve Employment and
,. Training Act - include a
· shakeup of top management
in Washington , improved
monitoring
or
local
· operations to spot fraud, and
new rules that speclflcially
ban nepotism, politica l
patronage and other abuses.
Other changes set tighter
: eligibility
requirements
; geared more tO' poor, long. term unemployed people ;

Henry

boa rd \\as j ust now

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The cross-country
traclorcade of protesting farmers failed to make it to
Wheeling , W. Va. Wednesday night, and spent the night
at a mall near St. Clairsville in Belmont County.
The farmers originally plalUied to spend the night
at Alderman's Airport, but local health authorities
nixed ·the idea and the' farmers were diverted to the
shopping mall ,
The farmers praised the escort service provided
by the Ohio Highway Patrol for the 9!JO.vehicle
tractorcade as it moved over Interstate 70.

WILMINt.iTON, Ohio (AP)- Consumers shouldn 't
grumble about projerted higher beef prices, a
Wilmington Colleg~ agricultural economist cencludes.
Such prices, which may start showing lip this
spring or summer, will be the indirecfresult of earlier
actions which were cheered by many consumers,
according to Dr. Donald Chafin, chairman o! the
agriculture department at Wilmington College. Chafin
explained that President carter several times eased
import ~strictions on bee!.

Blue Denim

•

Tractorcade continuing

Consumers shouldn't grumbl

ME~'S

A

WASHINGTON (AP) - Government officials,
faced with continuing shortages of Iranian crude oil, .
are considering a ban on Sunday gasoline sales and. a
variety of other measures reminiscent of the 1973-74
Arab oil embargo.
Energy Secretary James R. Schlesmger said
Wednesday the C~~~:ter arl!ninistration.will. ()ecide by
APril I whether to impose mandatory conservation
measures. But he said such actions would not be
nellded i! the public voluntarily saves fuel.

NEWPORT NEWS, Va . (AP~) - Steelworkers at
the giant Newport News shipyard have struck in a
wo~k stoppage that clim'axes a year-long dispute over
the rigbt of the United Steelworkers union to represent
17,000 blue-collar workers.
About 100 pickets from United Steelworkers Local
8888 set up picket lines in front of all the shipyard's
entrances before midnight Tuesday, the union said.

were

A

Considers ban on gas sales

Steelworkers strike yards

luncheon guct&gt;t s

scheduled

problcm lor CETfl workers
mvolv ed '"th the plat map
project was discussed at
Tuesday 's regular meeting of
the Me1gs Cou nty Com-

PLEASANTON, Calif. (AP) - · For Patricia
Hearst, today promised release from prison and the
first taste of freedom in five years- neither terrorized
by kidnappers, stalked by the law nor shackled by the
state.
.
The newspaper heiress was expected to leave the
federal prison here on the arm of her fiance, police
officer Bernard Shaw, accompanied by' her attorney
and two bodyguards. In Hillsborough, about 40 miles
away, her parents, four sisters and friends planned a
champagne brunch to celebrate the homecoming.

Dmm removal forthcoming

SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) - Sixty percent of
Rhodesia's white voters approved the new constitution
promising the black majority. eventual control of the
country.
About 66,300 o! the 94,700 registered voters cast
ballots in the referendum Tuesday, and results from 37
o! the SO districts showed 85 percent voted 'yes."
Results from the other districts were expected today.

•

Hearst released from prison

Nationwise·-

Among _ h1s

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY I , 1979

WASHINGTON (AP ) -John J. Gilligan, former
Ohio governor, has submitted his resignation effective
March 31 as administrator of the Agency for
International Deve lopment, it was announced
Wednesday.
The agency said in a statement that President
carter accepted the resignation with regret, but that
carter plans to nominate Gilligan "to an important
post in the•field of international· economic affairs" in
the next several days. No details were provided.

HIGHEST HONOR - Bill Young, right, received a
Jaycee International Senatorship Award, the highest
given by the Jaycees Saturday night when the Meigs
Jaycees held their first charter night banquet at the Meigs
inn. Making the presentation was Herb Schul, director o!
Jaycee District &amp;-B.

at honlc as a man from Mars.

en tine

at

Gilligan resigns position

ELBERFELD$

'I

VOL NO. XXIX

muni st Iemler would

Nationwise

made

MEE'f. SATURDAY
The Western Boot Citizens
Band Radio Club will meet at
7 p.m. Saturday at the
clubhouse.

--1

Carl 'v. Gheen," Jr., 19,
Pomeroy, was lined $20 and
costs on speeding charges, 40
in a 20 mile zone, when he
appeared before Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday night. Forfeiting a
$25 bond in the court, pasted
on a charge of running a red
light, · was Carolyn L.
He} nolds. 3ti. Racine.

(USPS 145-960)

Hom eowners making
structural repairs on a leaky
roof or winterizing living
quarters by installing storm
windows will be eligfble for a
state income tax credit i!

during 1978 and cost at least
$300, remmds Edgar L.
Lindl ey, Ohio Tax Com·
missioner today.
Senate Bill68, enacted July
24, provides a tax credit once
every three years for Ohio
U.S. Air Force, 35lst Bomb Group, and
homeowners making home or
was stationed in England during World
energy-saving
repairs and
War II.
improvements , so long as
Flemming was a past president o! the
they Increase or maintain the
Rotary Club and a member of the
value o! the property and are
merchants division of the Chamber of
in the tax year for
completed
Commerce, the American Legion and
whi
ch
the
dedu ction is
Minturn Masonic Lodge No. 19, and the
claimed.
Presbyterian Church of Point Pleasant.
The tax credit amounts for
He was also a member of the Mason
5
percent
of the "total cost"
County Development ~Authority board
of the "home improvement",
of directors.
but the credit may not exceed
Survivors include his wife Trl a
$65. The law also stipulates
Ffemmmg; a sister, Mrs. Florence
th at the credit not surpass the
Engle, Marietta, 0.; and several nieces
hom eo wner' s state tax
and nephews.
liability.
He was preceded in death by a
"Home improvement " has
brother, James Flemming.
been defined to include
· Arrangements will be announced by
repairs or alterations of the
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
foundation floor , walls, gutter
In lieu of flowers, the family is
or roof. It also includes the
repair of installation of
requesting donations be made to the
windows, doors, insulation ,
Memorial Fund of the Presbyterian
electrical wiring, plumbing,
Church.
hot water heaters or furnaces. Construction of a room
Hospital News
storage area or garage that IS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Irene Null , physically attached to a home
Tuppers Plams; Lisa Allen, is also considered a home
Portland; John Edwards, improvement.
But, carpeting, painting or
Pomeroy ; Charles Evans,
Pomeroy ; Patsy Hul'iey, the installation or conCheshir~ : Thomas Walker, struction of items not men·
tioned in the above list-are not
Rutland.
Discharged
Donn a eligible for credit.
Ohio Tax Commission er
Roush, David Sorrell, Paula
Derenberger, Millie Price, Edgar L. Lindley may
require docwnented evidence
Gladys Cuckler .
for the credit, mclqding
Holzer Medical Center
certificatiOn
by the county
Discharges, Jan. 30
auditor
that
the
repair was
Frances Boring, Ada ,
actually
made.
-, Marcella Ferrell, Mrs. Neil II maximum 30 day jail
Frieder and daughter,
Richard Fuller, Floyd· Gehr· sentence or a fine of up to
ing, Gregory Gibbs, Rosean- $250, or both, may be
na Gibbs, Lona Harris, assessed to any individual
Thomas Haynes, Asa Henry. found guilty o! making a false
Velma Keller, Samuel Nance. claim .
Charles Pyles, Tina Rhodes,
Mildred Russell, Sadie Stelle,
John Stivers, Rebecca Tyree,
SQUAD RUNS
Charles Williams, Ollie
Th e Mid dle port
Wiseman, Mary Woolf.
Emergency Squad went to
Births, Jan. 30
the
Village Manor ApartMr. and Mrs. William
ments
at 4:05 p.m. Tuesday
Anderson, son, Pomeroy.
lor
Vivian
Phelps who wa s
Mr. and MRs. Charles
tak
en
to
Holzer
Med ical
Orerder, daughter, Jackson .
Center.
Mr. 1 and Mrs. Jeffrey
At 9:49 p.m. the squad went
Yearian, daughter, Jackson.
to
Route l, Cheshire, for
• Mr. and Mrs . James
Patsy
Hurley, who was taken
Broome, daughter, Mid·
to
Veterans
Mem orial
dleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crace, Hospital where she was
admitted.
daughter, Vinton.'
Mr. and Mrs. James Kinnison1,daughter, Hamden. ·

Amounts' outstanding as of report date :
Time certificates of deposit in denminations of
$100,000 or more ................ . ..... . ................. , .. . ........ ·. ... 300,000.00
Average for 3D calendar days (or calendar month ) ending with report date:
Total deposits . .. .. ........................ . . .. ... , .. , , ........ , .. , ... 12,lii,OQO.(l0
I, Manning Kloes, Vice President and Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
belie!.
·
Manning Kloes
January 10, 1979

1

I

Clarence Collms Kees,
Mayswiek, Ky., a daughter,
Mrs. William (-Charlotte )
Schweitzer, Ashland, Ky ; 11
gra nd children, a nd
lo
greatgrandchildren .
Funeral services were held
at the Pallrner-Brell Funeral
Home in Mavswick with mternment in· the Mayswick
Cemetery
Going from here were Mr.
and Mn;. James Rees, Sr.,
Mr. and Mrs. James Rees,
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Willford, Mrs. Gordon West,
Racine, and Douglas Rees,
Syracuse.

Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 2,000
,
b. No.sharesoutstandings 2,000 (par value) ....... , ............ ..... .... 100,000.00
Surplus . ........... .. .. . .................... : .. .... . ............. . .. . ... 900,000.00
Undivided profits and.,reserve for contingencies
.
and other capital reserves ............................. ._ .. : . ... .... . . . . $448,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .................... . .......... .. ............. . 1.448.000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13,055,000.00

c
Ci

organization, included, left to right, Bill Childs, banquet
speaker ; Dale Kautz, Theodore T. Reed, . Jr., Dick
Follrod, Roger Morgan , Don Mills and Virgil Brown, a
past state president.

MARIETTA, Ga. (AP) Chinese Vice Premier Teng
Hsiao-ping began his tour of
American business and
technical facilities today .
arriving on a frigid day for a
visit to an automobile plant
and a luncheon with
businessmen.
En route, spokesmen for
the Chinese and Amencan
govermnents issued a joint
press communique in which
the co untri es " rea ffirmed
that they are opposed to efforts by any country or group
of countries to establish

I

Area"Deaths

-

.-.-....

CHARTER MEMBERS - Tbese charter members of
the Meigs County Jaycees, organized in 1952, were on
hand Saturday night when the group held a charter night
banquet at Meigs Inn. The group, np longer active with the

'
.
I
--------------------------

1

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

4lt

Vice-premier Teng tours American .businesses

!\'Irs. Gn·lta Sunp.snn. !\1rs

Weather

••

l

'

•

�Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday Feb I 1q7q

1- 1'heDailySenllnel Middleport Pomeroy, 0, Thursday Feb !, 1979

-

=-

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

COMMENTARY

Sports World

Donald F. Graff

AND JUST WHEN

Health plan: extent, expense

WERE"
STARllNG-10
G() WELL.

1l!IN~

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - A showdown IS rapidly nearmg
between HEW Secretary Joseph A Califano Jr and the While
House staff over the SIZe and scope of the natwnal health m
surance pla n F.'res1Elent Carter Will send to Congress th1s year
Contrary to the prevailmg public unpresswn Carter 1s absolutely senous about pushmg some kmd of national hea lth
program through the 96th Congress - 1! not thiS year then

Commwrities
will suffer

:************~*******************************f.f

!• Editorial opinions

~

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )- t*******************************************··~
Local commumues 10 the
1mmed1ate v!clnlt~
of
R1ckenbacker A1r Force Base
would suffer from deac
llvataon of the facility an A1r
Force study released Wed
who got In the last word
the forth commg speech
By FRANK CORMIER
nesday sa1d
Hours
after
the
two
Wathout hes1tatmg a
Associated
Press
Wrater
But effects on conunumues
report
ers
were
hustled
moment
Jordan responded
WASHINGTON
lAP)
10 the Wider central Ohio area
because
they
shouted
away
It
s
a
poor
address but 11 w11l
Two
Ma01st
demonstrators
would not be sagmflcant
slogans
Powell
anti
Teng
be
very
well
delivered '
wath
press
credenllals
may
accordmg to the report
nnp!shly
approached
Jour
lhe
address
did get
have
diverted
some
attentiOn
The possibility that the
nalists
awaatmg
the
deparsomethmg
of
a
ho hum
from
President
Ca
rt
er
s
301st Refuel10g Wmg of the
ture
of
the
Chmese
v1ce
rece
plion
but
Ca~er's
welcome
for
Teng
Hsia
o·
Strategic A1r Command
would be removed from the pmg but 11 was White House prem~e r followmg his second de livery was mor e than
base surfaced last April when press secretary Jody Powell round of talks With Carter adequate - and for good
The pres ident asked ' rea son
He
rehearsed
the A1r Force announced 1t
Powell
,
If
any
of
you
sa1d
beforehand
was studymg the matter But
until Feb 16 to add their
no act10n m that direction has comments to the stud~ before had any announcements
Ca rters new foundatiOn
been taken yet and officials at the secretary of the Air Force mak e them now'
surely
hasn t caught fire yet
the base say they have not makes any deciSion on the
Clam
smoker
Teng
before
and
m
fact may have a far
been told that a reduction w1ll ba se s future
meetmg
s
at
the
Capitol
w1th
r
lifespan
than
shorte
take place
No da te has been set !01
groups
of
Senators
and
House
President
Rachard
N1xon
s
We don t have any 10
public hear10gs
members
asked
Carter
1f
New
Feder
ahsm
formation at all on the
Accordmg to th e study
But sellmg labels Jake these
proposed force reductiOn
Hamilton Lo ca l sc hool s l? erchance Congress had
Col Thomas E SchWletz, would be affected by a pull passed a law agamst smokmg can be tough as President
Lyndon
B
Johnson
201st wmg commander sa id
out of the a1r command and m meetmgs
They won t as long as I m di scovered Before a ChiCago
He sa id he 1s contmumg a housmg vaca nc1es would be
said the non audienc e m 1964 LBJ cn ed
president
personal effort to keep the created m the area
smokmg
Carter
who added out
base as 11 1s
Other commumt1 es that
that
his
home
state of
We ve been called upon Staff10g statistics effecllve would feel nnpact from such
Georg
ia
produ
ces
con
are
you listenmg' - to build
Tuesday show R!ckenbacker a move would be Groveport
s1derable
tobacco
a
great
society of the haghest
IS actually above authonzed Obetz Lockbourne and Ash
Sm1lmg
1
eng
pulled
out
a
order
strength for personn el ville
Alas nobody was listemng
1ts SAC
assigned to
The move would elim10ate pack of Chmese Pa nda brand
Cigarettes
and
declared
It
took nearly a year and
operat1ons
I 648 military and 464 CIVIlian
Very
good
about
a dozen additiOnal
Cop1es of the A1r Force po sitions at Rwkenbacker
es
identi
a l refe ren ces
pr
report on possible deac- would cost $6 mallion to nn
Hamilton Jordan 1s one of before Great Society took
tivation of the base Will be plement but produ ce an
available to the pubhc Local annual sa\ mgs of about $24 the very few White House hold
atdes who ts secure enough tn
officials and residents have m1lhon the study sa1d
his pos1hon at Carter s raght
hand to venture occastonal
Irreverent cracks that m1ght
Th~~; Daily Sentmel
get others mto hot water
t l lSP'i. 145-960
By Jerry Buck
Before Cart er delivered his
AP Television Writer
State of the Umon address
~,~~~~dHOLLYWOOD ( AP) - Tom Horn led enough lives to keep last week J ordan was asked
OEVOTEUIUIHE
an enlire senes gomg Two of those lives are the basis for a by a reporter to say
rNTF.RF...STOF
MEIGS MASON AREA
two-part CBS movie, "Mr Horn '
something an~1hmg about
ROBF.RT HOEFI lCH
• D
Horn tracked down the Apache chief Geronnno m the
City Editor
Lawrence E Lamb, M
DAVID RUSKlRK
1880s was a cavalry scout, champaon rodeocowbo~ Pinkerton
Advertising Managt r
detectave soldier 10 the Spamsh American War and bounty
Pu blished dtuly CXlept Satunl&lt;~ y
Yes, Its always true tnat hunter The first and the last form the foundation for 'Mr
by The 01 10 Valley Pubhshlng
K(Tping fat
your body acts hkc a check
Company Mult11ned a lnt
Ill
Horn '
Court St Pomt!roy Ohw 45769
h.d.llt('(' elm~ n
mg account If you deposit
As a Pmkerton agent he brought m some of the West's
Pentecost (from Greek Rusmc:;:; Offl t~ Phone 992 2156
F.tllh HI PI on~ 992 2157
DEAR DR I AMB - Is 1t more than you can use the most noloriollS desperadoes, but qu1t because he swd 11 was too 'f1f!Jeth") 1s a New Testa
&amp;cond dass postage paid at
balance
will
acc
umulate
The
word
and
among
early
ment
tame He boasted about klllmg, say10g I look at 11 as a
dlW(:IVS true that conswmng
Pornero) Oh10
balance
m
th1
s
mstance
1sn
t
Oirast1ans
was
an
event
busaness
propos1t1on
and
I
thmk
I
have
a
corner
on
the
NaL10nal adverhsmg rl.!presen
more food than IS necessary
rankmg near the cruclflluon tat vc l.andon Assot1atcs 3101
for the upkeep of your body qmte so attractl\e beca use market '
Eu I dAv e Clcve l&lt;~nd Ohw4411 5
1l s deposited as fat
Dav1d Carradine stars as the 1cy, emgmat1c Tom Horn m the and resurrection In the Old
Sub~;cn pt 1on rates Oe l1 v~red by
&lt;.a uses O\ erwe1ght? I am a
Testament
1t
was
the
feast
The other Side of the basic four-hour two-part mov1e that a1rs Thursday and Saturday
ttifflcr where aVI:Ulllble 75 nmls per
small cater and I have a
of
weeks"
and
'~feast of the
week By Motor Route where carr er
med1 um la1ge fa ame I am 5 bal ance system 1s ho\\ many rughts on CBS The hard-drmk10g closed- mouth Horn makes harvest '
servu;e not avmlt ble One month
25 By rrunl rn Oh o a 11 W Vi!
feet 6 but I don t seem to be calones you arc usmg I Gary Coope r sound like a chatterbox
"For Paul bad deter- $3
One Yu&lt;~r SZ1 :;q S x months
rrught
ask
If
your
lifestyle
The
part
ongmally
was
Written
for
Robert
Redford
by
mined
to
sall
by
Ephesus
able lo lose any we1ght I
114 50 Thr ec months $8 50
permits you to use enough William Goldman but Redford decided not to do 1! It marks for be basled H It were Elsl.!where $32 00 )Nir S1x months
don t dnnk beer and I eat
$17 00
Thr ee mon ths $9 00
' "'&gt;
the televlsloo debut of Goldman who won Academy Awards possible for him , to be at Subst
very little bread potatoes or calor1es
nptll n pme mdudes Sunday
Jerusalem
tbe
day
of
If
you
are
not
ph;'!li&lt;!allyac
for wntmg Butch Casstdy and the Sundance K1d ' and ' All
Tlmmi-&amp;!nlmel
peanut buttea What else can
1
Pentecost " - Acts ZO 16
tl\ e you m1ght try to the President's Men'
I do"
Theongmal scnpt was used unchanged lor television , and
DEAR READER - You gradually develop a phySical
fitness program - even 1f that Jack Starrett dtrected 1t like a theatncal feature - With
need to learn to eva luate pro
perly ho\\ ma ny calon es are IS walkmg an hour a day You numerous long shots, breath takmg v1ews and a leisurely pace
m the foods you eat I see you can divide suc h a walk mto And that may be the mov1e's undoing, because 1t starts very
two parts If you don t want to slowly and doesn't bwld a head of steam untal hallway mto the
avmd starches sweets and
walk too mulh at a lime You first part
apparently alcohol
ca
n decrease your balance
Except for Richard W1dmark's remarkable performance
The other maj or source of
(fat
(issue)
b~ spendmg more
as
Indian
scout AI Sieber, the enttre first episode on the
ca lones 1n the di et IS fa t
ca lories
caplure of Gerommo m1ght have better served as a preamble
1 here are mne calones for
DEAR DR I AMB - Just to the second hall Tbe Saturday chapter, 10 which Horn turns
every gram of fat as opposed
what
1s meant by passmg bounty hunter and IS disposed of when be outlives his
to only four calones for every
What 1s the purpose usefulness IS by far the best
sounds"?
g1 am of carbohydrate or pro
for
1t
•
Mv
doctor has done
Karen Black stars as Ernestma who has a brief affa1r w1th
tem If you want to limit your
this
three
llmes
and I don't Horn when she comes to Anzona to claun the body of her
calori es I suggest you limit
know why He said t~c open brother, killed m the hunt for Geronimo She reappears 17
your fat
I am se ndmg you The mg to my uterus should be years later widowed and runnmg a roommg hollSe m
opened I am 60 years old and Oieyenne, Who where Horn IS summoned to Wipe out the
llea lth Letter number 4 7
have had some utenne cattle rustlers
Weight Losmg D1et to g1ve
bleedang I am takmg hor
Horn does hiS JOb too well He fmally becomes an
you some basiC mformataon
manes
embarrassment
to the cattle barons who hired hnn and when
on ho" to plan a balanced d1et
DEAR READER - You can he mistakenly kills a sheepherder s son, 1! provades a
that 1s lirruted m calories
thmk of a sound as a rod , dif convenient excuse to hang hun
Other readers who want this
ferent
sounds are made from
He developed It for Redford sa ad Robert L Jacks who
Issue ca n send 50 cents w1th a
different
substances They produced tbe movie for Lorunar Productions
Steve
long
s t a mped , se lf
are used literally to dilate !McQueen snnultaneously got the same notwn McQueen
addressed envelope for 1!
openmgs such as your doctor bought the book '1, Tom HD~:_n ' I don t know why ,Redford
Send your request to me Ill
has done 1n your case They dropped the project, but 1t reverted back to Uruted Artists and
ca re of this newspaper P 0
may be used to l1o1te the we acquired tt "
Box 1551 RadiO C1ty StatiOn
opemng
m the esophagus 1f It
He sa1d one reason Redford may have g1ven up the project
New York NY 10019
becomes
constncted
They're
was
that It actually tells two different stones that are 17 years
This diet will g1ve you bet
used
If
there
1s
a
stnc
often
apart
'It does make for a gap but to fill that gap would take a
ween 1 200 and I 300 calories
ture
of
the
urethra
m
both
12-hour
mov1e," he sa1d
a da~ I don't hke to see peomen
and
women
"It
s
really better-smted for television I understand
ple go on a diet that 1s much
There
IS no way I would McQueen 1s usmg the Gerommo chase only bnefly then going
more restncted !han this one
know what I&amp; ca usmg your mto his days as a bounty hunter "
unless they are under careful
ulerme bleedang, but you
medi cal supervisiOn A perI think It's cousin Louie, from Chicago "
sot shouldn t stay on a strict have done th(' r1ght thmg m
1
litU18rlv
betwem
puwds'
m
d1et more than two to SIX seemg your doctor I would
Somctunt s thi s c.111 be Hll et-tr
weeks, depending upon how hke to take th1s occasion to Hft('r they have comph h d tiM
ly •wn d &lt; anu 1 Nn cr 1g
tell
all
women
w~o have an menopause, to sec the1 r
severe at IS Such dwts may
r11u t• um xpl.unt d hh ( dmg
unexplaaned
bleuhng,
par
ph
ys
awn
ltllm•
di.!l&lt;
I)
cause scrwus problems
---------~

•

Jimmy's White House

TV ... in Review

HEALTH

Berry's World

I

•

•

Ry Will GrlmslcJ
AP Corrt"sp~mdt&gt;nt

New bonds coming

next

The only real dispute Within the adm1mstratwn 1s how exten
s1ve -and expens1ve - 11 should be Were not mterested m
posturmg we want to send up somethmg that can pass, one
semor White House adviser said
Califano met Jan 18 w1th Carter White House domestic
policy adviser Stuart E1zenstat and other key aides to discuss
the opl1ons under cons1derahon, but no decisions were reach
ed
The HEW secretary has been urgmg the president to endorse
a comprehensl\ e natwnal health plan that would be phased In
gradually over a penod of years as econorruc condilions per
1rut
But most, 1f not all of Carter stop Wh1te House aides favor a
more lim1led package emphaSIZing protectiOn agamst
catastrophic illness coupled perhaps w1th some revampmg of
medicaid and new cost contanunent proposals
Ne1lher approach goes far enough to satisfy Sen Edward M
Kennedy - the natwn s leadmg advocate of full
sca le comprehensiVe natwnal health msurance covenng
evervthing from preventive services to catastrophic Illness
Kennedy last year publicly split w1th Carter over the na
twnal health 1ssue and the nft remams unhealed The senator
acknowledges the need to phase m any nalional health m
surance plan to m1mrruze the fiscal nnpact of such an expen
s1ve program but he IS not Willing to see 1mplementat10nmade
cond11ional upon economic factors
Furthermore Kennedy IS vehemently opposed to any move,
such as that now contemplated by the Wh1te House staff wh1ch
would split catasll ophic coverage off from the rest of the
hea lth package and g1ve 11 pr10nty treatment
Kenned~ and h1s allies m orgamzed labor most notably the
Umted Auto Workers, have long been convmced that enact
ment of a catastrophic msurance measure would largely
d.iss1pate whatever politiCal pressure there IS for a natiOnal
hea lth msurance program
And mdeed, their fears may be JUStified Private msurance
plans on the one hand and medicare and medicaid on the
other already prov1de at least partaal protectwn to the vast
majonty of Amencans The one specter which terr1f1es every
fam 1ly -and agamst which there 1s no effecbve shield - 1s a
catastrophic illness or IDJU11
Kennedy himself as White House aades rather gleefully
pomt out, regularly ysgs horror stones about families fman
emily destroyed by catastrophic illness to dramatiZe his
arguments for natwnal health msurance
Just as Kennedy has for years been pushmg for comprehenSl\ e natiOnal health msurance Sens Russell Long, [).La and
Abraham Rlblcoff D-Conn have urged adoptiOn of a more
limited catastrophic msurance bill, whi ch they have already
mtroduced this year
White House and HEW officials durmg the next few weeks
plan to discuss their va nous health msurance optwns wath all
mterested parties on Capitol Hill before Carter decides exact
ly what plan to back
But m the crunch, Carter 1s likely to be tempted to Side more
With the Long Rib! coff approach than With Kennedy -or even
Califano As chairman of the Senate Fmanc~ ColTUIIIttee,
Russell Long IS sure to have the !mal crack at any health m
surance program the admm1stratwn proposes even though
Kennedy Will be a force to reckon with
Ca rters political advisers would love to take away Kennedy s number-one ISsue by steermg some kind of natwnal
hea lth program through Congress before next year's
pnma nes If catastrophic msurance looks like the only proposal With a realistic chance of enactment the bettmg here 1s
that Carter will opt for 11 mstel'd of a more sweepmg package

I

Today's

®

Wagner 94 Se ton Hal l 90 2

79
Cheyney St 78 Sho ppensburg
67

maulmg at Waver!)
l'h c local cagers Will have
m easJ task cut out for them
1f Waverly plays 1ts usual

Wins 6th !(arne
1 he

South
Alabama A&amp;M 96 Tuskeg ee
95 OT
A l a B1rm1ngham

Joseph lnd 69

84

Sl

Appalachtan 84 Dav 1dson 72
Augusta Col 84 N Caro
Ashev tll e 77
Blu~f1 e ld S t 76 W Vtrg1n1 a

51 71

Duke 75 Wake Forest 60

Floroda A&amp;M 91

~

In 1893, Thomas Edison
completed work on the
world's first motion picture
studio The cost of the studio
m West Orange, N J f was
less than $700,0Q0
In 1956, Autherme Lucy became the first black to be admatted to the Umverstty of
Alabama
In 1965, Martin Luther King
Jr and nearly 800 blacks
were arrested during clvU
raghts demonstrations at
Selma, Ala

seven th

aga mst two losses Mond~ y
mght .as th ev rolled over host
Eastern 54 13
~ ' cr) light defense that
~ 1clded ilo pomts 1n the first
quarter and on!} Cave m the
second was the ke) to VIC
tory fhe halftime score was
265
Once agam Southern was

led by Denms Teaford With 15
pomts and Kevm Cu1 fm an
w1th 14 pomts
Nelson Mom s and Wade
Connolly came off the bench
to score e1ght and se\ en

pomts respectively Teaford
and Troy Ward led the
rebound ers
!.arrJ L1fc led Eastern With
7 pomts and also led h1s team
on the boards
B) Quarters
s
12 14 18 10--54
E
o 5 4 4--14

Edward

Wale s 87

Deer

Park

E sle

Rutger s 60 Ma ssachusetts 55
St John s N Y 72 Armv 65

J oseph s
1can 68
St

Pa 92

Soena 92 St Franc os
OT

Amer
N

Y 90

Verm ont 84 New Hampsh re

81
Youngstown St 66

Ph I

DC

74

St Augustt ne s 98 Norfolk St
77
S Carol•n a 96 Ma1ne 66

Tennessee Challanooga 87
Tenn Tech 69
Tennessee St 79 N Alaba ma

77 OT

the

Sl OAI la st I nd aJ 0\ Cl

TUESDAY TRIPLICATE
Tea m
Reu ter Brogan Ins

36

Fnend l y Tavern

30

Royal Crown Cola
26
Royal Oak Park
14
Rober t Rob1e Can st
12
Doug s Ma1ne Sales
2
H•gh ln d Game - Oebb1e
Haw ley 208 Pat Carson 20J
H1gh Ser•es - Pat Carson
58t1 Debb ie Ha w ley 528
Tea m
H• gh Game

Reuter Brogan Ins 573
Team Hi gh Se rt es
Reuter Brogan Ins 1457

Tea m
Reu ter Brogan Ins
F r endl y Tavern
Roya l Crown 1..ola

38

Robert
Cons!
Doug s Mar me Sa l es

12
2

36

34

22

Hogh lnd Game - Betty
Wh oll atch
221
Belly
Wh !latch 193 Hel en Phelps

183
Hog h Seroe s
Betty
Nh I latch 592 Helen Phe lps

513 Nora Rt ce 503

Team H1gh Game
Fr end l y T avern 1546
Team
Htg h Sertes '"'Fr endly Tavern 56 1

:;..

