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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

�3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 14, 1979

~,
.... IN WASHINGTON
•

...

Washin,pon
..
By Clarence
Report Miller
.

~ Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Remarkable restraint·
EASTON , MD. (NEA) · The jnstinctive reaction of politicians who spot a bandwagon headed their way is to leap
aboard - without much quibble as to its destinatiOn. So when
not JUst one but scores of pohllcians res1st the impulse, that 1s
news.
And that IS what happened here last weekend when more
than one hundred top elected Republican leaders who had
gathered to seek consensus on a handful of major pohcy questwns declined to endorse the cono;ept of a constitutional
amendment requiring a balanced federal budget.
The balanced budget amendment is the biggest, brassiest
political bandwagon on the road r1ght now. Some 25 or 26 state
legislatures have already petitioned Congress to adopt such an
amendment itself or call a constitutional convention to·do so. If
34 sta tes act, Congress will be forL'ed to call a convention.
Republicans for years have been the principal advocates of a
balanced budget, ra1hng aga mst the free-spendmg ways of the
Democrallc-&lt;:ontrolled Congress and the huge federal deficits
whi ch have resulted.
Yet most of the se nators, House members and governors
who came here for the second annual mformal issues conference at the Tidewater Inn refused tocall for a constitutional
amendment to require a balanced budget Instead, they approved a call for an amendment to limit federal spending and
urged that Congress, through its normal legislative pr.ocess,
balance the budget startmg fiscal year 1981.
The consensus, interestingly enough, cuts across ideological
lines, obliteratmg the usual right-left d1stmctions. Staunch
conservati ves hke Sen, James McClure, R-ldaho, and Rep.
Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., joined moderates hke GOP Nat10nal
Chamnan Bill Brock and Sen. Jack Danforth, R-Mo., in opposmg any conslltullonal amendment to balance the budget.
And most of those who took the opposite pos1llon argued
pohllcal ex pediency, rather than philosophic commitment
"I'm convmced th1s IS a Republican Issue and we're about to
lose 1t,'' warned Sen Robert Dole, R-Kan., one of several
potential presidential candidates altendmg ''Tidewater II "
"Unless we move aggressively," added freshman Rep Newt
Gmgrtch' R-Ga , "the Democrats may once again pre;,mpt

''f

Kansas
lowest

'******ilf********************************'II''II''II''II''II''Jt1Jj.

~ · Editorial opinions

Loyalty bottom line
suggesting at one point that
even. the meetings of his
Cabinet m1ght be open to
coverage by newsmen. He
dropped the latter idea, but
not the commitment to
openness.
The question becomes how
open. An administration in
which every adv1ser was free
to recount every conversation
would be a free-for-all in
which
debate
would
substitute for policy.
Carter said he never told
his aides to stop talkmg to
reporters . '~I do, however,
have to insist upon ·a degree
of teamwork once a decision
is made that relates to a
sensitive issue , like the
Middle East, or like SALT
negotiations or like the
relationships with Iran in
rece nt months," he said at his

~

news conference . "That's
what I have admonished
them to do, to have a free
expression of opmion and to
let me have their Individual
opinions up to the time that I
make a decision. Once I make
a decision, to comply with it .''
Carter said he wasn·'t
ordering his advisers to clam
up, but neither was he issuing
"a blanket permit" for his
aides to express publicly
their personal views on his
policies. He said if aides
cannot accept his decisions,
"then the only option for
them is to resign."
The net result of the Carter
lectures is sure to be a more
reticent administration. His
aides and advisers won't get
into trouble by keeping their
mouths shut.

HEALTH

'

By Dr. Lamar Miller-

Good plan
for health

OU Coll~e of Osteopathic Medicine

Names
•••
•

the news

8erry s

•

,.

'

•

Swain's Jumper
with 5 seconds
left wins tilt
Mark Swain's 18-foot jumper with five seconds
left to play gave Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande
College Redmen a thrilling 83-81 Mid-Ohio
Conference basketball victory over host Urbana
Tuesday night.
The triumph assured Rio Grande of at least a
share of the 1978-79 regular season championship.
A victory over visiting Tiffin University at Lyne
Center Friday night will give the Redmen their
fourth undisputed MOC championship in five
years, and third in a row.

.~

.: r

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Health Review

w0 rId

I;

,.

l

quest to me m care of this
newspaper, P .O. Box 1551,
Radw City Station, New
York , NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Could
you give me a little informallon regarding the use of a
pessary for a cystocele and
rectocele I am nearing 70
and fear an operation but am
badly in need of help.
Is this an office or hospital
procedure? Is it safe ? Are
there any adverse effects on
the body functions such as

,,
'

sex?

DEAR READER - The
answer to your question
depends on understanding
what a cystocele and rectocele are. The vaginal canal ·"
is really a muscular tube. The
bladder is in front of this tube
and the rectum behind it.
When the muscles tear ,
separate or weaken at the ' \
front, the bladder can literally rupture into the vaginal
canal, causing a cystocele.
When the muscles at the back
weaken, tear or separate, the
rectum can literally rupture ' ,
through the back wall, caus,•
Ing a rectocele.
•
A pessary is just a
••
mecbanical device that is in•
•
serted in the vagina in the
I
hope of propping up -the
'f
womb. I don't think you can
:0
expect any meaningful
results with the pessary for
*•
e1ther a cystocele or a rectocele. It certainly won't
•••,
strengthen the muscular wall
of the vaginal canaL Surgical
repair of such hernias into the
vaginal canal is very com-·
i
mon and almost always suct
cessful.
•

-.
•

,,
.•

••
•
••
•

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•;•

· The Dally Sentinel

·-··='
lUSPS145-Ht)

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t
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DEVO'I'EDTO'ufE

••

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MABON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH

••

Cltyi!Ait.r
DAVID BUIIIURK
AdvmlllqMaPubti•hod dally "''""' Salurday
by The Ohio Valley PubUIIhing

:· t

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NaliUIJill adver11slnK representative Landon Associates 3101
Eur.lidAve., ClevelandkOhio 44115.
Subscription rates ueUvered by
carrier where av•llllble 75 cents per

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week By Motor Route where carrier
service Dlill av•Uable, One month
13 25 By !noll In Olio ond W. Va.:
One Year, f27.50 ; Six months,
114.50 ,

It was an uphill battle most
of the way Tuesday night as
the Redmen, after an early 88 tie in the first half, fell
behind by as many as 15
points, 51-36, with 2: 15
remaimng in the initial
stanza.
The Blue Knights, after
building up that big advantag~, finally cooled off
just before intermission. The
Redmen, behind Swain, Steve
Lones, Dan Bise and Dan
Purcell, reduced Urban's
lead to 53-47 just before the
halftune buzzer.
After an exchange of
buckets opened second half
play, Rio's Vince Phelps and
Steve Lone~ pulled the
Redmen to a 57-57 deadlock
with 17 :55 remaining in the
game.
It was also (led at 59-59, 6161, 6~ and 65-65 before the
Redmen erupted with 10
pomts while permitting the
Blue Knights only two
markers. With 10:02 left, Rio
was on top, 75-li7.
However, the Blue Knights
wouldn't give up. Consecutive
goals by Larry Huff, Carlos
fulherts and Chris Faulkner
pulled the home team to
within two points, 75-73, with
8:02 showing on the clock.
Both teams slowed it down

during the . final seven
mmutes of action, taking only
good percentage shots.
After Dan Bise's goal gave
the Redmen a 77-73 lead,
Faulkner and Mike Rengert's
back-to-back goals knotted
the count at 77-all with 6:19
left to play.
After. Swain and Faulkner
traded goals, Dave Gustin put
the home team on top, 81-79,
with 2:03 left.
Phil Washington's tap-in
with 1:44 left knotted the
count at 81-all. Willy Lunoy
missed a field goal attempt
w1th 59 seconds remaining in
the galfte. Rio Grande
grabbed the rebound , and
worked the ball around
before calling tune at the :36
mark.
Rio got the ball inbounds,
then passed it around 31
seconds before Swain hit the
game's winning goal with five
ticks remaining on the clock.
U&gt;nes' pick set up the winning shot.
Urbana called tbme with
four seconds left. With Gustin
acting as the triggerman, the
Blue Knights got it inbounds
and up court, but ' LWIOy's
desperation shot was off
target. Big Steve Lones came
down with the most im·
portant rebound in his career

•

•••

-•

"I:_hr~~

monthl, N.SO;
Elsewhe~t:f2.tll yur; Sb: mooths
'17.00 ; 'Diree months , St 00.

