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                  <text>)).10-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. Feb. 4. 1979

Cleveland's new budget below 1978 :e xpenditures
'

.

CLEVELAND (AP ) - A
$137.5
million
budget
presented by Mayor Dennis
J . Kucinich is $10 million
below 1978 actual city expe,nditures and still relies on
tapping bond receipts to pay
off government debts.
"With inflation taking its
toll, labor contracts to be
fulfilled and ~h deficits to
be made up. you don't submit

a budget $10 million less than
last year," said City Council
President George L. Forbes,
who denounced the speqding
plan as a distortion.
" It is obvious to me that the
mayor knows less about tfie
financial affairs of the city of
Cleveland nOW than before we
went into default," added
Forbes, chairman of the
council's budget committee.

'

The city sank Jnto default
Dec. 15 when it could not
repay $14 million in no.t&lt;'S
held by six local banks.
in his budget message,
Kucinich wrote that he will
reduce costs where possible ·
without massive layoffs.
Thomas M. Acklin, · a
private consultant hired by
council as a budget adviser,
said his review of the

'

document indicates that the
adm ini stration is "either

going to be laying off 1employees ) or serio,usly curtailing services" to ·makc the
budget work.
"My administration will
fight against waste and
inefficiency wherever they
are found." · Kucinich said.

Acklin said it appears that
Om• reason the 1979 budget
is lower than 1978 expenses is Kucinich will &lt;:ontinue to
that the city paid a $12.2 borrow from receipts of bond
million coort·order e d. sales earmarked for capital
juugment last year to the 'improvements to cover acCleveland Electric cumulated deficits.
Joseph "G, Tegreene, forIlluminating C0 . for elecmer
finance director and now
tricity purchased in previous
years for the city,owncd Kucinich 's chief of staff, said
that while the mayor deplores
electric company.

the practice of using bond
funds. the tactic was so
widespread under former
mayors that it is impossible
to stop now.
The budget submitted
Thursday by Kucinich's staff
does not show how additional
revenues would be used if
voters approved a 50,percent

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(AP) - State mandates to
reduce ozone and carl!on
monoxide concentrations in
air over the Youngstown area
by 1982 could inhibit
economic gro"ih, a regional
plaMing agency says.
The heavily industrialized
Mahoning Valley area is still
trying to recover from sharp
steel industry retrenchments

••
••
•

in 1977.
1be Ohio Environmentai
Protection Agency has ordered a 72 percent reduction
of ozone concentrations from
1975 levels in Mahoning · and
Trumbull counties and a 15.9
percent reduction in carbon
monoxide.
'!be Eastgate Development
and Transportation Agency
said such restraints sub-

stantially would increase
costs for nearly one-fifth of
Ohio's industry, especially in
stee l
and
automobil e
production.
The annual value or goods
produced in the two counties
is $16. I billion in terms of 1977
dollars. or 18.3 percent of the
state's output, according to
the study.

•••••••••••••••••

:Jb c report was released
Thursday by the planning
organization of local governmental
agencies
in
Ashtabula , Co lumbi ana,
Mahoning and Trumbull
counties .

~al ~

••
••

C£state=••

Today ••

••
•

By

•••
••

.

••
•

Willis T. Leadi.--gham

Realtor

THE OFFER TO BUY

• You are sellin Q your
•hom e. A prospect inspects
• It, likes it, and decides to

:

emak e an offer . You can
edepend on human nature.

OnCe these elements are
fulfilled, it ' s up to you to
either accept his lower
offer. reject it outright, or
make a coun ter offer to sell

• He will fry to ha\le you
•accept an offer lower than

somewhere bet ween the •
two. Just r.emember , if it's •

all , if

10
no
wr t tng
an
accompanied
by
a ·•

•

William Fergus, executive
director of the agency, and
George Zokle Jr., a transportation engineer. both said
relief is possible .

•

your asking

pri~e.

Now wha t? First of

e you are going to even
e consider an offer, it must
e be in writing and signed. It
• must have a def inite time
•lim it, and it should be
accompan ied
by
a
.• respectible amount of the
• .buy er's money as an
e indication of his sincerity .
e The spec ific amount wi ll
• depend on the value of your
hom e, ' t he
mpr1gage
• mark et and the bu yer ' s
• financial
con d it i on .
• Resp ect yo ur Realtor ' s
e advice on this sub ject

t

·

· t·

e•
•
•
•

d

reasonable

amount of
money taking your house
off the market wou ld be
poor judgment .

•

e
•
•
•

11 th ere i s anything we
ca n do to help you in th e
fi eld of ree11 estate pl ease
phone or drop in at
LEADINGHAM
REAL
ESTATE, 512 Second Av e.,
Gallipolis . Phone 44 6·7699 .
We're here to help ,

e

e

•
•

e
e

•

e
•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Fergus said that a week
ago, federal Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Douglas Castle
said agency studies showed
ozone standards were too
stringent. Castle raised acceptable federal levels from
.08 to .12 parts per million.
and the change . could affect
the state mandate.
"This would have a substantial change on current
plaMing, but we don't know
what it willl&gt;e," Fergus said.
Meanwh il e, Zokle
challenge d the computer
model used to analyze Ohio's
pollution level, saying it was
invalid for the Youngstown
area. He said a different
method would produce more
'

.

VOL. NO. XXIX

A petition drive designed to
oust the current board of
directors of Buckeye Rural
Electric was initiated Sunday
when cooper~tive members
met to air their grievances

NO·FROST
$·
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skid plate duel mirrors, all terrain rubber. Sticker $8940.

Soviets importing U. S. beer
WILDER, ldabo (AP) - The Soviet Union, best
known in drinking circles for vodka consumption, is
sudden ly importing enaugh American hops to make
more than a"billion gallons of beer a year.
'!'he chairman of the Idaho Hops Commission says
the Soviet purchases have turned the hops-farming
industry around. But he says he doesn't know why hops
are suddenly. popular in the U.S.S.R.

• Standard Capacity
• 3 Drying Selections - Nor~a(
• 2 Cycles- Regular and Special
Low, No heat fluff
'
Including Perm Press and
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Polyester Knits
e
• Porcelain Enamel Finished
• Removable.Up-Front lint Filler Clothes Drum

.• Standard Capacity, Sjngle
Speed Washer
• 3 Weter levels let's you
match the water level to
load size

• 2 Cycles-Regular and
Permanent Press

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• $ Temperature

• Filler:flo~ System
• Porcefal.n Enamel Finished
Top, Lid, Tub 11o Besket
· • Unbalanced Load Control
System

•

Driv_e to Elberfelds Mechanic
Warehouse - Plenty of free parking _ easy
loadmg ramp. Open every weekday 9:30 IJ..M, to 5 P.M. &lt;;- Friday 9:30A.M to a
P.M. - Saturday 9.:30 A.M. to 5 P.M.
.

ELB

CoQ~blnatlon

(in timer)

PHILADELPHIA (AI')- Ronald Reagan, a likely
contender in the 1980 Republican presidential •ace
shares a Los Angeles office and tel ephone number with
longtime associates who represent Taiwan 'in the
United States, The Bulletin reported Sunday.
The newspaper, in a cop)Tight story, quo~es an
unidentified Justice Department lawyer as saying the
firm could lind itself in a "precarious position" If
Reagan becomes an official candidate. Reagan, who
sought the . 1976 Republican presidential nomination,
was unavrulable for comment Sunday.

Avalanches killed 3 persons

St.

cooperative you

ovm."

negotiations between Bakhtiar and the Khomeini camp .
Kh~m~m1 says the Bakhtiar government, appointed by the
shah, IS Illegal and vows to abolish the mon1lrchy and establish
a religiously oriented republic.
Again Sunday the prime minister refused to step down. ·But
he told the newspaper Ettelaat that Khomeini could create a
"shadow Cabinet" as British political parties out of power do.
"But 11 th1s prliDe minister-designate starts creatin g disorders and riots ~nd wants to interfere with the lega l order of
the country, I w1ll arrest him, " Bakhtiar said.
Opposition sources descvibe the negotiations as a "tug of
war" for the allegiance of the Iran's 430 000-man military
which holds the key to the current power str~ggle.

Massive traffic
jams
.
.
caused by tractorcade
-

'

WASHINGTON (AP) One major commuter artery
was closed and mas sive
snags developed on others
before dawn today as
thousands
of farm ers
chugged into the capital
aboard tractors and trucks to
demand higher government
price supports for their crops.
At least four separate cavalcades,
totaling
an
estimated 1,500 to 2,000
vehicles, edged into U1e city
from staging areas in
Virginia and Maryland . The
George
Wa s hin g t o n
Parkway, a principal eastwest route for tens of
thousa nds of commuters
from both state., was closed·
by police to all but the farm
traffic .
·
Meanwhile, a 20-m ile.Jong
line of 750 farm vehicles
crossed the Potomac River
from the south over the city's
busiest bridge, emptying into

........

-

'

the city just short of the Agricultl\re Department and
creating a huge traffic jam at
the height of rush hour.
Texas farmer Marvin
Meek, the. wagonmaster for
that group, looked over his
shoulder at the endless line of
blinking tractor lights and
exulted into his CB radio: " It
looks just like a damn
Christmas tree!"
Police urged regular
motorists to choose mass
transit or car pools for their
ride int o the city, and
suggested alternate routes to
those normally selected. But
th ose alternatives were few
in a city that offers access for
many commuters over just a
handful of bridges.
The farmers represented
the American Agriculture
Movement, which staged a
similar
but
smaller
demonstration in .the capital
a year ago that produced

.

'

'

some isolated violence.
Police said they expected up
to 30,000 farmers in the city
this time.
The stated plans were for
two days of demonstrations,
followed by at least two
weeks of small-group
lobbyin g of members of
Congress. But police weren't
counting on a set agenda.
Capitol Police Chief James
M. Powell said, "They say
that no one is in charge, they
have no leaders." He gave
permission for 9,000 people to
rally today and Tuesday on
the Capitol steps .
Protesters said they left for
Washington angry and aren't
feeling any happier after
driving from as far away as
Texas through bad weather.
They said they intended to
disr upt ru shhour traffic
daily,
though
Joyce
Robinson, an American Agriculture delegate from
Montana, said at a Sunday
news conference, " I really

ReagaiJ. shares office, phone

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-150 STEPSIDE PICKUP

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP ) -Palestinian guerrillas
fought a bloody battle with a unit of United Nations
soldiers from Fiji because the Fijians "executed " one
of their guerriila comrades, a radical Palestinian
group said Sunday.
·
Two Fijian soldiers werf killed and four
Norwegian sOldiers died in.a helicopter crash as they
tried to rescue two other Fijians who were wounded in
the southern Lebanon clash Saturday, U.N. officials
reported.

.

1979 DODGE W-150

1979 DODGE

_.

CLEVELAND (AP) - The financial and school
crises in Cleveland may have contributed to a rise in
mental health problems among the city's ·residents,
according to medical authorities. figtires show the
caseload at Cleveland's four mental health centers has
doubled since last year.
Dr. Barry Gordon, director of the office of
counseling and community services for the
Department of Health and Welfare, said its workers
are seeing "more frUstration e&lt;pressed in violent and
scary ways."

V-8, auto ., P .S , P.B., RT Pkg ., chrome road wheels, spoiler tint . g la ss, undercoat,
AM-F M 8 tra ck: P . B., con sole , bucket seat s. Sticker $6418.25.

'7799

"I

point his ministers and introduce them to me," Khomeini sail
at a news conference.
Bazargan, a longtime humanrights activist and a Moslem
nationalist, was seated next to Khomeini during the meeting
with reporters at a Moslem school.
There was a press report ea rlier today that the Iranian military, which has pledged supp.ort to the Bakhtiar government,
was reinforcmg lroops stalwned outside and inside some
government ministries.
Bakhtiar has warned his foes he would "answer Molotov
cocktail for Molotov cocktail" if they carry out Khomeini 's
threat to launch a holy war to oust him.
·
s:ua·rgan is believed to have acted as a go-between in secret

Problems contributed

1_9 79 DODGE ASPEN RT COUPE

wag~n

• .J

Bloody battle fought Sunday

1979 PLYMOUTH CHAMP .

WGN.

'

DAYTON, Ky. (AP)- Paul Hopper, 19, of Dayton
has been charged with murder in a fatal shooting
following' a weekend party.
The body of Timothy LeFevers, 19, was found in his
parents' home in Dayton early Sunday shortly before
Hopper surrendered to police. "He stopped the cruiser
and surrendered himself," Police Chief Jerry Early
said. Hopper, who apparently did not know LeFevers
until they met at the party Saturday, was being held in
Campbell County Jail under $20,000 bond·Sunday night.

V-8, auto ., P .S., P. B., fl oor mats, speed cont rOl. AM-F.M 8 track, tih w hee l, vinyl root.
premier whee l co~ ers. Sticker $8245 .05 .
·
,

~

Cooperative · Manager

which as members It was

Clyde Ramsay was the target

claimed, they ha ve a full
legal right to review.

of heavy criticism as ap·

proximately 500 memb ers
and interested parties from
throughout Buckeye's five
district , nine county, service

area discussed membership
rights, electric rates , and the
current strike by Local 2359
of
the
International
Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers 1I.B .E.W. ) against
the cooperative .
One steering committee
member, Anne Zimmer, said
of Ramsay , "He may have
put 40 years of hls life into the
cooperative, but he 's also put
40 years of our money into
it. "

During the meeting , the
committee charged that
Ramsay had refused them
access to informat ion
regarding the operation of th~
, cooperative - · information

It wa s assert e d "during

the afternoon meeting that
the comm1ttee would seek a
co urt order to have the books
opened, if necessar y.
Ram say, who wa s not

/

present i:lt Sunday's meeting,

said last week he wo uld not
attend since th e last time he
appe ared at such a meeting ,
he claimed t110 se present
would not allow him to speak
- th at he had been jeered
and heckled as he attempted
to expla in the operation of the
cooperative.
The strike by Local 2359 of
the J. B. E.W. ag ainst the
coo pe rati ve

en t er ed

·'

th e

disc ussion of Buckeye's rates
as an area elect rical unio n

leader, Charli e · Panca ke,
charged th at th.e use of non·
!Continueil on page 101

K.homeini names oil engineer prime minister

....-Nationwise·~

1979 DODGE MAGNUM XE

against
the
current
management of the utility.
The move to prepare and
circulate petitions calling for
a special meeting for the
ouster of the present directors and the election of a new
board was taken foJiowing a
two hour meeting at Rio
Grande College.
The emphasis throughout
the meeting centered around
the rights of the members to
control the management of
the cooperative.
State Representative Ron
James (D -Proctorvill c)
voiced the mood of th e crowd
as he urged member · to,
" Take control of th e

grievances against the management. Membership rights, elec tric rates
charged by the cooperative, and the current strik~ by Local 23o9 of the
l.B.E. W. against the utility highlighted the two hour meeting.

A PETITION DRIVE design~d to call a special meeting to oust the
current board of directors of Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative began
Sunday when approximately 500 members of the coop met to air their

TEHRAN, Iran ( AP) - Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini today
named 70-year-old oil engineer and veteran opposition politician Mehdi Bazarga,n asprime minister of a "lransitional government" to pave th e way for creation of an Islamic republic
in Iran .
Khomeini called on the people of Iran to obey the new
14
revolutionary" government.
The announcement set the stage for a possible showdown
with Prime Minisier Shahpour Bakhtiar, who has threatened
to arrest Khomeini if the religious leader tries to supplant
Bakhtiar's sitting government.
"I am appointing Mehdi Bazargan, who is an honest and
religious person, as head of a transitional government to ap-

'4589

15 CENTS

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1979

PetitiOn drive
started Sunday

'

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.. .... ~

'

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 205

.

Youth charged with murder

1979 PLYMOUTH VOLARE ST.

'---·

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

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·

.

ELBERFELDS IN POM E·ROY

1

4 Dr .• 4 sp .,

enttne

at y

e
(USPS 145·960,

•

•

.

.

Mandates could inhibit growth

increaSe in the city payroll
tax Feb. 27.
The Citizens League oE
Greater Cleveland has said
that
unless
sweeping .
economies are put Into effect,
as 'recommended by a report
to the city by an outside
auditing firm, the city could
end this year with a $51
million deficit.
· Finance Director Mary T. •
Medvick said, however, that
she is questioning those
conclusions.
.'.

WAsHINGTON (AP) _:_ Only three Americans
have died in avalanches this snow season, a statistic
government experts consider encouraging, but the
worst may be yet to come. The nwnber of fatalities is
slightly below normal, ~id Knox Williams of the
government's Mountain Snow Management an d
Hazlird Evaluation Group in Fort Collins, Colo·.
Two persons were killed ir( January and one
perished llefore \he first of the year, Williams said. He
salll over the past five years the United States has
averaged 16 fatalities in avalanches per season .
•

Man
injured in
.
Sunday mishap
Officers report that a north
Dean Hawk, 25, West
Columbia, W. Va., was ad- bound auto operated by
mitted to Veterans Memorial Marcum went out of· cWJtrol
Hospital Sunday for injuries in a sharp curve, passed off
sustained during a one- the right side of the roadway
vehicle accident in Meigs and struck an embankment.
Marcum was transported
County on SR 7 one and fivetentbs of a mile north of U.S. by the · Gal!ia Volunteer ·
Squad to Holzer Medical
33.
The Gallla-Mcigs Post, Center, where he was treated
Highway Patrol, called to the ·for a contusion of th e
scene at 1:35 a.m., reports forehead and a sprain of the
that a south bound auto lower back and released.
There was heavy damage
opetated by Hawk went off
the left side of the roadway to the vehicle. No citation was
and struck a rock wall.
issued.
An auto operated by
Hawk displayed visible
signs of inj ury and was trans- Randal Reiber, 32, Racine,
ported by SEOEMS to was demolished Uuring a oneVeterans Memorial, where he vehicle accident Saturday in
Meigs Co unty on CR 30, onewas admitted.
tenth
of a mile east of SR 7, at
Hawk was cited on charges
of OWl and operating a motor 9 p.m.
The patrol reports that
vehicle without a li cense. The
Reiber's
east bound auto
vehicle was demolished.
went
out
of
control, passed off
Donald S. Marcum, 29,
Bidwell, was treated at the right sid e of the roadway
Holzer Medical Center for and overturned ih &lt;.1 creek .
ftciber claimed injury, but
injuries sustained during a
Saturday ·accident on ~R 160, was not immediately treated .
five-tenths of a mil e north of No citation was Issued.
milepost 11. at 6:55a .m.

don't think we'll cause many
problems. We'll be starting
very ea rly."

Ex tra officers
were
ordered on· du1y , and riotcontrol units were to stand by
"to handle whatever is
. necessary," police said.

...

'

The military high command supports Bakhtiar and has hinted at an army takeover if Khomeini 's forces attempt to depose
the prime minister. But Khom eini 's aides cJaim up lo 60

percent of the troops side with them .
The chief mediator between the two sides is believed to be
Mehdi Baiargan , a longtime fnend of Bakh tiar who was
Khomeini 's personal envo)" in negotiations with strik ing oil
workers.
Informed sources said he has met with Khomeini. Bakhtial"
and at least two senior military leaders within the past few
days. There ha been speculation that Khomein will na me him
prime minister in hs provisional gov ernm ent.
The viol ent street clashes which have plagued the nation for
much Of the past 13 months have fallen off sharply since
Khomeini 's triumphant retw·n from exile last Thursday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through
friday: Cold throughout
tbe period. Snow possiblo
Wednesday. High In the 20s
to low 30s Wednesday and
in tbe low tu mid 20s Thursday and Friday. Overnight
lows five to 15.

As they did during four

months of demonstrations
and lobbying a year ago, the
protesters contend farm
prices are too low for them to
make ends meet. They want
to force
the Ca rte r
administration to raise price
supports to their legal limit.
Go\'ernment agencies ha ve
recently furnished statistics
that show prices paid the
operators of America 's 2.3
million farms rose 20 percent
in the last year. more than
double the rate of inflation .
Net farm equity - what
farmers use to borr ow
operating cash at loca l banks
- rose II percent, despite
many individual farmers'
dire straits .
The protesters prefer the
"parity" indeli; another t!Jeoretical measure of buying
power based on th e farm
economy of 1910-)4. Prices
then registered the 100
percent of parity they want
again. That indicator showed
1978 to be one of the three
worst years since the Depression.
Cong ressional hearings
have not been schedul~ on
the handful of bills introduced
in response to the farmers'
earlier demands .

Bitter cold
will remain
across Ohio
By The Associated Press
Skies will be clear tonight
as the result of a high
pressure zone that moved

Into Ohio during the day. The
system will keep bitter cold
temperatures in the slate for
another night .
The Nationa l Weather
Service says temperatures
will become slightly milder
with increasing cloudiness on
Tuesday, as southerly winds
move into th e state behind the
high pressure zone.
The lows toni ght are
expected to range from 5
below zero to 5 above. The
highs Tuesday are forecast in
the 20s.

Wood stove
blamed f~r
house fire
A wood burner stove is
believed to have caused a fire
that destroyed a home O\med

by Dennis Howell. Hysell
Run. Rt. 4, Po meroy.
Saturday at I I :20 p.m. Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reports.
The Rutland fire department
responded to the call.
The sheriff's departm ent
received a report from Rand y
Griffith. Plymouth. N. C..
th at hi s truck had damage to
the right rear quarter panel
made by an unkn own vehicle.
The incident is under investi ga ti on .

Weather
Clear tomght with a low of
zero to five above. Mostly
sunny Tuesday morning with
lncreasing cloudiness in the
afternoon. Not quite as cold
with a high Tuesday of 20 to

..

.

30.

LODGE MEETING
Pomeroy Lodge 164. F &amp;.
MEETING SET
The Meigs County History AM will meet in regular
Book COmmittee will meet at session at 7:30 p.m. Wed7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the nesday . All Master Masons
are invited.
Meigs Museum.

•

STATE REPRESENTATIVE Ron James (second
from right) explained wthe 500 member gathering that
since Buekhe Rural is a cooperative, neither the Public
Utilities Cmhmissiori of Ohio or the Federal Regulatory

Energy Agency has jurisdiction over the company's rates .
To put the cooperative under PUCO control, a bill would
have to be enacted by the' Legislature. James urged those
present to "take control of the cooperative you own."

·.

