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---------

~ 10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. Feb. 12, 1979

.

--~-

.

iProtesting farmers
...~ enter second -b ig
: lobbying week
•"'

..,..- - --:::;_-

-- ·-----· ---

--

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

1I

Area Deaths ! Pierce called
.·

.

I·

squ~d

NEW YORK (AP) c._ Tele- . Varying reports lnitially in· Rockefeller, who was lying oo
HAROLD E. THOMAS
Mrs. l.!lrene l.ucas, CheShire. vision personality Ponchitta dicated the person who
a couch.
.
Harold E. Thomas, 67, Seventeen grandchlldr!'n, 19 Pierce, attempting to answer moned help was a female
"It seemed to me that the
Cheshire, died Saturday great-grandchildren and two questioos about her role the neighbor. The caller was best thing I could do was call
evening at his residence.
great-great-grandchildren
night of Nelson Rockefeller's .later identified as Miss' 911. I phooed 911 and asked
Mr. Thomas was born Oct. survive.
death, says it was She- not a Marshack, a research for emvgency medical
10, 1911 at Point Pleasant, the
Five brothers and four Rockefeller aide - who assistant who was ·with 1 the • ••sistant@," her statement
son of the late Floyd and sisters survive: Marcus, called the police emergency fonner govern~r and vice said.
Margaret lfurke Thomas. • Lester and Stacy, all of number.
president when he was . Miss' Pierce said after she
•
Mr. Thomas w·a s an Spril\gficld; Stanley, Mutual,
Miss Pierce's public state- stricken. ·
placed the call she left the
automobile painter of !5 Ohio ; Rev. Erman Peters, ment, issued. Saturday night
Unidentified sources sub- townhouse and walked back
"·
~ WASHINGTON (AP) supports cannot be raised if posed no new price-support years hpvlng operated Florida; Mrs. Ercel (Esta) through her lawyer, was the sequenUy said the caller was to her apartment. On the
Protesting farmers, now in the higher · level would legislation.
Thomas Brothers' Garage in · Niday, New . Carlisle, Ohio; fiEst by any person known to Miss Pierce, a one time way, she said she saw a pollee
-the second week of 1979 overprice 0 .S. crops in world
The House Agriculture Cheshire. . An assistant Mrs. Sarah Myers, South have been present when Rockefeller employee who car and·told the officers to go ·
'lobbylng ((I' higher graln markets, which now have Committee is · holdihg three ~ntrol rC)Om operator at Charleston, Ohio; Mrs. Roy
Rockefeller died of a heart · · now · works for WNBC to Rockefeller's apartment.
~upport prices, have . been
heavy supplies Of the days of hearings this week · KygerCreekPowerPlant. He (Lottie) Hughel, Springfield, attack on Jan. 26 at ·his office-' television as co-host of a local
.,.(l'klng long days . in the commodities involved.
and two next week on the organized the first basket ball Ohio, and Mrs. Lucy Gard- townhouse at 13 West 54 St. public affairs program:
(.'Clllgressional field. ~ickin's
A national emergency In resolutions
and
the team in Cheshire, served on ner, Urbana. Two brothers:
Meanwhile, today's
In her statement, Miss
are mighty slim.
which farmers would need Ill protesters' complaints about the school board at Cheshire WUiie and Curtis, preceded editions of the paily News Pierce said she was called by
~ Protest leaders are stUI
be encouraged to produce farm programs generally. for 18 years, was very active him in death.
quoted an unidentified Miss Marshack, her friend
,llopeful, however, saying more, even with today's overin Utile League and softball. · Mr. Peters joined Okey member of the Rockefeller and neighbor In a cooperative
-acceptance of their ideas is flowing bins, is the only ex- Truck destroyed
He was also an active Chapel Church near Lecta at family as saying· privately apartment building at 25
•wider than expected.
ception to that condition.
member of the BiR Bend CB . age 18. He moved to Cheshire that despite confusion over West 54 St., between 10:50
legislation
the
; The
By Friday, the seemingly
A 1978 pickup truck was ciub and paleyd the tram- in 1920, and became a . specifics of . Rockefeller's p.m. and 11 p.m.
American
Agriculture pointless measure had ~ destroyed by fire Saturday at bone with the New York member of the Cheshire death "we are abllolutely
"She told me that Gov.
:fo(ovement is backing this sponsors in the 43lknember 12:47 a.m. Bob Tripp, Fire Central Band.
Baptist Church.
satisfied nothing could have Rockefeller had suffered a
_year is a resolution urging the House and 13 in the 100- t.llief ofthe urange 'l'ownsn•p
He is suryived by his wife,
He has served as church been done to save him."
heart attack and aSked me to
•Carter administration to member Senate.
volunteer fire department Clara B. BookllJs Thomas, superintendent, teacher ao&lt;!
Miss Pierce's statement come immediately to 1.3 West
-raise the supports and basic
By The Auoctated Press
Agriculture Secretary Bob reported.
two daughters and sons-in- trustee of the Cheshire emerged out of mounting 54 St.," just a few buildings
,inarket prices ro 90 percent of Bergland, emerging last
At least 11 persons lost
The fire department Jaw, Myrna and Jessie Baptist Church, and owned .coilfusion about the events away.
.
~ 'parity.',
their
lives on Ohio's
week from meetings in responded to the call· with Beaver, Cheshire; and an honor,ry lifetime deacon surroundlng Rockefeller's
·When sl1e reached the
~; -One lrundred percent parity
r6adways
over the weekend, ·
remote offices with small ' eight men. The truck was Haroldlne and John Oller, membership.
death, specifically apartment, Miss Pierce said
·.theoretically would give groups of protesters, said owned by Raymond Lyon, Hollywood; Fla.;
four
Funeral services wUI · be concerning the time and She saw only Miss Marshack according to the state
".farmers a return oo crops each time: "We plan no Parkersburg. An electrical grandsons, , Michael Baver, held 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Patrol.
place of the death and the administering mouth-to- Highway
The
patrol
counts traffic
~parable to that received
changes in basic farm short is believed to have been Cheshire; Joy J., John T., Cheshire Baptist Church with presence of a Rockefeller mouth resuscitation to
deaths
,W growers In the 1910-14 policy."
from
6
p.m. Friday
,
the cause.
and Antl!oqy G. Oiler, aU of Rev. Alfred Holley and Rev: aide, Megan Marshack
;Period. But that sounds too
until
midnight
Sunday.
President Carter has proHollywood; two sisters, Mrs. William Uber officiating'.
much like a "guaranteed
The dead:
Curtis (Marcella) Rice,
Burial will be ln Gravel Hill
CLASSES OUT
irofit" they know they can't
SUNDAY
, Tenn., and Cemetery. Friends may call
The Meigs County School · Goodlettsville·
,~~ell, leaders say.
NEWARK-Kevin P. LamMrs.
Auburn
(Dorothy)
at
the
WaughHalley·
Wood
Hospital News
District dismissed classes .Meadows, Baltimore, Md.; Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7· A boost to !MI percent would
mers, 24, of Ottawa, in a twoearly
Monday morrilng as "five brothers, Raymond, 9 p. m. Tuesday.
using January prices Veterans Memorial hospital ·
car accident on Ohio 161 in
snow contlnued to fall. Meig~~ Buffalo, Mo.; Donald, . The body wUilie in state at
~ costs, a governmentLicklng County.
Saturday Admissions Eastern
and Southern a1
::backed support price lor Richard Berkhamer, Jr.,
MEDINA - Kevin R.
Cl&lt;J~'ll,b u·s ;
Marvin,
the
church
one
hour
prior
to
.
! ~shire; David, Arizona, the services.
)!heat of $5,05 a bushel Chester; Lela Easterday, sch~duled classes today.
Shaw, 21, of Medina, in a two~ompared with the 1978 Racine; Wilma Osborne,
car accident on a · Medina
and James, of Grass Valley,
Pallbearers wlU be Terry
;!!Upport of $2.35 and an Pomeroy; Sharuion Petrie,
County
road.
,
GET LICENSE
Calif.
Lucas, Brian Lucas, . Gary
.average l!"lling price of $3.02. Pomeroy; Oris Hubbard,
CLEVELAND
-Clifford
J.
Marriage licenses were
Funeral services will be i Peters, Rick Oudding, Jerry
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) said. "And !don't want it Ill
)For corn, the ·support would Syracuse.
Woss,
25,
of
Novelty,
ln
a
oneissued to Phillip Adelbert held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Scott, Ronald Will, all Older Ohimms would receive be a sen.ior citizen bUI."
tgo from f2 to ·at least $3.53 a
car accident on Interstate 77
Saturday Discharges 'Thomas, 26, GallipoUs, and Rawlings .Coats . Funeral grandsons of Mr. Peters.
greater property tax breaks
in Cuyahoga County. ·
:Jlwrllel, compared with an Harold Circle, Frank Clark, Deloris Zola Newell, 20, Home with the Rev. WUiiam
under two bOis heading for
NEWARK-LarryE.Fad•verage price of f2.10 last Wilma Anderson, Brady Middleport; George Alvin Uber officiating. Burtal wUI
separate legislative
ley,
28, of Newark, In a carmonth.
Knapp, Mildred Tubbs, Della Moden, 63, Pomeroy, and . be in Cheshire Gravel HUI
committee hearings this
~ A fundamental problem Curtis, Hazel Westen, Susan
train accident at a Licking
Bernice Irene Molden, 61), Cemetery. :1\rlends may call
week.
,With the legislation is that Tracy, Allee Garnes.
County railroad crossing.
at the funeral home any time.
· - Pomeroy.
Both measures seek. to
.:~ther federal laws don 'I
Sunday Admissions · .c. · !&lt;_~~-. . LISBON Russ E.
Pallbearers wlll be Tommy
liberalize
the
state's
:j,ermit such a hike under Raymond Justis, Middleport;
Russell, 62, of Lisboo, a
Oxyer, Ray Zerkle, Ralph
homestead exemption law,
~y's economic conditions. Wliliam Haley, Rutland;
pedestrian struc~ by a
Rife, Harolq Mack, Edward
which allows qualified
· EXTENDED FORECAST
' Minimum supports were Clarence Price, Portland.
on Ohio 164 in
vehicle
Preston, and Merrlll Briggs.
homeowners to reduce the
Wednesday through
fixed in 1977. And since they
Columbiana
County.
Sunday Discharge
Friday: . Colit Wednesday
,,
.'[1
,,.0. RlU_
taxable value of their dwellare the effective market Norma Goddowin.
SATIJRDAY
with a aUght warming
. CLARENCE PETERS
'"'e'
lngs.
~oars for grains and cotton,
DATYON- WUliam T. RowMeigs will battle Nelson·
· Thursday. Colder again
Clarence C. ·Peters, 90, a
A Senate bUI sponsored by
land,
20, of Dayton, in a oneville-York
in
the
first
game
of
resident-of &lt;!:l)eshire, died at
By The Associated Press Sen. Jerome Stano, DFriday. Snow pouible each
SQUAD RUNS
car
accident
on a Dayton city
the
Class
AA
Sectional
!:50a. m, Sunday lll'narans ' The light snow and flurries Parma, would Increase the
The Pomeroy emergency ' day. Highs Wednes•y and
street.
Tournament
Feb.
22
at
Me m 0 r i a.J. H 0 spit a 1, . which fell in much of Ohio to- · maxlinum Income of persons
squacj ,, iJ!IfJ.S called to ~e ; Thursday in the 3h In the
DAYTON
Antonio
Patrie residence on Mecharuc· north to 40o In tbe south. . Pomeroy. He had been In day are expected to end who qualify for homestead Athens High School
Wright,
73,
of
Dayton,
in a
Pairlngs
for
the
'event
were
falling heahh the , past six tonig~t and give way to ·· exemptions to $15,000 from
St. late Saturday afternoon Hlcbs dropplae Into tbe zts
tw~H'ar accident on a Dayton
Sunday.
Nelsonville,
made
years and hospitalized the relatively mild cooditions by the present $10,000.
ad.r Z8o Friday. Overnl&amp;bt
for ShaMan Petrie who was
past three weeks.
mid-week.
Gov. James A. Rhodes ex- York has a 13-3 record while city street.
Jowi moelly Ia the teeaa to
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
quick promotion
BATAVIA- Vernon ShepDurlng
the
past
five
years,
A
small
low
pressure
pressed
support for such Meigs is 4-13.
Hospital where he was ad- low 20s early Wednesday,
Sheridan,
9-7,
plays
New
herd
Sr., 42, ofHarrison, Ind.,
,
good benefits mitted.
he
had
mad~.
his
home
with
a
center
over
southern
llllnois
legislation
in
his
State
of
the
, In the ZOs to low 3h Thursln
a
one-car
accident on U.S.
Lexington,
9-7,
in
the
second
!hould
;Package
be
over
the
VIrginia
State
message
last
week
and
At 12:47 a.m. Monday the day, and 10 to 18 Friday.
daughter and -son-in•I aw, cBast tonight, the National said his new budget contains game that evening.
50
in
Clermont
County.
squad went to the Village
LO.RAIN
-Randy W. Huff~'%ire~nd,
Lor~e
Lucas,
Weather
Service
said.
A
large
funds
for
it.
On
Friday,
Feb.
23,
Green
Apartments
in
ca11 Army ·
He was born May 9, 1888, ln high pressure system over
Rep. Dennis E. Eckart, D- .· Alexander, 12-6 battles man, no age listed, of
Pomeroy for Sheila Reeves
central Canada wUI Euclid, said he plans to offer Warren, 8-8 and Federal Grafton, in a two-car
who was lll. She was taken to
Lawrence Coun t y, SO!lth
EVENT CANCELLED
move
southeast
to northern asubstitutebillforonehein- Hocking plays Belpre at 8:3jl accident on a Lo~aln County
Lecta
(
583-3022 collect Holzer Medical Center. '
·Tile Mal!llolla Club meetin.- Milson Twp.) son of the late
road.
p.m.
to· be held at the home of Jeptha and IDrtensay Higgins Lower Michigan by Tuesday traduced that woulC! proyi&lt;!~ a
COLUMBUS - David R.
On
Tuesday,
Feb.
27,
the
· morning.
flat $5,000 exemption for disEdna Slusher has been Peters. . .·,
Spencer,
22, of Columbus, in a
winners
of
the
Meigs
•
He marrted Goldie Swisher
The snow flurries should abled OhiOBllS and persons
cancelled lot this month.
one-car
accident on a
NelsonvilleYork
game
and
·
on Jan. 1, ··191-1, at Little end in Ohio as the ridge of aged 65 or older.
. . .
Kyger. She preceded him In high pressure approaches.
Eckart said he plans to Sheridan-New Lexington Columbus city street.
FRIDAY
•.
OPTOMnRIST
death on Feb. 11, 1970.
The cold weather is change !lis bUI to conform contest play. Finals are set
GREENVILLE
- Floyd L.
1t OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2'to 5 (CLOSE t ·Vietor Hqgo.: wrote a senMr. Peter.s was an em- expected to continue through with Stano's In view of the · for Saturday, March 3.
Rodgers,
'11,
of
HollanSburg,
: AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COII~T I tenc~ In Les Mlserables ployee of the New York Tuesday
The winner advances to the
night.
But governor's support of the
District Tournament at Ohio in a two-car accident on U.S.
.
I' containing 823 words.
. ST.; POMEROY:
Central RaUroad at Hobson, forecasters say relatively. $15,000 cutoff point.
36 in Darke County.
' --~~-~~~----·-----------~
.
having retired in 1956 after 34 mUd conditions are expected
"Under all three proposals, University.
Wednesday as a southerly it's all a plus f&lt;r older
years servii;e.
He Is ,slirvlved by three flow of air pours into Ohio Ohioans," Eckart said.
sons arid five daughters: behind the high pressure.
"They all are Improvements
vaughan, Cplumbus; Mrs.
Light snow spread over over the existing situation.
IsiS Scott, Mt. sterling, Ohio; Ohio early today with some It's just a question of how
Earl, Las Vegas, Nevada; light freezing rain reported in much each 'individual Will
Mrs. · Georgia Garrison, the Cincinnati area. Dayton receive."
Akron; Mrs. Bernice wm, picked up about an· Inch of
Senators begin their
Whittier, Calif.; Archie, Eik new snow overnight.
legislative week with a
Temperaillres rose slowly session tonight. The House
Grove, Calif· .; Mrs. Chri st ln e durin •• · ht db
1
Tu sda
t;Judding, Nitro, w. va., and
g u•e mg an year y returns e y at 11 a.m.
today ranged ftom 10 to 15 deThe Senate Ways and
grees In the north to the 20s In Means Committee scheduled
the south.
a hearing Tuesday mornlng
Youngstown and Akron on Stano's bUI, and the House
•I
{i!!M'tiilued from page I )
were the coldest spots in the Ways and Means Committee
. l .r
&amp;l'ffied forces have opened state with readings of 11 wlll consider Eckart's
fi're on tne people." It degrees. Cincinnati was the measure later in the day.
The Euclid Democrat said
Model HQ 6869
broadcast an "order Ill all warmest with a temperature
of
'11
degrees.
he
will · offer his substitute
r~volutlonaries"
armed
Stereo Cassette and S-Track Player/Recorders with
which said: "Since all the History tracing
:::~a\
the House panel's
AM/FM Stereo Receiver and Deluxe Autbmatic
garrisons h~ye surrendered,
Re~ord Changer
"My. original bill was
they should be surrounded by
This feature-loaded stereo.system performs as 9reat as'
dralted ln December !lnd prethe revolutionary armed slated Friday
it looks!
filed in the House," Eckart
forces."
AM/FM STEREO SECTlON .... High power
The
Return
Jonathan
sale!,: "I didn't know the
Khomeinl's l~year fight to
Meigs
Chapter
of
Daughters
output
with lower distortion, increased high and low
governor was going to take it
convert Iran from a
of
American
Revolution
will
frequency
range, FM muting, large illuminated tuning
(the exemption) to $15,000.
monarchy to an Islamic
meter,
A
-B
speaker switch.
·
meet
Friday,
Feb.
16
In
the
"His
(and 'Stano's)
republic rea~ed a successful
River
Boat
Room
of
the
CASSETTE
PLAYER/RECORDER
....
Built-in
ALC
approach is broader than
climax Sunday, after twq
·Athens
County
Savings
and
fast
forward,
rewind,
play,
record,
stop/e)ect
and
'
mine, and I welcome it," he
days of bloo&lt;jy street fighting
pause
controls,
digital
tape
counter.
Loan,
Meigs
Branch
at
1
:30
said.
in Tehran, when the armed
S- TRACK PLAYER IRECORDER .... Built-in ALC
Eckart said he feels the
for,:es chief of staff ordered p.m.
Tracing
ancestors
will
be
automat~
st~p, fast forward, pause and record, I,.. EO '
governor's
$17.7
billion
all troops back to their
program 1nd1catorS.
presented
by
Mrs.
Thereon
budget
is
underfunded.
The
barracks and declar'ld his
DELUXE AUTOMATIC RECORD CHANGER ....
support for' the '16-year-&lt;Jid Johnson and Mrs. Robert House Finance ·Committee
Fu
ll
size changer, cue and pause control, stylus
Ashley.
The
only
money
will soon be given the task
Shiite MOS!e!'l patriarch's
pressure
c~ntrol, ~nti-skate meChanism, ceramic
making
project
of
the
ofexaminlng the budget bUI.
revolution.
association,
a
silent
auction,
cartridge/d&lt;amonll
stylus, Pius a deluxe bass reflex
With the army no longer
"U that'ls the case, someported
speaker
system,
Speaker size: 23" x 12" x 7".
wlll
be
held.
.
thing has to' be cut," Eckart
behind him, Prime Minister
Walnut
grained
vinyl
veneer
on wood product
Hostesses
will
be
Mrs.
Dale
,•
Shah pour • .~al!htlar was
construction. ·
Mrs.
Daniel
'Thomas,
Dutton,
reported to have dellvered his
Pomeroy police
'•·
resignation
to
Mehdl Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs.
Bazargan,
Khomeinl's Charles Lewis and Mrs. check 2. wrecks
ONLY
nominee to head a provtalonal Robert D. Craig.
government.
Bakhtiar
Two . curs were heavily
Saving money in a passbook savings account or time certificate
dropped out of sight, and
damaged In a collision on E.
account is necessary in today's economy. A savings account
there were unconfirmed
Main St., early Sunday
earns inlerest compounded daily, giving. you money to meet
nunors that 'be had Oed the
morning.
emergencies or for buying luxuries. A savings account will also
country or committed
Pomeroy police said a car
help to send your kids to college!
SEEK DISSOLUTION
suicide.
,
driven by Larry Huston,
Filing for dluolution were Dayton, traveling east on
Tehran's 'streets were back
.
We Wi1 Be Closed Monday, februaJY 19th In Obarance al Plllidints lily
David
Lynn Robinson, East Main St., went left of
to something like normal
today, with · heavy traffic Syracuse, and Susan Jane · center and struck a westjams, volunteer "Islamic Robinson, Syracuse.
bound car driven by ·.
pollee'~ trying tp direct
Marguerite Mace, Point ·
MEET TIIURSDA Y ·
traffic, some sporadic
Pleasant. There were no
The
Willing Workers Class Injuries.
shooting,
youths
carrying
POMEROY, OHIO
rifles as If tl\ey were attache of the Enterprise United HWiton was charged with
and lncreaain11 Methodist Church will meet driving while Intoxicated and
cases,
'40,000 MUimum lnsuriiiCI F« £ad) Deposilol
numbers of lhops and street at the home of Mrs. Thomas leaving the scene of an acMember Ftdllll Deposit I~ Corpoilllion
Bentz Thursday at 7:30p.m. cident.
&amp;!alia reopening.

sum-

..

11 killed

on Ohio's

highways·

Snow
ends
• hf

T OurD.ament
• •
pmrmgs

announced

Tough challenges
.for tough people.

.
1

By The ·Aiooclated Press
Bitter cold and about haH a foot of new snow left most of the
East Coast In a vast deep freeze today. Ninety-mph wind,s and
heaey.rains brought massive power blackouts and floodlng to
the PBCific Northwest.
Record lows- as cold as 47 below zero in New York State were recorded throughout the East after a low pressure
system blew in from the Midwest, then headed out over the
Atlantic Ocean.
An area within a !()().mile radius of Washington, D.C., appeared to have been the hardest hit by a snowstorm which
closed many schools and forced motorists to ~bandon their
cars.
·Tree-toppllng winds gustlng to 90 mph knocked out power to
about 42,000 homes and businesses in ihe state of Washington
today, and a number of hospitals were forced to .switch to
emergency power.
·
.
''The trees are falling faster than we can put the power lines
back up," said Frank Moses, a utility company dispatcher in ·
Hoquiam, Wash. "Our servicemen was watchlng all the trees
fall down and jllllt decided to wait until they stopped falling."
In the meantime, a blanket of dense fog covered east and
central Texas, cuttlng visibility to less than half a mile, and fog
and mist wu disrupting air traffic in southern California.
Much of the town of Mesa, Wash., remained under 4 feet of

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

water, following a weekend of flooding. Streets were caving in,
the water supply )'laS contaminated and power poles were
tilting.
.
"The town is shut down tight," said Sharon Cunningham, a
volunteer worker at the Red Cross headquarters in the
sou!heastern Washingron hamlet. "Nobody can come and nobody can go."
·
, · The National Weather Service reporte&lt;l '/ mches of snow at
Alexandria, Va., and other suburbs of the nation's capital, and
police spotted skiers in downtown Washington.
National Airport, closed ln the afternoon, reopened about
10 p.m. Monday.
Public schools throughout the Washington area were
. close&lt;! and some canceled classes tnday as well.
Snowy roads were blamed for the deaths of two persons in
suburban Maryland, police said. In one, a drtver was unable to
stop her car on a steep hill, striking and killing a pedestrian.
Disgruntled commuters on a bus in the DiStrict of Columbia
took a look at curb-to-&lt;:~~rb traffic ahead and voted to change
their normal route . Their bus driver complied.
A pregnant woman, stranded in traffic, was rescued by a
poliee offic;er who drove her to Georgetown University
Hospital on the only route free of traffic - the sidewalks, said
Steve Harray, a hospital administrator. She made it in time to
deliver her baby.
·
"It's a mess," said a teleohone Of)erMnr :lt the capital Hilton

Hotel, not far from the White House. A desk clerk who refused
to give his name said the hotel wa~ filled with commuters
stranded in the .city.
11 •
Commuter Mary Ellen Grogan said it took her four hours
to get home from work, usually a !!!Hninute trip. After waiting
an hour lor a bus, she gave up and headed for the city's new
subway.
• ·
She was not alone. Police had to restrict crowds-trying to
get into one subway station, and trains were filled to capacity .
Cars, abandoned after they stalled or becam.e snow-bound,
were a problem throughout the area. Tow trucks worked
overnight in an effort to clear cars off roads for the morning
rush hour .
II was' the second major eastern snowstorm in a week. A
storm last Wednesday dumped 5% inches of sn.ow on
Washington, where traffic is normally crippled with more than
an inch or two.
In Washington, traffic was further hampered by protesting
farmers staging a !S().tracror parade from their encampment
to the Lincoln Memorial.
On the wesiem edge of the storm, in West Virginia, up to 8
inches of snow were reported. Five inches fell in Clarksburg,
W. Va., where a propjet crashed on takeoff Monday from
Benedum Airport in nearby Bridgeport, killing two persons.
Fresh snow across Pensylvania, up tn 7 inches in places,

(USPS 145-960)

was blamed for at least three traffic deaths on slick roads. Two
Northumberland County teen-agers were k'illed in a threevehicle accident south of Sunbury, and a Beaver County man
died~~ a head-&lt;Jn collision near Butler, pollee said.
Monday was a day of record lows. In Pennsylvania, the
mercury hit 2 degrees in Philadelphia and fell to -19 across the
state in Bradford. Erie recorded minus 8.
It was .0 cold across parts of New York that the water
company in the village of cairo suggested residents leave their
taps turned on so their water pipes wouldn't freeze.
"We are running about 10 degrees below normal for the
month so far, " said Bart Walker of the National Weather
Service in Albany. "This means temperature for the month is
22 degrees and we've been below that every day this month."
Old Forge in the heart of the Adirondack Mountains reported
a low of -47 Monday. Elsewhere, Saranac Lake reported -42,
Rome -25, Massena and Watertown -22, Syracuse and Glen
Falls -21and Plattsburgh -20. Buffalo reported a record low of10.
Baltimore . Washington International Airport recorded a
low of -7 Monday, and Wilmington, Del., dipped to a record low
of ·I.
In Connecticut, Monday temperatures included -26 at
Chester, -17 •.at Avon and -18 at Stafford, Ellington and
Glastonbury.

•

•

at y ..........en tine

e

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Older Ohioans
would-· benefit

mean,

r-

Bitter cold, snow pelts' East Coast

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 211

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1979

15 CENTS

Conservation plan being Checked
GREG BUSH

LORI WOOD

Pair .honored
Two
Meigs
County
teenagers were honared
Saturday night at a reception
held by the 12th Masonic
District at the Rio Grande
College Cafeteria honoring
Daniel Iceman, Grand
Master of all Ohio Masons.
Honored were Miss Lori
Wood, daughter ·ol Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Wood, Condor
St., Pomeroy, and Greg Bush,
son of Mrs. Celeste Bush,
South Third Ave., Middleport.
·
Miss Wood was selected as
the outstanding member of
Job's Daughters in the
district and Bush was
selected as the outstandiJ)g
DeMalay mem her of the lour
counties making up the

district. Counties include
Meigs, Gallia, Lawrence and
Jackson.
The two were presented
excellence in youth certificates by Grand Master
Iceman at the reception
attended by over 200 persons.
Miss Wood is a past
honored queen of Bethel 62,
International Order of J.ob's
Daughters, and was queen of
the local DeMolay Chapter
last year.
Bush has held several offices ln the Meigs ·Chapter,
Order of DeMolay and is
currently senior councilor at
the present time.
Miss Wood is a senior at
Meigs High School and Bush
is a sophomore at that school.