• I ~~

Subscription price includn Sunday
'11mes~nlinel.

MOC

EAGLE JUNIOR VARSITY - Team members of
Eastern's junior varsity squad are, fr ont, 1..-, Ken
Chapman, Charlie Ritchie , Tony Kennedy and Greg Cole;

standings
(ALL GAMES!
TEAM
W. L.
Malone
16 9
Cedarville
13 9
Ri o Grande
Urbana

15 11
9 14
9 15

Mt . Vernon

8 18
6 15
6 22

Walsh

Ohio Domini can

Toffon

(LEAGUE ONLY)
TEAM
W. L.
Ri o Grande

Malone
Cedarville
Urbana
Walsh

Mt Vernon

Toffin

Oh 10 Dominican

TOTALS

ll I
9 3
7 5
5 7
5 7
5 7
3 9
3

9

48 48

Tuesday's results:

Rio Grande 83 Urbana 81
MI. Vernon 67 Toffin 62
Ol• o Dom 1nacan 81 Cedarville
72

Ma lone 79 Walsh 76

Fnday's game :
Tiffin at Rio Grande

Saturdar's games:

MI . Vernon at Malone

Cedarvolle at Urbana

Walsh at Oh 1o DomanicC'n

and Rio Grande had clinched
at least a tie for the 1978-79
league championship.
The victory left Rio Grande
with a 15-11 season mark.
Inside the MDC, the Redmen
bmproved their mark to Jl-1.
Urbana dropped to 9-14
overall and 5-7 inside the
league.
Rio Grande, playing
witbout the services of Greg
James who reported back to
work, connected on 39 of 68
field goal attempts for 57.3
percent. The Redmen were
five of six at the foul line for
83.3 percent Rio had 32
rebounds, 13 by Lones, and 19
assists, 10 by Vince Phelps
The Redmen had 12 tum-

DAL·E'S

KITCHEN ·cENtER, INC•
WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO DOt
PUT IN A
IIEW KITCHEll

BIG 40%
CASH &amp; CARRY
SAVINGS ·WHEr
YOU DO IT
YOURSELF.
TOUR DIMENSIONS

AiiD OUR
EXPERTS WILL
HELP YOU!

Dan Blse paced the Redmen In scoring with 22 points
hefore fouling out with 3:01
left in the game.
U&gt;nes tossed in 19 markers,
Dan Purcell 14 and Swain 10
for the winners.
&lt;ltris Faulkner led the Blue
Knights attack with 22 points.
Dave Gustin added 20, Mike
Rengert 14 and Willy Lunoy.
12.
The Blue Knights connected on 35 of 60 field goal
attempts for 58.3 percent.
Urbana was 11 of 12 at the
foul line for 91.7 percent. The
losers had 26 rebounds and 11
turnovers.
"They shot very well the
first half," remarked Coach
Lanham. "We were not
stopping their penetration in
the first half," Lanham
continued.
In the second half, Lanham
put Mark Swain on Gustin as
the Redmen repeatedly
switched defenses with a boxt-and-Qne, two-three zone and
man-to-man.
Box score·
URBANA (Bll- Funoy 5-212 , Faulkner 9-4·22; Huff 4-08, Gust,in 9-2·20, Rengert 6·214 ; Roberts 2 1-5. TOTALS 3511-81.

2119 Jackson Ave.

. Point Pleasant

75-2311

RIO GRANDE (83) Swain 5-0-10; Blse 10 2-22;
Purcell 7·0·14 ; Phelps 5·0-10;
Royse 2·0·4; Washington 2-0·
4, Lones 8·3·18 . McCormick
0 0-0. TOTALS 39-5-83.
Halftime score:

Urbana 53 Rio 47.

By BOB GREEN
AP Golf Wr1ter
TUcSoN, Ariz ( AP)
Fuzzy Zoeller , according to
defending champion Tom
Watson's formula , could be
the man to heat in the $250,000
Joe Garagiola-Tucson Open
Golf Tournament.
"These things tend to go m
cycles, trends," Watson said.
"At any tournament, all you
have to do is look at the men
who have been playmg well
recently and you know who's
likely to play well at that particular tournament.
"That doesn't mean that
the man necessarily will win
- but the chances are that
he's playing well enough to
win."

'That descrption f1ts Zoeller
perfectly.
He scored his first career
victory last month in
San
Diego. And
he
was second alone last
week in the weather-plagued
Hawaiian Open. Those two
performances put him at the
top of the year's moneywmners with more than
$82,000 and stamped hbm as a
factor to be considered in the

72-hole test th at begms both, it 's really something. It
Thursday on the 6, 703-yard takes so much pressure off
Randolph Mumcipal Golf younrons. You don 'If eel like
Club course .
you have to get 1t close to the
"I'm dr1vmg good and I'm hole to score, and you re not
putting good," Zoeller sa1d always diggmg it out of the
after he and Wat.so n and a cabbages."
number of other players !lad
Watson, Playe r of the Year
recovered from a 13-hour, th e last two seasons, Zoeller,
weath er-delayed fhght from former Tucson hUe-holder
Haw au "Usually, you don 't Bruce Lietzek and others
have but one of those th mgs were on a !hght that was
going for you. When vou have grounded by fog in Los
Angeles They were bused to
Burbank and eventally
arnved m Tucson about eight
hours behm d sc hed ul e
Others had even grea ter
difficulty when fog closed the
I Al S Angeles airport, and
many sk1pped the traditional
practice ro"nd Tuesday .
That could be costly. Many
will be playmg the little
1

Paul has

reasons
for rules

CLEVELAND (AP) Mention of the recent injury
to Philadelphia Phillies
pitcher Larry Christenson,
suffered during a chanty
bicycle marathon , mov ed
Cleveland Indians president
Gabe Paul to reflect on the
unpact of off-season mjur1es.
"Bill Davis was one of the
·:·:·:&lt;··:·:·:··.·.· ::·:··:·:·:···· ····:::;.· ···:.·.· ···:·:···· great prospects w1th the
MAKEUP GAMES • Cleveland orgam za ti on
several years ago until he
Keith Carter, head
ruptured his achilles tendon
basketball coach of Kyger
playing basketball ,'' Paul
Creek, today aunouoced
said Tuesday . "Bobby Tolan
the dates for two make-up tore his achilles tendon and 1t
games.
rwned a great career."
Weather permitting, KC
Paul also cited off-season
will host Elk Valley at noon basketball mjur1es to Buddy
Thursday in the high school Bell, Toby Harrah and
gym and Haunan Trace Tommy Smith.
Friday night.
Whenever a player s1gns a
multi-year
contract with the
·:·:·:·::·:·:·::·:·:·.·::: :·:·:·:·::: :-:-:·:·:: :·····:-:::-.
ind1ans, he must accept a list
of prohibitions. Among them,
th e player cannot nde
motorcycles, lift weights,
play basketball or football for
recreation,
sky
dive,
participate in tug of war
contests, race automobiles,
pilot airplanes or use karate.
Paul said he doesn't want to
be a spoilsport, he just wants
to protect the players fr om
themselves - espec ially
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) those
players w1th long-term
Turkey hunting permits will
guaranteed
contracts.
be accepted by the state
"The
problem
is that a lot
Division of Wildlife starting
of
fellow
s
think
it
isn't going
March I.
to
happen
to
them.
Those are
There will be 2,000 pennits
the
fellows
it
happens
to ,"
issued this year for the two
week season which opens Paul explained.
Noting that Christenson,
April 30. The permits will he
who
has a guaranteed
issued on a first-&lt;:ome, firstwith the Philhes
contract
served basis, the division
through
1980,
broke his nght
said.
in
a
!all from a
clavicle
Permit applications may
bicycle
last
Sunday,
Paul
be obtained from the
said
:
"That
could
cost
the
division's Columbus
Phillies
the
pennant.
I
think
headquarters and all district
wildlife offices. They must be we'll prohibit bicycling from
accompanied by a check or now on ."
money order for $10.50,
payable to the division of
wildlife.
The
division
said
applications postmarked
before March 1 will not be
accepted.
The 1979 turkey hunt area
includes the following
counties: Adams, Athens,
Carroll, Gallla, Guernsey,
Hocking, Holmes, Jackson,
Jefferson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Monroe, Perry, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Vinton and Washington.
A valid Ohio hunting
license 1s required in addition
to the turkey permit. The bag
limit is one bird per season.