�2- The.Patly Senttnel , Mtddleport-P0111eroy, 0 . Mouday . ~ .. ~

!J l ~lil

IN WASHINGTON

SWHStops

THE U.S. AND YOU

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

W111iam Stetf

NG, 79-62

'

How to _pay for college

SElfSlR'JJCE

Questionable recovery
Ry Martha Angle and Robert Walters

By William Stell

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Worrted about possible Oil
shortages mduced by the political turmotl tn Iran• Have no
fear, because the federal government has stockpiled more

The number to telephone for financial advice, if you or
anyone m y,our family is gomg to college or planmng to go
to college, i's 800-638-6700.
'
• ""
. Ia
That 1s a toll-free number anywhere tn the 48 contmen I
states (it doesn't work in Alaska and Hawall).
The center ts staffed from 8:30 a .m. to 6 p.m. EST
Monday through Fnday, Twenty persons work there,
answering questions about how to pay for college.
The center is the starting point for you or anyone In your
family warned about financing a college educatiOn.
There are 11.4 million students In U.S. CQJI~~es,
umversities and post-high school mstitutlons now and 1t sa
good bet the vast majority have money wornes .
• That's one rellson Congress last fall enacted, and the
presldent signed, the Middle-Income Student Assistance
Act which considerably broadens federal help for college
students The other reason IS that the cost of a youngster
going to college today IS nearly out of stght for the average
.
family
Four-year college costs have n sen 6 perce_nt annually
smce 1973 The American Counctl on EducatiOn recently
compiled the cost of attending pmrate umversltles and
fo und the average was a total of $6,600. And there are few
signs of a slowdown.
.
So It's incumbent on you to start gettmg the mformallon
needed to finance college. Now IS not too soon to start for
next fall
The Middle--Income Student Assistance Act opens up
federal grants to students from families who.se mcomes
are as high as $25,000 a year. Even more _Important, the
new law broadens the federal student lending ~rogram so
that any family, regardless of income, can 9~ahfy for lowmterest loans with special repayment provisions.
There are five big fed eral college-aid programs:
BASIC EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY GRANTS,
which Will assist more than a million students in 1979 With
$2 btlllon·plus. The money goes dtrectly to the student and
the grant ca n be as high as $1,800 or half the toal cost of
going to college yearly, whichever Is less. Average grant:
$950. Family income determines eltgibility.
SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY
GRANTS which amounted to $270 million for 460,000
students last year The grant can be as much as $1,500 a
year
COLLEGE WORK-STUDY, which m 1978 enabled 960,000
students to earn more than $400 million through 3,000
colleges. Student pay usually Is around the minimum

than 70 million barrels of petroleum for JUSt s uch an

emergenc)'.
There 1s however one small problem Although the
Departme~t of Energv has pumped the crude otl into vast
underground salt caverns along the Gulf Coast, nobody at
DoE ts qutte sure how to get it out agqin.
As a ma tter of fact, DoE has encountered a few other

dtfftcultws wtth tts Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPRJ
program, destgned to assure the country of a !50-day otl
supply in the event of an mternattonal crtsts. Among those
problems
• In less than two years, DoE's estimate ofthe cost of the
SPR program has more than doubled, from '' 5-1 per
barrel predicted m May 1977 to $3 35 per barrel currently
proJected
The on gmal plan called for placmg 500 mtlhon barrels of
oil in storage at a total cost of $7 6 billion But the btg
spenders at DoE now are talking about a one billion barrel
reserve with a $25 billion price tag
• Federal officials onginally claimed they would have
125 million barrels m storage by the beginning of this year,
then boldly doubled that estimate to 250 million barrels In
fact
only about
mtlhon
barrels
now are to
in reserve.
• ,Many
of the70salt
caverns
designated
hold the otl II'
proved madequate, producmg major delays m filling them
But the DoE offtclals buymg the crude petroleum
contin ued to order additional shipments at a rapid pace
As a result, DoE last autumn was paying more than $2
'\. mtlllon a month m demurrage - the vessels must stand
idle off the
coast
until the recipient is prepared to accept
delivery
of the
cargo.
Instead of prov1dmg a guaranteed supply of oil if Imports
fro_m a maJor supplier (such as Iran ) are unexpectedly
halted or sharply curta iled, the SPR program has become
a textbook' example of a government undertakmg plagued
by unforeseen problems, unscheduled gelays1 cost over-

'*******"'**************************************'fQ* Poet's Corner

•1-1 • l oprnzons
• •
l4
*** Ed z*orza
Jt
*1
,
*
.*
_.*************************"*'******************wl

runs a nd m tscalculahons.
Currently bemg fill ed with oil are s ubte rranea n caverns

near Bryan Mount, Tex ; West Hackberry, La , and Bayou
Choctaw, La A mine at Weeks Island, La is bemg
prepared and a fifth site IS bemg acqUired at Sulphur
Mmes, La.
The most publicized event m the history of the progri'm
occurred at West Hackberry last year, when DoE
contractors allowed too much pressure to bmld up whtle
pumpmg oil mto a salt dome .
The otl spurted from the cavity, htt a hot diesel engme
and Ignited The fire burned out of control for five days,
one man was ktll ed , others were burned crttlcally and two
dnlhng n gs were destroyed. Total cost to the taxpayers :
$12 mtllion
" I want to know If anybody m DoE knows anything about
drilling mto a salt cavity ,'' says Rep W. Henson Moore, RLa "That is what happened down there. Nobody knew
what the he ll th ey were domg (and) tt blew vp ,"
On a more mundane level, DoE officials have belatedly
discovered that the mmes must be greatly expanded
through a process called bnmng - pumpmg fresh water
mto the caverns to was h a way the salt a nd provide more

storage space.
The sa lt water or brine then Is pumped baqk to the
surface but there IS, m the words of one DoE official, "a
fundamental problem with brine dtsposal " Thousands of
barrels of brme are bemg produced each day , but the
government can't fmd a place to dump it
What about reclaiming the 01! durmg a major e ner~y
crtsis ? "The withdrawal engineering is something, str,
that we ha ve not done," a DoE official recently told a
House subcommittee chaired by Rep. John D Dtngell, DMich
·
DoE promises to have "withdrawal plans" ready by next
summer. By then, 11 w1ll have dumped more than 125
mtlhon barrels of oil into the ground without really
kn•&gt;wiing how to recover 11

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb . M.D.

Try tht· hest tranquilizt•r
DEAR DR LAMB - I'm
wr1tmg to ask If you can help
me My doctor of 30 years has
been giving me Vahum for
the past eight years I have
taken It m good faith not
knowmg one could become
addicted to II, thmkmg I could
stop Without any adverse effects I take 5 rnilhgrams in
the mormng and at night.
I &lt;Is! week I decided I would
stop takmg this drug. But
after v1ewmg a TV progra m,
I was very upset With all the
accounts that takmg this drug
Will cause Withdrawal symptoms and that a person could
have convulsion~ and many
unpleasa nt thmgs happen
Thts worrtes me
I cut the dosage m half and
am now takmg one half m the
mormng and one half at
mg ht But I do feel a b1t shaky
and nervous

l am very disappomted m
my doctor for doing lhts to
me. Also, 1f this drug Is so
dangerous, why m the name
of heaven do doctors give 11
to us ' I am very confused
about this and I certamly do not want to contmue takmg
Valium What should I do '
Many people, I e:tm sure,
would hke to have your opt moo on this matter so please
~ n s wer

Anyone who has been takmg
bar biturates for a long period
of tune m a reasonably large
dosage ma y also have
withdrawal symptoms
Afew decades ago some Informed individuals knew that
if they took large doses of
barbiturates and stopped
them that they could produce
convulsions Thts was used by
some unscrupul ou.s mdlVlduals to sunulale epllepltc attacks to avmd mihlai y
servtce
'the proper way to get off
most of these med1cmes 1s
gra dual withdrawal, which. !
see IS what you are doing It 's
the abrupt stopping of the
med1cme that leads to
withdrawalreacllons
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 12-2,
Sedallves, Hypnoti cs and
Tranquilizers · The Pill Problem Th1s will give you more
mformation on all of the different med1cmes that Interact m this way. Other
readers who want this Issue
can send 50 cents w1th a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for 11 Send your request to me m care of th1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Radto C1ty StatiOn , New,
y ork , !0019
Alcohol fall s mto thts same
group Alcohol, tranquiliZers
and . sedatives all tend to
depress the functions of the
brain. They interact and
that's why people who take
tranquilizers or sedatives
should not drmk alcohol.
The other suggestion I'd
!Ike to make to readers who
feel they need to take tranqmltzers is, to re..examme
thetr lifestyle Many people
are takmg tranquilizers and
drmkiQg coffee or tea or
colas Caffeine, present in
coffee , stimulal&lt;•s the bram
and has essentially the opposite action on your nervous
system as tranquihzer.s . The.
hest tranqlllliZPr 11111ny people can get is In stop drinkmg

DEAR READER - Let me
say at the outset that lam not
at all fond of people taking
tranqmlizers 4if any type.
Even so, there are temporary
situatiOns when the temporary use of such agents is
beneficial.
l don 'I like to use the word
add1etmg because that mvolves deftmtions. I would
prefer to say that a person
who takes most tranquiliZers
over a long period of lime can
develop psychologtcal and
phystological dependency on
such med1cmes That mcludes Valium
This IS not particularly new
to the medical professwn
smce the entire borbtturate
group has the sa me effect these bevcrugt•s

••

)j

Ohio perspective
'

By TOM GILLEM
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Oh10 I AP J A man and a woman divorce,
and suddenly one of them ts
cut from their JOint health
Insurance policy and faced
w1th the prospects of no
medtcal coverage
What can that person do ?
This scenario is played out
almost every day m domes\lc
relatiOns courts throughout
Oh!o, accordmg to Common
Pleas Judg e John J.
Leskovyansky of Youngstown.
At I.eskovya nsky's urgmg,
two senators have Introduced
a bill that would require
health msurance companies
to offer a spouse unmedtate
medical coverage when the

person ts dropped from a h•m on the bench with a
fn ght ened look when told she
policy due to divorce.
""I've seen situatiOns wben would no lon ger have
divorce cases have been coverage
"How am I gomg to hve,"
delayed a year or two
because a woman was havmg the JUdge quoted her as
surgery and couldn 't afford to saymg
Sen Mar1gene Valiquette,
be dropped from her
husband 's msurance policy,' D-Toledo, and Sen. Harry
Leskovyansky sa id m a Meshel , D-Youngstown, are
sponsormg the measure that
telephone mterv1ew
In one mstance, a man attempts to help divorced
dela) ed
hi s
planned spouses
Under the legislatiOn, any
remarrlage for more than a
yea r so his estranged w1fe mdlVldual subscnber of a
who needed eKpe nsive hospital service assoc1at10n
surgery could benefit from or Indi\Ildual stckn ess or
their medical msurance , the accident pohcy would contain
a provtston guaranteeing
JUdge smd
Lesko&gt;yansky said once a coverage of a spouse after a
woman mvo)ved m a set- ma rri age IS ended by
tlement hearing looked up at dtvor ce, annulment or
dissolutiOn Under present
procedures, most msurance
companies requtre a wa1tmg
period
______ The sp_Quse, would lose the
joint Cove ra ge but co uld
apply within 60 days of the
marr1age ' s end for a new
policy , and would be provtded
coverage "that 1s most nea rly
Similar to the terminated
coverage," the btll says
There
can
be
no
probatiOnary or waiting
period 1f coverage was tn
fo rce under the priOr policy
taken out Gas• 1s high, you or contract. the legislatiOn
know! Smcerely your s,
says
Harold White , P 0 Box 32,
Many JUdges tn Ohio have
La ngsv ille, OH 4574 1
md1cated they plan to push
for the bill's enactment
du rin g this Legislature,
Leskovyansky said.
The Duil y Sentin el
~

Dear Edttor and Public ·
We the dediCated Sub bus
drivers have done so much,
with so little, for so long, we
are no w quahh cd to do
anythmg with nothmg It
seems that way We try to get
along w1th your chtldren and
we do quite well constdermg
we don't k11ow some of the
routes very well But
sometimes the children will
try us Subs too much Please,
Moms and Dads, don't get
mad when you get a letter
from school Help us, \\ C need
yo u' Please try to understand, 1f we get side
tracked or hit m back of head
by snow ball, 11 could lead to
a serious accident Children
may be killed. your ch ildren
or someone else's I say with
m y own opimon and sub bus

dnvers say the same thmg
We arc dedicated or we
wouldn't dnve at all
We get paid very little, for
so much responsibility for so
long Hey , we get $14 a day
and our own car expense ts

I USPS 145 964! )

DEVOTED TO THE
rNTER ESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editur

DAVID BUSKIRK
Ad' rrtlslng Mana g~r
PubhshL'Il dally f:.IC( cpt Saturday
by TIIC Ohw Valley Pu bh s hm ~
Cumpany Mul ll metha Inc
Ill
Court Sl , Pomeroy , Olnu 4~769
R11 s mes~ Ofrll'~ Phonto 992· 2156
F.thlurwl Ph(Jnt 992 2157
Sct'ond das.s I)OSWge pa1d CJ I
Pome roy, Oh1u
NHtwnal ildvt•rtl smg rcprescn·
l&lt;ILI VC Landon AiiSOCiatts, :1 101
Eul'hdAVt! , Cievclund Ohio 44ll5

Subscnpt1un rates Dchvercd b}
u1rner whert t~V&lt;II I abl c 75 cent!; pt' f
week By Motor Route where l'llrriCr
Sl'rvk.&gt;t&gt; nnl a wnlable, One month
$3 25 B) •mul m Ohw cmd W Va ,
Ont Yea r, $":7 50 , She rnuntlrs
SH 50, Thr ee mon ths , $8 50
El!&gt;cwhcre 5,12 00 yc:~r, S1x months
$17 00 Three munlh s $9 00
Suhsu tplton pr u e rn d udts Sunday
ln ncs ·Scntmcl

Berry's World
'

"After The R.;p'rure"
We are left behmd the
"Rapture" has come and
gone
They spoke the truth of Jesus
their Lord
Now what Is left , what will we
do,
With no hope left and Hell to
shun
What will the people do ?
Aman says bum my Bible up
Oh, I loved to see tt shme
I would dust Its face each day
lfl'd only opened up and read
I wouldn 'I have been mtsled
Now I'm forced to bum thts
book that saved others, but I
forsook
A man has come to my door,
he says that I must take a
mark
I don't want to I say, for tf I do
I'm doomed for sure
He says I must to buy food
and clothmg and riches for
to trust
Oh, people, what will we do
Where is the. hope for me
and for you'
Well, listen , world this soon
shall be but don't take the
mark for God h&amp;sn 't forsaken thee
Turn to Him, but you must die
-g1vmg your lif ~ a "martyr's
death" a sacrillce.
You are 1n a world of VIOlence as you've never seen
Satan as ruler and demons as
kmgs
A world wtthout God
A Mrld under the curse
All thi s IS surely commg
about but you have a reason
to look up and shout
The children of God are still
on this earth and you have a
chance to go wtth the first ...
Patty Hensler, BoK 36B,
Raci ne, Ohio

TV ... in Review

·
;
•
'
.
·
,
:
,
·

I'

AIRBORNE- Kyger Creek's John Westfall (21) and Von
Taylor ( II•) go high In the air m this actiOn show in the KCEastern game Saturday rught. Watching the flight of the ball

CATCHING PASS - Eastern's Heff Goeble goes after a
pass or rebound in this action shot taken in Saturday 's SVAC
game between Kyger Creek and Eastern. Trailmg the play are
KC's V.on Taylor ( 11) and Jon Thompson (35) Bryce Buckley
photo.

.,

wage

NATIONAL DIRECT STUDENT LOANS , 90 percent
federal money admmtstered through the colleges. Last
year more than $310 million was handed out m loans
GUARANTEED STUDENT LOANS, whtch enable a
student to borrow up to $2,500 a year, or a total of $7,500 as
an undergraduate. Interest is federally subsidized while
the student is in school; repayment starts 9 to 12 months
after leavmg school, w1th mterest at 7 percent.
To get the basic grants you have to apply through the
federal 11overnment If you're shy about phomng 800-6386700, write the U.S. Offt ce of EdtiCation, Seventh and D
Streets. SW, Washington, DC 20202, and mark the
envelope, " Attention: BEOG "
To get a guaranteed student loan, go to your local bank
or lending mst1tution. The other thtee _programs are_
available through campus financial-aid offices
The Student InformatiOn Center will send you the
necessary forms to help you Initiate your grant application, and once you get the forms , you can consult 800-6386700 if you have any questions.
' But don 't watt Do It now.

·r

Names •••
in the news

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent

.t

,,

,,
SEW YORK (AP) - Everyone goes wild over composer
Eub1e Blake, especially when he celebrates another birthday
Blake, who turned 96 Sunday, went to the Ambassador Theater, where "Euble" is playing, and heard the 11-member cast
sing " We're Just Wild About Eubie," a modified version of
Blake's hit "I'm Just Wild About Harry."
As he entered the theater, Blake, who has written 1,500
songs, received a standing ovation.
After the show, Blake slowly ascended the stairs leading
onto the stage. The cast and audience sang two rousing versions of "Happy Birthday, To You."
"Thahk you,'' he replied. "And I thank all the people who
had the nerve to believe in my music ,"

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - For Candice Bergen and
By PETER J . BOYER
Robert
DeNiro, the proof of the pudding is in the pots.
AP Television Writer
Harvard's
Hasty Puddmg Theatricals, the nation's oldest
-J..OS ANGELES (AP) - In 1976, after five years as
theatrical
organizatiOn,
aMounced Sunday that the two film
teleVIsion's master essayist, Bill Moyers closed his "Journal"
stars
have
been
named
woman
and man of the year and that
and left public television for the greener fields of commercial
they
would
receive
the
traditional
awards- pudding pots
TV.
He went to CBS News for the big ~udiences, the big
CLEAR LAKE, Iowa (AP)- They came from 35 states and
production money and because he had bred of the rigorous
Canada
to remember Buddy Holly, the rock 'n' roll singer who
routine of h1s weekly public teleVIsion senes. Those same
died
in
a
plane crash Feb 3, 1959.
factors, viewed from the perspective of the other stde , have
Other
names
from the '50s and '60s - like Del Shannon,
now prompted hun to ditch the job at CBS and renew his
Jimmy
Clanton,
the Drifters, Wolf Man Jack and Nlki Sulli- ,
"Journal" on pubhe TV.
van,
a
former
member
of Holly's band, the Crickets - were .
Tonight, "Bill Moyers' Journal" returns. "Harvest" is the
there.
.
. ,. ~
first of this year 's 26 chapters of the "Journ~J." that clear
All
told
,
some
1,700
fans
came
to
the
Surf
Ballroom
on
Moyers-eyev1ew of the world presented through documentary,
Saturday night to remember Holly, who died one day after his '·
discussion and essay
last concert, which was presented in the same Surf Ballroom.
Moyers on his return to PBS '
Proceeds from the sale of the $17.50 tickets went to charity -,
"I found I was spoiled m a sense by my previous five years
and
the Buddy Holly Memorial Society,
at PBS, where I bad more atr time , a more regular slot and a
more consistent audience, all of which you can achieve with a
regular series."
NEW YORK (AP 8 a little bit of enlightenment about Gregg •
At CBS, where he was editor and chief reporter for "CBS Albnan's drug habit led"the Allman Brothers band to reunite
.and produce an album called "Enlightened Rogues,". People
Reports," he found the bigger audiences he wanted.
1
"None of the shows I did at CBS was seen by fewer than 10 m~t~z~e';.r';~:r~e about, the magazine quotes drummer :
million people, which is a bunch of folks for a boy from East Butch Trucks as saying, because "we got positive reports
Texas. But they were a capricious 'ludience. They never knew, about Gregg, that he'd kicked smack (heroin) lor good, that he , for mstance, when It was gomg to be atred, and I was in danger was more clear-thinking than before."
.
of losmg that loyal, comrmtted aUdience that had followed the
Says Albnan: "We feel like it's the first ttme together, We're ·
journal for five years."
f
hr
1 nd 1
f
resh. We've comet ough a ota earned rom It."
' At CBS, where he only·had a dozen or so documentanes a
kl
Meanwhile, Allman says he and his estranged wife, Cher · _
~:-~~e found relief from the grmd o1 a wee y senes, as he Bono, still phone each other even though she has flied for • ' ~
"Yes, but my nature cned out for 'a greater variety !ban I divorce. Allman says their 2,.-year-old son, Elijah Blue, Is ·:
could accomplish w1th an occasional documentary. Each of the - "huge" and "he looks tdentical to me."
. "'
10 or 12 documentaries at CBS were supposed to be on a very - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ...
senous Issue and on a certain kmd oflormat "
TODAY IN HISTORY
And at CBS, he found the big production money_he wanted.
captured the Mediterranean •:
By The Assoelated Press
" It gave me $160,000 to $200,000 to produce a documentary
island of Minorca from the
Today is Monday, Feb 5, British.
mstead of $50,000to $90,000at PBS ... But I couldn'thavedone a
show like 'Harvest' at CBS. Commercial television assumes the 36th day of 1979. There are
In 1783, Sweden recognized
- 329 days left in the year.
that the audience has an abbreviated time sP!In."
the independence of the , ,,
Today 'B highlight in Uruted States.
"Harvest" is the story of George and Hanslne Fisher, New
history:
Yorkers who left the city io farm a-piece of North Dakota land
In 1937, a bitter c6ntroversy
On this date in 1917, Mexico began when President , ,
inherited by Mrs Ftsher. Sounds like a puffy "Wilderness
Family, Part III " But Moyers, m his usual style, puts this became a federated republic Franklin RooseVelt proposed ,,,
curious bit of Americana ih perspective, sho\'mg the Fishers' of 28 states.
adding six new justices to the
On this date :
struggle with their first harvest and the home flirth of therr
Supreme Court.
In 1782, · the Spamsh
second child
· So, he's back, this erudite seeker and explainer from East
Texas It 's a smaller forum, public TV, but Moyers says his
venture into commercial television taught him It's not size that denominators, to make something popular among a discerning ,,
counts .
audience even illt Is not accepted by everybody. No one of us :·
"Commerctal TV reaches for the largest common can satisfy the needs of aU audiences. The trick Is to fiild out . .'
d•normnator Our role IS to reach for those smaller which your audience Is and how to service them."
·'

-.

--------~--:--......J

,.