Six hurt in
14 mishaps
Six persons were injured
durtng 14 Monday accidents
investigated by · the GaliiaMeigs Post, Highway Patrol.
An auto operated by
Mildred
Johnson,
26,
Gallipolis, was demolished
durlng a one-vehicle accident
on Johnson Ridge Rd., one
and four-tenths ·of a mile
south of Bulaville Rd., at 2:20
p.m.
Officers report that
Johnson's auto went out of
control on the ice covered
roadway, passed of! the left
·side and struck a tree.
Johnson claimed Injury,
but was not immediately
treated. ·
·
The ·patrol investigated a
three-vehicle accident on SR
7, two and three-tenths of a
mile south of SR 218, at 10
a.m.
oiflcers report that a south
bound auto operated by Dow
Saunders, 22, Gallipolis, went
out of control, passed left of
center, and struck north
bound vehicles driven by
Robert
Warren,
47,
Gallipolis, and Charles
Nuckles, 71, GaUipoUs.
Saunders claimed Injury,
but was not immediately
treated.
Warren and a pa~t~enger,
Garnett Phillips, Gallipolis,
claimed Injury, b~t were not
EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through
Saturday: Warm Thursday
then turninll colder Friday
and Saturday. Rain
posoible Thursday and
Friday but cbanglag to
snow In the north Friday.
Fair Saturday. High
Tbanday Ia the 30s to low
t08 Ill the north aod Ill the
flli to low 50s Ia the south.
Temperatures dropping
lnlo tbe QPper 28&amp; and 38s'
by Satarday. Overnight
Iowa mostly Ia the teens
aad ZGo.

. immediately treated.
..
:saunders was cited on
charges of excessive speed
lor conditions.
All tlu'ee vehicles Incurred
moderate damage.
Two vehicles Incurred
' heavy damage · during an
accident on SR 124, •fourtenths of a mile west of SR 325
In Meigs County, at'4 :30 p.m.
The patrol reports that an · ·
east bound auto operated by
Paul Thomas, 28, Middleport,
went out of control, traveled
left of center and struck a
west bound vehicle driven by
Mark A. Oiler, 23, Pomeroy,
head-&lt;Jn.
Both drivers claimed Injury, but were not im·
mediately treated.
Thomas was cited on
charges of left of center.
The GalJia-Meigs Post
investigated 11 other accidents Monday attributed to
the snow and ice covered
condition of the roadways,
during which the vehicles
involved incurre.d minor,
damage.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport Village Council,
meeting in regular session
Monday night, agreed to look
into an energy conservation
plan for three large buildings
used lor village operations.
The aotion came alter
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate

pointed out that natural gas
billings for the three structures which include the lire
station, village hall and the
vehicle garage, will run be·
tween $900 and $1,000 this
month. ·
Grate urged council to look
into ways that might con·

Deer accident probed Monday
· A deer was l&gt;illed Monday
at I: 10 a.m. ori SR 143 when it
ran into the path of an auto
driven by Leslie R. Gibbs, 30,
Rt. 1, Rutland.
A~cording to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department,
there was slight property
damage and the ct'river was
not injured .
Sheriff Proffitt request s
that drivers of four wheel
vehicles refrain from running

their vehicles on property
without first getting · the
consent of the landowner.
Sunday evening deputies
answered a complaint that a
four wheel vehicle was
runntn'g on ·a oerson !s
property without permission
in the 'IJicinity of Rock
Springs Cemetery. The
driver was located and a
warning issued.

serve gas rather than to
contioue paying such bills.
Following a discussion on
possible solutions, Councilmen Allen Lee King and
Dewey Horton were named to
Investigate the situation and
report recommendations ~t
the next meeting of council.
ORDINANCES APPROVED
Council gave the final
readings and approval to
three ordinances which in·
elude a payroll ordinance
granting employes an approximate seven petcent
wage increase retroactive to
the first of this year; an ordinance providlng for the
removal of snow and
'procedures to he followed in
moving vehicles which might
be hampering snow removal,
and a fair houslng ordinance
providing a g a ins t
discrimination in housing lor
all persons.
.

·~

Snow cushioned crash
By S'rEVE SWIF'J'
the ground was covered with
Associated Press Writer about 14 inches. The plane,
BRIDGEPORT, W.Va . Flight 561, was bound lorNa(AP) - A thick covering of tional Airport in Washington,
snow probably saved many D.C., and had been delayed
lives by cushioning the crash lor just less than 2'h hours
of a twinengine Allegheny because of the weather ,
Airlines plane that flipped Allegheny spokeswoman
upside down after takeoff, .. Nancy Vaughan said.
says
an
engineering · The plane was taking off
consultant. Two persons were from Benedum Airport at
killed.
about 1:10 p.m., and was
"The snow allowed the bound lor Morgantown,
plane to skid and then make a W.Va., before going .on to
gentle stop. It came to rest on Washington.
·
its .own," said Harvey
AeroMech Inc., which also
Epstein, 32, an engineer and a flies out of Benedum; suspassenger aboard the flight · pended flights about baH an
on Monday.
hour before the? crash
It was not known whether because airports that Its
the '
he~vy
snowfall flights were going to were
contributed to the crash.
snowbound, airport-manager
After Monday 's fresh snow, Angelo Koukoulis said.

A letter was received from
Ashland Oil reporting an
increase of one cent per
gallon on all types of gasoline
as of Jan. 30.
Council approve d th e
report of Mayor Fred Hoffman for January. The report
showed $1 ,552 collected in
lines and fees and $115 ln

Add' · l .
ttwna snow
closes schools

Schools of Meigs County
were closed today as the
result of snow which fell
practically all day Monday.
Attempts were made to
reopen schoo ls Monday in all
thr ee county districts,
howeve r, as snow kept
fallin g, students were
returned to their homes in the
early afternoon.
Schools were closed three
days la•-t week.
J\11 districts have exceeded
the five days permitted
without makeup as the result
of calamities.

Grate w11l check mto the
matter.
Council agreed to purchase
a one-ton flatbed dump truck
from Albert Goeglem_
. Mayor Hollman reported on
his trip to Washmgton, D.
C., last' we~kend ~hen he
conferred With Housmg and
Urban Developm~nt ?fficials
on steps needed m lilmg an
application lor an HUD
grant.
The mayor reported the
meeting was instructive and
productive.
Council discussed . repair
work on the Shadle Br1dge at
Point Pleasant and what
effect it will have on truck
traffic. through Middleport.
Council also discussed a
street surface problem near
the corner of Walnut and
Fisher Sts.
.
Attendmgthemeetmg were
Mayor Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer Grate, and
Councilmen Horton, King ,
William Walters and Carl
Horky.

Wahama musicians get
••
•
17-superzor I'atzngs

However;
weather
conditions at National were
good, he added.
The plane's first officer,
David Baltes of Beaver Falls',
Pa., and a passenger, Mary
Sturm of Fairview, W.Va.
died in the crash . All 23
survivors were admitted to
Members of the Wahama
United Hospital Center in band who competed ln the
Clarksburg, 'administrator annual Solo &amp; Ensemble
Max Francis said.
Contest received 17 "111 or
Among the injured was the . Superior ratings and six " II"
plane's captain, Robert or Excellent ratings . .
Everly of Camp Hill, Pa.,
Students were judged on a
who was reported in serious five rating plan with a " I" or
but stable condition, and Superior being the highest .. ·
blues singer Leon Red bone, According 'to the West
who complained of brtiises . Virginia rating system a
Another individual, not Superior ratlng is described
identified by hospital au- as follows:
thorities, was in critical
Rating I - An outstanding
condition.
performance, with very lew

technical
errors
and and the Percussion Enexemplifying a truly musical semble, Kenny Bond, John
expression . This rating Van Meter, Jerry Oldaker,
should be reserved for the Mark Thompson, Eddi~
truly outstanding per· Wildman, and Jenny Clark. '
formance.
The following students
The following students received "II" ratings on their
received "I" ratings on their ensembles: Brass trio solos: Karen Brown, piccolo; Dave Rose, flebbie Starr and
Terri Johnson, flute; Tammy Melanie Sisson; braso qulntet
Yoho, clarinet; Brett Grin- - Todd Tucker, Tammy
stead, trombone; Mark Young, Mark Goodnite, Lisa
Goodnite, French horn; Lisa Yeago and Debbie Starr; and
Yeago, French hom; Debbie the trombone quarter - Joni
Starr, trumpet;
Mark (,1ark, Melanie Sisson, Brett
Thompson, voice; Kren Grinstead and Jill Taylor.
Brown, flute ; Terri Johnson,
Terri Johnson and Karen
piccolo; Kenny Bond, snare Brown received the addrum; and Todd Tucker, ditional honor of ·being
bass.
recommended to submit a
Students receiving "I" tape for "Honor Finalist."
ratings were : Melanie Sisson, They could be among the last
trombone; John Van Meter, 10-15 flnalists in the state.
snare drum, and Jeff
Charles Yeago directs the
Bumgardner, alto saxophone. band. Yeago said he believes
Students receiving "! " this was one of the . best
ratings were : Clarinet trio records that Wahama has
Brenda Gray, Audrey Fields achieved at the Solo and
and Tammy Yoho; flute trio Ensemble Contest.
- Angie Lawhorn, Becky
Fields and Jenny Clark ; flute
duet, Karen Brown and Terrf
Johoson; snare duet - Kenny
Bond and John Van Meter;

Conviction

;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;::::::;::::;:::;::::::·:;::::

VES begm•S
fund drive
The Racine Volunteer
Emergency Squad is starting
a fund drive for the construction of a new building.
The planned structure will
be a 30x40 foot, two story
block building located beside .
the present fire statl.on.
Cannisters have been
placed in business houses to
collect lunda for the building.
Residents wishing to donate
may send their contributions
to the Racine Volunteer
Emergency Squad, Racine,
Ohio.
Ground for the new
building has been donated by
Raclne Village Council.

merchant police fees or a
total of $!,667.
Council was advised that
one fanner employe who quit
his .job, will be drawing
unemployment benefits
totaling $1,820. A letter was
read from the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Control
pointing out that application
for a carry out at the SaveMore Station in lower Middleport had been cancelled,
as was a Maring on the application. A request was read
to transfer a penni! of the
McFann' from 514 Locust St.
to 441 Locust St.
Two councilmen indicated
complaints from neighbors
had been registered on the
transfer. Coucnil agreed to
request a hearing on the
matter.
A communicatio.n from the
office of Howard Frank,
County Auditor, was read
Indicating that the v\llage
appropriations exceed the
estimated resources. It was
agreed that Clerk-Treasurer

A COMPUMENT - The youth of the village of
Syraclise are very proud of Its pollee 'chief, Milton Varian.
In his honor Monday they built a very large snowman who

was named "Milton the Snowman." Shown 1-r, are, Becky
Adkins, Lori Chapman, Kathy Adkins, Pam Spencer and
Juanita Guinther. The snowman was assembled in fr ont of
London Pool.

LOCATION CHANGED
The location of tbe
awards dinner being
sponsored by the Po!Jieroy
Cbamher·of Commerce has
been changed from Royal
Oak Park to Meigs High
-scbool, Paul Simon,
president, announced
today.
Simon staled that the
supply of tickets are
limited and persons in- ·. terested in atteadlng
. should get their tickets as
soon as possible.
. rickets may be purchased at New York
Clothing Store, Simon's
Pick-A-Pair and the office
ofthe cblimber. The tickets
ate $6 and the dinner is
Saturday, Feb. 17 at 1:30
p.m.

is upheld
The Fourth · District Appellate Court has upheld the
June 1, 1976, murder conviction of Mary Virginia
Hendricks.
Mrs. Hendricks was convicted in the shooting death of
her husband, Floyd· Eugene
Hendricks.
In the 2-1 decision, the court
refused to allow the defendant's claim that the Common Pleas Court ·refused to
instruct the jury on selfdefense, and also that the
court improperly denied the
defendant her right to crossexamine witnesses.
Charles Huddleston, Portsmouth, represented the
defendant while Fred Crow
III. Meigs Prosec_utlng At·
torney, argued for the State
of Ohio.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesdav. Feb. 13.1979
'

~capitol

~· IN WASHINGTON
M;utha Angle and
Rober.t Walters

I

I

..

wASffiNGTON (NEAl -- Relationships between the states
and the federal govenunent, seldom entirely cordial even in
the best of times, appear to be growing increasingly snappish
•
this year.
State legislatures, responding to voter dismay over inflation,
are demanding that Congress eithel"' adopt a constitutional
amendment requiring a balanced federal budget or call an unprecedented constitutional convention to do so.
But members·of Congress, irked by such fingerpointing, are
darkly muttering that they could balance the budget right now
·if it weren 't for the billions in federnl aid doled out to the states
and local govenunents each year.
In fact, Sen. Uoyd Bentsen, ~Texas, chairman of the Joint
Economic Committee, has already introduced legislation to
strip the states of some $2 billion in general revenue sharing
funds next year. And he.was e~ged on by Sens. Gary Hart, D- ·
Colo., William Proxmire, D-Wis., and Dale Bumpers, ~Ark .
The governors are preparing to swing back at their annual
winter conference here later this month. For now, however,
Vermont Gov. Richard Snelling has fired off a letter to Bentsen
suggesting it is not the lump-sum revenue sharing grants that
should be eliminated but rather some of the red-tape ensnarled
492 categorical grant programs Congress has created. The
states, he said, would cheerfully settle for less money If those ·
programs were rolled into block grants with few strings attached.
Out West, meanwhile, close to a dozen states -led by Wyoming -seem headed for open warfare with the feds over the 55mile-an-hour speed limit, which has now been in effect for
some ftve years.
Transportation Secretary Brock Adams has threatened to
cut off federal highway· money to states which seek, through
action of their legislatures, to raise their speed limits to 6!i or
70. But that may not deter some legislatures.
In Washington, Sen. S. I. Hayakaw~, R-Calif., last week introduced a bill to repeal the federal law-requiring a 55-milesPer-hour limit. "We expect a good deal ~ support, especially
~rom members from the West," an aide predicted.

E conomzc
·
• news all bad

GOP: Sticking together?

Names •••

in the news

..

••***•*-..,.. ••****'*************·*******••·...-···~

i Editorial oninions !.

-

Elderly citizens pay
more. than law allows

Inconsistent, indeed.

..

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I

HEALTH .

Berry 's Wo rId

r

'.
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~

Library

.......
...

Letters ·

·~
=
....,.

..•

L-----

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J

Meigs
hosts
event

'T oday's

By Will Grimsley
AP Col"'respolldent

For readers of the Coitgtessional Record, 1978 was the year
of the black dot, This is the year of the blank box.
The page~ of the rec!rd were sprip!ded with black doll after
"And all those in favor of our new oonstitution please raise your right Congress
voted lasf year to identify . .tertal, such as·
speeches, .which members didn't read but Simply Inserted In
hand. If handless, speal!: out If tongueless ''
the record.
·. .
Before the dots there was no way of telling whether a memberwasm the floor anddelivel"'ed a speech which was included
.
.
in the record.
Now, the proceedings of tbe HOUBe are sprinkled with little
blank squares with munbers, next to them.
The numbers refer to the time and make it easier for
members to locate themselves on the audio and video taped
By JOHN CUNNIFF
sumer price increases to currency of ''wumticipated,'' be squeezed inl&lt;l that same records of House proceedings.
a word repeatedly used Ill category is the mind of the
AP Business Analyst
come.
Mirror, mil"'ror, on the wall, who's the tallest senator of all?
describe
the continued rise in consumer, which is far leS!I
NEW YORK (AP) - The ·, '-;-Michael Blumenthal,
It's not Bill Bradley, the former professional basketball
economic news has riot been ,J reasury secretary, m effect wholesale and consumer predictable than some
economic modelmakers . player, who's now a 6-foot-5 Democratic senator frojll New
good. Who said so? Maybe conceded that the dollar has prices.
The entire wagei)rice pro- would like to have it. How do Jersey. Nor is it 6-foot.aSen. Lowell Weicker~ &amp;Conn.
you, for one, but If not you not stabilized · in world
The tallest senator is 6-foot-7 Alan Simpson, R-Wyo. Not only
then certainly your neighbor markets
and
that gram - in fact the entire you explain all that credit?
Last year, for example, that, Simpson says a Senate trivia expert says he's the tallest
if we can believe the polls: " uncertainties continue to Carter economic plan - Is
And the Carter admin- generate nervousness" con- predicated on accurate various dP.bt records were man ever elected to the Senate.
estimates of future prices, set, ·including one foc the
istra\ion for another.
cerning it.
Its official line seems in-Kahn, Utough doing his . but some of those prices amount of installment credit
Republicans remain badly outnumbered in Congress, but
when they stick together, they can have an enormous impact creasingly to be at odds with utmost to sound happy about already seem to be slanting outstanding . As the year
ended it totaled $275 bUIIon,
on the outcome of key legislative battles, especially in the the more spontaneous, less it, was forced to concede that off at different angles.
Moreover, economists are up 19. I percent in one year.
considered comments of its of the 500 largest U.S.
Senate.
While that total itaelf was a
Which is why President Carter and the Democratic leader- individual members. · And companies, only 207 have complaining that temporary
.'
ship on Capitol HiH should feel distinctly nervous abogt the that could mean some pledged to uphold the wage- distortions, such as weather, surprise to many if not most
remarkable degree of unity which developed on a couple of unpleasant decisioos coming price guidelines. Among the Iran, and a possible ' economists, even fewer.were
Teamster strike are making prepared foc the surge that
holdouts: oil and food.
crucial issues among scores of Republican senators and House up.
Such as whether or not to
Perhaps nothing has gener- it difficult even to determine occlirred late in !he year,
members 'who held a two-day workshop last weekend at the
curtail gasoline sales, and ated
more
general where we are in the business when $8.4billlon was added Ill
Tidewater Inn in Easton, Md.
the l&lt;ltal in just November
For one thing, the Republicans agreed that no SALT II trea- whether to strengthen or per- nervousness than the wide cycle ..
CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (AP) -Singer Leon Redbone is in
Another factor that might and December. ·
.,
ty negotiated by the administration can be considered in a haps enfocce more rigidly its
his :lOs, but says he feels "like I'm 93" after escapting without
vacuwn. They served notice upon Carter that Senate ratifica- wage-price standards.
serious injury from the crash of an Allegheny Airlines plane at
tion debate will focus on the entirely of Soviet-American relaWhile the official word rea local airport.
tionships .
· mains one of optimism that
"!ache all over and my hip hurts. But nothing is broken as
On the domestic front, the Republicans lined up solidly in the country can escape the .
far as I know," Red bone said from his hospital bed a few hours
favor of a tax program that would combine multiple-year rate worst of inflation, recession,
after the crash. He was one of 25 persons aboard the
reductions )Vith cuts in federal spending and indexing to pro- shortage and other economic ~
~
WaShington-bound plane.
tect taxpayers from being sli6vM into higher brackets solely stresses, you have Ill wonder Ill
.
..
Two people were kllled and 23 others were injured when
by inflation.
when:
the propjet flipped and crashed shortly after taking olf in a
-James Schlesinger,
snowstorm.
With congressional Democrats and Carter opposed to any energy secretary, assessed
Redbone is a blues smger from New Hope, Pa. He said
tax reductions this year, the GOP plan probably won1 get very the Iran oil cutoff as
there was little time Ill prepare for the crash. "All of a sudden I
·"'
far. But the Republicans should be able to make some political ·"prospectively · more
was hanging upside down in the plane," he said. "It was a
hay from the package.
serious" than the 1973 oil emmatter of monients before the plane came down. Everybody
' ..• ,
bargo, and then, Ill stress the
I
was disoriented, but no more than could be e%pecled."
I
positive, called it "serious"
but not "critical."
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) - Fomer first lady Bess
-Alfred Kahn,chairman of
Truman planned to celebrate her 94th birthday quietly today in
Gov. Jim Thompson o( Illinois 8ayshe won't seek the 1980 the Council on Wage and
.her stately 17-room Victorian mansion.
GOP presidential nomination because "running around the Price Stability, called the
'
The widow of President Harry Truman was reported In
country" campaigning would be "inconsistent" with serving January producer price
high spirits and regaming her, strength from recent hospital
the best interests of his state.
increase of 1.3 p:!'rcent 11 3
at more than 3,000 locations income of under $5,450.
. By Louise Cook
stays.
'
But asked whether he would, on similar grounds, decline the catastrophe" and said he
-You ae mal"'fied, filing a .
throughout the. country. The
Associated Press Writer
Bouquets of flowers and cards and letters were expected
vice presidential nomination if it should be offered him, couldn't even appear to be
Millions of elderly advice is provided by 8,500 joint return, both you and for Mrs. Truman, who has s!lfPIIssed by five years the age of '
thompson swiftly hedged. "I don't want to get into that sub- optimistic.
Americans
pay more federal retirees, trained by the Inter- your spouse are over 6!i and any former first lady. Anna Harrison, wife of the 9th president,
ject, " he said.
·
-Qlurtenay Slater, Com- income tax than the law re- nal Revenue Service in the your joint taxable income is Willlam Henry Harrison, lived to the age of 89.
merce Departmenl chief quires, ·and older people areas of tax law which apply less than $5,700.
Mrs. Truman's sister-in-law, Mary Wallace, 84, said
economist, expressed preparing their returns may to people over ru;_
You may want to file a she planned to stop by with a birthday favorite of the former
surprise at the big producer need special help to cope with
Most of the "Tax Aide" return even if you don't have
lady's -homemade chocolate fudge.
price rise, saying it was more the Internal Revenue Service counseling is done at places to. If, for example, you are first"She's
very frail; she doesn 't get around too well yet,"
than she expected, and rules and regulations.
like senior citizen centers, entitled to a refund for tax said Mrs. Wallace, who lives near the Truman home and is a
'
warning of fairly large conOverpayments often stem libraries, shopping malls and withheld from salary or pen- frequent visitor. "The nice part is that her head is clear. Thank
sion
benefits,
you
will
have
to
churches;
a
few
of
the
from the lack of understangoodness she can read;. that's one of her great pleasures."
di'ng. Many men and women volunteers even make house file a return to get your Mrs. Truman likes mystery stories.
lawrence E.lamb, M.D.
another.
money.
.
over 6!i file returns when they · calls.
Health has been a problem for Mrs. Truman the pest year.
Whether you will have don 't need to; others fail to
Tax credits are another She spent 17 days at Research Medical Center In June and was
For the location of 'the
• I
another collapsed lung or not take credits they are entitled center nearest you, write to: potential source of confusion.
hospitalized again from Nov. 20 to Dec. 16 for tests and
Collapsed Lung
depends upon· how many to.
Tax-Aide Program, Dept. Every taxpayer is entitled to treatment of high blood pressure.
r.
this potential space, the lung more blisterlike formations
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
The "Tax Aide" program NK, NRTA-AARP, 1909 K St. a General Tax Credit for each
•
DEAR DR. LAMB - One collapses. That is why such a on the surface of the lung you run jointly by the American NW, Washington, D. C., 20049. person claimed as an exempLOS
ANGELES
(AP)
Letters
from
weU
wishers
year ago I had a hole in my condition is sometimes called have, if any. This condition is Association of Retired PerAccording to the retire- tion on his or' her return. If
lung (pneumothorax). At the a collapsed lung.
more common in young, sons and the National Retired ment groups, authoriti~s you are overli!i, you get an ex- including England's Queen Elizabeth II- helped keep up his
time, the surgeon put a hole
When the lung collapses healthy men. r saw quite a Teachers Association is calculate that at least half of tra exemption for age and, spirits while he recovered from surgery to remove his
through my side at th~ back spontaneously, as in your few cases in the Air Force fly- designed to clear up some of the nine million· people over under tax Ia w changes which cancerous stomach, says actor Jobn Wayne.
'.
The gravel-voiced box office king says he's now "feeling
of my chest to let out the air. case, it is sometimes ing population. But a collaps- ·the confusion.
65 who file federal income tax took effect on 1977 returns, an fine and going to make it."
·'
. Two days after being releas- necessary to slip a tube ed lung can occur in anyone
,
"Tax Aide" is a free returns in a typical year pay extra credit.
In a copyright interview with the Los Angeles Heralded from the hospital the hole through the chest wall and in- at any age.
"
There is also a Special Examiner, Wayne said be got "3,000 letters at the hospital ...
counseling service available more than they are required
popped again. This time I to that space where the air is
Credit for the Elderly which
to.
and tliere were another 10,000 here when I got hollll'. I
stayed in the hospital for five accumulating. This allows
Where do people go wrong? offers savings of up to $562.50 sldrnmed through some of those and found one from one of my
"
-~
days for bed rest with no lube the lung to re-expand as the
in some cases. You must file grand kids, who wrote It the day I was operated on."
The
first
chance
to
slip
up
air in that space is pushed out
in my back.
"'
comes when you decide a separate form, Schedule R, ·
He made his comments Sunday from his Newport Beach
"
My problem is ·this, my through the tube. Otherwise,
and
your
income
cannot
exto file a return. With
home -a day after being released from ULA Medical Center.
. ·, l
back has been constantly the air must be slowly ab- r ----=-- - - - - - -- - - - - ----, awhether
few exceptions, you are ceed fixed limits. Ask the IRS
"!still have a little trouble (a slight infection), but as soon
aching around my shoulder sorbed, causing the lung to be
NOT required to file a federal or a private counselor to find as that clears up, I'll be up and at 'em," Wayne said.
blade and one doctor said it collapsed for a longer period
out whether you qualify.
income tax return If:
Wayne underwent 9'&gt;2 bours of surgery Jan. 12. Doctors at
was just my nerves thinking of time . .
A special tax guide for
- You are single, over 6!i
the
medical
center have said they expect him to make a quick
Once
the
ruptured
blister
·
it was lung trouble again.
and had a· taxable income, older people is avallable at no and complete recovery.
on
the
lung
has
healed
comAnother doctor says it will
beyond Social security and charge from the retirement
take a long time for my_ribs pletely, the lung expands
r
. !other exempt benefits, of associations. It's called
to stop aching where the fube back to no=al. It's possible
"Your Retirement Income
less than $3,700.
that the Imig can be expanded
went through.
- You are married, filing a Tax Guide." To get a copy,
My question is this, what too soon, before the hole has
joint return, either you or write to NRTA·AARP, P.O. them. I pointed out that Middleport is a small library and with
•
are the chances of another fully healed, which may have
your spouse is over 65 and, Box 2400, Long' Beach, Calif., . the rising costa of paper and books It is difficult for ·a small
hole popping again? Is it nor- happened in your case.
library
Ill
buy
the
booka
It
needs.
Here
in
San
Rafael,
our
j logether. you had a taxable 90801.
mal for my back to still ache? . Sometimes there are
public library (which Is L'UI'iously fashioned In the .same
I am a 36-year-&lt;&gt;ld woman several blisters on the lung,
Carnegie style as your library) has been conducting public ' , '
and was · told this problem ·causing repealed episodes.
meetings to determine how to deal with high book prices and
To give you a better
usually happens in male
other problems spawned by mushrooming volumes of
",.
understanding of the space
teenagers. Is this right?
infocmation. Hopefully a broader community involvement will
' .·
L~
L
that
exists
between
the
lungs
DEAR READER - A
help llbraries everywhere adjust to these ha.rd tiines.
I "
pneumothorax, or collapsed and the rib cage and how the
Your letter implied that Middleport has produeed other
~
lung, is not a serious pro- lungs expand and move, I am
Could you please send me names and UUes? I am
authors.
1\
blem, even though it can be sending you The Health Letcuriowi
to
know more about my hometown and what makes It
A·
.....
R .... ~...
disconcerting. Your lungs are ter number 2-4, Keeping Y'Our
unique.
R ~
y ,.... .
great air sacs. The windpipe Lungs Fit. other readers who
I hope your h•band enjoys my garden booka and the
y
(trachea ) goes down your want this issue can send 50
journal, all of which aim to entertain as well as enlighten
•
throat and divides into half cents with a long, stamped,
people about new approaches to a very old craft. As you can
and continues into smaUer self-addressed envelope for
Feb. 3, 1979 leU from these ~Ungs, I have a great Interest In !\ncommon
and lesser known planta, especially edible ones. If there are
and smaller passages· until it. Send your request to me in
Ruth Powers
any old or unusual type of plants In your family, I would llli;e to
they endJn tiny air sacs. On care of lhis newspaper, P.O.
Middleport Public Ubrary
~-, ·' ll"'ade seeds. I belong to a uniqili! group: Kent Whealy's ~
"
· occasion, one or more of Box 155f, Radio City Station,
Middleport, ohio 45700 '
•
Seed Exchange, Rural .Route 1, Princeton, ~1. 6M'I3.. · '~
New
York,
NY
100)9.
•
C
1G19
by
NE"'
.
Inc
these little air sacs thins out
. Kent and his members aU have this Interest in the rare and
II 's not too unusual to have
like a blister on the surface of
Dear Ruth,
1
'. •."..,
pain
and
aching\
in
a
chest
the lung. It cah blow out.
Thanks for yourletter.I am happy Yolla Bolly Press chose unusual garden plants. Kent's new catalog will be out 1100n, so
your
husband
shoujd
write
1100n
for
membership
Information,
When that happens, the air wall for quite some time after .
"No, he 's not doing Tal Chi. That's just the
ill 8end complimentary copies of My Garden Companion and
whistles out of the lung a large puncture Is made, as
The Night Sky Book to the library where I learned the If he's Interested
way he always moves In the morning. "
Thanks again for yoqi- letter and your Interest. I hope the
through that hole into the .in your case:. The same is true '
pleasures and necessities of reading.
kids of Middleport and Pcmeroy enjoy my booka. - Sincerely,
space between the lungs and for people who have had chest
Normally,
the
Press
does
not'
send
booka
to
libraries
)
'
'
because It assumes most libraries have the bUdgets to buy Jamie Jobb.
the rib cage. AJ; the air fills surgery, for one reason or

t .....'*****************'********:*******-li*******•;l

.