•

b1
sport s a
thut avn 1gcs

\\Siting J tCk!'iOn 55-47

:-,1 uttng fn t:

In that contest l om
lla "kY netted lb p01nb and
Steve Ohlinger added 15 ltaJ
Andre\\S plavcd a fired up

over that
H1g Hob llolsmg cr at cent ei

conditions in Ohio

Bl lh&lt; Assocl8tcd l'n ss
Con gress
I ak e
Road
Here ts a 1epor1 on 1&lt; c [ r 1pp1cs are hilling best
f1 shtng cu nd tl!On s &lt;l.IU UII{I after dark I r) off f{ oute 43
~tands 6 8 and can mtmwlutc
OhiO ISSUed Wednesda y b) n• ar th e boathouse Outlook
opponents Me1gs 1s not the the Ohio Dl\ lSI On ol Wildlife e xcell ent
g Jmc &lt;tnd ha ul ed m lR b1g ll pc of team Ihat r.1n b&lt;
I akc F ric
Norlh\\l ~ter .1 Ohao
reUo und s
mllm!dated and Wa ve r!)
I AK I
I A COMPTE
Icc condition s conti nue to
However on S11tu1 da ) \\Ill hm P to do m ore than tmpro \&gt;C m thickne ss I ry off r OS I OltiA - Ice 14 mches
mght the ho st Wahama lh ol
H,ottlcsnake Island m 20 feet Vcal good reports on verch
White Falcons do• ned Meigs
l.l1g Joel Gord en h od 12 of \\ ater for \\ allc) es Us..: Bluegills and 11 all e)es to
m o' crttmc b2 51J to m cnge rebounds m that Ironton loss la rge shm ers or sonars Jigged pounds F 1sh for all m B to 10
an ca rltu se tson loss
and he also. IS a fa (tol th at JUSt off the bottom \1 ail e) e feet of ~at er Usc mmnov.
In that game llawlc) had mu ~t ilt reckoned \\!t h
.!ISO bemg caught m the north (J pc Iures J&lt;gged off the
20 pomts Oh hnge1 I? aud
Mugs ha s come a long \\a;
harbor off Kcllc\ s Island bottom for \\all c) e and ICC
frcshm dn Bob Ashlc) 11
SlnCC the\ p]a\Cd W lVt:l I)
I rr&lt;h hshmg repoot ed good n1es t ppcd Wllh IJl Sel( lao vac
I'he Marauders ha\ c bun llcccmbco 22 omJ the) ha1c off !ldss Island Cata" ba and for perch and blu egill s
h,l\ mg problem s tn thl one big plus gomg for them
MC! rblehead lee 6 H 1nthes 111 Outlook excellent
rebo undmg department all lhe\ no\\ kno\\ th&lt;.~t ttwy can Sundu skJ Bay U&gt;c small
ME I ZGEH li M\ - Ice J?
year and that '"" be the b1 g \\In
shmcrs and fish 15 30 feet ol H 1nchcs Outstandmg for

Four important SVAC
games are scheduled
Four unportant contests
are on tap th1 s weekend m the
South er n Valle~ Athl et ic
Conference 1f the weather
man cooperates
t nday mght Kyger Creek
VISits Hannan Trace \\hlle
league leadmg Southern 1s
at North Gallia
1 wo games slated Saturday

are make up lilts 1111h KJ gc1
(reek gomg to I astern a nd

South wes tern pia) 1ng at
North Calha
l.ly defeallng I as tel n
before a ,pac ~cd house
1 uesda) mght Coa ch C,uJ
Wolfe s Southern l&lt;lrn&lt;~do cs
JUm ped back to lhC!r fa!lllliao
slot hrst pla ce m the SV AC

B6

Local Buwling

PIDTD

Mctgs tall c~t 111m IS

\\h ll c Wa u:rl )

~11ndmg .s

1he "m pushed Southern s
lc 1gue record to ' 1 cmd 9 I
O\ c 1 pll

l'h l

I 01 nadoc!:l arc

the 101 dnd 1978 defendmg
S\ ~ C champs
I ndaJ mghl Southern IS
expected to run mto the hot
and cold North Ga lha
Ptrat cs
On a g1vcn mght

Co~.H: h

I cd I che\\ s Pirates c.1n play
Wl(h the best of thCI11
North c.allw hd s had some

59
C1nc mn at
Sycamore 58
M I ford 67 lr d•p n Hill 45
N el sonv ill e York 42 Me
Arthur V1nton 40

Royal Qak Park

oh:-it td e tomon O\\ mght

\Hiler except Sandusky Ba}

hig h ~ rorm g cont ests th1 s

Den Talk

66

Tu esday Tnpltcate
Jan 30 1979
Standmgs

R der 84 W Chester 78
Roc hest er 66 BrandeiS 62

m

But the Tigers w11l fmd a
much 1mproved ball club
when the} come here Fnday

Loveland

Ja cksonv ille 101 W Georg1a
77
LaGrange 69 Georg ra SW 60
LOUISVI ll e 84 Flonda St 71
Marshall 94 OhiO U 81

N Caro Wllm•ngton 96 S
Carol na St 92
Old Damrn o n 90 Bos ton U 72
Oral Rober ts 75 Georgetown

man

percent

Manemont 77
Crn cu nat Madera 120 Glen

Fa1rfteld 77 Canis us 69
La Salle 84 V1 lla nova 78
Lafayette 64 Delaware 59

56

one

ami fir st 111

Wednesday N1ght

Cmcm na t

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES

St 75

placed only

double figures Bo Arnett
w1th \1 pomts Waverly had
an extreme() cold mght from
the floor hlttmg only 35

Mc1gs picked up 1ts tliu d
\ lCtoi}

By The Assoc1 afed Press

Grambl ng 73 NW Lou sana

Mercer 85 Georg 1a So 74
New Orlea n s. 82 Morehead

game Although the f1gcr s
arc at 10 5 overall and 8 3 ~~
league plaJ they do spo rt one
of the strongest clubs In the
SI OA I
Ironton current!~ at th e
top of the Southcastcl n Ohio
AthletiC I eaguc came out
w1th a strong second half and
pmned a 65-47 loss on the
11gcrsofCoach [ D Hawhec
last Saturda v
In that contest Waverly

OhiO Hogh School
Ba sketba ll

FRONTERA, Calif (AP ) - Fonner Oiarles Manson
follower Leshe Van Houten has been demed parole despite
good evaluations from prison psychologists and staff·
members
Society has no defense m thiS type of crnne, except to
1solate the offender, ' Community Release Board chatrman
Ruth Rushen smd Wednesday "We feel we must observe you
longer before we can project your parole date "
M1ss Van Houten, 29, was sentenced to llfe ln prison laat
Aug 11 after her third trtalm the stabbmg deaths of Leno and
Rosemary LaB1anca The LaBumca murders occurred one
rught after Manson followers murdered actress Sharon Tate
and four others m Los Angeles m 1969 Miss VanHouten was
convicted ln her first trial , but the conVIetion was overturned
Her second trtal ended m a hung jury
Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today IS Thursday Feb I
the 32nd day of 1979 There
are 333 days left an the year
Today s highlight m
history
On this date m 1790 the
U S Supreme Court held tis
first sesston, meetmg m the
Royal Exchange bwldlng m
New York C1ty
On thas date
In 1861, Texas voted to secede from the Umoo

South ern

grddc p1 c ked up tts sixth wm

64

1nqton 44
Pnnceton 82 Long Island 64
Rhode Isla nd 99 M er n mack

ASPEN , Colo (AP) - Ethel Kennedy and her
housekeeper will be here March 14 to teslify at a hearang on a ;:.
lawsuit over a $535 bill for Chrtstmas dinner
""'
I
Pitkin County Judge Bob Gruetterr demed a motion

an ea rlt er seaso n l1 gcr

Con nect1 cut 77 Manhattan 64

Lehog h 82 Bucknell 64
Penn St 51 George Wash

LONDON (AP) - M1a Farrow has filed for davorce m the
Domm1can Republic from conductor Andre Prevm, tt was
reported today
The Dally Mtrror srud the 32-year-old actress left Br1taln
m June to make a moVIe, takmg the couple s three children
and three adopted VIetnamese chtldren
Under Domm1can law, mamages can be diSsolved Wlthm
a week even 1! only one of the parties IS present
M1ss Farrow and 411-year-old Prevm were married m
London m 1970 The actress, who starred m the televiSIOn saga
'Peyton Place " prevlollS!y married and divorced smger
Frank Smatra
Prevln IS mus1c director of the Pittsburgh Symphony
Orchestra He has sa1d he will g1ve up his nane-year post as
prme~pal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra next
AugllSt

By Greg Bailey
111e Me1gs Marauders will
try to get back on the wlnnmg
track tomorrow mght when
theJ entcrtam the powerful
\I avcrly l1gcrs 1n Mornson
Gynmasaum
Mc1gs will be out to avenge

Jan 23 1979
Standmgs

OT

vveanesday s College
Basketball Scores
By The Assoctated Press
East
Assumption 80 Northeas tern

in the news

women be allowed to submit depositions and avoid testifymg m
court Ashley Anderson, the attorney also filed a mollon
denymg the complamt
The Widow of Sen Robert F Kennedy was sued Jan 2 by
Le cuasm1er a catermg service that claimed she refused to
pay lor a Christmas dmner ordered for 20 people Mrs
Kennedy was vacationmg m Aspen durmg the Chrashnas
holidays
Torn Small a Le Cwsm1er partner, saJd he gave the bill to
Mrs Kennedy the day after Christmas "She was really
furaous ' he sa1d

1

I ex t11e 56

BASKETBALL

Names •••

Wednesday by Mrs Kermedy s attorney ask10g that the

The Dui/y Sentinel

There IS an aura about Rod fhe Rocket Laver th at
commands respect - even awe - whenever and wherever
tenn)s buffs gather
That shock of red ha1r which nowfalls below his ears the
lon g nose, the mighty left arm - a Popeye forearm four mches
thicker than his nght - memor1es of h1s slashmg play that
earned h1rn to two Grand Slams
He was one of the all-time greats, to be talked about only m
the reverenlial tones reserved for the Ti ldens Perrys
Lacostes Budges and Kramers
"In the last half-&lt;:enlur) only two men have had a
revolubonary nnpact on the game said former Davas Cup
captam Bill Talbert One was Jack Krammer With his
mtroduction of the b1g serve and volley The other Rod Laver
With h1s wnsty top-spm shots off both backhand and forehand
"Laver set the pattern for the modern style of play - the
exaggerated top.,o;pm shots you see from players such as Bjorn
Borg, Guillermo V1las, Eddie D1 bbs and Harold Solomon not to
mention all th e kids who are 1rmtatmg them
"But no one does 11 qUite as well
The Aussae Rocket, now 40 and out of the Iunehght for the
past few years, was m Ne\1 York thiS week to help kick off a
new tour that w11l brmg hun and other members of tenms '
Over the H11l Gang out of moth balls It's the Tenms Legends
tour for players 35 and over startmg m Atlanta March 22 25
and clnnaxmg With the Legends C lassiC at Newport R I Aug
20-26
It was a nostalgic feast for court enthusiasts who recall
seemg the bandy-legged Queenslander crush everyone m th1s
path while dommatmg the game m the 1960s
With the trend a\\ a~ from gra&gt;S to clay and a1llflc!al
surfaces at IS a different game now, Laver sa1d between biles
of sauteed veal Everybody 1s playmg on slower surfaces It
has become more a game of patience than aggressiveness and
qmck kill
Most of the players don l h1t the ball on the nse any more
It ts whip-Whip whip back and forth across the net until
someone gets an open or becomes 110patient
Of the current crop, Laver IS most nnpressed w1th another
left-hander, 19 year-old John McEnroe
Vilas Laver sa1d was uncomfortable on gra ss and thus
never a factor at Wnnbledon
He prefers to stay on the
baselme ahout 70 percent or the tune Rod added He IS not
very supple and doesn t volley well
Junmy Connors has one garne plan - he mows you down
by brute force He has the talent to do 11 consistently He ISone
player who hits the ball on the me always attackmg He
makes you work harder
Borg 1sa ternf1c athlete but plays accordmg to has mood
He 1s tough 1! !DSpu-ed He likes to stay back and say, O ka~ 1f
you can be as pat1ent and as accurate as I am, maybe you can
wan
Laver thmks Pancho Gonzalez had the best serve he has
seen, Ken RoseaU the most effecllve back hand Connors the
best ground strokes and Frank Sedgman the quickest reflexes
at the net

Back m 1960 Charles de Gaulle erased the highly VISible
evidence of a half century of French lflll!llion
He mtroduced a heavy franc" equal to 100 of the debased
old francs , then worth somethmg hke 500 to the dollar The
heavy fra~c quickly became the franc and the ne! effect of de
Gaulle s fascal sleight of hand was samply to move the dec1mal
pomt two places to the left m the French currency It was a
pamless monetary reform smce Frenchinen were not out any
real cash and rapidly adJUSted to the more convement lower
denommabons
Poorly as 1t has been domg of late, the dollar IS not a can 1
dictate for such a drastic overhauling -yet Another pillar of
the Amencan fmancaal system, however, 1s about to undergo
maJor restructurang
The mostfarruliar 1ssues of US savangs bonds, E and H, will
be d1scontanued an 1980 to be replaced by new Senes EE and
HH The new bonds will mcorpora te several changes Pur
chase pnce of Senes EE, for example, wall be haH a bond's
face amount rather than the current 75 percent But smce the
new bonds will mature an 11 years, mne months, rather than
f1ve years as at present the anterest rate remams the same - B
percent over the hfe of the bond
Something else Will not remaan the same, however the
denorrunat1on of the series The lowest-praced bond henceforth
will be $50, the long-farruliar $25 IS bemg retired Also, the
Treasury as raasmg the ex1stang $7 500 annual purchase llffilta
bon to $15,000 There could be no clearer offiCial recogmtaon
that the dollar 1sn t what 1t once was- to put 1t IDJidly
Savmgs bonds have been something of a fiscal phenomenon
for more than four decades F1rst offered m 1935, they really
caught on with the public durang World War II - the war bond
program which served a double purpose It helped fund vastly
expa nded federal budgets and, by absorbmg excess purchasmg power on a home front short of ciVIlian goods, curbed mfla
twnary tendencies
It was a different econom1c game after the war, however In
some quarters the bonds were seen as havmg an mflatlonary
effect to the extent that the contmumg public loan propped up
budget defac1ts ;.!so, the 6 percent return tended to lag behmd
both mflatlon rates and mterest available through banks and
other savmgs mst1tubons
None of this affected the populanty of savmgs bonds,
however The public bas contmued to buy them m quanllty
- JUst short of $8 billion worth m 1978- and they are today the
most widely held of all fmanc1al paper
The quesllon now IS whether the public IS gomg to contmue to '
go for the new senes m such a b1g way According to the
Treasury, the changes bemg effected will strengthen the en lire
bond program Obviously, from the Treasury's pomt of v1ew
By more than doubling the turnover period, 1t Will enjoy longer
use of the bond-buyer's money at considerably less ad
ffilmstrat1ve detail and expense
But there does not appear to be any provisiOn for strengthen
mg of the buyer s financial situation The onl) real change IS '
that for many low-&lt;ienommabon purchasers the bonds w1ll now
cost more, and they wall be tymg up their money for almost 12
years rather than five And unless there IS a sharp and early
drop m the mflatlon rate - estunates for the current year are 8
percent and up - the contmumg 6 percent mterest rate means
a netloss
An argument rrught be made m such a Situation that the
bonds are actually havmg an ani! mflabonary effect but only
by deliberately reducmg the value of the public s mvestment
Charles de Gaulle, where are you when we need you'

Meigs trying comeback SPORTSl
.
against Waverly crew Report on fohing

The wildlife hearmg of District 4 was held last Sunday at
th e Wildlife DiviSIOn OffiCe m Athens Forty persons attended
and gave mput on the proposed 1979 fish and w1ldlife
regulatwns Here are some of the results
The state proposes that sqUln el season run f1om
September 7 to November 10 on pr1vate land Those sportsmen
present had a strong feeling agwnst th1s p1oposaJ
They voted down the proposed season 111-12 and p1oposed
Uta! 1t run from September 21 to November 24 !'heir mam
argument was that sqmrrels seem to have many wai bles m the
earher season
There was some feehng that grouse season sho t~d be
shortened and there was a strong fe elm g that perhaps rabbit
season should also be shortened The past two winters have
hurt rabbit populahon m Dlstnct 4 drasti ca lly However no
ne w proposals were made

"t.'a son \\hllc othc1 gCJmes
h&lt;:J\ C ended
res ults

\~llh

surpnsmg

l11 e Pirates are lui of
tcn SI\ el;

Snuth

h\

sen to I s Sam

11m McComas and

Stacc\ Wmston
Couch V\ olfe

st rong

fa st

l~Jhc s
111 0 \ tng

on a

bench

Y..atcr and usc lt C fh cs t1ppcd
\\lth msect 1anac l11C IO\HI
basm IS best m the bm s

Ou tlook very good
BUCKEYE I ~KE

(( r

6

Hlucgtll.s bcmg
on v. a x \\Orm s along

us1 11ly sec 1d10n

qud!Jt) s tzed fi sh Pe1 ch I } to
15 mchcs m 20 fcft of \A; ettcr un

1cc 01cs lipped •1th spikes
mousa:s or \\lgg!Hs Se\ eral

(hanncl catfish caught from U
to l l 1 1 pounds and \\ a ll e)es 5

to 7 pounds ca ught 11gg1ng
Hapa las off th e bott om
Outlook excellent
NE f I I E I AKI
Icc 12 II
mches r ISh 8 to IU fe et ol
\\ tler ncar shorchn es Us~,;
tlppod \\ 1t h 1110 USi e9

to H tnches

tC' C ni CS

~.: cmght

or

th e south Side of th e lake
I erch hsh111g 1cpO&lt;te d good
I ISh H feet of "atcr and usc
red

01

wax

\\Ofln s

or

mOUSICS (li e SOUth SidO Of
l1cb s Island ocst outlook
goo d
KNOX L'K E
Ice 6-8
111c he s Blueg1 ll s com1n g
from 8 (O10 feet of Wdtel Oil
\\dX

worms or mousJcs I 1sh

ncao the old 1oa dbcd 1n the
upper end of the l&lt;~ kc Outlook
good
No rth cash rn Ohw

AQU III A I AK I
Ice 14
Inches F1sh the center Jf the
loikC 111 12 feet of " lte f11
blucgllls and noith c!o pike
Usc ma ggot s a nd" tx

\\OIIIl S

Du nng a normal ~.:ont e~1 all fo1 blu eglll s Usc l ip ups
Southe rn 'll slty pla yea s b utcd \\l(h 5 to G mch chub

nllnno\\ S for north ern p1kc

At Merccn il lc Co dc h Outloo k excellent
BEIH IN 1\E SEHVO IH
Ke1th Cart er s K1 gcr C1cck
AN
D I AKE Mill ON - lc&lt; G
!.lobe •ts 111ll battle Hannan
8
mches
Excellent 11 allc)c
I race m a game "h1ch could
deCide the last place club m ft shmg reported m bolh lakes
r ISh 5 to 15 fee( of watco on d
Ih1s ) ear s SVAC race
I'hc Bobcats 2 II overall usc Silver sonars Jigged JUSt
are ().fj agamst league foes as off the botlom Outlook ex
ccll ent
1s Hannan Trace
MOGADORE
HESf.ll
Bot h KC wms wer e non
VOIR
lee
10
12
mches
league a ffat rs over Elkview
(.ood
reports
for
blu
eg1
ll s 111d
ond Wahama both We st
crappies F1sh 5 feet of walco
Vn gmta schooJs
Hannan Trace under first use wax WOI ms 01 metggots
\ear mentor Donnte Saun and the best spot IS east of
ders has not won a game th1s
"mtcr Overall the Wildcats

The proposed turkey season 1s to I un II om t' nday Apnl 25
through May 8 A 10-8 &gt;Ol e obJected A co unterproposal was
Utat openmg day start on a Monday and run for two weeks
One of the strongest proposals approved by those present
concerned trappmg season Members thought It "!Se and
many of the d1 visiOn people agreed that the huntmg and
trappmg seasons for fur bearmg anunals should comc1de
except beaver s State proposal doesn t follow those gUidelines
The sportsmen P• oposed the seasons run from November I to
O\\n a n 0 12 record
January 2tl
Coach WaJ ne Bergdoll s
A large part of the afternoon was spent d1scussmg deer Southwestern
Highlanders
proposals and the deer situatiOn m D1stnct 4 The state deer
travel to No rth Ga lh a
populatiOn 1s esllmated to be from 90 000 to 100 000 and 20 to 25 Saturdav mght m sea rch of
percent of these can be harvested "1lhout a decrease In
their Sixth SV AC v1ctory and
populalion
se\ enth wm O\ era !I Tuesday
Personally I proposed that hunte1s be allowed to take one mght SW HS was blit?ed H2 51
deer by bow and one by gun Some gun hunters were agamst
at Fairland
thi Sbeeause they felt they would be d1scrnnmated agamst, but
lns1de the SVAC South
anyone who 1s w1lling to spend the mon ey and the tune
"estern holds down third
mvolved could hunt lwo ways
place behmd Southern and
Biologically this proposal might be sound , but there are a
Eastern
few doubts from the state bwlog1sts For one thmg 11 IS not
Coach John Boston s
known how many gun hunters would take up archery and we
Eagles "'ll be out to snap a
could only estnnate the mcreased kill
t"o game leag ue los1ng
Although nothmg was voted upon th e sportsmen as a streak Saturday mght m the
majority seemed to favor the 1dea but the dlVlson was m a ke up cont est aga tn:;t
skephcal They did prom1se that Utey would consider the idea KJ ger Creek
Achange Ut1s year opens the whole state of dee r hunllng
There has been a rezonmg of the deer diVISions Some of the
SVAC STAND INGS
comments on deer season wer e as follows
ALL GAMES
There was some feelmg that huntm g tune should be t Team
W L P OP
extended to 5 30 p m Some hunters also felt there should be SEout,hern
9 3 860 68 4
as ern
7 6 765 799
d
either a law or a recommendatiOn by the diVISIOn tha i eer North Ga lloa
6 7 754 847
hunters weat at least som e fluorescent orange
South wes tern
6 8 B77 899
Also personally I expressed the genea al feeling fo r South Kyger Creek
2 11 728 844
'
1
t
Hannan Trac e
0 11 584 899
1th
eastern Oh10 sportsmen that a rec1proca agreemen w
SVAC ONL v
ne1ghbormg states should be enforced This agreement deals Tea m
w L I' OP
Wltlt antlerless dee r permits
Southern
7 I 585 427
It was my feelmg and I am sure 1l s shared by others that Easlern
6 2 525 482
1 t
5 3 541 485
1f we are not eligible ' for perm1ts m neighborh1ng sa
es th at Southwestern
North Gall a
3 2 344 31 3
nonresidents should not be eligible m our state What s fair IS Kyger Creek
o 6 324 399
!au- both ways
Hannan Trace 0 6 307 508
There was no proposal made but some d!VIson people felt
SV AC R ESE RV ES
Team
W L P OP
that my feelmg was not prevalent' among oth er spor tsmen If Southern
8 o 485 309
you agree w1th me , perhaps you or yow spol tsmen Norlh Ga ll a
s o 101 164
organizations can pressure some of the nght people
Eastern
5 3 360 449
Although no proposal wa s made the d1V1son did accept Kyger Creek
1 5 222 324
m suggest1dn that they seriously consider this matter
Hannan Trace I 5 235 287
Y
b h
Th1 s week s games
Although these proposals are to be considered Y t e
Fr&gt;day - Kyger cree k at
DIVIsiOn of Wildlife m thetr !mal laws, nothmg IS guaranteed Hannan Trace and Southern
The state fish and game hearmg will be held Fnday FebruarJ a! Nort h Ga II a
Sa turday - Kyger Cr eek at
2 at 9 30 am m Colum bus
Eastern and Southweslern at
My complnn enls to George Ledbetter for conduclln g the North Ga lloa
hearmgs orderly and unpart!ally
V 1rg •n1a 69 Ma ryland 63
Va
Commo n wea lth 85
Ball m ore 48
VM I 75 Chn s Newport 49
M1dwest

•here 6-8 feet 1s rccom
mended Outlook good
Ct ntral Oh10
AI UM CRLEK I AK I
Ice 6 8 mches ll!ucg111 fl shmg
' en good F 1sh 6 to 14 feet of

=~

CaseyKasem
WMPO

SATURDAYS
9 til Noon

\HIX

v.o rm s for blucg!lls

and crappi es 11lc north end
IS ~ ~ pe c 1alh go od

So m l'

repoits of large boss bc mg
c.1 ught Jlggmg mmn o" t) p&lt;
lures Outlook good

Oh o College Ba sk etb a I
By T he A ssociated Pr ess
Wedne sday N1ght

Conf erence
M1d Amenc:a n
"- M th gan 82 Kent St 63
Oh o
B~ l d w n Vl.a! 'IU

9')

d'-2 1bc r g

WHY
PAY

MORE
FOR

CARPET

CLEANING
Get p rofessional
results at a
fract1on of the cost

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Oklahoma 70

Kansas St

62

Oklahoma 51 66 Nebraska 57
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67 01

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W M IQ Mn 82 DePaul 80

r'

TIRE SALES
N 2nd Ave

J

tal lS Oil o Northern
73 0He1'"be n 7
Oberl n 69 M ouni Un on 61
W tt cnbcrg J7 M usk 1gun ~J
Hoo s1er Bu c keye
De l an ce 90 Earl~ arr 7o
Hnnover 92 Blu ff !on 69
Prcs1denf s
Case Re-ser ve q 1 Th el 80
H nm 76 John LdrrOII 71
1...c1p

He

Ball 51 63 Evansv li e 60
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Ch cago 62 Lawr ence 60
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Of

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Mtddleport, 0

�•••
••

.'
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thur·sday , Feb. 1, 1979

Foster's agent not
By BILL \' Al,E
Associaled Press Writer
CINCINN ATI tA P l - It
rnaJ' be a good omen for the
Crnc innati
Reds
tha t
outfielder George Foster's
agent ha s never had a client
that entered the free agent
draft.
·nrc Reds , who lost third
baseman Pete n ose to the
Ph iladel phia Phillie&gt; when
th ey w ~re unable to come"'to
L'ontra L·t terms with him
.resttme negotiations Frida,;
with Foster's age nt , PittSburgh lawye r Tom Reich .

Heich recently resolved t he
Da re l' urkcr's dirrcrenrt.·s
\dth the Pir&lt;ite s for an
cst i111aled $4 million contr&lt;iet
u\· er fiVe years. However,
Hci ch said he is not optimistic
at thi s ti m e a bout Foster.
" We ha\·en 't reached a
level where Geor~e or I could
e xpre ss
any
ser ious
optimism." sa id Reich of the
1977 National Lca(,'IIC Most .1
Vcllunblc Plnyer.
Rl'lch Sklid many sessions

have been held since October

reg ar di ng Foster , whose
contract runs out after the
1979 season. But he said both

STANDINGS
National Basketball

Edmon .