50 10 ,
W 1n slon
14 0 28 ,
M cComas 2 1 5 , Peck o 1 1,
Little 2 0 4 Howe ll 2-3 7 and
Barnes 3 1 7 To1als 27 6 62
By Quarters
Sout hwes tern
1.4 35 59 79
NorthG al ll a
8 32 43 62

Mid-Ohio

·"

" If you don 'I have enough anxieties, slay
tuned for the news "

With five players In double of his best mghts thts season
figur es, Coach Wayne Berg- w1th 28 pomts.
doll ' s Southw es t e rn
Sentor guard Sam Smith
Highlanders defeat ed the was the only other Pirate m
North Galha Ptrates, 7% 2 double figures wtth 10 pomts
Saturday night
North Gall1a rcmamed atop
Southwestern remams m the SV AC reserve standmgs
the SV AC title piCture behmd wtth a 44-28 wm
league Ieadmg Southern and
Mark Miller led the wm·
second place Eastern .
ners with ll pomts Dwnyne
Jumor
center
Dale Forgey had eight for the
Newberry
pa ced
the Little Highlanders
Highlanders w1th 19 pomts
The win gave Southwestern
Sent or Gene Layton had 16 ; a 7-7 overall record and &amp;-3 .
sophomore Scott Russell, 13 , slate m the SV AC. North
senior Greg Nelson, 12 and GaU1a dropped to 6-l! overall
Dwayne Forgey added 10
and 3-4 1n the league. Tuesday
Southwestern led 14-l! after ni ght, Southwestern hosts
the first stanza and 35-J2 at Kyger Creek and North
the half The Highlanders Gall1a goes to Eastern
increased their lead m the
Box Score
third period to take a 59-43
Southwestern (79)
advantage gomg mto the final Nelson 3 6 12 . Newberry 8 3
19 Baker 4 1 9 , Ru ssell 5 Jstanza
13 Layton 7 2 16 . Fo rg ey 50
Stacey Winston enJoyed one 10
Totals 32-15-79
North Ga(l1a (62 ) - Sm1th

Sweeping up the week-&lt;!nd leftovers ·
Kudos to Rod Carew, one of the last of baseball's rugged Individualists.
In harpooning his chances to play with the rtch and successful New York Yankees- and that's what he did - baseball's
best hitter Ianded where he wished, With the California Angels.
Baseball people were stunned by the swift-breaking weekend
developments. How c001e George Steinbrenner let this choice
morsel get away? After all isn't it true - as they boast in the
Yankee front olftce - that "what George wants, George
gets ?"
Not in Carew's case
,
If there was one thing that killed the deal for the Yankees tl
was this display of arrogance, which Steinbrenner later
attributed to a kidding comment by his team president, AI
Rosen
It offended Carew, along with the feeling that the baseball
nabobs were playing Monopoly with h1s life and career. He
said so in no uncertain terms. As a result, Steinbrenner quickly
pulled back, saymg he didn't want anyone who wasn't proud to
wear the Yankee pinstripes.
"I play baseball for a living," Carew srud. "I don't buy this
stuff that you have to be m New York to get proper attention."
There is something admirable about Carew's stand. In
effect, he Jilted the nchest and prettiest girl in town for the
ruce but unsensational gu-1 next door .
He Is a qUiet , mtrospecllve man, N_ew York may be good lor
an extrovert hke Reggte Jackson. Rod Carew doesn't need it.
He doesn 't need the fawning and the folderol. What he sells are
base hits. In his line, no one has a better product.
Steve Cauthen, thoroughbred racmg's boy wonder, has gone
from "Who's Who " to "Who's he'" m less than a year, fallmg
mto an abysmal slump this wmter on the Pacific Coast. He
rode 109 straight losers before finally scormg at Santa Amta
Thursday. It was his fift~ victory in 154 mounts smce Jan. 1.
Horsemen were completely baffled, No one could reca ll a
sharper reversal of fortunes . Two years ago Stevie, a fuzz.
faced apprentice of 17, was the talk of the sport with more !ban
480 wmners and a record ~ million in purses Last year he rode
Afftrmed to racing's Triple Crown.
· What happened ?
"Bad horses ," insists Lenny Goodman , Caull)en's Eastern
agent. "You can't wm if you don 't get the mounts. Steve ought
to come home. Racing is veryclarush. Horsemen on the (West)
coast have their own riders. They resent outsiders . So they're
gtving Steve the long shots, just as 11 happens to Lafitte Pincay
when he comes East."
Meanwhtle, Steve's blacksmith lather, Tex, has flown from
Walton, Ky., to Arcadia, Calif., to try to fmd the answer.
'

Fairland
bombards
Wildcats
PROCTORVILLE - Ken
Nichols scored 27 points to
lead Fairland past Hannan
Trace Saturday night for Its
eighth win of the season, uo57.
Four other Dragons scored
in double figures m the
mismatch with Allen Bums
getting 17, Marshall Damels
15, Jinuny Johnson 12 and
Rick Wise 10. Fairland is now
8-6.
HaMan Trace was led by
.Paul Shaller with 17 pomts.
Jeff Whitt added 11 and Mtke
Pack 10.
HANN-AN TRACE 157l Shafer 17, Pack 10, Wh1tt 11 ,
Campbell 9, Webb 6, Beave r
4, Hmdman 7, Hlte 2.
FAIRLAND !110)
Nichols 27, Stewart 8, Camels
15, Johnson 12 , Burns 17, W1 se

10, DeGarmo 7, Morr is 4,
McComas 8, Conzett 2
'

'

==::::·:·::-:::.::.:::r:~: ;·===·;·=·=: = ..:.
Meigs - Reserves

·=;·;

=

(35) -

Swann 0 3 3, Kevin Sm1th 3 2
8; Scottl -0 2, Judg e20-4, 0
Kennedy 3 0 6, M1ke Mill er 2
2-6, lanare)I10 1-1, Thomas 1

2-4. BlaeHna r O1-1 Tota ls 1211 35
Waverly 154) - Moor e 50
!'0; Ranta J 06 , Nathan 40 8,
Smith 204 , Teeters 022 ,
George 2 1 5, Sa ms 2 1·5 ,
Pendleton 2-3 7, Robertson 0
1 1, Ch1twood 1-0-2, Burriss 1
2 4,

Eagles remain close,
defeat Bobcats, 56-52
By Greg Bailey
shot gave Eastern that ImThe Eastern Eagles fought portant spark to take mto the
an upnill battle all the way locker room.
Saturday night, but m the end
The Bobcats weren't
trimmed the visiting Kyger fimsbed, and started the thtrd
Creek Bobcats, 56-52. That period like a storm, buildmg
wm kept Eastern just one up an eight-point advantage
game off the SV AC lead.
Before the visitors knew what
Kyger Creek scored first , was happenmg, the Eagles
and shortly before the end of had taken a 41-40 lead as the
the first penod had a 13-4 buzzer sounded The lead seelead They had another nin e sawed through most of the
pomt advantage, 21-12, last period, and with 2. 55 to
halfway through the second go In the contest, Kyger's Von
penod before the Eagles Taylor hit for two to put his
caught fire to cut the lead to team in front, 52-49 But from
one at mtermission, 28-27
there on , the Bobcats didn't
Jeff Goebel's last second score a pomt Eastern's Dan

Meigs dumps
Wellston crew
By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Marauders used
a balanced scoring attack
and accurate shootmg In
downmg the host Wellston
Golden Rockets, 71-57
Saturday night
Led by Tom Hawley's 23
pomts, Meigs placed three
men In double ftgures, and
shot their best mght from the
floor , caMmg 53 percent of
their shots
The boys of Coach Ron
Logan netted 25 of 47 shots
and sank a whoppmg 21 of 36
free throws Both teams hit 25 _
field goals, but the free throw
shooting was the dec iding
factor.
Me1gs didn't take Its first
lead untll midway through
the second quarter. They
trailed 31-28 at mtermiSSion,
and then regained the lead 4241 mtdway through the third
penod In endmg the quarter,
Meigs agam took the lead,
this time for good, 46-45.
Twenty·flve pomts in the
fina l penod Iced the game
The wm was Meigs' fourth on
the year aga mst II loses
The Rockets lo st three
starters via fouls tn the fourth
quarter, but by then the game
was decided.
For the second game in a
row, Metgs committed only

Waverly
Meigs

10 23 37 54
8 16 25 35

Ashley
Hawley
Becker

Mid - Am~rican

Conference

By The Associated Press

Conference All Games
w. 1 pet. w. I pel.
8 I 888 15 4 789

Toledo
Ba ll St
C, Mich

7 2 777 14 5
2 777 13 6
Bowl mg Green
5 4 555 12 7
ChioU
5 4 555 10 8
E M1ch 4 5 445 7 12
M1 am 1
363336 14
Kent 51 2 7 2~3 7 12
N Ill.
2 7 223 7 12
W M1 ch 2 7 223 6 16
7

Thomas
Yeauger

737

TOTALS

632

M ontgom er y

684
555

368
300
368
368
273

By Quarter -=
H Trace
10 14 18 15- 57
Fa1r1and

Dodson
Ck Kennedy
Bl aettnar
Cl. Kennedy

29 23 27 31- 110

I'

PLAYER
Sp ~r es

Lockhart
Swon~er

Rob orm an
M assey

Settles
Potter
TOTAlS
scOre
Wellston

Me1gs

Quarter s·

by

,.

777

Alhens

12 3 1006 855

Logan

9
11

2 653
4 10 19

11

5

11
10

957
5 889

s

556

79 4

902 778
757
786

6 8 825 833

Ra ven sw ood 3 8 6&lt;16 693
Meig s
4 11 880 1068
Well ston
4 11 896 11 27
Jar:kson
2 13 8851117
Non SEOAL res ults
Gi lm er County 60 Ra ve ns
woo d 45
Pt
Pl easant
Buffalo
Can ce ll ed

SEOAL VARSIT Y
TEAM
W L P OP
Iron ton
Athens
Wa verl y
Gall• poll s
Loga n

10

2 850

630

9
9

597

8

2 7
3 740
a 731

4

7 665 678

ao

574
632

Wellston

3 8 659 854

Me1gs
Jackson

2 9 609
1 11 696

803

922

46 46 5690 5690

Saturday's results:
Gallrpolls 61 Jackson SO
Me1gs 71 Wellston 57

Athens 70 Logan 42
1

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP

Cm cmnat1 4, Phoenix PHL

Meigs-Wellston box• ..
Andes

OP

15 0 1062

Wa ver l y
Gall 1poh s

four fo uls the first half, and
ended the contest with only a
total of 10 That fme defense
allowed the hosts just 12 shots
at the charity stripe while
Me1gs got 36.
Again ,
Meigs
was
outrebounded, 43-30, but the
Marauder defense held the
leaglie's leadmg scorer, Rob
Norman, to JUst 12 pomts
Th at fourth quarter explosiOn
by the Marauders forced
Wellston to throw up a lot of
desperation shots that went
wild The Rockets ended th e
mght w1th a 34 percent
shooting effort, smkmg Just
25 of 73 attempts
Besides Hawley, Ray
Andrews and Greg Becker hit
double figures for Meigs
Andrews had his best mght of
the year gettmg 16 marked
and leadmg in reboundmg
with 10. Becker hlt for 14
points and hauled in mne
Pro Hockey
AI A Glance
rebounds.
By The Associated Press
Wellston was led by Mark
Wodd Hocke y Assoc1at1on
Swonger's 20 pomts. Swonger
w 1 1 pis gf ga
and Norman each collected II Quebec 25 18 4 54 180 155
Wm n1peg 24 19 6 54 198 181
caroms.
Eng 73 15 7 53 186 157
Meigs has two home games New
Edmont on
th is week Friday nval
23- 21 0 46 171 151
Galltpohs comes to town and Cm c1nna h
20 24 5 45 J 72 179
Saturday the Logan Chief~
B1rm
1ngham
tams Invade Marauder
19 24 4 42 169 189
territory
Saturday 's Game

MEIGS MARAUDERS
FG-A FT-A
66
5-12
1-15
00
8 12 7 11
48
5 10
38
I5
23
3·6
1I
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
15 .47 21 36
WELLSTON ROCKETS
FG-A FT A
I2
3-10
. 3 12
03 0'
36
16 16
00
5 12
22
14
19
00
0-8
00
o.o
7 12
25 73

P

Port smouth

Wash CH

I. e xh1b 1t1on

"PLAYER

ALL GAME S
W L

Pt Pleasant
Iron ton

RB PF Pis
10 4 16
1 I 2
2
23
5
9 I 14
2 I 7
3
I
7
0 0 2
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
30 10 71

New l::. n g l and 2, 81r
mmgham 2, t1e, ot
Sunday's Games
Quebec 6 Edmonton 3
Wm n1peg 8 Cmc•nnat1 1
Today's Games
No games sched ul ed
Tue sday 's Games
New England at Quebec
B1rm1ngham at Edmonton

Ironton
Gal lipoli s
Athen s
Waver ly
Logan
Jack son

Wellston

Me1g s

TOTALS

10
8

I All Games)

Ceda r il 1ll e
Mal one
R1o Grande
Urbana

standings
TEAM

Conference .....- - - - .
TE AM

Cage

TOTAL S

Marshall 0 0 0. Totals 22

•n•By Quarters

are the Eagles Joe Bowers ( 40) and Keith Wolle (30) and KC's
Jon Thompson (35). Eastern won the SVAC contest , 56-52 to
remam one game behmd Southe rn m the SV AC title chase

2 508

461

4

418

459

7 4 '51 9 429
7 s 549 469
5

6

47'i

433

5

7 532

542

1 10 374

571

3 8 427 520

46 46 3843 3843

W L
12

7

12

9

12

11

8
8

11

12

7

16

Wa lsh

Mt Vernon
Oh1o Oom1 n1can
T1ff m

TE AM

5 13
5 19

(League only )

W
8

Rr o Grande
Cedarville
Malone
Urbana

L"
I
3
3

6
6

4 - 4

Wal sh

5

Mt Vernon

4
3

6

Trf fl n
Ohto Dom.n1 can

2
2

6
7

TOTALS

35

JS

Saturday's r esults
Cedarv 11i e 72 Mt Vernon 72
Ma lone 83 Oh1 o Doml nt can 62
R1o Gr ande 61 Wal sh 59

"COACH LAMP"
BIRD FEEDER

Prevenhon is
the best policy .. .

Hold s over 10-lb s o f bnd
seed Fea tu res gold A m en can
Eagle &amp; Dom e Easy to ftll
5-Yz foo t St eel po l e

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

'13.99

Young men and w omen
often ask why the y ha ve to
pay
more
tor
t heir
automobile insurance
.
Dr1vers 1n th e1r tee ns and
earlier twenties cause far
more tha n the ir share of
tr aff1c acc 1dents Report s
the
Na t io nal
Safety
Counc tl 21 8 percent of all
motonsts are 24 years of
age or un der, yet these
y outhf ul opera t ors are
involved as dnvers m 38 6
per cent of all acc1dents

and 37 3 per cent of al l fatal
mi Shaps
A great

people

many

are

WILD BIRD
FOOD only

young

sk•l led ,

Saturday's results
Jackson 46 Ga lli pol iS 33

respons1ble
drivers .
Obviously, th ough, qu1te a

Athens 39 Logan 37

few are not

Wellston 59 M e1gs 47
Tuesda y's games
Spencer at Raven swood
Hunhngton H1gh at Ports
mouth
Fnday 's games
Jackson at Athen s
Ironton at Well st on
Wav erly at Logan
Gall1pol1 s a t Me1g s
Pt Pleasant at South o?rn
Wa shmgton CH at M1am1
Trace
Sat urday 's games
Raven swoo d at Gallipoli s
Portsmouth at Wheeler sburg

There' s no subst1tute for
development competence

grams prov1d e most nutn
ttonal needs for w 1\d b1rds
Attracts many song birds

and the right attitudes,
mcludng
a
po c:1 f1ve
approach t o def e ns• ve
dnvtng
Our agency pr O'.. It: es
f1nanc1al protection ~nd
serv 1ce m case of acc1dents
1nvol vmg young dnv er s
but
ma ny
of
these
acc1 dents
can
be
prevented That ' s why we
say - prevention isj the

•

BIRD FEEDERS

$5.95 to $12.95

SAYRE

best policy.

HARDWARE

DALE C. WARNER
WEEKEND
TRANSACTIONS
By The Associated Press

99'

Balanced m1xture of se eds &amp;

992 2143
102 W Ma.n

New Haven, W. Va .

Pomeroy

BASEBALL

Amertca n l eague

MINNESOTA TWINS Traded Rod Car ew f1 rs t
baseman to th e Ca l1f orn1a
Anq el s m e)( change for Ken
Landreau x, outfielder , Pau l
Hartzell and t;r ad Ha vens,
p1l cher s , Da ve Engl e, ca t
cher , and an undi scl osed
amount of cash

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

---~

_ ...

HOCKEY

Nahonal Hockey l eague

ALL STARS - Named Ron
Greschner of the New York
Ranger s, defen se m an , to
team t o repl ace 1n1ured J 1m
Sch oenfeld. def ensema n. of
the Buffalo Sabrres

BUFFALO SABR ES -

Re a cqu1r ed R1 ck Dudl ey ,
n gh t w mg 1 from the Cm
onna t1 Sti nger s o f the Wor ld
Hock ey AS SOCi at iOn

NEW YORK ISL AND ERS

S1g ned Bill Torrey, gener al
manager , to a m ult r ye ar
contra c t

oBUILDING

SUPPLIES
HOME IMPROYEM ....".

RB PF Pis
3 5 7
3 4
9
2 2 6
II
5
20
12
II
5
9 3 3
5
2 0
0 0 0
43 27 57

PO¥EROY

CEM F~T

BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
Of Building
Since 1915

22 31 45 57
20 28 46 II

•

''·
I

,

......

,,

�-

'

· 5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monda y, ~·eb . o. l~i ~J

The Daily Sentinel , Middlepori-Ponwro), U ., MIJ(i!la), . ~ ·do . 5. 1~m

4-

~ Rio

Grande edgesWalsh, 61-59
'

Greg James' layup with 55
seconds reJ!Ialnlng gave
visiting Rio Grande College a
61-59 Mld.Qhio Conference
basketbaU triumph over the
W~lsh Cavaliers Saturday
rught.
The victory left Rio Grande

.

.

.

in undisputed first place in
league play with an 8-1 mark.
Walsh dropped to 4-5 in loop
play. On the year, Coach Art
Lanham 's crew upped their
record to 12-11. Walsh
dropped to 8-12 over.all.
"II was a big victory for

STANDINGS

National Basketball
·~ .ASS'ocietion
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
tEas tern Conference
Atlantic Division ..
W L Pd. GB
Washington 36 '15 .106
Philo.
29 19 604 51f,
New Jersey 23 25 .419 11 '!2
24 30 .444 1Jif,
"New York
Boston
19 31 .380 W h
Central Division
San Antonio 31 22 .585
Houston
27 23 .540 21;,
Atlanta . 28 25 .528 3
·•Cleveland
20 31 .392 10
·:.Detroit
19 33 .365 11112
New Orleans 17 36 .321 14
Western Conference
Midwest division
,'Kans . City
31 20 .608
Denver
28 26 .519 41f'
' Indiana
21 30 .412 10 •
22 32 .401 JOlh
Milwaukee
· Chicago
19 33 .365 12112
Pacific Division

Seaitle
34 16 .680
. Los Ang .
32 20 .615
Phoenix '
32 20 .615
San Diego
27 27 .500
24 25 .490
Portland
· Golden St.
25 29 .463
S1turday's Games
No games scheduled

3
3
9
91,,
11

Sunday's Games

NBA All -Star Game: West

134, East 129

TOday's Games

Wates Conference
Adams Division
Boslon 32 13 ~ 73 tll 166
Buffa lo 21 19 11 53 169 164
Toronto 21 22 10 52 169 110
Minnesota

21 24 1 49 168 115
Norris Division
Montreal 37 9 7 81 227 132
Los Ang . 23 24 7 53 197 194
Pittsburgh

21 23 8 50 180 185

Washington

Detroit

17 29 8 42 179 231
I 1 29 14 36 169 209

Saturday's Games
Pi t tsburgh .4, Detr oit 2

St. Louis 6, Colorado 3
Vanc ouver 5, Washingt on 1

Chicago 4, Atlanta 2
Boston 4, New York
Buffalo 2, Minnesota 1
Los Angeles 4, New York
Rangers 2
Sunday's Games

Boston 6, Vancouver 1
Buffalo 3, St. Louis 1
Philadelphia 7, Atlanta 4

Montreal 8, Washing ton 4
Detroit 8, Pittsbur:g h 3
Chicaqo 5, NY Islanders 4

Minnesota 6, Toronto 4

Los Angeles 4, Co_lorado 1

Today's Games _
No games scheduled

Tuesday's Games
No games sc:;heduled

Boston at Atlanta

Frustr~tec! writer we know
Indiana at Chicago
says all he can manage to
Detroit at Houston
turn oul are best-cellars for
San Anton io at Los Angeles "the ratings charts.

New Jersey at Cleveland

Phaenik at Portland

Blue Devils
whip Jackson .
•

I.

-National Smoker Study·
.

'

'

'

~"A&amp;!. t~ ~sat~~ alnong low

tar snnkmgs toughest cottcs-htgh tar smokers.

A detailed, nationwide research -effort has
.Confirmed: 9 out.of 10 MERIT smokers not
confirmed that 'Enriched Flavor:. MERIT really considering other brands.
does deliver the flavor of higher tar brands.
MERIT is the first real taste
Confirmed: Majority of high tar smokers
alternative for high
rate MERIT-taste equal to-or better thantar smokers.
leading high tar cigarettes tested! Cigarettes
having up to twice the tar.
·Confirmed: Majority of high tar smokers ·
confirm taste satisfaction of MERIT.
And current MERIT smokers made these
confirmations:
...
( Confirmed: 85% of MERIT smokers say it
was an "easy switch" from high tar brands. ·
Confirmed: Overwhelming majorit-y of
MERIT smokers say their high tar brands
weren't missed!

..•' ..

...

....

'

.·

' •

.'

~·

.c.

, Kings &amp; tOO's

Q Philip Morris Inc 1979 '

.,

0

Lunh am

winning goal. tht t 'ot va li c r~
still had a chanc&lt;'-lo tic it up.