Sports .World

By OONAID M. ROTHBERG
Associated Press Wrller
WASffiNGTON (AP) - Before another scandal sweeps
through the halls of Congress, let the record be straight, the
new name of the House International Relatiorui commlttee is
Committee on Foceign Affairs, not Affalres.
Committee Chalrinan Clement Zabloeld, ~Wis., asked the
House Ill approve cha~ing the name of the panel back to
Committee on Foreign Affairs, the title It held far 198 years.
In 1975, committee members decided that Conunittee on International Relations had a much nicer r~ ,
Rep. Robert · Bauman, R-Md., noted that since the 1975
switch ''we have had trouble in the Middle East and we are
about to 19se Iran. Africa is a shambles. We have abandoned
Taiwan and embraced Red China and our general foreign
policy is in general disal"'fay. Perhaps, a change is necessary."
Then Bauman wentto take a close look at the name: ·
"Foreign, of course, means situated outside a place or "
country, but affairs, I find, can be described either as commercial, professional or public business or matters of concern,
or, if spelled with an e it means a romantic or passionate attachment, particularly of Umited duration or· an illlcit rela- •,
tionship."
.
After assurances from Zablocki that the word was "affairs"
~d not "affaires." the House aooroved the change. ·

States and feds square off

\

ideas

'

.

.

Doug GUbert, a journalistic critic from the Edmonton Sun,
lamented: "We are No. 2 and fadllig fast. We may be no better
even against 'the Czechs."
John Ziegler, president of the NHL, acknowledged that the
Russians had learned the spurt from Canadians and then
developed succesSful techniques of their own.
"What impressed me more than .any,lhing," Ziegler said,
"was the Soviet team's momentum - the high intensity of
their play. They performed at a killing tempo and never sagged."
1
•
Defeat of the NHL's finest merely capped off a week of
somber portent for the Western world. New Zealand's John
Walker, the great miler; warned that the Russians and ·their
sateilltes would inundate Americans with medals in the 1980
Olympics. On Sunday afternoon, U.S boxers were thumped 9-3
by little Cuba In Havana .
The U.S.S.R. hockey victory was almOst the equivalent of a
Russian soccer team coming over and beating the Pittsburgh
Steelers In a Super Super Bowl or devotees of the ancient sport
of lapda (the Soviet antecedent of modern baseball) creaming
the New York Yankees in Ute World Series.
Canadians have been playing hockey for perhaps 100 years.
The NHL was formed in 1917 and the league has been the
epitome of world class professional hockey ever since.
The Russians started playing hockey after World War II in
1946. Tbey used criiQe curved sticks and rubber balls, playing
on frozen soccer fields. Within 10 years they were Olympic
·champions. In 1972, they proved they could play even with the
best in the NHL. This year they laid solid claim Ill being best in
the world, amateur oc pro.
If the Challenge Cup series at Madison Square Garden
proved anything, it was that skill and finesse are masters of
the stick-flinging, body-crashing, bullying tactics popularized
by the NHL.

·HOLDING TROPffiES - Shown left 'to right with the trophies to be presented at the
league meet are, left Ill rtght, Van Wilford, Dave Davis, both Meigs Wrestlers and Jim
Sheets, the Meigs Wrestling Coach.

The 1979 SEOAL Wrestling
Tournament wiU be hosted by
Meigs High School in the
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium on Feb. 17. League
FAIRFIELD, Ohio (AP) schools participating are Irate fans fail to rile Carel
Athens, Gallipolis, Ironton, Cosby, one of college
Logan, and Meigs.
·basketball's busiest officials.
The tournament will be an
."I'm a firm believer in fan
aU day event beginning at reaction aH .game," said the
11':30 a.m. with the cham- Middletown elementary
. pionship round scheduled at school principal, "as long as
6:30 p.m. This exciting sport it doesn't get out of hand.
offers entertainm ent for After aU, it provides a fan
everyone and this year's with a chance to release his
SEOAL tournament promises pent-up emotions after a hard
to be more thrilling than day, doesn't it?"
ever.
Cosby has officiated for 28
Five wrestlers in each of 13 seasons everywhere from a
weight classes will grapple local YMCA leagu~ to big. their way through a grueling time college basketball, so
day of matches to reach that he 's developed ways to
coveted spot of league handle the angry fan.
"What I often do is Ill turn
champion.
Individual trophies will be

Ill that fan with a big smile.

And you know what usually
happe..,? The fan looks at me
and smiles back. Then ~he
feels better. So do !," said
Cosby.
The
Miami
(Ohio)
Univer.sity gra!luate
currently works in the Big
Ten, Mid-American and
Metro conferences as well as
four smaUer college leagues.
Cosby also be longs to the ·
Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky
hig!J school officiating associations, often wocking in state
tournaments in those states.
Cosby recalled one typical
week in January:
Saturday - Worked a Big
Ten game in snowbound Minneapolis.

Shouting match mars
60-58 Bearcat win

By Tbe Associated Press
Xavier Unlyersity proved
again it was no match for
crosstown rival Cincinnati,
and the Musketeers's seventh
straight loss to the Bearcats
was a particularly bitter pill
for Coach Tay Baker.
Monday night's 60-58loss to
Cincinnati, mal"'fed by an
ugly shouting match, was
Baker's last game against his
alma mater, where he also
coached for five years. And,
'since he is leaving college
coaching at the end of the
year, it W!IS his last chance to
beat the Bearcats.
"We were trying to keep it
close but we had a breakdown," the Xavier mentor
said. "We had good shots. We
had
our
foul
shot
MID-OHIO CONFERENCE
opportunities.
We
had
our
BASKETBALL STATISTICS
chance but .... "
(February Ul
MOC Record OVerall Record
Cincinnati Coach "Ed
W
L W
L
Badger
is doing .a tremendous
Rio Grande
10
l
14
11
under
adverse
Mii_IQO~
8 3 15
9 job
7 4 13
Cedarville
8 conditions," Baker said ofthe
Urb!ana
5 6 9 13 shouting incident. "However,
Walsh
5 6 9 14 there is no way one of those
Mount Vernon
4
7 8 17
Tift in
3 8 6 21 two assistants, any assistant
Ohio Dom .
2 9
5 15 like that; can shout profanity
atmeandshowmenorespect
Off. Del..
RB
A.v. Av. FG FT Pet.
· Rio
81.6 82.4 50.7 70.9 48.7
Malone
83.4 78.9 50.3 72.3 52.0
Cedarville
83.2 81.0 ~.9 72. I 53.2
Urbana
73.9 79.2 ~ . 5 71. I 43.0
Walsh
70.6 72.6 47.7 67.2 48.0
M. Vernon
76.4 83.6 45.8 64.3 50.8
Tiffin
67.7 73.4 44.3 66.7 49.0
Ohio Dom .
66.4 74.4 ~ . 4 67.2 46.0
SCORING LEADERS
G FC FT TP Avg.
E.Mounts(CI
21 204 97 505 24.0
By TOM CANAVAN
M. Blankemeier (Tl
27 253 77 5113 21.6
Associated Press Writer
T. Volarich (MI
24 218 67 503 21.0
K. Kauffman (CI
16 122 79 323 20.2
NEW YORK (AP) C. Lulher (WI
23 173 83 429 18.7 Indiana State Coach Bill
D. Guslln(U)
22 174 54 399 18.1
E. Yarborough (Ml
24 173 71 417 17.4 Hodges said his Sycamore
D. Reep ( Cl
21 143 70 356 17.0 basketball team should be
D. Purcell ( RGI
25 169 70 408 16.3 No.I and they are today - but
A. Freeman (MVl
25 165 56 38~ 15.4 • just barely.
REBOUNDING LEADERS
The Sycamores, who rolled
G REB AVG
A. Freeman (MVl
25 265 10.6 Ill 'their 23rd consecutive
K. Kauffman (C)
16 166 10.4 triumph with a 11J0.75 win
G. James ( RGl
16 159 9 ,9 over West Texas State
C. Luther ( W)
23 218 9.5 Monday night, collected 43 of
M. Waters (M I
23 185 8.0
G. Mills (MI
22 170 7.7 62 firsti)lace votes and 1,196
M. Rengert ( UI
22 167 7.6 points In balloting by The
D. Blse(RGI
25 187 7.5 Associated Press' committee
S. Michell (Tl
27 203 7.5 of
sports writers · and
27 197 7.3
M. Blankemeter (T
broadcasters. They edged
Fl ELD GOAL PCT.
G FG FGA PCT. second-place UCLA by a
21 91 141 64 .5
D. Baker (CI
Dan Bise (RGI
25 141 232 60.8 . scant six points.
"U we were good enough to
Brad Kentosh (MVl
24 126 220 57.3
Dale Royse ( RGI
25 76 136 55 .9 be rated No.2 with our sched23 95 170 55.9 ule, we're good enough to be
Mike Waters (MI
25 169 310 54 .5 No. I," Hodges said, replying
Dan Purcell ( RG)
20 101 195 52.8
S. Brannen (0Dl
26 120 228 S2 .6 to critics who felt Indiana
D. Anderson ({ Tl
L Moore (WI
23 106 202 S&lt;.S State's schedule is weak.
23 118 224 51.5
Ed Ungashlck (WI
And the AP coinmittee
FREETHROWPCT.
agreed,
although there were
G FT FTA PCT. exceptions.
D. Purcell ( RG)
25 70 79 88.6
Indiana State and UCLA,
T. Voiarlch (Ml
24 67 81 82.7
.s. Lones (RGl
15 45 55 81.8 which received 19 first place
S. Brannen (001
20 74 92 80.4 votes, were both named on all
K. Kauffman (Cl
16 79 99 79.8
E. Yarborough (MI
24 71 90 78.9 62 ballots. The Sycamor~s
D. Baker (C)
21 63 81 17.8 were listed as low as No.9 by
E. Mounts(C) .
&lt;1
97125 77.6 one vOter, whlle the Bruins,
J . Feesier (WI ·
23 41 54 75.9 who upset then No.I Notre
L. Moore (WI ,
23 50 66 75.8
Last Week's Scores- Maione 96, Urbaft1190; Malone 101, Dame . 56-52 Sunday, were
Ashland 87 ; Malone 97, Cedarville 88; Cedarville 94, Tiffin 91 ranked ·no lower than fourth.
(ol) ; Urbana 93, Ohio Dominican 74; Mount Vernon 74, Walsh
The Fighting Irish, who
72 (at); Ste.ubenvllle 74, Walsh 62; Walsh 80, Tiffin 72; Rio handed North Carolina State
Grande 92, Mount Vernon 70; Rio Grande 81, Ohio Dominican · its first non-conference game
74.
This v..ek's Games - Tuesdoy ;_ Walsh al Malone; home loss since 1968 ·
Cedarville at' Ohio Dominican; Rio Grande at Urbana; Tiffin Wednesday, slipped to third
at Mount Vernon; Thursday- Mount Vernon at Siena His . with 1,073 points.
(Mich.) ; Friday- Tiftln at Rio Grande. Saturday - Mou~t
Atlantic Coast Conference
Vernon at Malone ; Cedarville at Urbana ; Walsh al Ohio
teams occupied the next two
Dominican; Tiffin at Eastern Kentuck··
positions. North Carolina,
Exhibition tilt sc~~uled Aug. 11
No.6 last week, jumped to
fourth with 983 points
OAKLAND lAP) -The an- PDT.
following
wins over Maryland
game · . The neighboring National
nual exhibition
and
Providence.
Duke, topbetween the Oakland Raider$ Football League teams also
ranked
in
the
preseason
poll
· and San Francisco 49ers has will play a regular-~Jeason
and
third
last
week,
slipped
to
been SCheduled for Aug. II, game in Oakland on a date
fifth
with
901
poiiiiS
after
and the Raiders will be not yet determine~. ·The
shooting · for a seventh Raiders and 49ers are 1-1 in being upset by Pittsburgh 71Straight victory in the series. past regularseason games, 69 on Saturday.
Southeastern Conference
The game,_one of the Raid- but in the exhibition series
leader Louisiana State, No. 8
' ers' two · ~season home the Raiders lead 1~2.
'last week, was a close sixth
games, Will. start at 6 p.m.

MOC cage statistics .

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Sportlight

N~W-YORK (AP) ..:.The world of ice hockey - color It red.
It 18 red for the hue of the Soviet unifonns. It is red for the
fierY intensity of the Russians' play. It is r~ for the blush of
embarrasliment on the cheeka of the Nation~! Hockey League .
In the first confrootation of the best hockey players of two
continents, the Soviet national team crushed the NHL AIIStars
1M! Sunday In the third and decisive game of the Challenge Cup
series.
It was a humiliating lesson fo~ the proud NHL professionals,
mostly Canadians wbo grew up on the frozen waters of the
nol"'th -a lesson car.ved on ice by the speeding, graceful blades
of the sons of the hammer and sickle.
·
· Bring out the drawing boaro.
Said Sarge Savard, defenseman of the Montreal Canadlens :
"We have Ill start developing hockey players instead of
developing goons."
·
Added Bobby Clarke of the Philadelphia Flyers, captain of
the losing All-&amp;ars:
.
"You can do aU that hitting lind stuff you want to but if you
can't finish the plays off you're not going to aceomplish anything."

SPORTS

for my 28 years of coaching."
Badger said: "In my 22
years of baskeball coaching,
he (Baker) is only one of two
players who ever showed me
250 percent when he played
for me at ·· Wright Junior
Collge. He flew off the handle.
I didn't pay attention to what
·was being said. 1 was just
trying to get the ball in
boWJds."
Badger added: "We won it
at the free throw line. That's
the way it should be down the
stretch. It was a dramatic
game. Keith Waler is quicker
than the devil . It was a fine,
pressure-packed game. It
was a shame anybody had to
lose it."
Cincinnati forward Pat
Cummings paced
the
Bearcats with 25 points, and
guard Eddie Lee hit clutch
free throws to preserve the
victory .
The victory evened Cincinati's record at 11-11. Xavier
fell to 9-11.
In other Ohio college
basketball action Monday
night, Kent State erupted for
a 101-70 nonconference

thrashing of Wilmingl&lt;ln . .
"This game is something
we needed ," said Kent State
Coach Ed Downa. "It 's a
morale builder. The first
string guys were cheerin g.
It's just something you
needed."
Wilmington Coach John
Ferguson said: "Kent played
better than the ir overall
record. We tried to learn
from it, and we did ."
The Golden Flashes, led by
senior forward Burrell
McGhee' s
34
points,
improved their record to 9-13,
while Wilmington fell to 14-11.
Elsewhere, Bowling Green
raced to a 9~2 drubbing of
Duquesne - and set a new
MidAmeri ca n Conf erence
record in the process. The
Falcons peppered the net at a
70.2 percent clip to erase a
68.4 percent mark Toledo

That's the best we have run
the fast break for a long
time:' '

Lamented Duquesne Coach
Mike Rice: "We thought a
high scoring. game would be
fun . But we couldnt put it in
the hole. They got layup after
layup after layup."
The Falcons moved to 14-8,
while the loss dropped the
Dukes to 11-9.
Also, Wright State downed
Cleveland State 70&lt;i4, and Loyola of Chicago routed Ohio
University 104-75.

Tuesday Flew to
awarded to the champs and Memphis, Tenn., to work a
the team . scoring the most Metro contest.
victories will be awarded the
Wednesday - Drove to
championship trophy.
Wilmington, Ohio, to officiate
Trophies were made a Hoosier - Buckeye
possible through the support Conference game.
of several boosters of 1 Meigs
Thursday - Drove to East
High School including Rick Lansing, Mich ., to work
Crow, Carson Crow, The another Big Ten game .
Meigs Inn, Farmer's Bank,
Friday - Drove Ill Flint,
New York Clothing, Powell's Mich., to visit his son on a day
Super Vatu, Downing-Childs off.
Insurance, R. C. Cola BotSaturday - On to Aun
tling Company a~d Dr. Jim Arbor, Mich., Ill officiate his
Conde.
third Big Ten 'contest in eight
The Meigs Band Boosters days.
·
and the Girls' Athletic
Saturday night - Stopped
Association will provide at Dayton en route home to
refreshment booths during watch the second half of the
the entire day. Tickets will be DePaulDayton game.
available at the door and wiU
cost $3 for adults and $UO for
students.
Oakland A's lo