Turkey
•
per1mts

accepted

'
J

back, John Reibel, Rick Long, Tim Dill, Paul Sprague, P.
G. Riffe and Mike Bissell. They have an overall record of
9-8 and league record of &amp;-4 Dennis Eichinger 1s the
coach.

Zoeller tabbed man to beat

overs.

••
l!

Company-MulUmedia , Inc.,
111
Court St , Pomeroy, Otuo 46789.
BUSlRI!S! Office Phone 992- 2156
Ed1tonal Phone 112·2151.
'
Second class postage paid at

Boyles, Dan Spencer, Keith Wolfe, Joe Bowers, Leonard
Myers, Don .Eynon and Brian Bissell. The squad is 8-9
overall and 7-3 in league standings. Coach is John Boston .

Redmen clinch tie for MOC crown

"

DEAR DR. LAMB -I am 64
The heart struck by cupid's arrow has become the symbol
years old and have been in
of Valentine's Day. Perhaps this year we ought to forget this
good health all rny life. Now
romantic bmagery for a minute and think about a group - the
that I am retired , I have joinHeart Association -which is dedicated to helping that real
ed the health spa . I spend
pump each of us.depends on every day of our lives.
three hours a day, three
QUESTION: Every year during February, the Heart
limes a week, exercismg. I
Association conducts a campaign to raise money for "Heart
walk three nules around the
Month." What happens to this money?
track , swun 40 laps, use the,
ANSWER: The Heart Association keeps more of its money
sauna, steam room and the
in the local area than nearly any other health drive. The Heart
whirlpool
Association has a national organization with each state having
In February I wei ghed 135,
Its own chapter and regional groups within that state. Tbe
now I weigh I 30 I would bke
national and state offices receive less than one half· of the
to get down to 115. I have
money collected. The major portion of the funds from the heart
given up bread or anything
drive remains in the local area.
made with flour . My husband
QUESTION: For what purpose is the money utilized
and family seem to think I am
locally?
doing too much. I have a comANSWER: Various programs such as cardio-pubnonary
plete physical every year.
resuscitation (CPR) traming are financed. Most of these
What do you think ?
,
programs are inexpensive to comjuct since most if not all the
DEAR READER - I think
help from doctorS, nurses'ruiofi'ained paraprofessionals IS
you're great. Why not get 1n
done as a public serVIce without charge. In fact, the only
there and do everything you
personnel who rece1ve pay are the full-tbme executive director
can to improve your health
and maybe a secretary. Many of the local associations function
and appearance? The fact
w1th only volunteer help.
that you're only losing about
Many booklets on diet, blood pressure, heart attacks and
a pound a month is just 'fine
other related topics are available free of charge from your
People who lose weight too
local association. There are also films available either free or fast and don't change their
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) - Eve! Knievel 's request to
at nominal cost to any interested commumty group. A lifestyles usually regain it all
have his felony conviction for assault and battery reduced to a
speakers bureau is also available in many areas free of charge anyway. Exceosively rapid
misdemeanor has been dropped from the court calendar at his
to interested groups.
weight loss is usually not
At various tbmes during the year your local Heart healthy.
request.
I
The rea .on. the daredevil stuntman no longer needs the
Association will organize and sponsor blood pressure clinics
I am not sure anyone really
court ac tion to obtain permission for an Australian tour.
r-----=-----------------~ with volunteef help, information booths at fairs and antineeds flour. But be sure to get
"We had been informed Adstralian authorities would not let
smoking campaigns in the local schools.
your v1tamins; B complex
him in because of a felony conviction," attorney Peter Brown
QUESTION: Who IS allowed to take too CPR courses vitamins are found in cereals.
sa1d Tuesday "But we withdrew the action when a judge
offered throu~ the Heart Association?
I suspect you are taking an
signed an order allowing him to go. "
ANSWER: These courses are available to anyone in the
all-purpose vitamin tablet
Brown said Australian authorities had agreed to 'give
community who wants to learn the procedure. It consists of every day anyway. You
Knievel a visitor's permit 1f a judge in his assault case allowed
mouth-to-mouth ventilation of a person who has stopped should be s~re to get suffithe trip.
breathing and compression of the chest to restart a heart cient bulk, too. A good source
Knievel served just under five months of a sentence for
which has stopped beating. I will discuss this further m next of that is cereal fiber or bran.
assault on a former pubhc1ty agent With a baseball bat. He sllll
Perhaps you're using one of
week 's article.
has two years of a threeyear probation term remaining.
The course may be organized directly by the Heart the whole wheat br~akfast
"He left at Bo'clock last mght," Brown said Tuesday. "He's
Association, or you may form your own small group · cereals.
got an e1ght-week tour m Australia with his daredeVIl show."
(neighborhood, PTA, clubs, etc.) and then request the
I'm not enthusiastic about
I
association to supply certified instructors. The course usually the sauna or steam room. But
IDNOON 1AP ) - AreJuvenation of society is taking place in
takes 11-12 hours and is taught in two or three sessions.
as lung as you· don't get too
the Soviet Union, says exiled Russian author Alexander SolQUESTION: How may I contact my local Heart hot or dehydrate yourself, are
zhenitsyn, who repeated his desire to return home.
in good health and have no
Association?
In an interview, Solzhenitsyn , winner of the 1970 Nobel Prize
ANSWER: The telephone number is usually listed in your heart or circulatory profor literature, said communism is a "dead dog" in Russia,
telephone book under Heart Association, or you may contact blems, there isn't any good
"while for many people in the West it is still a living lion."
the state association in Columbus if you live in Ohio. Tbe reason why you shouldn't enSolzhenitsyn was exiled fr,om. the ,SOviet Union five years
address 1s Central Ohio Heart, 200 E. Rich St., Columbus, Ohio joy them, if you do. Don 't exago He now lives in Vermont, where he was interviewed Feb. 3
43215, or phone (614) '228-6237.
pect saunas and steam rooms
by the British Broadcasting Corp,
to remove any significant
Tlie mterview was copyrighted by Solzhenitsyn, It was
quantity of body fat. They
broadcast Tuesday night in the BBC Russian Service, which
Five years ago : Special maintain ii military balance might help you sweat out a litha s a potential listening audience of millions.
tle water, but that's not
Watergate
Prosec:,utor Leon in the Middle East.
Speaking of his home country, the bearded 6().year-old auToday's birthdays : Former helpful and sometimes can be
Jaworski said President
thor said)" "Yes, we are still pnsoners of cvnunumsm ,n but
.
Richard Nixon had refused to Ohio State football coach harmful.
"we have in Russia Withstood this penod of trial spiritually,
you
The
Health
I'm
sending
release tapes and documents Woody Hayes is 66. Sports
and amazingly we are st1ll standing."
needed for the Watergate broadcaster Mel Allen also is Letter number 3-7, Girth Con66. Television personality trol · Avoiding The Big Midmvestigations.
&lt;lie, "" a reward for your ef·
One year ago : The Carter Hugh Downs Is 58.
The mandrake lS a com- childless but the erfort or
forts
at self-improvement.
Thought
for
today:
The
administration
announced
mon pl'l,nt in southern Pales- pulling it up with cure lwnOlh&lt;•rs
who want this issue
love
we
give
away
is
the
only
plans
to
sell
billions
of
dollars
" How about some fun! Let's go to the border
tine. An old superstition, bago. When the last fibers
t•an send 50 cents with a long,
lo
ve
we
keep
,
Elbert
worth
or
arms
to
Egypt
and
and taunt 'em about our oil reserves . "
which still survrves. says give way and the root comes
Saurli Arabia as well as to _Hubbard, Americn writer, stamped. self-addressed
tha t he who digs up the long up, a semihuman scremp is
t•nveh•pe fur 11. Send your reIsr.cl, saying it would help 1856-1~19 .
and branched root will be supposed to result.