J\·1ark !"11r: •i n (.'i llll ~ of (

dWI UT .

Howl'\'\.:( . th e CtJ \'!-i m bsed

(.!gain as big Sttov~ Lones

Walsh missed c1 shot. .Ja mes
&lt;.'amc down with the r cl&gt;ounrl

pa rtiail ) bl oc k ~ d a shot .
and was fou lerl with ~1 .James came down with the
seconds left . .Jam es missed .rebound again and held ·onus
the first shot of u one-a nd· t im e rcrnout.
one . Wal's h had a nother
" i'hil Wa shington and

drop 70-42 cage tilt
With 12 players contributing to the scoring the
Athen s Bulldogs easily
whipped the crippled Logan
Chieftains 70-42 Saturday
night. and moved to within
one half game of leagueleading Ironton. ·

Ironton. idle Saturda y
night, still holds first pla ce
with a 10-2 mark while Athens

whom Y.·crc injured C:lnd did

not play .
._
Coach rred Gibson' s
Bulldogs roared to an 8~ lead
and fini shed th e first quarter
on top of a 14-2 lead as the
Chiefs hit just one of H. shots.
By intermiss ion i\HS had
built a .35-11 lead as Logan
completed the first half with
just three flcldcrs of 25 attempts.

owns a 9-2 record .

The Chiftains played at
Athens minus the services of
two starters. Dave Lehman
and Steve Walton. both of

Sports Briefs ••. .
GOLF
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.~
Lon Hinkle , despite shooting
a 5-over.par 77, won the
$300,1100 Bing Crosby National
Pro-Am Golf Tournament in
a three-way sudden death
playoff against Mark Hayes
and Andy Bean by firing his
only birdie of the day on the
third extra hole.
Bean had a closing 69, while
Hayes had a par-72 despite a
four-putt, triple-bogey seven
on the 15th . Hinkle earned
$54,1100.
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif .
- JoAMe Carner won tbe
$100,1100 Ladies,J&gt;rofessional
Golf Associahon Triple
Crown tournament with a 4.
and-3 victory over Pat
Bradley at Mission Hills
Country Club . Carner collected $23,000.
TRACK AND F1ELD
EDMONTON- Dan Ripley
of the Pacific Coast Track
Club of Los Angeles set a
world indoor pole vault
record at the Edmonton
Journallnternationallndoor
Games, clearing 18 feet, 5%
inches on his third and last
attempt. ·
His leap erased the 18-SV.
mark held by Mike Tully of
UCLA ,.who was elimialed at
a lower height.
PRINCETON, N.J . - High
jumper Franklin Jacobs
shattered his second meet
record in less than 48 hours
by clearing J·feet, 4'h incbes
in the Princeton Relays .
Jacobs broke his own meet
standard of 7-2, established
last year, on his second
attempt.
Villanova broke· the sprint
medley record in 3:26.2 with

Willie Sydnor, Keith Brown,
Tim Dale and Anthony Tufarieilo.
Maryland , with a meet
record 3:13.6, beat Villanova
in the mile relay .
TENNIS
RICHMOND, · Va.-Bj orn
Borg scored a 6-3, 6-1 romp
over Guillermo Vilas for the
championship of the $175,1100
Hichmond Tennis Classic.
The third-seeded team of
John McEnroe and Brian ·
Gottfried won the dpubles
title with a 6-4, 6-3 decision
over fourth-seeded Vilas and
Ion Tiriac of Romania .
NOHTH LITTLE ROCK,
Ark . ~ Top•seeded Vilas
Gerulaitas defeated Butch
Waits 6-2, 6-2 in the finals of a
$50,000 tennis tournament.
Gerulaitas also teamed up
with Vladimir Zednik of
Czechoslovakia for a 5-7, 6-3,
7-5 triumph over ' the
Australian duo of Phil Dent
and Colin Dibley in the
doubles finals.
CHICAGO - Top-seeded
Martina
Navratilova
defended her championship
with a 6-3, 6-4 victory over
Tracy Austin in a $200,1100
women's professional tennis
tournament .
In the doubles flnal , Rosie
Casals a·nd BettyaM Stuart
defeated the South African
duo of Ilana Kloss and
Stevens 3-jj, ,7-!i, 7-!i.
PRO BASKETBALL
DETROIT- The National
Basketball Association' S
Board of Governors voted to
be g i n
c o n s i de r i n g
. application s for expansion
franchises, hoping to add two
teams to 'the league by the
1980-ill season .

Afte r thr ee

Wellston reserves win

stanzas th e

wirmer s were coasting along
with a 55-2~ bulge as sub;titutes had an opportunity to

tht•

btnc h to gin · us a !Jig lift ."
l~ nh u m

:wid .
Steve - Lom·s paccU Hio

(i r~nd e's

CJ tt Hc k

w ith

16

points . .James added 13 and
Washington Ill.
'1 11e Hrdmcn hit 24 of 41
fi eld goal attempts for 5~.1
p&lt;Jrccnt . Hio was 13 of ~ I at
th e foul line for 61.9 percent.
Th e Hcd)llen had 37
rebounds. 15 by .James. The
winner s hi.!d nin e assist s .and
17 turnovers.
Lonni e Moore paced the
Ca valiers with 16 point s .
Craig l.u~her added 13 and
Joe Seefler 10. Walsh hit 23 of
45 field goal attempts for 5 1. i
percent. 111e Cavs were 13 of
20 at the foul line fo r 00
perc ent. Wal s h had 26
rebound s, nine by Luther , 17
assi st s and 22 turnov er s.

Tuesday. Hio Grande will
host Ohio Dominican at l.yne
.Center . Tipoff time is 7:30
p.m. The Hedmcn will host
Mt. Vernon Saturday night .
Box score :

RIO GRANDE 16ll - s; se

3·l-l; Ja mes 6-l -13 ; Purceii 20 -4: Phelp s 1-2-5; Lon es 6-416; Swai n 1 4-6 . Washing t on

B y The Associated Press
Satvrday 's Re sults
A da 80, Pau ld ing 69
Akron Cen t r ai -Hower 84.
As h tabu la 61
Ak r on M a nchester 64,
Bristol .., ille Bristol 63, 2 at
Akron St. Vi ncen t 72 . Akron
Nor t h 68 , o f
An twerp 49, Ayers ville 4B
A thens 70, Logan 42 · ·
Bascom Hopewe ll . Loud on
102, Danbu r y Lakeside 82
Beach wo od 76 , Ga tes M i ll s
Hawk en 52
Beallsv il le 57, Waterfor d 49
Be ll ville Cl ea r For k 7] ,

Shel by 58
Berl in Hiland 76, Sm it hv ille
63
.

Belmont Union Lnr.:.l A7
Woods fi eld 65
B rook f ield 88, M assi llon 68
Brookl yn 6 4 , Cle ve l and
Hol y Name 62 , 'l at o
•
B r yan
-dO ,
She r wood
Fai r v iew 35, ol
Burton Berksh ire 70, R ich ·
mond Hei ghts 69, ot
Cadi z 69. West La faye tte
Ridgew ood 58
Canton Mc K in ley 70, Ak ron
Sou th 5B
Cant on South 69. M ass ill on
Jack son 49
Cinc innati Ta ft 72 . Dayton

Roth 71

Cleve land John Ada m s 60,
Shak er Height s 50
Cleveland John M arsha ll
66, Cleve land Ca tholi c 62
Col um bus
Br i~HJ S.
62 ,

,

.

ll.thens with Art Chonko an·d 2 10' Clayton 1-0-2; Nau 0-1· 1;
Rodney Hart each adding 10 Sabulski 2-J.7 . TOTALS 23- ll59
markers.
.
.
·
,
Halfttm e sc or e - Rto 30
.
Duane l.ovsey was the only . Walsh 27.
'
Chieftain ip double figures
with 13 points ."
Ohio High School
In uppin g th eir season
Bask etball ·
record to 12-3 Athens eonHi ll sbor o 76, Lees Cr eek
nected on ~6 of 56 from th e
East Cl inton 71
floor and converted 18 of 26
· Howa rd East K nox 8\, Ohio
charity tosses. Art Chonko Deal 39
Hudson Wes tern Re ser ve
pulled down nine of the 46
89.
Pi tt sburgh ,
Pa .,
rebounds by the Bulldogs.
Shadysi de 62
The Chieftains, now 6-8
Huron 88, Ti ffin Ca lvert 93
·overall and 4-7-in league play ,
Kent Roosevelt 80 , A kr on
ma de only 14 of 54 go als and Garli eld 66
Kent on 83, Lim a Shawne.e
14 of 31 free throws. l.ovsey
77
grabbed 10 of Logan's 33
Ketteri ng Fai r m ont East
rebounds . .
69 , H am i l ton Taft 56
Lex ing ton
72,
N ort h
Box score :
Robin son Co l. Cr awfor d 47
LOGAN I42) - Mo rgan 1-1·
Lina Cen tr al Ca tho li C 72,
J , Cla rk 1·0-2; R. Bell 10-2;
El ida 52
D. Bell 3-0-6 ; LoVesey 4-5-13 ;
Fi sk 2-4-B; Dillon Q. J. J ; Kr eig

1-H ; Moore 1-1·3. TOTALS
14· 14-42 .

.

ATf1ENS (70) - SmHh 2-2-6;

~a ss 1-0-2; &lt;::hon~ o 5-0-10 ;
Saba J. J.J ; Brunin g 2-0-4 ;
Hart 4-2- JO; M eyer 1·0·2 ;
Mathews J.J.9; Bentle.,- 5·5·
15: Burson 1·0·2; E dw ards 13-5: Dail ey 1·0·2. TOTALS 26·

18-70.

·

Score by qtJlnter s:
Logan

2

A·lh ens

9 11 20- 42

14 21 20 ll- 70

Reserve score : Ath ens 39,
Logan 37.

Midd lef ield Car d inal 54 ,
K irtland 43
Mi d d let ow n Mad iso n 66 .
Hamilton New M iami 65
M orr ow Litt le M iami 73 ,
Ma son 67
Mount Bl anchard Ri ver -

Minersville, Ohio.

41
Hami lton
ches ter 57

Ross 72."

Newa r k

64,

Columbu s

~;;,::Md~r

New c o m e r s t ow n
53 .
C ambridg e
Guern sey
Ca thOli c 43
New Matam oras Frontier
47 , Bever ly For t Frye 115
Niles M c Ki n1ey 59, Y oungstown Chaney 54
North Le wisburg Tr iad Y8,

Saves
Expensive Coffee!

Wa y ne sfi eld -

Goshen 66
Old Washin'g ton Bucke ye
Trail 55, Graysv i ll e Skyv ue 40
Oregon Cla y 63, Tol edo
Ma comber 60, at

P("fect Tr1o
hll

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was te, at mic rowave speed. Or . .you
can reheal 1 to 4 c ups whit e preserving
th at fresh brewed flav or

Kook-Kit
Roa sting Rac k Doubles As
A Serving Dish or Tray.

Inc ludes .

1. Browin g Grill e

2. 3 Qu a rt Casse ro le
3. Roast ing Rack

5 Cook ing Prog rams
10 Power Level s

But'. .. Simple As 1 - ~ . 3
1. Cooks by time or c.q oks lo tem pe ratu rcl
'
• I '
2. Even hO lds at temperatu re to te nde rize economy
cuts of meat .
· ,: ·
3. Advanced memory. Touchma t ic· II can re me mber
to: defrost, hold, start ~c oking by time, then
cook to temperature at the same o r a different
Cookmat ic setting. All with one set o f inslruct ions.
'
4. Clock even remembers the time of day.
5 . Automatic start time .

PACK OF 30
VALENTINES
• "S.p ace Pals" or
• "Self-Mailers"

(Opti onal)

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200 East Main

Popcorn Popper

lllf. lf.111J

Pomeroy, 0 .

Popcorn Popper -

J

I

•'

. .,

-

•,

..

•

Instead of

ColleeM.aker Or Koo k·Kit ALNo
Cha,rge.
Pop!: w11h No Oil

No Grl"ilSf' 1

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&amp; JEWELRY •
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

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"L.&gt;cal~

77

Fremont St. Jose Ph "'
Cas tal ia Marga r clta 55
Ga l l i pol is 61. Ja ck son SO
Ga l e's M ill s Gilmour 60 ,
Cl eveland Unlver:. ily Schoo l

Plus ... From Us ... A

Height s L,uther·an Ea st 59, ot

FOR MOBILE HOMES

KINGSBURY HOME
SALES &amp;PARTS
ACCESSORIES
CENTER
in fhe former OV I Egg Building in

Old Fort

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dale 66 , Blufft on 64, ot
Newbury 61. Cleveland

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Euclid 80, Wi ckl 1fle 58

For t Jenn ing s 83 , Delphos
Jefferson 76
Fort Recove r y 63 . New
Madi son Tr i -Villag e 62
Fos toria 58, Pemberv i!le
Easl woad 411
Fos tor ia Sl. Wendel in 87,

Direct From A,,.,..

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1

L eba.non

'50.00 From Amana
29.00 Co ffee Maker
29.DO Kook -Kit
' 108.00 Tot a l Va lue

Lima Per r y 60, Ridgeway,
Ridgem ont 52
·
Lina Senior 48, Defiance 36
Louisv ill e 66, North Can ton
Hoover 52
Mal ver n 68 . Bowers t on
Con'ot ton V alley 57
Marietta 53, Ca m bri dg e 51
Ma ssill on Per ry 56, Canton

MOBILE HOME HEATING SYSTEM

UTILITY BILLSI

Ea ton 6 4, · New
Dixie 53

d

ma1ter.

I

55

5-0-10. TOTALS 24 -13-61 .
WA L5 H I59 l - Luther 5-3·

By Greg Bailey .
Marauder in double figures
Ottoville 49, Convdy ·crost - Mike
·
Saturday night, the host as he hit for 10. Meigs con- vi ew 48
992-7155
Piqua
66,
Tr
oy
60
Wellston Heserves jumped nected on 17 o( 45 shots from
Plain City Jonathan Alder . 149 5. Third St.
out to a quick 10-il lead and the floor for 35 percent and 62 , Milf ord Center F)i rbank s Middleport, 0.
never looked back as they made 13 of 26 from the foul 56
Port Clinton 83, Be ll evue 78
defeated the visiting Meigs line.
HAll rA•M
Ri c hm o nd
D a l e Marauders, 59-47. By halfMeigs (471 - Sm1lh 5-4-14 ; Southeastern 76, Chilli cothe ·
time, the hosts. had a 30-17 0 . Kennedy 2-1-5; Scott 4-2- Uni ot o 46
'" ' UUo"tl
advantage and the game was 10 ; Judge 0·0-0; Miller 3-0-6;
Sf. Henry 52, For t Lo ram ie
•
Swann 0-2-2; Blaettnar l -3-5;
aU but out of reach .
48
Tho mas 1·0-2; Cl. Kennedy 1Jeffers led the winners with , 1-3; Wayland 0-0-0. Totals 17.
16 points while Benson added 13-47.
Wellston {59) - Par sons 415. The Baby Rockets hit 25 of
0-8; De ver 0-2-2; J eff er s 8-058 shots for 43 percent and 16 ; Butcher 3-0-6; Potter 4-0sank 9 or 18-lrlm the yharity 8; Benson 4-7. 15; Michael 2-0stripe.
'
4; DeSiephen 0-0-0. Totals 2l·
Kevin Smith paced the 9-59.
Quarters :
losers with 14 markers: .
Meigs
8 17 27 47
Scott was the only other Wellston
16304859

00
~:~~E
ONLY
[s"AvioNriiosiHIGti-j

Columbus Beechcr o1t 59
( qlumbus East Ill. Da y ton
Dunbar 77
COlumbus Frankli n Hei ghts
79 . Zane sfie ld Benjamin
Lognn 72
Co lumb us
H ami lt O_!J.
Tow n shi p 65, Lan cas ter
Fnirf ield Uni on 44
Con linental 77 , Holga te 65
Cre st on Nor w a y n e 89 ,
M.edina Bu ckeye 60
t r oo k svill e 48, Zancsv i! l e
West Muskingu m 44
Dal ton 48, Mi dva le Ind ian
Vul ley North 117
.. ..- ...~
Dayton Carr oll 74 , Fair
born Baker 6 1
•
Da y_tor Chr istian 78 , Xenia
Wilson 51
Day t on
Jeffer so ri
.79 .
Dayton · chaminade -Julienne

13; ~oore 7-1-16; Ungashick
J 0 6.
Sedm ock
0-1-1;
Gary Bentley s 15 pomts l e .- Kounouz del
if 1-1-3; See fl er 4-

display their w ar es .

Wa ynes field

•

GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (61)
.
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT -A PF RB TO TP
Mark Smith, f
1·2
0·0
0 2
I
2
E. V. Clarke, I
8· 13 o.o . 3 14
4 16
Jetl Cameron . c
1·2
o.o
•
7
I
2
Jimmy Harris, g
10·17 o.o 2
5 4 20
Bill Armstrong, g
4·7 3·4 3 ·o 3 11
Jetl Lanham , I
1-•
0-0 3 7 o 2
Mat!Sterrett,c
3-4 1-3 1 4
0, 7
o.o O·O o o o o
Nate Thomas, g
Rick Dailey, g
o.o
0-0
1 0 0 0
Greg Atkins, t
0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0
Mark Weaver, I
o.o 0·0 0 0 0 0
0-0 0-1 0 0 , 0 0
Greg Harrington, g
Nick Robinson, g
0-0
1·2 o
I
o
1
TOTALS .
28-49 S-10 17 40 13 61
,•
JACKSON JRONMEN ISO)
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP
3
2
8
Mike Stevens, g
4:6 • o.o
I
3
12
NormSydow, l
5·i1 2·3 2 ' 4
7
1 11
Tom Evans , c
3-10 57
I
8.
3
Ed Martin, I
4·8 0-0 2 4
1
I
3
1
Dave Evans, 1
3· 16 5-7 2
0
0
John waugh . .g
0·2 ·0-0 2 0
0
0
Bruce Neal, g
0-1 0.0
2 0
1
1• 0
Jim Campbell, g
0-0 o.o 0
0
0
Kev Barnett, c
0-0 · 0·0 0 0
0
0
Larry Ghearlng, I
0'0 · 0-0 o 0
TOTALS
19-5• 12,11 12 22 11 lO .
' Score by qUIIrlers :
15 8 18 20-&lt;1 1
Gallipolis Blue Devils
Jackson lronmen
8 18 10 14·· 50
Offitl•ts ~Ron Borden and LarrY, Williamson .

-

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Coach AI Burger's Jackson (I :II) as the ltonmen built up
lronmen, ln one of their best a 26-23 haUtime advantage .
efforts of the season, dropped
Jackson increased its lead
a 61-50 Southeastern Ohio to five points, 30-25, during
,League basketbaU decision to the first two minutes of play
visiting Gallipolis Saturday in the third period.
night.
Jeff Cameron's lone field
• The lead changed hands 10 goal ofthe contest (3:33left in
times .during the first two and the third period) put GAHS
one-half quarters before back 011 top, 33-32.
,Coach Jim Osborne's lads
Dave Evans' tap-in (3:11 )
·took the lead for keeps.
put Jackson ahead for the last
The victory assured GAllS time.
of a fourth place flnish ln
E. V. Clarke's driving
league play - that's where layup (2:22) gave GAHS.a 35'both league coaches and news 34 advantage. Consecutive
media picked the Blue Devils goals by Jeff Lanham, Bill
to wind up this winter.
Annstrong and Harris upped
Gallipolis hiked its season Gallia's lead to seven, 41-34 ,
record to · lo-5. Inside the with I: 14 left in the third
SEOAL, the Blue Devils . period. Sydow's bucket inade
moved to 8-4. Jackspn it 41-36 after three periods ·of
dropped to 2-13 overall and I·• play.
·n inside ·the conference.
Harris, Matt Sterrett, Mark
' Jackson, bowever, did not Smith and Clarke led the way
play like a last-place team as GAllS built up a 13-pointthe first three quarters lead, 55-42, with 2:30
.Saturday. ' ,
remaining in the game.
After faDing behind 15-il
Gallipolis ·connected on 28
:following the first whistle of 49 field goal attempts for 57
.stop, Jackson outplayed percent. At the foul llne, the
Gallipolis over the next .12 Devils were five of 10 for 50
minutes. The lronmen, percent. GAHS had 40
,)lehind Mike Stevens, Norm rebounds, 14 by Clarke.
Sydow, Tom Evans and Dave
Harris led GaUia's scorers
Evans, blanked GAllS 11).{1 with 20 points. Clarke added
the first four and one-half 16 and Annstrong 11. GAllS
.minutes of the second period bad II assists, four by Jeff
to take an 111-15 lead.
'Lanham.
Gallipolis became careless
Norm
Sydow
paced
'in the second stanza, losing Jackson's attack with 12
the bail nine times on tum- points. Tom Evans and Dave
overs., (The Blue Devils Evans ooch had II for the
finished the game with 13 losers.
Jackson hit 19 of 54 field
turnovers) .
Jimmy Harris' short goal attempts for 35 percent.
jumper (3;38) finaUy broke The lronmen were 12 ofl7 at
the Ice. Harris hit again at the the foul line. Jackson had 22
2:42 mark to give Gallia a 19- rebounds, seven by Tom
Evans. The Ironmen had II
IB ·Iead.
'
. After Ed Martin and Harris turnovers.
exchanged goals, Dave
Gallipolis will play at
Eva'ns scored on a three-point Meigs Friday . Jackson
play at the '1:22 mark and travels to Athens .
Sydow 'anll: one from afar

GABS-Jackson box.

Kings: 8mg "lar: · 0.6mg nicotine·
100 's:11 mg" tar;' 0.7 mg nicotine av. per cigareue, FTC Aepon May' 78

r em arked

Injury-riddled~..Chiefs

Montreal 6,' Tcrronta 3

Tuesday'• Games
Sea tile at New York

..

u ~."

following the important road
•·ictory . " We threw a 2-:l and
1-2-1 zone at them, then ;fuck
it to them after pressing and
falling back."
It was a close.ball game all
the way. After James' game -

Islanders ·4, tie

No games scheduled

..:...

Saturday's high
school results

'·

.'

�'
• ,I

"

_., ""' " W.,J

-

'

'

' .