Rose says

commence drills

OAKLAND (AP) - The
Oakland A's will open spring
training next week with atBosox acquire
least three coaches working
under newly named Manager
third baseman
Jim Marshall.
Charles 0 . . Finley, the
By The Associated Press
CINCINNATI (AP) - Pete owner who seems resigned to
BOSTON ( AP) - The Rose bid Cincinnati farewell the task of operating the
Boston Red Sox have over the weekend with a few baseball team a 19th season,
acquire d lighthitting third barbs at the Reds. who failed announced Monday that Jim
recorded in 1954 against
baseman Larry Wolfe from to sign the All.Star infielder.
Saul and Lee Walls.have been
Marshall .
the Minnesota Twins in
"I didn'tabandon anyone in signed as coaches. Pitching
"It 's nice to shoot .702 and exchange for infieldereven nicer to hold the other outfielder Dave Coleman, Utis town," he told a charity coach Lee Stange already
team to .402," said Bowling who hit 24 home runs last roast on Saturday night. "! was under contract.
Bobby Hofman, who began
Green Coach John Weinert. year for Pawtucket in the WJderstand the Reds for not
last
season as travelin g
getting
into
the
bidding
war
"And it feels great to take a International League, the
secretary
and ended it as
for
me,"
added
the
longtime
record away from Toledo. Boston club announced
third baseman who will don a third base coach, probably
Monday .
Philadelphia
Phillles will return to the secretary's
Wolfe, 25, hit .234 and drove WJiform this season.
job.
in 25 runs in 88 games while . "A year ago, I never would
Marshall, the former
platooned with left-handed . have believed I would be say- Chicago Cubs manager who
hitter Mike Cubbage for the ing this, but it wasn't as hard handled the A's Vancouver
Twins last season, Wolfe's for me to leave as I though!'it club in the Pacific Coast
rookie year .
League last year, was hired
would he."
He joined the Twins in SepFormer
Reds
first Sunday to take over the big
tember 1917 after hitting .304 baseman Tony Perez , a league club that opens spring
with 39 doubles at Charleston member of the Montreal training Feb. 23 in Marshall's
with 795 points. Louisville, in the International League , Expos since 1976, flew in from home town of Scottsdale,
No.5 last week, tumbled Ill and.leading the league's third Puerto Rico for the event.
Ariz.
ninth after los ing to basemen in putouts and
"Seeing Tony Perez here
Marquetie, No. 10 this week. assists. ,
made me think of the days
Coleman , 28, hit .270 with 24 when it was fun in Cincinnati,
Arkansas headed th e
home
runs and 83 runs batted when we had harmony on the
Second Ten ,. follow ed by
in
at
third
base. lmd in the out- team, a harmony that started
Southwest Conference rival
field
for
Pawtucket
last year. to decrease the day Tony
Texas. Purdue, unranked last
week , jumped to 13th, He appeared in 12 games for left /' Rose said ..
followed by Iowa, Temple,· th e Red Sox in 1977, going hit"All of us players in the big
plus be paid
Georgetown, Ohio State, less in 12 at-bats.
leagues can catch the ball, hit
to
learn a ski II
the ball, throw the baU. But
~~~:~ . Vanderbilt and
there is so much more that
Texas A&amp;M, No.ll last
goes into it. You have to live
Call Army
The Daily Sentinel · with one another, love one anweek before losing to
Arkansas and Texas Tech,
other. That started to leave
(USPS 145-!HitfJ
· and !Uinois, No.20 last week,
us when Tony left," Rose
593-3022 collect
feU from 'the Top 20.
said.
Detroit joined Purdue as
DEVOTED TO litE
the only newcomers to the
INI'£RFSTOF
Top 20.
MEIGS-MASON AREA

-farewell

to friends

Indiana State records
23rd consecutive win
with 895 points while
Syracuse, 20-2, remained
No..7 with 1169 points.
Michigan State, which defeated Iowa 60-57 and bombed
Ohio State 73-55 last week,
jumped from lOth Ill eighth

Davis May
• VI•ted· tO .
m

R e dS camp
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
letter from his grandmother
once helped Davis May get a
tryout with the Cincinnati
Reds.
Edith May, then living in
Covington, Ky., wrote a letter
to the National League
baseball club in 1973 telling
them of the pitching exploits
of her grandson, who had just
finished two years at Gulf
Coast 'Junior College in
Punama City, F1a.
The Reds invited May to a
tryout camp. Instead of going
into professional baseball at
that time, he went to Auburn
University
where · he
graduated in 1975 and was
drafted biro the Minnesota
Twins farm system.
May QUickly found success,
posting ' a 9-2 mark for
Wiscoosln Rapids In 1975 and
following that with a 17-3
mark in 1976.
After a 4-a record wuth Tacoma In 977, May bounced
back last summer with
Toledo of the Internationa.l
League where his 10 victories
included four shul&lt;luls and a
3.12· earned rWJ average.
The Reds acquired his contraCt from · the Twins In
December and he .has been
invited to the Reds training
camp a• a non-roster plover. ·

Tired of the cold?
Sweat in the heat!

ROBERT HOEfl.ICH

Cil)' Editor

OAVtnBUSKUtK

Ad\·erttstng Manager

Southern box
Soulhern (72)- Hill H ·l8 ;

Brina~r6 - 5 - l7 ; Foreman 4-6-

14 ; Duffy 3-7-13 ; Findley 3-2-8
and Teaford 1-0-2. Totals 23-

26 -72.

Wahama

9-1-19 ;

(61) -

Richard s

Rawlings
7-2-1 6;

Barnitz 5-0-10; Weaver J-2:8;
Sayre 1- 1-3 ; Buzzard· 0-2-2;
Russell l-0-2 and Roush 0-H.
Totals 26 -9-61 .
By Quarters :

Southern
Wahama

17 16 18 21- 72
9 22 18 12-'-61

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4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Porr.1eroy,lJ., 'J'uesdav .. F'eb. 1\1979

STANDINGS
. Wednesday 's Games

The Associated Press
National Hockey

Birmingham

England

League

at

New

Winnipeg at Cinc innati

Campbell Conference
Patrick Division

wllplsgfga

N. Y. Islanders

33 9 10 76 236 143

National
Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

N. Y , Rangers

29 18 5 63 216 182
29 22 4 62 217 190
23 18 11 57 170 163

Atlanta
Ph il a .
Chicago

19 25

9

Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel. GB

47 157 191

Vancouver

Washington
Phila.

18 29' 7 43 161 204
St. Louis 13 35 7 33 163 237
Colorado 12 22 8 32 150 216

New Jer5:ey

. New York
Boston

Wales Conference

Adams Division
Boston
32 13 9 73 221 166
Toronto 22 22 10 54 174 172
· Buffalo 21 19 11 53 169 164
M innesota
21 24 7 49 168 175
Norris Division

'

IAontreal
Los Ang.
Pitts .
Wash .
Detroit

37 9 7 a1
23 24 7 53
21 23 a 50
17 29 a 42
11 29 14 36

5~~;~i~nd

227 132
197 194
180 185
179 231
169 209

at

23 32 .418 15

1/z

30 27 .526 3

;~ ~j :~~~

g,;,

Kan. Cily
Denver
Milw .

34 20 .630
30 27 .526 5'1'
24 34 .4 14 12

Seattle
Los Ang .

34 20 .630
35 21 .625

Indiana
22 33 .400 12 1h .
Chicago
20 35 .364 141/:t
Pacific Division
Phoenix

York

New

26 26 .500 10112
25 33 .431 14'/2

New Orleans 19 37 .339 131/z
Western Conference
Midwest Division

Monday's Game
Toronto 5, Chicago 2
Tuesday's Games
Colorado at N. Y . Islanders
Vancouver ~1 St. Louis
Wednesday's Games

Boston

37 16 .69a
32 19 .627 4

Central Division
San Antonio 33 24 .579
Houston
31 23 ;574

l\tlanta

Rangers

Los Angeles at Detroit
Philadelphia at Toronto
New York Islanders at

JJ 22 .600

1112

Portland

27 25 .619 6

San Diego

27 30 .474

Golden St.

25 32 .439 10V'

81 t;~

Monday's Games

Buffalo

No games scheduled

Tuesday's Games
Kansas at New Jersey
Los Angeles at Cleveland
Oenve,- at Chicago
Indiana at Houston
Washington at San Diego
New Orleans at Portland

Atlanta at Chicago
Vancouver at Minnesota

World Hcickey
Association

w I I pis
New England
25 16 7 57
Winnipeg 25 21 6 56
Edmonton 27 21 0 54
Quebec 25 20 4 54
Cine.
22 25 5 49
Birm .
19 27 4· 42

gf ga

Ph~l~1r;:~~y·~i?:mes

200
203
192
183
186

167
194
161
163
189
176 202

af

Denver at Detroit
New York at Indiana
Boston at San Antonio
New Jersey at ·Milwaukee
· New OrleanS at Golden

Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Game
Quebec at Edmonton

State
Atlanta at Seattle

Controversial vote to ·seed
teams
..
·
.. .
l.
ed-B
l
will go Wlc.IJ.GE;'
a es
n .....

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) A controversial vote 1o seed
teams in an Eastern District
boys prep basketball Class A
sectional lournament will go
unchanged, says Ohio High
School Athletic Association
Commissioner George Bates.
"In essence, I told them
(the competing schools) the
draw would stand,'' said
Bates after talking Monday to
Old Washington Buc!(eye
Trail Athletic Director-Coach
Terry Leggett and William
Polk,
principal
at
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley
South.
Indian Valley South, 17-1
and No. 1..-anked statewide in
the weekly Associated Press
Class A poll, must face
Buckeye Trail, 14-1 and rated
seventh in Ohio, on Feb. 20 in
a first..-ound game of the sixteam sectional at River View
High School in Warsaw.
By agreement, the coaches
of the six teams voted Sunday
for first and second seeds,
with three points going to a
choice for first seed and one
point foc each vote for second
seed . ·That meant a total of 24
seeding points.
Tournament director Joe
Prosek, the River View
athletic director, announced
that Indian Valley South was
the sectional's No.I seed with
16 points and Zanesville
Rosecrans, 15-1, the state 's
fifth..-anked Class A power,
the second seed with six
points .
The coaches assumed
Buckeye Trail got the other
two points to make the total of
24.
Leggett,
however,
realized that he had voted for
his team as the No. I seed, '
giving it at least three points.
Charlie Huggins, Indian
Valley South's menlor, also
said 'he voted for Buckeye
Trail for the second seed,
which would have meant it
had a total of four points, t~
same as Rosecrans.
"It's in the rules. You
revote seeding ties, " charged
Huggins. "The votes were

counted wrong."
Leggett said: "It can't be
right. I voted (first) for
myself. And how can you
count four second-place votes

Local Bowling
Wednesday Earlybirds
League

Jan. 24. 1979
Standings

Team
Royal Crown
Jack's Club
New York Polhlng
Riebel's Used Cars

Swisher and Lohse

W. L.
16 8
16 8
14 10
13 II
7

17

King Builders '
2 22
Ind. high game - Betty
Whitlatch 210 ; Olema Roach
194; Debbie Hawley 193.
Ind. high series -. Betty
Whitlatch
525;
Donna
McFarland 502 : Pat Carson
478.
High team game - Royal
Crown 814,780; Riebel's Used
Cars 766.

High team series - Royal
Crown 2366: Riebel's Used
Cars 2203; Swisher· Lohse
2064.
.

Sycamores take over
•
top spot m college ratings
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Nothing's changed now that
the Indiana State Sycamores
are finally No. I - thefre
still winning basketba 11
games .
Undefeated but relatively
unloved by the voters

Tiant warms up

throughout the season, the
Sycamores have moved to the
lop of The Associated Press
poll and established their new
beachead with a handsome
IIJ0.75conquest of West Texas
State .Monday night.
incidentally , that not only
gave some more substance to

their top..-anked status, but answer 1o some charges that
clinched the Sycamores' first the Sycamores play a softMissouri ,Valley Conference touch schedule:
championship.
That was apparently the
"They are certainly one of thinking of AP voters who in
the better teams in the coun- past weeks voted , Indiana
try, " said West Texas State Stat No.) even though the
Coach Ken ~wards of spotless-Sycamores had the
Indiana State: a possible best record in the Top

Seven of eight MOC teams still
--have chance for 1979 playoffs
With the Mid·Ohio Conference · tourney starting in
less than two weeks, seven of
the eight conference teams
still have a chance to qualify
for the tournament by
fmishing in the top four .
Each team has three
games to go before the

pmrmgs will be set. Rio
Grande and Malone have
both claimed playoff spots.
Cedarville, Urbana, and
Walsh have the be'i chances
for the other two spots, but
Mount Vernon and · Tiffin
have an outside chance to
make the tourney field . In

all probability the final four
teams and pairings will not
be known until the regular
season is completed on
Tuesday, Feb. 20.
Malone moved into sole
possession of second place by
defeating Cedarville 97-88.
The Pioneers have won 12 of

Portsmouth risks No. 1
rating against ·Ironton
By· GEORGE s:rRODE
A P Sports Writer
coLuMBus! ohio (AP ) For Cmcrnnah Withrow and
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley
South, it's a waiting game.
For Portsmouth. it's winning
one more regular season
contest.
Those are the situations
facing the leading trio with
one week remaining in The
Associated Press' Ohio boys
high school basketball poll.
Withrow, the Class AAA
pacesetter, has stashed away
an IS-O reg\)lar season record .
Indian Valley South, ahead in
the Class A poll, has finished
its season at 17-1. Both have
substantial leads over 'their
nearest challengers.
.
It's
different
for

and come up with six? The
other four coaches are happy.
If they had drawn it up, that's
the way they would have
wanted it."
Before he talked to the
competing school officials,
Bates had conferred with
Tuscarawas Valley school
district Superintendent Don
Miller, the Eastern District's
representative to the state
high school athletic association's board of control.
Miller had ordered Prosek
by telephone Sunday to stick
by the original vote count.
The other teams in the sec- Portsmouth' the defending
..
Class AA state champion .
tiona! are Newcomerstown, 9- . The Trojans, 17-0 going into
8, Freeport . Lakeland, 3-15 a Saturday game against
and ~ambndge_ Guernsey Ironton , nurse a 277-274 lead
Catholic, ().20, which will play over No. 2 Youngstown
the wumer of the Indian Ray en' IS:O, which concludes
Valley SouthBuckeye Tra!l . its regular season against
game.
Youngstown Chaney tonight
an'li Youngstown South
Friday. Willard stands third
with 195 points.
The final outcome of the
balloting of a statewide panel
of . sports writers and
broadcasters
will
be
announced at 6:30 a.m. next
FORT LAUDERDALE, Tuesday and will determine
Fla. (AP) - Pitcher Luis the poll champions going into
Tiant, having signed as a free tournament play.
Withrow
has
a
agent for the third time in his
commanding
302-260
lead
baseball career, pitched 10
second-ranked
minutes of batting practice as over
Kettering
Alter and is 68
early spring training began
points
ahead
of No . 3 Canton
for the World Champion New
McKinley
in
Class
AAA.
York Yankees.
In
Class
A,
Indian
Valley
Twenty·one players
South's
hold
on
first
place
is
participated in the 21&gt;-hour
even
more
impressive.
The
workout held Monday under
the direction of Manager Bob Rebels piled up 288'points, 66
Lemon. Tiant, who signed as in front of new runner·up
a free agent with the Atlanta Botkins. Mansfield St.
Braves in Aprill971, and with Peter's, second last week and
the Boston Red Sox a month now No . 3, had 201 points.
In Class AAA, Cleveland St.
later, thus began his Yankee
Joseph, Findlay and Celina
career.
"It feels some kind of fuiUiy retained the fourth, fifth and
to be in pinstripes,'' said the sixth positions. Warren
cigar-smoking right-hander, Western Heserve jwnped two
who had pitched for the Red spots to seventh, Toledo Scott
Sox the last eight seasons. fell .one to eighth and
"But I'm happy to be here . Groveport one to ninth and
This is the best team in Marietta was loth again.
In Class AA, Uhrichsville
baseball.
Claymont
dropped one
"The Yankees gave me
what I was looking for all my position to fourth , Cleveland
life - security. Nobody else Latin kept fifth , Millersburg
picked me in the free agent West Holmes advanced from
draft and now I want to show seventh to sixth and Bellaire
to seventh.
' them that I appreciate what went from loth
Dayton
Jefferson
tumbled
they did and that I can still be
two
rungs
to
eighth,
Coa winning pitcher," said
llllllbus
Mifflin
.
was
ninth
Tiat\t.
Tiant joined a nwnber of ·again and Wheelersburg went
veterans, including pitchers from eighth to loth:
In Class A, Mogadore was
Jim Beattie, Ken Clay and
up
one to fourth, swapping
Paul Mirabella - who came
spots
with
Zanesville
lo New York from Texas in
Rosecrans.
Sebring
advanced
the deal that sent reliever
ooe
position
to
sixth
whil~ Old
Sparky Lyle to the Rangers .
Washington
Buckeye
Trail
The "Man of a Thousand
dropped
from
sixth
to
Motions" who rarely gives
seventh.
Southington
Chalker
batters the same delivery
twice in a row, signed a two- kept eighth, Canal Winyear contract with an option chester moved up one to ninth
for a third during the wjnter. and St. Henry moved from
"I have come to show them lith to lot!J.
New Philadelphia TuecaIt Is not the money," he said.
rawas
Central Catholic lost
"I want to play baseball, and
for
the
third
time this season,
• the best way to show them is
66-64
to
Akron
St. Vincent-St.
to come early and get in
Mary
in
overtime,
and fell
· shape."
The rest of the Yankees Ire from ·ninth to 11th in Class A.
not expected until next'Tues- . COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -How a panel of sports writen
day. The camp that began and broadcasters rates Ohio
Monday was optional io high school basketbeall
teams for The Associated
pitchers and catchers. ·

with Yailkees

A program on activities at
the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly camp site was
presented by Mrs. Bob RusS,
wife of t~ camp director, at
the Thursday meeting of the
Phlla~hea Women of the Middleport Church of Christ. ,
· Mrs. Russ showed slides of

the camp activiiies and ex·
plained the work which goes
on in the sununer there. Mrs.
Beulah Roush had the prayer
to open the-meeting presided
over by Mrs. Betty McKinley,
president. The meeting
l9llowed a luncheon.
A donation was made to the

l

Eastern Conference

Smythe Division

B
&amp;
PW
to
solicit
house-to-house
Philathea Women hear camp
activities
.
-

Press th is week (10 poi nts for
fi r st to 1 point ·for lOth) :

C,lass AAA

1. Cincinnati W ithrow, 18-0,
302 points.
.
2. Kettering Aller , 16-1, 260.

3. Canton McK in ley, 16-1,

234.
.t.

Cleveland St . Joseph. 15-

2. 166.

.

5. Findlay , 15-1, 151.
6. Celina, 16 · 1, 122.

7.
Warr e n
We stern
Reserve. 15 ·2. 87 .
8. Toledo Scott, 14·2, 77.
9. Groveport, 15 · 1, 68.
10. Marietta, 14-2, 6S .
Other · schools receiving 10
or more points: 11. Akron

Cenlrai -Hower 26, 12. Toledo
Start23, 13. Chillicothe 20, 14.
(tie). Cleveland West Tech,
Cincinnati .Mount Healthy
and Athens 19, 17. (tiel Ma nsfield Madi son and Boardman

18. 19 . Cincinnati Elder 16. 20.
Barberton 14, 2l. Napoleon
22 . (tie) . Cleveland
Glenville and Ak,-on Copley
12, 24 . Enon Green"on ll, 25.
Springfield North 10.
13 ,

Class AA

1. Portsmouth, 17-0, 277
points.
2. Youngstown Rayen, 16·0,

Kings M i lls Kings 10.

Class A
1. Gnadenhutten

Indian

Valley South, 17·1, 288 points .
2. Botkins, 19-0, 222.
3. Mansfield St. Peter's, 15·

3, 201.
4. Mogadore, 16-0, 193.

5. Zanesville Rosecrans. 15·

1' 178.

6. Sebring. 14· 1. 116.

7. Old Washington Buckeye
Trail, 14 .1, 108.
8. Southington Chalke,-, 151,

82.

9. Canal Winchester. 15-1,
7l.
.

10. St. Henry. 17-0, 48.
Other schOols receiving 10
or more points : 11. New
Philadelphia Tuscarawas

Cenlral

Catholic 46,

12.

Cincinnati Summit Country
Day 39, 13. Lees Creek East
Clinton 32, l4. Strasburg 28,

15. Woodsfield 25, 16. Ada 19,
(tie), Covington and
Haviland Wayne Trace 14, 19.

17

Newbury 13. 2 (tiel . New

Matamoras Frontier and
Richmond Dale Southeastern
12, 22. Cortland Maplewood
11, 23 . Rittman 10.

their last 15 games. Craig
Hershberger has been a key
factor, contributing · 179
assl~ts in 20 games as well a~
shooting 83 percent from the
line and 55 percent from the
field.
Cedarville dropped to Uilrd
place by virtue of Uie loss to
Malone . Sophomore Eric
Mounts passed the 1000-point
mark in his C1Jllege carerr in
the Malone contest. Mounts
currently leads the conference with a 24 point per
game scoring average, has
started in all 50 games of his
two coll~giate seasons, and
has scored in double figures
in 48 of all SO games.
Rio Grande, helped by good
depth and team balance,
C1Jntinues to lead the 'league
at 10 wins and I loss. Transfer
Steve Lones has played a
major role in the success of
the Redmen, scoring 24 points
in helping Rio defeat Ohio
Dominican 81-75.
Overtime games seem to be
a regularity in conference
play this season. Cedar1iille
defeated Tiffin in overtime
and MoU!Jt Vernon defeated
Walsh in overtime. Joe
Feesler of Walsh hit a IS-foot
jumper with 3 · seconds
remaining in regulation
to
send
the
game
into overtime;
however, it was Jeff Fischer
(MV) scoring on a layup with
5 seconds remaining in
overtime that gave the
Cougars the victory. Craig
Luther had 22 points and Joe
Feesler 18 as the Cavaliers
defeated Tiffin.

Nicks, who scored 17 pointi
Twenty. Indiana state Coach
for
the winners. "We started!
Bill Hodges was miffed,
to
last
break." --~ ..... .pointing out: "If you're voted
No. 2 in the nation, why aren't
you gooll enough to be No. I?"
They certainly looked· good
enough Monday night.
"The second half," said .
Hodges, "we just got out
there and played at both ends
of the C1Jurt."
In other games involving
the ranked teams, No. 6
Louisiana State beat Auburn
78-68; No. 11 Arkansas
stopped Baylor 71~2; No. 12
Texas whipped Texas A&amp;M
6Mi7 and No. 19 Vanderbilt
beat No . 20 Alabama SM;7.
As on many other
occasions, Larry Bii-d was
the reason that Indiana State
won its most recent game.
Bird scored 27 points and
registered 19 rebounds
FOR YOUR
against West Texas State.
"The second half, we just
VALENTINE
·stuck it to them," said Carl
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IN THE

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TRI-STATE AREA

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.MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
Mon., Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30 filS: 00
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until8 P.M. ...
Herman Grate
...J73·5592

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Maspn , W.Va..

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il Morale Problem? Hy
pectations of a secretary
Karen Blaker, fh .D.
really are.
On the other hand, your
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
.am writing to you because secretary may have a
you are a woman and pro- realistic attitude toward her
bably know what makes the menial work. By not acting
female sex tick. I need some enthusiastic, is she making
advice about liow to handle you feel guilty for asking her
my secretary.
to do routine tasks?
She arrives at work promp'Or is she making you feel
·tly,leaves promptly and com- insecure? It could be that her
pletes ~r assignments within matter~f.fact approach is a
the allotted time. But why far cry from your last
·can't she be more en- secretary's frequent ego
thusiastlc a built her work •
massages.
I know typing and filing are
If none of the above
quite menial but - well, I possibilities seems ap·
guess I want her to be happy plicable, you may have a
and look happy,
morale problem on your
· ,First I tried to flatter her banda ..
with compllments on her apIn that case, compliment
pearance. That failed . In your secretary's work, not
fact, thinj&lt; she thought I was her personal appearance. Remaking a sexual approach; !llind her that her ideas are
she acted'· insulted by my welcome. (She · might not
.positive comments about her have believed you the first
time.)
clothes and make·up.
Try letting her organize her
Then I tried the manage'
ment technique of trying to own time in the office. For ex·
get her more involved in the ample, why not let her
business. I asked for her in- schedule ..her own breaks?
put on . marketing our pro- Flexibility raises morale
duct. That failed, too. It has because it lends a little
been two weeks now and she respectability to otherwise
hasn'thad any su@gestions.
meni.al jobs.
Now I am at a dead end.
Can you ask something
DEAR READER - If you specific of her• Perhaps you
can look past your might request that she smile
secretary's sex to the feelings more often when showing
she may have abuut her job, clients into your office. If she
you may come a lot closer to knows what is e.xpected of
devising a solution to this her, she may not mind playmorale problem -if that's ing the game to keep her job.
what it really is.
One final warning: Many
' Maybe yo\lr secretary is in- business executives would
secure about her job. If so, give their right arms for
she is probably trying to be reliable, hard-working
very buslhesslike in de- secretaries like yours. Maybe
meanor.
the status quo is not that bad.
Getting personal with com- Why rock the boat? ·
pliments on her looks will not
Is lear keeping you
help the situation. On the con- prisoner in your home• Write
trary, it may make her more for Dr. Blaker's new hoUine,
insecure. She may begin "If You Are Phobic." Send 30
wondering just what your ex· cents plus a stamped, self-

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274.
3. Willard, 16-0, 195.

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14-1, 174.
5. Cleveland Latin , 13·3,
155

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6.,
Millersburg
West
Holmes, 16-1, 1.47 .
7. Bellaire, 15-1, 85 .
8. Dayton Jefferson , 14 ·2,

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4. Uhrichsv ille Claymont,

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fJOr '2bur 'Valentine

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9 . Columbus Mifflin, 14 ·3,

58.

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10. Wheelersburg , 14-3, 47.

Other schools receiving 10
or more points : 11. Swanton

.... p.m. at the home of Mrs .

I ·Social I
I Calendar
1

Peace program begun

Not for women only

13 (tie) . Steubenville Catholic
Central, Orrville and Ottawa Glandorf .20, 16. South Point
17, 17 . Nelsonville -York 13, 18
(tiel . Warrensville and
Lorain Catholic 12. 20. Cadiz
11 ,21 {tie) . Bucyrus Wynford,
Marion River Valley and

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I LB. $4.45

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SATIN HEART 2LB. $11..25

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Don't be surprised to find a spider in
your evening newspaper. The spider
is. merely looking to see which ofthe
town's merchants is
nor advertising~ He
will then go to that
store, spin his web
across the door and
lead a life of
undisturbed
peace!

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ASSORTED ·

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CHOCOLATES

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I LB. $3.50

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·HALLMARK

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NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING DOES MAKE THE DIFFERENCE

GOESSLER'S

JEWELRY .
STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy,O.'

PHONE

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

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By day, Me Daile is a
computer systems analyst for
a Cincinnati company. But
when the artistic mood hits,
he heads for the quilting
frame in his workroom .
"It's one of those things you
do when the urge hits you,"
he said. "A lot of people,
because of our industrial
society, feel they have to
mass produce. You can't do
that with quilting."
He exhibits his quilts each
year during a festival at
Hueston Woods State Park
and he'll be there again this
year.
He has also served as an
adviser for a Butler CoiUity 4H quilt that took honors
during the 75th anniversary
of 4-H clubs in Ohio. Last
week, more than 200 persons
attended
a
quilting
demonstration he put on at a
local high school.

Administration

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ho urs lwve been set from 1 to
5 p.m. ,\ cl~it i on al volunteers
an· needed and anyone inh'n•stcd in helping should
''"lll~d Mr~. Pratt.

v;lss the {'nmmunit y. Mrs.
C.r~u·p Pratt is ('hCJil·mun for

duh has on Heart Sumlay in
Middkpnrt.
till' RPW with Mr&gt;. Linda
lll'adquarters wi ll ·he MidStoh&lt;H'I cts Uw l'IH 'hainnan . dl!'port Villa ge hall and the

Women's

Club will again this yea r
solicit house -to~hnu se in Mid ·
dlcporl for the Mei gs r.m mty

Ht•ctrl Association fund rlrivt•.
On till' aflern&lt;HII1 of Hearl
Sunday, F&lt;•b. 25, members

are trained and prepared to
join in this peacemaking
task, either as a full4ime

career or as a seco nd
vocation along with their
major occupation, " the
professor of religion and
philosophy said.
Redding said he hopes to
show there is more to life
than " looking out for No. I."
" Even if our most
important instinct is for
survival, we ' can learn that
we will survive better if we
cooperate than if we are
aggre$sive," .Redding said.
" If we can do this, then those
people (who take the
courses), whatever their
vocation, are going to be
better prepared to deal with
the conflicts that arise in the
family, in the work situation
and in the eommunity ."
Advocating non-violence
and peace is nothing new at
this small southern Ohio
Quaker-affiliated college, ·
which was founded 109 years
ago.
The peace studies program
will include courses on war
and peace, social and
political thought,
international conflict, and
hwnan relations laboratory
work .
In addition, each student
will spend time off campus as
an intern with an agency or
organization dealing with
peace.
" Beyond these courses,
students will be able to select
from other departments on
campus," Redding said.
Redding said he does not ·
know how many people will
sign up for the program .
&gt;~ Obviously, we' re not
going to be able to turn this
whole
thing
around
overnight, " Redding said.
" We're not going 1o be able 1o
. change
that mentality
overnight, and we may not
get very dramatic results.

SNACK AND SAVE THIS WEEK.
WITH THE COLONEL1S
TWO PIECE SNACK BOX SPECIAL
This week for just 99(C you can get 2
pieces of the Colonel's finger li ckin '
good chicken with a tasty dinn er ro ll
to go with it.
It's regularly $1 .30. Which means ,
you can put the pennies you save
toward a drink to go with it. So pinch
your pennies and lick your fingers .
Or hy our Dutchboy
Sandwich this week
'

for on~ 99' ....

Reg. Price 11.25
OFFER GOOD THROUGH
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18TH.

BONELESS
ROAST

GROUND
BEEF

$}69

BONELESS
SAVORY

TAVERN HAMS
Whole

LB.

BACON
LB. 79c .

$}59 Ha~B. $}69

WELCH'S

GRAPE PRESERVES,
GRAPE JEUY OR
GRAPE JAM

GRADE A

SMALL

EGGS

Dozen

49

~

.ZESTA

CRACKERS...... ~.!~:. 59
FINE ASSORTMENT
OF STORE SLICED
LUNCH MEATS

~

20 oz .
Jar

DOUBLE COLA
8-16 oz.
bottles

99~

Plus tax &amp; deposit

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magazine .
Although there are few men
locally who can support his
claim, McDade says he's not
alone in his love for quilting .
"There are a lot of men who
quilt, but nobody knows about
them," said McDade, who
estimates he's met about 30
men who have taken up
quilting.
He learned the art from his
grandmother and mother.
He became interested in
quilting in a ro\Dldabout way.
McDade, an avid antique collector, latched onto an
antique brass bed and asked
his sisters to make him a
quilt.
"But I always made fun of
their quilting and they dared
me to make one," he smiled.

"So I did."

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Pr.pfessiO,lCll

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and

the cover of a women S

RED FOIL HEART

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and other volunteers will ran- This will be the 29th yea r th(•

The . Middk por.t Rusiupss.

:w:e:do:n:·t:st:a:rt:so:m:e-_!!!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::!~~

&gt;i .

38, 12. Bell vi lie Clear Fork 28,

Jackie Zirkle. Mrs .. Phyllis
Skinner will have the contest.
LAUREl. CLIFF BETI'ER
Health Club. 7:30 Thur~day
night at the Riverboat Room,
Athens County Savings and
Lo;m, Meigs Offic-e.
WEDNESDAY
BROTHER DAYMOND
ADAMS
speaker
at
Fellowship O!urch, Racine,
Wednesday through Sunday
7:30 p.m. nightly. Public
invited.
THURSDAY
WILLING WORKERS
CLASS of Enterprise United
Methodist Church Thursday
7:30 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Thomas Bentz.

lJ

' 1llESDAY
SYRACUSE PTO 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at school with
program by the fitst graders
and members of Syracuse
Cub Scout Pack 245.
REGULAR . MEETING,
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Work in
the Master Mason Degree.
WEDNESDAY
REGULAR
MEETING
Pomeroy Cha_pter 80, · RAM
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, Wednesday , 2 p.m . a!
the home of Mrs. Nan Moore ..
Mrs . Dwight Wallace will
review "Six Men."
WIJ ,MINGTON, Ohio (AP)
and r~gular meeting of - Wi_lming~n College next
Bosworth Council 46 Royal fall w1ll begrn a focmal fourand Select Master~ Wed- year program of studies
nesday night. Work in Mark · devoted to helping students
Master Degree and Past achieve peace between men
Master Degree..
and nations .
"Peace does not just
· P 0 M E R 0 Y - · happen overnight. It is the
MIDDLEPORT L1ons Club,
product of intensive effort on
regular meetmg, Wednesday
the part of hwnan beings,"
at noon at the Meigs Inn . All
said Earl w. Redding, who is
hons urged to attend.
in charge of the peace studies
MEIGS . COUNTY GIRL program .
SCOIIT umt meetm~, 7 to 9
Graduates earning a
p.m.Wednesday,Me1gslnn.
bachelor of arts degree in
THURSDAY
peace studies will be
ROCK SPRINGS BETTER qualified for careers in
Health Club, Thursday, 1:15 governmental or private
- · ·
organizations which strive
addressed envelope to Dr. lor peace.
·
Blaker in care of this
"We need individuals who
newspaper, P.O. Box 475,
fuldio City Station, New
York,. N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
request the newsletter by