Association
By The Associated Pre ss
Ea st e rn Conference
At lantic Divi sion
W L Pet .
GB
3J IS
28 18
23 23

.694
.609
.500

N ew York

23 30

Boston

18 31 ':i67 16

Gdmes
Quebec at New · Engl and
Edmon ton at Winn ipeg

41 2

91 1

434 13

25
31
JO

By The Associated Press

BASEBA LL
Am en ca n Leag ue
MINNESOTA TWINS

.528 31 1
.415 9 1 1
.400 10
.360 l'l

Signed
Glenn
outfielder .

Los Ang .

32 20 .615 2
31 20

26 27
23 25
25 28

C leve l an~

Phoenix 123, Milwaukee 118
Jer sey

S~n Diego 112, New
10d

r' ;

Seat tle 115 , Portland 112
Thu r sday's G.3mes
Detroi t at Clevela nd
Washington at San Anto nio
Philade lphia at Ch icago
New Jer sey at Sett le
· Friday's Ga m es
Cleve land at Boston
Golden Sta te at Indiana
New York at Phi ta,d elphia
New Or leans at Chicago
Wa shi ngton a t Houston
Detroit a t Kansas Ci ty
Sa n Antonio at Phoenix
Denver at Sa n Dieg o
M ilwaukee at Seat tle
New Jersey at Portland

for Terry Furlow ,

guard .

BOSTO N

CELTICS

Suspended Mar vin

We dnesda y's Ga m es

Detroit 86

Adam s,

Traded Bu1ch Lee , guard, to

.608 21 1
.49 1 8 1 2
. 479 9
.472 911

Boston 119, Houston 102
Atlanta 130 , Kansas City 118 ·
Golden Sta te 108, Ph iladelphi a 106
New York lOB .

-

.BASKE TBALL
Nat ion a l Bas ketba ll
Assoc iation
ATLA NTA HAWKS

Chi ca go
32
Pac.ific Divi sion
Seattle
32 16 .667
Phoenix
San Diego
Portl and
Gol den St .

LEBANON RESULTS
LE BANON , Ohio lAP )
Wen Hur Oaks regained th e
lead
in
the - stretch
Wednesday nig ht and won the
$1 ,200 featured c laiming pace
in the eighth r·aee at Lebanon
by a neck .
The winner paid $13.60,
$6.20 a nd $7.40 for a time of
2: 12. Besta Money placed,
returnmg $3 .40 a nq $2 :60. The
show hor se , Imago, pa id
$2.60.
Wak efie ld a nd Sha m p oo
combined 5-7 in the doable for
$65 . The mutue l pool totaled
$120 ,51 5. tl lt e ndan ee was
1,137.

Transactions

West er n Conference
Midwest Division
Kan . Ci ty
30 20 .600
28
22
20
18

0 46 166 141
) 45 171 171
J 39 160 187

Frid&lt;~y's

Central Di\'i si on
San Ant
31 10 .608
Houston
'27 22 .55 I 3
Allanta
28 25 .528 4
Cleve.
20 29 .408 10
Detroit
18 32 .360 12 1 1
New Or lea ns 17 35 .327 14 1 1

Denver
Milwau .
Indiana

23 19
20 23
18 2d

Cincin.
Birminq
We dnesday 's Ga me
Winnipeg 6, Edmonton 3
Thu rs day's Game
Quebec at Birmingham

At A Glance

Was h .
Ph il a,
N. Jer sey

he anJ l·ostcr w.rmt l'ostl'r to
r emt:~in with the Heds .
··c.rorgc has no desire to
leave
Ci neinnati,
no
prefere nce to p·Ja y for any
other team. " Reich sa id .
However, Foster want.!:i to be
paid un a par with other
superstars who have pulled
down multimillion doll ar
mul t i-yea r cOntracts.
'
"lie
ex pec· t s
to
be

Barnes,

for ward , t or t wo games .

HOC KEY
Wor ld Hockey Association

NEW
ENGLAND
WHA LERS - Traded Ja ck
( ~ri son .

wing, to
the National
Hockey League fo r fu tur e

right

Mmnesota of

DAMAGED BY FIRE
COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP J A fir e Wednesday caused
extensive damage to an acre
of the Scioto Downs harness
rac in g trac k where a n
a ddit ion to the gr andstand
was being const ruc ted.
There was no estimate of
damage. Officia ls sa id t he
fir e, which was confined to
the constr uctio~ area, st arted
in a ro lled-up ca nvas and
may have been caused by a
cigarette or space heater.
It was not known if t heblaze would a ffec t t he
scheduled May ~ opening of
r acing.

5--,The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday. Feb. 1, 1979

l

hopeful.-~f,.

compensated to playe rs of his
level. supe rstar s. '!'here
&lt;Jrcn 't ma ny aroWld cmd it's
clear what kind of mon ey
U1ey 'r e making.
" He doesn't intend to be
r elega ted 'to a lesser position
than his position justifies,"
Heich sa id.

Reich said it has not been
tl1e players who have ru n up
the salary market.
"George a nd I d id not
cr eate
t ha t
level
of
compensation, but the bids of
the owners. It iS a n
w1assa ilable fact," he sa id .
Reich said he believes,
however, that the Reds would
trade George Foster rat her
than lose him to the fr ee
agent draft as they did Rose,
" I thin k if a gener a l
mana ge r is unable to sign a
sta r in the last year of his
contract , he should tra de
him ,'' Reic h said .
Reich said he 'was pleased
that Pa r ker sig ned with
Pitts burgh and hopes Foster
can come to terms with
Cincinnati.
" It's a better id ea for the
great p la~e rs to stay with the
team s th ey become star s
with . But a guy's entitled to
rea li ze his wor.th . Rose said
he could get a lot more mon ey
and who can a rgue with him
now ."
Foster is billed by the Reds
as " t he premier power hitter
in baseball today." Al though
his batting aver aged dipped
to .281 last season , t he fi rst
time under .300 since 1974, he
finished the season with 40
hom e runs and 120 runs
ba tted in . In the past th r ee
years, he has rut 121 homer s,
knocked m 390 runs and hit
for 1,016 total bases .

Wagner, while m aintaining
he r e mains " positive, " said,
" I don 't know if we'll ever be
prepar ed for a large figure ."

considerat ions .

lie s:d d it ~\·as U11porta n t to
sign ~·osh.'r before the season
starts.

&lt;d tlu.: cHU

' It was the second stop in -.Sca ndina via
fd~
the :
American Olympic hopefuls t!'J
after scoring a 6-4 victory in
Sweden Monday night. .

An· American 1\matcur
Athk1.ic UniOn lt.:am l'i;lsilv

_,.
ot

dcfcatctl
'

a

NorwegiGI O·

Finnish squad ij-1 in an in ternational lioxi.ng meet.

t h e I ~J"i~ season .

However, Griffey will not be
elig ible for th e next free
agent draft , tacking one day
rn quali fying as a six-year
veteran in the majors.

1\eich also represents .Joe
Morgan and Ken Griffey,
whose contracts also expire

Sports briefs••.
By The Associa ted Press

Figure Ska ting
ZAGREB , Yugoslavia -Ma r ina Ch er kasova and
Sergi Shahrai of the Soviet
Union captured the 'pairs
compet ilion of the E uropean
Figure
Skati ng
championships.
Lb erkasova and Shahrai
coll ected 145 .26 point s in
beating fellow Russians Irina
Vo robjeva and Igor Losevski.
In t he men's competition.
Jan Hoffma nn of East
Germany took the lead after
t he short program , collecting
Bl.48
poi nt s.
Hu ssia n
Vladimir Kova lev was second
with 81.48 points.
Ea rlie r , Soviet ent r ies
dominated the dancing ev&lt;"nt.
Aft er the compulsory dances,
the pa ir of Natali Linc uk·
Gena dij Kar p o n osov
collect ed 100.50 points to ta ke
the lead, followed by count ry m e n Irin a Mo js je j eva- ·
And rej Minjenkov wit h ~7.40 .
CINCINNATI - Defending
champion Linda Fratiarine,
seeking he r third consecutive
women's title, gra bbed t he
lead a ft er the compulsor y
figures in the U. S. Figure
Skating championships.
The 18-year-old No rth ridge,
Calif., na tive received seven
or dinals and 92 .90 poirrts to
open a big lead over fellow
Ca lifornia Lise-Marie All en ,
who ha d 17 ordinals and 87.90
points.
Tai Babilonia and Randy

Gardner held a commanding
lead aft er the s hort program
in t he pairs competit ion . The
·California co).lple received.
seven ordinal s a nd 79.70
points.
Sheryl Franks and Michael
Botticelli wer e second with 15
ordina ls and 74 .90.

Be Battery
-·
Minded

LLIE

TENNIS
RICHMOND. Va . - Topseeded Bjorn Borg of Sweden
crushed Hussell Sbnpson 6-1,
6-2 in the second ro und of the
Richmond Tennis Classic .
ln ot her second-ro und
m a t c hes, Tom Wilk ison
ousted fifth-seeded Corrado
Ba razz utti of Italy, 6-3, 6-1,
a n~ Pat Du P r e defea t ed
Marty Kiessen 3-6, 7-6, 6-2.

Dav id
off ensive tack le .

"'
TROUBLE STARTING
YOUR CARl VISIT
DENVER KAPPLE
IN THE AUTO DEPT.
AT MOORE'S.

CH ICAGO Uns eeded
Gr eer Stevens o.f South Afr ica
Ann
up se t fift h -seeded
Kiyomura 6-4,6-3 in a $200,000
women 's professional ten nis
tourna ment.
In other seco nd ro und
mat ches. Na nn e Sm ith
dow ned So ut h
Af r ic an
Yvonne Vermaak 6-4 , 6-3;
Mirn a
J a u sovec
of
Yugos lav ia bea t Sh a ron
Wa lsh 7-5, 7-0; Kerry Re id of
Aust ra lia
t oppe d
Pam
Teeguarden 2-6 , 7-5, 7-6, and
South Africa Marise ll.rUl!&lt;!r ,.r
beat Austra l ia n
Turnbull 6-4,

LARGE STOCKI
BAnERIES

MOORE'S
W. 2ND STREET OR
W. MAIN STREET
POMEROY, 0.

r ·~

.

..:•''"u

.'
111 1

'"

I .,

· ~

I " I

" ,.
..i 1

..

011 11

'

·~"

'·

.. .

'

..

I IH

Boxing
THONDHEIM , Norway

'

'

top, 42-38, ut the half.
By Strat Douthat
Marshall
t'oach
Stu
Assorialed l,rcss Writer
Aber,oloen
says
the
Southern
1
HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
1AP ) - Ke n Labanowski \cDir-lerence is about t o
scor ed 22 points and gr abbed discover that his Thundering
Herd team has come of age.
t1 rebo unds Wednesday night
" I'm not saying we'll iorin
as h ot -shoot ing Mars hall
t
he
confer ence tourna ment,"
whi pped Ohio Univer s ity 94Aberdeen
said Wednesday
81 in college basketba ll .
Marshall
whipped
night
after
Marshall jumped out to a 9Ohio
Univer
sity,
94-81.
"But
0 ltad over the visitors but the
I'
m
predicti
ng
we'
ll
be
Bobcats cam e right baek
representative; we' re a good
time aft er time in the first
basketball t eam."
half before th e Herd broke on
Ohio lfni"r.. c:it ~· r'l'""'h n~1n

EAST LANSI NG, Mich . in· rebounds with II per
(AP)- Michigan State faces contest.
a "m ust -w in" bas ~etball
" For the fir;t time t his
game t.o n ight when th e year we won't be t he favored
staggering Spa rtans take on team ," Heathcote noted .
league-leading Ohio St ate at " We' ll be playing the leag ue
Jenison Field House .
leader and we'll be at home. I
Michigan Stat e got another think we'll be ready to play -jolt Wednesday when fresh- · I'm sure we will."
man gua•d Gerald Busby quit
Starting . for Ohio St ate
the team . Busby hall warined along with Ransey and th e 6the bench most of the season, fooH O Williams wi ll be
but playep 26 minutes in the forwards Carter Scott and
last gam e and Coach J ud Jim Smith, and. guard Todd
Heathcote was thinking of Penn .
starting him ·aga inst t he
Michigan State will li kely
Buckeyes.
st a rt its norma l li neup,
For a t eam with pre-season alt hough reserve
Mike
dreams of a national title, the Brkovich is expected to see
throws by Jeff J ones, a
By Herschel Nlssens on
Spa rtan s have been a plent y . of· action a s t he
basket by J eff Lam p, who led
AP Sports Wr iter
.crushing disappointment . Spartans seek an outs ide
a
U scorers with 2f&gt; points, and
Yo u can 't blame the
Having lost their last t wo shooting threat.
another
by Mike Owens.
Forward Gregor y Keiser is Ma r yl and Te rrapin s for
c-ontests and four of their last
In
anothe
r ACC contest ,
six, the defending Big Ten the t eam scoring leader, with . getting a little cocky after t h ird-ra nk e d Duk e rolled
champs are teetering on the 17 points a game overall and knockirig off No. t - r ated over Wa k e Forest 75·60.
edge of elimination from the 13.5 a contest in league play. Not re Dame last weekend ... E lsewher e in The Associated
P laymaker Earvin J ohnson and you can't blam e the
conference title race and a
is
second at 15 points a game Virg inia Ca vali ers
for Pres Top Twent y, No. 6
slot in the NCAA tournament .
Louisvill e downed F lorida
Michigan state is 4-4 in the in over all pla y. Cent er Jay brin g ing them ba c k to St a te 84-71 in a Metro Cont
f
. d
R
reality.
Big Ten - tied for fo urth with v·mcen,'
or wa r
on
" It doesn't look like we can fer ence game, Oral Roberts
•
lliinois and Michig an - and Cha rl es and guar d · Terry
nipp e d n i nth - rank e d
11-5 overaU , slipping to 15th in Donn e lly round o ut the stand prosperity," Maryland Georgetown 75,74, and No. 16
sta rting five, unless Br kovich Coach Left y Driesell sighed
the rankings.
A&amp;M
s wa mped
aft er
hi s
17th-ranked Texas
Surprising Ohio State could gets the nod.
Southern
Methodist
92-56 in
Meanwhile, Bus by dropped Terr a pins , a pparently still
pound the last na il iri the
,
So
uthwest
Conference
action.
in their upset of
coffin . The Buckeyes a re a out ofschool ,saying: " ! can't reveling
Maryla nd's fin a l point
Notre Dame , came down to
perfect 8.j] in the leag ue, 13-4 play rny game a t Michigan
came on a Buck Williams free
overall a nd ranked seventh in St ate." He said he int ends to earth with a thud Wednesday throw , ma king it ~3. The
, dropping a 69-63
The Associat ed P ress poll . tra nsfer to Kentucky State, night
Terps then had a chance to tie
Atla ntic Coast Conference
" We'r e going to buck up fo r where his brother is play ing.
the score but Larry Gibson ,
Michigan State had high decis ion to. Virginia.
.
the Buckeyes and go from
It was obvious from the whose three-point play with
th er e/·' sa id Heathc ot e , hopes for Busby' a 22-point-a- start that Maryland wasn't one second left beat Notre
knowing he'll need seven game star at Buchanan High
Dame, missed a shot and
straight con fe r ence win s School. " We.thought he was a the same. outfit that· toppled
Albert Kin g muffed a stuff
afterward to get back into the gr eat basketball pr ospect," Not re Dame. The Terps fell
r
e bound a tt empt. Owens
Heathcote said .
behind by nine points at
title fight. ·
canned
two free t hrows with
ha lftime but eventually woke
Sharp-shooting Ohio State
24
seconds
left to nail down
RECREATOIN
up and used an eight-point
brings a league-leading 75
the
triumph.
CANCELLED
run to take a 62-09 lead with
points-a,game average to the
" We played like a bunch of
Open recreation at Lyne
eight minutes remaining.
contest, led by guard Kelvin Center on the Rio · Gra nde
prbna
donnas in t he first
That, however, was their
Ra nsey with a 21-point College College and Comh
a
lf
,"
s aid Dri esell . " It
last gasp. They managed -just
average in confer ence play. munity CoUege campus has
looked
like
Virginia want ed it
one m easly point the rest of
Center Herb Wi lli am s is been ca ncelled lor Sunday,
worse tha n we did.''
t h e way while Virginia
popping in 19 points a game, February 4. Sunday open
Virgini a needed all of
wrapped it up with a s ix-poiril
shooting 60 percent from the recr eation wiU continue Feb.
Lamps' 25 points since the
str eak of its own - two free
field and leading the Big Ten
11.

"

~

~

.
~...
..:..
...

~

Young Eagle
girls lose 2

~

·~

....i.

...~

(Umit 16 Words-Sizes lllusbated Below)

~~C.·G

UTILITY BILLSI

I

L.--~~~C!-~!'.!~].!~!...__J
KINGSBURY HOME
SALES &amp;PARTS
ACCESSORIES CENTER

"Located in the former OV I Egg Bui !ding in

-...t

After 14 wond erf ul
year s of marriage, I ' m

•

..
••
••

We couldn' t ha ve picked
a nicer pair of parent s in
the world! Hav e a

still head-over-heels tn
lov e with you !
Walter z.

Happy Valent ine's Day!

•

M i ke an~ Sue

WRITE YOUR MESSAGEBEUMANiiBilrifF ___________
~------------------------

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- --

Steve Brann en (Q DJ

Eri c Mounts(( )
Kim Kauffman ICJ
Ed Yarboro ugh IM)
Jeff Fischer IMV )
Drew Bake r ICJ
. Thi s Week Games -

-

-..
.••..

-:•
i.

..•.

!...
!..
..
:..
•
'"

~

=

Marshall, which improved
its record t o ~-12, shot a torrid
55 percent Wednesday night
as fo ur players accounted for
66 points between the~ .
"This was a big wit1 for uS,"
Aberdeen sRid . "1 t hin k nur

pluycr s hm'c finHIJ y begun

believing in th emselve s." •
Marshall ·~ Buuny C it;son
led .a ll scorer!'&gt; with ~:1 points
while Ken I .aiJanow~ki il!ld

(;,·o r gc Was hingto n each

pit ched in 22. r;rcg White
added 19 points for th e

winners.
!.abannowski al so pu lil'd
down 11 re bounds. The 6-'i
forward connected on eight of

-si s attempts at the foul line.
'l1lc \"isito rs were puccd by

Tim

.J oy~;.·c

with 20 !XJints .

Marshall got &lt;.1 little

scur in ~

fl urr y ju st
bdore ln ·
t c rmi s~ i o n , however : and
went into t he dressing room

leading 42-38 . Then , shortly
after the second ht.~ l-f heg&lt;m,

Ceorgc Wa shington drove in
for &lt;:~ li-.iyu p ~nd was
delibe ratel y fouled by an

Oldo player . Th e penalty
pru \' 1 \,· 1\ l:l/l outburb't rrom
Banu ) , w:w was promptly lut
with a l wo-shot technical ·
When the smoke cleared.
Mar shall had wo und up
getting fi ve points on the pla y
and the Bobcats wer e down
by 12 points. 54-42.
winning streak ca me to an
"That pl ay hu rt us as much
end when Calvin Garrett a s anythi ng else, " Bandy said
made a free throw with seven afterward. " But you can't
seconds left Georgetown' s take anything away from
John Duren had t ied tt\ings up Marshall 's offensive effort.
with a pair of fr ee throws 10 We got 81 points and that's
seco nd ~ ·eH r! ier . Garrett

12 field · goal attempts but
managed ·t o sink only two of

'

Cava liers' No. 2 scorer, Lee
Raker , missed his third game

in a row.

71
92

paced th e winn ers with 23
po ints while Craig Shelton
had 26 for Georgetown.
David Britton, a sta rter
umlier in the season. cam e
off the bench to score 18
points and lead Texas A&amp;M
over SMU. Britton helped the
Aggies to a 14-poinl halftime
lead even though 6-foot-11
Hudy Woods ha d to sit down
with three personal foul s.
In other key games:
- In the Big Eight , AI Beat
led the way with 21 po int s as
Oklahoma defeated Ka nsas
State 70-£2, the Sooner s' fi rst
victory in Manhattan, Ka n.,
in 31 yea rs. Ar\d fo ur free
throws by 7-1 Paul Mokeski in
the final 24 seconds helped
Kansas hold off Colorado 5651 although the Jilyhawks
didn't scor e a basket in the
fina l 6 1 :o min utes.
- Jim P axson's 24 points
paced Day ton over Miami of
Ohio 7J-62.
- Ed Wineinger scored 23
po ints a nd fellow freshman
J on Man s bury a dded 19,
leading Texas Ch ristia n to a
77 -71 SWC victo r y over
Houston . " It 's been to u ~h on
our freshmen coming into a
situation where we haven' t
been a winner in a whil ~ . but
they are me ntally tough,"
said TCU Co ach Tim
Sorherville . "'lllCY believe
they ca n win ."

fer ence. has six more games
to play - a ll in the confere nce . The Thund ering
llerd will be back in action
here Saturda y aftcrnbon_ in a
reg ionally - t elevi sied game
against the University of

Tenn essee - Chattanooga,

r-----·::-,..-·._·..--------z
)
)

I

You r "Ex t ra Touc h "
Flor is t Si nce 1957

t'-::2

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81.7
80.4

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86
80.2
59
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18.7
71
92
77.2
43
56
76.8
Gene va ; Frida y,

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If you come to a participating H&amp;R Block office
before February 1st. 1979, we 11 90 your 1040A
Short Form for only $ 7.50. and then we II do
any state or local ret urn for even less. Remember you must come in before February 1st.

INTO
SPRING

ACE HARDWARE

us ua ll y good enough to win ."
Marshall , which currently
is 2-5 rn the Southern Con-

SEW

...

•

58
74

13
19
21
17
Thursday, .Wal sh at

An optimis t is a fellow who
believes anyone reads the
r eams of politicaI puffery
you' re handed on the way into
the voting booth.

l:

i

16
17

R1o G r ~ nd e a t Malone-x; ,Saturday, Rio Gr ande at Wal sh-x •
Cedarvil le at Mount Vernon-x, Urban a at T iffin . )( .

....

:...
...
•.,."'
......

scaso'n."

"I kee p reading we' re a
t wo-man t eam and it 's certainl y tr ue statistically," said
Owens.
"But yo u need five g uys to
set picks and play defense.
We feel we have a. good
eno ugh t eam to compensate,
bot I guess we have to prove
it to ourselves."
Th ey did prov e it t o
Maryland.
" ( thought they o uthustled
us ," said Driesell .
Duke got 26 points and 13
r ebounds from Mike Gminski
in t ro uncing Wake Forest ,
a lthough the Blue Devils blew
a 14-point lead in the first
ha lf. A 21Hi burst at th e start
of t he second half t urned a
tight game into a Ia ugher .
" Gminski's play down the
stretch has been tremendous," sa id Coach Bi ll
F oster . " Right now, we seem
to be in a pretty good groove.
We a r~ getting th e ball inside
better no w and that has
helped out by getting better
m ove ment
aro und
the
pe rimeter ."
Louisville t railed F lorida
Sta te by foor points at the
ha lf but the Cardinals connect ed on 21 of 26 shots afte r
the intermision t o turn things
a round a nd post their loth
consecutive triumph. Darrell
Gr iffith led the way with 21
MID-OHIO CONFERENCE BASKETBALL STATISTICS
points while Bobby Turne r ,
(As oil January"29)
who was held scor eless when
SCORING LEADERS
G FG FT TP AVG . the t wo t eams met two weeks
17 161 74 396 23 .2 ago, added 14 this time.
Er ic Mounts I CJ
13 105 69 279 11.5
Kim Kauff ma n ICI
Geo rgetnwn 's seven- game
23 207 61 475 20.7
M. Blankem ei er (Tl
19 165 59 385 20.5
Tom Vo lar ich tM l
17 123 69 315 18 .5
Cr aig Luther (W J
19 '137 59 333 17.5
Ed Yar borough IMJ
21
151 63 365 17.4
Da n Purcell I RG)
17 120 53 293 17.2
Da n Reep I C)
18 133 39 305 16.9
Dave Gustin I UJ
21 142 49 333 15.9
Art Freeman IMVI
FIELD GOAL PCT .
FG FGA PCT .
G
67 101 66 .3
Drew Baker ( Cl
17
Dan Bi se I RG)
21 123 200 61.5
Brad Kentosh IMV)
20 102 175 58.3
9
70 124 56.5
Mike Water s IM)
18
53
94 56.4
Tom Coffman IMJ
19
74
134 55.3
Steve Brann en 1001
16
Mike Rengert l UI
18 104 190 54.7
151 277 54.5
Oan .Purcel l { RG)
21
so
94 53.2
DaveCi ine( U )
14
93 177 .52.5
Ed Ungashi ck IWJ
17
REBOUNDING LEADERS
G REB AVG .
147
11.3
13
Kim Ka uffman ICJ
Art Freema n (MV)
11.2
21
235
17
164
9.6
Cr alg Luther ( Wl
Ill
9.3
12
Greg James I RG)
18
142
7.9
Mike Waters IM)
7.7
23
177
St eve Miche li ITJ
21
156
7.4
Da n Bi se I RG)
124
7.3
17
Da n Reep I Ci
FREE THROW PCT .
G FT FTA PCT.
Da n Pu rcell I RGl
21
63
69
91.3
Tom Vol ar ich U"\)
19
59
69
85.3
Mike Rengert iU)
18
65
79
82.3
Steve Lones iR GI
11
32
39
82.1

MOC cage statistics

Nam ed Norb Hecker
defens i ve back coac h an d Bill
Mc Pherson linebacker coach.

Handy , whose Bobca ts
dropp&lt;•d to ~-8 on the season.
agrt.·«.·d with Aberdeen.
saying : ·· That' !&gt; th e bcs l
offensive game any.body has
played against us t hi s

Virginia jolts Terps, 69-63

SAN F RANCISCO 49E RS

MOBILE HOME HEATING SYSTEM

Miners ville , Ohio.

'

1,

Marshall guns down OU, 94-81

Studd ard,

ma1ter.

I

!H I

" 1"1

Last Satu r da y, Ga lli a
Academ y's junior high gi rl s
Ca mpbe ll Conference
built up a n earl y lead and
Patrick Div isi on
on to defeat Eastern 25held
W L T Pts GF GA
20. The winners led 9·2 after
NY
Is land.
32 8 9 73 224 133 one quarter but from then on
NY Ra ng . 29 17 5 63 214 178 the game was nearl y even.
Atlanta 28 20 ' 60 207 i78
Hene e Ha ll ey le d t he
Phi la .
22 17 11 55 162 155
winner
s a nd took. scor ing
Smythe Di vi sion
Chicago 17 23 9 43 145 114
ho nor s with 11 points while
Vancou . 17 27 7 41 l 5.d 193
Susan Griffin had 6. Nancy
Colo.
12 31 B 32 146 206
Evans and Tracy Hennessey
St . Louis 12 3&lt;~ 7 31 156 231
each had four. ·
Wa les Confer enc e
Adam s Divi sion
Kath y Hitchie led East ern
!Josten
30 13 8 68 205 160
with eight points and Becky
Toron to 2 1 20 10 52 162 158
Bu ffalo
19 19 11 49 164 162 ' Ambrose had five . Kelly
Headley had three points and
· Minn.
19 23 7 45 155 168
Norris Divi sio n
Rhonda Riebel a nd Dee
~ont
35 9 7 77 213 125
Da iley each had two . AmLos Ang . 21 2.:1 7 49 189 191
Pill s.
20 22 B 48 173 175 brose led the rebounders wit h
Wash .
17 27 8 ·12 174 218 eight.
Detro it
10 27 14 34 158 196
Eastern made 9 of 22 field
Wednesday's Games
~ttempts and conve rted 2 of 7
~onlreal 4, P ittsbur gh I
free thr ows.
Wa sh mglon 5, Lo s Angeles 3
In Monday's 41-18 loss to
·At lanta S, Bu ffal o 2
·
Tor on to 5. Sl. Lou is 1
So uth e r n, Dai ley led t he
B o~t on 2 Chicago 2. tie
Eastern rebounder s with six
·:ot or ildo 5, NY Rang e rs t1
ca
rom s. Scorers in t hat
rh ursday 's Gam es
cont est were Ambrose 8,
~ 11 Lrl go a 1 Boston
V. ,ncouv cr El l At lanta
Riebel q_ Ritchie 4, and
t-J Y Is la nder s at Phit~delph i a
Dailey 2.
Detroi t d l M innesota
Southern scorers \\.-ere Mel
Frid ay's Games
Weese 18, Tonj a Salser 12,
No gam es sc hedu led
La ure n Wolfe 4, Kim
Wor ld Hockey Association
Ma ynard 3, Michelle Johnson
W L .T Pi s GF GA
Quebec
24 16 4 52 168 141 2, and Cindy Evans and
N. Eng
22 15 6 50 180 154 Debbie Michael L
Wi nn .
22 19 6 50 186 178

COMPLETE
SYSTEM
ONLY

-

"'

"'•

Pro Hockey At A Gla nce
By The Associa ted P ress
Nationa l Hocke y Lea gue

'I·

.....