•

'

'

\

• h Mnl • t ~· ··"'-\.JAiil . ~.l~ I.IIU\.1 V J 1 '- • 1 o1U.J, I'"-"J 1 I • ..,. , ,. o •

•
w

-

o~

Thomds, Darnell preside over Eastern .Star
MIDD I.E PORT --The·
charter was 'draped in
memory of George Meinhart
and Eloise Wilson at · the
Thursday night meeting of•

Evangeline Chapt&lt;•r, Or·tl•·•· of
the F..astern Star. held at the
Mitldleport Masonil- T&lt;•mpl&lt;•.
Ann Thomas and Paul
Darnell, worthy matrun and

ln ilia lion wa ~ hdd fm· Ki1h'
worthy ~1tron, prl'sidt•d "'
Ow llll'l'ting with Maryl n ·r rtssi·ll wllu I'P&lt;:l'i'i.tt·fl th~·
Wi leox: C~t tht.• urgan . A mo- l lj•gn'&lt;'S uf tlw ordt•f'.

c:tr·d:-. hnd .ht·,·n ~~ ·nt

111

;\laorni

lkl'd nn tht• ln:-:1-! of ht•r !Ius~
llantl. Onm Ne·Json on the loss
of hf•t· motht•r, alit! Mr, and
Mrs. lhd1tml V&lt;•ughan wi tht•
loss of lllt.'i r SOIL F.rnhlt.•ms
were st•nt in memory nr Mr.
MPinharl mul Mrs . Wilson , ar

. nrn('~' . fJi!'lury highlidlts will
ht· ~ivtm rtt Nlt h mt·c~i ng this
yt•ar . Slu.• noh•d that the
dwpter w;t/'i 'institult'&lt;l in
Ot•t·emll&lt;'r 100:\ and .was
('hartt·r~"C.I in Nnvt•mbcr, J904.
A1 tlml timt•. she rcportt~d
that mt•ctin~s wcr~ held

mt•nt u£ sih.•ut pr~lyt•r wa s
A sehtH•I nf instrud inn was
twld in tribuft• tn llw tlt1t't!a s- ;umnuncml for Ft•h. lO at
t•d .
•
Ot•lrtwarc and (;I nuh• was
Kathryn Mih'hcll was sun· rct·eivcd fl~nm Lcsta GothHrd
·shim• page for lht.• evening. who reside~ in Columbus . A
du•·r vaS&lt;· to Mr·s. Zeil(l&lt;·r·. · twice a month and at the
Cmmnun iee~tion s wel'e rt.&gt;ad t'tmt shower was planned for
from the Meinhart family, Mrs .- Gothard who will ht• 81 · mula sympathy vast'. ~ Mr~ . clt•e~th of (.1 member, a eommith~t~ prepc.m.•d a rcsn\nlion
from Pmrlim• Roush for a on Ft'h. ?~ Her address is 27 Rnusil .
sympathy vase at the death of M{•f•k Ave.; r.nlumbus, Ohin
F:lta Ma&lt;' Norton ga VI' a whieh was put into the

her husband, and from 4~222.
Mildred Zeigler for a cheer
Mrs. F.uv&lt;•tta Re"htlc
vase.
reported that sympathy

Soloist frw the meeting was
Glenn F.v~ns who sang "He
Touchl&gt;d Me.' ' F.vclyn Lewis ·
thankl&gt;d the !'hapter for the
birthday observanl'e in her
honor at the last meeting.
Refreshment~ were served
In the dining room by Betty
Van Matrc, Glenna Crisp,
and Katllryn Mitchell. The
va lentirie theme was carried
out.

rc1M&gt;rt on the history of minutes. The chaplet in~vangeline Chapter as a part stituted Wilkesville in Sept.
vf the 7)ith anniversary obser- 1905.

Pomeroy Pennzoil
has Boss Lady '

:~:hi~"

1

two employes and works
about 12 hours a day herself
driving back and forth from
her home.
By summer she anticipates
that she will have one if not
both of her daughters here
working in the station. Mrs.
Zalupski's main businesS is
selling gas, although some
minor repairs and adjustments are made at the
station. She also keeps on
hand some beverages and a
few groceries so that her
customers can make one stop
instead of two.
. For many years Mrs.
Zalupski was a tailor and
wqrked in a Parkersburg
men ~s store. For a short time
a long time ago, she did work
in a service station.
Mrs. Zalupski feels that her
future is . here. She says
busines~ is pretty good, she's
happy m what she's domg,
and unless something drastic ·
happens, she's here to stay .

,---.-..~-,

·I So~iai
·I

Calen~ar

MONDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
Order of the Eastern Star,
regular meeting, Monday,
FEb. 5, at the Masonic Temple. 7:30 p.m. Obligation .
night will be ol&gt;served.
MEIGS COUNTY Salon ·
710, Eight and Forty, Monday
night, 7:30 p.m. at the Athens
County Savings and Loan
Meigs Branch, Riverboat
Room.
FRIENDS of the Meigs
County Library, Monday ,
7:30 p.m ., at Pomeroy
Library . Do not have to be a
member to attend.
INDOOR CAMP of Me1gs
Area Holiness Assn., Monday
through Sunday, 7:30 each
eveni ng with Rev. Clyde
Hendo.-r snn speaking on
Mond·y and Rev. P. L.
Lidde... Howell, Mich.,
remainder of week. James
and Rosemary Green,
Canton, Ill. , to be in charge of
· mu sic starting Tuesday.
Public invited.
LONG BOTTOM Community Assn. ·meeting 7:30
p.m. Monday with Rep. Ron
, James to be present to
· discuss road conditions and
other items of community
interest ; all area citizens
,urged to a.ttend.
TUESDAY
XI
GAMMA
MU
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:30p.m. at the Columbia Gas Co. in Middlfport.
Cultural program, " The
Shrinki ng World" by Mrs.
Kay .. Atkins . Hostesses,
Charltote Hanning and Donna
Nease.
GALUA COUNTY Sslon
612, Eight and Forty, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
home of Miss Erma Smith.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7:45 p.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Dues are payable.
WEDNESDAY
UNITED METHODIST
WOMEN, Letart Falls
Methodist Church, home of
Mrs. Inez Hill , Racine, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday.
muRSDAY
. ELEANOR CIRCLE, 7:30
Thursday allhe Heath United
Methodist Church. Nancy
Cale, C~erole Burdette, and
Kitty Cassell, hostesses.

Turns two
S Y R A C USE -- D a v i d
Michael Robinson , son of
David and Susan Weaver
Robinson, celebrated his second birthday recenUy.
A cireus cake made by his
mother was served with other
refreslunents. Games were
played with prizes going to
Brian Weaver and Tabby
F.blin.
· Others attending were
Mike McKelvey, Eleanor Kay
McKelvey, Melody Weaver,
Karen Weaver, Mike Van
Mater , Melanie Van Meter,

l.OIS ZALUPSKI, operator of Pomeroy Pennzoil.

At the Pomeroy Pennzoil
Service Station on West Main
St., the boss is a lady.
Lois Zalupski of near ·
Coolville · came here eight
months ago after signing a
lease with Pennzoi!. She has

Zealand but left ther&lt;• to li ve
on a sheep ranch where their·
triumphs and tr&lt;igedit•s were
interwoven with the wonders
and .cares of a land lavished
in cycles of drought , fire and

David Robinson

.

·
·
'

·

BIG 40%

.

SLICED
lACON .. ~ ...........................~·...

'

'

CUT-UP FRYERl ........~.~~~-;. a41cit£M ·1l.JIGH$.-..:.......~: 79~
WHOlE F
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Center Loin

BACON ENDS &amp; PIECE$ ........................................3. lb. .
0

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9
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BAmRDIPSEASTAR

2119 Jackson Ave.

675-2311

"

$149

.

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8 .
99c
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.

Bananas .... 4 lbs.

aae

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3 lbs.

e 11 ow On1ons .......... 39e

U.- S. No. 1

.lb.49e Potatoes.-.. 20 lbs. '1 39

Tom·a .t oes

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

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I

·

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Fl SH.................................~~~~~....

"holioiooooo.,;"o••••,••••·fb. $189

Red Ripe ·

1

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FRANKIE$ .
12oz.
WIENERS.............. ~ ..... ··~ ..~~~·:...

.

..--

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

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
'
Pnint Pleasant
MAXWELL HOU

GOFF

.

'

Limit ont with coupon

:'

...
'

~

.,.If
CARIATIOI COCOA MtX ................... ... · ·

. REG . MILKC~OC. O&lt;WI!.iiN&lt;

1114RikM~lOWI "

.

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.

.

MUSSELMAN$ .

U -Ct

SAIKA llstAit CGmE ....~ ............ •,;::·

16-oz.
Cans

PLESAUCE.............

$....

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$ 00
$ 49

Lb.

Can

.
'

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

,UIT.
1

~ti.!,l1. •

aca

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"

To My Wife, Ann ...
After

14

wonderful

years of marriage, I'm
still heod-over-heels In

..

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2.
6.
10.
14.

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the wortdl Have a
Happy Volentine's Day I ·
Mike and Sue

15.

16.

2,,...•.,. 59

BANQUET

Barden._ ChOcolate &amp; Vaoilla 1 .. ·
•
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ICEII! CR!AM
.................

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SWE ETMILK ot IUTTE .. MILK

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BISCUITS .............. .., ................ · ·-.

PILL.IIUfiV

THE DAILY SENTINEL

W\111 cou...

$219
Loaf
Lb.

l-011. • "

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SIIM"MILK ..............................
LARGE FRADE A

Ullllt oilo

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EGGS .....).~ ..

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2% MILK..................~~~.~ 1 59

Plus Deposit
DIET RITE or

R.C. COLA;.; ....:....
:

· Reg. 99c
8 01 .

· 79~

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TOILET
TISSUE ·

STORE~ ~uc ~o(NAL Foo o STORE S J!(eliJ

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WISK

$179 -

Limit one ~ c ~ ,.

one eoupD;I ,., hiirl l.., · Gal.

.Jug

-

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'1,0 STORES

WRIP TOPPIIG ........................ :~-:;; 49•

CHIFFOI SOFt MAtGAiliJi .\!t·
CHOCOLAn Hill ................

BORDENS

~

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Good at Ca rdin a l Stores

'AOITVAlifii

FRIEDl
CHICk

PHONe 992·2156

•

12-14 1bs .

VELVEETA.

PAK

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KRAFT

CORONET

We couidn't have picked

12~

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TURKEYS

z

a nicer pair of parents In

$200 OFF

z

c'"'

FACIAL TISSUES

4.
8.

ARMOUR BASTED

STORES • CAROINAl F QOOS TO R~S

10' .OFF LABEL

To Mom and Dad ...

3.
7.
11.

.

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49-oL

limit four

WRITE ·YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND BRINGJJ
OR MAIL .IT WllH '1.00 BY FEBRUMY 12TH TO.THE
DAILY SENnNEL, P. 0. llX 729, POMEROY, 0.
16 MlRDS '1.00-CASH WITH ORDER
1.
5.
9.
13.

.

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'

KRAFT

--C11~~

.

CHEER

S!'oat·to. -rASTE ............ ...1 ··· s9· ·
T

(Umit 16 Words-Sizes . IUustrated Below)
-:::-:--~r ·

DETERGENT

FLAVORS

iii.

.

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Utnti two wtth coupon

5IIIUf

'

=:~~l&gt;=&lt;

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aottles

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL -VALENTINE AD.
'

-..

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ai-oz.

. In 1958, Gamal Abdel
FRIDAY
HAPPY HARVESTERS Nasser beca me the first
CI,ASS, I :30 p.m. Friday a( president of the new United
Arab Republic.
the Trinity Church.

'

CRISPY SERVE EXTRA LEAN

PICK OF CHICKEN...... -.

YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
EXPERTS WILL
CQ--M--P~.-Q-N-,--0-.D--. --,~··
HELP YOU!
I'

love with you!

SPECIAL GUEST
Lois Pauley, deputy grand
· matron, was a guest at a
special meeting of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, Tuesday night
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Three past matrons
and two past patrons attended. Refreshments were serv~ '
ed.

PUT IN A
NEW KITCHEll!

~-~-------------~---------·

Mr. and Mrs. John Sheppard of London, are announcing the birth of an eight
pound, nine ounce daughter,
Tracy Nicole, born on Jan. 17
at the Madison County
Hospital. Mrs. Sheppard is
the fonner Kathy Gorby.
Mr. and Mrs. Sheppard
have another daughter,
Michelle, four. Maternal
grandparents are Mina Mae
Gorby of London, and the late
Ward Gorby, both fonnerly of
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Reason Sheppard of London.
Mrs. Nettle ~eek s of MeConnelsvrlle IS a maternal
great-grandmother.
. BLACKSBURG, Va. - Mr.
'and Mrs . David Notter,
Blacksburg, Va., are announcing the birth of a
djlughter, Megan Leigh, on
Dec . 28. She weighed 7
pounds, 7 ounces. She wa'
greeted at home by a sister,
Heather, age three.
The paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Notter, Scottown, 0., arid
maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. McDougale, 'Waterford, 0.
David Notter is a former
resident of Gallipolis.

WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO DO?

back parish to the inner
floods.
circle"
of the Vatican.
The story, she rcportl'd,
Mrs.
Ben Philson gave e•eenters on Maggie who fall s
in love with a m~:tn she can cert&gt;ls from the life of James
never marry whnse amhitiun Michner, author of " Portrait
takes him fmm a small out- of a Lady", "Return lo
Paradise" and "Centennial"
which is now being shown on
television in installments .'
UAR TO MEET
For roll ca ll members gave
ATHE NS
Ret urn
enmments
on the . reviews·.
Jona than Meigs Chapter, ·
Mrs.
Robert
Fisher presided
Da ught ers of American
at
the
meeting
and announcRevolution, will meet Friday,
ed
that
the
neKl
meeting will
Feb. 9 ·at 1:30 p.m. in ,the
beFeb.
l4atthe
homeofMrs.
·
. River Boat room at the
Nan
Moure.
Refreshments
'Athens Savings and Loan.
Tracing ancestors will be were served by the hostes,o;.
presented by Mrs. Thereon
'Johnson and Mrs. 1 Robert,
Ashl ey . The only money
BECKY TYREE
making project of th e
Becky Roush Tyree re- ·
association, a silerit auction! mains a patient at University
will be held.
Hospital. Cards may be sent
Hostesses will be Mrs. Dale to 'her at the hospital, MaterDutton, Mrs. Daniel Thomas, nity Ward, Room 557, 410
Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs. West lOth Ave., Columbus,
Charles Lewis and 'Mrs. 43210.
Robert D. Crai~.

Meter, and Bar- 1...
11
Sending gifts were hi s
11
grandt&gt;ar.,nts, the Rev. and I
.
OPTOMORIST ,
Mr,. John Rubinson, his I
grea t-grandmother, Mrs. o. 1 OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE
c. Whitaker, and Ann .I AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
Breaton.
:1 ST., POMEROY.
.
, .

Daughter born.

·

~ ~·

KITCHEN CENtER, INC.

',

family who lived .in New

-s~·

DALE'S

Mrs. Owen reviews 'The Thorn Birds'
Mr·s. Richard Owen r·eviewed "The Thorn Bird"" by Colleen McCullough at the
Wednesday meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club
held at the home of Mrs.
Emerson Jones.
Mrs. Owen noted that the
story centered about three
generation" of the Cleary

LAFF- A- DAY

....

09111700

"!&gt;o STOR ES

4•]: I

�.. .
9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday, Ft•b. &gt;. ~~·;•t

8- The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 5,1979

.

'

Racine Social Events

For Best Results Use

Sentinel Classifieds.