DARRTOWN, Ohio (AP) name.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care As far as Paul McDade's conof this newspaper, P.O. Box cerned, quilting is not
475, Radio City Station, New women's work.
In fact, smce he took up the
York, N.Y. 10019. Volwne of
mail prohibits personal art 10 years ago, hiS qutltrng
replies, but questions of has far outsh~ed that of
general interest will be
C1lmpetitors in quilting bees. where, it will never happen."
discussed in future columns .
Last faD
many
of inhiSWashington,
female :B;u:t:i:f
D.C., his "DaddyHex" quilt
took first place in the
National Quilt Show.
The same quilt has
received two other national
awards and made its way to

CU'ed!Usda~ rJib. 14

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80.

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Karen Blaker Ph.D.

cher, Mrs . llorothy Baker,.
Mrs. Dorolhy .Jtonkinson, ·

Kelly, Robert Ml'F.lhinny, Clariet• F.1·win. Mrs. F.wlyn
Mrs. Hattie Swift, Mrs. Murra y, Mrs . He len
Bessie Ashley and Mrs. J.ula - Reynolds,
Mrs . Mabel
Mae Quivey. Hostesses were Walburn, Miss Mabel Hysell,
Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs. and Miss Fraucrs Roush,
Grace Hawley, Mrs. Etta members, and guests, Mrs:
Mae Norton, Mrs: Katherny F.leanor Lohs1•, Matt and
F.rvin. Others attending were Amy F.rwin, Scott and JenMrs . Farie Cole, Mrs. Kathy nifer M&lt;·Kinley .
F.t·win , Mr.r.: M:trflnr,•t "Pnt .

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CHOICES
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fi
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•
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fi
d.
d
•
~:~&lt;~rt:~S ~\\'Sl:~r~:l ~a~~r~ ~~~:CJ~l!1l l'•~fJ~:~~WI~I~~~~(:.~: or 11.ear. .
ssocta ton un rtve

fund lor robuil&lt;ling a homr
for the Dext&lt;'.r man whose

DUTTON
DRUG CO.
MIDDLEPORT. Q,

Be 'p aid to learn.
quic!c: promotion
good benefits
package
.

Call Army
593-3022 collect

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, 6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; 0., Tuesd~y . Feb. 13, 1979

]-The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Feb. 13, 1979

Plans for .selecting Valentine royalty announced
Plans for selecting va lentine royally as a pm'l of the
annual Meigs County Hea rl
Association fund 1lrivc wer·e
.~mriou11ced t orlt~y .

Mrs. James S0ulsby and
Ralph Werry are cochairmen for the activity.
Winners will be selected by a
JWnny-&lt;-1 -vnte system anct if

s eniors of Meigs County

all shphomnrf&gt;s . .innior'~ and

g rade J!irl~ of MPi~~ C:ountv .

By DOLORES BARCLAY
·Associated Press Writer
She Ha~ Junior Housewife Blues
NEW YORK (AP) Df,AR HELEN :
Twenty thousand men,
I am l4 and worried. My mother and ! live alone and don 'l women and children from all
get along anymore. She has been working night shift for three parts of the nation swoop in
years and ! do most of the houoework. I don 't mind because I on New York's Kennedy
enjoy it, and she is supposed to sleep during the day.
,
Airport during July 1980. The
But lately I've been awfully impatient and haven't done a same 20,000 board Moscowthing without her having to beg me. She even threatened to bound planes.
leave and that scares me. I love her but can't help being a And during this same two·
JUMPY, TEARFUL AND FEARFUL GIRL
week period, they must be
P.S. Don'tsay to get patience because I haven 't any .
housed, fed, entertained and
DEARJTFG :
shown the Soviet Union witll
Our long-distance diagnosis is: junior housewife blues -and five days. of Olympic game~
you're entitled, if you've been doing most of the work, plus at- tossed in somewhere. Whew!
tending school, plus staying ajone nights, since you were II.
How does one keep track of
TI1at's too mt1ch responsibility for a young girl'
so many tourists in the same
ll•" '
.&lt; . " a day jobfor your motherandaddedmother- place at the same time doing
ing tc
, ~ven if she can't swing the first , perhaps she the same things ?
Could lu f.~. vver more home duties, plan more waking hours
If you're E. WaUace Lawwith you - and see that they're enjoyed ,. not bickered rence Ill , you use a
awdy!
computer. And that's exactly
Let's hope this column "111 start a mother-daughter talk at what he's doing as the official
your house. -HELEN
U.S. travel agent responsible
JFTG'S MOTHER:
for Americans going to the
We see your side too : it isn't easy, being the breadwinner- 1980 Summer Olympics in the
and differential pay probably keeps you on a night job. Also, Soviet Union.
you can 't quite understand the change in a daughter who was
Two
IBM
computer
always willing and now isn't... unless you realize she's pro-. terminals in ·his eastside
bably as tired and lonely as you are.
Manhattan office are being
Let's hope that talk will lead to a system of mutual help and fed in'formation on 10,000
appreciation at your house! -SUE
tourists who already have
signed up for one of the two
RAP :
tour packages being offered.
Jenny's family moved here in September, and I helped her The data will be used for
gel acquainted at school. Too well' We went together until last visas and accommodations.
week. Then the " in" girls asked her to join their sorority -and
" It's the first time we've
they only date "in •· guys. I'm your average clod so I'm 'Jout. " done th,is sort of thing," said
She hardly speaks to me now, after I accused her of being a Lawrence, president of the
snob. She thought she could keep on with me and also be in the the travel agency Russian
sorority but I told her it was either them or me. She said I was Travel Bureau and Orbitair
jealous and unreasonable, and they're "great girls."
Ltd. His appoinbnent came
I really liked her and didn 't think she'd fall for that stuck-up from the U.S . Olympic
bunch. She really liked me too. So why can 't she see? -DEL
Committee last year.
DEL:
The tours being offered See what ' You forced the break-up by insisting Jenny choose one for 15 days at $1,550 and
between you and a group of girls she likes. Maybe you're a one f&lt;r 22 days at $1,850 reverse snob who won't accept the "ins" because he enjoys only permit the tourist til
feeling "out." (Or you're afraid to compete?) -SUE
attend five days of Olympic
DEAR DEL:
sports. The remainder of the
Or maybe the "ins" at your school live up to the stereotype time will be spent traveling
and really are snobbish dictators of who goes with whom. In elsewhere in the Soviet
which case Jenny will either drop out of the sorority or become Union. This means the 8,000
one of them, depending on what kind of person she is. ,
accommodations will be
So give her a chance : Call, apologize for trying to run her rotated for all 20,000 slots allife , and' ask for a date. Good luck! -HELEN
loted the United States.
"It's a strange market," he
(GOT A P ROBLEM' Or a subject for discussion, twosaid . "As soon as one
generation style' Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen Olympics
is
over,
Botle l -&lt;Jr both, if you want a combination mother-daughter affecionados of Olympics
answer -in care of this newspaper.)
want to make plans for the
next. People started calling
us right after Montreal, even
though the Russians hadn't
said anything yet."
So Lawrence made a
survey of the first 2,300
people who called. He found
•
that only 17 percent wanted to

.Announce
mamage
Announcement is being
made of the marriage of Berni ce Irene Molden and
Geo r ge Alvin Molden,
Pomet·oy , on Feb. 10, at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church. The Rev. Floyd
Shook perform ed the
ceremony. Mr. and Mrs.
Molden reside. at 160
Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy.

Turns three
Matthew Martin was
recen tly honored on his third
bi rthday with a party at his
horne. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh Mattin . Cake,
ire crea m, and koolaide were
ser ved to hi s brother,
Michael, Amy and Saca
Berkhimcr, Lori Mundry,
Jeff Chevalier, amd his
gra ndmother, Mrs. Erika
Boring .

·' Apple of Sodom" or
"Dead Sea fruit ," symbc?ls
of outward beauty but m·
ward decay, a re suggested
in the Bible. Geikic's " The
Holy Land and Bible" describes the a pple of Sodom
as " fair and attractive, soft
tn the touch, but if pressed , it
bursts wi th a crack and only
the broken shell remains in
the hand."
"For their wine Is of the
win!! of Sodom ... their

grapes are gropes of fall,

thd r clusters ·arc bitter."
Dent. 32: 32.

•

Ten years ago: National
Guard troops at the
Uni versity of Wisconsin in
Madison and police at Duke
University in Durham, N.C.,
used tear gas to break up
demost rations ba cking
demands of · black students.

Attend funeral
Mr. and Mrs. Paul L.
McDaniel, Sr., and Mr. and
Mrs. Paul L. McDaniel, Jr.,
Middleport, were in Vinton
for the funeral services of
Steve Runyon of BidwelL
McOaniel, Jr. and 23-year-&lt;Jid
Steve had worked together at
the Runyon Trucking Co. of
Bidwell, operated by \he
father of the deceased, Dan
Runyon.

Daughter hom
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Tillis,
Rutland, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a
daughter, Dusty Dawn, Jan .
12 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The baby weighed
six pounds, 10 ounces.

Maternal grandparents are
Wilma Gilmore, Rutland and
Ca rrol Gilmore, Rutland,
Route I. Paternal grand:
parents are Pauline Tillis,
Rutland, and J ohn Tillis,
Reedsv ille.
Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Roy
Nelson, Leona Giimore, and
Mrs. William Haley, Rutland,
and Mrs. Viola Tillis,
Chillicothe.
MF.ETING SET
The annual installation of ·
officers for Howard,s Stars
District 25 , Order of th~
EAstern Star, will be held
Feb. 18, 6:30p.m. at the Ohio
University Inn. All of the
Stars and guests are invitl'll
to a !fetid, .

hi ~h

there is good participation in
eac h group, runner~up
awards will be presented.
The queen conteo1 is open to

s chuols.

The

princ~ss

or

hearts cont est c"n be entered
by seventh, eighth and ninth

stay in the Soviet Union for 24
days. Forty percent wanted
to stay 15 days; 7 percent,
seven days; 21 percent 21
days; and 6 percent longer
Ulan 24 days. The most
popular cities were Lenigrad,
Kiev, Odessa and Irkutsk in
Siberia .
Most tourists want to
attend opening day and
c losing day of the 22nd
Olympiad. other popular
events were track and field,
swimming,
gymnastics,
basketball, boxing and
soccer.
But travelers have no say
over what events they will be
given tickets to during the
five day~ in Moscow. This is
not unusual , . says the
Olympic committee.
"There's very little one can
do,when the host city sets up
tlle ground rules - that's the
way it S been since 1964 in
Tokyo ," said Bob Paul,
directnr of communications
for the ·Oiympic committee in
Colorado Springs , Colo.
" They cannot tell you what
sports you'll be sitting at or
where you'll be sitting. Even
tlle accomodations.
" During the Munich games
in 1972, a number of the
accommodations were in
private homes," he said.'
"People who frequently go to
the · Olympic
games
understand this."
Many
tourists
have
criticized the 1980 travel
arrangements, questioning
why they can only spend five
days at the games.
"There are only 8,000 beds
available each day in
Moscow," Lawrence said.
" That means only six nights
either in hotels , student
apartments at· Moscow
University or In some newly
constructed apartment buildings. They're all on a first·
· class Soviet basis. The rooms
are clean but they don't have
thick carpets or overstuffed
chairs."
Payment for the trip is in
installments. The first is $500.
This deposit Is returned ,
Lawrence said, if the tourist
should have to cancel. A $25
fee will be applied if the
reservation is canceled
before March 15, and a $95 fee
after that date .
Lawrence is arranging a
program with a U.S.
1

and the junior princess

(~O n·

on March 31 . Girls wishing to
enter the contest may do so
by sending their name, addruss, ~rade in sohool, and
which contest they plan to

test is open to "11 elementary
!(iris of Meigs County,
The contest will begin on
Wednesday, Ft•b. 21, and end

insurance company that
would permit a traveler to
'recoup all of the payments
should he or - she have to
cancel at the last minute
because of illness, death or an
accident.
Most if not all cancellations
will result in substitutions, he
said, since there are so many
people waiting to go.
"Sinee we have the policy
of substitution, we expect
some people will be signing
up 30 days before the
Olympics," Lawrence said.
"B\11 anyone who wants to go
should get a reservation in
before June to play it safe.
We're keeping a waiting list
on the ba5is of post mark."
"I don 'I think anyone will
lose on this," he said,
"because the numbers or
people who want to go are
more than those who are
going .' '
Lawrence is laking a staff
of 150 to Moscow and will be
staying six weeks to set up
the tours and to work witll ·
American tourists while in
the Soviet Union. He plans to
set up barter booths in the
hotels and apartment
dwellings to permit Olympic
fans to exchange tickets witll
each other.
' The 22nd Olympiad will be
held July 19-Aug. 3, 1980, with
21 sports in Moscow, Leningrad, Minsk and Kiev .

enter to either Mrs. Soulsby
at l17UnionAve.,orWerryat
J;lox 2, Pomeroy,
·:
A list of contestants will be
announced along with the

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly ~ramer
Marble Turned Yellow
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
pair of carved urn-shaped
marble lamps tllat need
cleaning badly. I have used a
damp cloth but my husband is
" heavy smoker and they ·
have turned yellow. - IRENE
DEAR IRENE - If real
marble surfaces are wiped
with a cloth wrung out of
warm water and a bit of
detergent once or twice a
year they should slay in good
shape and only require wiping with a cloth dampened in
lukewarm water in between.
One dealer in Italian marble
says a coal of liquid wax can
be applied to avoid staining.
I have no specifie treatment for removing tobacco
smoke stains from marble
lamps but smoke discoloration can be removed from
smooth marble fireplaces by
scrubbing with fiber brush
and a detergent solution.
Cover with a thick paste of
kitchen cleanser and··
' water, cover to keep damp-

ness in and leave for a day,
let dry and then rinse away
the dri~d powder. This
MIGHT work on your marble
lamps but I would test a small
back area first as your marble may be more poroils. The ·
safest thing to do is to take
the lamps to a marble company to have them · cleaned
and then take care of them as
suggested.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I had the
·same problem as Joe - my
clothes did not smell fresh
after laundering. I found the
solution was to wet the
underarm area of a garment,
rub it well with a bath
deodorant soap and let it set
for a few minutes. Then
launder in the usual manner.
-STElLA
DEAR POLLY - After you
think you have used all the
toothpaste in a tube lake the
back of a comb, start at the
bottom of the tube and rub the
comb to the top.· You will be
surprised to find that you can
usually" get another week's
worth of paste. - MRS.
R.L.H.

·QEAR POLLY - An easy
way to make cookie cutters
for special occasions is to
remove the metal strip from
a foil or waxed paper box and
bend it into the depired shape.
Snip · off the e~cess ··
MILDREDP.
Polly will send you one of
her ·signed thank -you
newspaper - coupon clippers
if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Don't be
a heart
breaker

Eat less saluraled fat.
!he Ame11con Heart Aso;ocohon •

W"E'ftE FIGHTING FOfl VOURLIF£

ALL PURPOSE

STEEL SHELVING
4 SHELF UNIT, 12" DEEP
• Heavy gauge stMI

REG. 16.95

• Versatile, for use
anywhere

8!!

• Ribbed posts &amp;' sway
braces provide oddoci

strenglh
• Adjustcole shelf height

.•
••
:
•e

YOUI CHOICE

••
:
•e

•
•

60WATTOR
lOOWATT

•
•

LIGHT

BULBS

.••••••c•••••••••••.
•

•

• S1ock~newond

•

save

•

'

By DON KENDALL
Monday, ashe has in the past,
AP Farm Writer
that "the w&lt;rld has produced
WASHINGTON (AP)
four bumper crops hack-toLooking at the odds, hack in tbe last four years"
Agriculture Secretary Bob and that it "has never grown
Bergland says drought or five good crops in ·a row ,"
other severe weather in some
Consequently, he told the
parts of the world in the annual meeting of the
' coming months could mean National Association of
full production for American Conservation 'Districts, "It 's
farmers in 1980.
entirely conceivable tllat for
Bergland
madtW . ,no 'crop year 1980 there would be
prediction that this will no set-aside program n to
happen, but pointed out again

Curb the production of major
crops such as wheat, corn and
cotton .
In 1978 and again this year,
acreage set-aside programs
were put in place to help
slowdown the rise in grain
stockpiles, now the largest
since th e early 1960s.
"The day of the massive
'soil bank' is gone," Bergland
told the estimated 2,000
delegates to the meetin• " !

can 't

imagine

·. any

has started Operation
"RATS," which stands for
"Report All Things Swiftly ."
A student, Elizabeth
Stauderman, pushed th e
measure through the Student
Congress after a friend had
her purse snatched .
"We're trying to deal with
two kinds of problems. One is
crime outside the school the violent crimes, kids from
other schools preying on
Walnut Hills students.
"The other kind is inside .
We've had a rash of locker
break-ins and we're trying to
get kids to stop ignoring it.
Students tend to be apathetic
and also scared. The:;,'re not
used to it. They haven 't
encountered violence pa st
'Slarsky and Hutch ' a nd
'Charlie's Angels.'
" We're trying · to get
students to care and not be
afraid to teh someone if they
see something , wrong.''

Acentral location where incidents can be reported ha s
been estab lished . The
students have set up a fund to
reward tll ose who provide
information on crimes.
P.arents have rece ived
letters explaining the anticrime program .
Th e students are working
with the Cincinnati police deparimenl to set up seminars
on crime.
''What we're attempting to
do is give kids strategies on
how to protect themselves
and their property, to make
them more street·wise," said
Principal David Shepherd.
Rut crime has not risen at
Walnut Hills , Sh ephe rd
added .
Despite two incidents in
whi ch a youth pulled a gun
and robbed a student last fall ,
the school is not unsafe, he
said.
"We don't encounter the

In a question-and-answer

have stayed in gr ass or under

other sound conser vation

agency ar e working to a

same kinds or problems in programs .
thi s school as other schoo ls Thu s , he sa id, a not her
because kids choose to attend export and price boom could
·here ," he said . '' Disruption in put renewed pressure on
oth er schools is primarily fa rmers to plant such land ,
from those kids who don't rai sing further. threats of
damage from wind and water
want to be ther e."
erosion.
Bergland urged the group
to work with slate and federal
off icials to design the best
CA NCEtLATION
lucal programs pos~ible to
The Wednesday meeting of help forestall so il and water
the Past Councilors Club of erosion.
Chester Coun cil 323 has been
But he also. ca utioned that
cancelled. The date of the "we cannot and will not
next meeting will be a n- create new federal pr ograms
noUn ced later
that wil l solve all the
problems by themselves."
"We could not pay for
them ," Ber gland said. "We
F'ive years ago: Soviet could not staff them . A
re g ula tory
Nobel prize writer Alexander com pl ete
pro
gr
a
m
co
uld
not find
Solzhenitsyn
had
his
citizenship stripped away and enough policemen to make it
was exiled to West Germany work .. and such a program
afte r be ing arre sted in would be as unacce ptable as
the problems it would adMoscow.

disadvantage in carrying out

we would have as much as
even 50 million acres of U.S.
cropland taken out of production .''
This year, he said, th e setaside programs are aimed at
getting farmers to lake 12
million to 14 million acres
from crop production.
ln 1972, just before U.S.
grain exports soared, nearly

StJ.tdents plan to protect school
CINCINNATI (AP) - Students at Cincinnati's elite
Walnut Hills High School vow
they ar~ not going to let crime
and violence become part of
their life , as it is in other
schools.
They began a program on
Monday enlisting the aid of
all students to protect each
other. Apathy, not telling on
wrongdoers, is out. ·
·
The students at Walnut
!Iills are considered the
cream of the Cincinnati
school district. Admission
standards are high and are
based o9 1 grades and
achieve1 ~ent. The students
come gener~ly from middlea nd upp .e r-class
neighborhoods and attend by
choice.
Because
of
several
robberies, thefts and assaults
both inside and outside the
coll ege preparatory high
school, a student -task force

()() million acres of whea t and
feed grains land was taken

sess ion afte r his talk ,
Bergland was asked about
proposed budget cuts for the
Soil Conservation Service am!
wheth er it might be possi ble
for loca l districts to gel
federal grant• to help hire
people to carry out technical
programs.
Bergland made · no commitments but said the grants
are "something we want to
look at. "
" Let'• get together on this"
to see what can be worked
out , he added .
Ceilings placed on the number of employees in the

cir cumstances und er which

fr om

production

under

federal programs.
With huge exports, grain
prices skyrocketed in 1973-74
and a ll acr eage cur bs wer e

taken off . But record wheat
and corn crops in recent
years have r ebUilt reserves

and prices tumbled from
their ea rlier peaks.
Bergland said the high
nrices - including wheat at
$5 a bushel and soybeans at
$10 a bushel - encouraged
many farmers to plant
marginal land that should

dress."

FOLDING STAIRWAY
22" X 54" or 25W' X 54"

TO 105" CEILING HEIGHT TO 120" CEILING HEIGHT

3377

INCTN.

REG.
48.95

use of it as

and

the

gove rnment 's th ree-year
storage program have help
ke ep prices relatively strong,
the board " said in a
prelimimiry report. r
The farm price for corn

ago.

" There will be some
seasona l rise in corn and

association officials.

WASHINGTON (A PI- The
Agriculture Department says
that while 1979 crop prospects
a pp·ear · favorable, it is
unlikely corn and other feed
gr"in s production will be as
large as last year 's harvests.

" Weather condition s m 1978
were exception ally good, and
the (average I corn yield of
101 bushels per harvested
acr e was a record ," the

WASHI NGTON (AP) - The
na tion1 S miJk production in

.Ja nuary wa s about J0 .04
billion pounds, slightly above
th e 9.99 billi on poun ds
produce d in the same month

was $2.10 a bushel in midJ"nuary , compared to $1.97
last October and $2 a yea r

many conservation programs

r elation to corn prices .' '

sorghum prices this spring

and summer, but not much
change in barley prices, " the
report said. "Oat prices are
expected to continue strong in

of 1978 , according to the
Agriculture Dept~rtmcnt .
Production averaged 925
po unds a cow, compared to
915 pounds in Janua ry of last
year , the department said
Monday.
The nurnber of milk cows
totaled 10,848,000 last month,
compared to 10,923,000 a year
earlier, officials said .

SPEED QUEEN
Quality Products Since 1908

WASHER
LARGE CAPACITY
HEAVY DUTY
FABRIC SOFTENER
DISPENSER

depariment 's outlook board
said . "While &lt;l would be

SALE

Wl us ual for the favora ble

conditions of 1978 to repeat
tl1i s year , heavy precipitat ion
and snow cover over much of
the major grain-producing
areas is encouraging for 1979
crop prospects ."
Despite the huge corn crop
last fall - a record of about
7.1 billion bushels - export

MATCHING

DRYER
DOES THE
JOB JUST
RIGHT

'588PR.

lAUNDRY SALE AT:

DAIRY

U. S. GRADE A SMALL

S'LICED BACON •••••••••••••••••••••••
1

-LB. PKG. • ]

19

EGGS .................................~~~~. 49~
VALLEY BELL

2% LOWFAT MILK ...... ~~.~~~. $} 69
CHOCOLATE DRI NK .....G.~~?.~ SJ 29
49
1% MILK .........................~~~~~sl .

•

ALL STAR DAIRY

SUPERIORS
'

BROUGHTON$

'

BY THE PIECE

CHOICE OF OPENING SIZES:

REG.
-44.49

lar ~e r

demand ,

li vesl ock · feed

in tl1e field, according to

~

3711

SUPERIORS

BOLOGNA.L~.. 99e

COFFEE·MATE ...................::.~:.J.A.~ s1s9
'

IN CTN .

• Completely oosembled 1 ready to instoll
• 3116" steel ladderrods under every tread

SMOKED PICNIC SHOULDERS

• Top grade .southern pine

'l'

9

LB.•1°

Rockwell
SLICED

3/81NCH VARIABLE SPEED

SMOKED PICNIC _SHOULDERS ..L:~~l

REVERSING DRILL
WAS

34.99

When It becomes (ce, water
swells 9 percent over its
original volume, .forming a
wedge that may exert 30,000
pounds of pressure per
square inch.

.

.

with these food values!

••••••••
P=rw~. :

EASY·TO·INSTALL

The clouds above keep telling
About our L&lt;lrd's great power,
And that His love is dwelling
Within His own, each hour.
So, If we trust i&gt;ur Saviour,
And strive to do our best,
He'll keep us in His favor,
And give our souls sweet rest.

Let's strive to tell our Nation, ·
And countries everywhere,
That joy and full Salvation
Is found thru faith and prayer.
That our dear Lord is living
In that fair place above,
And tbat He's freely giving
Salvation thru His love .
. Composed in May 1968 by Mrs. Riley Pig~tt. L&lt;lng Bottom,
Ohto.
.

BerglaDd feels odds ·f avor American farmers

RATH RACORN

Why do we feel so weary,
And slay so worn and weak?
Why does the day seem dreary ,
-When light and joy we seek?
Now comes a thought to cheery,
We can quite happy be,
And tho ' the day is dreary,
We still can beauty see.

And wait for brighter day,
He'll show us wondrous beauty,
Which shines within His way;
And if we feel like crying
When things around go wrong,
He'll turn to joy our sighing,
And gl~e to us a song.

,

.

of Building Since 1915

HE'lL SHOW US WONDROUS BEAUTY
Why do we feel like crying,
When things around go wrong,
And why do we keep sighing
In sadness all day long?
Why don't we keep oo singing,
And wear a sunny smile?
Why don 'I we ]seep on !ringing
Some gladness all the while?

ropolitan area were to
secede from the Union, it
would rank as the world's
lOth largest nation ·in size o(
income.

locations where votes may be
cast. All proceeds will go to
the Meigs County Heart
Fund.

The Department Store

Poet's Comer

If we -will do our duty,

.

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.

SAVE 7.981

If the New York· met-

.··

'

Farm Scene

••
•

•

Versatile;drlliowoodmetol,
mooonry, gloos

2488

• Drives a, removes Krftll
• Speed can be preset&amp; iod&lt;od

• Double l.... ~.od

~~...."rt!t •• ••••••

••
••

IGZDl.

ENaGY
$AVERS

PROPANE TORCH

.STOPS DRAFTS

. ·144

FUEL CYLIN~I
••
• SIILE
•
••
PRICE
~-------'
••
••
••
••• camp stO¥es, lanterns
•
••
••••••••••••• •••
•

• 'Jb.7 fl. OJ: •

REG. 2.59

'GLOVES

PAIR

FRIDAY

OFI

ONI.YI

197

2" X 10 YD. PLASTIC COATED

REG.U9 7 8 c

PAK

~POUNDS

16 OZ. Bns.
Plus Deposit

ASSORTED NAILS
SALE
PRICE

CELERY. .................. 4!r bunch
BANANAS ............. '.4 lb. 51.00
CARROTS.................... 23' lb.

PEPSI
8 Pak-16 oz.
Plus deposit

· THURS. ONLY

DR. PEPPER

DUCT TAPE

JERSEY

3/244

•'

YOUR
CHOICE

BROWN

REG.
1.19
PAIR

THROUGH
ELECTRICAL .
OUTLETS
AND SWITCHES PACKAGE

• Fits standard tordleo,

• Removes i!llt

FOR MEN~
WOMEN

19

133
I ,'

79~

REGULAR PRICE .............. 99•

-·

RC or DIET RITE
'

SUPER MARKET ... OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10
. Federal Food Stamps- We Reserve I he

To limit Quantities

'

8

16 oz. ans.
Plus Deposit

99e

�&amp;~The DaUy Sent.lnel, MiddleJ)&lt;lrt-Pomeroy, 0.,

FUNNY BUSINESS

By

Tuesday, Feb. 13,1979

Roger

LOOK, FELLAS,
I'M 8EIN6

.• .

HONEST UJITt-l
')tt) ... I SIN\PL.Y
Do NOTHM:.

A"POt::'ER

-

--;:-;-;-;:-:-:-;-:·-:;- -·-

_ __:.H.:.:e~l.o:..
P Wanted

WANT AD
CHARGES
1.00
1.50
1.110

lday ,
Jday.!J
&amp;days

1.25
1.!10
2.25
3.7&gt;

3.00

Business Servir:es

March 15th. Union Shop. Excellent Wages and Fringos.
Mus! be Mature, SOber ond Be Able to Han~le and
Miinlain Tandem Vehicles .. Phone 99!-5100 and We
Will Mail You an Application Form. If you Appear to 1M

AL TROMM CONST.

Mobile Home ulesand Y.1:1rd &amp;~:~leY
are &amp;l.'Cepted only with cash with
order. 2$ cent char~e for aWl carry·
ing Box Ntunber In C11re of The Sen·

The Publisher reserves the right
to edll or reject any ads d~med objediorutl. The Publisher wiU not btt
resppnsible for mvre than one in&lt;.'Of'·

red insertion.
Phone992·21 56

CHIP WOOD . Poles me )( .
dia meter 10"" on lorgest end ,
$11 per ton. Bundled sl ob. $10
pP.r ton . Delivered to Ohio
Polle t Co ., Ht. 'l , Pomeroy .
q9'1·168q .

.....--------:---;1
NOTICE

TIMBI:R . POMEROY Fore st Pro·
du cts. Top price fOr sta nding
sow timber Cal l 991-5965 or
Ken t Hanby ..} -44 6-8570.
-

-

-

-

M,O, TURL

babysitter-housekeePer need·
e·d . Mobile !lome. e•penses
"ond sala ry pr ov ided . No
chil dre n. no pets , prefe r mar·
ried co uple. 304 ·863 -6088 after

. OLD FURNITURE , ice bmces , brass
beds, iron beds, desks. etc..
comp le te househo lds. Wr ite
MD . Miller. Rt . 4 . Pomeroy or
coli q92. 7760 .

OW COINS 'pock et watches.
closs rings . wedding bonds,
diamond'!&gt; . Gold or si lver . Coli
_Ro'ger ~~m_s l~y: 7~1: 2~3-~ . _ _
Tuesday
WANT TO buy : old 45 and 78
thru Friday
phonograph reco r ds . Co li
•
4P.M.
the dHy before publlcllll_on
q91 -b370 or Contact Mort in Furnilure.
Sunday
•
4P.M.
WANTED TO buy ol d jewelry.
Fridayart.ernoon
Ca ll 992 -5102 or wr ite Kay
L _,__.....:,,;_..;...._ _ _ __._,.. j
Cecil . 87 S 2nd . Middleport ,

~---

LOST IN Flatwoods·Te•as
munity oreo: Block long
adult mole. col. Missing
Jan . 22 Call 985 · 43.4~

Com·
heir ,
since
after

5,30

_b~~ w_o~k:.S~7~:~9~2 -_:11_64_ . _ .
1975 BUICK CENTURY Cus tom.
Copper with block vinyl top. ex·
cellent shape . lo w mileage.
will se li as is. Hos new point
· job, .4 new steel belted radials,
OH.
---=c=-a- r""d -o-f -T ha- n-ks _ _ _
mags on d AM·FM S-trock tope
OACHSUN D PU P. POODLE or
deck . 131 V-b engine . In·
Bos fon terri er . Prefer younger ·
ROUND HAY bo le!&gt; for so le .
tere sted per sons whould cal!
tho nO mo . 9q1 -73 15.
843·2524
992-3933 .

Notices

-~~-

GUN SHOOT . Recine Gu n Club
Every Sunday I pm . Factory
ch_ok_e !JU_ns on lx. _ ~ __ ~ ~
GUN SHOOT, Racine Volunteer
Fir&amp; Dept . Every Sa turday 6:30
pm at th eir build ing in Bashan .
Fac tory choke gu ns only.
FREE CANDY mak ing doss at Di' s
Condy and Coke Supplies, Spr·
ing Vo l ley Plaza . 44b·1134 for
registroti tm . "lfs fun and ea sy
You 'll be omozed at whqt you
con do .

-..

(21 ll , 20. 27 , ltc

SHE'S TAlk'ING BIG TO lOT~'(~
6ASS~R . WHOSe HUSaAND IS ONL'f
THE PRES1D£Nl' OF 816 91\NNO ..

1q75 DATSUN PICKUP. good con dit i on . Good tire s
low
mileage. Runs good in snow.
985-3979 .
1970 FORD three-quarter ton 4speed , good condition . $7.45.
1q51 Chevro let 1' J ton, flat

bod, S•8S. 742 .3093.

Fridat Late Mixed

eague

Jan . '26, 1979
Standings

Team
Rovsh-Wilson
Coleman's
Young 's carretin9
J'ERR'f GOODMAN ,
BI?ADF'ORD,
PENNA ,

Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 13,
the 44th day of 1979. There are
321 days left in the year.
Today 's
highlight
in
history :
On this date in 1635, the
first public school in the
United States, the Boston
Public Latin School, was
founded .
On this date :
In 1633, Italian astronomer
Galileo arrived in Rome and
was detained by the Roman
Catholic inquisition.
In 1668, Spain recognized

SIDE GLANCES

Portugal . as an independent
country.
In 1689, the English Parliament adopted a bill of rights.
In 1741, Andrew Bradford
of Philadelphia published the
first magazine in the United
States .
In 1920, the League of Ng.
tions
recog:.1 ized
the
perpetual neutrality of
Switzerland.
In 1945, in World War II, the
Soviets captured Budapest
frono the Germans after a 50day siege of the Hungarian
capital.

Young's Gu l Statton

W.
22
20
15

L.
10
12
17

15 17

Capehart's
Clark's

14 18
12 20
Teem high series - Roush WIIson 910 ; Capeharl's 886 ;
Young's Carpeting 877 .
Team high game Young's Carpetlng 349 ;
Roush - WIIson
326 ;
Caoehart's 317.
Men's hi!=lh series - Butch
Rous~ 50i;- Mike Capehort

490 ; Terry Seldenable 409 .
Men's hiqh aame ~ Butch
Roush 190 ; Butch Roush .
Mioe Capeh•rt 185; Mike
Capehart 164.
Women 's

high

series

-

Marlene Wilson 468 ; Kelly
Wilson 406; Edith Hall 385.
Women 's high game ~
Marlene Wilson

198 ;

Kell y

Wilson 153 ; Marlene Wilson
145.
Early Wednesday Mixed

League

Jan . 31, 1979

by Gill Fox

Standings .

Team
Pis.
Young 's Market
32
Sm ith-Nelson Motors
28
Headquarters
24
Longshots
22
Zide 's Sport Shop
20
No. 3
18 .
High series - Bob Couch
559, Pat Carson 513 ; Ken
McLaughl in 529, Maxine
Dugan 506.

High game ~ Bob Couch
205, Pal Ca rson 179 ; Bill
Porter 192, Isabelle Couch
178.
Team

~erles

-

Young ' s

Market 2001 .
Team game - Zlde' s Sport
Shop 714
Early Sunday Mixed
LNgue
Jan . 28, 1979

Sales Rep. t-or
Sundins
Hammond Organs
Tyree Blvd. Racine, Olilo
Phone 949·'2118 eventngs
after 5 p.m . Weekends
after 12 noon.
2-5-1 mo.

Team

Pts.

Team

series

~

, Tom's

Carry Out 2108.
·
Team game - Torn ' s Carry
Out 154.

992-2356

ASTRO•GRAPH

lARGE
HOM£ in
992-2205 before 5 .

Pomeroy .

·• ... mper

on

rlrt

vour

pUt

Itt• -

.EP

Cott.tH£

""' cootiirr" s.;vtco wit~ .
,20th Contury KMw·li-.
I

'

..s·.,...eci•U••n•••
,.... ,.u..
2-5·1

mo.

-

~ ~~{hday -CO_A_l._l_IM-="-=~-0r'-N=~a.~:-:=·-nd-·~-,-.·,-~·

~--

--

- ·---- - ---

Mobile Homes for Sale

·1967 TOTAL ElECTRIC mobile
home, furn ished. 3 bedr.,
washer and dryer. A ir conditioned. 1 lot , 210 h . frontage .
cold um chloride , fertilizer , "dog
$12,000 . Phone 7.42·2826.
food, and all types ol salt. E•·
celsior Solt Works , Inc -., E. Moin 1955 Prairie Schooner , 28 x 8 1
- ~~~