ln

EASTERN VARSITY SQUAD - Making up Eastern's
Varsity basketball teaJil are front, 1..-, Lawrence Pooler,
Jeff Goebel, Gene Cole and Brett Matthews; back, Joe

1

t*****************************************•••; •

WA SHINGTON (AP) Kansas had the lowest
unemployment rate and
Alaska the highest jobless
rate among the 50 states at
the end of 1978, the federal
goverrunent reports.
Hy WALTER R. MEARS
Unemployment estimates
AP Special Correspondent
released th1s week by the
WASHINGTON (AP) Bureau of Labor Statistics With President Carter as with
our issue .''
showed that Kansas bad a his predecessors, the bottom
Dole, Gingn ch and others who echoed them may well be cor- jobless rate of 2.7 percent in line is loyalty to the
rect in their assessment of the political allure of a balance-the- D ec ember , while administratiOn once the
budget amendment But that doesn't make 11 good pulley - unemployment m Alaska president has set its course.
which the majority of Tidewater II parllcipants acknowledg- stood at 11.4 percent.
PreSidents never have
ed, to their everlasting credit.
Nationally, the unemploy- taken kindly to public
There are a million and one reasons why a constJtutJOnal ment rate was 5.8 percent in disclosure of the pnvate
amendment to reqUire a balanced budget IS a lousy idea , but December. However, the na- debates that shape pobcy, or
most of them are fairly soph1shcated and difficult to explain to tional figure IS adjusted for to public dissent within the
a public pamcked by mflatwn and erroneously convmced that seasonal variations m offiCial family
unbalanced budgets are to blame.
employment patterns, while
"Once I make that
No matter how 11 is written, any constitutional amendment the ,state figures are not. decision, I expect my policy
reqwrmg a balanced budget IS fraught with perils For Thus, state JObless rates to be carried out , with loyalty
starters, as many of the Tidewater II delegates noted, it could cannot be compared directly and with enthusiasm, ''
easily lead to whopping tax mcreascs to make revenues match to the national rate .
Carter said Monday
expenditures - hardly what most advocates of the amendment
Kansas was among eight
Enthusiasm may be a bit
lmve in mmd. But that 'il one sure-f1re way to balance a budget. states with unemployment much to expect from an aide
Furthermore, there are times- such as war or an economic rates estimated to be under 4 who has seen his counsel reemergency brought on by something like another ml embargo percent at the end of 1978. The jected, but a president
-w hen a balanced fed eral budget "ould be a flat-out disaster. others were South Dakota, 3.0 certainly is entitled to expect
Some have suggested an "escape " clause allowing two-thirds percent ; Nebraska, 3.1 ; loyalty from his advisers
of the Congress to approve dehc1t spendmg m such emergency Oklahoma, 3.2; Wyoming , even if they don't agree with
Situati ons, but that puts enormous power for nusch1ef m the 3.5; New Hampshire, 3.6; soniethmg he has decided to
hands of one-third plus one of the members.
Utah, 3.7, and Minnesota, 3.9. do .
.
The Republicans who met here last weekend were umted m
Ten other states bestdes
In that situation, loyalty
their support for reduced federal spending and balanced Alaska had unemployment can simply mean silence.
federa l budgets. But, 1n a commendable display of respon- rates of 6.5 percent or more.
All of this came up after
sibility, the majority of them were not willing to engage m They were Arkansas, 7 8; Carter lectured his top aides
what Rep. Barber Conable , R-N Y. called "constitutional Rus- Hawau, 7.2; New Jersey, 6 9; in three White House
Sian roulette' ' to achieve those goal s
Michigan and Washington, meetings, telling them to be
6.7; M1ss1ssippi and New careful what they say to
- -....---"---------- -----1'' York, 6.6, and Idaho, Oregon reporters .
and West Virg1ma, 6.5.
Carter was quoted as
The government sa1d saying that "those of · us in
jobless rates declined from responSible poSitions ought to
December 1977 levels m 34 be very careful abou't making
' slates, rose in 12 states and pnbbc comments wh1ch could
remamed unchanged in four contribute to a misappreslates.
hension about what out policy
The
states
where was. "
unemployment rates rose
The subject is a difficult
.-!ENN ING , Tenn . (AP ) - Except for a few new Main Street were Alaska , Arkansas, one because Ri chard M.
busmesses and a large sign hallmg Henning as the "Home 'Of Hawail,. Idaho, Illinois, Nixon gave confidentiality a
Alex Hailey," th1s small west Tennessee town has changed Indiana , Iowa, Kentucky, bad name by invoking
little from pre-"Roots '' days.
North Dakota, Tennessee , national security and the
But local off1c1als are hopmg the television sequel to Hailey 's Virginia and Wisconsin. Un- pr1vacy of White House conbest-selling novel "Roots" w1ll change that .
changed were Maryland, versations in the attempted
"We had about 2,000 people visit here because of interest in New Jersey, South Dakota Watergate cover-up.
the book," Mayor Bill Brandon said Tuesday . "And we have and Texas_
But the excesses of the
had people who have moved here who never would have othThe government cautioned Nixon admmistration don't
erwise "
that samples used to compute change the fact that a
OtiS Scogg ins, who mo~ed to Henning two years ago, con- jobless levels in the less pres1dent couldn 'I function if
verted an old movie house to a beer tavern. Two antique shops populous states are small, everything 'he and his staff
and a sporting goods store also have opened for business.
thus
the
reported said to each other was
Haley also is negotiating to buy his family home in Henning, unemployment rates could be available for publication.
which has- been listed in the National Register of Histone off a percentage point or
Carter came to office
Places.
more from the-actual JObless promising
open
an
"Roots II," a 14-hour sequel to the award-wmning televiswn rate m those states.
administration , and
series, will be alfed by ABC-TV beginning Sunday.

Though I am In to- to it? As of this writing four of
tal sympathy with th e the twenty-four remaining
objective spelled out in 'the states who have yet to gain
various budg et balancing passage of such a petition,
petitions approved by 26 of have had one of their two
our
na tion 's
state legislative houses approve
legislatures, I feel compelled such a proposal. It appears
to express my strong that an additional five states
reservations about the end support the concept and will
result such actions may possibly act on like
prompt ; namely , the con- legislation shortly.
My fear is, that should the
vening of a constitutional
required
number of states
convention to act on these
pass
a
budget
balancing
~it ions.
proposal,
setting
into
motion
Article Vof the Constitution
reads that '1he Congress on the convening of a conthe application of the stitutional convention, that
legislatures of two-thirds of there are no groundrules for
the several states shall call a such a convention to go by.
con vention for proposing One often expressed concern
is that such convention would
amendments."
The ultimate number of not be limited to just the
states needed to bring about 'single ISsue of budget
such a convention is 34. If balancing that brought it into
eight more states jom the 26 ex1stence m the first place.
who have already approved Some speculate that such a
budget balancmg pelltlons, convention could propose a
we as a country will be facing complete rewr1tmg of our
the possibility of such a cherished constitution if they
conven!lon for only the so chose. Many feel that a
second time in our two constitutional convention
hundred ' and three year would be a very vulnerable
history . In 1905, two-thirds of target for the single-issue
the states sent petitions to lobbies , lobbies bent on
Congress in support of an seeing action taken on long
amendment to permit the sought amendments condirect election of United cerning a number of con-'
States .Senators. Instead of troversial subjects.
convening a convention, the
As one who has authored
Congress, as wa~ its option, countless budget cutting
elected to draft its own amendments during my
amendment which wsa service in the Congress and
thereafter ratified by the as one who has co-sponsored
required number of states. It an amendment to ban deficit
is my hope that the states will spending on the part of the
again force the hand of the ·Federal government in the
Federal legislature,. and that last two Congresses, I again
the Congress w1ll see to 1t that want to express my full
the public will is served in a support for the passage of
like marmer; that is, through such a proposal. I only hope
a Congressionally approved that the enactment of such an
constitutional amendment amendment can be acrather than through the complished through con convening of a constitutional ventional legislative means
convention .
rather than through the risky
What are the chances of process of a constitutional
such a conv ention being convention.
called and why am I opposed '

undergoing renovation.
In addition to Zoell er ,
Lietzke and Watson, who said
he ISn't playing up to his
usual standards at this time ,
U1e 144-man field includes
Hubert Green , the run-away
Wlllller last week m Hawaii,
U!e Trevino, J .C. Sllead ,
Arnold Palmer, J ohnny
M1ller and Mark Hayes ,
another who fits Wat-son 's
description of a potential