" ' .t

FOOTBALL .
Nation a l Football League
DENVER BRO NCOS Sig ned

uti

It's do or
die for MSU

LTD OFFERS
RIDI &amp; QUALITY
• '79 LTO has the famous
quiet ride and quality
that has made it
a tradition.

FORD

�•

·•

--

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Feb, 1.'1979

7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer~y , 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 1. 1979

~
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··

.·:;:;::::: ;.•;·: ·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:;;;::=;:: :: ::::::::: .: ;::: ; :::;:;:;:;:;:; :;: ;:;:;:::·:::::(::;:;:;:;:~~-~

i!,

.=
• .: •.
•=.•

r

By Helen and Sue Bottel

(
== ==

TO SQUEAL OR NOT TO SQUEAL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I was behind a woman and her daughter in a supermarket
check-&lt;&gt;ut line when I sow the girl reach over and take some
candy bars while she thought no one was looking. She hid them
in her jacket pocket.
The kid was around 7 years old, and I figured she shouldn't
think she could get away with shoplifting, so I politely t.old her
mother . Instead of making her give the candy back, she paid
for it, and the~ waited outside the store to bawl the daylights
out of me for embarrassing her- while the girl stood there and
sm irked . l'll bet she'll steal something bigger next time. Come
to think of it, maybe they're a mother-daughter team, like
Fagin and his gang.
Wllat would you have done' -STILL BURNING
DEARS.B. :
I'm the outspoken type who'd have (quietly) told the girl to
put the candy back, hoping her mother wquld take it as a good
object lesson . Later I might have ki cked myself for butting in
·but I doubt it. -SUE

DEARS. :
And I'm the " Wonder if I should " type who might have re·
mained quiet, then kicked myself for it later. Youngsters must
learn early on that shoplifting is a crime. Too bad the mother
doesn't agree with us .- HELEN
INDOOR CAMP SPEAKERS - James and Rosemary
Green , Canton, lll., will be in charge of music at the indoor
camp of the Meigs Area Holine.ss Assn . to be held next
week at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene.

Indoor camp planned
Monday through Sunday

'

.

The indoor camp of the
Meigs Area Holiness Assn .,
will be held at the . Rutland
Church of! the · Nazarene
Monday, Feb. 5, through
Sunday, Feb. II , with ser·
vices each evening at 7:30
p.m .
The Rev. Clyde Henderson
wtll be speaker on Monday

Turns nine

HELEN AND SUE :
I'm writing about a new breed of girL Wllen my buddies and
I were in junior high school, everybody smarted off and tried
to act big because we weren't. Most girls outgrew this.
Guys back then noticed how different junior and senior high
girls were. But things began to change. The younger girls got
worse : they used every obscene word around, picked fights,
and would flip you off if you looked at them. And they didn't
calm down when they got to high school. Wllen I was a senior,
sophomore girls were the pits.
·
·
Now I'm out of school, I see the new crop of young girls going
the same way - hard and tough, and high school doesn 'I
mellow them. Many guys agree with me. Wllat I)lakes them all
want to act like animals ' - A MALE WHO LIKES FEMININE
FEMALES
MALE :
Generalizations turn me off. Not all girls act like animals,
though the toughies arc so visible they sometimes give that im·
pression- esp~cially to a man bent on proving his point.
I think you '11 get feminine flak here. -HELEN

•

·,l.~\:1&gt;....

lly Juks J.uh
.~l'Spcdalturrespondent

HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
1Al'l - Joe Dobbs works in a
disheveled little shop where
the tart smell of old-fashioned
hide glue mingles with the
sweet sound of old-fashioned
mountain music and the
wonder is that any work gets
·
done at aiL
" On Saturdays," Dobbs
said, " we don't even make
any prciense at working . We
push everything aside and
play."
.
·
What Joe Dobbs plays is
that ancient music of Appalachia, music brought here
by pioneers, handed down by
tune from fiddler to fiddler ,
and somehow kept intact for
200 years.
When he isn't, oh, fiddling
around, Joe and his brother,
Dennis, repair the in·
struments that make those
soulfuul sounds: dulcimers,
fiddles, mandolins, banjos,
instruments literally as old as

POSTPONEMENT
A meeting of the Long
Bottom Community Assn. has
been postponed until 7: 30
p.m. Monday at the hall: Rep.
Ron James will be on hand to
discuss road conditions and
other items of community
interest.

the hills.
" I couldn't have made a
living 20 years ago. " Joe said,
·' but since the recent revival
of traditional music, fine old
instruments have been
coming out of attics~ by the
dozens.
"Somebody will come in
with a sack of parts and say,
' This was gra ndpa ' s old
fiddle and I want to learn to
play it.'
" Take a look at tllis in·
strument. It is a fretless
banjo. The only other one I
ever saw was in a museum.
This one came out of an attic
in Kenova . It was made
before the turn of the cen·
tury."
The Dobbs brothers' shop is
located out on the edge of
town in an area deatlng in
used furniture, second·hand
clothes, feed, coal, life's
earthy fundamentals, just the
right place for a mountain
music shop.
People come from miles
around to find the shop. When
they do, they are likely to be
treated to an impromptu
duet, Joe stroking a fiddle,
Dennis plucking a· banjo. If
the cubtomer feels the urge to
grab a guitar off the racks
and join in, have at it . Let
the work go.
"If you get anxious about
getting this back, Joe told a
man the other day, who had
brought in a guitar for repair,

LAFF- A - DAY

the best.
Joe
was
raised
in
Mississippi and Louisiana,
out in the country. Uke most
country musicians, he is both
self-effacing and self-tausht. ·
"When I came here in 1967
and saw these Appalachian
mountains , · saw where
mountain music has come
down in its truest form, it 'was
as though I always knew this
was where I wanted to be. I
believe there are more
pickers in these hills than
anywhe.re.
"Now there is one more.
One more country fiddle~.
Say, if you want to hear some
real mountain music, drop by
Saturday."

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
.,
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til 5:00
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until&amp; P.M
Herman Grate
Mason . W. Va.
773-5592

J ennings Beegle, principal,
announces the third six weeks
grading period honor roll for
the Southern Junior High
School. Making a "B" or
above in all of their subjects
to be listed !those in capital
letters made all "A's" ) in·
elude:
Seventh Grade - LEE
DILL , LAREN WOLFE ,
Randy Armes, Tony Wolfe,

'

rJOr '2Jour CVakntine
RED FOIL HEART
I LB. $4.45

I
4'X8'
SHEETS
AS LOW AS

SATIN HEART 2 ~B. $11.25
\I

m &lt;Jtl' i' nt~ l gl'andp.arents, Mr.

ASSORTED
CHOCOLATES
I LB. $3.50

REG.
REDOAK ......................•.... ; ..... S 4.79
CHERRYTONE LUAN ...... .... . ... ....... $ 5.95
MOUNTAIN HICKORY ... ... ..... .. . . .. . ... $ 7.59
MOUNTAIN BUTTER ............... .' ...... $ 7.59
BRADY BIRCH ........ ... ................. $ 8.48
COFFEE ............. .. . .......•.... ..... $ 8.48
WESTERN CEDAR ................ ........ $ 8.99
EASTLAND PECAN ........................ $ 8.99
BLUE MIST . ... .. , , ....... ..... . .. . . . ..... $ 8.99
SEAFOAMWHITE ..... . ........... . ....... $ 8. 99
COUNTRY ROADS ..... .. . ... . ....... . ...... $11.75
CRESTLINE 1/o" ................ . . . ........ $10.50
5PICE BIRCH 1/4" •••.••.•• • ••• ••••..•• •••• $10.95
WATCHTOWER ELM 11•" •• ••••••. • • . . • ••••• $11.95
BOVNTY f:'INE V• " . .. . .......... .. ........ $12.80
51 LHOUETTE Bl RCH 1/4'' . , . , .... , . ....••.. $11.95
GASLIGHT RED BRICK 1/4" ..•.• •. : . . . . . . . . $17.59
TS!,IQA SIERRA 7/ 16" . ............ . ...... .. $18.59

HALLMARK

The reason it's so difficult
to loc;Jtc a plwnber is thai
most of them have gone to
work designing antacid 'il·
hLstrations for TV commer·
d a is.

.,

.•.

CARDS

Ra cine a recent afternoon.

..
N. 2ND AVE.

DUTTON
DRU.G CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

SALE

PRICE PRICE

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Tuttle
and son, Mrs. Ray Johnson
and son of Eagle Ridge, Julia
Hose of Bashan and Wayne
Ervin , local, were recent
guest s of Mr . and Mrs .
Do uglas Circl e.
Mr and -Mr s. Donald
Pi erce of Athens visited with
Mary Circle on Saturday . Mr.
and Mrs. George Circle, Mr.
and Mrs. James Circle of
New Haven were at the c .rcle
hom e on Sunday .
Patrick John son spent
Sunday afternoon with
Eunice Brinker.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
John son, Patri ck and Sheryl,
ca ll ed at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas .Johnson of

f .U I'k f"l nh. fncJtltJtod Wii S :lfl
ikmizt.•d Jist of munt•y ~JK' I11
for gifts and fnqJ,I Hs Wt?ll ~~ ~
llw ('ash and gifts rt.•('eivt•d
dur ing 1978. t\ lsu .st•nt tn lht'
dub was H f'opy of tht• n•rtifintt(' nf aw~ml from lht.·
Ohio Associ;Jlinn of Gardt•n

Clubs tn th(' Goml Lur·k lluh

for ganh•n thentpy in whil'h
tht• Rutland ('luh had par·
tidpah•1l .
From ltw t.HIIipolis Stoth•

Institutt· . ;1 cNtifi cah' had
bt•t 'tl pn•sl•nh•li tu lh t' Rutlrmd
C:ardt•n Club in fl'C'o ~n ition
for services tu the rt•sidt·nts
!here. a l'IIPY of ihl' volunteer

-,

,~----- .

Today's Topic:

Social II
I Calendar 1

I
I

Comrade or com-bad?

l"t ' l ' ttg lt_ifj jlfl t!JIHII ' I' Jll"ll~\l'i·llll ,

M r .· l lldll w;1s ('o-ho.r.; t.·s....: for

;1 ncl tlw .J;tnuary Jli'Ws lt·ttt·r .

1ht• lllt'l'l illg

Mr s.
En g(' llt' /\ t ki ns
n •portt'd tlwt sl w lwfl 1'1 '1 't'i\' l'd tll(' fiSI N;l \!ll'i.' r.t-trden

Club 1978 ·7~ pro~nun hook.
Tht• 1·l uh iS spnr1snrt'il !Jy Ow
C, ardl'll Clubs of Crclllia ;nul
Meigs ruuntie" ;md the Oh io
Assod atiun ofr.€lrdt•n f'lubs .
F'nr roll call t'&lt;-H'h mt!InhL· r
pn·st·nl named hur fa vorite
pic-tnt container. Devnlions includl'&lt;l Mrs. Chris Dil'hl's
t·eading of " Look Up Whill'
Slowing Down " and Mrs.
TUI'Ill'I' 'S giving quotes rrom

OHVi'r Wendell Holmes cmd
... questions. But I have no
By NIKKI FINKE
grasp of Soviet citizens.
1\br&lt;.~h&lt;nn
T.inroln , cll s~o
answers.
I
have
only
hope
THURS!lAY
Associated Press Writer
In 1960, the average Saviet
reading
fr
om Sun s l1ine
F.VANr.EJ.INF: rHAPTER
MOSCOW ( AP) A worker was earning slightly that an enlightenment will
magazine
"
Tho!
Word Old"
generation gap of sorts has more than 80 rubles a month. come both to the parents and 172, Onler of tht• F.aslern
and
"
A.
Pattern
for
Living".
Star, 7:.10 p.m. ThursdHy,
come to the Soviets.
according
to
official to their children."
foll
owed
by
till'
dub's
t'I'&lt;'Cd
There is a small rebellion rt'gular meeting.
This is apparent from the statistics. In 1965, th.is rose to
ami
coiled
given
in
un
ison .
complaints of journalists , 96.5 rubles, in 1970 to 122 away from the excessive
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S
teachers and sociologists who rubles and in 1975 to 145 materialism of the older C!.UB, Bp.m. Thur•day at the
much
like church . Meeting will be
are blaming it not on the rubles. Today he earns 159.3 generation,
youngsters but on parents rubles, almost $239 a month. America 's hippie movement. preceded by Ma•s at 7:30
One cartoon in the Soviet p.m .
who they say are spoiling
There is no measure of how
satirical
magazine Crocodile
Installation of .offi cers
their . teenagers with rock price rises may affect wage
SATURDAY
pictured
a
mother sitting in a
hi ghlighted the· .Januar ~
albums or jeans and not increases, but the Soviet
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and
teaching them about work government maintains in- gaudily decorated living Game Saturday, 7 p.m., at mel!ting Qf tbc Mt.:igs Couul)'
room as her overall-clad son
W.orncn ':--;
C h ri s ti~ut
and the value of the ruble.
flation does not exist here.
club house on Shade River
leaves
home
to
work
on
the
F
ellowship
held
H
I the Mtd·
The problem - which
Whatever the level of
Road.
dlepurt
Chut·eh
of
rhri
st.
Baikal·Amur
railr
oad
seems to echo what's been prosperty , it has brought
WESTERN Boot CB Club
through
Siberia.
U.
s
ing
scripture
from
St1l. 2
going on in the United States - questions - from the official
meeting 7 pm. Saturday at Marge Peuter. lhe insta lling
"
Wlly
?
Why',"
The
mother
for years- could intensify as media - on how to teach
club house.
officer, compar ed th e
the Soviets become more youngsters that happiness asks. " Haven't I given you
SQUARE Dance, Saturday, women's urgcmizatiun to tl
affluent and parents keep wtder ''mature socialism'' is everything?''
But unlike this " hJppie," 9 to 1 at Rutland American vase of rl owL·rs and cu ll ed for
trying . to make their ideological purity, and not a
most teenagers accept their Legion Post 467 home; music l'ach offi cer ami nwmbcr or
children's lives easier than new motorbike.
by Hilltoppers; heart and
"The problem with young p aren t's sacrifices. cake walks ; public invited. · the group to usc her lalents in
their own.
the work of the uq_
.(H niz&lt;-ttion.
"There are families in people today is that they are sometimes demand them. So
.She
commended
Mrs.
Merl1•
Russian
papas
and
mommas
MONDAY
which parents renounce not being forced to stand on
.Johmmn
,
retiring
pre.s
ich:nt ,
try
to
bribe
offlctals
to
get
RACINE
CHAPTER
134,
everything for . themselves, their own two feet," a jour·
fur
her
lead
ership.during
the
Ord
et·
of
the
Eastern
Star,
junior
into
a
coveted
school
or
yet try to \fress their children naliSt complained. "How will
past
year
.
regular
meeting,
Monday,
of
vodka
under
slip
a
bottle
in the latest fashions and buy these children turn out if they
As each officer was in stetllthem new radios and tape are spoiled by the good life the counter to get him the FEb. 5, at the Masonic Tern·
ed
she rceeived Hrose in l'Oior
pi
e.
7:30
p.m.
Obligation
latest
record.
recorders,"
said
the they didn't earn? Questions
njg
ht
will
be
observed
.
symbolic
of her office. Innewspaper Komsomolskaya
stal
led
were
Ca tltl·rine
Pravda.
Russell,
pre
sident
: .Ann
"Don't these parents ever
I
.cunberl,
vice
pre.sirlent
:
think about the fact that their
Holly
McArthur.
assis
tunt
to
children are growing up like
the vice president: Merle
parasites?" the newspaper
Johnson
, serreti:l ry ; Kathryn
asked. "We must show more
informal guidelines barrmg wouldn't say we're obese.''
By TJOTHY HARPER
F.\'ans,
treasurer
; Trudy Anconcern about the younger
The Rays enlisted state
adoptions for health reasons.
Associated Press Writer
generation so It won't put
'they wrote and told us we Sen. Peter Bear, who said he
MADISON, Wi s. (AP ) material things ahead of
were
o""se and could not is awaiting more infonnation ·- l70Un~a TJ
Barbara and Ray Gordon
life's real valuables,"
6 VV i
adopt
until we had a sulr from state officials to 1. I
,child, but
An example listed in want to adopt a
determine
if
the
obesity
rule
stantial
weight
loss,"
Gordon
•
another paper was a farm ·. they can't. The state claims said. "Basically, the problem
is legal.
they're too fat to become
family whose breadwinner
is with my wife, but they told
parents, the couple says.
" It seems riciculous to
walked .seven miles each way
me," Bear said. " I don't
6
" We started this thing and me I should lose, too."
as a lad just to find enough
Social workers told Bar- know how a state agency can
New officers were elected
we're not the type of people to
good grass to feed his
give up on it," said Barbara, bara she had to get down to deny adoption eligibility on at the January meeting of the
animals . But his grand·
who stands 5·foot·9 and 190 pounds and she did within the basis of the prospective Young Wives Club held at the
daughter wouldn't dream of weighs 210 poWJds.
three months. But then they pa rents' weight , especially in home of " .Jane Coates,
soiling her hands with farm
Gordon, a 6·foot·2, 215· lowered the weight to 170 the absence of definitions or Chester .
work.
proof that .a health problem
Elected were Mrs. Coates.
pound shipping clerk at the pounds, she said.
"She cannot milk a cow and University of Wisconsin, said
Jane Thompson, a state exists."
Gordon said he and his wife president; Celia Bailey , vice
·has never held a shovel piled
they began state adoption social worker who the Rays
with manure or c.a rried a proceedings two years ago said had been assigned to have been certified in good presil{ent; Shelia Taylor,
and Celia Bailey,
bucket of water from a well," when doctors said it was their case, refused comment health by their doctors, and secretary;
historian and photographer.
the Literaturenaya Gazeta unlikely they would ever have on the case.
are active in many sports. He
The name of the club was
said.
·t
Gordon said (here were no said he and his wife, married chang d t 0 th c
children.
seven years, own a home and
e
e ommum Y
''Why?
Beca~se
lier
When the state Department specific guidelines, and the are saving to build a house in Wives Club. Several money
parents protected her from
of Health and Social Services social workers made the
making projects were
hard work. And her hardest
discussed. Attending were
said they would have to wait decision according to an the co untry some day .
task is to wash the dishes." five or six years for an infant, insurance company's
"The child is the most N
orma Hawthorne, Kathy
One journalist wrote about the Rays said they would preferred
height·weight important thing in the world Stone,
Mrs. Bailey, Mrs.
another household where the rather have a child 5 to 10 chart.
to us, " said Barbara, a Coates, Linda Well, Susie
father was forced to look years old right away.
"I
think
it's
just statistics clerk in the Dane Kibble, Lila Van Meter, anu
after his brothers and sisters
Health Mrs . taylor.
Then the couple, both 28, di scrimination ," he said. "If Co unty Mental
at age 14 after his own father ran into the department's yo u wer.e to meet us, you agency.
was killed in World war II .
She sa id her family has a
and his mother fell ilL
history of being large-boned
"But now, he can't ~.:ope
and overweight, but also of
They'll Do It Every Time
with his own children," the
longevity .
writer noted. His 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld
" I could lose the weight if I
WHATIA'fA SORE ABOUT NOW f'
t!N6tltA G!V&lt;S
son jumps from job to job. His
really wanted to, but why do
- \N' 'IOU TElL ME? AM l
lf~R lfVS84/IP
daughter; already divorced,
it just until the adoption goes
SU~SED TO WORR~
'J'H~S/LcNT
spenqs the winter In
through
and then go back to
TREATM~NT··
SECAUSE '/OU
Leningrad and summers in
my normal weight ., It's the
TAlK. TO ME?
the country, knowing her
principle of the thing. I've
"daddy" will take care of
been this weight for years,
since high school, and I'm
her .
"But daddy has never had a
comfortable. This is me,"
vacatiOn in his life and wvrks
Barbara 4old.
very hard to break his back
The Rays say they will go to
a private adoption agency
for his ehlldren even though
they are already adults," the
only as a last resort.
" This is a state agency,"
journalist said.
Gordon
said. " I pay to run
"There is a widespread
fiNT!t. Slf~
that
agency
with my taxes.
delusion that because we
f'IN{JS lfE'S
Wlly should I go somewhere
suffered very much and =eo OFF
7HifT 15·else'!" t
worked very hard, let's make
TiiEN, I
it easier for our children. But
ON, BOY,
· easier from what? From
MILDRED TUBBS
worry? · From work• For
~I;
Mrs
. Mildred Tubbs,
adults, this is the normal
ERIC
Condor St., Pomeroy, un·
condition of life - to work
derwent surgery recently at
and to worry. "
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Authorities note there are
Her room number is 131 for
other young people rejecting
those who wish to send cards.
life on the fam( br at the
factory in favor of cushy jobs
requiring little mental or
manual strain. But they say
parents, not children, are to
blame.
"Only the family in today's
times can instill in children
and teenagers the proper
ideas aJ19ut . the material
world and teach them to
orient themselves to it, " a
soclologlsl was quoted as
saying.
·
"But if parents themselves
live by small interests, then It
wl11 be very difficuh for the
UP
50%· REDUCTIONS
child to understand that he
should not strive for material
ON FINE WEARING
thing$."
APPAREL FOR MEN
W.esterners are often
surprised · at the average
Ruelan's almost comical
AND WOr.1EN
preoccupation with conswner
goods, Milch are in short
VISIT:
supply here. A new gadget or
a well-made jacket quickly
become the prized possession
in a Soviet househol~.
·
Only recently have luxury
Open All Day Thurs . &amp; Fri. Evenings ..
Items like cars, color
•
.
Middleport, 0 .
N. 2nd Ave.
· televlalon sets, and jewelry
aime within· the economic

Mrs.

BATHROOM PANELS
GOLD LACE ... ........ ... ........ ... ..... $11.49
AV.OCADO FLORENTINE, .... , .... ,,,,.,, . $13.39

.

4.25
5. 25
6.59
6.59
6.95
$ 6.95
$ 7.59
$ 7.59
$ 7.5.9
$ 7.59
$ 9.95
$ 8.95
$ 9.2 :
s.9.85 .
$ 9.89
510.19
$15.95
$13.94
$
$
$
$
$

$ 9.69
$11.39

.

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CORPORATION
'

Wood ctrd

n l)roth y

Jht• st·t·n·t;.tr,\··s rep1n·t ;
Mrs" Roy Snowdt·n rcpnrlt'd
on tfw treilS lH't'r's balant't&gt;
and a lsu l't'ild il greM ing from
Mr, . fharks Knhl , n•gional
din•dur. A lhcmk y[lU po4.•m
from Mrs. Robert Camu.l&lt;JV
follnwtng tht· dt·;tth i1r hci·
mother wa s read .
Mrs. Virgil Atk ins introducPrl the evening's program
with Miss 1\uby Diehl repor·
ling on "Selecting the Proper
Contai ner Hnci Rcpntting of
Honse Plants" written by
. JPrTy B &lt;J kt~ r. Miss DiPhl gHvc
such tips as containers now
l'OITle in ml:tny materials all
wit h poin ~ fur and a9ainst
them for va lue. She said thai
the most attr~:~cti vt.• container
;'il\'t'

~dways

thl' best urw ,
most importl:mt
nspt.•t ·t 11f any container is the
pn,\·i sinn for dra irwge and
n~orn tur root growth . Shl'
noted t hat plants sumt&gt;t ime~
rwcd first aid and that
kn uw lt-~dge and gentle hands
can make repotting a plea sant t•xpcrience.
Mrs. Robet·t Canaday t·ead
from Popul.Hr Indoor Garden ing on " Rest New Annuals fur
r:onlainers." She sa id lhat we
· do not need all varieti es listed
for beauty but new hybrids of
varied varie"lies with corcful
sclel'tiun and planning can
produce results of beauty.
Members gave reminders for
February about plans for sprin ~ plantings.
·
Twelve eontainers of
VHrious colors and purposes
tlw

were un c.Jit&gt;play . Mrli. 1\tkins
and Miss Di ehl reported on
having furni shed Christmas
arrangt::mt•nts for lheir chu r ~
ches, Mrs. Snowdt&gt;Jl, one for a
church dinner, Mrs. Turner,
Mi ss Diehl , Mrs. Eugene
Atk ins and Mrs. Virgil
Atkins , Hrrangements fur the
F:a stcrn Star installati on.
The nower fund rl'port was
given by Mrs. C. 0 . Char·
mr.~n . The trav.t:ling prizt•
donateu by Miss Diehl was
won by Mrs. Turner with Uw
contribution going tv lht.!
nuwcr fund .
The dining room table was
t't.'ntered with an arrangement of "Winter Splendor "
made by Mrs. !liehl using
white dried materia l with
gera nium . Refr eshm ents
wet·e served by the hostesses.

Officers installed by Women 's Christian Fellowship
drl'W.S , new.s reporter, and
.Jane Hazelton, card chairmom .
The meeting opened with
sin gi'ng of " Love Lifted M ~".
The prayer hymn was " Ivory
Pal e~ces'' with
Mrs. Ann
1.&lt;-:~rnbert giving prayer . Mrs.
.Johnson presided for the
opening of the meeting and
ga ve devotions on faith .
A meeling of the planning
eommittt.•.e wa s set fur lhe
Purnt•roy Church of Ct,1 rist,
F&lt;·b. 12 at 7:30 p.m .
Hefres tunents were scrv~d
bv the member• of the host
church. Next meeting wi11 be
held at the Pomeroy Church,
Ft'b . 22 ol 7:30p.m . with the
Mitltlleport women to hav e
lite devotions.

VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Gruescr
and chi ldren, Kimberly and
Todd , Coldwell, were recent
visi tors of his pHrents, Mr.
and Mrs. Karl Grueser rmd
I ..t:I!T)' .

i

eld meetz'n~ a · - - - - - -. .
,.

I lush

111u!)pl(
'
"'
~H
FOR ALL

~1\1
~

FIRST OF THE MONTH

..

L7

\ 7f#J ''"''•·'__

._

r.
-..
1_ 1 .

-

All

WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

FASHION BOOTS
LEATHER &amp;
MAN MADE

lf2PRICE

--·.---'
All

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

HIKING BOOTS ·

lh
_____J
PRICE

~ THE

FAMILY

heritage house

VISA'

OF SHOES

THE
SHOE BOX

Open Friday Night Till 8 P. M.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport. 0 .

Middleport. Ohio

c.

@~li!~
Open: 7:00toS:OO Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 Saturdav

FASHION

CLEARANCE
CONTINUES

nylon face velvet
sofa, chair and ottoman

to'

PREFINISHED TRIM AND ALL ACCESSORIES TO MATCH EACH PANEL
CASH &amp; CARRY
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

923 S. JRD AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

is not

w11l

lush livin

·I

$425

and Mrs. Thomas .Garten,
Blounl. W. Va.; Mrs. Phyl'
Mullen, Middleport, and her
friend, Marcia, at St..Francis
Hospit11l tn Charleston, W.
Vn.
-~

the me~ting f1rt• sidt•d over by
Mrs . Turner lo t·untinuc tilt•
spring flower show . R&lt;•ad al
thl' meeting was " letter of
appreciation from Mrs. Betty
Mizicko, garden therapy
chairman at the Athens Men·
tal Health Center , for the con·
tinued cooperation with the
Christmas patty for the Good

h

At Thanksgiving time,
what did the Pilgrims and In·
rlians find to do after church
ami before dinner ' TV foot·
ball hadn't been invented .

'11lednesday. r.feb. 14

RliTI.AND-Plans for tak·
ing valentine arrangements
and . fruit plates to the
residents of the Meigs County
Infinnary were made during
a meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club Monday night at
the home of Mrs. Ralph
Turner.
It was also decided during

Tz've.S

Gobel, Debbie Michael, Janie
Amberger, Missy Stover,
Kevin Curfman.
Eighth Grade - John
Porter, ·Kathy Baker, CINDY
EVANS, Bruce Johnson,
Becky Lee, Kim Maynard,
David Salmons, Lori Warden .

' James Manuel. Dorothy
Warner, Daniel Weddle, Bill

do wn ··

Rutland Garden Club met, made ·Valentine plans

Too fat to adopt a child???

Southern honor roll

L~-"======.-.-_j
" Hk a ~. Buz . lime for splash · Linda Proffitt, James Bush,

T r a cy Lynn Smith,
da ughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Howa rd C. Smith, Lincoln
Hill. Pomeroy, was honored
wilh a party on her ninth bir·
thday, Jan. lB.
The room was decorated
with red streamers and
balloons, and a white cake
with red roses and inscribed
" Happy Birthday, Tracy"
was served with ice cream,
koola id to the guests, Dena
Ma nley , Wendi and Kenda
Dunfee, Tammy Wright ,
Tosha O'Nei l, Leah Doidge,
Juli e Baity, Jeff McKnight,
Rick Smith, Greg Smith,
Vi cki Ptckens .
Sending gifts were her

\·call rnc up and give me a
nudge' .''
.
.
Joe Dobbs is a bouncy man
of 45 put together in the shape
of a barrel.
When he tucks his fiddle
under his chin, under a shaggy brown and gray
beard, and cradles it in his
big round shoulders and thick
arms, the fiddle. seem s
fragile , toy-like.
The music it makes is far
from fragile though.
Lids close over ·deep blue
eyes·, warm red wood presses
against neck and the mi!Sie is
alive, driving, laughing,
wailing . Fellow fiddlers at
folk festivals from coast to
coast count Joe Dobbs ~mong

and the Rev. P. L. Liddell of
Howell, Mich ., will speak for
the remainder of the week.
James and Rosemary Green
of Canton, Ill., will be in
MALE:
charge of the music which
Maybe more girls bang tough because they're imitating
will start on Tu esday
.
males
these days. They've learned aggressiveness pays off,
evening.
and true: some overdo it. But not all! -SUE
The public is invited.