--

---

bdr .

February 14, 1979
St :, ~O~_!·r~Y :_?!2:_?~~· ___ .
Tt)iS commg year you may MIXED CONDITIONED hoy . Very 1965General. 60)( 12 , 2bdr.
1968 Elcono, 51x 12, 2 bdr.
become involve d in a project
good
qua l ity . Del! ve ry 1969 Buddy, 60 x 12, 4 bdr.
which you will 1o1a11y manage
avai lable . Phone 9Cjl2·.7201 or 1970 Sylva , 60 x 12, 2 bdr.
for another . A big bonus is
992-3309.
1970Costle, 60 x 12, 2 bdr .
- - -- - ---likely if you do a good job.
1973 Arli ngton . 60 • 11. 2 bdr.
1q79
FORO
CUSTOM
F·1
50
truck
,
AQUARIUS IJ8n. 20-Feb. 19)
302 engine. 11, · ton auto., P.S., 1973 Ridgewood . 70 )( 14, 3 bdr.
This i s a very promisi ng da y for
1973 Kirkwood . 50 w 12, 2 bdr.
P.B.. A.£. 742-2826
jo1nt ventures Somet hing e x. - - - - - --- -- - - - - -a &amp; S MOB ILE HOME SALES
tra ordinary co uld occur to FROSTY 'S CB Radio Equipment .
PT. PlEASANT , WV
Everything in two·woy rad io,
please bo th you and the other
67 5 - ~.424
ante nna and accessories .
par ty. H ow to ge l alon g with
Phone Portland 843-2181. Open
othe r signs is one ol th e
TWO BEDROOM mobile home on
_e-:_e ~i~s-u_~t~~~ S~_':l_d~t~ !!_1 ~6-~
sec ti ons yo u'll e nj oy i n you r
•·, cere lot. Garage, workshop.
all-new 1979 Aslro-Graph Le i- ZENITH ALLEGRO stereo with AMMust see too apprec iate! T.P.
ter. Get yours by mai li ng S1 l or
FM radio and taf)e ~)Ioyer .
oreo . Phone614·667-31()Cfl.
Phone qq2.3131 or 992 -31 19.
each in a lon g, se lf-addressed ,
.
.. -~1970 12 x 16 Hillcrest trailer. 2
s laffiped envelope to Astra- "EVERYTHING'S
GOTTA' go",
bedr., fully carpeted ewcept
Graph P.O. Box 489. Radi o Ci1 y · House end lot. furniture.
both and kitchen . See Effie at
Station. N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
"clothes , cor. all my househ!)ld
Leta rt Service Station .
specify birth si gn .
items. Drop by 760 lau re l St .,
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-~-~d~l ~p~r t.:. _____ _ __ _
Rather than He you rself to a
CHAIN SAWS. used, good condi·
defi nite sc hedule today . you
lion . hove several. Will trade
and your special someone will
Real Estate for Sale
for niost anything. Fife's .
have more fun doi ng th ings that .
992·7494.
HOMESITES for sole, 1 ac:re and
are impromplu !'"
up. Middleport, near Rutland .
ARIES !Ma1ch 21-Aprll 19)
__C~I !.._99_2_
· 74.:_
81::.·_ _.___
_
Something unex pec ted could
pop up toda y, caus ing you to
THREE BEDROOM frame home in
th ink more about pleasure, than
Middleport, Coll992-3457.
- -work . Enjoy it . It won 't detra ct
FARM FOR sole . Hous•. 2 barns ,
from your business .
trailer. large pond. 10 ac re s or .
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 201 Look
82 acres . 742-2566 .
lor spur- o f-th e-mo ment hapHEADQUARTERS
3 "~ ocres In Pom•roy. Seclud•d
penings to bri ghten yo ur day . A
For all Your Appliance ·
wooded area on top of hil l.
flexible sched ule will permit
Needs.
Overlooks ri ver . Water , e!ec ·
the latitu de you' ll need.
tric available, 992·3886.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20i You ' ll
accomplish a tot at li l li e th ing s
REAL ESTATE Loons. Purchase and
tOday that were !eft un finished . 1
refinonce. 30 year term s. VA .
JACKW.
Thi s time you 'll complete each
No money down (eligible
CARSEY
job.
veterens) . FHA · As low os 3
Mgr.
"per cent down ( non-veterans )
CANCER (June 21-July 221 ~
Phone 992-2111
lrelond Mortgage Co.. 77 E.
spo ntaneous get-together wil l
State , Athen1 . 614 ·592-3051 .
occ upy part of your day tOday :
- - - - - -·· ---·-breaking up the mundane rouRUTLAND H~RDWARE ; 2 doors FAIRVIEW HTS. 6 yeors old . AI!
tine and serving as a good
electric home, 3, bedr., 111,
from Rutland Post Office.
tonic .
bath , lovely fam ily room with
Phone 742 -1255. 1 delu•e
LEO !July 23-Aug . 22) A
can ister vacuum cleaner w ith . wood buring stove, fully
surpri se gift could c ome your
carpeted . goroge. I acre. Neor
powe r noule and attachments,
way today from someone who
Meigs High School. 992-6287 .
$69 .95 . 1 Sunbeam Indoor, out·
ofter 6.
cares a great dea l abbut you .
door vacuum cleaner. 11 1~ h.p.
Th is shoul d bri ghten yi'J ur day
motor , 539 .95 . 1 laboratory FIVE ROOMS aod balh, la~ge
conside rably .
sl nk
and coblntt.
Also
basement. over 3' 1~ ceres. MidVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 221 Don '1 Mansfield closet combination,
dleport , Shody Cove oreo. Cell
the New Water Saver, both
be hes itant to disc ard an old ,
992·5532 after .4 :00 .
$86 .95 .
unworka ble plan If you happen
to come up with a better Idea .
i7L·;e~ gold corpet. Good
Sometimes we need to Switc h
cond ition. 1 interior door . After
horses in mid-stream .
6. 992-3401 .
·
-

- -·-- --...:...--

~

--

IIOMERO), 0 ;

NEW LISTING

~

lot, lots of remodeling, 3 or
4 bedrOoms, 2 baths,
natUra l gas hot water heat,

Mobile Home , (expando
living room) add a room '
l4x36, deck wlth seating
ca pac ity . Here is a genuine
~

13··;

23-0ct .

23) ·- ... - ---·---- --·- -

·-

'
'1
'd
MF l;l5 gas tr.octor. MF 150 g01
You •ve been
qut e cons! era 1e
tractor. MF' 11~5 troctor with
cab and AC. Gehl qs MX
of so meone lately and today Is
this ·person's day to reclprogrinder-mi xer. Gehl 1070
ca te . You mig ht re ceive some·
mowe r conditioner . Shinn's
· Tractor Soles. 03.4·458-1630.
thi ng you'll really like. ·

leon , wv.

You 'll know a good idea when ~ -· ·- - - - -·- ··-------- - ·you hear one today apd several SALE . RENT or hire . MF 200 B
cou ld come your way . Later
Corwfer-dazer . MF 711 1kld
you 'll have a chance to use
!teer loader. Shinn'1 Tractor
them advantageously .
_So~~~o~:~~~~~:_l!_O~ ~'!.. :_
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc . REDUCE - SAFE · and lost w ith
21) An oppor1unlty llee11ng In · , Go8ese Tablets &amp; E-Vop "water
nature could cross your path
pi ~l s~·~ ~.e.! s_?~~u~--- ......._ __
· 1oday; If you are 100 coy 11 may BROWNING MARK IV CB On ten no,
evaporate before your eyes .
to wer , '] rOtors, wott . meter,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 18)
0 -10.4 TwHtie Bird mlc, linear.
Someone separated lrom you
Coli Little Bit "W~ - 2265 .

by miles, bul not In s plr11, Is

an xious to hear from you today.

A call or note would be apprec la led .
!NEWSP..,PEB ENTEAPAISE ASSN .!

· - · - · - .. - · · " .. · ·

HAY FOR sole Round boles. $20.

Squoc• bal.,
Q85 ·AI3l.

1-=IREWOOO FOR sole. q85-3505 or
9~5-3S37 .

.

.

Sl . 985-3537 ,

fiJBSl EII ER
REALTY '

New Listing ~ Excellent
opportunity

established

to own an

grocery

business and have a nlce

apartment too. Apartment
has 3 bedrooms, living
room, bafh, family room or

dining room and 2 porches .
Grocery business Is doing
very well and the price
lnclu.des
stock
and
equipment. Located on
Salem ~!reel In Rutland.
Call for more Info. Selling
price $29,500.00.
HobaleHtr Roolly
GeorgeS, HobsloHer Jr.
Broker
Choryl Lomloy
Aasocilto
Phone 742-2003

ALLEY OOP

WE WANT WIGWAMSI ...

f

f:

f vlJST'
STAND
I!ASY NO'W-.-

.,

GASOUNE ALLEY

A . lB
.-

.,
.,"'

EXCAVATING , dozer. backhoe
and ditcher . Charles R. Hotfield . Bock Hoe Service,
...!utlond, Ohio. Phone 7.t2·2()08 .

'·

AND

NEW

bf&gt;rl••·

e&lt;

4
large
·"· ' PUblic

LISTIN" - ·· ~

ll.l\ [

Di,"D\"G
I"

wur."and one·half acre,
near Guysville. $18,500. ·

NEW

LI ·STING

Renovated 3 bedrooms,
c losets, nice eat·ln kit.,

bath, full basement, oil fur·
nace on nice lot. want
523,500.
NEW LISTING ~ 3.33
acres right on lhe Ohio
River .

. Summer

playground with haokvps
for IWo trailers . $14,900.
NEW LISTING ~ J&gt;lder'

~";'e

CO"'-rt"n'ttG ·~~: ·

drill~
. at•u 1•12 acresof
land. Need $35,000.

NOW IS THE TIME TO
PUT YOUR P~OPERTY
WITH US TO SELL.
,992-3325 will gel you the
,best resu~ts.

' ·

HELEN L;, GORDON B.
AND SUE P. MURPHY, .
;
REALTOR ASSOCIATES,
'

Hou &lt;;iny
He.ICic/lhlrW ts

&lt;

!

c

'':·

..•'
-·

point ing.

HOME REPAIR and remodeling .
Careful work ot reasonable
rates. Erny Davies , 742·1090.

~E S GONE THROUGH

wE KNOW HIS
WILl ~ARE for the t!derly In our
home. Phone992-7314 .

WATER WELL drilling. William T.

..,

Grant. 742-2879 .
.

PIANO TUNING fOr home and
. school. Lone Daniels, astoclott
of Elberfeld's and Brunicordl
• Mu1ic
Company.
Phone

992-2581' or 992 ~ 2082 .

ROOM, BOARD, laundry, elderly
only. Private room . Price starts
Ol $175 . 992·5422 .

HEARING ISN'T IMPAIRED .. . AND I
DOUBT THAT Hl5
5PEECH 15
EITrlER.

SOMETHING- VERY MUCH

LIKE CU~TURAL SHOCK.
REMEMBER, HE'S BEEN
RECLUSE f'O.R Y5 A RS
. AN D YEAR:5'.

e;;;~'"

~'

WATER AND misc. hauling. Call

992-5858 .

.

·-,'

' .... I

• T""~

1101'
·,,,,:

(&lt;]19'19 Killj! Features Syndlca~. !no.

3ARNEY

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

·,.

I

~

992-3988.
BlACK ~F;;E:';-M;-:A;-;L-;:E~d;-og.-G::o-r_m_o_n
Shepard-type .

Med ium

j '

.. ,
1,1'

THREE PUPPIES, port Border Collie
and Beagle to good home.

.
--6U-37B-6389
··-

•· I,'
-.

sin.

·

' THREE YOUNG pretty cots 1
block end white mo le, 1 tiger
male, 1 gray and white female .
Humane Society ..992·7680.

"

"'
·-'
,,
,,•,

.. l:
,.,.
,.
,.

.'

Hollywood

f Tf.IINK I'LL GIVE IT
TO Tf.IE LITTLE
RED-HAl RED GIRL

SHE'LL PROBABLI( LAUGf.l
RIGI-IT IN l(OUR FACE ·

Squi!!lres

15;

Bunch 15; I Dream of Jeannie 17.
Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;

5 : 3~Carol

Son 8; Elec . Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Battle of
the Planets 13; Odd Couple 15; Beverly Hillbillies
17 ; Doctor Who 33.
6:QO-NewsJ,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6 : J~ NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; M y T hree Sons 17; Over

Easy 20.
7:00-Cross-Wifs 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Port er
Wagoner 8; News 10; Love, American Style 15;

Carol Burnett

II ; Footsleps 20; Big Green

Judge 10; Thai's Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17; Mac Neii .Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Supertraln 3, 15; Eight Is Enough 6. 13; Bugs
Bunny 8,10; Shakespeare Plays 33 ; Edward The
King 17 ; We Interrupt This Week 20.
8 : 3~Popeye 8, 10; Wodenhouse Playhouse 20 .
9;oo-From Here to Eternity 3, 15; Charlie' s Angels
6, 13 ; Mash 8, 10; Movie " High Noon" 17; Country
·
Matters 20.

9:JQ-O ne Day At A Time 8, 10.
10:QO-Vegas 6,13; Dolly . &amp; Carol In Nashville 8,10 ;
News 20 .
I O : J~NBA Basketball 17; Turnabout 20.
i 1;00-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15; Dick Cavet~20 ; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,15 ; Police Woman 6,1 3: Rock·
ford Files 8; AB C News 33 : Movl e " Little Fauss &amp;

Big .Halsy " 10.
'
- .. , _ _
6, 13; Kojak 8; 12 :4s-Mov1e "Sergeant
Ry ker " 17.

12 : 4~Manni x

L oo-Tomorrow 3; l : So-News 13; ; 2: 35--News 17;

2;5S....Mov ie "The Big Canlvanlval " 17.
4:1 S....I2 O'CIIock High 17; 5:15-Wor ld at Large 17.
TuesdB)', Feb. 13

BRIDGE
-~__:O
::.::
sw
:..:..::a~ld~-=.;-=
a-=
c-=
o::..
b!..
y ..:ca::..n:.::d::..A
~Ia_n__~
So_n_ta-'g..__

Very modernistic bidding
NO RTH

2·13

+A 9 B
¥ AK8
• K 4

+ K93
WEST

EAST

• 6

• 10 54 2

•Q 963

...! 2

• J 972

+ J 10 8 5

• 10 3

+

A Q 764
SOUTH
+ KQJ73
• 10 4
+ AQ865
+2
Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South
West North Eas t Sou1h
1+
Pass 2+
Pass 2¥
Pass H
Pass 3+
Pass 4 NT
Pass 4•
Pass 6+
Pa ss 5¥

Pass

Pass

DON'T KNOW
WHO'S TAKIN'
AFTER WHO

cepted t he idea of a s lam and
South toQk off for the s tratosph er e wit h tha t same 12- ·

75

Pass

Opening lead : + J
By Oswald Jacob y
and Alan Sonlag

to cue bid if South had
anything better tha n a minimum opening. This _is very
G J HE A modernist ic, but qutte reaEW
P W T J
FATA
FA
sonable when yo u play that
VJL
twowJevel r esponses are alRADDWFUAJ,
WGT
FHEN
ways good nands .
South 's fo ur-&lt;liamond bid
FHEN
EW
QWHJ
HJ
SWUUGJHEO
carried this slam idea rather
far but he did ha ve two good
ENA
NGUVJ
TVSA . ~ SHSATW suiis and a singleton in the
Yesterday's Cryploquole: CIV!UZATION IS A METHOD OF unbid one .
North 's fo ~r-heart bid acUViNG, AN A'rnTU!&gt;E OF EQUAL RESPECT FOR ALL
MEN .-JANE ADDAMS

'" I

• I'
' ool!!l '
:r;·

•

GiveAway

Is

AXYDLBAAXR
I, ONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

WINNIE

Services Offered

Cartoon 3;

Bewitched 6; Pork Pig &amp; Fr iends 8; Sesame St .
20,33 ; Batman 10; Mario &amp; the Mag ic Movie
._
Machine 13; Space Glnats 17.
4 ; J~Bew ltched 3; 'Afterschool Speclal6 ,13: Gil ligan's
Is . 8; Brady Bunch 10; Pettltoa t Ju nction 15;
Gilligan's Is. 17 .
5;00-l Dream of Jeannie 3: Beverly Hillbil lies 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer Py le USMC 10; Brady

One letter simply st ands for another. In th is sampl e A i s
used for the three L 's, X f or the two O' s, et c. Sing l e l et ter s,
apostrophes, the lengt h and form at i ~n of the words are all
North 's three s pade bid
hints. Each day the code l ett ers are d1fferent.
wa s forcing and asked South

&lt;

Caii742·232B.

I Encounter
2 Asian river
3 Quote ·
,
DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's hQw to work it:

..

.,',

Want only $58,000 .00 for a
quick sale:

DOWN

''

MOBILE HOME repairs . Furnaces.
electrical work , pipes sawed,
plumblng. 992-5858 .
WA~lPAPERING

36 Felled, ·
as a tree
41 Eagle's nest 1;;:-+-lf--+-~
42 Like a
cornstalk
43 Alloy
44 Swiss river

TIPPING

•·•·

Innocence" 17 .

1:00-H ollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6,13;
New s 8; Young &amp; the Rest less 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1 ; 3~Days ol Our .Lives 3, 15; As The Wor ld Turns 8, 10;
2:DO-{Jne Llle to Live 6,13; 2:2S....News 17.
2; 3~Doctors 3, 15; Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:00-Another World 3, 15; General Hospltal6, 13; Lil ias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer· 17.
3 : 3~M ash 8; Joker' s Wild 10; F llntsiones 17; Over
Easy 20.

Magazine 33.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
4 Queen Sofia 's
ACROSS
predecessor
I Aspect
' 5 E nsnared
6 Prairie
6 Bordeaux
grove
wine district
11 sleepwalker
Bellini's
7 Hockey great
12 Boxscore
8 Prefix
entry
with cycle
13 Routine
9 Hockey's
Yesterday' s Answer
15 Poetic
Blake
33 Corrida beast
21 Tattered
preJ)&lt;lsition 10 Shrew
34 Ma n's name
22 Spurious
16 Sticky
14 "- What
35 Wavy: her .
show
substance
Comes
36 E nglish
17 FurnaceNatur'lly" 23 Low-easte
river
cleaning
Hindu
17 Impassive
37
Half
a bray
24 Islands
tool
18 Fiimish
38 Table scrap
off Galway
22 Island in
lake
N.Y . Bay
27 Mola r
19 Gaucho's
39 News reporte1
29.
Musketeer's
Lindstrom
25 Cape - ,
weapon
40
Burmese
Alaska
foil
20 Closing
knife
31 Discharge
...but I
~ I 26 " Salome"
word
.,---,;,.---r.-~-r;;;--,
role
he sa id
somethinq 27 Greek
physician
about
crossinq 28 Turkish
regiment
the
29 Wandering
Grand
30 ThanksCant.jon~
givin g treat
32 Foreigner :
comb. fonn
~:;;:!~;; 33 Extremely

NO

.

E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor servIng Ohio Vol ley region . Six
days a week . 24 hours servlc•.
Emergency c.olls. Co tl 882 · ~51
or 882-2305 .

HIATUS MORGUE

trom Jumble, clothla newspe:rer, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1ncfudtyour
neme, addfiSI, idp coda an maka checks payable ~ o Nawspaperbook1.

FRANK &amp;ERNIE

::
::,.

S. the Restless 8; Midday Magaz ine 13 ; Love
American Syle 17 .
12 ;J~Ryan's Hope 6,13; Password 15; Search for
Tom orrow ; ,10; E !ec. Co . 33; Movie " A Matter of

7 :30-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6; Muppet Show 8; The

-,

•

12:oo-Newscenter 3: News 6, tO ; Jeopardy 15; Young

Answe r: Whal snobs m ight kee p from ot hers-

Jumble Book No. 13, canlalning 110 puulas, Is avallablelorS1 .75poltplld

G

conceited? lost your operators
license? Phone 992-2 143.

FOYER

Bunch 8; Hogan ' s Heroes 10; Green Acres

17 .
10 ;00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edae of Nlaht 6; All In The
Fa mily 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie " Love With
the Proper Stranger" 17.
IO : J~A II Star Secrets 3, 15; ~20,00Q Pyram id 13; Price
is Right 8,10; Andy Gr ltfllh 6.
11 :00-H igh Rolle rs 3,1 5; Happy Days 6,13; Lowell
Thoms Remembers 20.
11 : J~Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love
ot Life 8.10; Sesame s. 20,33.
II ;5S....CBS News 8; House Call 10; News 17.

ALOOF

ll!l~mJllf:l,
.::,.

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been

with fireplace. Hot water
heat and 2 car garage.

birthda4~

698-7331 .

Service. Phone 992-2478.

home with 2 baths, full
basement, forma l dining

be

AND MARTIN b cc:~vot i ng .
septic systems,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck,
l imestone, grovel, blacktop
paving, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Compl•t•

NEW LISTING ~ 5 acres
In 't he wOOds on good road
with school and mall
routes . Modern 4 bedroom

uramps and
Grandma won't
here for Pop's

was a bad
connection ...

HOWERY

BATHROOMS AND l&lt;ltchens
remodeled, ceramic tile , plum:
bing , carpentry , end general
maintenance. 13 years experience. 992 -3685 .