· Sunday visitors · of Mrs. Caroline Miller. Mrs. Brown
Laura Byers were her son resides in Minersville and has
Tuesday, Feb. 6
_ -·. ~~t!d_t!!_Buy __
and daul!hter-in-law, Mr. and been ill for some time.
WANT AD
CHit-' WOOD
Poles
max .
Mrs. !?elbert Van Meter of
Mrs. Flossie Badgley and
diameter 10" on largest end,
CHARGES
Columbus.
Mrs. Wanda Shuler visited
S12 per ton Bundled slob, S1C
pC'r tnn . UP.hverPd to Oh10
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert with Mrs. Pearl Norris of Bernice Bede Osol
ISWordsorUndl!r
I' .11 ,., •
P.t "I ' Pnn'&lt;'' l"o';'
Sayre visited with their. niece Letart Falls.
C.oh
Charge
992 '1~9 .
1.00
lday
and her husband, Mr. and
Weekend visitors of Mr.
1.50
1.90
2days
TIMBER . POMERO.Y Forest ProMrs. Norman Styers who and Mrs . Herbert Sayre were
2.20 .
3days
1.!0
ducts. Top price for standing
3.00
3.7$
6days
reside in .Waterford. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre and
~ ow timber . Coli 992 -5965 or
Styers' brother, Paul Sayre, children of Jackson and Mr.
_K ~n t_ Hanby , ~ 446_- 8570
Eactl word over the mimmwn J$
words is 4 ctmb per wurd per day .
Is a patient in Mt. Carmel and Mrs. David Sayre of
OLD FURNITURE , Icc boxes, bra!;s
Ads running other than consecutive
Hospital in Columbus.
b ed ~. 1ron beds. desk~ . et c. .
Antiquity.
days wiU be ctlllrged at the I day
Washington St., Albany, 0 .
co rnplete households. W11t e
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick
rt~te
.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Phone 698-6173
February &amp;. 1979
M D. Miller . Rl. 4. Pomeroy or
Grimm visited with Mrs. Corn well of Gallipolis visited Y.ou cou ld be singled out beDavid Coleman
In memory, Card of Ttutnks and
coii99'J.J760 .
Agentfor
Grimm's brother-in'law who with Mrs. Cornwell's mother, cause of your abilities to lead
Obttu~:~ry : 6 t-ents per word, 13.00
OLD . COINS. pocket watches ,
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
or manage someth ing large in
minlmwn. Cash In advance.
was a patient at • Holzer Mrs. Caroline Miller.
doss rmgs . wedding ' bond s, -r
c
COMPANIES and SANDY
scope thi s commg year Th1s
Medical Center, Walter
Mr . and Mrs. Frank new
MobUe Home 11.11les and Yard Sllle.s
rl1omonds GQid or sil ver Ca ll
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
pos it!on adds greally to
are
accepted
only
with
c1:1stl
with
Shane. Mr. Shane is now Cleland and Mrs. Cleland's yo ur social stand1ng .
R~g~r ~~~sl:y_ 7~2 - 233!
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio.
order. 25 cent clwr"Ke for aWl caiT)'recovering at his home 1ft mother, ,Mrs . Bill Wood, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19,
WANT TO buy : old 45 and 78
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
mg Box NUmber In Cart rl The Sen·
GaUipolis.
Hnet
phon ograph reco rd s
Co li
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
visited with Mr. and Mrs. You're reas on ably safe in tak992-6370 or Con tact Mo_rtin Fur·
BUSINESS.
Freeland Norris, who was a Cleland's daughter and son· ing chances on th ings or with
The Publisher reserves the right
nllure
1·26·1 mo.
patient in Veterans Memorial in·law, Mr. and Mrs. Paul people you know a lot about .
to edit or"reject any ads deemed at;
Strange
rs
or
new
condi
ti
ons
Jedlonal.
The
Publisher
will
nol.
be
WANTED
TO
bvy
·
old
Jewelry
.
Hospital, is now at home.
Knotts and son, Aaron, in should be treated wilh caution .
responsible for rntJre than one IncorCall 99'1 -5262 or wr i te Kay
A baby boy was born to Mr. Gallipolis.
rect insertion.
Fmd out · more of what ltes
Cec1l, 87 S 2nd, Middleport ,
Ptlone 992-!156
and Mrs. Danny Sublett of
Rev . and Mrs. Don Walker ahead lor yo u in 1979 by sendOH .
Pomeroy. Mrs. Sublett, Bea were in Columbus on Monday ing fo r you r copy o f th e all· new
Jay, is the daughter of Mrs. visiting Mrs. Clara Powell 1979 Astro-Graph Lette,. Mail $1
Pets lor Sale
Beulah Autherson, Racine. wh!) is ill in University lor each and a long, self~
NOTICE
RISING STAR Kennels, Boord1ng
addressed , s tamped en-ve lop e
Visitors of Mrs. Kathryn Hospital.
Tl)ey were ac- to Astra-Graph , P .O . Box 489 !
and graommg , all breeds .
Brown were Mr. and Mrs. companied by Rev. and Mrs. Radio City Slation. N.Y 10019.
Ch eshire, 367 0292.
WANT-AD
Linley Hart, Mr. and Mrs.
Mark McClung of MiddlePort Be sure lo spec1fy birlh sign ·
Roderick
Grimm and who visited with a patient at PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20) AlServices Offered
thOugh you may ha-ve some
Children's Hospital.
ideas tor changes
SMITH NELSON
WILL CARE for the elderly 1n ou1
Mr . and Mrs . Jeff clever
around the house, you might
home. Phonc992-7314 .
Monday
MOTORS, INC.
Knighting visited over the be better ott to attempt them .
Noon on Saturdt~y
1WATER WELL drilling. Wilham T
weekend
with
Mrs. another day You don ' t have as
Grant. 742 2879
Tuesday
Knighting's sister and much know·how as you th ink .
thnJ Frkiay '
WATER
AND mi se hauling . Call
brother-in- aw, Mr. and Mrs. ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) If you
&lt;PM
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
992·58S8
the day before pubUct~ tion
Larry
othard in Sum- say sOmething unthinkingly toMrs. Linda Jewell, Letart,
day that hurts someone 's feel·
e.
Hammond
ings , apologize promptly The
W.Va., spent Thursday night
~~'l:ly
~ ~E,!)iie-HomesTors-al-e longer
the
dolay,
the
deeper
· with her parents, Mr . and
Friday artemoon
lhe wound .
1.-'--.;.....,..:.-'----.Yj
1 11 ACRE 12 x bO mob ile home
&amp; Famous Name BraQd
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
near Dex ter 992 5858 .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be a
.
Keith.
little more ca reful with you r
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobde
Notices
Mr. and Mrs. Dim Bell
possessions today . Th1s inhome, furmshed
3 bedr ..
spent·a few days with Mr. and
cludes your money . Pec;&gt;ple GUN SHOOT Raci ne Gun Club.
washer and dryer . Air condi ·
have a lendency to go back on
ti oned . I lot , 210ft. frontage
Mrs. Bruce Hart at Colum·
Every Sunday 1 pm . Fact ory
Sales Rep. For ·
lhelr word . leaving you with a _ ~d~a":_e !lu_ns_o~ly...: . . _ _
$12 .000 Phone742-2B26
bus.
Sundins
loss .
Ralph Ours of New
.BY Mlil. Herbert Rousb
Hammond Organs
GEMINI {May 21-Juno 20) GUN SHOOT . Racine Volunteer 1955 Pro1r1 e Schooner. 28 x 8.
Fire Dept Every Saturday 6·30
bd'
Brighton, Pa ., George , · Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel You 're sharp today and do
Tyree Blvd. Racine, &lt;?hiD
pm ot the1r building in Ba s han . 1'165 Genera l , 60 x 12. 2 bdr
Donohew of Circleville, Greg entertained Sunday with a know all the answers UnforPhone 949-2118 evenmgs
1968
Elcono
.
52x
12.
2
bdr
!o_c t~r~ c_hok! g_un__s ?n~v ._ . _
Donohew visited Mrs. turkey dinner in honor of tuna te ly, you have a tendency
alter 5 p.m. Weekends
1969 Bu ddy , bOx 12 , 4 bdr
TAX Service, Federal 1970 Sylva, 60 x 12, 2 bdr.
Mildred Donohew, a patient their son, Tim's, birthday. to be unrel iable and cou ld INCOME
after 12 noon .
, ~ and State Taxes. 992 2272 for 1970 Castle, 60 Ji 12. 2 bdr
disappoint
someone
depend2-S-1 mo.
at St. Joseph Hospital in Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
oppts
or
see
Wa
nda
Eblin
,
ing on you .
1973 Arlmgton 60 x 12, 2 bdr .
Parkersburg.
41000 Laurel Cl1ff Rd.
Ernest Bush, Terri and CANCER (June 21-July. 22) Try
1973 R1dgewood, 70 x 14 3 bdr
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
Mr .. and Mrs. Doug Bar- Tommy Manuel, Mr. and not to make assumptisns
1973 Kirkwood . 50 x 12 2 bdr
co vollng . septic systems .
B 8 SMOBI LE HOME SALES
nette of Langsville visited Mrs. Sid Manuel, Long based upon partial evidence
For Rent
dozer. backhoe, dump tr~ck ,
PT PLEASANT, WV
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis today. Investigate full y before
l.tmestone, g~ovel , bl ack top
675-4424
COUNTRY
MOBILE
Home
Pork
.
ac cusations . You 'll
povmg, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)
Sunday.
Hudson, Minersville. Sending making
Route 33. north of Pomeroy
yourself embarrassment
698·7331 .
Mrs . Mona Ervtn, children, gift~ were Mr. and Mrs. save
lo!g~ l_ot~ ~o_l l ?9? · ~4~9 . • .
LEO (July 23-foug. 22) Your
1968 TRAilER 12 x bOas IS $3500.
BATHROOMS AND Kit chens
KeUie and Jason, of Ba5han- Harry Roush, Minersville, overall day should go lolerably 3 AND 4 RM fu rm shed an d un · Good condi tion Call742 2806
remodeled. ceramic tile, plurv·
Raclne Road, visited Monday and Mr. and Mrs. Robert well. However, sOmeone might
furn•shed
opt s.
Phone
bing,
carpentry and general
992 - 54~4
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell. Bailey and family, Pomeroy. try to uSe your good humor for
maintenance. 13 yeors ex·
Mrs. Alice Balser returned
Mr. and Mrs. Harold personal gain by plying you TWO BEDROOM kit chen fu rni shFor Sale
p~i!n ~e: 9?2~ 3~85
___ _
ed opt Call before 'a om
home after a visit with her Lawson and son, C. J., Letart. with flattery .
PULLINS
EXCAVATING
.
Complete
COAL
,
LIMESTONE
.
sand.
gro\lel.
VIRGO
(Aug
.
23·Sept.
22)
Don't
992 2288
son and family , Mr. and Mrs.
Service. Phone 992-2478 .
W. Va_. Mr. and Mrs. Ed1 try to co-ver up any mlslakes
calcium chlpride , fert-ilizer . dog
Carroll Balser and family at Lawson and Eric, Mr. and today . 'Fess up to th em and TWO BEDROOM mob1le home
food , and oil types of ,solt Ex - AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
near Dexter near No I Mine
ce lsior Soft Works , In c. , E. Main
Mansfield.
Mrs. Bob Lawson, Mrs. Rick you won 't destroy all the good
cancelled? lost your operators
992·S8SB
St. . Pomeroy. 992-3891
work
you
'
ve
already
done
.
•
l1cense? Phone 992-2143 .
Mrs. Gerald Hauman and Morris and Michelle visited
··- ·- -- -- - - LIBRA
(Sept.
23-0ct.
23)
Popu1
son, Keith, visited Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawsiln·
- ' . E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor serv Yard Sale
ing Oh1o Vo lley reg•on . S1x
Mrs. Allen Cunningham at and Wilda over the weekend. lanty IS yours today until you
SNOW
attempt to seem knowledgedays a Week , 24 hours ser..,ice.
Racine Sunday afternoon.
Cindy Roush spent a few able in something you know IF YOU hove a ser \I ICC to off er .
Em ergency calls . Coli 882-2952
TIRE
SALE
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert days with Mr. and Mrs. Dana little about. It will ruin your
won t to buy or sell something,
or 882-2305
·good Image.
oe looking tor 1'work . . or
Roush and Mrs. Iva Orr Lewis at Clifton.
MOBILE HOME repo1rs. Furnaces .
SCORPIO {Oct. 2t-Now. 22) The
wha tever
you "ll gel result s
visited at GaUipolis Tuesday.
SNOW TIRES
Ed Roush spent Saturday paren
electm ol work . p1pes sowed.
ta l instinct iS slrong in
fost er with o Sent1nel Wont Ad
ON SALE AT
Mrs. Orr consulted her doctor nlgbt with' Jim O'Brien.
pi~ ~?~~ ~~- 5-HS_B . ____ "
you today . You could take care Co i i 9 02- ~ IS6 : . . .
POMEROY LANDMARK'
at Holzer Medical Center.
WALLPAPERING AND pomhng .
of an obligation for one who
SERVICE STATION
Greg Donohew of Columbus
IN THE
·,eally Isn 't worthy of your good
.Coll
-·-,742·2328.
- ., ,.. - - . .. - - .
COMMON PL'EAS COURT
"
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
deed
.
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
.
'
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
Saturday.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Pomeroy Landmark
· ESTATE
OF
HANNAH
21) It 's not like you to be ATHENS
COUNTY
GREENLEE, DECEASED suspicious without cause, but SAVINGS &amp; LOAN COM Local Bowling
Case No. 22576
""" today you might misinterpret · PANY
' Jack w. Carsey, Mgr. · Real Estate lor Sale
NOTICE OF
PLAINTIFF
the motives of one who is
APPOINTMENT
~.
Phone 992·2181
HOMESITES for sole , 1 acre 'and
VS
Friday Night Ladies
lrytng to be cooperative.
.
OF FIDUCIARY
·
up. Middleport , naor Rutla nd.
JAMES SEE, whose address
January 8, 197P
Oh Janua ry 18, 1979,' in th'e CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) is unknown; CORA SEE, 1003
Call992 7481 .
Pfs
Meigs County Probate Courl.
Excuses can never replace per- South Second Street, MidAPPLES.
FITZPATRICK
Or$hord
.
THREE
BEDROOM frame home in
Case
No
.
22576,
George
E.
Bill's Quality Body Shop 87
formance . You 'll know what dleport, Ohio ; and RUTH
Stole Rt 689 Phone Wtlk esville
Greenlee , 7551 Lee Rd.,
GOSNEY , 271 South 6th,
Kenny ' s Angels
84
,
~d~I!P~rt
;_ ~ ~~ 9J2_:3~52 __
669·378S.
Weslerville , Oh io A30Bl was needs to be done and for Middleport, Ohio, 45760 .
Don's Upholstering ·
64
FARM
FOR
sole
House 2 barns ,
appointed AdminiStrator of
whom. so put out the required
DEFENDANTS
Mine No 3
59
tra iler Lorge pond 10 ones or
the
estate
of
Hannah
the
best
oi
your
NO'
.
I7
,070
effort
to
Hona~er CB
50 · Greenl ee , deceased , late ot
82 acres . 742 .2566.
LEGAL NOTICE
abilities.
Parker's AI. Service
40
. - - - - , - - ----357 Williams St., Middleport, ·
Plaintiff has brought thiS
!NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
ASSN
.)
REAL
ESTATE LOANS. VA . No
Ind . High Game - Dottie · OhiO .
action naming you as one of
m o ney
down
(e l i gible
Nelson 189, Ellamay Norton
the defendants In the above

ASTRO·GRAPH

AN

.'Birthday

INSURANCE AGEN

'II• mile ott Rt, 7 IIY·PJ•• ..n
51. Rt. 124 towerc'l Rutflnd,
0.
, '

PETE SIMPSON

News Notes

./------~---~--

:W_

182 , Lor ie Moore 138.

Manning 0 Webster
Probate Ju dgeClerk
22, 29 (2 ) 5. JfC

named co urt by f iling his
complaint on January 17.
Ind . High Series - Dottle
1979.
Nelso n 444, Ellamay Norton
(1)
HEADQUARTERS
The object of the complaint
443, Lor ie Moore 376.
Is to foreclose a mortgage
Te am High Game For au your Appliai1ce ·
against
the
following
Kenny' s Angels 465, Bill's
Needs.
described real estate and the
PROBATE
COURT
OF
NOTICE TO
Quality Body Shop 452 ,
prayer is to foreclose a mort MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
EMERGENCY
Parker's A. I. Service 445.
gage e•ecufed by you as
NOTICE OF
AMBULANCE
mortgagee on the follow ing
APPOINTMENT
Team High Serle~ DEALERS
descr ibed real estate to
OF FIDUCIARY
Kenny's Angels 1299, Bill's
JACKW,
Ln accordance with Section
Athens County Sa~ings &amp;
On January 24, 1979, 1M the
Quality Body Shop 1294 . 307 .86 of the Ohio Rev is e~ Meigs
CARSEY
Loan Company and for In County Probate Court ,
Parker's A. I. Service 1292. Code. sea led bids will be C&amp;se No 22593 , Elmora E . ter est, costs and for other
Mgr.
received by the Meigs County
rel 1ef as may be proper . The 1
Bo ice, 124 Mulberry Ave ,
Phone 992-2181
Board of Com m 1SS 1oners , 1n
Pomeroy , Oh iO, Ramora C .
real estate is described as
their office, located In the
Morning Glories
Young , 773 N. Thurb er Or. E .,
follows:
Courthouse , Pomeroy , Ohio,
Si tuated in the Vlltage of
Columbus , Oh io and Robert
January 23. 1979
ONE FURNACE MASTER wood
45769, until 4:00P .M . on Feb .
Middleport, County of Meig s
Boice , Bo x 5213 , Walnu t
Pfs
burner , regular $495, now
20, 1979. The bids will be
Creek
,
California
94598
were
and
Sate
of
Ohio
.
G&amp;J Auto Parts
103 opened at 6: 30 PM . on Feb. appointed Co Executors of
$400. One auto Rad iant wood
Being Lot No . 33, the north
Karr &amp; VanZandt
84 20, 1979, and re&amp;d aloud tOr the es tate of Raymond E . part of Lot No . 34, and 10 feet ,
heeler, reg . $199.95, now
Newell Su noco
80 the fo ll owing veh icle : Each
$170.00. 3 Cool Moster stoveS ,
Boice , de ce ased , l ate of
more or less , ott the east side
bid to meet the conditions and
Sears
78
wood or cool , regu!or $378.55,
'Pomeroy , Ohio .
of Lot No . 36, for a depth of so
as follows :
Cleland Realty
64 specifications
feet. All in Behan 's Add it ion .
now
$300. Gravely TraCtor
Specifi cations may be
Manning 0 . Webster • The tolal of the above parcel
Gibbs Grocery ·
47 obtamed
Soles. 210 Condor, eameroy
fr om the Meigs
of land being 55 feet, more or
Probate Judg e High Ind . Game - Candy County Emergency Medical
992·297S .
on Short Street, and 80
Brothers 196, Drema Smith ,S,ervices County Off 1ce, (1) 29 , (21 5, 12, Jtc Clerk less,
feet, mOre or less, on Fronl
191
located al Mulberry Heights,
Street.
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769
H igh Ind. Se.rles - Orema
Reference Deed : Vol . 271,
Vehic le to be one ( 1l 1979
Real Estate lor Sale
Smith 524, Mary Gil lilan 464 .
Pg . 935. Deed Records Meigs
Type
I
I
Class
1
Emergency
Hig h Team Game
County, Ohio .
Ambulance Price will be
You are required to answer
Cleland Realty 822.
11
w ith 'flO trade in veh i c le.
the complaint within twenty - J 1 acres i n Pomeroy Secluded
Hiqh T Earn Series
The front of the envelope
wooded oreo on top of hilL
PROBATE
COURl
uteight
days
after
the
last
Sears, 2202.
enclosinQ the bid must be
Overlooks river . Water, elec·
MEIGSCOUNTY, OHIO
publicat ion of this notice , \
marked
"Se aled . Bid ,
ESTATE OF GEORGE A which will be published on ce
!ric avoilabl&amp;. 992 -3886 .
Emergency
Ambulance · MEINHART ,
DECEASED each Week for six successive
Vehicle. " Bidder to f urnish
ADOLPH
Grueser
Case No . 22594
weeks,
and
the
taut FORMER
the i r own b id form .
residence located in Out·
NOTICE
OF
publicat ion will be made on
The Board of
County
Thought
for
today:
APOINTMENT
ch town, Minersville . ApproiC . '
March 12, 1979.
Commissioners may accept
OF
FIOUCIARY
· In case of your fa ilu re to
10 acres , good garden, lots of
Revenge does us more harm the
lowest bid. or select the
On Jan uary 24th, 1979 , in answer or otherwise respond
wood, two stories wtth Iorge
than the injury itself - John best bid for th e intended
the Me igs County Probate as perm itfed&gt; by the Ohio
front porch . l 1/ 1 both , 2
purpose , and reserve the
Court, Case No . 22594, Bar -' Rules of "Civil Procedure
Lubbock,
English right
bedrooms
to rejec t any or all bids,
with sleeping enclos bare Jane Mayer, 3975 Irwin with i n the time stated,
astronomer
and and or any pari thereof
ed proch, country kitchen, din·
Court. Grove City, Ohio 43123 , judgment by default will be
ing room , living room , sotrm
was appo 1nted Executrix of' rendered against you for the
mathematician, 1803-1865 ..
(2) 5, 12, 2tc
the estate of George 'A . Mein - relief demanded in the
wlndo¥/S, natu ral gos furnace ,•
hart , deceased, late of 941 compla int
unfinished basement , deep
Hudson Street, Middleport,
rock walled open well w1th
OhiO 45760.
Larry E . Spencer ,
shellered cover . also cistern .
Clerk of
Drapes and carpeting included.
Mann i ng 0 . Webster
Co mon Pleas 1 1
.4 fa 5 good building spots Tup·
Probate Judge Meigs ounty , Ohio I
pers Plains water Ohio Power,
Clerk
Coble TV, General Telephone.
Il l 29, (21 s. 12, Jlc
Price $25,()(X). Call W1ltiom
Ru ssell at 992 5614 , Charles
Grueser at 992-2211 or Wolter
Grueser ot 992 -3770. lm·
Located S miles west of Athens at the
_m~~o
te_po_:~!~n.:.. __ __,__
Athens Livestock Sales.
I

Veterens) . FHA · As low as 3v
down (all non-Veterens and
general public) To purchase
real estate or refmance . 30
YEARS TERMS . IRELAND MOR·
TGAGE CO . 77 E State St ,
Athens . Phone.614 -592 -'3051 .

SALE PRICES

PUBLIC AUCTION

FEBRUARY 9th, 7 P.M.

HELP WANTED

*TOOLS OF ALL KINDS * BISQUE PIECES
TARPS OF ALL SIZES AND ITEMS TOO
NUMEROUS TO MENTION. OVER $5,000
WORTH OF MERCHANDISE TO BE SOLD.

*

AUCTIONEER

mSHERIDAN

SlH Auction House &amp; SeMce - '

MECHANIC MUST BE EXPERIENCED.
HAVE OWN TOOLS. APPLY:

BOB HAWK CHRYSLER PLYMOUlH
ATHENS, 0.
28 E. STATE STREET
593-6653.
LEONARD WILKES. SERVICE MGif

3

bedrooms, bath, new cEmtral air and gas furnace.
Full basement, enclosed
bac~ porch and carport.

Only S12,500.
3 APTS. - All rented with
good income . Property
looks good near school.

NEW LISTING - Business
brick building. 2 stories
wllh oer «00 sq. ft . with adACREAGE -

MAIN .....
POMEROY,O.
NEW LISTING - 24 acres
of beautifully secluded
land, 2 year old bi-level, 3

! by THOMAS JOSEPH
I 1ACROSS
39 More
Monastic
profound
room
AILEY

CA~FUI., S~NY!

MAGIC

h 1

FOR 6ETTIN' RID OF
ED CRI'T"I'lf~ ARE....
QIN(i~ OOO~'r;

S!!!EN US)

utilities available. Small
pond, woods . 523,000.00.

ROPO SOON,_Y!

•'

-...
~.

composition

~-

15 Poem
16 Actor,
Rod 17 Atlantic'
island group
19 Suffix
with exam
20 Wmg-like
part
21 Bete 22 Jaunty
24 Wynter or
Andrews
25 In a blue
- (fearful!
2.6 Silent
27 Cali£. fort
28 1Adjourn-

"

'
·'

.
'
GASOLINE ALLEY

~
·w:\;J

CARPniNG

ll/4 ACRE Vacant
ground, originally had 2
houses, lots of frontage,
located
in
Pomeroy.

DRIVE ALITTtE
&amp;.
SAVE ALOT

I
I
1

You'll never

\ '
'

qit. t.' Caliform~
baclt,in' up,

Mister Waltf

All ciliioef'iillie11«1 with
paddln, at no charge.
Expert nstelletlon.

I

enclosed porch, garage.
Also has 2 mobile homes

Floor Cola ing In Stock

get

Buy -•you cen come In ·

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

•
•

ONf Cf

.•...•.
0

desired

RESULTS!
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELANbJR.
. ' ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELANO
LEONA CLELAND

111d 1M wMt ~OU'I'e getting

-a

'wiWt • " - Fully

•tee:-. .

'

.. S:.'llt4ll·J211

" l'M.K"ff .
We-.n or Herll Ontc
or O...Smltll

991-6191

RUTLAND
FURNIJURE

~··

THOSE '$PY

'
'

...
..
......

$AT'!:L.L,.1TE.S

.-.
*

.~.

~

,•

.,.."'

-·'
......
_.
·~

·'

'

....•.

,

YOU ...
1. Two lull floors of all new
'

"·''

· 2. Nice selections of used
furniture.

· 3. A large building full of
.IJtautilul carpet.

5:30-Carol Burnett 3; News6; Sa'nford &amp; Son 8; Elec .
Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15,
Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doc\or Who 33.
6:00-News3,8,10,13,15; ABC News6; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett 6;
CBS News 8,10; My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20.
t7:oo-Cross-WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Please .
Stand By 8:. Love American Style IS ; Carol Burnett
&amp; Fr iends 17 ; Lock Stock 11. Barrel 20 ; Marshal l U.
Report 33.
7·30-Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go to the Races B;
t;~dld Camera 6; Price Is Right 10; Donna Fargo
l'f• Gilligan's Is. 15: Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20.33.
· 8·00-Movle "Two Ml nute Warning " 3, 15; Happy Days
6, 13 , Horror Show 8, 10; World at War 17; Austin
City Limits 20; ·city Notebook 33.
•:Ju-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9 .0(}-Three's Company
6,13 ; College Basketball17; Academy Leaders 20;
The Town" 33.

6,13; Movie " Duffy" 10; Movie "Bunny O' Hare"
17; ABC News 33.
12 :40-Banacek 8; 1:00-Tomorrow 3; 1: 05-News 13.
1:30-,.,.,vle "The New Interns" 17; 4:05-News 17;
4:25- 12 O'Clock Hlgh 17; 5;25- World at Large 17.

of
"Gunsmoke"
Monday, Feb. 5 '
natre word 29 English
poet
22 A1m
30 Seeing
23 Rattly
red
24 Sand ridge
31 Rartn' to go
25 Spumed
Oswald
26 Martin of 33 Footprint
"Adam-12" 36 Tearful

BRIDGE
Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Importance of ARCH
NORm
• 10 7 6

WINNIE
• I'M GLAD 1HE H05PITAL
LET ME SPEND WE
. NIGHT HERE ...

I WANT W BE !&lt;:1,!.3HT
NE:XT TO YOU WHEN
YOU aJME AROUND;
START 10 BPEAK ...

'

.'

24-A

!-:-:::-+-+-

• 864

+A 9

WEST

EAST

+KQJH3

+ A6

• 9

• 10 7
t J 975
+86 4 3 2

t K 10
• QJ

10 7

so urn
• 92

•AJ864
t

A QJ 2

+K5

36 Obstacle
37 Jewish
ascetic
38 Poker term L--J.-'-...1..--''--..t.....,;;,

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

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: West
West North East
I+ I Pass Pass
Pass
Pass 4•
Pass

Opening lead : +Q

ZHLG
GNLLJQ"
HK
..-.,.,-::-:--:=:-:::-c::-c-:-=="""' '' K S L L Z H I
WENDY, IT'51t1E INTEJZNATIO"AL OPER!\TOR !
1\HO
DMFL
HRL
OQL
SMDQO
OH
I THINK YOUR .
MOTHER'S TRYING11
XQLR
OQLSL
MG
KMSL"
GQHYO
TO 5ET THROUSH
TO YOU!!!
OQLCOLS .
RHRL ' MR
C JSHXZLZ
- HBMFLS
X.
QHBILG
Yesterday's Cryploq110le: MORAL VANITY IS THE SNARE
OF GOOD PEOPLE,-MARGARET DELAND

I'D

BE TICKLED

TO, LOWEE'Z.V

Irick . He decides to postpone
a diamond play as long as he

ca n."
Alan : " He starts by drawing trumps with two leads;
then cas hes the la st high
club and leads a spade from
dummy . East rises with the

•KQ532

ace."