-,. "'-'•

Tracy Smith

•

joe
Do
pbs.·
·
just
fiddlin
'
around
Generation Rap
• •

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!i

.

PHONE 992-2709
OR 992-6611 ·

BAHR CLOTHIERS
-.

sale

'749

When you can get this much comfort and style at such a low
price, that's value! Fashioned with deep channel tufting,
you'll be literally surrounded by luxury. Generous attached pillow-back and reversible tee seat cushions are buoyant
polyester wrapped urethane foam .

BAKER FURNITURE

.

00

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
I

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•

Cub scouts ,-----:---,

H- The Daily Sentinel: Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursd"Y· FPb 1, 1979

·Charlton Heston
writes of his life
TilE ACTOR'S 1.1 FE :
JO URNALS 1956-1976 By
·Cha rlton Heston. Dutton 482
Pages $1 2.95 ..
In September 1956. the
young actor Charlton Heston
IITites in his journal after
v.e wing
' 'Ten
Commandments" w1th Cecil B.
llcMille: " I'm pretty sure 1t's
lllY best film work so feu , but

the whole picture IS so much
more than the sum of Its parts
that I feel only the smallest
responsibility for what's on
the screen. Everyone at lunch
... seemed unpressed w1th it
I guess I'll st and or fa ll on
thi s one."

While not normally g1ven to
prophecy, Heston was certainly correct in this entry,
which is part of an intriguing,
personal perspective of an
.\merican actor's life on and
off stage. It is not sc;lf!'iCrvtng; instead. 1t records
Heston's work in film, hls
fea rs and his family across
two decades.
Heston is perhaps th e
perfect fig ure fur1his type of
book. In an age of changing
,· alues, he has played a host
of traditional herolc roles Mose~ .

The Cid, Ben Hur.
Michaelangelo . and several

· la~1: man " characters hke

the ast ronaut m " Plant of the
,\pes". And he doesn't JUst
"pl ay" the parts. His comtn itment becomes evident in

the book, as when he notes in
1!\64 as he prepares for "The

Agon) and the Ecstasy" and
gets a close look at
Mi chae la ngelo's Sis tin e
Chopcl · "To sec what one
man. drt\'en by his tearing
need to spend his talent, did
hfrr is a shattering rebuke to
every one of us who calls
him self an artist ."
The book fleshes out warts and all - the celluloid
image of th e Michigan-born
Heston . It includes his phobia
for pac king . th e prepondera nce of travel in an actor's Life, the Love for hiS
children and wi fe and some of
his political ph ilosophy. The
entries frequently are at their
best when he reflects
emot10naUy on his youth and
his children.
''The Actor's Ltfe'' is not
without flaw. It does suffer
from
the
narci ssism
necessary to the industry :
Heston likes all his images on
film It's essential for the
hea lthy actor. Worse, though.
are some of the apologetic
postdates under a few entries. Heston often steps back
from some of hi s original
criticisms of his colleagues\
replacing hon esty with
maturity.
The book, which is edited
by film critic Hollis Alpert,
also includes an array of stills
from the actor' s movtes and
photographs of his family
Scott M. Bushnell
Associated Press

given

CHOICES

1 The Poet S
awards Comer

l

For The Do-lt·YourseHer.
Hammers, Saws,
Screwdrivers, Hatchets,

and
MUCH, MUCH llt\OREI

STOP IN TODA Yl

I Uhio Ar,is Council

Arts Council
lists artists

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy: 0 ., Thu~sday. Feb. I. 1979

Sharp price hikes cOntinue in grocery bills

- COLUMBUS, Ohio I API The Ohio Arts Council is
putting together a listing of
professiOnal artists In·
terested in performing
throughout the state. The
directory will be made
available to groups sponsoring drama, dance and
musical events.
Those performers listed in
the directory can become
part of the Ails Council's
·Touring Program, designed
to increase public awareness
of the performing ~ rts. Last
year, artists in the program
traveled to 51 co unties
· thorughout Ohio.
Performers interested in
being included in the
directory should contact the
Ohio Arts Council by Feb. 9.

COI.l!MBUS, Ohio I AP I H.,;M EMBER
Application s for proj ect
GUO'S LOVE
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
present ed 'l'hursduy ni ght
support grants are being
Hcmem
ber the good times, accepted tiy the Ohio Arts
when Middleport Cub Scout
CounciL
to jump otl a l&gt;ndgc tornor- L'ack 245 met at the t'ecne) - Forgetting the sad,
Not an
The state grants are
rnw Mv bnrh · lnlJ..',h1 lx• in Llcnnett Post 128, American lind in the rememb'ring
Yo u'll surely feel glad,
des igna ted for specific
pn•lty h·ad :-;h;~p(• . hy tlu• tmw Leg ion Home .
\&gt;
average donor
!'resented the awards by Glad for the happiness,
projects from both arts and
tht•y find mt• ThHI's why I
Cubmastcr Jack Bacon were And glad for the good,
non-a rts organizations in the
;~skl'( I 1f I harll o lH.• hPalt hy t n
!' nH' l' the f1r st hl'H I't
wtll m y h(Hiy tn sf'il•nt •t•. ,M)' Greg Hager, bobcat patch ; And you will be feeling
following areas: architect ure
tnm.splant , rnillinr,l.S nr penplt·
or enviro nm ental arts,
lif" nevt•r amnuntccl to Trey Glaze, David Dodson. The way that you should.
havt• willt•d m·guns fm · u.st• Hl1)'1hi ng. P&lt;·rhaps I ('a n lidp Stanley Broome. Richard
commun ity arts , danc e,
afl 1'1' lht• i1•liN1ths
Long , wolf patch : Stanley If you keep rememb' ring
Litera ture, mu sic, theater .
~mm•ont' - snmP meili&lt;'Hl stuRut th&lt;· ea ll er in the followilt•nt - &lt;l ftt•i' my dt•&lt;itli .
Broome, Trey Glaze. Darrin The times that were sad,
vis ual arts, media, and folk
ing hut-line excerpt had mon•
!&gt;renner. Jeff Nelson, Don You won't have tlie courage and ethnic arts.
r:oUNREr.On
:
That
'"
"
big
cmnplt•x rnotiv~s than · the
The applications, whi ch
dl•t·ision tn makL• without Stein, gold arrows; Eddie To smile and feel glad;
HV ('I't-JJ.!t! donor, who simply
Kitchen. bear patch; Jay So cheer up, be happy,
must be submitted to the
Utlking it uvt.•r with somct1ne.
wa nt' his or her l'xly to be of
.JIM: I've tm•d to talk to Buskirk, silver arrow; Ed Keep Looking above,
co uncil by March 15, will be
help when the inevitable ot·Baer, one year membership, And thank our dear Father reviewed by a pan el of
JK'tlplc
but
no
orH'
can·s
.
I
curs. (Personal information
dtdn 't thmk yon would &lt;"are and Scott Haning , the For sending His love.
professiona ls in the partn &lt;ill llul-line excerpts has
t•ilher. I thought you would recruiter award.
ticular fi eld . The recombel'n changed In protect the
just answer my question
Using flashlights aimed at Remember the blessings
mendations will he forwarded
co ller'' confidentiality. I
You 've had in the past ,
abn_
u
t
a
donor
's
hectlth
ami
fl
ag
in
a
an
American
to
the council, ·whi ch
T"kl you have 8 friend nr ·
Have faith for the future
darkened
then
hang
up.
Oth&lt;'r
people
room
,
the
sco
uis
allocates
the funds.
relot ive who, like this young
"And joy that will Last.
didn't
pick
up
on
my
hints
like
conducted
the
openi
ng
man, is suidda l?. Fur ynu did .
Exhibition, which will open at
Th~re surely is coming
guidHnl'C, order my hotlinc, - COUNSF.LOR : What hints . ceremonies. E r1c Chambers A glad happy day
the University Gallery Feb.
conducted the uniform .inAccepting entries 25 .
'· Wh Pn a Loved One
did you give?
spection
and gave a When sorrow and heartaches
Thrt•atens Su i&lt;'ide. " Send 50
An exhi bition of 50
CLEVELAND tAP) .rrM : T gue"s f wa" rather demonstration on karate and Will all pass away.
t'l'llts and a sta mped, selfdrawings
by nine faculty
Cleveland State University is
vague, but they should have outlining techniques and the
addressed envelope to me in
members
is currently
Our Saviour is coming
accepting entries for its first
known . I told ITIY best fri end dangers involved.
ca re of this newspi:lper, P .O.
featured
at
the
gallery.
Int e rnational Garage
There was an adult game To call all His own,
Box 475, Radio City Sta tion , that I didn 't really feel like
getting up 111 the morning any and Den I won a scout game And take them to Heaven,
New York, N.Y. 1001 9.
more and I sent my valuable and presented a skit . Plans That beautiful Home.
.JIM : Maybe you ca n
l'Uln colledwn to my mother
were made fo r the ob- Keep trusting His promise,
cm.swe r my questiOn . Mus t I
Nt•ither of them asked me servance of the 66th an- Keep looking above,
b•• perfectly healthy to Will
any questions They probably niv ersa ry of scoutin g in And ever remember
my body to science"
care.
.
February. The group will God's wondert.ul love.
COUNSELOR : What do don't
Composed Jan. 6, 1979 by
C:OUNSF.I.OR : Or maybe attend Sacred Heart Church
you mean ?
Mrs. Riley Pigott, Long
.JIM : Would it matter that I they just didn't hea r your cry on Feb. 4 m observance of
Bottom, 0 . 45743.
Scout Sunday and a wmdow
don 't have perfect vision, for fnr help
After talking for more than display will be prepared. A
example, if I want to give my
an hour , the eoun ~elor ('on- blue and gold banquet was set
eyes away after my death ? ·
vinced J1m to talk to his for Feb 22 at the Middleport
COUNSELOR: Well , the
friend about his real feelings. First United Presbyterian Learning disabled
eyP banks say it is only the
H he still fell no one cared, he Church.
health of the cornea that is
was to call back and talk By
The group made plans to taught fine arts
1mportant. Even blind people
the
W{IY, more organ donors
visit the "polar bear exca n donate their eyes provitl arc urgently needed.
pedition" at Camp Kiashuta ,
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) ed the cornea has not been the
Although 4,BOO kidn ey Feb. 23-25, on Saturday, Feb. An after-school fine arts
ca use of the blindness. Is that
Learning
what you want to do, will your transplants were performed 24. Den III presented a skit program for
m 1978, for exampl e, more and the cubby award for the di sa bled
and
autistic
eyes to sdenc.
.JIM : No. I want them to than 15,000 peopl e •·ould ae- den with the most parents children, sponsored by the
use my whole body. You eept a kidney if it was present for the meeting went Association for Children with
to that den. Refreshments Learning Disabilities, will be
know, cut it up. I think available.
Tf you wish to become &lt;1 were served following the held at Ohio State University.
medical students need bodies
donor, reques t a Uniform closing ceremonies.
The 10-week series, headed
to cut up to learn how they
donor Card to ca rry in your
110 SQUARE .. INSTANT'" WALLET
35mm
by
art director Sonya Rolr
work. They must need some
wallet
from
your
local
BEDFORD
bins, will involve classes in
young specimens. They prochapter of the American
TRUSTEES
New me thod needs no costly negat1 ve
dra wing , paintings, sculpba bly only get old bums.
Medi&lt;'al Assoc·ialion . You'
The Bedford Town ship ture, collage-a nd ' print•I makes .a sa me SIZe co lor print di CO UNSELOR : Young
mav also hi:ive a notatwn to Trustees will meet on the first making, and design . Classes
rectly from your co lor prml Blac k-and ·
specimens?
JIM : Yes. I'm only 28. My thai effect made on your Saturday of each month, 6:30 will begin Feb. 5, and will be
white ong.nals make se pia to ne copy
body will probably be much driver's license. Making your p.m. at the home of the clerk limited to six chllren per
pnnts . Duplicate your '1nstant " camer a
mtentions known in writing to during 1979. The first meeting class. Different age groups
in demand.
pnnts for less than the ongmal p1ct ures
relatives, an attorney or e1 w1ll be held on Feb. 3.
will attend the one-hour
COUNSEl ,OR: It sounds
t:ost Sorry. no en large ments. Ava1lable
spiritual
adviser
is
also
sessions on different days.
like you are planning to die in
only for reg ular . wallet SIZe and "1nstant "
the near future. I'm afraid I recommended .
nr. Blaker cannot take J:.'uropean musicians
pnnts . (fro m 2· 1/ 2" x 3 · 112" to a maxi don't quite understand .
telephone calls from her •
mum of 3-1/ 2" x 5-1 / 4 " s•zel
JIM : You understand , all
readers. However, there are
right. Of course I'll be dead
hundreds of crisis interven- present recital
soon. I'm going to see to it.
tion phone lines in the United
COUNSELOR : What are
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A
States. For the phone number
you going to do?
.cBoot
recital
by two Eastern
JIM : I might as well tell of one near you, contact your European musicians will be
you . You can't slop me You Local mental health associa- presented Wednesday night
Middleport
l:l COUPON
tiOn or mental health inMUST
II
don't know my last name· or
at the University of Toledo.
fonne~tion serviee .
ACCOMPANY
I
my phone number. I'm going
Yugoslav violinist Miha
I ORDER
I
EA.
I
Pogacnik and Hunga rian
cellist Csaba Onczay will
I
VALlO FEB 1 THRU FEB 14. 1979
I
perform Franz Jo seph
Haydn's "Duo for Violin and
~-------------e.-•
"Two Locations To Beller
Cello ," Johann Sebastian
Bach's "Solo Suite for Cello"
Serve You"
STRAIGHT LEG
and ' F :Solo Sonata for
Violin," and Zoltan Kodaly 's
&amp;
Polly Cramer
"Duo for Violin and Cello"
)opus 7).
BOOT CUT
The recital is part of the
SIZES 1 thfu 48
his shoes do not get marred or duo's first United States'
Paper stuck
wet in case of a small leak m tour. They have been per- ·
to table
forming together in Europe
the boots.- SUZANNF.
Open 9-5 Mon., Tues., Sat.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 . &amp; NEW HAVEN , W. VA.
Friday night tillS p.m .
Polly will send you one of since 1976.
her sig ned !)lank -yo u
DEAR • POLLY
Fragments of a paper towel newspaper coqpun dippers if
LAFF-A-DAY
are stuck to the center of my she uses your favorite
pecan wood dining table. I Pointer, Peeve or Pro b) em in
tried using spray furmture her eolumn . Write POLLY'S
polish and lemon oil but POINTF.RS in care of this
neither work ed. What else m•wspaper .
could I try• - DOlliE
!)EAR DOITIE - You used
GOLDA ROUSH
'
the right thing but doubUcss
Mrs. Golda Mourning
did nut leave it on long Roush is cunfmed to Veterans
enough . The usual procedure Memorial Ho spita l for
fo r removing paper stuck to medieal treatment ·
'
furniture is to dampen paper
WJth IJquid furniture polish
Folks look ing for thing to
and leave it on overnight. In study might investigate the , " l\l y t lllan clil l pns11 1on IS
the mormng rub the paper off pollutant potential of kids' \ I':H\ IICJtlld . I'm gn1ng !-i lnwl y
with ~oft cloth . - POLLY
bubble pipes.
do w n lhl' rlr atn
!)EAR POLLY - After
th eir first washing my expensive sheer curtains never
looked nice. I tried steam
pressing, hanging them while
slightly damp, drip drying on
'
the line. tumbling in the dryer
Ladies
on wa•·m, etc. Finally I found
the answer was to put half
WINTER COATS
water and half white vinegar
Girls'
in my steam iron. - MYRPRICE
· TLE
SKI
JACKETS
nEAR POLLY- Afriend in
the hospital complained of
always los ing her slippers. I
Small Group
came up with what _we both
'
thought 'was a pretty good
idea and I thought it might
Sz. 12, 18,
help others who are ill. I bent
24. mo .
the ends to a regular wire
coat hanger up ~ !io it was
similar to a shoe ra•·k, slipped a slipper over eaeh end,
Ladies' &amp; Girls '
lwnt !lw hook around and
thl'll hung it on the '!Jed rail'
WINTER DRESSES AND
mg. Her slippers
arc always
toge ther with no more searMATERNITY TOPS
ehing.- MRS . W.O.
nEAR POLLY - N(lthmg is
mor•· fru strating to both
mnlhcl' and dlild than strug1\ number of ;1wi:lrds were

...

By Louise Cook
Associated Press Writer
Families hoping for some
relief in 1979 from soarmg
grocery bills found little
~a u se for . encouragement
during
January .
An
Associated P ress market basket survey showed Sharp

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Gov. James A. Rhodes will
submit to the legislature next
week a proposed two-year
budget in excess of $17 billion,
Budget and Management

$~
a.i

EA.

D

By The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES tAP) Rain, tornadoes and golf ballsize hail whipped and battered So.uthern Ca lifornia ,
damaging
homes
and
businesses and paralyzing

39f';

~ several . communites,

*JEANS
LEE

,,.

ENJOY FRESH FROM
THE FARM FAVORITES.
RIGHT FROM THE FARM.

REDUCTIONS ·

lf2

GIRLS' JACKETS
'3.00

Meigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RacinP, Ohio

0\'(•r shot'S . Now I put plastit•
!-imulwkh bags 0\'l'r my
kiru lt· r ~ar t e nt·r ·s
s ho1• s
lll'flll'l' putti ng on his lljl&lt;tls
~nr!

they

!) Jid~· l'iL~b! Pll. r\l ~o

Bring your family to the B,ob
Evans Farms Sausage Shop. Here
you'll find homey atmosphere, warm
friendly smiles and all the whole.some goodness and hearty eating
you'll need to get you through the
chill of winter. Come see us soon
and often .

PARMS®

OPEN FR10AY Til . 8 : 00P.M .

By Mar~aret Parker
you written your storY for the Meigs History . Book
yet ? If not, there is ·still time . The deadline of February 5 is
near, but a few minutes is all it takes to write a short story
about yourself and your family. You probably already have the
idea for writing, so all you need is to take a few moments and
put it into order.
You are allowed up to 500 words free and one picture. Words
over 500 are 10 cents each. Cost of the book is $26.00 if picked
up, $28.00 if mailed. Payment must accompany orders, as only
. th e number paid for will be printed.
If you need help in writing your story, there wiU be someone
at the museum on Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday , to
accept stories and assist you in writing.
We need your' story to make this book complete. If you don 't
write it, your family will not be represented . The historical
society will not be making any additions to the book~ We will
publish only what you the public write and turn into us. If your
family was left out of )he previous histories of !fie county, now
is your chance to see that they are included in this one. We
would like to see an individual family history from every
household mMeigs County.
If you are a newcomer to Meigs County. we Wll!lt your story'
as you will be a pert of the history of Meigs County in the
1
·
future .
stories can be mailed to Meigs History Book, Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769.
If you need additional information phone 992-2264, 9926040, 247-2344,985-3897, 667-3183,247-2152,698-2282, 992-2802, 8432111, 742-2143, 949-2441, or any of the numbers listed on the
letter mailed to households last fall.
Hav~

WE DO IT RIGHT. OR WE DON'T DO IT:·

SAUSAGE
SHOP
Route 35 · R1o Grande Oh•o

Chinatown.
In Orange County, tornadoes accompanied by oneinch hailstones broke windows, lifted roofs off houses,
overturn ed cars 8nd tossed
300-pound trash bins around
the streets .
Twisters that roared
through Anaheim and Santa
Ana uprooted trees, flipped
cars and caused damage to
several businesses, police
said.
A ranger at Huntington
State Beach reported threeinch drifts of hail in some
spots.
Floodwaters carried away
some mobile hom es and
submerged. others, trapping
at least two people for hours
Wednesday.
Palm Springs was virtually
isolated with roads hidden
under as rouch as 2 feet of
snow, the first snow to fall in
five years and the first on the
ground since 1949.
Hundreds who fled the bad
weather lined up at Palm
Springs Airport for tickets,
but all flights were cancelled.
In Baja, telephone communication s, power and
roads were cut in several
areas and a number of
families were evacuated as
heavy . f'\lins battered Baja,
California, Mexican officials
say.
'The unusual weather is the
result of conditiOns that have
persisted for many weeks in
the Pacific Ocean, according
to a research meteorologist.

Meigs historical news

&amp;\ftAMS·

gJin g tn get wintf:'l' hoots OTJ

while a

rare snowfall accumulatiOn
stunned residents of others.
Elsewhere, neW snow has
muffled at Least a half-dozen
states in the East and the
West and bitt erly cold
temperatures were reported
in the Northern P\ains.
In San Diego, where more
than 2% inches of rain fell,
doze ns of persons were
rescued from their · flooded
bomes and stranded cars.
City
Nea rby National
recorded 4.82 inches of rain in
a 24-hour period.
San Diego police were
searching today for a man ·
who was swept away by
floodwater s Wednesday as he
attempted to clear a stonn
drain near his home. Mexican
authorities said a Tijuana
woman drowned when she
fell into a rain-s wollen
drainage ditch.
Int erstate 5, th e main
artery linking Northern and
Southern Califor nia, was
blocked by snow north of Los ·
Angeles for the second
straight day and avalanches
were reported in the Angeles
National Forest.
A tornado caused $1 million
damage to two Universal City
Studios movie sets depicting
New York ' City and a

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

You can now put aside part of your
Income tax-free ... . and the Interest
It earns Is tax-fl'ee until you cash In
at retirement . Ask about our
special RETIREMENT PLANS for
lndlvldu·als and self-employed
persons .

1981 biennium will be at lea\t
117.8 bilhon- or 10-ll percent
- more than the 1977-1979
total of $15 .2 billion.
It is believed that about $10
billion of the new budget will
come from Ohio's general
revenue fund , the receptacle

Almo't the highlights ol
lht· l&lt;ttcst :::;u rvcy :

'i11 e marketbasket bill
tnL r'l'a ~cd

~~t

th e checklist

.store in II cities and
dccrca.scd an two citi es. On t:~n
over &lt;.t il basts, the lJill rose 2.7
percent durin g Januar) .
compa r ed to 1.2 percen t

. ·.

for state tax re\•enues, with
the remamder commg from
federa l and non-tax revenue
sources
,
Wilkins plans to release the

no·ne\\o -ti.tx document next
Wcdnesdi.ty morning, the day
aft er Hhodes delivers his
Sla te olthe State address to a
joi nt
scs,.o n of the
legislature .
Rho~ cs may divulge his
::::·: .":':'.·:': :·:·:.=::·:: :·:=:: ;.·.·;. : .': .. :.
cdueution
spcndtng proposi.tls
Exte nded Ohio Forecast:
m
hi
s
speech
on Tuesday
Sa turday through Monday '
'however.
aides
ha ve s:~id
Snow Sa turday. Flurries
Wi
lk
in
s
sa
id
he didn 't
Sunda y mai nl y in th e
for their labors.
quarrel
with
predi
ctions
that
northeast and fair Monday.
Ne wspaper headlines
pn
mar
y
ond
seco
nd
ary
Cold with highs Saturday in
refle cted tbe acceptance
education.
one
of.
the
sti.lte'
s
the upper 20s and low 30s
accorded the pope's message
biggest
money
problems,
\\'ill
and
in
the
upper
teens
to
by both progressives and
mid 20s Sunda y and get a boo!l't in Sti.ttt! aid of
conservatives On the same
Monda)
. Overnight lows about $600 million.
day in Caracas, Venezuela,
That would .boost state
the front-page headline in El . fi\'e to 15 above.
school
es fur the
Nacional,
a
liberal .;:::,..:,.·.· .,: ,.,.,.,..,::::: :,:: :::::.:.: ::·:·: :::.:: · .'.":·. bi enmumsubs1d1
'1artmg July I tu
newspaper, said , " Pope John
about $3 4 billion. an all time
Paul II : the Church Supports
the Cause of the Humbl e,"
while the conservative EL
Universal delcared, "Pope
says Christ was not a sulr
versive or a revolutionary.''
CINCINNATI 1 APJ - 'The

Rain, tornadoes, hail
battered California

---------------.
~~ COPY PRI ..TS t

FINAL CLEARANCE

ha ~ r~c h eck cd on or :ihout the
start of e~c h succeedin g
mont h. One item. chocolate
chip cookies. was dropped
from the list at the end of
November 1077 because the
manufact urer diseontmucd
the package size used in the
su rvey

Dt Lembcr
Th e
bill .a t ~ ro!:ie
onli 1.2 percent rlunng
.Janu&lt;J ry l!liB
- Co m pa rin g today · !:i
pn ccs with those a ye&lt;l.r iJgo.
th e t\P foun d that th e
dur1 ng

nwrk ct iJ~ · ~ k et

nw r k(• t h&lt;~ .., k d hill lll t'rt•ased

at the chcckli't store in every
cit). up &lt;m average uf a lmo ~1
14 percent.
·n ~ c pncc of a pound of
chopped ch uck rose at the
checklist store m every ctt y
Last month In the p'5t 12
months. the average pn ce of

.

By RICHARD BOUDREAUX for two hours after midnight
Associated Press Writer
to speak to a crowd of 10,000
BUENOS AIRES , that waited six hours for him
Argentina (AP 1- Pope John in a stadium in Nassau, the
Paul II impressed Latin capital of the Bahamas. As
Americans
with
his his plane flew over Cuba, he
magnetism , s tamina, sent the customary greeting
st raig htforward pastoral to President Fideal Castro,
style and co mmand of extending his "most fervent
Spa nish, and both con - wishes for prosperity for this
servatives and progressives beloved nation whose noble
found much to their liking in virtues I most sincerely
his pronouncements.
appreciate."
The pontiff's six-day visit to
Latin American religious
the Dominican Republic and leaders and commentators
Mexico "was like an earth generally mea sured the
tremor of faith in all Latin pontiff by the content of his
America," said Archbishop messages to the conference of
Emilio Tagle Covarrubias of Latin American bishops in Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Mari e
Valparaiso, Chile. "We have Puebla, Mexico, in which he
very
bea utiful warned pri ests a nd nuns Custe r, Pomeroy ; Gladys
heard
declarations, of great clarity against political action, and Bosworth, Dexter ; Jestie
and comprehension , in to crowds of peasants and Molden, Rutland; Bess ie
perfect Spanish John Paul f1 workers for whom he said the Hysell. Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Rodney
is a true pastor."
church should seek land for
Bailey,
RDbert Reiber, Patsy
· The pope flew home to Ita- them to cultivate, more food,
Hurley
and Alfred Warren
ly Wednesday night stoppmg education and a fair return

POLLY"$ POINTERS

Individual
'Retirement
Account

Director William W.. Wilkins
said today.
He declined to provide the
exact total, but in effel1, said
spending from all fund s,
including federal , in the 1979-

Pope impressive..