(Answers tomorrow)

~~~~~~~~~~Tl ~m~~:rnmnrrm771 r--r~="""""_:_""""\'\'"""fT'/?T;'IiJ'~,---T-:::;::;::;;-\1

.'

EXCA VATING , dozer , loader end
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo·boys for hire; w ill haul
fil l dirt , to so il. limestone Ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jeffers . dey phone 992 -7069. night
p_hone 992-3525 or 992· 5237.

SALE PRICES

--

. ·~

-

---

and every other kind of
house Imaginable. Buyers

'

.. ".

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , service , all makes. 992-128• . The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singe r Soles and
Servi ce. We sharpen Scissors.

We have several, and one
to suit your needs I am
sure . Call on these.

I Jumbles: WHEEL

"0-[ I I 1 ]"

~~'6td

Sweepers, toasters. irons, all • ·
smol! appliances . Lown mower . · '
ne)(t to State Highway Garage
on" Route 7.

gas bills) . HERE IS A
BUY .
48'1, ACRES ~ New 1978

.
Ves terd ay s

AND TH E ~ A BARGf'
STOPPfD '" nt E HANDSOME
OWNER SMiLED AT ~ER '"
HER FAIRY PRINCE,
Sllf. THOUGI1T ...

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

(low

.

DREAM BOAT

...
...,.,
..
',""..
.._

BRADFORD , Aucti oneer , Com·
ple te Service. Phone 9-49 -2487
or 949 -2000 . Racine , Ohio; Criff
Bradford.

ulllily room, $18,500 .00 .
MIDDLEPORT - Corner

waiting with ready cash.
CALL NOW AND LET US
SELL YOUR PROPER·
TY ...
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
HENRY E. CLELAND JR .
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992 ·2259 992-6191 992-2561

AND THE EIARGES PASSI NG
'" WITH SMILING , WAVI~Cl
PEOPLE '" RICH ... HAPPY ...

Business Services

1 story

bargain a! $48,000 .00 .
WANT A BUSINESS?

.

2-7-mo.

fr ame, 3 bedrooms, bath,
all eledric, about lf2 acre,

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

......
....

949-2862, 949·2160

carport, s1orms, uoo.oo
down plus closing . Total
price $8,000.00.

Prlntanswerhete:

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

CAREFREE .. .

New, repair,
gutters and
downspouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

NEW Lt&gt;TtNG ~V.A . ap·
proved, Jll:z sfory frame. 2
bedrooms . bath, fireplace,

- ----

(Sept.

1
Pd
_m_o_._ _,·

Now arrange lhe ci rcled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon

) I I

-

992-6011

2-11
1;;;:::..__ _ _ _
_-

iHAT REAL E"'-"T,,"Tc:
RE.PR:E!&gt;ENTAIIVE IS

~BEGBIT I

*

Pels for Sale
RISING STAR Kennels . ~cording
end groomi ng, all breeds .
Ch esh ire, j"67-0~1 .

I KJ

~

Gam elO.
9 ; 3~Brady

4,: QO-Mi ster

C.E.RiAINL'Y NO LADYAI LEAST I"T
S&gt;OUNI:'&amp; iHAl' WAY!·

*

J

l'hono' 742-1110

Kim Wlt1to, l'roprlotw

I NAHVE

BXC:.ITII-Jb ~VII...,
ISIJ'T HE:- !

..

*New Home
Add-ons
Remold ' ng
I

W-lloYt, 011 '•rrieco

~

' ~:.&gt;:.~~.:.!.: ....... ' .......... '"'

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; AUJM.
SIDING

H. L Wrilesel
Roofing

FURNISHED HOUSE in Middleport .
Suitable fOf 4 construction
worke rs. Will cleon weekly .
After 6 coli 304 -882-2566 or

992-5434.

LIBRA

BORN LOSER

.,

For Rent

992-2288.
Wednesday, Feb. 14

-~

o.

1

(!k.ia

I MOCTE
I I I _j

..

~

't---~----~~~--~

fiNO BEDROOM, kitchen furnish ·
ed, opt . Ca ll before 8 om

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22)

lin One
28
Jack's Dai ry Bar
24
Tom's Carry Out
16
Royal Crown
10
Gibbs Grocery
10
Meigs Inn
.8
High series~ Ed Voss 603,
Marlene Wilson 557 ; John
Tyree 546, Stephanie Rought
534 .
High game - Ed Voss 258,
Stephanie Rought 210 ;' A L.
Phelps. Jr. 230, Marlen!!
Wilson 198. •

Middleport,

IDIUrld ·

Oori't lit a Chlmn ... ,

tx

.'"'

651 Beech Street

Sw•••• CJ~Id
,

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one letter 10 each square. 10 form
four ordinary words .

'. -~

1-4·1 mo. (Pd.)

:

'it lr\f~ fii}lt ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\9 ~Ui;l~ ® by Henri Arnold and Bob lee

f!;!J

.'

11 Ytlrt Exporlonct
Will Mlokt
Servlco Cells

Auto&amp; Truck
'Repair
-..... o Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perle .
Rou te J3, north of Pomeroy .
_Lo!g~~ot_: . _~oJ1'!9_~· ~4~9 . _ __ _
3 AND A RM. furnished and un·
furnished
opts . Phone

-- ·~

Local Bowling

0.

~~7::~:· .

PETE SJMPSON

Please Come Home" 17.
12 :40-Banacek 8; 1: oo-Tomorrow 3; 1:30-News 13;
Mov ie " Man of the West " 17.
3 : 3~News 17; J ; 5~Movle " The Gambler " 17.

ELEciRIC MOlOR
SHOP

"'• milO off Rl. 7 ~y.poss on
st. Rt. 124 towara Rutlond,

PIANOS

-~

Francis Ford Coppola
ordered 250 gallons of a new
cosmetic blood for his film,
"Apocalypse Now."

·: GARAGE

Hammond

&amp; • amou$ Name Brand .

Pl-EASE!

REYNOlD'S

HYS01.

992-5434.

Bernice Bede Osol
Chenille fabric is made
from a twisted velvet cord
woven so that the · short outer
thi-eads stick out !Ike hairs on
a caterpillar.

~ER

Washington St., Alb~ny, 0 .
PhoM 698-6173
David Colemin
Agenllor
MOTIRISTS. INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio.
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM, • LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.

ORGANS

IF YO U'L l.- BOTH
COMIO WITH ME·

11-9· 1 ,mo.

i -12-1 mo.

- -~ -

Manning D . Webster

M&lt;{ GUlf IS 8E7TER
OFF THAN YDIJR. GU&lt;{··

Auto Sales
1971 DATSUN 2.40 Z. needs a li ttle

HEY l WOT'S 50 IN'
ON DOWN THEil 10!

Pom~ray,O.

INSURANCE AGEN
- - -:Lc-o- s--;-t-a -n-:d -:F:-o-u-n"'
d- - - •

CAPTAIN EASY

Ceii99H113. . _
'"For Free Estlmotts

_sP:m ~

-

'-~·

220 E. Main Sir"''

PI«&gt;NE 742·2328

DEPENDABLE

Monday
Noon on SalurdHy

They'll Do It Every Time

Squares 3; Let's Go To The Races 8;
Candid Ca mera 6; Price Is Rlght10; Donna Fargo
13; Intuition 15; ; Sanford &amp; Son 17.
8:00-Movle "Tentacles" 3, 15; Happy Days. 6, 13;
Movie "Cri sis In Mid-Air"· 8,10; Wor ld at War 17;
Austin City Limits 20; City Notebook 33.
8 ; 3~Lavene &amp; Shirl ey 6,13; To Be Announced 33.
9:00-Three's Compa ny 6,13; Movie " Kiss Me Kate"
33; Movie " Fathom " 17; Academy Leaders 20.
9 : 3~Taxl 6,13;.
10 :00-Amerlca Vs. the World : Circus Cha llenoe 3.1 5;
Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;" Paper Chase 8,10.
10 : 3~ Like It Is 20.
1LOO-News 3,6,8, 10,13, 15; Di ck Cavett 20; Hogan's
Herres 17; Book Beat 33 .
11 : 3~Johnny Carson 3,15; Movi e " Reven9e for a
Rape " 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
" Barefoot In the Par k" 10; Movie " JohnGoldfarb,

'·

APPUANCE I'

Depend On ....

Unel.

Probate Judge Clerk

7 : 3~Hollywood

EWOTT

Ceromlc Tile . Formica
Counltr Tops - Ceilings
(Suspended, Texture! . Tile
. Floors. Ponelina &amp; Trim.
Quality Work You Can

Pomenrt Cement Block Co.

minimum. Cash In advance.

big transport flew at 350 mph
over a 5olid exparise of white.
Bands of black Angus catUe,
looking like raisins, dotted
the countryside.
The flights were the first
under a $4 million operation
approved by the Legislature
to provide emergency aid to
PROBATE COURT OF
ranchers struggling with
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE .OF ADA VIRGINIA
what the National Weather
OHLINGER ,. OW,
ADA
Service says is Wyoming's
VIRGINIA
ZAHL
OHLINGER ,
OECEASEO
worst winter on record.
Case No. 22602
The weather is hitting
NOTICE OF
cattle, deer and antelope
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
hard, state officials say.
On Febr uary 7, 1979, in the
State Agriculture Com- · Meigs County Probate Courr.
missioner . Larry Bourret Case No . 22602 , Martha
Vennari,
ow ,
Martha
estimates 4 percent of Ohlinger
. 303 Wetzgall Street ,
Wyoming's 1.1 million head of
Pomer o y , Oh i o 415769, was
executri x of the
cattle wUI .die ~ " if con- appointed
esta te of Ada
Virg'lnla
ditions don't get worse." Ohlinger , ow , Ada Virginia
Normal cattle mortality is 2 Zahl Ohlinger, deceased , late
of Route 1, Midd le port, Ohio
percent a year.
4Sc]6Q .

TUESDAY , FEBRUARY 13, 1979

~;:

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1979
at Large 17; 5;4S....Farm Report 13; 5:5()PTL Club 13; 5:5s-.Sunrlse Semester 10.
6;00-PTL Club 15; 700 Civb 6,8; 6: I~ News 17; 6;2S....
Christopher Closeup 10.
6 ; J~Romper Room 17;6;4S....Morn lng Report J;
6:5()-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6;5sChuck Wh ite Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning Ameri ca 6,1 3;
Wednesday Morning B; Schoolies 10; Three Stooges
17; 7: 15-Wealher 33.
7 : 3~Fa mliy Altair 10; 8:00-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10;
Leave It To Beaver .17 ; Sesame St . 33.
8 : 3~Hazel 17; 9:00-Morv Grllfln J; Phil Donahue
13, 15; Emergency One 6; Hogan' s Heroes 8; Match
5 : 4~World

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.

Armsbong Carpeting

- Room Addilions-Cuslom Rem,o deling-

Qualified, You will be interviewed.

In m~mory , Card of Ttumk.s 11nd
Obituary : 6 cenu per word, 1:1.00

WORLAND, Wyo. (AP} ~
For the first time In three
decades , the Wyoming
National Guard is using
aircraft· to feed cattle
marooned on the fro~en
prairie.
A C-130 Hercules transport
plane stuffed with 12\'z tons of
hay each trip made one flight
Saturday and two Sunday to
drop feed on the Hampton
ranch about :i8o mUes nor-·
thwest of Cheyenne. ·
Deep sriowdrlfts on his
5,000-acre
ranch
had
prevented Hampton and his
famUy from getting feed to
their 250 head of cattle since
Wednesday. At least three
had died.
"We haven't done this since
the big blizzard of 1949,"
flight
engineer
Melvin
Duncan said Saturday as the

.

,...,.,....--:-:---::---:--::--, .....'
Your Headqua11111 For :::

Work Commencing About

rate.

food to animals

.

~

For Reasonably Steady

Each word ove r the mJnimwn 15
words is 4 c:t!flls per word per Wty .
AcD runnlng other than coru~ecutive
·dllya will be churged at the 1 day

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING i
DEADLINES '

biCKTRACY

- - ·---"-H""e"-'
1p_r!' a_l)ted_ _ _

Wanted - Skilled Truck Drivels

tswords or Under
Charge
C.•h
~days

Aircraft flying

9- Th• n"nvSentinel, Middleport-PomcrQy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 13, 1979

For Best ,Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Bollen

point hand he had been
dea lt.
• The s la m is a good one, but
t hi ngs started out badly
whe n East produced the ace
of clubs t o eQver dummy's
king a nd led a secQ~d clllb.
South ruffed and played
king a nd queen of trumrs.
His plan had been to ruf a
t hird d i amond w i th
dummy's ace of trumps, but

when trumps broke 4-1 tha t
pla n had lobe a bandoned .
South led a third trump ,
cas hed dum my's king of diamonds, led a diamond IQ his
quee n , cashed his last trump
to pull East 's lO and had his
slam s in ce that las t trump
le&lt;:td squeezed We st out of
eit her he(;!, rt or di(;!,mond protecti on . This lucky h ea rtdiamond squeeze had over·

come the bad luck in clubs,
spades a nd diamonds.

Ask lbii!XDIPIS
A Maine r eader a sk s if
t here i s such a bridge term
as "Four c hette .'"
It is ah obsolete term for a
tena ce s uch as ace-queen or
king-jack .
! NE WSP APER

EN TF~ HPR l SE

ASSN .)

roo you have a ques tion lor
th e experts ? Wr ite " Ask th e
Experts ," care of this newspaper. Individual ques tions wi ll
be answered if accompanied
by stamped. self-addressed
envelopes. The mos t interest ing questions wilt be used 1n
thfs co lumn and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN./

�)
10- The Dally Sent10el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Feb 13, 1979

tiar arrested by Iran's new government

B
By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN, Iran (AP ) Former Prime M1mster
Shahpour Bakhtiar was
arrested today as Iran's new
provisiOnal
government
appeared to be makmg
headway m 1ts efforts to br10g
unruly supporters und~r control
The state radw reported
that Mehdi Bazargan, head of
the Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomem1 's new goverrunent,
named seven members of h1s
Cabinet. Two of the mm1sters
are longtime leaders of the
Natwnal Front, the coahtwn
of parties that opposed the
rule of Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlav1
National Front leader
Karun Sanjaby was named
foreign minister and another

leading Front !Jgure, Darl'lsh
Forouhar, was named labor
m1ruster, the rad1o reported
Bakhllar, who made a
futile, last-ditch attempt to
stem the revolutwn led by
Khomein1, was arrested by
armed guerrillas, the off Ictal
Pars news agency reported .
State rad1o sa1d he was taken
bhndfolded
to
the
headquarters of the rehgwus
patnarch
BakhtJar had not been seen
10 public s10ce his res1gnallon
Sunday and was reported
Monday to be under the
protectwn of prov1sonal
goverrunent ch1ef Bazargan,
an old fnend. Bakht1ar had
been a Natwnal Front
member unlll he was eJected
last month for accepting the
shah's mandate to become
prune mtmster

Columbia Gas
files request
CLEVELAND (AP) - Columbia Gas of Ohio has
appbed to the Public Utiht1es
CommiSSion of Ohio for
permiSSion to take on new
customers m the state for the
f1rst time m seven years.
If the request lS approved,
the unit of the Columb1a Gas
System sa1d it plans to add an
estimated 11,000 new residential,
commercial
and
industrial customers th1s
year, startmg May I.
The utility currently serves
some 973,000 residenllal customers
and
78,700
commercral customers m 56
counties m a band from
extreme south and southeast
OhiO through the central and
north central reg1ons of the
state.
The
state
uttlllles
commiSSion ordered
Columbia to stop taking on
new customers m 1972 after
Columbia requested the halt
111 growth to protect natural
gas supphes for ex1sting
FLOWERS FOR
VALENTINE'S DAY

Crocus, 4112 " pot

Sl 00

Afracan V1olets, 4V:r "

pot

Sl 25

Mums, Slf2" po1

$2 so

Tultps, 6112'' P,Ot
52 50
Azaleas, 6V:r pof
~J )U
Mums, 61f:r" pot
$3 so
Gktx1n1as, 6h" pot
SJ so
Plus all s1zes of beautiful
hangmg baskets.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse

Open Sunday Ito 5 p m .
Dally 91o 5

Phone 992-5776

customers
Smce then , however ,
supphes have mcreased and
customers have adopted
conservation practtces that
consumptiOn ,
the
cut
company srud
ReSidential customers reduced gas usage by 21
percent of the normal
demand smce the 1972-73 011
embargo and the company
sa1d It e•penenced a 20
percent reductiOn m demand
from commercial customers
and a 34 percent declme m
useage by mdustry
Pubhc hearmgs on Columbia 's r equest are scheduled to
begm on March 12
Marvm E White, chaJrman
of the board of Columbia,
saJd, "Columbw IS m a
poSitiOn that it should
promptly begm to take on
new customers and return to
normal cond1t10ns as they
ex•sted pnor to the unposihon of restnct10ns "
The ulthty sa1d 1t had a substanllal unprovement of gas
supplies flowmg m from the
southwest, mcreased storage
capacity and mcreased gas
production in Oh1o and Cited
the potent1al mcrease m gas
supplies resultmg from
recent federal natural gas
leglSlatwn.
Columbia rece1ves 92
percent of 1ts total supply
from the Columbia Gas
TransmiSSIOn Corp Another
7 percent comes from a
synthetic gas plant near
Green
SprJDgs,
w1th
rematning supplies commg
from local purchases

II Khornet n1 spokesman
sa1d he did not know what
charges would be brought
agamst
Bakht1ar. But
Ibrahim Yazdi, a newly
deSignated deputy pnme
mm1ster m the provisiOnal
government, sa1d when
Khometm for ces seized
power Sunday that Bakhtiar
was "held responSJ ble for
everythmg the army has
done ," referrmg to the deaths
of hundreds of de.norstrators
m clashes w1th troops.
Tehran Radw sa1d s•x
generals also had been
arrested , mcludmg the
commander
of
the

paratr o opers ,
Gen .
Mauncheh Khrosrowdad.
r ewc1 gunmen were on
Tehran 's streets today
Monday ,
compared to
presumably as a result of
Khomem1 's appeal to h1s
armed supporters to turn 111
therr weapons and refratn

from VIolence. Traffic also
seemed to be returmng to
normal and many food shops
were open

However ,

Amencan

sources srud gunmen se1zed
the U S. lnformatwn Center
m Tehran and that U S
officials had not been allowed
mSJde They also sa1d about

HOSPITAL NEWS
Rhoades, Mrs R1cb SHunders
mHI daughter, Garry Sexton,
George Sl1ffler, Jame•
Swa nn, Beulah Swmdler,
Shawn Thomas, Cynthia
Vance
Holler Med1cal Center
Birhts, Feb. 10
Dischargt•s, Feb 9
Mr
and
Mrs Carl Muncy,
Howard BJrehfJeid, Rethc
snn,Jackson
O i:IVIS, Rufus Dorsey, James
Mr and Mrs Sanford
Hall , Jake Helton , Mrs Joiu1
Snyder,
Jr , daughter, Oak
Howell and daughter, ElS&lt;·
H1ll
Hoyd, Amta Jams, Dana JefMr and Mrs. Coy Starcher,
fers, Mrs Jack Jonas and
.Jr
, son , Middleport
sun. Rubel t Jones, Sherman
Discharges, Feb. 11
Kemper, Pamela I.mton,
Arnold
Bailey, Dolly CherrStella !.ovett. Ray McQwre,
Ogle
Dillon, Curtis
mgton,
Charles Mobley. Melissa
Fraley,
Curtis
Gilbert, Mr..
N•.mce, Mrs Thurman 01ler
Eddie
Hughes
and son,
and daughter, Ca thy ollve1·,
Walter
Jewell,
Sr.,
Viola
C!a~ence Ousely, SR , Elhs
Johnson,
Mary
Jones,
Pearl
Sagraves, Mrs Ha1·uld
Scarberry and son, MAtthew LAne, Rirky Lawhun,
Scott, .Janel Selby, Chnslma Charles Martin, Aaron Mit·
Shr1ver, Edna SumomervJlle, chcll, Clemence Moore, Mrs.
Barbara Stahl , Mrs KEvm John Mnrgan and daughter,
Slaten and son, Max Sterrett, Edith Newsome, Augusta
W1iham Stout, Dolph Sw1ck, Pnwell, Sandy ·Pyles ,
Kimberly Rathburn, Rodney
BenJamm Upton
Reeves, Irene St. Clair, MRs.
Births, Feb. 9
Chaires
Thomas and
Mr and Mrs. Jay Brown.
daughter,
Linda
Young.
daughter, Galhpohs
Births,
Feb.
11
Mr. and Mrs. Dav1d ProfMr
and
Mrs
Thomas
fitt, son, Raeme.
Lyons,
son,
Oak
Hill
Mr and Mrs. Myrl Samons,
Mr and Mrs. Greg Oliver,
son, Gallipolis.
daughter,
Jackson
Discharges, Feb. 10
Mr
and
Mrs
Dana
Granv1llc Blanton, Lew1s
Williams,
daught
er,
Bo&lt;hmer, Enne~ Ce~nter, KenPomeroy
dra Casto, Oretha Crookham,
DIScharges, Feb. 12
MRs Denms Pue and son,
Matthew
,\ult, C1chael
.John Elholt, Sue French,
Blankenship,
Mrs Jay Brown
Mrs Chr1s Gentry and son,
and
daughter,
Henry Carsey,
Katherme Hal ey, B1lhe
Florence
Crac
e, Bradley
Halley, Jo Ann Harbour,
Mrs
Wayne
Hesson
Folden,
Ttmothy Harvey, Richard
and
son,
01ana
lhle,
IA&gt;Ie
Helton, Nelson Jarv1s, Helen
Johnson,
Lawrence
Jenmngs, Howard Johnson,
Douglass Johnson, Jr, !.eo Leumard, Kelly McGee, NorLl:lmer, Angeli:! Lawrence, ma McGhee, Debbie Muncy,
Dorothy Love, Robert Mrs. Dav1d Poetker and son,
Manley, Mrs Robe~·t McCul- Mrs Dav1d Profhtt and son,
ly and daughter, Thomas Barbara Sm1th, Cecil SM1th,
Mohler, Misty Perry, Goldie V1cky Spradling, John
Radar. Dons Rapp. Marcella Silvers, Ruth Tedrow, Emerso n Townsend, Alb e rt
W1lhams, Jr
Rirths, Feb. 12
Mr and Mrs Thomas
FALSE ALARM
The
Middleport fire Harkms, son, Mc,\rthur
Mr and Mrs V1rg1i
department answered a call
Hartley, sun, Middleport
to Cheshire at I 24 p m
Mr and Mrs Randy L~ev­
Monday when a car was
reported on hre Two vehicles mg, daughter, Letart, W Va
Mr and mrs. Mrs Kenny
of the department answered
Newsome,
son, Ewmgton.
the call However, f1remen
Mr
and
Mrs. Timothy
reachmg the scene, found no
Sm1th,
sun,
daughter,
Athens.
flre
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - None
DIScharged
Leona
W10mgs, Raymond Justis

mne Amencan cavthans were
setzed Monday by vanous
fachons m Tehran , and some
of them were held up to 12
hours before be10g released.
II
US
Embassy
spokesman srud Khome101
supporter s also bnefly
detained 25 Amencans
asSigned to the Military
Airhft Command
"They were taken to one of
Khomem1 's courts and were
released w1th apologJes all
around, " the spokesman
sa•d "We take comfort from
the fact that they looked on
(the arrests) as a great
mtstake "
"Tehran Radw warned
agamst attacks on the
estunated 7,000 Amencans
and thousands of other
foreigners m the country and
destructiOn of goverrunent
bulldmgs
"The operational staff of
the
Iranian
Islamic
Revolution in its statements
has stressed that all foreign
natwnals domiciled in Iran
are 1mmune from any
transgressiOn," the
broadcast sa1d.
" In another statement, the
operational staff has warned
the people regard10g destrue·
bon of buildings and govern·
ment
and
pnvate
mslttutwns "

The operatwnal staff is the
proviSIOnal
government
headed by Bazargan that
Khomemi set up Sunday
when the natiOn's military
commanders abandoned
Bakhtiar and gave the1r
support to the ayatollah.
One of the defectmg com·
manders, the former atr
force ch1ef, Gen. Am1r
Hossem Rabae1, told a news
conference at Khomemt 's

headquarters that none of the
US -supplied F-14 Jet
hghters, thetr Phoemx
missHes nr electromc gear

CINCINNATI (AP) -Kentucky State Police have confirmed that all eddence
taken from the Beverly Hills
Supper Club 111 the wake of
the May 28, 1977 flre has been
returned to the owners of the
club.
At the same time, la~ers
handlmg civil smts m connectiOn w1th the fire in wh1ch
165 d1ed, were warnmg
chents that the $3 m•lhon outof.&lt;:ourt settlement was only
the beginning.
" It has no effect on my
probe or my concluswns," .
sa•d Lexmgton, Ky., lawyer
Cecil Dunn of the returned
evidence, 10 regard to hiS
crunmal mvest1gat1on
Dunn was appointed by
Kentucky Gov Julian Carroll
to review whether there
should be any criminal
proceedings. Dunn was
appomted after a Campbell
County, Ky. grand jury last
fail found no laws had been
broken in the case.

Weather

extra special servlcesl

Q

And do we ever have them! A full range of
banking serv1ces for your convenJI:'nce;
PassbooK

Savinqs

Complete

Loan

Certificate

Partly cloudy and not as
cold tonight. Low 15 to 20
"Mostly cloudy and wanner
Wednesday. High 35 to 40
Chance of precipitation 20
percent tonight and Wednesday.

:&gt;av1ngs

Department for

ANNUAL INSPECTION
Middleport Masomc Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, will hold its
annual inspection in the
Master Mason degree at 7. 30
p.m Fnday. All Master
Masons are mv1ted.

home.

busmess. personal. installment and auto.

If you ever need to collect on one of your 1nsurance
polic1es, tt's good to know you ere worktng through people

who are ready to go to bat for you. L1ke our "crew" at
The Insurance Store.

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"
Walk- Up Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings, s to 7 p.m.

As mdepsndant agents we represent a number of fine
Insurers .. . like The Continental Insurance Companies
But we don't work for any one of them-we work lor you.
So when you need to buy Insurance, we can help you select ..
the precise coverage you need at the best avatlable price.

And we 'll be rlghl here lo help you g81n a fast, fair settlement If you &amp;\ler need to ttle a cta1m

::: 14llll

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE
214E. MA1NST

Member F. D. I. C.
DeposJis l11surance to $40,000.

POMEROY , O.

992-5130 or 992·5 139

"YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY,
YOU HIRE AN AGENT"

government's army, wearmg
green arm bands marked
Guard of the Revolution,
drove off looters from a
military base, a mili\3ry
supply depot and the Agriculture M1mstry Monday.
Many armed Khomem•
supporters, euphonc w1th
VICtory, had gone on sprees,
1gnonng orders to turn 111
the1r weapons to mosques.
The state radio sa1d the
new army
also
had
recaptured a number of
soldiers and
civilians
charged with corruption and
other crones who had escaped from a military
barracks Sunday "in the
· process of a people's ra1d ."
A contmgent of 69 U.S. Marmes was standing by abroad
m case the Marines guarding
the Amencan Embassy in
Tehran
needed
remforcements. SIX b1g U.S.
Air Force helicopters also
were standing by 111 case they
were ordered to begin
evacuatmg Amencans from
Iran Wash111gton sources
sa id most of the extra
Marines and choppers were
at aU S AirForcebasemthe
Azores
Pres1dent Carter told a

Owners given evidence

• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · , that
However,
Dunn
cautiOned
the release
o[ evidence
to
/ the Schilling family and the~r
4-R Corp. should not be taken
as an md1callon of the
contents of hiS soon-to-becompleted report

•••we
think you're
worth these

lor spy10g on the RusSians Washington news conference
had left Iran
he had been in touch with
" Nothmg at all has been re· Bazargan's government and
moved Everything is st1ll "we stand ready to work with
m Sh1raz and Isfahan," them " He said the new
Rabae1 sa1d when asked government was "vel'y
about reports the eqUipment helpful m msurmg the safety
had been flown out, possibly of Amencans."
to Saudi Ara b1a
Carter al:;o satd the effect
Khomem1, the Shute of the change in government
Moslem leader of the year- on American oil supplies "is
long revolt that drove Shah not a crisis," but the situation
Mohammad Reza Pahlav1 could get worse if Iran
from Iran, urged his doesn't resume production
followers to avoid "arson, shortly.
destruction and cruelty" and
Under the shah, Iran was
declared that violators would the world's No. 2 011 exporter
be disobeymg "Allah'sorders after Saudi Arabia and
and are trattors to the
IslamiC movement."
The
proVISional

SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED
Feb. IS
Head Start, Racine, 2;2 ·30
p m.: Portland Post Office, 33·30 p.m.; Racine, Home
Nat! Bank, 4-5 p m.;
Wagner's Hardware, 5-6
p.m., Syracuse, Swunmlng
Pool, 6:15-8:15 p.m.

CLINIC CANCELLED
The TB chest clinic to be
held Wednesday, Feb. H at
the TB Clinic on Mulberry
MEETING OFF
Heights, has been cancelled
A meeting of the Syracuse
by Dr. Donnerberg of Ohio
PTO scheduled for tonight
State University Hospital
has been cancelled due to
The clinic has been ten- weather conditions.
·
tatively set for March 14.
MEETS THURSDAY
The Bradbury PTA will
meet Thursday, Feb. 15 at
7:30p.m

L

! Area Deaths I
I

I

VELMA V. NEWELL
Velma V. Newell, - 82,
Tuppers Plains, died Monday
even111g at Camden Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg,
following a short illness.
Mrs Newell was born in
Orange Township, Meigs
County, a daughter of the late
Elmer and Mumie Osborne
Newland. She was preceded
In death m 1973 by her
husband, Jesse. She was also
preceded In death by one
sister and one brother
Mrs Newell was a member

Ferry service

began Monday
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP)
- Temporary ferry service
between Portsmouth and
South Shore, Ky., began
Monday under a temporary
4!i-&lt;iay contract.
Ferry operator Roy
McGovney won the contract
with the city of Portsmouth
with an apparent low bid of
$3,500 a day, according to city
officials Two other operators
bid on the contract.
The ferry service is free to
the public and will be subSidized by state and federal
funds
· The serv1ce across the Ohio
River is being offered while
the U. S. Grant Bridge is
closed for repairs. Portsmouth's previous contract
was terminated recently by
the c1ty because of riders'
complaints about the service.

Counly Co

CLASS RESCHEDULED
The Mason County Slenderella Class Which wsa
cancelled Monday mght due
to weather conditions has
been rescheduled lor 5:30
p m Wednesday at the St.
Joseph Catholic Church In
Mason

MEETS THURSDAY
'The
Meigs
County
Democratic Central Com·
m1ttee will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Inn.

-,

produced about 6 milllon
barrels daily. But exports
dw111dled to zero last fall as a
result of anti-government
str1kes Khomeini called from
his exile headquarters
outside Paris.
The shah left Iran Jan 16
and is now m Marrakech, Morocco. Khomemi returned
home from 14 years' exile two
weeks later, and in 10 days
toppled the government the
shah appomted and set about
undoing his Westernizing
refonns, which the ayatollah
viewed as eroding traditional
Islamic values in Iran.

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

"I don't think anyone can
read anything into that, nor
do I thmk they should," he
sa1d.
In Cmcmnat1, lawyer
stanley Chesley, a member of
the lead counsel corruruttee
which has filed more than
$2 9 blllion m lawsuits, sa1d
the out-&lt;~f&lt;ourt settlement
with 4-R Corp. and the
Schilling family would remain in the hands Qf the
courts.
"The settlement w1th the
Schllhngs is just the
beg111nmg. It represents only ·
Uit
a small segment of posstble
settlements or JUdgments
Seven defendants were
agamst approXImately 1,150 fined and 10 others forfeited
additional defendants, all of bonds in Meigs Count:r Court
whom are still defendants," court Friday.
Chesley said
Fined by Judge Charles
" It's hke bu1lding a Knight were Robert C. Miller,
building, and so fa~ we have Little Hocking, $10 and costs,
only placed one bnck on the passmg without assured clear
foundation," Chesley sa1d. distance; Larry J. Barrett,
Langsville, $5 and costs, no
muffler; Myra C. Garst,
Cheshire, Kathryn A. HUI,
Racine, and Donald L.
Lambert, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs each, ~eed; Anna M.
Knighting, Racine, $20 and
costs, left of center; Lowell
McNickle;Racine, costs only,
possession of parts of deer
Two sutts for dlssolutlon of without tag.
marriage have been fUed In
Forfeiting bonds were
Me1gs County Common Pleas Michael EJ. Dailey, Rt. 1,
Court.
Long Bottom, $28, wtsafe
F11lng were Janet S. vehicle; James S. Rees, Jr.,
Lightfoot, Rt. I, Racine and Racine, $360.50, OWl; Larry
Jeffrey J. Lightfoot, Rt. 4, 0 Sellers, Rt. I, Portland,
Pomeroy, Carol L. Gumther,
$35.50, unsafe vehicle; David
Racine ancj Kenneth R. L. Brown, Belpre, Robert D.
Guinther, Racine
Russell, Chesapeake, Joe E.
Granted d1vorces were Glass, Nelsonville, Leonard
Jack K. Spires from Carolyn
L. Wiggins, II, Belpre, James
Gene Spires ; Clifford R.
W. Bramcomb, Watertown,
Grlfflth from Cecilia Griffith;
and Gary R. Hale, uttle
Penny S stewart from Harry
each,
E. Stewart and Patncia Hocking, $35.50
speeding; Linda Giles,
Cleland from Wayne Cleland. Pomeroy, $50, resisting.
The marr1age of Stanley E.
Bennett, Jr., Coolville and
Susan D. Bennett, Coolville
was dissolved.

Couples seek
dissolutions

p •

of the Tuppers Plains Church
of Chr•st since 1912.
She is survived by two sons,
Hohart Newell, Chester, and
Clair Newell of Columbus,
one
brother,
Creston
Newland, Reedsville; one
Sister, Mrs. Veri (Binlce)
Tuttle, Tuppers Plams; three
grandchildren, one step·
grandchild, seven great·
grandchildren and two stepgreat - grandbhndren.
Funeral services will be
held Thursday at I p.m. at the
White Funer~l Home in
Coolville with Eugene Underwood officiating. Burial
will be in the Christian
Cemetery at Tuppers Plains.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after noon
Wednesday.

Ministers
•
revzew

programs
Discussions on several
business ma~ters were held
when the Meigs County
Ministerial Association met
Monday at the st. Paul
Lutheran
Church
in
Pomeroy.
' FolloWing devotions by the
host pastor, Rev. Willlam
Middleswarth, Mrs. Mary
O'Brien reviewed the pl8Med
parenthood program and the
cancer society fund drive
slated the first two weeks in
April.
Bob Hoeflleh, City Editor of
The Daily Sentinel, discussed
methods through which the
newspaper association can
work towards Improvement
of the life and times of Meigs
County.
There was a dlscWJSion on
the weekly sermonette and
how it is received by the
Sentinel readership.
Ministers were asked to
scrutinize the weekly Friday
church page to insure that all
church notices are current
and correct.
The chaplaincy schedule
for Veterans Memorial.
Hospital was completed
along with the schedule for
WMPO Radio.
Schedules were completed
through May.
Each pastor wW inform
their congregations on who
will be serving each week.
The group thanked Rev.
Floyd Shook, chaii'rnan of the
chaplaincy program, and
Broom~ .
Rev.
James
chairman of the radio
program, for their work
Ministers planned to
participate in the personal
advocacy program In the
county on a CPR program In
the near future.
Refreslunents were served
at the close of .the meeting.

*HAllMARK CARDS
*FANNY FMMER CANDY
*UNGERIE
*JEWELRY
*COTY/REVLON Gin SE1S

*\WMEN'S FASHIONS
*MEN'S WEAR

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