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP ) Donna Parker took the $1,200
featured pace mile 111 a photo
finish Tuesday night at Lebanon .
The winner paid $6.80, $2.60
and $2.40. Just Fnendly was
mwt1c1pal cour se for the fir st second, returning $2.40 and
lime. It was pressed in to $2.40, and Charloe Byrd was
third, paying $4.
serv1ce on a once-only basis
The 7-4 double of Peggy's
while Tucson National - the
Red
Rock and Little Sampson
usual site of this event - IS
paid $39.20.
The small crowd of 963 bet
$88,600.
Ohto College Bas ketba ll
By The Assoctated Press
Tu esday Ntght
Conferenc e
Oht O

Ba ld wi n . Wa ll ace
Obe rlin 62
Hetd e! b erg
11 0,
Wesleyan 102

78,

Oht o

Presidents

winner .
Hayes has played very well
this season, loswg once m a
pla yoff and challenging
strongly m another event.
He1 S fresh from a week 1S

break and could be a threat
here
Portions of the fina l two
rounds Saturday and Sunday
will be televised nationally by
NBC.

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
t Guns and
Reloading
.. Ba II Gloves
Camp&lt;ng
Equipment
e •Arche ry
• Indoor Games
•'We
have Gift
Certificates
601 Main St.

All egheny 95, Htran 85
Mtd .Ohto
M alon e 79, Wal sh 76
Mt Ver non Na zarene 67 ,
T tfftn 62
Ohm Dom mtcan 81. Cedar
v tll e 72
Rto G r ande 83, Urbana 81

Pt . Pleasant , W. Va .

Oth er Ga m es
Akron 94, Ashlan d 76

SVAC
standings
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAME S
TEAM
W L P

OP
Sou ther n
11 4 1060 876
Southwes ter n 9 8 1103 1088

Eastern
North Gal lo a

8 8 955

7 9
Kyge r Cr eek 2 14
Hannan Tr ac e 1 12

TEAM

996

931 102 1
877 1025
711 102 1

SVAC Oi'IL Y

Southe r n
Southwester n
Eastern
Nor th Ga l Ita
Ha nnan Tra ce
Kyger Creek

W L P
1 642
7 3 725
7 3 638
A 5 521
8

I

OP
J81
599
595
507

7 367 553

0 9

47 3 580

PERK UP WDH PAINT

SVAC RESERVE S
TEAM
W L P OP
North Gaili a 9 o 458 283
Souther n
8 I 550 378
Eastern
6 4 427 514
Hannan Trace 2 6 264 360
Kyger Creek 2 7 307 JJS
Southwester n 1 9 302 470
Th1s week 's ga m es
Wednes day - Nor th Galli a

at Hannan Trac e
Frtday Sout hern

Nor t h Ga ll1 a at

Wall

Paint
I Excellent
covering
power

1 Whateve~ ~ you
cover

LUCITE

wtth

wet

stays covered

when. it dries
•Soap
and
water clean-up

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W, VA.

�4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . ,Wednesday , Feb. !4. 19.79

l~oday's

f:u·

What hapl!en.s after
Sports World 'The Bird·' graduates?
'

Ry STEVE HERMAN

Ry Will Grimsley
AP Corn•sptmdrnt

" Anytime you
have
someone Umtgood, he's going
to draw a lot of atten ti on. Not
on ly from the falls. but from
the media C:I S weU/ ' said
King , who signed Bird four
years ago, red-shirted him

liP Sport&lt; Writer

1.2 Yl'HI"S a t the University

this

.&lt;., l'~t ~ut l

I 'I oJllt ' l ' l' llt ' l'

wit.li

th!:

(' h (llll p j (.JII S hi)J

•li t t•arl y assured. ··
'I he
ll u l mt~n
Ct'n ter,
dr: tpe d with si~n s and .
ba 11 ner s, now is l'efcrr e d to on
n nnpus as " the ho45~ thal
1

or

Ne.w Mcxi l!o, ln ll eritt•d ~
proJ,.: ram t.h(l t ll &lt;i ~ prudUI.:ed
j ust one win ning seC:~wn in the

li r&lt;l lili&lt;o&lt;l." imd stude nts· line

up hou rs before Ci:lCh game

aJH I. ~• ill lind U1e onl y space
l1 •fl is stan ding:-roomo nly .
lltxlgt•s' goal all alo ng has
i.lt!cn to win the Missouri
Va lley championship and
ce:trn a berth in the NCAA
tourney , where he hopes to
sti fl e critics who contend the
S\'l'amores· schedule hasn't
bee n ru gge d cnou gh to ·
warrant the nation's No. I
rcinking But the \on g~· a nge
effect of the Bird-&lt;ra success,