Oswald : ·'At this point the
probabtlity that West w11!
hold the diamond king has
risen from a high probability
to a certainty. So when East
leads back a diamond, South
goes right up with his ace
. and leads a second spade.
West wins and continues
spades. South ruffs ."
Alan : " Now South is
South home. It doesn't matter how
he plays the second diamond
2•
because after West takes his
Pass
king he has to give South a
ruff and discard."

Ask lbc IXPCPII
You hold:

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

2-5-8

+AQJ!lli
•QJ107

•z

+2

Oswald : "How about some
Tennessee reader wants
articles on the acronym to Aknow
what action we take
1
ARCH'?"
dealer.
as
Aian: " Let's remind our vulnerable. Both sides are
readers. A is Analyze the
We open four spades. If
lead. R is Review the bidding. C i·s Count your partner has just a little help
we will make it. If he has
winners and losers. H is How
may get our
can I make or defeat the nothing, weinto
the wrong
contract, depending on opponents
contract.
·
which side you are. It •
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J
Oswald : "South reviews
the bidding and notes that
(For a copy of JACOBY MODthe odds are greatly in favor ERN, send S1 to: " Win at
of West holding the king of Bridge," care of this newspadiamonds and he can only per, P. 0 . Box 489. Radio City
afford to lose one diamond Stat1on , New York . N. Y 10019)

BARNEY

Headquarters
the Grate Family at ·

Fidrych
.
2.I Ques t ton-

CRYI'TOQUOTES'

~

·

18 Baseball's 28 Milburn

One l ett er simply stands for another. In this sample A is
u sed for th e three L' s, X for the two O"s, et c. Single letter s,
apostrophes. Lhe l ength and form a t~on of the words are all
hints Each day I he code l etters are dafl'erent.

~

"
' ••
.·

· we -OFFER

Dream of Jeannie 17.

. ~.

.,,t.·.,.742....,-22,..1;,o1-·'-.....:·~R;;;utt.,;;;;lld"""i :.,-:;

RUilAND. FURNnuRE
..

Yeslcrday's Answer

--.:LT--M-U-~-"r'-Je-- ;;;.~~lme

. -.
•

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6,1979
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; World at
Large 17; s:55-Sunrise Semester 10.
6:00-PTL Club 15; 700 Club6,8; 6:1(}-News 17; 6:25Concerns II. Comments 10.
6:30-Romper Room 17; 6:45-,.,.,rnlng Report 3;
6:50-Good ,._,.,rnlng, West Virgin!• 13; 6:55Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:oo-Today 3,15; Good Morning America 6,13;
Tuesday M&gt;rnlng 8; Schoolles 10; Three Stooges 17
7: 15-Weather 33; 7· Jo-Famlly Alfalr 10; 8;oo-caot.
Kangaroo 8,!0; Leave It to Beaver 17; Sesame St.
33.
8:30-Hazel . l7; 9:0(}-N-erv Griffin 3; Ph il Donahue
13, 15; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game 10; Lucy .
Show 17.
9:30-Brady Bunch B; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
10 .00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13; ,._,.,vie " East of
Eden" 17.
10:30-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; $20,000 Py&lt;amld 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3,15; Happy Days 6,13; Consumer
Survival Kit 20.
11 :3D-Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15; Fanilly Feud 6, 13; Love
ofllfe B,lO; 11 :55-CBSNewsB ; House Ca iiiO .
12 :00-Newscenter 3; ; News6, 10; Jeopardy 15; YounQ
&amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :30-R yan's Hope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;
Elec. Co. 20,33; Movie "Dear Brigitte" 17 .
1:00-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children ~.13;
News 8; •Young 8. the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1;30-Daysol Our Lives 3, 15; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:oo-&lt;lne Life to Live 6,13; 2 :25-News 17.
2.30-Doctors3,15 ; Guiding Light 8,10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:oo-AnotherWorld3, IS: General Hospltal6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Rocer 17.
3:30-Mash 8; Joker 's Wild 10: Fllntstones 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
4:00-MIIster Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; /lev
Griffin 6; Porky P ig &amp; Friends B; Sesame St.
20,33; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is. 8,17; Brady Bunch 10;
Pettlco•t Junction 15.
5:00-1 D~am of Jeann ie 3; Beverly Hillbillies B;
Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle
USMC 10; Bionic Woman 13; Brady Bunch 15; I

Movie " On

34 "- pro
nobis "
. 35 Mrs .
' • Gary -

......
.
. Ill;;'!·
. up

II 3D-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee Story 6, 13; Rofrd
Files 8: Movie " The Bobo" 10; Movie " Bull or
Sandoval" 17.
·
12 :40-MCMIIIan &amp; Wife Q; Ironside 13 ;
Tomot'rqw 3; 1:3(}-Movle "Gunsofthe Revol ution "
17.
I 40-News 13; 3;3(}-News 17; 3:SO-Open Up 17.

9 JQ-Taxi 6,13 ; 10 :00-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Paper
Chase 8, 10; News 20.
11 :oo-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Hogan's Heroes 17 ; Di ck
Cavett 20; Book Beat 33.
11 ·30-Johnny Carson 3,15; ,._,.,vie " Love Boat Ill "

""'~~ ~

As Low As

"9' and 12' Vinyl

DOWN
I Medtt. tree
2 Pass over
3 Pry
4 Actor Van
Cleef
5 Spanish inn
6 Redolence
7 M. Coty
8 Early
trumpet
9 Iron Curtain
country
10 Less pinguid
16 Religious
(ollowing

,!~i~~~~§~, 32 inent
phrase
Evangelist

RdDber Back Ca~

SELLING YOUR HOUSE
-LET AN EXPERT DO
THAT! Won't cost a cent
UNTIL and UN~ESS we

creature

s e ter
Threatener's
phrase
:::::;" 13 Split
14 Musical

•

SAVE ON

has many building sites,

~e

LESSEE ... TH '

"THAT Ste VARMINT'S

.

40 Forest

5 Package

[~~~~~~~~~(l~~~~~~~j;~~~~ r~~~~~f:~~~~~~:=~==~~~~~~~-11Toward

,,

'

~OL1MftHd

"'

$38,5011.
.
21 ACRES CLOSE IN -

Housing

OWNER MUST SELL -The owner ol thi :&lt;
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now sci she is offering this line
.home lor a low, low price of $20, 000. There
are 2 bedrooms ( l'is extra larg e) , spa cious
living room w -lireplace, formal dining, eatin kitchen, bath w -shower, garage &amp; a king
sized yard. Good location on Mill St. Call the
Wise111an Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
446·3643.

.

·.,.
' ~

Jan. 22 thru Feb. 10

bedrooms, family room,
garage, home has many
other features . JUST

· furniture.

Now arrange the Circled
to
lorm the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

•

·'

"PERM SPECIAL"
120.00 for 117.50

In the wild.

WANT TO SAVE 'YOUR
MONEY WITH LAROE
INTEREST? INVEST IN
PROPERTY, THEN
WRITE IT OFF.
G. Bruce Tealord
· Helen L. T01lord
Sue P. Murphy
Assoelatos

' i'Q BE •

Irom Jumble, Clo ltlls newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848.1ncluda your
name, 1ddr11s, :a:lp code 1nd make ctlecks PI WI bill to NtwJpaptrbookl.

" ·

608 E.

A Ill

WA~ "INCLINED"

Jumble Book No. 12, canlalnlng 110puulet,lllvtlll ble lorS1 .7S postpeld

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

992-22~9

WHAT 'THE CROOK.

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Sweepers! · toasters. irons , oil
small opp ionces lawn mower,
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7.

ditional space in basement,
$21 ,500.
We will sell you what you
want. Just call to see.

••

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

rounded bY a new wood

rent pay for il. $23,000.
NEW LISTING

D

"•

KAY'S
BEAUTY SAWN

the

r J

I I

J I I ·J

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Racine . Ohio. Critt
Bradford .

Real Estate lor Sale

you

...

•,.
•'
•

____ -

carport. $28,500.00.
Ml DDLEPORT - Nice 3
bedroom home, utility,
N.G. forced air heat,

A

""~ '' o.c..,.. ' "'"'" ~ ' --· ··-· ·~

•.
'.

- - ------

Lovely to see, 3 bedrooms,
utilitv, equipped kitchen,
air cond., storage bldg .,

LOOJ(,IF H£; CQ;St.J'T, 'OJ
~ .. ,IJAiq; IT. .. (~ I
ri;;:&lt;~\ HAVe' HI~ lJM~t..t..A ~

I.. ....I-..... I

11·9·1 mo.

--------- --

ABOUT 6 YERS OLD -

HAVIIJ0

A. W.IP,
~

EXCAVATING , dozef, backhoe
ond d1tcher. Charl es R Hot- SEWING MACHINE Repoin, ser·
fi e ld
Bock Hoe Service
vice, ott makes, 992-2284 . The
Phone74!2-2008
Rutland
. " Ohio
- _,___
- .Fabri c ~ Shop,
Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
. _!~c.!:~!. sharpen Scisso.!s.

$3,000.00.

H~'5

~tJE&gt;OO

Pomeroy,O.

fence , large concrete park ·
ing area . $16,500.00.

Income. Live In one, let the

00, ~!i'5 00'1'

Ca II 992-7113
For Free Estimates

late model mobile home.
Located on level acre. sur -

216 E. ~cond s\r~i
ADVANTAGES - 5 ren·
tals, 4 occupied. Excellent

GALEE
BORN LOSER

220 E. Main Street,

urRict

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
ane letter to each square, to form
four ord1nary words.

••' '

EWO'IT
APPUANCE li

(all are rented) . $29,5011.00.
NEAR MINES - Beautiful

. 992-3,325

..
•'

Your Headquarten fGr
Armstrong .Carpeting

------~

~

M&amp; WIO'RE j.OOI&lt;IN'
AT THE FLYINt:l
OllrcHMAN!

Tew;

1} jl\}1.\.ft fij}'ft ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

1·19-1 mo.

&amp; lllnpllctllluH

__

AND TRAN~PA~oNTLIKE A 6H05T
SHIP!

33.
7:30-That Nashville Music 3; Muppet Show 6; Price Is
Right 8; Wild Klnqdom 10; $1.98 Beauty Show 13;
N~hvllle onthe R&lt;ad IS ; Sanford &amp; Son 17;College
Basketball 33.
8:00-L itt le Houseoothe Prairle.3,15 ;; Salv•ge.i6,13 ;
. All In The Fam ily 8,10; Bill ,._,.,yers' Journal 20·
Let's Go To The Races 17; 8:30-AIIce 8, 10; Last df
the Wild 17 . .
9:00-Backstalrs at the White House 3,1S; 'How The
West Ws Won 6,13, Mash 8,10; Col lege Basketball
17; Growing Years 20.
9:30-WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10; Doctor Who 33.
lO :oo-Lou Grant 8,10; News20 ; Movie " Accident" 33.
10 :30-Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
11 ;oo-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; dick Cavett 20 ; Hogan's
~ ~ ~~~ ®

10 Years Experienc:e

""' contury · Service w1t11
2)\tft century KMw-Haw.
Utclelllln.ln

-

'

90RTA WAVsRY

•
'

992-7583

.

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5,1979
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20.
6·30-NBC News3. 1S; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett6;
CBS News8 .10; My Three Sons 17;0ver Easy20
7:00-Cross.Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Pop Goes
The Country 8; News 10; Love, American Style 15;

Heroes 17.

ROUSH '
CONSTRUCTION

.· lHESEP

~

WOTICS AIJY·
THING EL$E

VOU AIN'T JUf,T WHif,TL I'-''
DIXIE', 0~ ~UDDY! 5UMTH!N

Home Remodeling

DOft't Itt 1 chlmhwY fin put
• ••mptr on your lift -

~--

HOLV f,NIO~Cf'! · 'f I 'LL &amp;AY I DD,
D-D·DO YOU PODNIOR~ IT LOOK!S-

NIGMT FINDI&gt; THE 5HAfl.l&lt;
BATTLING 5-TOO:M AND F0&amp;-1\5 OUR TWO ADYENTUR~fl.~
E!APE AT A W&amp;IRD 5-PECTACLS

'

General Repairs
Masonary Works

Cfti'lliniY
SwtepoOultd
lnsurH

EXCAVATING . dozer . -looder and
backhoe work . dump trucks
ond Ia - boy ~ for hire, w11l haul
fill dirt , to soil , limestone ond
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fers . doy phone 992 -7089, night
phone 992-3525 or W2- 5232.

CAPTAIN EASY

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION ·
FOi Competitive Prices

MIIRIMrOt

Pflont: 742·SIIt
Kim Wftllo, Praprl2-5·1 mo.

~

Tftinking Of Having
A New Home Buill?
Conlict

Middleport, 0.
992-2356
·1,4-1 mo. (Pd.)

' Woocllt0¥1, 011

...

i -12-1 mo .

651 Beech Street

Cell...

••

,."'

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Carol B urneft 17; AI manac 20 ; Know Your Schools

..••

PII)NE 742·2328

WltiMake
S.rvice Calis

ORGANS

•
.••.

Depend On ....

11 Years Experltnco

News Notes

PIANOS

••

REYNOLD'S
ELEcntiC MOlOR
SHOP

Apple Grove

-....

Ceramic Tile - FormiCI
Counler Tops - Ceilings
I SUspended, Tulurel · Tile
. Flaors- Panellll!1 &amp; Trim.
Quality Work
. You can
.

............

A8lM~~G

..,

-Room Additions-Custom Remodeling-

. GARAGE
Auto&amp; Truck
'Repair
i(lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

ITS INHUMAN!

AI. TROMM mNST.

ROGER HYSOL

RICHARD - BRING
THIS KNAVE TO
JUSTICE. IMAGINE!
MURDEFi!ING
A MACHINE-

..I

Business Services

..,.

~'¥our

DICK TRACY

WHAT ELSE CAN

I DO FER ~E?

�-.-

----

...

'

,.

-.-....
/: '

'

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleporl-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Fob. 5, IU79

Squads busy
over weekend

IIAK E SALE SI.ATF.V
Tho Ladies Auxiliary of the
Middleport Fire Department
willm&lt;&gt;ct \Vodncsday, Feb. 7,
at 7:30 p.m. at the fire hall.
'llll' Pomeroy emergeJtcy
A white elephant and bake . squad was called to Route "I
sale will be held. Hostesses nea r Shenang Springs at I : 50
will be Hetty Ohlinger and a.m. Sunday for Dean Hawk
Patty Stein.
who' was injured in an auto
accident. Hawk was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The squad went to the
Chester Road at 7:09 a.m.
' Sunday for James Garnes
who .was taken to Veterans
Memorial llospital.
At 3:13 p.m . Sunday the
· squad went to Minersville lor
Pauline Cunningham who
was also taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Saturday aft ernoon the
squad took Mrs. Norma
Goodwin from Brick St.. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The Southeastern Ohio

Garden Tractor Club will
meet at8 p.m. Wednesday at
the Dale Kautz residence,
. ~ute 3, Pomeroy: Persons
interested in joining the club
are welcome.

Baker Furniture Has
A Budget Shop-

All NEW FURNITURE
AT BUDGET PRICES!
9'X12' RUGS

$58

3 IPC. LIVING ROOM

GROUPS
'398 . '498 - '598
PLATFORM ROCI&lt;ERS $68
'

.

SPEED
QUEEN LAUNDRY
I
HEAVY
DUTY - LARGE SIZE
f

$588

WASHER &amp;
DRYER
.

CHEST OF DRAWERS $39

HOOVER CANISTER
10 QT. DISPOSABLE _BAG, 1.7 PEAK HP,
~ FLOATS ON AIR,

NO WHEELS NECESSARY!

'4495

HOOVER SWEEPER

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLETPORT, 0.

$68 88

The Middleport emergency
squad was called to 573 North
Second Ave., at 7:13 a.m.
Monday lor Dorothy Scarberry who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 7:36 p.m. Saturday, the
· squad went to Route 124 for
Charles Burt and at 7:57
Saturday night to Middleport
Hill for Mabel Pierman.
· Both Burt and Mrs. Pierman were also taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

Committee plans
Tuesday meeting

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

1
I
I
I

Area Deaths

AIJA V. OHLINGER
Mrs. Ada Virginia Zahl
Ohlinger. 80. Houle 1, Mid·

dleport, died Sunday morning
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Ohlinger was born
Oct. 25, 1898 at Minersville, a
daughter of the late August
and Christina Yeager Zahl.
She was also preceded in
death by her husband ,
Frederick William Ohlinger
in 1972: a "sister, Mary
Elizabeth Zahl, and two
brothers, William and Edward Zahl.
twin
Surviving . are
their
daughters
and
husbands, Mary and ·Albert
Schleicher, Parma, and
Martha and James Vennari,
Pomeroy ; another daughter
and her husband, Mildred
and Joe ·Bailey, Route I ,
Middleport, with whom Mrs.
Ohlinger had made her home
for the past three years; a
brother, Aaron (Zeke ) Zahl,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Ohlinger was a
member o( the Minersville
United Methodist Church and
she had been a Meigs County
school teacher for 36 years.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p-.m. Tuesday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
· Home in Middleport with the
Rev . W. H. Perrin officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call
. at the funeral home any time
until the hour of services. .

The committee for the
establishment o[ a nursery
and day care center will meet
JAMESON R. FRIEND
at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the
Graveside
rites . for
Meigs County Mental Health
Jameson Ray Friend, stillCenter.
Meeting with the com- , born san of Jeffrey and
mittee will be Gary Little of Kimberly Ward Friend, Portthe Buckeye HUls-Hocking land, at St. Joseph Hospital,
Valley Regional Planning Parkersburg, Saturday, were
Commission
and
3' held this afternoon at the
representative of the county Gilmore Cemetery.
Surviving besides the
commissioners. All interested persons are urged to parents are maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
attend the meeting.
Gene Ward , Portland ;
paternal grandmother, Betty
Friend , Long Bottom ;
, ASK TO WED
greatA ' marriage license was maternal
grandmother,
Icy
Dailey,
issued to Robert Lee Jones,
greatRacine;
paternal
. 34, Rt. I, Albany and Nancy
grandmother,
Amy
Friend,
Louise White, 26, Rt. ),
Akron : maternal great
Albany.

•

YOUR SAVINGS HERE I
Saving money in a passbook savings account or time certificate
-account is necessary in today's economy. A savings account
earns interest compounded daily, giving you money to meet
emergencies or for buying luxuries . A savings account will also
help to send your kids ·to college!

Fat litters
POMEROY, OHIO
......_

....__

......

VUKU

-

'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Eac~ Depositor
· Member. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
. I

&lt;.

•

BY KATIE CROW
·
Conditions of US 33, SR 7 and the City Hall Building were
major topics discussed at Monday's regular session of
Pomeroy Vlllage Council.
Larry Wehrung, councilman, told fellow members he had
readthelettersMayorCiarenceAndrewsreceived last spring
in which Gov. James Rhodes had placed U.S. 33andSR 7on the
top priority list for paving.
Wehrung noted that this did not happen. Later when
council agreed to have the state pave Nye Ave. to Sycamore
Street the weather was such that hoi mix could not be placed.
Wehrung asked council for pennission to write to Gov. .
Rhodes and ·Glenn Smith, Marietta, Ohio Deparbnent of
Transportation to request that paving in Pomeroy be done in
early spring· rather than in September. Wehr.ung also
suggested tbat paving be completed from Butternut to the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. Council approved his suggestion.
Hall Deplorable
Wehrung also commented that the present city hall was in
deplorable condition and suggested that the building be
remodeled.
•
He added that "villages all around have nice city buildings
while OW'S is a rat hole." He also addert that he relt the vilJa~e

t:HIUSTINE JOHNS
Chri&amp;ine Johns, 58, 107
Kerr Street, Pomeroy, died
Saturday in a nursing home
at Piketon, Ohio. She was
preceded in death by her .
· mother.

Survivors

include

one ·

sister, Ellie Mae Venable,
.'Cleveland, one . nephew,
William Venable · and two
great nieces, four aunts,
Cornelia Bunch and Gertrude
Johns, both of Pomeroy,
Vlolena Melton, Cleveland, .
and Rosie Minnis, Bidwell,
and several cousins.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at
Ewing Chapel with Ute Rev.
Eddie Buffington officiating.
Burial will be in ·Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home at any
time.

WINT~R HIKE SUCCEss .:... Thirty-two overniRht eampers loaded for a cold winter
evening and 10 day hikers traveled the Grandma Gatewood trail last Saturday at the Second
Annual Winter Hike and Campotit sponsored by Bob Evans Farms in Rio Grande. Doubling
the numbers who participated last year, this weekend's venture was blessed With fair
weather and moderate temperatures. Hikes included a 4-H Club from Friendship, Ohio;
faculty and students from Shawnee State College; Jackson area businessmen and many
local adults and children . The day hikers explored fresh animal tracks in the snow while the
''backpackers managed to jump two buck deer and a doe. Fox, raccoon, turkey, and grouse
prints were pointed out by the experienced trackers. After the days' hike and discoveries
along the trail, the campfire was ignited and fellowship was Shared by all. Seasoned winter
campers assisted the novice by sharing thei~ tips and insights.

GLADYS L. BOSWORTH
Mrs. Gladys L.- Bosworth,
80 , Dexter, died Monday
morning
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mrs .
Hospital News
Bosworth was born in Salem
Township, a daughter of the Veterans Memorial Hospital
late Alfred and Flora O'Dell
Saturday admi ssions Pond Holliday . She was a 66- Norma Goodwin, Pomeroy;
yea• member of Star Grange Ray Tryall, Pomeroy.
778.
Saturday di scharges Surviving are her husband , Ronald Miller, Charles Wise,
E. L. Bosworth ; a si&amp;er,
Larry Curtis, Henry CunAllee Houtday, Delrter, and ningham , John Edwards,
several nieces, nephews and . Mary Laudermilt, Thomas
cousins.
Walker, Marion Francis,
Funeral services will. be . Dora Smith.
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday by
Sunday admissions - Dean
the Old Delrter Church with Hawk, West Columbia, W.Va. ;
the Rev .' Ralph Smith of- James. Garnes, Pomero Y,;
ficiating. Burial will be in the Sarah Lunsford, Tuppers
Nelson Cemetery.
Plains ; William Arnott, CoolFriends may call at the vj))e ; Charles Frye, Rutland ;
Bigony-Jordan Funeral Paulin e Cunningham,
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Minersv ille; Ethel Dilcher,
p.m. Tuesday. The body will · Rutland.
.be taken to the church one
Sunday disc harge .
hour prior to services .
Timothy Dillon. •

Buckey~. • • Ferry
union contracted crews
employed during the strike
would pay the additional
\yages being sought by 2359
for six years. ·
"The cumomers are being
fleeced in an attempt to bust
the

union,' '

Pancake

.