PRI TS
i

than
ottset
sca ttered
declines. mostly for coffee,
butter and tomato sauce.
The AP drew up a nmdom
list of 15 commonly purchased food and nonfoo cj
items, checkod the pnce at
one supermarket in each of t3
cities on March I. 1973 and -

$17 billion budget prepared by Governor Rhodes

COPY

{!)~···

price hikes, particularly for
basic items like meat and
eggs.
The AP found that grocery
bills rose last month at a rate
more than double that in
December. Prices increased
in almost every city checked
by the AP and the hikes more

1

FULL COLOR

..-------------------"'1,
HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS

Applications }or
1gran:ts accepted by

In the eastern part of the
nation, snow warnings were
issued for parts of Ohio,
Pennsy lva nia , Maryland ,
West Virginia, Virginia and
North Carolina .
A developing storm in the
Southwest ha s prompt ed
winter storm warnings in
part s of Colorado, Uta h,
Nevada, New Mexico and
Arizona.
In the central Midwest ,
temperatures dropped to well
below zero thro ugh th e
Northern Plains into th e
Upper Mississippi Valley
Temperatures around the
nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged
from -21 at B1smark, N.D.,
and Sioux Falls, S. D., to 61 at
Key West, Fla.
•

Error caused
renewed furor

high.
Last bi ennium: the schools
got an mcrease of about $5:l4
miLlion, but due in part to th•'
f:ulure of local tax lcviei::i and
other problems, soine schools
hit the financwl rocks.
Mor e than a sco re of sc. houl
distncts have had to shut
down temporarily over th e
pc.tst t\\'O years for l&lt;t ck of
fumb .
The ~over nor sa icl during
his 1978 re-election campaign
th at hi s propo sals for
education funding. along with
n e w l y m a n da t ed

·nsc

'lh c mo ~1 rccent 1ssuc of the
even close" cstlm C~tes by Agriculture
Defl&lt;u1m ent's
some so urces that sta te ' "N ational Food Hev iew"
spendmg 1n 1979- 1981 would ~ay s, for exampl e. tha t a
total $18.5 bill ion.
general m!lation rate of 6

"That so unds like 1t came
from the legislature." he

percent - three full percenta ge pomls below th e t978
Lc1cl ~- 1\ ould. by itself, add
1 4 percent lo the cost of foo d.
No &lt;~ltempt wa s fnade to
we1ght the 1H.1 survey res ults
&lt;J Cco rcling to populat iOn
dcnsit) or tn terms of what
percent of a famii) \ actual
groec ry outluy et:~c h item
represent s.
The day of the week on
whtc:h th e check was made

~ud

Some legislat ive lcatleri: i
were g1ven the \1st of agency
spcndmg requests~ He said
$18 5 billion approxmwtcs the
tot a l amo unt th at wCJs
requ ested by state agenctes.
Most of the agencies had
the ir requ ests trimm ed
subst antially, th e direc tor
.S&lt;lld .

v &lt;.~ n ed de pcndmg on t ht!
month. Standard brands and
sizes. we re used when
ava tli.tble. The AP did not t ry
to corhpare pnce s from cit}
to cit y Compan sons \\ere
madt· only Ill terms of perce nta ges of tncrc&lt;-t se or
decrease
The it ems on th e ,, p
chec kli st 11 ere eho pped
chuck. center cut pork chops,
fro zen or&lt;:mgc Juice con cen tr ate. co ff ee. [l3per
towe ls, l!utter . Grad e--A
medtum wh1te c~~s. peanut
butt or. letundi y dcte rgt.! nt .
fabric so ftener . t urnato.
souce , milk . frankfur1cr .s an d
granulated suga r .
'/be CJlJes checked wei e .
Albuquerque, N M . Atl anta.
Ca. Ho~1 on , Ch1 cngo. Dallas,
Detroit. l..o!:i Angeles, Miami.
Ne w York. Philade lph ia .
Prov idence. Sail LakP l'1 ty
nnd oeattlc.

managem ent improvement s.

would be suffi cient to keep all
schools open in th e next
biennium .
Wilkin s brushed off as " not

Mayor's Court

In the co urt of Holland
Mayor E. Eugene Thompson.
five defendants were fmed
and two ot her s forfeited
l!un ds.
I
l"' in cd we re Ha ymond
Mkms, Ht. 1, Rutland, $350
and costs, three days confinem ent , one year pro bation,
dmmg while intoxicated, $50
and costs. dnvin g under
8Uspenston , $50 and costs,
Tenderloin prices have ri::;en fle emg an off ice r : Da rl a
40 cent s a pound in the last Ha rp er , Pomero y, Sha ron
Heiber. Racine and Ronni e
1\'CC'k .
Columb us butehc1 J ack Johnson , Racine. $15 and
Sm1th smd he's se ll ing more costs each. speeding: James
beef now than he docs m the D. Co uncil, Langsvi lle. $15
sprtng , normally his peak and co~1s. defective muffler .
Forfeitin g bo nd s we re
!-:ieaso n Sm ith al so scll cl
Larry
L.cw!s, Oak 'Hill Hnd
rentals of his ·800 ft:cezcr
John
II
. Woo d. Wilkesv ille,
lo cker s ure in cr ea s in g
1:10
each
. spcedm g
"They're Wking them as fa st
as 1 can rent and fill them. If
thi s keeps up we' ll be out of
lockers in C:l co uple of months," he said
AMERICAN
Yet not all butchers arc
reportmg in crea sc'tl .sa les.
It 's busmcss as usual at The
Butcher Shop m Cleveland ,
and busmess al the Monarch
Quality Beef Co. m Dayton is
ad ually lower than a yea r

Panic buyers
being cheated

U S. Corps of Engin eers has
ad mitt ed a typographi cal
error t riggered renewed
furor over a permit the Ohio
River Co sought to build a
barge mooring facility 1n
West Covmgton , Ky
By Mit: had B. Lafferty
The company has received
Assodah:d
Press Wr iter
a permit to re-establish such
Butchers
around
the state
a fl eeting facility to park
ba rges on the Ohio side of the are reporting scattered panic
OhiO River. But the location . bU)lng of beef. but a cattle
of
the
~ ite
was expert says the buyers may
misrepresented in C:l corps IK1 ua lly be cheating themnews release.
selves b} stockUl g up when
Ohio River Co. prcsid.ent beef is mo't expenSive
John Geary could not be
Ca rl Harsh of the Oh10 Beef
reached for comment.
Markctln!;: Program says no
H0 w e v e r ,
c h u c k rattle shortage c~ists and the
Schumann , a spokesman for PI icc of' bee f is bound to drop
the corps' I""u 1sviLle Oistnct, o\Cr the short run as weather
confinned the err'or Wed- improves, allowing we·stern
nesday , say ing the site was. cattlemen to market their
indeed, in Hamilton County, &gt;tock
Ohio.
"I th1nk they may be
Cov in gton officia ls and buymg at the high . poiut,"
r esidents oppose a

barge

Har sh s aid · The pncc nght

facility on their side of the now is very reOeCtivc of the
that
ca n't be
river . A ci ti ze n ~ group ca ttl e
marketed
"
gathered 1,300 signatures on
a petition opposing a permit
Ken Lakey of The Meat
so ught by the barge company House in Dayton said his
company has so ld three times
last April.
The Ohio River Co. own s more mea t in January th1s
some of the land and leases year than last, wh il e Michael
more land at the proposed Block of The Meat Block in
Kent ucky Oceting site. But to Columbus sa id one person
use that land for mooring called him wantmg t'o price
barges wou ld requi re a 1,000 pounds of hamburger
change in zoning, which the Block 's quotation was $1 46 a
Kentucky city is not likely to pound - up .10 cents m recent
grant, said a company of- weeks. - .
flcial who asked not to be ' Block sa id a truckload of
identified.
n;eat cuts that once cost
· $U5.1100 now costs $102.000.

a pountJ ot chopped chuck
JUmper! mo re them 55 percent
to SLi9
-- ~gg s also soa red, rising
in LL cities durin g January .
Uy the end of the month , the
average price of a dozen ,
medium eggs was 91 cents.
'llu..· governm ent predicts a
mmimum 1979 food pnce
mcrcasc of 6 percent - about
half ' the 1!!7~ level, but experts wam thC:lt a number of
fm1ors could cause &lt;1 steeper

MADE

MEN'~

WORK BOOTS
&amp;SHOES

LEATHER UPPERS
PRICED NEAR WHOLESALE

ago
'11w Cattleman Beef and
Cattle Co. in Cincinnati was
expecting an l!1 flu x th at
nc\' er dev eloped. " We 've
been r ccc ivmg C:l few
inquiries. Frankly, I was

NOW 10%
. OfF

hoping\vc'd be swamped," a
rompC:lny
represe ntat ive
said. But he has experienced
no such luck. Business IS up
only slightly.

BAILEY'S

FEB. 1

MIDOLEPORT, 0.

FEB. 10

TO

%r 'Your 'Valentine

.,. -·

·'Wednesda}J, 'Jfh 14
l

RED FOIL HEA RT

CONTINUES WITH

I LB. $445

FURTHER REDUCTIONS
•
Boys' &amp; Girls'

ALL

INFANT
WEAR

Ali

'

DRESSES

Sz . 6-24 mo .
Was 1/4 Off

NOW~

Boy s' &amp; Gtrl s '

SPORTSWEAR
Sz . 2 to ·14

1f3

OFF

Ail
Sleepwear
Selection,
Boys'
Shirt.s, Boys' and
Girls'
Pullover
Sweaters '
Boys' &amp; Girls'

JOGGING
SUITS

OFF
I LR . $3.50 ·

All in Stock
Boys ' &amp; Girls'-

CORDUROY
PANTS
lf2 OFF

TODDLER
JACKETS
/11\o . sizes

LESS THAN

lf2 ·PRICE

FURTHER REDUCTIONS

·

Hours :
to 5:00

,Kt&gt;nn.i!th Mc~uuough, R.' l&gt;h. · Charles t&lt;IHie, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning , R. Ph
.

1 : 30

Mon. thru Sat.

9:30108 , 00 .

Friday

Near Stifflers'
In Pomeroy

ASSORTED
CHOCOLATES

STILL AT GREAT SAVINGS

3 mos .-14

liz OFF

SATIN HEART 2 LB . $11.25

;.
2nd Street
Pomeroy , 0 .
992 -2586 .

KIDDIE SHOPPE
'
·'

Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a .m . to 9 p.m .
12' 30 and 5 to 9 p.m.

Sunday 10 ' 30 to
PR ESC K li'TIONS

I' H . 992-2955

Fnendly.Service
Pomet"oy , 0 .

E. Main
Opfll

Nights till9

- - ------~_:_-· ---~----. .l::==:::::J

•'

•

�10- The Daily Sentjnel , Middleport-Pomeroy,&lt;;&gt; .. Thursday , Feb. I , 1979

Indicators fell.
-For 'Best Results Use · Sentinel Classifie·d s
WANT AD
during. December
CHARGES
IN M ~M O RV col Jot no., P

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Elvira Barr to Larry D.
Barr, Sha ron L. Barr, 15 2
acres , Rutland
Gertr ude E . Drake, dec., to
Burl Drake, cert. of trans. ,
Salem .
Anna Lee Gibson , Adm.,
Charles E . Stout, dec., to
Patti D. Camacho, Melvyn
Camacho, parcels, Colwnbia
and Scipio.
: Edna
Reuter .
for
Charles
Reuter,
Charles
W. Reuter by Edna Reuter to
Okey Ray Meadows, Sha ron
R.
Meadows,
parcel ;
Salisbury.
Gary A. Hawkms , Nancy E .
Bawkms to J effrey Lang
Tillis, Debra Jean Tillis , lot,
Rutland.
Paul Van Cooney, by atty.
in fact, Anita Van Cooney, by
atty. in fact, Marie Van
Canney, atty. in fact t o Mark
S. Sea rles, Becky A. Searles,
'" acre, Rutland.
Sam Hicks, Jr., Martha
Rhea Hicks to Richard L.
Lambert , Barbara Sue
Lambert, 4 acres, Salem .
Arnold J. Hupp, Iona V.
Hupp t o Kenneth L . Bass, In a
Jean Bass, 1.008 acre,
Lebanon .
House of Prayer &amp; Praise,
Inc . to Richard W. Vaughan,
Ruby A. Vaughan, parcels,
Middleport.
Arminta G. Taylor, Pres.
Notice of Ownership in Oil
and Gas Rights, Orange.
Isaac Shupe, Sallie Shupe
to Donald E. Shupe, Ruth Ann
Shupe , parcel, Salem.

month decline is confiscated
one indication of a posSible
I da y

While the index is far from
fool-proof and is subject to
frequent maJor revisions, the
s econd monthly decline
comes a gainst a background
of predic tion s by many

2days
:! days
6duy!i

recession will occur this year
becaus e
of
Carter
administration efforts to slow
the economy to help fight
inflation .
I n recent weeks, top
administration officials have
conceded there IS some risk
of a recession, but they say
the risk would be greater if
inflation continued to worsen.
Th e
Comme r ce
Department said six of the 10
individual indicators m its
index declined in December,
led by a drop in cash and
other liquid assets . Also
negative were the average
work week, the job layoff
rate, contracts and orders for
plant a nd equipment, the
money supply a nd building
permits.The four mdicators that
increased were sales delivery

performances,

avoid a recession. However,
administration officials say
unemployment will increase
this year even if a recession is
avoided, rising to about 6.2
percent from the current 5.9
percent jobless level.

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark
Phone992·218I

Charge

1.25

1.90

ago

3.75

.
All your p01n has come to on end
And hme has he lped our heart s to

Ecn:h word over the minlmwn 15
words Is 4 cenls per word p!!r day
Ads r unnil'll!! other lhan con!le(utlve
days w1ll bt&gt; t•harMed at the I day
ralt!

!H ('I rld

Mob1lc Home sales and Yard sales
are accepted only with Clilsh with
ortkr 2:5 t-ent chuge (or ~tiD.: cwrrymg Boll: Nwnber In C.1:1r~ ofTh~ Sentinel.

The PubliSher rese nre!l the nght
lo ed1l or reject any ads d~med objt'i.'tlorutl. The Pubhsher wtU not be
resporn;Jbll:l for more Uum one mcurrecl msertion
992-215&amp;

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

No one w ill ever kn ow
You b1d no one a la st fare w ell or
even so1d good bye
You were gone befor e we knew 11
And on ly G od knows why
Sadly mt-ss ed ,by wi fe and Formly

Monday

Noon on Saturd11y

Tuesday
4P.M
the day be! fore publication

Sunday
4P M .

Hfl.ernoon-

Notices
PUBLIC NOTICE

GUN SHOOT Roctne Gun Club
Ever Y Sunday 1 pm Factory
choke ~u_ns on ly

Notice IS hereby given that
on February 3rd , 1979, at
10 · 00 AM a pupll c sale Will
be held at lOS Union Aven ue ,
Pomeroy , Ohio , to sell tor
cash the lo llowmg co ll ater a l ,
to wi t ·
19 73 Monte Car l o , seria l No
1H 57K31462J32
The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Com pan y, Pomeroy,
Ohto . reserves th e nght to b td
at tht s sate

On J an u a r y 27 t h , 1979, in
th e Me,gs Co unt y Probate
Court , Case
No
22588 ,
J acque li ne E M e nch1n1 , 3 12
Wet zga ll Street. Po meroy,
O hi o

45 769 .

was

ap po 1nfed

Exec utri x of th e estat e of
Gina Menc h in i, deceased ,
la te of 309 Wetz Qal l Str eet,
Pom er oy, OhiO 45769

(21 I ,

a.

Ma nning 0 Webster
Probate Judge
Cler k
15 , 3t c

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF WILLIAM M.
POOLER , SR , DECEASED
Case N o. 22S97
NOTICE OF

~~PFOJ~tc~.::J
On J an uar y 27, 1979 , m t he
M eig s Co unt y Pr o bate Cour t ,
ca se No 22 597 , L ena Be l le
Pull ins, Rout e l , Reed sv ille,
Oh10 wa s appoin ted Ad
m1n istr atrix of th e es tat e of '
Wil l 1t1m M
Pa ll er, Sr ,
dece as ed , late of Route 3,
Po mer oy , Oh 1o

&lt;2)

Mann 1n g D Webs t er
Pr obate Judge
Clerk
1, a, 15, 3tc

HELP WANTED
MECHANIC MUST BE EXPERIENCED.
HAVE OWN TOOLS. APPLY:

BOB HAWK CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH
ATHENS, 0.
28 E. STATE STREET
59~653
LEONARD WILKES, SERVICE MGR.

~2 )

Bernice Bede Osol

~'Your

-

Lost and Found

'Birthday

Th e l yP.eS of changes you ' ve
been wanting to make in yo ur CHW WOOD
Po l es max
basi c lifes tyl e are l 1ke ly to be
d1 ometer 10 on l o rg~st' end ,
bro ught abou t lhts co mtng
S12 pe• ton Bundled slob $I 0
year That wht c h h e ld you back
per too Del1venad to O hio
forme rl y IS no longer exis te nt.
Pollet Co
Rt 2. Pomeroy .

wo r kers wi ll resent you today tf
you try to co n them into doing
you r work . Production should
be yo ur pu rpose . not fl o wery
,• prattl e

(March

21-April

19)

OH

know what needs d01ng today , rlF YOU ho ve a service to offer .
but you may have- probl ems in
wont to buy or sell something .
getting your in tt ta ti ve into high
ae look 1ng fo r work. ... or
gear . B e ltve ly , no t leth argtc .
whatever
vou 11get results
GEMINI {Ma~ 21-June 20} It' s
fo ster w1th o Sentinel Won I Ad
best t o let othe r s boast of your
Colt 9 9?·3.1 ~6_____ _
accompl ishmen t s to day , rath er
you ' 't'e done someth ing worthy
they ' ll ment to n 11, so relax

CANCER (June

21-July

111

Even th ough yo u ' ll be moneyco n sc ious today . you' re sttll
l1k ely to spend beyond your
means for thmgs w h iCh aren ' t
necess itie s- ~ and feel guilty in
the process

mally you make ca utious assessments be fo re you tnvo lve
yo urself Today . howe't'er, yo u
·tma y ignore th iS procedure and
do som ethtng impulsively

LIBRA (Sopl. Z3· 0CI. 23) Take
ca re today not to labor under
the Illusion th at an tn flu ential
co ntact Is prepared to pull o ff
au types ot miracles for you
Unfortunately, he can 't

SCORPIO (Oct. Z4·Nov. 22) An
associate may

not

fee l

the

same urgency that you do
today regarding a co llective
obte ctive . ll1t means that m uch

PORTABL E sew i ng
SIN GER
moch1ne
Geme
Used 10
hours Excel len t condition $200
f1rm . 985 3988
AMERICAN MADE Men's wor ll
boots ond shoe s. leath er up
per s Pnced near wholesal e
now 10 per cen t oil Bmley ~
Feb I olld Feb 10
'

Real Estate for Sale----------·HOUSE AND lot . furn 1ture,
household goods 7tiJ la urel
St , M tddlepor t

.

.

.

CORNER LOT located at rnter sec·
tion of SR 124
7 ond 33 1n
Pomeroy Ohio 992·'1449 or
992 234'1

Pets for Sale

NOTICE

POMEROY, 0.
JU~T

indu st rious self, you're m ore

prone to rationa li zing and po s ttasks will plague you late r
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. It) .
Do n ' t attempt to manage some·
th ing for ano th er toda y wh e re
you leelln~pt. You cou ld ca u se
al l co ncerned unnecessary

problems .
(NEWSPA.PEA ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

LISTED - 2 fam.ily

home on

good street in

Middleport . 2 kitchens, 2
baths~ al l rented . E xcel lent

Investment .
JUST
$13,000 .00.
NEED MORE &lt;ROOM? We have just lhe place, 3
bedrooms, balh, dining ,
fireplace , fu II basement,
large 2 car: garage and

workshop. S23,500.00.
NEAR SCHOOL - 1 floor
plan, 3 bedrooms, balh ,
basement, 2 lots, por ches,

RI SING STAR Kennels Boarding
an d grooming, oil br eeds
Chesh1 re , 367 -0292

•

No! tee is hereb y g iven that
the undersign ed intends to
make application to the
Common
Plea s
Court,
Probate Dtvision of Me igs
County, Ohio, for an order to
change her name to Joyce M .
Grover
Said appliCation wi ll be by
pet 1tion to be filed in said
Court, on or after the 3rd day
of March 1979.
Dated thts 21st day of
January 1979.
Joyce M . Brewer
( 2) 1, ltp

other features. S27,JOO.
LARGE LEVEL LOT Nat .,gas heat, 3 bedrooms,

bath, part basement, olher
features . Sll .000.00 .
HOUSE AND MOBILE
HOME - All rented, lots of
news in the house , 2 lots.
L oca ted in Middleport .

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

99::2~9 or ~r f~'

-IJiiii•••••••••llli

A

HEADQUARTERS
your

Appliance

SALE PRICES
JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr .
Pllollt 992-2111

W"AT' RE

YOU SAVIN G

I .

Dream " 10.
12 05-Columbo 8, 12 . 2D--Movie " Blood Alley " 17 ;
12 :40--Mannlx 6.13.

REYNOLD'S
ELECTIIC MOTOR
SHOP
'

AN

A New Home Built?

Contact

18 Years Experience

Will Milke
Service Calls

992-7513
1· 19·1 mo
.

Real Estate for Sale

Business Services

HOMI::SITES l or sole , 1 cere aod
up Middleport near Rutland
Co ll992 746 1

BRADFORD, Auct toneer, Com
plet e Ser v1ce Phone 949-2487
or 949·2000 Rocm e Oh1o ( rift
Bradford

----

THRH B!:OROOM frame home 1n
M1ddleport Col i 992 3A57
'

. . .

-

!=ARM FOR 'Sole House 2 ba rn s,
tr oller large pond 10 acres or
82 acres. 742-2566 .

1 00--Ho llywdod Squares 3; Al l Mv Children 6.U

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD·GAME

mRieD
M'i
DAU(:,IjTt;R.
15' '/f3WS

M~

Easy 20 .

'

--

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood ?0,33, Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10, Six Million Dollar Ma n 13; Brady Bunch
IS ; I Dream of Jeannie 17
5 3D--Carol Bur nett 3; News 6: Sanford &amp; Son 8; E lee .
Co 20 ; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd. Coupl e 15,
Beverly Hillbi llies 17; Docto r Who 33.
6 ·QO-NewsJ,B, IO, l3,15, ABC News6 , Andy Gnff llh 17,
Hodqeoodoe Lodge 20 ; Stu~lo See 33.
6:30--NBC Ne ws 3,15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burneft6 ;
CBS News 8, tO ; My Three Sons 17, Over Easy 20.33.

ure'S

Bt:e~A

1mA\..
DI~'5T~!
'

'

FEAR5M16HT
MAKE 'iOU "TH I:OIF 'YOU lAKE
PROPEFI:
I

7 ·oo-Cross-Wits 3,' P M Magazi ne 4, Newlywed Game

6,13; Sha Na Na 8; News 10; Love Am e r iCan S1y le
15 ; Car ol Burnett&amp; Friends 17, Consumer Surviva l

. Now arrange the ctrcled letters to
lorm the surpnse an swer. as sug ·
gesled by the above cartoon

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

.,E ? WflL,
TELL Me WliAT

TP DO , AND
Ilk TRY .. .

30-- Bewltc hed 3; Gil ligan' s Is. B; Brady Bunch 10:

Pet tiror:~t Junction 15, G i lligan' s Is. 17
5 ' lM--1 Dream of Jeann ie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;

IEMBLUHI

........

.

4

0.
Aulo&amp; Truck
Repair
--Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

3. 00-AnotherWorld3,15 ; General Hosplta l 13,6 , L i lias
Yoga &amp; You 20: Speed Racer 17.
3. 3o-Mash 8 ; , Joker's Wild 10; F lint stones 17, Over
-4 · 0Q-Mi ster Car toon 3, Hollywood Squares 15 , Merv
Grill in 6 ; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St 20,33 ;
Batman 10, Dinah 13. Space G iants 17 .

GI~ -rnw, ~~~~r:~C:·J~

AloO...

mile oH Rt. 7 ~~ · INIII on
St. Rt. 124 tow•ril Rutland,

by Henrt Arnold and Bob Lee

...AI-X) !;;~12-

'{()lJ

REAl ESTA H LOAN S VA
No SEWING MACHINE R e p o ~r s ser·
m o ney
dow n
( el 1g1bl e
vice , o il make s, 992-'1284 The
Vetere ns) . FHA As low os 3,.....
Fob r 1c Sh o p ,
Pomeroy
down (all non Ve terens and
Autho rized Stnger Soles and
general pub i!C ) To purcha-se
Scrv1ce We sharpen Sossors
----------reo! esta te or reltnonce 30
J:XCAVATING
. dozer , loader and
VEARS TERMS IREL A ND MOR
backhoe work dump truck s
TC. AGE CO ., 77 E State St ,
and lo boys for h1r e, w 1ll haul
At hens Phone6 1A 592 305 1
fill d1rt . to sod , l1mes tone and
Auction
3'' acres in Pomeroy Sec luded
grove l Call Bob or Roger Jef
wo oded oreo on top of hdl
l ers . day phone 992 7089 mght AUCTION Friday 7pm New and
Ov erlook s rtver Wa ter clec
u!:i ed merchand )se ot Ohio
phone 992 -3525 or 992 5'132 .
. -·- - -- tm ovo tlob le 992 3986
Ht ve r Auc t1 on , 537 Htgh St .,
EXCAVATING dozer, bo(khoe
FA IR VII::W HEIG HTS 6 yea r old oil
.M ~d~~ ~~r ~ ~ h ~o _ ~
and ditcher Charles R Hotelec trtc hOm e. 3 bedroom 1' ',
fi eld , Back Hoe Serv1ce,
both love ly fom1ly room w lih
Ru tl and , Ohio Phone 742 2008
wood
burntng stove
fu ll
GiveAway
MARTIN J:x .
carpeted goro ge 1 acre N ear HOWERY AND
cavottng , sep t tc systems , FI VE FEMALE pupp ies Heinz 57 . 7
Meigs Hg•h School To !&gt;ee , call
dozer , ba ck hoe , dump tru ck .
992-0287
weeks old . 992 -2779.
l1mest one
grovel. black to p
FORMfR
ADOLPH
G r u e ser
-PUPPiEsPa~t -chihu~~o
povmg , Rt 143 Ph one I (b l-4 )
residen ce located in Ou t·
and terner mtxed 8 week s old
698·7331
.
. - . - - - - .. 985·3884
chtown, Minersville Approx .
10 acres, good garden , lo ts ol BA THRO OMS AND K1tchens
remodeled, cerom 1c hie plum· All WHITE ADULT long haired
wbod two stones w1th la rge'
male cot. gentle, Iiiier framed
btng
.' ca rpen try , ond general
fron t porch
I ' 1 bath
2
Yellow and white small femal e
rna rn tenonce
13 yeors e:o; ·
bedrooms with sleeptng enclos·
cot. !tiler tromed Two mon th
perience 99'1 3685 .
ed proch, counhy k1 tchen, d m·
~------old cute oll block female k1tten
ing room , !1 vi ng roo m , sotrm PUlliNS EXC A VATI NG Comple te
Meigs
Humo,n e
Socie ty
w indows, natural gas fu rnace ,
Ser vice Phone 99'}.'}478
992 -2592
unlmtshed basemen t, deep
rock wa lled open we ll w1th AUTOMO BILE INSURANCE been TWO ABAN DONED cots both
cance ll ed? Lost your operator s
shel tered cove r al so cts tern
long ho1 red beouttf ul, fem al e
l1cen-se? Ph one 992 -'11.43
Drape-s ond carp eltng Incl uded
1 w h 1te wtlh groy morktngs the
.
4 to 5 good buildtng spots Tup· E C ELECTRICAL Con tra ctor serv
other black with a li tt le white
pers Plo1ns water , Oh1o Power
H ~~ ne Soc1e ty . ~~- ~680 .__ _
mg Ohio Volley reg1on Stx
Coble TV , General Telephone
da ys a week 24 hours o;ervioe
FIVE FEMALE pupp1es 7 weelo.s
'Pnce $25 ,000 Call Willtom
Emergency calls Co li BB'l 295'1
old 992-2779
Russell at 992 5b 14 Chodes
or 882· '1305 .
Grueser at q92 2211 or Woller
Grueser
ot qn 3270
lm MOBILE HOM E repo trs Furnaces
elec tr ica l work , pipe-s sowed ,
mediate po_:. s~s~ i~n _ _
Mobile Homes' for Sale
_pl ~~b~n ~ ~9~- ~8~8 .__ ~ __
1' ', ACRE . 12 x 60 mobtle home
WAL LPAPERING AND pomtmg
near Dexter. 992 5858.
Coii 7A2·'132B.
TOTAL ELECT::
RicC:: mo
- :b-11-e
For Rent
home . furn1shed , 3 bedr.,
was her and dryer. Alf condi ·
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park .
tioned. I lot, 210 ft frontage.
Route 33 north of Pomeroy .
$12,000. Phon 9' 742·'1B26
la rge lo ts. Call99 '2 -7-479 .
- - - - - - -- - - - 1955 Pro111e Schoon er , 28"---x 8.
3 AND 4 RM . furni shed and un·
bdr
fur n 1s hed
opt s
Phone 1965 Gene ra t bO x 12 2 bdr
992-5434
1968 Elcono , 52:.: 12. 2 bdr
216 E. Second Stree\
TWO BEDROOM , k1tchen fvrn1 sh· 1969B uddv60 x l'l , 4bdr .
YOUR CHANCE - To own
ed. opl . Call before 8 om 1970Sylv o,60x 12 2bdr.
a neat I rttle location for a
1970 Costle 60x 12 , 2 bdr
992-2288
'--,-small business and live
1973 Arlingt on , 60 &gt;&lt; 12, 2bdr
TVVO BEDROOM mobile home 1973 R1dgewood . 70 x 14 3 bdr
upstairs . Wonderful
near Dexter near No 1 Mme
1973 Ktrk wood 50 x 1'1 , 2 bdr.
opportunity on Main Street. ,
992·5658
B&amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES
Small amount down .
PT PLEASANT, WV
NEED STORAGE? - Out FOUR ROOMS ond bath tn
675--4424
Lan gsville . Reference and
of high water in Middleport
deposi
t
John
Shee
ts
Box
64
,
·and one ih Pomeroy. Both
- --,-,-,-Middlepor t · 3' 11 mi les south ol -1968 TRAILER 12 X 60 OS
have natura l gas heat, city
IS . $3500.
_M~~~
-:_p~r
t
_
o~
Rt
water, anti electric.
Good condi tion Col/742-2806
1.9 ACRES - One of the
HOUSE 4 rooms and both un· ~
furnished 99'1 -3090
f1ner older homes around,

--

2 30--Doctor s 3,15; Guiding Ligh t 6.10; I LoYe Lucy 17

Unscrambl e the se four Jumbles
one Ieifer to each squ are , to form
tour ordtnary words

BORN LOSER

~.