TEHRF. HAUTE , Ind . (AP )
- Indiana State University's
NEW YORK ( AP) -He wore a full -length wolf-fur coat and rise from virtual obscurity to c.
prev iou s
fu ur
years.
a black derby hat. Gold chains dangled at his throat. Diamonds . nationa l prominence in
AI tcnilance at homt' ~ames
winked from his fingers . Store-bought teeth glistened in the basketball began with the
averag ed barely ove r 2,000 in
glare of the lights- rows of ivory that could make a president arrival of Larry 'Bird th ree one sea.son and coached him th e lO ,fHJ O-sc al ll ulnwn
jealous.
,
. .
years ago. But what happens two years before Stepping Center.
Even with all the trappings, there is a refreshing honesty when the 6-foot-9 All- down because of illness.
''S t&gt;m e time:; , you could
and simplicity about Leon Spinks, the young Olympic gladiator American graduates thi s
"As far as recruiting, \\'e ha\'e fir ed a shotgun at rhc
who beat the great Muhammad Ali for the WBA heavyweight spring?
can talk with the best now . Slfl nds and not hit anybody,,.
ring title and lost it before the gloves got cold.
"A super player always We don 't have to compete s&lt;J itl sport s information
He is an intriguing personality, this product of the St. Louis helps your program," says with Bobby Knight or any of director Ed McKee.
ghetto - uneducated but street wise, bull strong and bulldog Athletic Director Bob King, them."
The caliber of basketball
tough, ·a survivor of the neighborhood jungle yet, like Ali, a who doesn't expect a
King , who came here as "had been a .500 situation ,"
man who cuts through the thick layer of hype and hypocrisy drama ti c backslide when athl etic
dire ctor
and King recalled . '"11wy had just
with disarming candor.
Hird departs.
basketball coach in 1974 after moved to tNCAA I Divis ion I
"You are a black man and you are going to fight an ex-eop
a few years ear her, and our
from South Africa ," a reporter told him. "Jesse Jackson (the
bigge st problem was the
black civil rights activist) has urged that you don't go through
schc'&lt;iule. gelling a major
with it. Others are exerting political pressure. Ha ve you
schedule."
thought about how the public might feel?"
"My first job.as athletic di"No matter how the public feels, no matter how I feel , if I am
rector was to get us into a
going after the title I am going after it," Spinks responded .
good major league. We were
"ll'snot a racial thing. It's nota hate thing.lt's just that I am
decided by three or fewer ~ ble to mo ve into the
By GEORGE STRODE
trying to make a living. This man is in the way."
points. The Arrows, 12-4 Mlssouri Vall t:!y Conf erence,
AP Sports Writer
Spinks is uncomfortable on a dais, facing a battery of reportCOLUMBUS, Ohio (liP) - ov~ rall , won five of the close and this was a bi g help to our
ers, TV, radio men and flashing cameras, but anyone who can Maybe those are greyhmmds ones.
program .' '
stand up to Ali for 30 rounds should be able to hold his own disguised as high school
Canton McKinley's boys
Then, of courSe, came Bird,
under the most trying circumstances.
basketball players fo r are 16-1 and and its girls 15-l. who had left Knig ht's squad
The 25-year-old heavyweight was brought out of temporary Cincinnati Swrunit Country McKinley's boys stopped Co- at Indiana University and
seclusion by Top Rank's Bob Arum, announcing that Spinks' Day.
lumbus South's Bobby Harr is enrolled at tiny Northwood
quest to regain the championship would begin against Kallie
on
just eight points last week. Institute near hi s southern
The Silver Knights have
Knoetze, the terror of Johannesburg , some time in May.
was ce ntral Ohio's lndicma home at French I.ick .
Harris
sped by their last three
Opponents of South Africa's apartheid (separation of the opponents for more than 100 leading scorer with a 28-point Aid ed primar ily by Bill
races) policy have sought to have the South African fighter points each time for a 17-0 average going into the game. Hodges, who moved up from
barred. Spinks was pressed to conunit himself on the rna Iter. record. They walloped ll was the first time since the an assistantship after King
"How do I know? " Spinks replied logically. "How could I Cincinnati Christian 105-26, opening game of his s uffer ed a seri ou s heart
feel like somebody I'm not ? We are not at war . He is an indi- Cincinnati Country Day 105- sophomore year that the !i-10 attack last summer and later
vidual. I am an individual. If you can't fight for a world title, 53, arid St. Francis Seminary senior did not hit double an aneurism . the Sycamore
you can't prove anything."
figures.
llW2.
coach lured Bird back to
Spinks acknowledged that he had been caught up in the euWayne
Wi se m an\ school.
Summit Country Day has
'phoria of his overnight success- from Olympic gold medalist rolled past the century mark Springfield South 's coach ,
King's first year produced
to world champion in less tban two years - and he couldn't seven times for an 88.4 now has a 301-164 career a 1:1-12 record . The next year.
pointsper-game average. Six record.
cope.
•
with Bird in the lineup, the
He became entangled with promoters and wheelers and of its players average in
There were seven technical S~· carri.ores were 25-3 and
dealers. He said b'usiness interfered with his .boxing.
fouls on Mendon Union in its . e~r n ed
double figures .
a
National
"It all happened too fast, " he said. "I didn't have time to
87-15
loss to Minster, with In vitational Tournament bid.
Around Ohio : Jim Weiss, a
think. I couldn't adjust to the mistakes. But it's different now . I 6-foot guard from Tallmadge, three of them on the coaches They were 23-9 with another
got a better handle on my life. "
posted a school reeord 50 and four on the players.
NIT bid last year , and they
What about Larry Holmes, the WBC titleholder ?
points against Ravenna last
"If Holmes is there I will fight him," Spinks said simply. "I week. Weiss sank 22 of 23 free
don't want to fight nobody . But it's my job, the only one I know. throws and 14 of 2I floor
I got to make a living."
shots.
Clark Kellogg, Cleveland
St. Joseph's 6-8 whiz, has
visited the campuses of Ohio
State, Michigan, Notre Dame
and Kentucky . Kellogg,
looking for a school with high
academic standards for a
possible business career,
may also visit Duke and "a
West Coast school.''
CINCINNATI (AP)
Neither team had won as
Archbold High School, a
Cincinnati
Bengals mid-season approached.
Class
AA school from Fulton
quarterback Ken Anderson
"When you are losing, it is County, needs a victory over
now says he came back too a funny thinlJ. Everything Delta Friday to become the
soon from a hand injury last bounces the wrong way ," he first team in the state to
fall, hoping to salvage a said.
reach 1,000 victories.
disastrous 4-12 season.
Anderson said he was not
Archbold has a 999-386 allAnderson suffered a broken intimidated but frustrated. time
record . Archbold began
finger in the final pre-season "And it wasn 'I only my
the
sport
in 1911, posting a 3-2
game against the Green Bay feeling . It was the feeling of record. Since
then , the school
Packers and was sent off to a the whole offense. Doe time I has had 18 seasons of 20
Louisville, Ky ., hospital would go back and I couldn't triumphs or more, including
wbere doctors mended it by get the pass off . The next five undefeated years.
inserting pins.
time I'd get good protection
The five top teams in the
"It was pretty obvious I at- and throw a bad pass. Then a
Lima
Class AAA Sectional
tempted to come back too pass would be dropped . It was
Toucnament
have
a
soon, said Anderson, looking frustrating."
71-10
record,
led
by
combined
back on the team's
But Anderson continued to
When you take th ese coupons to your store
unsuccessful
National play knowing he was top-seeded Findlay's 15-1
mark and 16-1 by No. 2
you'll instantly save 50C
Football League season.
physically below par, taking Celina. Napoleon is 14-1,
"I probably shouldn't have his shots when the rookie pass
on Savarin'" lnstant
.,-~
Wapakoneta 13-3 and Lima
thought about playing until blockers collapsed.
and automatically
Senior 13-4.
New England," he said,
" If you are worrying about
If
Youngstown
Rayen
save another 25Con
referring to !he seventh getting hurt , maybe you
the
regular
season
finishes
regular season game. But the shouldn't be playing," he
Savarin Au tomat ic
18-0, the Tigers will be the
club was 0-4 under reserve said.
Filter Coffee.
first Youngstown city team to
quarterback John Reaves
Then the team came go undefeated in the last 40
Wh ich is good
and ultimately, Coach Bill together
when r ookie
"Tiger"· Johnson resigned. defen sive lineman Ross years. They are coached by
news for people who
But Anderson was not fit Browner came off the injured Frank Cegledy, who was 20-3
in his first season last winter.
when he returned . His passes list.
Craig Tubbs, No. I Portsstrayed. He was repeatedly
"Maybe the odds caught up mouth's
guard,
50~
STOI1l Cll li i'O N
intercepted, the fans booed with us. We could not pumped outstanding
in
29
points,
and started staying home.
continue to lose," Anderson including 15 of 16 foul shots, in
"The people expected me to said.
a 56-53 victory over
Mr Groc~r Eac h r.fl u(JOil cnl ol it''&gt; ytJ ur
turn things around and I
cu stomer to 50t o ft tow~ut ~ '''l' pur
Wheelersburg.
II was the 16th •
\
LAFFA
DAY
cha$1!
ot sa ...ann cottec ro• r.Kh cou
didn't," he said. But the Benpon you acce pt /'!&lt;;our ar rt horr/ 1'11 ;rt :r·n t.
time in 17 games this winter
we wrl l pay you ~c plu~ 5C lhu!rllmg
gals won their last four
that Tubbs has gone over 20
cha rges, provrd ed you :tmJ your L uc,
games in a strong finish .
tamers have comptrerl wrth the t crrr1 ~ ot
points.
thr ~ of lfJr Any o ther 11p p l r c ~ t ron CO rl'rl!
Things got worse, however,
t ut es f raud . IOIIOIC{'S ~ tlowr flj ynur pu r
·
If
East
Clinton
beats
c h a ~e nt ~ uttr c r cn r S!OCII ro ·c o·Jer ,,II
before they got better.
+' ·r 2 .
couoon; rn u ~l be showrr upon rc quc·,t
~-- ~ Waynesville Friday, It will be
"Being booed Is a big part
lq &lt;"~
Vo
•rl 11 pro hro rtl&gt;d, lit•t.'l l fH H· ~t r r ted
+
a school record 16th victory in
'!"'l,
or prc~ent {!(l by ou tSide &lt;lJif'nn es, tou·
of playing quarterback .
oon txo~cr s or ot hers w ho art: not ret.1rl
one season. East Clinton's
d•st r•hutors ol our mcrcha n tii~C C&lt;1sh
There is no middle of the road
H \
value 1120 ol ! C. Coupons w
rll be re
best
previous
mark
was
15-ll
deemed by marl Se ndtoS A Schonbr unn
with the people."
T ~
in the early 1960s. Gary
&amp; Co. lrlC .. P.tl 1s.1des Park , N.J 07650.
"We would look at . the
Couporr t!•P" ~ December 31. 197R
.
.
&amp; /!)
~· Howard of Uttle Miami bad
scoreboard to see what St.
SA'I{50C!*
.
43
points
against
Louis was doing, to make " Look&gt; lik e we had an 85 Blanchester.
'twlllXT60Z.OR100Z.
sure they were losing too,"
Eight of Tecumseh New
I•
Y SA'iMJij INSTANT.
An derson remembe r ed . percent cost overrun on our Carlisle's 16 games have been
lunch."