Highways, building conditions agen.da .topics

great - grandmothers, t•:o;thcr
DaileY, Portland, and Sarah
J. Congo, Racine, and several
aunt s. undes and cousins.
Officiating was the Rev.
Lawrence Gluesencamp.

(Continued from page I )

•••

.

I
I
I
I

contract

is terminated
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP)
- This city has terminated
its contract with one of three
ferries operating on the Ohio
River since the closing of a
bridge to South Shore, Ky.
"It won 't be a great Joss,"
City Manager Barry Feldman said this morning. A 400person passenger ferry and a
motor vehicle ferry continue
to operate.
Portsmouth City Council
decided to cancel the contract
with the Keystone - Rich·
mond Co. at midnight Sunday
following a weekend meeting
because of con.tinued public
criticism of the company's
operation, Feldman said.
The ferry, which carried
motor vehicles, had frequent
technical problems, the city
manager said. The company
was paid $3,800 a day for its
service. It was to have
remained in effect until
repairs were compiet~d on
the U. S. Grant Bridge,
scheduled to re-open neKI
December.
·
Feldman said a suitable
replacement for the ferry
would be sought this week.

Men expected to
return to Ohio
'

HAMILTON , Ohio (AP) Two Hamilton men being
held in Nashville, Tenn., in
connection
with
the
disappearance of a Florida
couple are expected to waive
extradition and be returned
Monday, authorities said
Sunday.
Gary Morningstar, 33, and
Allen Scott, 27, have been
charged with felonious
assault , but police said
additional charges could be
filed.
Two charred bodies found
· in .a burned-out, abandoned
car Saturday in rural Butler
County have been tentatively
identified as those of Carmen
Buetti, 36, and Terri Bel)!lett,
20, both. of Miami.
. But Butler County Coroner
Garret Boone said the bodies
were "burned beyond
recognition and ~rozen ," and
that clinical identification
may take a week.
The Florida couple disappeared after ~!tending a
rock concert in Cincinnati
last Saturday night. They
were reported missing the
next day by another Florida
couple who accompanied
them to Ohio.
A search of the house where
Morningstar and Scott
allegedly took the F'lorida
couple folloWing the concert
uncovered what appeared to
be
bloodstains,
bone
fragments and bullet holes,
police said.

charged.
James said he had in·
formation indicating that the
cooperative had accepted a
high bid from the non-lJ11ion
firm, Floyd Pike Construction, North Carolina, for
a recent project.
"The information indicates
Pike was the highest bidder,
but they got the work, "
James said.
"I don't under&amp;and why,
but the low bid was [rom a
union contractor, who would
not work during a &amp;rike," the
state representative con·
tinued.
Many of those . attending
said outages which occurred
last month following an ice
storm, would have been much
shorter if the company had
fired the non-union firm and
settled with the union local.
State representative James
received praise during the
afternoon session from the
committee members, union
workers and cooperative
u.s. WILL TRY
customers.
OTIIER PLANS
"Politicians have swarmed
WA.SHI~GTON (A P )
around these meetingJi li~ ~ The United St~tes plans to try
bees around 11 honey pot, lin to sell some of the billions of
but one has buzzed off though dollars worth of arms orders
- that's Ron James," canceled by the &amp;rife-torn
steerin~ co~ittee member government of Iran to other
Bob Letth satd.
countries, sources said.
Also present Sunday was
During recent negotiations,
State Senator Oakley Collins, Iran and the United States
a representative , from , Sen. agreed to cancel arms orders
Howard Metzenbaum's office of as much as $7 billion,
and a representative from sources said Sunday.
Congressman Clarence
Miller's office.
James emphasize,d at the cooperative's
code
of
outset of the meeting that his regulations, told the memconcern with Buckeye Rural bers that it would. · be
operations should not be necessary to draw · up· ·
!=Onsidered pro-union or anti- . petitions si~ed by 10 percent
management · but rather · in of the coop's customer support of the consumer.'
-owners calling lor a special
Those present were told by board meeting in order to
a steering committee to hold elections · lor new
reform the Cooperative that directors.
Anne Zimmer then asked
'Buckeye was formed to
provide low cost electrical for volunteers from each of
service to people who the cooperatlve's.five service
otherwise would not have that · areas to help in circulating
service, but over the years , the petitions, which have yet
the membership had, through to be written.
inaction, relinquished control
"We "expect the current
of the comJ)any to the board board of directors to do
of directors.
something or be replaced,"
A local union leader Lorry one committee member said
Smith di.rected himself to that Ill! coop members stepped
point when he said, "It's not forward to volunteer to
us working
for
the c\rcujate the petitions.
cooperative ."or Clyd~ Ram"It would be more hone&amp; if
say, but the cooperative and they took a gun and held
Clyde Ramsay working for people up," the committee
us. "
member continued, "at lea&amp;
The meeting ended after then you'd knOw what they' re
.l• me•. reading from the doin'g ."
·

..

.,

Morningstar and Allen
w'ere apprehended Friday at
a Nashville motel where
police confiscated two pistols,
a grenade, a small amount of
drugs and about $12,000 in
caSh.
Each was charged with
felonious
assault
and
Morningstar was charged
with possession of illegal
ordnance after officers found
explosives and automatic
weapons in his apartment .
Butler County Prosecutor
John Holcomb said SUnday
the matter may be submitted
to a grand jury being
empaneled Monday .
. However, that would not be
made public until the grand
jury reports Friday.
TO END MARRIAGES
Three dissolutions of
marriage have been filed in
Meigs County common pleas
court.
Filing were Andrew Edward Lyles, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, and Cindy Morgan
Lyles, Rt. I, Long Bottom;
Lawrence Eldo Rose, Rt. 2,
Racine and Edith Lee Rose,
Racine: ·Mary H. Cleek,
Racine and Corbett 0 . Cleek,
Racine .

Why doesn't the FCC assign
a special channel for the exclusive broadcast of TV interference?

ELBERFELD$
Wrangler' cowboy cut jeans
are made with that

good old western traditi on. They're rugged
yet extremely &lt;am·
fortable, feature

swing pockets and
pa nt legs that will
fit easi ly into your
boots. Best of all
they're ' so easy ' to care
for because Wrangl er

could not .&lt;iord' to renovate the senior high building or regarding such a tax. ·
maintain it. He felt the present location is a better one than the
Brown ·also reported the HUD grant for sewage,
senior high building.
demohtion of houses, winterization of homes and
I.ou Osborne, councilman, felt council would be wasting rehabilitation has been submitted . Brown said he had been
money on a building that is in as poor condition as the present contacted by a representative, of the Bureau of Outdoor
city hall. "We would be throwing good money· after bad," Recreat ion regarding the village ·gra nt for its mini-park .
Osborne noted.
·
Brown reported the village would not hear from the
Belt~ Baronick, councilwoman, suggested the present federal level for five to eight weeks , at which time he will be
structure be torn down and new building erected.
sent information on how to proceed with the project. Council
Council a11thorized the mayor to get cost estimates on also was to have a survey done to see what land is available.
repairing the present structure and costs for erecting a new
Discuss-Salaries
building.
Council also discussed a salary increase for the mayor and
It was also pointed out that Osborne Street was in terrible clerk. Council felt it was fortunate to have a mayor that spends
condition . It is impossible to patch holes there.
as much tim e as Andrews does on village business.
.
$50,000Spent
It was also noted that lhe clerk begin ni~g next year, will
Harold Brown, councilman, said council spent $50,000 on take over the treasurer's duties. No action was taken on salary
paving last year . He commented that if the village had a one or increases. Couricil, with reluctance, accepted the resignation
one"and a haUmilllevy for streets it would be possible to set up of Larry Powell. Powell's term expires at the end of th e year.
a program il·council knew what revenue was coming in.
Council discussed possible replacement member following
It was suggested that an additional tax on liquor might the council meeting.
help the village get more revenue lor street·paving.
. Council, in other business, approved the second reading of
·
Brown is to contact Villa~e Soliritor: Fr.O rrow . an ordinance granting a seven percent increase in wages to all
village employes and gave the first rf'arlinrr to u Fair H111to:.::inu

·e.
. (USPS 145 -96~

VOL NO. XX.IX NO. '206

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Promising not to raise taxes,
Gov . James A. Rhodes
outlined plans for improved
fundin g of education in his
Stiite of the State address
today.
He called for increased
state funding of schools under-

a new distribution formula·
and tightening of sch~ol
management to assure
effective spendin g . for
education.
He labeled education "the
first priority of our budget."
"I propose an additional
S636 'million in state support

for Ohio's schools," Rhodes
told the joint session o[ the
Legislature .
"This is a 24 percent
increase from the current
biennium. at a time when
enrollments will decline by 6
percent."
The plan will result in a

.--··cAA accepting applicants
for exten.d ed EEA proWam
CHESHIRE - The Gallia Meigs Community Action
Agency will be accepting
apJIIIcations
for
the
Emergency
Energy
Assistance Program (Extended), beginning Wednesday. ·
This program will assibt '
low·lncome households and
the elderly who experienced
financial hardship between
January I and June 30, 1978 ;
and those who have received
a "shut-off" notice this year.
The program Is intended to
assist elig ible low-incom e
individuals and families who
endured financial hardship
during the period January I,
1978, through June 30, 1978.
Individuals and households
who are pr esen tly experiencing a winter-related
crisis- such as a "shut-off"
notice from a utllity company
- are encouraged to apply
for assistance under this
· year's program, especially
the elderly living ·on fix ed
incomes.

In order to be eligible for
assistance, , an individual or
household mu&amp; meet income
guidelines and demonstrate
that winter conditions [in
1978) created - or are
presently creating
an
emergency nee,\1 which the
. person or household does not

have the financial resources
to meet .
Eligible applicants can
receive assistance with fuel
- utility bills ~nd-or such
iterns as blankets, clothing,
temporary space heaters,
emetgency furna ce repairs,
coa), .fuel oil delivery, temporary shelter, nutrition,
health and supportive ser·
vices, and temporary and
emergency·repairs to housing
unfit for habitation.
Those
)Nho received
assistance through th e
Emergency
Energy
Assistance Pro gram last.
year are not eligible to
participate in the "eK!ended"
program ; but may apply for
assi&amp;ance under this year's
program if they can provide
proof that an energy·related
crisis is occurring. Copies of .
utility-fuel expenses incurred
between January 1, 1978, and
June 30, 1978, ar~ required, as
well as proof of the ·
emergency need. Th e same
requirements exist for this
yea r's program.
Applications will · be
available in the following
locations: th e Community
Action Agency in CheShire
(992-7000, 367-7341); Com·
munity Action offices in the
Gallia (446-4612) and Meigs
(992-5605 ) county court-

hou ses; Senior Citizens
Centers in Pomeroy (9927884) and Gallipolis (4467000); and the Satellite
Nutrition Sites at the Vinton
Baptist Church (388-7877) and
the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Qtrist of Latter Day
Saints in Racine (843-3364).
Application deadline for
last year's program is March
15; · deadline for assistance
under this year's program is
May 31.
Additional . information
may be obtained by contadng
one of the above-mentioned
locations.

Church making
special appeal
An appeal is being made by
the Dexter Church of Christ
for donations of material or
money to build a small home
·for Caryl Tyler,.Dexter.
Tyler 's home burned to the
ground two weeks ago.
Neighbors in Dexter have
offered assistance and •I&gt;'
peals have been made to
several Churches of Christ.
Those wiShing to make a
donation may do so by sen-'
ding it to Waid Nickolson,
31345 Bowles Road, Dexter,
Ohio 45726.

boost ln basic atd per pupil
fr om $960 to $1,250 in the first
year and $1 ,300 in the second
year of the new biennium , the
governor said.
Hi s budget provides tor a 22
percent increase to education .
for handicapped children and
an increase o£ 104 classroom
units
for
vocational
education.
Rhodes said his education
budget would :
-Improv e . training for
teachers and administrators.
- Provide lull fundin g for
the basic skills program he
proposed last fall .
-Provide increased aid to
big city districts.
- Provide incentives .[or
parents and teachers to work
together.
~Provide funds -for--poor
school. districts to pay debt
charges.
"I will soon appoint a
special task force to analyze
and recommend solutions to
school di sc ipline problems,"
he said.
In addition to his big plans
for schools, Rhodes promised
$155 million, in property tax
reli ef.
"This relief includes a 2.5
per ce nt increase in the
rollback and increase in the
homestead e xem ptio n
program, " he said.
For higher education , the
governor proposed a 21
percent increase in fundi ng
and an increase in student
loans.
.
Rhodes ca lled for a 21 percent increase in fu nds for
mental health programs and
we lfa re incr eases " to
families that are in
legitimate need."
He hit upon a favorite topic
- jobs - by referring to
them as " the only thing that
will save the inner cities ."
" I will again propose
legislation that would exempt
employers who create or
(Continued on page 8 )

pucker and wri nk le free,

.relief.

l:

Union .leaders ·out on bonds
dation officials said th at
Two leaders of the Ohio Rt. 1, Cheshire, and staff union must have a certain there has been no harassment
Public Work ers Union re pr esentat ive Robert percentage of individual s . and, to their knowledge, there
(OPWU ) entered not guilty Gogerty. Massi llon, were wanting to join before its have been few if any cases of
pl eas Monday in Gallipolis arrested Monday morning by representatives could receive irritation.
Municipal Court to charges of GSI security poli ce when they pe rmi ss ion to ent er th e
Reg ulations under which
trespassing on Ga llipolis allegedly r efused to leave grounds and recruit.
the
GSI operates empl oyee
Charging that the arre,ts
campus grounds.
State Instit ute grounds.
organizations
mum meet the
A spokesman for the were Unwarrant ed, Mik e 10 perce nt membership
Dennis VanSickle. asthe
union's
si&amp;ant director of OPWU , Department of Mental Health Clifford ,
exec
uti
ve
di
rec
tor
, said requirement a nd mu!)t give
Reynoldsburg, fornterly of and Retardation said that a
Monday that the new union seven days' written notice.
The superintendent may
currently has between 50 and
grant
the right to enter the
60 members at GSI.
for pu rposes of
grounds
Clifford said he had sent a
rec
r
uitmen
t · when those
letter to GSI Superintendent
requirements
are met.
John Beattie stating that the
In
this
case,
the departOPWU would be on the inment
said,
Clifford
did send a
stitute grounds to discuss
letter
requesting
pennissio
0
problems with members and
to com e on the grounds feb . 5
Th e
Pomeroy
Fire gas standby: seven autos: non·members.
Department during 1978 one apartment building; one
"In recent weeks," Cli fford and 6 for the purpose o[
electrical;
one
fa
lso
alarm
;
answered 71 calls, 30 in to1m
wrote , "several employees recruitment; however, since
and 41 out of town , according one jail and three residence. have been harassed about his employee organization
Out of town calls included OPWU, and it is our intention did not meet the 10 percent
to Charles Legar, fir e chief.
four
autos ; l wo tractor and
criterion. the superintendent
Legar submitted a report to
hay;
eight residences: one to help soothe irritations the informed them that their
Pomeroy Council Monday
workers arc feeling and help
night for the period from July brUsh , One false ala.rm , one them understand their requem had to be denied.
barn and one dumpster.
· The jncursion of the
1 to Dec. 31, 1978.
rights."
Truck
two
was
rebuilt
at
a
During t~at perio d the
Department of Mental grounds Monday morning by
total
co't
of
$22,000.
All
department answered 15 in
Health and Menta l fl.etar- · VanSickle and Gogerty was
equipment
was
reported
in
en tirely unaut horiz ed and
town resulting in $35,010 in
good
condition
with
the
exinappropriate, the statement
lo sses, 355 man hours; 16 and
;.·-::::-:::·.;: :: ;.::::-:.··:&lt;:·.:::;.;.;.,.... ;.;;:·:·::;. read.
one-hall miles each vehicle ception of hose damage
· Mu nicipa l Court .Judge
one way, average ca ll per during recent flooding. There
EXTENDED FORECAST
were 184 man hours spent
James A. Bennett set bonds
man 15.
Thursdav through
at $500 each. The cases were
~aturday: c'old Thursday
Out of town calls tota l~d 18; flushing the. streets following
continued until March 5.
$53,63Uin loss; 199 miles each the flood .
and warmer Friday and
Saturday. Possible snow
vehicle one way; 292 man
hours; average man per ca ll ,
F rida)' and snow or rain
Saturday. High around 20
12.
Storm warning
Winter · st orm watch
In Pomeroy, there were one
Thursday and rising into
tonig ht. Snow possibly
the 30s by Saturday .
beginning by evening and
Overnight lows zero to 10
posted tonight
possibly mixed later tonigl1t
abo\'C Thursday and rising
with fr eezing rain or sleet.
into the 20s by Saturday .
By The Associated Press
!.ow tonight in mid to upper
The
Nationa l Weather
20s. Chance of precipitation :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;&lt;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: Service. has issued a winter
· · ·RACINE , Ohio (AP)
storm watch for extreme
Arrowheads found at the site 90 percent tonight, 70 percent
southern Ohio tonight. A
of a proposed trealment plant Wednesday .
winter storm watch means
have put a $4 .million sewer
that Conditions are right for
project on ice lor at least
BILL INTRODUCED
the
development·
of
three months.
WASHINGTON iAP) - A
hazardm.Lc; winter weather in
Bidding on the plllnt for
A porch at the James the area.
Meigs Co unty communities of constitutional amendment to
The watch was brought on
Racine and Syracuse was allow voters to enact their Hayes home on Nye Ave.,
scheduled to take place about own ·federal laws was in- Pomeroy, was eKtensively by a low press ure area
Nov. I, said Frank Porter, trodu ced again in Congress damaged and a pickup truck moving toward Ohio from
attorney for the two-village Monday and promptly ran hea vily damaged as the along the Gulf Coast today.
formidable opposition . result o£ an accident at 1 a .m. This system is expected • to
sewer di&amp;rict. But it now is into
1
'l'm
against it,'' said Rep . Tuesday.
spread snow across the s tate
stalled by a &amp;ate order for
Pomeroy police sa id the tonight. The snv~ may be
Don
Edwards
, D-Calil.,
archeologi cal
exploration.
Porter said the delay is cha irman of the Hou se truck driven by Eldon Blake, mlxect ·with freezing rain or
costing about $5,000 a day and consti tutional rights sub· 49, Reed sville, was traveling sleet in southern counties.
Temperatures in Ohio
put the total eK!ra cost at committee. which will con- l)Orth on Nye Ave .. it ran over
the sidewalk strikine the tonight should be mu clt
sider the proposal.
$250,000 to $~00,000.
Edwards said he will hold porch . The vehicle continued milder than the past two
An initi al archeological
&amp;udy turned up the arrow- heafings on the amendment if on and flipped over when it · nights, In the 20s.
The high temperatures on
heads. Additional exploration the majority of' the sub- ran into an embankment.
Blake is charged with Wednesday will range from
of the site will begin in April t'Ommittee ' wants to. The
and tak e 11 weeks, Por\er subcommittee declin ed to driving while intoxicated and the mid 21ls to around 30, with
said, li e pU\ the co&amp; of the hold hearings on a similar leavin g the scene. He was not snow tap ering off into
injured in the accident.
new c•ploration at $13,000. meas urt' la'st yr-r~r .
flurries.

71 fire calls
answered in '78

Driver faces
two charges

available
Wrangler

fuller cut blue
fuller in

the legs and seat
Sires 32 to.so walsi
lengths 30 to 36.
Be sure to see our
new spring styles

sl~ve

workers. Though the work ;s probably only a tempora• y
solution until repairs can be completed, it is a welconle

Anowheads
ice project

Straight Leg or
Boot Flare

men's

PATCHING HOLES - The Pomeroy parking lots
along the Ohio Power were getting the many potholes
patched Monday afternoon by the Pomeroy \OIIage

Weather

never shr inks out of size.
Navy in sizes 29-42 ..

of

15 CENTS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1979

Rhodes ·unveils school
financing plans today

of the dryer ready to wear

jeans -

ent1ne

a1 y

Fault" 100",(, co tton 14 ox .
deni m with Sanfor-Set'" .
Washes cleaner and comes out

Also

•

•

makes 'em of "N o-

men's

ordinance. Without the Fair Housing ordinance, the village
cannot qualify lor a federal grant.
Meeting with coun cil were Jeff Russell and Bob Schmoll,
representing the Jaycees. They asked if the Jaycees could
have an antique car show during Regatta. Mayor Andrews
informed the men to conta ct the Pomeroy Chamber of
1
Commerce.
Jane Walton , clerk, read a request to transfer a liquor
license from Mildred Johnson, Shamrock, to Morris and
Johnson, Rainbow Inn and a request transferring a liquor
license from Jellrey Morris to Morris and JoiUJson, Rainbow
Inn.
Council did not take any action. Council .members would like
to receive opinions· fr om residents in the respective district.
Council will take action one way or the other at the next
meeting.
Chief .Jed Webster 's report showed the deparbnent
invest igated 26 acciden ts, drove 4,611 miles, made 49 arrests
and collected $3,052 from the parking meters.
Tlie meeting wsa opened loy prayer by Lou Osborne.
Attending were Mayor Andrews, Wehrung, Osborne, Brown
and Baronick , council members, and Chief Webster.

long

western ·

shirts ready for
your selection .

SUBMIT HISTORY -Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Amsbury,
left, are Shown submitting -their family hls;ory to Meigs
County History Book Committee workers Mrs. Ted Reed,
center and Mrs. Patrick I.Dchary, right, at the Meigs
County Museum on Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Reed and Mrs. I.Dchary were working at the Museum

Elbeffelds In Pomeroy .

.

I

&gt;

I

Monday. from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. receiving the. written
historical accounts. Mrs. Margaret Parker, coordmator of
the Meigs County' Historical Society, reports more_than
500 accounts of family histories have ·lfeen turned m fa~
publication in the new county history book.

.,

'•

..

.

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