----- - -- - --·-

Style 17; 12·25-E iec Co 33.

3 ·10--Mo,ie " Bailie of Rogue Riber" 17 ; 5·oo--

'il\l\truf \li)'\l

GARAGE

Sweepers f o o st ~ rs 1rons all
small appliances Lawn mower
nex t to Sta te Htgh woy Garage
on Route 7,.

of L 1fe 8.1 0 : Sesame St 20
12 · 0o-Newscen1er 3; Jeopardy 6; Young &amp; the
-! · Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13. Love American

Dragnet 17

~ ~ ~'-!!) ~~ rA

ROGER HYSEU.

ELWOOD BOWE RS REPAIR --

of Night 6, Dah ng Game 13; Movie " Miss Sadie

Thompson " 17 .
10 ·30--A ll Star Secrets 3, 15, Andy Grilf ith 6; Pilce Is
Right B. 10; S20,000 Pyramid IJ
ll .QO-High Rollers 3, 15, Happy Days 6, IJ ; E lec Co.
20 . 11 :25-Sesame St 33
11 :Jo--Wheel of Forlune 3, 15 ; family Feud 6, 13; LoYe

6,13 : 2 · 25-News 17.

Agentfor
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANOY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, LISbon, Ohio.
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM ,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.
1-26-1 mo.

10 Years Experience

FINE.. · AND I'LL DROP
BY EACH OAY --· NOW I
MUST GI:T BACK 10 MY

i HAi Rfi't\IMD5
ME DOC "·

Wl'AT'S YER

LUCIIATWE P!?ACTIC£ ...

BILl?

HM •M ·.. BILL?
LAlFR , EH? IF YOU

Print answer here.

" (

I I XI

r

(Answers tomorrow)

GEl "'E SOME HOT
WATfR , I THINK

I'Ll SHAVE ' "

Yeste rday s

'

-'

I Jumbles AWFUL

I

An swe r

That T une 13, Sanford &amp; Son 17, MacNeii · L ehrer

Report 20 ; So The Peopl e Ma y Know 33
8 QO-Diff'rent Strokes 3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13, Wonde r
Woman 8, 10, Wa sh ington Week in Review 20,33,

Night Gallery 17.