Ohio Sportlight

H'

.-----..

-

a

The Photo .Place

PLANT WORKERS

~

:--:~---~

very special perso n i ~ {
~r lives . We th ank God f~r

~

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4•· Y-Ji

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/ ci

--=~~~~t1e
•

served fast to you before going
to work? ·Then come to The

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge in
Clifton,

9c001il7 :00
Saturday 9 : 00.9i00

7 UP

CLOSED

oi

~UNDAYS

ValleY BPll

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..............
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MARGARINE............ ~~~!..1:~~ .......:.49 ·
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Lovr·Lor

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~Valentine, Debbie,

! After th ree h&lt;'IPP V vca rs, I I
L st llllove only you
Roge:J

.__.._...._...._.._...__.._ '

L e ltmg

you

kno w

l
:Jl ·

you 're in

pro -.

Yea r . Th e f a m il y's

rn y though ts every minute
of ever y dnv ·
Love, Ji'ICk
l_..._..,_..._..._.._.._.._,

you 're a pai r

ur

Love, pMen tc.
and g randp are n t ~

_.._.._.._...__.__ !

.

apprec1ate you and are
praymg fo r you . Lot s of
love,
Bob and N.::mcy

~e~emberourtirstyalen ·

GraBndma and Grand-\

pa 1ron :

I
i

qneofmyhap p1nest. llove
Y
,ou .
(
. Love , Dream.Ja.
~--__.._.._.._
.

t-tappyValentine'sDay .
Love,
LiSCI&lt;'!ndDavid , XXXOOO ,
.._..._..l.

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l.-..-._____
.

r.._.._._.._._._~

0

r-----~--.-.---,

11

tw?

you,
end !! ! Bruce ,
.
.
We 10ve you , Pa.
To
wonderful\
all. we think you 're the ~Tothe or eilt cs t quylnthe l ~ Getwe l lsoon.
I ~parents.
\
world: · Ca n' t WC~it until
Mary, Ron, Bobbi e, ~ We couldn 't hfl ve r1sked tor!
fi no·sbay
June. Lov e ynbunches
Bub, Benny , Donna , \
better. Hi'l ppy Vi'll e ntir,~ e 's
Love ,
Chri sty. I
Kenda and Mommie
Dfl y.
'
stevr• &lt;'! ndDr c;tmt~
~
Tile Rought Girls
..-..-..-.-..-.--- ' ._._.._.._.._.._.._..._._...4, ~--------~ . . - - - - - . - - - -

l

L

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!

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---rr~-_.,--

~

Mom
Dad .. ·
I
.
\.
J weco uldn 't have hi'ldn ice r J Tomyhusband .
I
pfl rents. We love you.
~
I love you so muc h. you are
!
·
Sherry , Terry , \ \ wond erfuL
~
ShaUn and Doug
. Lov ~, I
·
you rwll e, Gol dre

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prefe r richer tasting coffee . Because Savarin
lnsta nt and Savarin AFC are made from blends of
the world's finest coffee beans. Beans that are deep
roasted for a richer, heartier flavor.
So go ahead and cl ip out the coupons. They'l l
leave you with agood
taste in your mouth
and some change
in your pocket

'" t

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plus

Cllar!]es,

your

CMse o t sullr crent stoc~ to co~er all
coup.:ms must be shown upon reQue st.

Voi(l rf prCJh ib rted, ta•ed or rest ri~.: ted
oi p!C$enled by Outside agencres. cdupon brOke r s or o ther s wt1o are not retirl
o f OIH rper chamlise . Cilsh
va lue- 1120 o f ] C. Coupons wrll be r,.
deemed by ma rl. Send toS.A. SChonbrunrl
&amp; Co . 'I nc ., Palisades Park, N.J . 07650 .
Coupo'n e•pites December 3 1. 1979 , - ~

.
•

·~ ·

~

•
•'

...'

j

Doug,
go 1

our ups and

appy Vale nt me s Day. .
Love. Bamb1

..,..... _ _..._.._.._.._..._._..

j

r--------1

LB

.

'We love you, Daddy,

Becky,Barbie andDenny

tove you' \I

0

.

~

j

I

Dick, Sharon,
Mi chele, Danny

.

!

·~

~ ~

-------1

Tr ecia&amp;Shann o.nKH!leS ,
Hartfor d, WV

·d·

1

89~

12 Ol

~

ear

J

Holly :
You didn't think I 'd do it
. .
,
gn1n, d1d you. I love you ,
John

----------

rr·:p;y-::-:-e:t:::-sl
Day
Mo m, Arn y, Molly nn(!
Larry, Bambi
Waldo and Scooter t

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Howard·
. ·
.
My c hil d ~cn Greg, Ri ck
andTr ac y.
Happy VC'I Ien tine's Dily .
Wi th love Dre ama

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Love fi i W~~~·

IToKatie:

To the greatest guy

~low· you
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love you more every da y. i
e~ ppy Va lentine's D t~ y . !

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Love yil , alway s.
Lau n,,

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Chi cky

Moose

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Happy

Valentin e's
Day
From The
Daily Sentinel

~._.._..._..._....:,.__.._.._., ~---,---_...........__! '---~-·-·--·-~"""~:

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\To my
Chump , I! To ourMolhor. ·
Delbert :
• Look Mo m! Thi s onr· s for I
~ ~ You becc1 usc " WE Love
!
r Ju ~ t had to say tho'l t " I LOVP I ·! Yo u!.. You' re !he Bcsll !
1 You" and wi sh you a very
Hi'IP PY Vn lent ine's D r~y .
H ap p yVCI I e n t in ~'!,. Day .
1 J Lo r e tl i'l, She&gt;rry , &lt;'Ind . ~
Sherry T C Shilun Cl .
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2 LB. $169

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Sao:~nda~it~e~b b l e, Garen, I
All 1 need 10 know IS that
Love La·rr Bnmb ·
I voulov c me.
I
Wa,ldoanydscoot el~ I

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WandilMa e:
H&lt;lppy V~lcnti ne's

m'iJ~s, !:~f'~d i
A~nt JaneandUnc leH C~rry ~tmc s Day .
·
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i much.
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Dad ,l nd Mom ~ i

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Mom c1nd Dad ~ !

very much_
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Momm y and 0Mddy J

oeanDott · ~ o

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To a sweet nephew:

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Ju s1me _

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Love, J"dy , Bunn oc

My beloved Amigo : ! ! Stacy Talisha Davis II Til mara ,
.
1 So thnnkful God g.:we us
The years h~w e come and
C?n your very f1rst Vi! len
such a "S weethertrl " Have

mer.

~ ~~~~~~~~in=~do:;Clndm as

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Dil n end Temer e

....... _.,.fied equal yield bill coming

$119
lB.

ilnd Mom and Dad
F' 1
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SUPERIOR

LB.