~~~

• • • • • • .,

1
FEB.14 ~

~

'---------'

•

e
(USPS 145-960,

•

enttne

at
.

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

VOL NO. XXIX NO 212

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1979

15 CENTS

Personnel release spares decision
WASHINGTON (AP) The freeing of U S Embassy
personnel today by the new
government of Iran after an
assault by an armed hand
apparently spared U S
officials a painful dec1swn
whether to intervene With
military force.
The assault on the embassy
early today seemed to catch
offiCials here by surpnse.
Wb1te House spokesman
Mark Henderson said at the

time he had not "the famtest
Idea" what the situation was
m Iran, and other officials
ctted
communtcattons
difficulties
Before the cnSJs subsided,
a member of a U.S
diplomatic task force on Iran
srud no decision had been
made whether to use a
remforced platoon of 69
Marmes that at last report
was sttll m the Azore Islands
m the Atlanti c Ocean

An

estimated

7,000

Brown was m Israel and

sa1d details of the assa ult

Jone s m the Philippmes
most of them defense
Army Gen.
Bernard
contractors' employees and Rogers, actmg cha&lt;rman of
the1r fam1hes Earlier Uns the Jomt Chiefs 1n the
week, Amencans had been absence of Jones horned to
warned by the embassy to the "Pentagon's' command
stay off Tehran's streets,
center before dawn for an
The criSIS caught Defense appra1sal of the Sltuatwn
Secretary Harold Brown and However, no meetmg of the
Gen. Dav1d Jones, chairman Jomt Chiefs was called
of the Jo10t Chtefs of Staff,
Slate
Department
thousands of m1les from spokesman Hoddm£ Carter

wer e sketchy here b~cau se of
th e c ommuntcat10ns

Arnencans remam m Iran ,

Washmgton on

nfflf' l ~l v1o::1t~

problems, " but we do have
tnd1cat10ns of concern and
effective response by the new
government, for which we
are most grateful "
II small for ce of Mar10es
flown from the Umted States
~&lt;ere last reported at l.ajes in
the Portu gues e Azores,
where they were halted after
havmg been demed entry by

Delta Theta Fratermty
Apparently qmte adept at
bankmg, Hobstetter moved
nght up the ladder In 1931,
three years after he began
work10g at the bank, he wsa
elected asSistant cashier and
10 1932 was elected cashier, a
position he held until 1941
when he was elected
pres1dent He wsa named a
d1rector of the bank m 1932
and has been chairman of the
board of directors smce Dec.
30, 1950.
ActiVe m Pomeroy and
Me1gs County commumty
affau s, Hobst etter was the
first pres1dent of the
Chamber
of
Pomeroy
Commerce and he IS a past
president of the Pomeroy
Alumm Assn
He IS a past master of
Pomeroy Lodge 164, Free and
Accepted Masons and a
member of Grange and the
Izaak Walton League of

Amenca He was chairman Savmgs Bond Comm1ttee of
of the Oh1o 4-H FoundatiOn, the llmmcan Bankers Assn ,
1966-1969, cha1rman of the and state cha1nnan for Oh10
Me1gs County Amencan Red for the Amencan Bankers
Cros s Cha pter , 1941 -46 , llssn , 1965-69
In 1953-54, Hobstctter was
preSident of the Me1gs County
Pionee r and HJStoncal elected preSident of the Oh1o
Society, 1964-1969, and was Bankers Assn , and the Oh1o
president of the Me1gs County School of Bank10g at Oh1o
Bankers Assn durmg the UmversJty, Athens, was
" Bank Holiday" cns1s of the started durmg hiS term of
off1ce
nation
He was a v1ce president of
He has been actiVe m
support of numerous farm the Oh1o Bankers Assn . m
1952 and served m other
groups.
w•th
th e
Weli-known m the held of capac1t1 es
bankmg . th e local bank asso ctahon durmg hts }ears
prestd ent served as a m the ba nkmg profession
Other honorees are Eleanor
member of the Board of
Thoma
s, B1ll Qu1ckei, Judge
Directors, of t he Fed eral
Mannmg
Webster , A R
Rese rv e Bank, Cleveland,
Kmght
.
Beulah
Utterback,
1952-57 , a member or ' the
Execullve Council of th e Fr eda L1evmg and .Ja n
Arnertcan Bankers Assn , Miller T1ckets are $6 and
1954-57 ; · a member of the may be purchased at the Ne"
Clot hing
House.
Executive Committee of the York
National Bank DIVISion of th e Sunon 's PJck·II-Pair and the
Amencan Bankers Assn , office of the chamber
1955-58 , a member of the

Nationwise,--, Carter seeks
Israel recognizing PLO
help in Mexico
JERUSALEM ( AP) - Fore~gn Minister Moshe
Dayan said Tuesday that Israel cannot deny the
'•position" or ~'value '' of the Palestme Liberation
Orgaruzation 10 future peace talks
•
H1s comment, vJewed by some as a softemng of
Israel's position on the PLO, drew a nuld rebuke from
Prune MiniSter Menachen Begm at a meetmg of
Begin's Likud party.

Revenue sharing TTUJY be cut
WASHINGTON (AP) - State governments, many
calling for a halanced federal budget, may f111d an
early target of congressional cost cutters IS the billions
of dollars m revenue sharing Washington funnels to
them.
Sen. Lloyd Benisen, 0-Texas, has mtroduced
legislation 111 the Senate to do away w1th the $2 2 b1lllon
program, saymg 1t "sun ply makes no sense" when the
federal goverrunent has a large dehc1t and states enJOY
balanced budgets.

Super complex under study
CHIWCOTHE, Ohio (AP) - C1ty and county
officials are considering constructwn of an $8.9 m1lhon
complex in downtown Chillicothe which would mdude
underground parking, commerc1al and pubhc office
space and a City-county Jail.
Ross County and Chillicothe offiCials are expected
to authorize the local Community Improvement
Corporation to appralSe a quarter-block s1te for the
development. Prelim111ary plans call for a 160-car
parkmg garage , retail store space, room for a savings
and loan, and jrul and office space for the Chillicothe
police and the Ross County Sheriff's Department.

Seeks balanced spending
BOISE, Idaho ( AP) - The Idaho Senate voted 24 to
11 Tuesday to ask Congress to launch a constitutional
ameooment requiring balanced federal spendmg. The
measure had previously passed the House.
Despite warnings that it might hurt small states,
the resolution called for a constitutional convention 1f
Congress fails to act. "There are very few people in
this country who feel1t is not unportant to balance the
federal budget. Unfortunately, about 400of them are m
Congress," said the measure's chief sponsor, Sen.
Dane Watkins, a Republican from Idaho Falls.

Chief TTUJkes accusations
CINCINNATI (AP) - CinciMati Chief of Police
Myron Leistler accused police uruon actiVIsts Tuesday
of threatening officers who fa1led- to comply
with unioo orders to stop all traffic ticket wnWJg. tne
charge was denied by Fraternal Order of Police
President Elmer Dunaway.
Paul Berninger, chief c1ty negotiator , vowed the
city would not budge from the same two-year offer
firemen agreed to earlier. Lelstler charged that some
of the 930 city policemen who continued to 1ssue traffiC
tickets Tuesday had received threaterung telephone
calls

By FRANK COHMIER

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter,
vowmg to "!tsten and learn, " new to Mexico City
today in search of "a new sense of partnership "
that could ease cross-border differences over Oil
'
trade and tmmtgratJOn
The president was awakened during the night
to be informed of the armed assault on the U S
Embassy m Tehran , but the !raman
developments caused no change of plans for the
tnp to Mexico.

Tehran s•tuatwn deterJoi ated
mto mob vaolence

The l'urks balked at admJttmg the Mannes, apparently
beca use of a d1plomat1c
m1xup and advance leaks of
the Mannes' destmatwn
The nearest US military
for ce to Iran IS a small threeship M1ddle East task for ce
last reported m the Pers1an
Gulf but nut very close to
Ira n Th1s force mcludes two
destJ oyertype stun ~ and a

comm and vessel but It
ca n Ies no Mat me force
Four other Amencan warships a re m lh e Arabtan Sea,
farther away than the M1ddle
East task !01 ce, and these
wa rsh ips, too , lack a ny
Marme landmg strenglh
The a1rport at Tehran has
been closed , makmg 11 mlpossJble for regularly scheJuled
Arner.Jcan transpor t planes to
land smce last Fnday

Commissioners review
978 SEOEMS contract

Hobstetter, chamber honoree
Edtson
Hobstetter,
president of the Pomeroy
National Bank Will be
presented an award of
dlStmctlon at the annual
awards banquet Saturday,
Feb 17 at the Me1gs H1gh
School cafeteria The event
hegins at 6:30 p.m.
It was on Sept 28, 1928 that
Hobstetter f1rst began his
duties as a bookkeeper at the
bank which he no~&lt; heads, 50
years later. He has served as
president of the inst1tut1on
since 1941 - 37 years - a
notable record, too
Born in Pomeroy on Sept
13,
1905,
Hobstetter
graduated from Pomeroy
.High School 111 1922 and for
five years he was employed
as shippmg clerk for the
Pittsburgh Coal Co 111
Pomeroy.
He attended the Unlvers1ty
of ClncJMatl, 1927-28, where
he was a member of Ph1

the TurkiSh government on
Monday
Those Mannes on gmally
were to ha ve gone to Inctrhk
m Turkey to stand 10ady m
case they were needed to help
defend the Iran1an embassy 1f
It came under attack
Six large HH-53 helicopters
had been sent from England
to Italy. They , too , had been
destmed for Turkey to sta nd
by for possib le use '"
evacuatml! AmPr!(':ln&lt;.! As the

EDISON IIOBST ETTEH

PLAY WAHAMA
The Eastern Eagles w•ll
play Wahama at Wahama

Thursda y evcnmg with
games at 6 and 7 30 p m.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Bali Run
at 2 14 a.m Wednesday for
B1ll Morm \\ho \\as taken to
Veterans Memona Hosp1tal

Randall Mace, newly appomted director of SEOEMS,
discu ssed the orgarm:at10n s
contract Wit h Mctgs County
Commlsstoncrs Tue sday
rughl
Mace rcv1ewcd the 1979
contract w1th Me1gs Count y
&lt;.tlong wtth va nous othel
matt ers pt!rtammg
to
SEOEMS' operatiOns
The pr es ident cont ract
calls for SEOEMS to serv1ce
Ohve and Orange townships
In
north western Meigs
County from the Coolville
Stat10n and most of western
Me1gs County from t he
Rutland Station
The reot o' Meigs County IS
served b1 volunteer umts
under th e Metgs Count y
Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce
which wa s forme d In
January, 1978
CommiSSioners pomted out
th at the)
were very
di splea sed a nd h1ghi y
re sentful of st atements
allegedly made by SEOEMS
representat1ves that Me1gs
County was delinqu ent 111 1ts

payments
The board stated that every
monthly b11l for 1978 was pmd
umnedtately upon reeetpt,
'"th the exceptiOn of th e
December b1ll l' hlch ex·
ceedcd the arm ual contrac.1
b) $9.000
ll was pomled out that
rercnt aud1ts had mdicated
gross mi smanag ement by
SEOEMS and that th e
possJblhty eXISted that bJIImg
through la st November m1ght
have been m error
It was the board s opm1on
December's b11l would not be
pa1d unttl a complete aud1t
mvolvmg all transactiOn s
w1th Me1gs County du11n g
1978 was completed and
proper
docum en t at\ on
p r ese nted pr o v1d1ng ,
ho\\cvcr, thatthe total d1d not
exceed the ann ua l contract
amount
In add1t1on , the board
expressed tt.s willingness to
appro1e a bill for Januar).
1979, for services 1end ered
and b1llmgs fo r ea ch month
thcr ea f~e r
until a new
contra ct ag reem 2nt IS

reached. prov1dmg proper
documentation accompanJe1:&gt;
the b1lls under the same
terms and conditions outlm ed
Ul th e 19i8 contraLt
Bob Balle), Me1gs County
EMS coordinator was also
present and dtscussed the
Me1gs EMS operations
.Jeff Burt of Buckeye H11l sHoo km g Vall ey Hcg1onal
Development di scu ssed a
solid waste plannmg program
for Mc1gs County
Burt explamed th at 1!
Me t ~s Co unty
was successfully part1c1patmg m a
pla n, a consultant would b~
employed b) Buckeye H1lls to
prepare a solid waste plan
whtch w1H cons1der the best
poss1ble use of land ad jacent
to the present samtary landfill and other~ s1te alternativ es. m additJOn to a
comprehensive soltd \\aste
plan
Atlendm g were Richard
Jones presid ent, Heno
Well s, J1 m Hou sh, comml SSIOners and Mary Hobstcttcr . clerk

Gasoline rationing not warranted
By roM RAUM
Associated Press Writer

Carter told a Mex1can oll resources now calculated
television aud1ence last week to approach and perhaps
he believes a new relation- nv al those of Saud1 Arabia
ship has flounshed smce he
Armed w1th thiS economic
entertained
Mex1can trump card, Lopez Port•llo
PreSident Jose Lopez Portillo wants to discuss a possible 011
as
the
Carter
ad- deal w1th the U S. as part of a
mtnistratJOn's first state package embracmg trade
VISitor two years ago
and unmigrallon .
But perceptions are qmte
Carter w1ll try to reach an
different m Mex1co, wher e agreement on a U S. purmany officials st1ll feel they chase of natural gas, but tl
are treated as a JUDIOr part- would he only a general
ner of the Umted States
agreement, sa1d John Ferch,
What has changed m two the U S. embassy's deputy
years, all agree, IS Mexico' s Chief of mJSSIOD
econ~mic potential , w1th 1ts
" Presidents don 't talk
about prices," he sa1d
Negotiations for the pur(Contmued on page 14)

WASHINGTON (liP ) P10s pects for a qu1ck
resumption of oJl exports
f1 om Iran are shm, but the
situatiOn st11l doesn't warrant
gasohn e rationmg or other
mandatory steps, say admimstratwn energy off1ctals
Ene rgy Secretary James
R Schlesmger contends 11
m1ght be one to three months
before any !raman 01! flows
agam and that when 11 does, II
will likel} he far below the
1978 level of 6 nnlhon barrels
a day
Meanwhile, ShahrJar
Rouham , a se lf-d esc nbed
spokesma n for Ira ntan
diplomats 111 Washm gton,
predicted In an mterv1ew that
lraman 011 productwn would
resume withm e1ght to 10
weeks and be near the customary 6 mllhon barrels a
day 111 a few months.
Schl es mger says the
Sltuatwn IS still "not en tical "
and pr obably ca n be
weatl1ered by a sen es or

The
Me1gs
County
Amencan Red Cross Chapter
has ISsued an appeal for
clothmg and fumtture for the
Ronald
Barr
famll n "
Ewmgton whose mobil e
home was' destroyed by f1re
Saturday mght.
Clothing needed for family ·
members includes : girl, SIZes
7, gv, shoe; boy, s•ze- 7, 10
shoe; boy, 34 waist, 28 length
trousers, 18 shirt and 5'r'
shoe; man, wa1st 33, short
length trousers. 14% shirt, 7'h
shoe, woman, size 10
clothmg, shoe SIZe 6. \
Anyone havmg clothmg or
furniture tQ donate" asked to
call John Sm1th, 742-2665 or
Rhonda Oatley, evenmgs or
weekends, 949-224~

Pac1hc a nd tore apart the
$24 6 m1lhon Hood Cana l
Bndge just off the Puget
Sound', caused at least two
deaths and left tens of thousands Qf hom es and
bu Si n esses without
electricity
It wa s th e most damagmg
wmdstorm smce a storm in
October 1962 lashed the West
Coast from San FranCISCO
Bay to Vancouver Island an~
was blruned for 37 deaU1s and
m!lli ons of dollar s m property
damage.
ln M1ddl~ib n , Idaho, more
than 100 persons were evaC·
uated frnm the1r hc.mes Tuesda y afl.C'r rum!fl f1mn snow-

voluntary conservatiOn and
fuel-sw1tching steps
Da vid
B a rdtn ,
admmtstrator
of
th e
F: cn nom1c R eg ulat o r y
i\dmmJstJatwn , was to test1fy
before the House enerb'Y and
power subcommittee today
on the adrmm strat1 on's
sta ndby pla ns to deal with
another fuel cn sts
Schlesmger told the panel
Tuesda y
admtmstr atwn
plans mclude one for gasoline
ra twmng , although the

EXTENDED FORECAST
Fr1day through Sunday :
Fair
Fnday
Suo"
Saturday becommg m1xcd
wilh rain Sunday. ll1gh m
the 20s nnd low 30s Fnday,
"arming to the mid 30s in
the north and upper 30s to
low 40s in the centra l and
southern portion~ by
Sunda} L:.o" in the teens tu
lo" 20s carlv Fnday, and m
m1d to lo" 20s e'3rl)' Sunday

1

Cartel admunstratwn had no
mtent10n of puthn~ It to use
becau se of the Iram (tn
cutoffs
Tile energy secretary sa1d
1 atwnmg would do nothmg to
stop the cost of gasohne from
contmumg tts upward chmb
and wouttl be a mghtmare to
~chmm s t er,
cost mg the
government $1 b1lhon
He also mdlcated that other
mandator y steps - such as
dosmg ga solme statwns on
Sunday - would not be taken
unttl voluntary meas ures
were lned f1r sl
·
Sc hiesmger sa1d 1! the Iraman otl cuto([ rematns
through June, 1t could brmg
about
worldwid e
oJl
shortages as senous as the
1973-H Arab ml emba rgo
He sa1d little IS known of
wh eth er
the
new
revoluttonary government m
Iran controlled by Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khumem1 IS willmg
to resume ml exp01 ts or to
what extent.
Mm eover, he tesl1fled th at
Khomemt may eve n be pow-

e1le:).s to restore produclwn
It 1s pla111 U1al control of
the 011 fi elds belongs to
certam radlCal groups" and
pollllcai eletr"'nts not loy. ito
Khometm, he sa td " J'here ts
no ass urance t hey will
respond to urgmgs from
Tehran and 1! they do, no
md1ca lion they will do so
qmckly "
Sc hles mger
did
not
elaborate, but his remarks
were re mforced later by "
White House off iCial who sa1d
the Cat ter adm1mstr atwn
remams ooncerned about the
ab1hty of the ne" regune to
funct1 on as a government

Weather
Cloudy w1th periods of snow
posSlbletomght. Snow. mJXed
with fr eezmg ram at tiiTi eS
Low tomght near 30. Warmer
Thursday •1th sho wers or
ram posSible H1gh 45 to 50

Appeal
issued Outages, flooding plague Washington
By The Associated Press
Power
outages
and
scattered Oooding plagued
parts of Washmgton today
after the state 's worst
wmdstorm m 17 years, and
flood waters threatened
portwns of Idaho and UtahIn the East , record-settmg
cold . sent temperatures
skidd10g
The Natwnal Weather
SerVIce ~red1cted that more
strong w10ds, from 35 to 55
mph. were m store for the
No1 thwesl today
ln the Seattle area, a
VIol ent storm on Tuesday
roared mla nd from the

packed fields jumped the
hanks of Willow Creek The
fl oodmg, con centrated m
southwestern Idaho, forced
offiCials to close schools and
many roads
In the Salt Lake Valley of
Utah, flood waters from
meltm g snow were recertmg,
but some spots were under
water
Th e fl oodm g fo ll owed
sudden wonnmg Th e ht gh
1i1csdny was 52 degree s,
oboul 10 deg1·ees abo1e
normal
llut the F:asl sh1vered as
temperature records fell
hum New York lo Ha ltun me
ami \o\ ashmgton
)

A record low was set m some areas The Nattonal
Rochester, N Y , when the Weather Servtce Issued travtemperature fell to 14 below elers' adVlsortes saymg that
zero shortly after nudn1ght
VISibility could be reduced to
In Newark , N.J, the zero m many locations, mtemperature at 2 a .m. was 1 clud mg the Dallas-Fort
degree, breakmg the record Worth area
of 2 set m 1943
Snow fell over U10 upper
At Balt1more-Washmgton Great Lakes and the upper
lnlern at10nal Airport , the MISSISSippi Valley One to 3
temperature dropped to 4 mche s of fresh snow was
degrees, breakmg a previous pred1cted for today m North
nnd
northern
record of 7 se tm 1965 1t was Dakota
lh e fif th consecutive day thnt Mmnesot.1 to Mtclugan
M 2 a m today, the
a retvrd low was se t there
Fog covered much of the n'att on·s h1gh tempe rature
na ttan 's mid section early was 66 m Houston, and the
low was 27 below zero m
today
In Texas. vu:11blltty was re- Watertown, N Y
duced to ll·~s Ulan a m1le m
I

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