--

-

~~~{~

THREE

-

Week 20,33; Nig hi Ga lle ry 17.
9 · 0o--T urnabout 3, 15; Movie " T he G1rls 1 n the Office"
6, 13. Capitol Beat 33 ; Movie " The Nigh I Walker"
11 : Congre .. slonal Outlook 20.

9 .30--Hello,

-------

I

-

---·-~-

f!

LA'Te:LY?

lmes,

:t Hc-exammmg
4 PoCm

&amp;ME:LL ANYTH lNG...

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

with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
full ba sement, and garage
in Syracuse.

5 Actor
Bissell
Electrod e
6
Powerful
II Fo1 ward
13 Kept in a pen bea m
7 Claudia H Fur scarf
Ta ylor
15 Manne flyer
8 Ex pert
16 Deb11ItaLe
9 Away from
17 Sirh~ S
ca mp
20 Craze
12 Grammar term
16 foreign
temple
18 We nt under

r ro...

GASOLINE ALLEY

ROCK SPRINGS - Only 13
years old . 3 bedroom frame
home .
Enclosed bath ,
modern kitchen, and utility
ro o m . Real Handy for
commuter.

28 ACRES -

WILL CARE for th e elderly tn our
home . Phon e99'1 ·7314 ,

TREE TRIMMING and removal
7.42-3167 or 7A2-'1573

----:-·-:-----::

Lays well

w ith pasture and plenty of
firewood . Has a modQrn

WATE-R AND miSC . houlmg Cel l

doub le wide home and a log

PIANO TUNING for home and
!&gt;chool l one Dani e ls, associate
ol Elberfeld's ond Brun!cordi
Music
Company
Ph one

~2 - 5858

house . East end of the
couhty on a good country
road .

ENORMOUS - 10 rooms In
a 5 year old home. With 5

"PERM SPECIAL"
'20.00 for '17 .50

---:---:------,

~2-2581 or~2 - 2082 .

' r;;#/7=;,'" ,..

....

Jan. 22 thru Feb. lO

~-------_;_

3 PERCENT DOWN PLUS
CLOSING COSTS BUYS
YOU A HOME. V. A.
NOTHING DOWN, JUST
CLOSING COSTS. CALL
992-J3l5 .
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy

INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE
AND REAL ESTATE NEEDS
CALL US.
OFF.·992·2342-EVE. 992-2449

Assoc:iates

Headquarters

OWNER MUST ~ELL - I he owner ot lh1 :;
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine
home for a low, low price of 520,000.: There
are 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
living room w -fi~.fplace, formal dining, eat'" kitcheJl, bafltw ·shower, garage &amp; a king
sized yard. Good location on Mill St . Call the
Wiseman Real Estate Agency , Gallipolis,
446 :3643.

.

lNG-CHlLDS AGENCY

.

I

MIDOLEPORT, OHIO
serving Meigs County
Since 1868

"Countterpolnt" 3.
Thursday, Feb . 1

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

NORTH
t A 1086 5

have had to jump to three to
forc e, so he e lected to cue

WEST

EAST

+KQJJO Sl

• 6 43 2

.. 9 2
• Q 74 2

.. 8 3

• 3

• J
+Q101642
SOUTH

+5

North East

DAILY

I+

2+

Pass

South
I+
3¥

Pass

7¥

Pass

Pass

Pass
h ow to work il :

CRYPTOQUOTE -

A X Y D L B A AXR
is

j
• MRS ..WR:16HT; 11-IIS ISN'T GOING
TO ~E: EASY; 13UT CAN YOU
MEMI3ER lfOW YOU
NOTIF IE D OF YO U~
HU5i!&gt;AN D:S DEATH ?

GCJOD GRIEF !
MR'. HEM.

ZCVGJVWJ

GXX

WAS [)IL L .. . ?

AW

TKJ

BAWSKCJNTV
JK

MV

Opening lead · + K

G MXV

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Sam fry ( hfe master
number 10 ) was Sam Fry Jr .
back in 1931. His partner t he
late Edward Hymes Jr , be·
came life master number 23.
Their bidding of today's
hand is indicative of how
experts had to

use Imagina-

tion back in 1932.
J K
M VG C
B A W S K C J N T V. - M A G W .Sam 's opening club bid
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: HISTORY DOES NOT INTERFERE was normal and sound then
WITH THE FUTURE OF YOUTH BUT IT IS A DRAG ON THE as it is now . West might ha ve

I CAN REMEM13ER
IT
Y...

dumrnv a n d realtzed that 1t

dummy's kmg of clubs, drew

would 'take a lot of luck to
bnng home all t he tricks.
He won th e spade 1 c: ashed

cashed his ace of clubs in Lhe
hope that someth ing really
·good would happe n in that
Now he n eeded real luck 10

used !or the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letter s,

JLV

PRESENT OF OLD PEOPlE.--JAMES FEIBLEMAN
© 1979 King Features Syndk:ate, Inc.

made a weak JUmp over call,

diamonds

TilE WORLD WA~ I

FLI{IN6 ACE WALKING
ALONG A COUNTRII
ROAD IN FRANCE ...

l-IE NOTICES A BEAUTIFUL
I{OUN6 GIRL APPRMCHIN6
FROM THE OPPOSITE
DIRECTIOI.l ... HE SPEAKS ..

.r---...

SHE IS NOT

IMPRESSED Bi/
~IS FLliENT
FRENCH

TATER --·

THEN I Hf_ERED
ELVINEY CALLIN '

FROM TH'GOSSIP
FENCE··-

He

cashed

his

king , no ted the fall of th e
ja c k from Eas t , finessed
agam st the queen and ever} ·
thing had c ome up roses.
1NE WSPAI)!-. H I!.:NTE RPR ISE ASSt-; I

(Do you have a a ues flo n for
th e experts' Wme · Ask the
Experts care o f th is news pa ~
per tndt vtd ua l ques t1ons will
be answered If accompan ied
by S4.ampe d . self-addres sed
envelopes. Th e most mteres t·
mg quest1ons Wi ll be used m
th1s column and wt ff rece1 ve
co~t es a/ JACOB Y MODERN I

BARNEY

SHE WUZ
WHAR'S 'lORE
RIGHT
HERE
AUNT LOWEEZY,
A SECONT AGO ..
JUGHAID?
CHANG IN'

h eart s

smt . But West showed out.

apost r ophes. the l ength and formati o n of t he w ords are all
hints. Each day the code l etters arc d 1~eren t .

BOSS CAME TO SEE M E
PERSONA LLY. I( .~':.;:~-::::......--· ........ .

se v en

trumps wlth two l e ads and

LONGFELLOW

One l ette r si mpl y stands f or anot h er. In t h1 s snmr l e ·\ IS
~·f

that

would be the mos t bnlhant
bid at his dis posa l. Be bid it.
Sam d1dn 't thmk II was
bnlhant when he saw the

l

~

!ned Lhree h ea rts.
c Jded

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South
·west

current age) Sa m is a m os t
agg ressive bidder , so he
E ddie, w ho a lways l ook ed

+AJ 985

laug h
39 Reg1ster
~ 40 Irish river
; 41 Crescent0 shaped
l
~
DOWN
c 1 Establis hed

bid two spade s . Sam should
probably ha ve b•d JUSL three
cl ubs. But e v e n at 69 !hiS

for s umeLhing bn lhant, de·

.. A J 7 6
t K93

•: ~~~~--------------------------~::::::::::::::::::::::~---------------36Edgealong
38 Scornful

buL that bid wa s mvented by
28-year-old Oswald Jacoby
some six months l ater
Hym es c ou l d not force
w1t h two hearts. H e would

+K

e g.

NSPIRATION
POINT

2-1

• A9
., K Q 10 54

ammal

--

Imaginative ways of yore

2t1 '·Benev-

CRYPTOQUOTES

DOWN' ING~HILDS

MOdern kitchen and large
corner lot .

19 Small bird
:10 G1·eek
22 Tepid
physician
23 Velocities
:11 Polishe r
24 " La Bohe m e":l3 Hamme r
,philosophe r
part
25 - espnt
:16 Noa h 's son
27 Ha lf-way
:17 Cadmus 's
Z9 Pied-a-daug hte r

1f 35 Cousteau.

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

dining and sliding glass
doors to the su.ndeck.

I :30-Mov ie " The Law vs Bt lly th e Ktd " 17, J·4oNew s 13; 2. 30-News 3.
J : OD--Movle "Coogan ' s B l uff" 3. 3 · 2{}--N ews 17; 3 : 4D---Movie "Sing le Room Furnished " 17, .5 . 00--Movie

Yesterday's An~we r

alent"
fellow
, 29 Culti va ted
land
I
3Z Wed on
the run
:14 Zodiac

169 N.2nd Street
Middleport, Ohio
992·2725

WATER WELL dril li ng . William T.
Grant 742-2879 .

" The Nanny " 10.

Back it up, Buster!

KArS
BEAUTY SAlDN

Services Offered

Box 8.
12. 4G-- Ironslde 13; 1 Do-Midnight Spec tal 3, 15; Movie

compose r

HE:Y, YE:AH , NOW

1%7

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

fo r short

B unker

----·

.! __ -·-

11 ·Oo--News 3,8, 10, 13,15, Dick Cav ett 20 , H ogan's
Heroes 17 ; Soundstage 33.
ll · Jo--Johnny Carson 3,15,
Bar e11a 13, Movie
" Generati on" 6; Bonkers 8, MOVIe " The Haunted
Palace" 10, Movie " Dracula Has R i sen from the
Grave " 17.
12·()(}-Gong Sho w 8, Monty Python 33 , 12 3()-Juke·

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Openmg

I IXlN'T

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

-

A B A'TH

MacNeil ·

10 .00-Sweepslakes 3, 15; Dallas 8, 10; News 20 . When
The Boat Comes In 33 ; 10 o30--Monfy Python ' s
Fl yi ng Ci r cus 20.

ACROSS

, '&lt;OU 'TAKE:N

I

Larry 3,15; Turnabout 20 ;

Lehr er Report 33

~

ALLEYOOP

.

B 3o-- Brothers &amp; S1sters 3, 15.; 'Makin ' It 6 ; Wall Street

EJECT MEA SLY GOATEE

Could be beefy fem ales-COW S

Jumble Book; No . 13 , containing 11 0 puzzles, IS a ... atlable torS 1.75 postpaid
from Jumble, clo th1s newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N J 07648.1nciude your
nama, address. zip code and make checks payable to Newspap111books

'

Kit 20; Big Blue Marble JJ .
7 3Q--Hee Haw Honeys J ; $1.98 Beauty Sho w 6; Family
Feud 8, 10; Pop Goes The Country 15; $200.000 Name

--·~---~---

~

To Beaver 17; Sesame St 33

You ng &amp; ·th e Rstles!l 10 ,· Not t-or Women Only 15

David Coleman

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
992-2356
I-41mo. (Pd . )

Jt

1 JG-Oays of Our Lives 3,15; 2 oo--one L 1te to Live

Washington St., Albany, 0 .
Phone 698-6173

For Competitive Prices
' H-ome Remodeling
General Repairs
' Masonary Works

6,1 3,

12 3o-Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Password 15, Sear ch for
Tomorrow B. 10; M ovie " Shadow over Elveron" 17.

1 so-News 13, 2·5o-News 17 ;

INSURANCE AGEN

ROUSH
CONSTRtJCnON

Housing
R!AIIO'

Mash 8, ABC N ews 33; Movie " An Amertcan

ME FOR .IF YOU
HATE ME 50
MUC H&lt;

Thinking Of Hoving

-

For · all
Needs,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

--~

io you. go It alone .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2t) Ins tead of be1 ng your usual
poning thmg s today N eg lec led

'Pomeroy
Open Evenings TiiB : OO p .m .

SPLIT FIREWOOD $30 o rounded
p tcku p load 12 1o 14 111 un less
o rde red Coli 61A b98 5601 col
lect

10 :30--Besl of Gro ucho 20, Talking Walls of Pompeii
JJ .
ll :OQ--News 3,6,8,10,13,15 ; Dick Cavell 20; Over Easy
33.
11 :JQ--Johnn y Carson 3, 15 ; Sfarsky &amp; Huich 6, 13;

OG-Tomorrow 3,

--

BROWNING MARK IV CB an tenna
tower 2 rotor s wot1 me ter
D 104 Tweette 81 rd m1ke
lmeor Call littl e Btt Ba by sw
1ng 25 " btMe 1971:1 Cut lass
Calat s
excellen t condi1 1Dn
949·2265.

8, 10, News 20

CAPTAIN EASY

A meri cC!I

10·oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; All In The Family 8, IO; Edge

Movie " Battle of the Bulge" 17 ;

.'

Morning

13, 15; Emergency One 6; Raz zmataz z 10; L u c y
Show 17
9 : 3Q-Brad y Bunch 8; Hogan ' s H e roe s 10; Green A cres
17

9:3Q--Soap 6, IJ ; 10 :00--Fam ily 6, 13, Barnaby Jones

11 -9-1 mo.

.1. 12 1 mo

GRAVH Y TRACTOR ond mower
Hoy l or sale 9A9-2361:1

WANTED TO buy old jewelry
Call 992 -5'162 or wri te Kay
Cecil 87 S 2nd M1ddleport .

TAURUS (April 20-May ZO) You

lha n tooting yo ur own horn If

POONE 742-2328

Leave

Basketball 10; Mission . Impossible 17
8 JQ--Makl n' II 6,13
9:1)()..-Qul ncy 3,1 5; Barney Miller 6,13. Palest ine 33 ,

. '·

Good

B· Jo--Hazel 17, 9.QO-Merv Gr iff in 3; Phil Donah ue

Movie " Mr Horn" Part · 1 8; Nov a 20,33 : College

YES.

'

.....

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call992-7113
For Free Estimates

De'p end On ....

•

......._. .

APPUANCE II

SHOTGUN ,

3, 15;

Schoolies 10; Three Stooges 17; 7 15-Weather 33
7:Jo-- Fam lly Affair 10, 8:00--Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10;

7 3D--Holl ywood Squares J ; Bonkers 6; Matc h Game
8; $100,000 Name That Tune 10; Nashvi lle On The
Road IJ, Dolly 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17.
B:QO-Circus Super Heroes 3,15; Mork &amp; M indy 6,13.

.

Radiator
Service
.._
....

EWOTT

Qua lity Work You Can

1963 CHEVROLET HAT bed lmclo.
/01 ~ ole or trade 9'1'2 b 11J

--

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

Ceramic Tite . Formica
Counter Tops - Ceilings
{SOspended, Texture) · Tile
. Floors . Panelmg &amp; Trim .

1973 CHEVROLET SHORT bed
!t uc k b cyl J ~p e e d , 64 ,0CXJ
r111l es Good ~ ho p e run s good,
new ttres I:I A3·30S:J

992 0370 or Con tact Martin Fur mture

Thing s m gene r al wil l come
WANTED TO buy Used portable
easily for you today Tha t could
sewing moch1ne 992·5786 or
work to your disadvan tage You
992 252'1
mt ght take an op A.Q rluni ty lor
granted and fail to exploit It
properly.
,
Yard Sale

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sepf. 22) Nor-

~

F 750 FO RD A ~.: 4 390
engtn e Jl S P ~
tool hox.
eiPctnc b1ok e ond tro 1ler hrtc h
S3500 I;IA3 48A 5

. . . . . .
N Y. 10019 Be sure to spe c1fy
b"th s1gn
_ WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
ph onOgropn - r ecord s
Coi l
PISCES (Feb. ZO·March 10) Co-

yo u coas t, yo ur co mpetition
wt!l ghde past you .

"Y041r Chevy DeGler''

992 2689 .

Members of yo ur famtly may
TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro·
fmd you a s hade too opiducts Top prtCe for sta ndtng
nion at ed. today . Tht s could
sow limber Call qq2 5965 or
cau s e some rumb les on th e
_
K ~n t_ H~n~bv_ 1 4~b. 8~70 .
home front ·Respec t the ir
v1 e ws 1f you want th em to OLD FURNITURE 1ce boxes , b rass
beds , 1ron bed s, desk s etc ..
respe c t yours Ftn d oul wh tc h
comple te hou seholds
Wnte
stgn s you are compat tb le with
M D M1ller Rt 4 Pomeroy or
by sendtng for yo u r copy o f th e
coii9CI2-7760
a l1 ~ new Astra -Graph Letter for
1979 Ma11 11 for each a nd a OLD COINS, pocket wa tches ,
long , self-add re ssed , s tamped
cl ass ri ng'S wedd tng bonds ,
envelope to Astro-G r aph , P.O.
dmmond-s Gold or stlver Ca ll
Box 469 , Rad •o Clly Slati on.
Roger Wamsl ey 7A2 - 23~ 1 .

good looks to get by today If

Chevrolet

FOUND
RA CI NE
female
Shepard dog weorm g &lt;:ol lor
Ev1dently obedien ce trained
949 '1244

Wanted to Buy

petittv e sttuattons tl wtll take
mor e than yo ur charm and

•

L

February 2, 1979

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

- Room Addi tions-C ustom Remodeling-

1~/ A

INCOME TAX Servtce Federal FARMI::RS NEED a l ew for mers 10
th ts oreo to tr y ACCO SEED
and Sto le Walla ce Rus sell
Greol 50vmg s Wnte or call col
B r odb ~ 'Y: ~a~l 99'1· 7228
lee!
Ston Coak ley
Rt
1
FR EE CANDY mo~o n g clas-s at Di's
K1llbu c k
OH
44037
Candy and Colo. e Suppl re-s, Sp r·
21 b · 276· A584
1ng Voll ey Pla za AA6 ·'113A for
reg tstrohon If s fun "an d easy TWO PIECE green liv1ng roorn
su1 le . Ve ry good cond1110n
You'll be amazed at w hat you
Herol d Osborne 985 3915
con do
APPROX 90 acre-s of coo l and
MEIGS CO
F1 !&gt;h and game
f o r est land
Ad1oc ent to
meet1ng ot the Club House on
Pogevtlle
OH
Write
Bo x :?43
Shade R1ver Rood. Saturday
Syracu se OH 45779
n1gh! ~e~r~a_r y 3
12 AM FM stereo iope deck s, 111
dash $50 to $75 742·3154

t , 2. Jtc

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In com-

POMEROY• MOTOR CO.

Ask1ng $1100.

GUN SHOOT , Rocrne Vo lun teer
Ftre Dept Eve ry Saturday b 30
pm ot the1r budd1ng tn Bo!&gt;hon CONDITIONED m1xed hoy $1 25
bo le 742 2873
Foc t~:ny c~hoke guns only
EIGHT
FOOT truck topp er , Jb "
INCOME TAX Ser v1ce Feder al
h1gh $135 Paul ltsc Su cc ess
and Stole Ta xes 997.·2172 for
Rd
Reed sv ill e .
OH
oppls or !tee Wando Eblin
6 14 667 3544
AI OOO Lau rel Cltlf Rd

MEN .

NOTICE OF

~ td

992·2975

PROBATE COURT OF

APPOINTMENT
OF. FIDUCIARY

197 1 PINT O
991 tJ:t62

Ill TROMM OONST.

13.
7 DO-Today

A'

ONE FURNAG MA STE R wood
burner . regular $49 5 now
$AOO . One auto Rad iant wood
hea ter . reg
$t99 95 . now
IN LOVING memory of Grove
$170 00 3 Cool Moster stov es
S a l ~ er Sr
who passed away
wood. or cool regular $378 55
Feb I 1973
now $300
Grovel )I Troclor
Sadly m1 ss ed by wtf e ch tl dren
Soles 210 Condor. Pomeroy
and grandchildren

thru Friday

( 11 31 ,

.

Socletl es in Translt(on 10 .
6 : Jo--Romper Room 17; 6 : .45--G ood M orntng West
V irgi nia 13, 6 . 55--Chu c k W hi te Reports 10; News

THURSDAY , FEBRUARY I, 1979

DAMAGED

:

Hill

992 3309

you

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

Case No . a,saa

GrNgC

1975 CHEVROLU MALIB U A C .
p 5 P B tdt ~tec t lll Q wh rl"' l
S3.t 00 9A9 71 12 a lh•r 5 30.

--

NOTICE

F ~ldHy

1'9"/ .1 AM · J ~ H'
'}!1 7 1qb1

WAS

Business Services

tron ., low mi iC'OQf' c xccll1'111
cn t•rlllton SA SOO Co il Q8S A:tffl
olt l'r Spm

IN MEMORY'bl Wol te r (Matt) Len·
dnck s. who pass ed aw ay ten
ycor s ogo today , feb 1, 1969
-For Sale
- They say lime heals all so rroll(
COAL UMES TONC san d gravel
And helps us to forget
(
coloum chlor1de;. / er tdtzer . dog
Bu t trme so for has only prove d ~ food . and all types ol salt Ex
how much we m1S !&gt; yo u yet
celstor Salt Worl.. s Inc . t: Matn
Although your s.oul ts now ot re-s t
St Pomero y qq2 3891
And fr ee fr om car e and po1 n
APPL
ES FITZPATRICK Orchard
Th1 s w orld would seem ltke
Stat e Rt btl9 Pho ne Wtlk esvitl e
Heaven tf we hod you bock
669 3785
OQOin
God g1ves us stre ng th to corry on MIXED CONDtTl ON!;D hoy Very
and cou rog£&gt; to heal th e blo w,
g o od
q uo l1ty
De l1 v·ery
But wh at it meant to us to lose
available Phone 992.7'10t or

ASTRO•GRAPH
ESTATE OF GINA
C HINI , DECEASED.

gone but o v1 love has

Mcmor1es of you alway s br tght t;o rt
our day
Now you're surrounded by God'!&gt;
pure lov e
And we hope we meet 111 Heoven
above
Sadly mr ssed by w rfe ch1ld ren
grondchdd r en on d gr eat
granddaugh ter

minimwn Cash in ~tdvance

Pho~

•

Y C&gt; Ill~ ho vt::&gt;
~t oy f! d

In memory. Cltrd of Thllnb and
Obituary 6 cenl.!i per word , $3.00

ARIES

992 -2 126

Hr took you fr om u-s 11111e yPnr'S

2.25

!Ill

3.00

l fO I H C/\MINO ( l o ~~ ~ ~ SS out11

FRIDAY , FEBRUARY 2, 1979
,
;·: 30--World al Large 17 ; 5;&lt;5-Farm Report 13; 5·50-PTL Club 13; 5.55-Sunrlse Semesler 10.
~ · QO-PTLCIUb 15; 600 Club 6.8; 6: 10--News 17 ; 6 ·25-

TELEVISilJN
VIEWING

(ENTRAL
COMPUTER
HERE AT
MONEYCARD

I \li P

Friday, Feb. 2

'.Jac~ W. Carsey, Mgr.
, _,

Cash
1.00
!.50

W r- dtdn t won t to let you go

sensitive

prices, stock prices and new
orders .
The index in December
stood at 137.3 of the 1967
average of 100.
The administration is
officially forecasting that the
economy, as measured !Jy the
Gross National Product, will
grow by 2.2 percent this year
alter discounting for an
inflation , down from about 4
percent growth last year.
That would be enough to

PROBATE COURT OF

- -- - - - --SNOW
TIRE SALE

l 5wurds or Undtr

recesston.

economists that an economic

Stlldc&gt;,
who poss e&gt;rl owoy q y('nt ., ago
' ('b 1'1"10
fh f' way s oflil r. ~c&gt;e"l '.Ont\'luJll'S
c1 ucl
But wr&gt; '-now wt'! hove to let God

.

. ,'
•

Auto Si!les

In Memory

By R. Gregory Nokes
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON ( AP )
The government!.!; index of
econom ic mdica tors fell in
December for the second
month in a row, the first solid
sig n that an economic
slowdown may be n'*'r .
The
Comm e rce
Department said t&amp;lay that
the index fell 0.5 .percent in
December, the same as in
November . The mdex had
increased 0.4 pe rcent in
October .
The Composite Index of
Leading
Indicators
is
designed to point to future
economic trends. A three-

.
'

I

11-Tbe Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb t. 1!179
DICK TRACY

-- SO SAI RV SAYS
TO ME , SHE SAYS --

�'

i
12~The Daily Sentinef; Middleport -Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 1, 1979 .

ELBERF·ELDS .IN POMEROY

Trial delay ordered
NEWAROK, Ohio (API - A Licking County judge ha s
ordered a delay in the trial of
one of two brothers accused
in central Ohio's so-called .22caliber slayings.
Common Pleas Judge
Winston Allen ' granted
defense attorney Gary
Tyack's request for a con·
tinuance Wednesday and
ordered that the trial resume
next Tuesday.
Tyack asked for a delay in
the trial of Thaddeus
·Uwingdon , 42, of' Glenford.
after a story appeared in The
Columbus Dispatch Tuesday
darning Lewingdon's brother
Gary may plead guilty to the
10 killings and testify against
his brother.
' Tyack said he knew nothing
about the supposed plan until
reading about it Tuesday anrl

that he would need to investigate his case furth er as a
result.
Tyack also made a motion
seeking c.onsolidation of the
Licking County trial with
similar proceedings in
Franklin Count y. Allen
reserved ruling on the
request. saying he needed
time to study the matter.
Licking County Prosecutor
David l.ighttiscr objected to
the proposal, saying he did
not think it would be legally
permissible without . special
action
by the
state
Legislature.
He also objected to the
continuance because of the
_problems it would cause in
rescheduling testimony of
' witne'sses and jury selection
and the additional costs it

would impose on the county .
Jurrselcction from a panel
of more than 80 pro spetts was
to have started Wednesday ,
but will not begin until next
wcrk becau se of the continuance.
Thaddeus Lewingdon is
st~nding trial in Licking ·
County on charges relating
to th e murder of Joyce
Vermillion, 38, and Karen
Dodrill, 38, in Newark and

ncar
Granville. Gary Lewmgdon,
28. of Kirkersville, has been
indict ed on the same charges
and is scheJ!~!~d to stand trial
next month.
Thaddeus has been indicted
in five murders and Gary in
six in ~·ranklin County, while
in ~' airfield County, both
Lewingdons ha ve been
charged with killln g a .
minister who was serving as
a security guard at a private
c1 ub last April.

1

I

Area ·D eaths .I

GEORGE E. LEWIS
George E. Lewis, 70, Salt
Lake City, Utah, form er
Meigs County resident, died
Tuesday in Utah.
Surviving are his wife,
LOuise; a daughter, Mary
Ann ; four sons, George Ray ,
Richard, Ronnie and John ;
three brothers, Robert W.
Lewis, Racine; John H. and
Sammy
Lewis ,
o,f
Okeechobee, Fla.; two .
sisters, Dorothy Stecklein,
New Concord, and Elizabeth
Perry, Canton, and eight
grandchildren. Burial will be
in Salt Lake.
FANNIE L. SA YilE
Fannie L. Sayre, 68, Fifth
Street, Racine , died this
morning at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs . Sayre was the
daughter of the late Joseph
and Fannie Miller. She was
also. preceded in death by one
daughter, Joan Huddleston
Wolfe and three sisters.
She is ·survived by her
husband, Carol Sayre; one
son, David L. Huddleston,
Racine; grandchildren, Mrs.
Michaela Hoback, Racine ;
David E . Huddleston,
Tucson , Ariz .; Michael
Huddleston, Racine, and two
great - grandchildren; sisers, Miream Millill_an,_
Orlando, Fla., and Muriel
Dressler, St. Albans, W. Va.,
and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services · will be
held Saturday at I p. m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Don Walker 'officiating,
Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral home Friday
from 2 In 4 and 7 to 9.

Expect more
·snow in Oh;.o
By The Associated Press
Snow showers and snow
squalls are expected to
continue in the eastern half of
Ohio tonight, with a total of
one to three inches of snow
accumulating in southeastern
Ohio.
The National Weather
Service says low temperatures across the state
tonight will range from 5 to 10
degrees above zero.
On Friday, skies will be
clouding up, with more snow
moving into western portions
of Ohio by afternoon .
The high . temperatures
Friday will again be in the
20s.

County receives
gasoline taxes
January gasoline excise
tax checks totaling $9,833,388
were distributed by State
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson's office to Ohio
counties, townships , cities
and villages.
Of the total, Meigs County
communities received the
Middleport
following :
Village, $2 ,153; Pomeroy
Village, $2,323; Racine, $604 :
Rutland , $540 ; Syracuse,
$754, a total of $6,375. Elach
township received $1 ,200.
TOP RANKINGS
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) ~ Darrell Pace of
Cincinnati and Luann Ryon of
Riversid~. Cal. , top the 1978
final rankings of the National
Archery Association, announced at the organization's
recent meeting here.
Pace and Ryon won gold
medals in archery at the 1976
Olympic Games in Montrfal.
They also are the reigning U.
S. national champions.

I

PAtlLETTE VANMETER
Paulette M. VanMeter, 32,
Coolville, died Wednesday at
University
Hospital ,
Columbus .
Mrs. VanMeter is survived
by her husband , Ronald; one
daughter, Lea Michele Van
Meter :
her
parents,
Lawrence and Violet Ritchie,
Portland.
She was a member of. the
Eagles Women's Auxiliary.
Funeral services will be
held Sunday at l p. m. at
Ewing Chapel. Burial will be
in Stivetsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 4 p. m.
Friday.

·SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE
,

Three Ohio

Vice •••
(Continued from page I)
experiments and to open
government · offices in San
Francisco and Houston. The
United States will also help
China establish a domestic
satellite · communications
system.
Teng was asked earlier at
an interview with 11
American reporters what
China had to offer in exchange.
He said there were many

commodities it could export,
including oil, coal, ra re
metals and chemical and
light industry products.
In this regard, he pitched
for the removal - of high
American import duties that
adp about 50 percent to the
price of Chinese products sold
here, such as cotton goods,
workmen's~ gloves
and
clothespins.
Under U.S. law , this would
require China to permit free
emigration. Teng promised
more leni ency in a speech
Tu esday night toward
Chinese who want to be
reunited with family members living abroad.
In the interview over lunch
at Blair ·House, across
'Pennsylvania Avenue from
the White House, the Chinese
lea~er blasted the Soviet
Union as "the main hotbed of
war" around the world .
He invited · th e United
States , Japan, Western
Europe and the Third World
to join with L'hina in denying
the Soviet Union strategic
bases and resources .
But
Teng
did
not
specifically call for military
action. By way of example of
what he had in mind, he cited
Ftanoe's support last year
for Zaire in putting down an
incursion by €ommunistbacked Katanga insurgents.
Denouncing Vietnam as
"the Cubans of 'the Orient."
he confirmed that China has
made ' 'necessary troop
movements" along its border
with Vietnam. "But, as to
actions to take, we will have
to wait and see," he added.
Teng also charged that
Cubans are "running ram- ·
pant" ·in Africa. Both Vietnam and Cuba ar~ allies of
the Soviet Union.
Then, in a second interview
with
four
television
correspondents, Teng
promised to work for
peaceful reunifi cati on of
Taiwan with mainland China ,
but said he could not offer a
commitment not to use force .
"The result then would be
to have the
Taiwan
authorities refuse absolutely
to 0egotia te with us for a
peaceful reunification ," he
said.

routes out

.

Quantities are limited, no exchanges or refunds _on sale Items• .

By R. ·Gregory Nokes
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AI' ) ~
The nation's unemplo)'ment
rate decllne~ slightly to 5.8 .
percent in January, showing
the slowdown in the economy
that the
Carter administration is planning had
not y'et begun to occur, a
government report showed
today.
The jobless rate in
December was 5.9 percent,
and the Labor Department
noted in its report that
unemployment has hovered
at just below 6 percent for the
pa'st six months. It has been
at the 5.8 percent level twice
previously in. recent months.
However ,
the
administration predicts that
unemployment will rise to 6.2
percent during this year and
remain at that level in 1980 as

~--..:.---·-·-·r;c;.,.u--;5:;~;----~._,-T---~----,.wc;£,"A'Ys.ALil-------w

.

!

$299 YARD POLYESTER60 inches wide, 100 per cent double kn it polyester , Solid
color s.

.

$150

.

GIRLS DRESSES

1

I

Our Entire Stock of Little Girls' Dresses. While they last.

I .
I

Yard

\

-~·---------------_..-~_.._....,._.._.._..._.._.._....__..1"_..._

~l!~~~~~~~ntl~i~~t~h~~ue~i~~.

_________

$799
_.._,_..._...._.._.._..,_,_...._.,_...._..._.....__...._._

TWO DAY SAI.EI

I MEN'S SWEATERS

$1495 LimE PROFESSOR

Made
give the answer. it gives the score .

1/
~ 2 PRICE '

.._....-,_,_.._.,_._._.._.._..___________ , ... _ ·-

I

TWO DAY SAI.EI

you

~

Our $9.95 to $34.95 sweaters, entire stock included,
Slipovers. Cardigans, Vests .

!
lf2.
PRICE
____ ______________ ______
,_

~.._.._

I
I
1

1f2 PRICE

(USPS 11&gt;·960)

WOMEN'S WINTER SLEEPWEAR

1f2 PRICE

!

l CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR

!
ss.OO SLEEPWEAR............................SALE l6.39 .
su.oo SLEEPWEAR .......................... SALE s8.79 !
~.00 SLEEPWEAR......................... .. SALE s4.79

s16.00 SLEEPWEAR .........................SALE s12.79 i

MEN'S WINTE·R
!
WOMEN'S WINTER ROBES
JACK' ETS AND COATS l
· -~2 PRICE

Indictments
returned in
murder case

!

sn.oo ROBES ................................... SALE SS.79 $15.00 ROBES ................................ SALE sn.99 .
:19.00 ROBES ................................ SALE :15.19

f---·------------------·----+~~!Q~!.S,;;.:.::.:.:.:::.:::.~:.:.::.:.::.:.:.:.::.:;.::..~-~~
TWO DAY SAI.EI

MEN'S SHIRTS
This sale includes our men 's dress shirts , dre ss flannel
shirts, men's sport shirts and knit shirs. Sizes J4lh to 1r :
and S, M, Land XL. All arranged for your easy selection .
Regularly $7.95 to $2.0.00.

I

TWO DAY SAI.EI

!I

CHILDREN'S
WINTER COATS

I
!
I

''

Y2
PRICE
I
Y2
PRICE
.
f------·---;;c);:;;sA--;_;;---------t--------;woD"A"Y5A1ii-------I

.

'1200

I
I!

-

'

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR

L_____ __________
Y2 PRICE
.. -· --------

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

NO. 204

Bidwell man
electrocuted

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

approximately 175 lbs., with light browr ha1r . 'i11e
unmasked subjects reportedly held revolvers on truck
stop att-endant Ralph Steinbeck, Gallipol is, and demanded
mone)' , but fled when they were frig htened by a noise
from the ba ck room of the U. S. :15 business. The Sheriff's
Office asks that anyone who might be able to aid in the
identification of the subj ects contact the department. A
spokesman lor the department said Thu'rsday thai the
source of any information would be held strictly
confidential.

15 CENTS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1979

Steve RunyGn, 23, Bidwell, Depart me nt , Run yo n was
was pronounced dead on elecu·o cuted when the bed of
arrival at Holzer Medical a dump tru ck he wa s
. Center Thursday afternoon operatin g became entangled
followin g an electri cal i.n high tension win:!S at a
accident at Rayle Coal Co ., work ar e ~ 011 the coa l
company gratUldS.
567 Upper River Rd.
Run yon reportedly stepped
According Ill an accident
report compiled today by the fr om the t ruck following
offer to the SEOEMS Boa rd Ga llia County Sh erif f' s ·contact with th e wires. and
was inju red when an arc of
during February to furni sh
electricity shot from the l~d-;
management se rvice by
of the vehi cle.
·
contra ct, cf.fcc ti ven c ss
Rayle
cociJ
lO . eHq.Jlu.vt::c
depending upon at:ccptance
Bil l Merr y unsuccess ful ly
by SEOEMS.
tried to revi\'e Hunyon using
mouth · to · mouth reLOCAK WILL CLOSE
suscit at ion . a dep artm ent
spokesman said today.
A spokesman fur the U.
Three deep coal mine s of
SEO F.MS paramedics were
S.
Army
Corps of
the Southern Ohio Coal Co..
called to Upper !liver Hd.
Engineers has announced
located in Meigs and Vinton
accident site and transported
. that the auxiliary lock at
Counties, re ach ed new Run yon to Holzer Medical
the Gallipolis Locks . and milestones last month.
Ce nter , \\'here he was
Dam will be closed for :10
On January 30, the com· pronounced d.o .a.
davs in March and April.
bined mines produced !9 .02b
Galli a Co untv Coro ner
Th-e lock will be closed for
ton s of clean coa l, a division Donald Wa rehiffie said this
repairs to the upper and
pr oducti on rec or d. The morning that dea th had been
lower gates . The main gate
reco rd was broken three caused by electrocution.
will remain open.
times previously durin g
Runyon wa s born Sept. 25,
January on the -15th, 18th anti 1955. in Williamson, W. Va .,
24th.
to
Dan
an d
Pauline
Harry Lester, general min e Cantebury Rw1yon , also of
superintendent, told the work Kt , 1, Bidwell, and he
for ce at the mine, "We. ,.,·ant mar ried Janet Ferrell April ·
to commend all the men and 30, 1977, at Deer Cree k
women of the Meigs Di vision Church, Rt. I , Vintnn. She
who have · made these new s urvives ·with thelr son . 15·
records a rea lity.··
months-old Steve Joshua.
Increasing productivity is
POINT P LEASAN T ~
t\lso survivin g a re a
Higgin s' Erectors and of prime importance if the brother. Bruce, and a sister .
Haulers of Buffa lo. N. Y. has price of coa l, and thus. the Brenda , Rt. I, Bidwell .
Services will be conducted
been awarded a contrat1 for priee of elcdricity is to be
kept at a rasonable level.
at 1 p.m . Sund ay at the
repair work on the Shadle
11le Meigs minc.s were McCoy-Moore Fun eral Home
Bridge here.
developed by Ohio Power Co. in Vuitnn . th e Rer . Jake FI')'
A mesh and con crete deck,
a pa rtially (concrete/ filled in conjunction with th e officiating, and burial will tw
grid, will be installed under co nst r ucti on of th e com· in Fair view Ceme t er y.
pany's Genera l J ames Gavin Visitation will be 2-4 and 7-9
terms of a $1,200,IJOO contral1
Gen eratin g Stati on at p.m. Saturda y m the :vlcCoyawarded to the New York
Cheshire.
Moore Funeral Home .
hrm. Work was expected to
The three Meigs mines pre
cost $900,000·.
a maj or source of coal for
Bridge work will involve
that plant having provided
the use of 16 ,150 pounds of
aver two million tons during
struct ural steel.
the nine months the min e
operated in 1978.
UEADLINE MAHCH
Lester sa id . " With th e
Thursday, March I is the
Snow tonight chang ing to devetopment work underway de11dlin e to sign..i!p for
flurries Saturday. Low at all three mines. including a assistance under the Rura l
tonight around 15 and high longwall mining panel at Abandoned Minr Program
Saturday near 30. The chance Meigs Mine No. 2, we an- tRAMP ). Interested pe rsons
of snow is 40 percent tonight ticipate greatly expand ed should contact the soil and
production in 1979."
wutcr cO nservation service.
and 70 percent Saturday.

-

The Ohio Valley Health
Services Foundation will be
making an offer shortly to the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Services to contract
management services to the
financial'ly troubled
emergency · syst er,n, according to Dr. William H.
Allen, OVHSF president. A
request for an offer was
issued by the SEOEMS board
during January.
The decision to make the
offer was decided Wednesday
night at a board of trustees
meeting of OVHSF in
Wellston . Th e board is
comprised of representatives
from eight counti.es, seven of
·whom are served by
SEOEMS.
oyHSF, which for the· past
10 years has been a health
planning, implementing and
operating agency in the
governor's Appalachia
program, was reorganized
last year as a primary health
care management system.
Emergency medical services
are considered to be a
primary health care:
The OVHSF decision
followed a report from its
staff, which, si nce midDecember has been making
an investigation . of the
SEOEMS operation at the
request of the SEOEMS
beard. Several of the OVHSF
staff are those who originally
'designed and operated the
system at the request of the
beards of commissioners of ·

the seven counties in {he be in reference to the fact
early 1970s. The system's that OVHSF transferred
design was . entered in a $327,082 in cash reserves to
national competition con- the SEOEMS corporation late
ducted by the U. S. Depart· · in 1975, none of which
ment of Health, Education remains today .
and Welfare in 1972 and won
the designation as a model for
rural regional EMS.
On the basis of the
designation, OVHSF was able
to acquire federal grants and
Ronald Coats, 20, Pomeroy,
contracts totalling over SO- was cited on charges of DWI
million to equip and operate Thursday following a four- •
the system for a period. of 3% vehicle accident in Meigs
years.
County on U.S. 33, threeIn April 1975, OVHSF tenths of a mile north ' Of
relinquished operating Pomeroy at 11:45 p.m.
control of the system to a
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
newly formed ~&gt;nard, which Highway Patrol, reports a
was chartered as the non- south bound auto operated by
profit
Southeast
Ohio Coats went off the left side of
Emergency Medical Service the roadway · and struck a
System, Inc.
parked auto owned by NorAccording to an audit man Price, Pomeroy, and a
report of the fim1 of Ernst &amp; second parked vehicle owned
Ernst for the year 1977, by Floyd Burney, Pomeroy.
published last month, the
The Coats auto then struck
SEOEMS financial position a barrel. which hit a parked
began to deteriorate rapidly pickup truck owned by
during 1977. It noted a lack of Burney.
fin ancia l control through
The· Coats vehicle con"i nadequate
finan cial tinued and struck a utility
statements" and recom· pole .
mended the institution of a
There was slight damage to
system to " maintain ac- the Price and Burney vehicle.
countability" for the cor- The Coats auto was
poration's assets.
demolished.
It recommended internal ' The Gallia-Meigs Post
accounting controls to investigated two other acprovide " assurance as to the Cidents Thursday.
safeguarding of assets
Officers were called to the
against
ross
from scene of a one-vehicle acunauthorized
use
or cident in Meigs County on CR
disposition." This appears to 28, one-tenth of a mile north

Through minutes of the day-to-day ·operational exSEOEMS corporat ion , the penses of the system. a
use of only a portion of these purpose for which they were
reserve funds can be traced . . not intended.
It is anticipa ted that
It is felt the unaccounted for
reserves were used in the OVHSF will make a form al

OSP charges man with DWI
of SR 248.
The patrol reports a north
bound vehicle operated by
Jacob Bush, 43, Racine, slid
backwards down a hill ,
struck a ditch and spun
around facing southward.
A passenger, James Bush,
12, Racine, displayed visible
signs of injury, but was not
immediately treated.
The driver claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated .

There .was
moder ate
damage to the Bush vehicle.
The patrol investigated a
one-auto mishap in Meigs
County on TR 152, two-tenths
of a mile south of SR 7, at 4 :20
p.m .

Officers report that while
attempting to ba ck into a
parki'ng area, a vehicle
driven by Vernon Otto. 29.
Reedsvill e, slid into a ditch
and overturned. Tiwre was
moderat e damage to the
vehicle.

Cold front on way to Ohio
By The Associated Press
The high pressure zone that
dominated Ohio's weather
early today is moving off the
mid-At la ntic coast thi s
evening , and a cold front will
enter the state behind the
front, starting in northeastern portions ea rly
Saturday.
Snow will move in tonight
and change to flurries
Saturday as the cold front
moves through the the state
and out of eastern Ohio by
Saturday night.

The Na tion a l - Wea ther
Service say s low t em +
peratures in Ohio tonight will
ra nge from 10 to 18, and the
hi ghs on Saturday will be in
the 20s to near 30.

Milestones
recorded

Contract

awarded

Don't get rid of those overcf!ats!

:~.77

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO .5 P.M'.·

I

at y

•

Blue 972. White 00. Gold

i

Tl-30 REG. 21.95
STUDENT MATH KIT

•

ARTISTS' CONCEPTION OF ATTEMPTED
ROBBE RY SUSPECTS ~ The Gallia County Sheriff's
Department has r eleased these composite drawings of
two white male subjects being sought in connection with
Tuesday 's attempted armed robbery ·of Elliott 's Truck
Stop, Rodrey. The subject pictured left is described as
being in his late teens or early twenty 's, 70 to 72 inches
tall , stout build , with shoulder length black hair , and a
mustache. The second subject is described as being in his
early to mid-twenlv's, 72 to 74 inches tall . weighing

1. Winathon 465tl4.

W0MEN'S DRESSES ! Hea~w~~'~tt!l!~l~c~1utSp~i!~!~ns.

I

VOL. NO. XXIX

a cost of worsening inflation, .
because the speed 6f the
increase helped push · wages
up faster .than justified by
worker productivity.
For this reason, they say
slower economic growth is
necessary to help restrain the
creation of new jobs and to
help reduce the upward
pressure on wages and
prices.
Any furth er significant
dccr.e ase in th e unem ployment rate would worsen
inflation, in the administration's view.
The administraiton is
projecting a slowin g of
economic growth to 2.2
percent this year, down from
about 4 percent in 1978. That
would not be enough to keep.
pace with new additions to
the labor force, meaning that

Weather

Entire stock included . Snow suits, jackets, long coats.
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio lAP )
Regular price $18.00 to $54.00. 2nd Floor.
~ AScioto County grand jury
Wednesday indicted two men
on charges of aggravated
murder in connection with
the slayings last wee~ of two
Portsmouth area women.
The pro&amp;ecutor's office
identified the two as James
Bell, 23, and David Gambill,
20, both of Portsmouth.
1
They are accused irr the
1
Regular sizes, S, Land XL. Super sizes 18 to 20 and trails In
Jan . 24 deaths of Donna
Our
entire
selection
women's
winter
dresses
-in
-junior,
I
sizes large and extra large .
· ·
Kennard, 20, of South Shore,
Ky., and Deborah Coleman.
' I 110.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS .•••...•••••.••••••.•••••••••••••• 16.57
regular and half sizes. REgularly $11.00 to $58.00 .
22 , o! West Portsmouth,
I 111.95-FLANNEL SHIRTS ..•.•.••••••••••••••••.••••••••.•• 17.17
whose bedies were found in
YOUR CHOICE
1
Miss Coleman's mobile
12.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ..................................
home.
I
'1395
FLANNEL SHIRl'S .......... .........................37
Prosecutor Lynn Grim- 114.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ••..•.••••••.•.•••••••••••••••••••. '8.97
shaw said Bell and Gambill
--·--._.._,._.._.._.._.,._.._._,_.._..,_,._,_._,._.._.._.._,._.._...._+_.....:.._._,.,_._,._.._._,_.._.,._.__.._, _ _ ._....
·have been in custody since
TWO DAY SAUl
TWO DAY SALEI
ihe evening of the killings
when they were arrested in
5
connection with an armed
robbery .
The indictments included
capital specifications and
I Children's Department, 2nd floor. Sweaters, tops, blouses,
Grimshaw said he will seek
Made by Texas Instrument. contains Tl -30 calculator, 224
vests, jackets. pants and skirts. Sizes2 to 14.
the . death
penalty.
page
calculator
math
book,
and
carrying
case
.
Camera
Arrajgnments for the pair are
E&gt;epartment, 1st FloQr.
scheduled Friuay in Scioto
County Gommon Pleas Court.
Grimshaw s~id the two
women who were slain h.ad
-----------.--·---~-----·----·---.._..
,
been in hi s office the day
,
'
before their de~ths furnishing
information a ~&gt;out a series of
armed robberies In the
Portsmouth area.
SQUAD RUN
But Grimshaw said the
The Pomeroy Emergency
he ret'eived from
information
Squad went to Route I,
Pomeroy, at 8:29 p.m. the women was not connected
Wednesday for Mrs. Giles with the armed robbery for
Hysell who was taken . to whi ch the two men later were
.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. a11ested.

1/
/2 PRICE

variation s.
Employment in the last two.
yea rs increased at a 4.1
percent annual rate, which
the administration said was
virtually unprecedented in
peacetime.
The proportion of the
working-ag e population
employed in 1978 rose to 59
percent. Total employment
grew by 3.3 million , outstripping an increase in the
labor force of 2. 75 million.
The p.!rcentage of women
in the Iaber force ~ those
either working or seeking
employment ~ rose 1.5
percent last year to 50.1
percent, passing the 50
percent mark for the first
time.
But President Carter and
his advisers sa)'· the substantial gains in employment
in the last two years came at

OVHS contract offer forthcoming

I
WOMEN'S
BOYS
COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR· I WINTER JACKETS

Y2 PRICE

a res ult of government efforts
to retard growth- of the
economy to help control inflation .
Both the percentage of the
population who had jobs, 59.3
percent, and the share of the
population in the labor force,
63.7 percent, were at aU-time
highs .
The Labor Department
sa.id total employment increased during the month by
450,000, with gains occurring
in most major industries.
Total employment was put at
96.3 million, while the
number of
Americans
· seeking jobs was 5.9 million.
·Adult m~n accounted for
most of the job gains in
January , although unemployment declined among all
population groups.
All figures in the report
were adjusted for seasonal

e

MEN'S WINTER CAPS
AND HATS

PRICE
Y2
__.. _. . _. ____________.___.

!

·~

,__.,_.._

COLUMBUS, Ohio I API ~ I
TWO DAY SAI.EI
TWO DAY SAi.EI
Three railroad passenger
I
train routes thorugh Ohio
would be eliminated and two
others restructured under a
plan recommended Wednesday by Transportation
Small, medium, large and ex tra large sizes. Entire stock
Secretary Brock Adams.
in this sale . Regularly $8 .00 to $32.00 .
Usually $2 .95 to $7.95. Not every size in every style.
The plan calls for almo•t
12,000 miles of routes to be
eliminated from Amtrak's
costly passenger service.
Adams said most of the
r
routes which would be
eliminated have low rider- J-·---.---------·-----------..---..---_..~_..-_.._.._.._..
ship.
I
TWO DAY SAI.EI
TWO DAY SAI.EI
If Congress does not
overturn the proposal wiihin
90 days, it will take effecton
I
Oct. l.
The routes to be discontinued include the Shenandoah between Washington
Famous makes such as Devon , Bradley, Douglas Marc, I
and Cincinnati, the National
~ Limited quantity in sizes 8 to 20. Regui;~rly $13.95 to $22.95.
Red ·i. Junior and regular sizes. 2nd Floor.
\
Limited from New York,
across Ohio to Kansas City,
and the Cardinal, which runs
between Washington and
- - - . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - - . . . _ . . -..-.._...._.,_,,_,_,_,_+--------_..._.._.._...._.._.._.._..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Chicago, passing through
Cincinnati and Hamilton.
TWO DAY SAI.EI
TWO DA.Y SAI.EI
Routes to be restructured
under the plan include The
Lake Shore Limited. It now
eonnects both New York and
Entire stock of winter pajamas. waltz and long gowns, I
Boston in the east with
good selection of colors and siyles . Lingerie , 2nd Floor .
I Not all si zes, winter gowns, pajamas and robes. Children 's
Chicago, with the New York
and Boston trains joining in
department. 2nd floor·. While they last.
Albany and proceeding
through Buffalo, Cleveland
I
and Tol edo. The combined
trains would be 'rerouted
through Detroit, eliminating
passenger service to Erie, r------..-.-._...-._._.._.._.._._,_._._.._._.._._..._.._._.._..t'_..._..__,.._._._.. _ _ .._ _ _ _ .._._.._._..._._.__..._.. _ _-1
Pa.
The Clev ela nd-Chicago
TWO DAY SA LEI
I
J:WO DAY SAI.EI
segment would be served by a '
re structur ed Broadway
Limited. The Broadway now
serves New York and
I Short and long lengths, Sizes small _ thru extra large.
C hi cago
through
Flannels _and .brushed rayons. Lmgene, 2nd Floor.
Philadelphia, Canton, Ohio,
and Fort Wayne, Ind. The
I
Sizes 38 to 50. Entire se lection on sale . While they last
new plan calls for the PittsRegu lar sizes $29 .95 t o r /·
I
burgh-L'hicago segment to be
rerouted via Toledo and
Cleveland.

W9MEN'S SWEATERS

•

-·

' Friday, Feb. 2nd and Saturday, Feb. ~rd
OPEN FRIDAY NIGKT TIL 8 O'CLOCK·

Jenkin Jones., 77, or

------------------------£-

Nation'S unemployment
rate declined shaq)ly

.,
\.

By DAVE TOMLIN
Associated Press Writer
,.
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. CAP) Punzsutawney Phil saw his shadow today, a:nd
according to the legend that means the nation
is in for six more weeks of snow and cold.
The ·Groundhog Day forecast came as no
surprise to several hundred onlookers who
waited to hear the groundhog's verdict in
several inches of snow ~md ,toe-numbing subteen temperatures.
Phil's •· official
guardians,
the
Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, insisted that
although skies were clou'dy here, Phil had seen
"a pale. shadow" and predicted "six more
weeks of mild winter weather."
Phil himself did not emerge voluntarily
from his burrow on Gobbler's Knob , but was
. trundled out on a special sliding drawer and
hung limply in the hands o_f a club men:t~r
while the club president delivered the offiCial
word.
'
Accotding to German legend in these
parts, Punxsutawney Phil emerges from ·
hibernation each year on Groundhog Day·,
Feb. 2, and points his nose to the winter
breeze.
If he sees his shadow, the squat, furry
beast scampers back into his hole, and the

nation is in for six more weeks of snow and ice.
If he doesn't, spring is just around the corner.
· Elsewhere, sayings from around the
world link Candlemas Day - Feb. 2
animals, and weather predictions.
Charles Hosler, a meteorologist at
Pennsylvania State University, offered these
examples from England:
"If it snows on 2nd February , only so
much as may be seen on a black ox, then
summer will soon come."
"If on 2nd February the goose finds it wet,
then the sheep will have grass on 25th March ."
But here, it's the groundhog that counts.
Local tradition insists Phil is the same critter
that began the annual happening 92 years ago,
although most groundhogs live seven or eight
years . The event has put Punxsutawney on the
map , and
grateful citizenry has '
embroidered Phil's appearance with a heavy
schedule of festivities .
Phil spends most of the year in a warm ·
enclosure at the Punxsutawney Library and
Museum .
Thursday night, he ~as taken into the cold
and lodged in a heated burrow on Gobbler's
Knob, south of town, in preparation for his
early - morning app~a11ance.

a

HOST BRIEFING ~ Gallia Cotmtians Frank
Cre111eans, second from left, and Skip Meadows, far right,
are shown discussing Ule upcoming Meigs-Gallia-Mason
Boy Scouts of America Sustaining Enrollment Drive
durihg a table hosts meeting held Thursday night at the
Holidav Inn. Cremeans and Meadows will be table hosts
.

.....

for the kick-off d(nner tn '!le"neld at uscar'·s on March 8.
Also pictured are M-G-M Scout Executive Jim Gilmour,
far left and M-G-M District Chairman Dr . Bernard
Niehm, 'also of Gallia County. The briefing dinner was
sponsored by City Ice &amp; Fuel Go, of Point Pleasant.

•'

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