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SUPERIOR
FRANKIES
SLICED
JOWL

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weve
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STO R[COUPON

Mr Groc er E&lt;tc h coupon enhl les your
cu(tamcr to 2'5 C off toward s the ptJrcha:;e o f Savar rn Coffee . For eac h c ou·
pon you 11ccept as our aut hor iced ~ge nt
we w11 1 PiiY you :?5C
5C h~ ndl i ng
prov• ded ~au and
cust omer s have complr ed wit h the terms of
tlrr ~ of tcr. Any Qther appl!cal ian ca nsl i·
tut os I raW . tnvorces showing your pu ~­

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~ ~ove evervth.ng we hcwe
.
!
o essie.
To my Superman
together . Without you .. ! I We. lOve you for th e lovro ! Lovf' IY Vi!l cntin e and .\In h.is unifor m
. . HE! ppy !
there is no love.
! y~ u bes tow on us anci
I fri end , too. We a ll S&lt;lY we I Vc'l lentine's Dov .
Love, Duk e
~ 91VIngofyourse ll lo us.
! IOV&lt;'YOU.
Love forever , ~

God gave us the world 's i To the gre~tcst Mom and
best Mom and Gran d
Gr,1nd mu In the world :
moth er that ever wa s. ~Ve ~ Hnp py Valentine's Dny,.
love you .
.
I Love. Kay·,G ienn,Mi stee
Th e :~htsj I
and Rodney

.
'

Ohio (AP) of the Senate
C&lt;mmittee said
will Introduce a
'difled equal ·yield"
formula to distribute ·
aid to educa lion in Ohio
the next two years. ·
Ma'"'us A. Roberto, DRa~~na, said his measure
replace '\he current

.,_,,.,n

equal yield formula which is tlon)
updat~
and
under challenge beflX'e the reappraisals, and a limited
number of state dollars have
Ohio Supreme Court.
"The bill was drafted to all conspired to complicate
meet some of tbe persistent school. funding ," Roberto
problems existing In the • said.
Roberto •s bill apparently
funding of elementary and
secondary schools. The lack results from skepticism
of growtH in local tax among rnajlX'ity Democrats
revenues, problems of that a proposal by GOP Gov.
triennial (property tax valua- James A. Rhodes , contained

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t•n&lt;''s, D,1v
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To Doug and Bunnie: i
Our Val entine hea rlsof t hr-

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HEAD
CHEESE
SALT

2/25C:

1

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V e~l en

Dearest Esther·
.
.

c. To a very spe cial\!

Greg ,

.
.•

SLICED

RADISHES

Mom,

~

d·ever your s,

'

LB. $109

. . . . . . . . .~

I IOV(' you• H ilppy

lov e you bofh very much '
Lt.n c ·~ Dil y
Love · La n ,

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lilrry ,

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SPARE
RIBS

B Pilk i6 oz . Blls .
Ohio University
Plus.
_Commemorative Btl. Tax &amp;deposit
.

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barling:

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better serve you.

59'
LIQUID DISH DffiRGENT ·• • ••• •••• • • • • •• • • • • •• • •
22 01 . '169
COFFEEMATE •• • ••• •••• •• •.• •• • ••.• •~. •• •• • •• • •• ·

Sweetheart

....

W.O.W. !
~

~

Open at 6:00 A.M. to

HUNTS KETCHUP ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·1.19
30 gal . 1n ct .
BES PAK TRASH BAGS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11.59
Jl ckley · ) 0 OI ·
BOLD 3 NEW FABRICSOFTENER • • • •• • •• • • • • •• •• • 69'
22 01 .
89'
IVORY LIQUID • • • • •• • • •• • •• • •• • •• • • • •• •gal.
• • •• • •
SWEETHEART FABRIC SOFTENER .. ••• • • •• •• • • • •••• 89'
~
P.HEB.E'S STORE
Thursday, Feb . lsthrough Feb . 17
we Gladly Accept Feii. ·Food St•mp•
Monday thru Friday

U:.ove ya m th e morn ing,
· love ya at nig ht, love ya
~e~twhite hol di ng me fi ght.

;.

24

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Mom and Dad:

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Falcon's Parkkette's new dining
facility ••• % mile below the

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Hi Big Robin!
can I say' Who
alwavs unde st d ·
r
r an s.

SUc h a special Mom . we
tpve you. Happy Valen
fl1
y

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Do you want a good breakfast

w ·-

Tn ,, w under ful set at
pMf'nts lo w hom 1owe iJ lot
.1n r1 will nev er l'lc nhle to
r cpc1 y . Give M&lt;1tf hf'w m y
tow' un ti l 1 r an qPt ho m ~ .
N1ncl .

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Anderson says he
came back too soon

1

111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

state lor1 g · Gilbert, a junior t-ollege All.;,
who
alsQ
donnnat cd by Indi ana , American
transferred
here
this
year;
6&lt; •
l'urdue and Notre Dame,
a
forward
Brad
Miley,
known
:'
eould ~no wba ll .
Ow•'shadowed by Bird's more for defense than •
glor y is a supporting cast that scoring , l!lld 6-2 point guard·
will return four starters and Steve Reed.
two of the top three subs next
year. The heir apparent as
....
tea m lea de r· is junior guard
ePortr ili fs
•
Carl Nir ks, whq, played lor
•
King as freshman two years
•wecttliogs
ago, then o'P"nt a ·year at Gull
eSpec ia l Occasions
Coast ComrnWJity College in
~'l o rida before returning to
•Pass ports
Terre Haute this season .
The 6-foot-2 Nicks, who
averaged just 2.2 points a
.
game for indiana State two
(Bob
Hoeflich)
years ago, is second to Bird in
:109 Hig'h St.
scoring this season with a 19.6
average. lllso back next year
Pomeroy
will be 6-7 forwar\1 Alex
u-.pt•r· Jtr lly in

i l!'l ' L:J ht • id ~ 11 ill ?,:\ g~ l lll'S i:iO

in ' his State of the ~tate
address Feb . 6, is not
adequately funded.
Rhodes prop ose d an
increase of $6:!6 million for
primary and secondary
education in the 1979-1981
bienium, and said it would
provide for an increase in
basic ~tate aid from $960 to
$1 .~0 per pupil next year,

and to $1,300 the followin g . aid, will provide an additional shortcomings of the equal
$40 million in aid to yield flX'mula , fully funded by
year .
RobertO said his proposal, disadvantaged pupils, an the legislature last year for
to be introduced later today, increase of $4,000 to $5,000 per the flrst time.
It came under attack in a
calls fiX' a hlke from ~ to unit in operating allowar.ces
$1,160 per pupil iii the first for vocational education, and lawsuit filed by the Cincinnati
year of the biennium, and to an increase in minimum City School District which
equal
yield
$1,200 in J!lll(}.l9Bl.
teacher salaries of $500 in contends
However , the education eaqh year of the biennium. discriminates
in
the
chairman listed the cost of his
Whatever
formula distr;bution of aid to the
proposal at $700 million, or eventually is used, the ·state's 2.1 million puplic
$64 million more than the proposals of both the school pupils.
On appeal by the state to
governor 1 s.
governor and Roberto apRoberto said his bill, in parently are de sig ned to the 1st District State Court of
addition to the hikes in basic ove r co m e alleged Appeals, the appellate court

agreed in part and disagreed
in part, and both sides subsequently appealed to the Supreme Court. A· decision
could come in. late March,
litigants say.

Safetyman Peter Harris of
Penn State Is a younger
brother of Franco Harris of
the Pittsburgh Steelers, who '· .,
also played for Penn state.

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7- Tl!e Dally Sentinel, fttldcBeport.Pmleroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb . 11 , 1!17!1

..
't
February proclaimed as 'Heart month

6- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, t'eb. 14. 1979

.:·,

...

Church celebrates · ,..•-..r--.-·---..,.--r---r--..,.--.,---r---.,
62nd-anniversary

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- - 'Governor James Rhodes
issued a proclamation
Monday designating
February as American Heart
Month and urging area
residents to support the 1979
campaign to be conducted
nationwide.
In the proclamation ,
Governor Rhodes asked for
· ,_~~rt of the central Ohio

campaign in the fight against _
the nation's No. I killer,
cardiovascular diseases.
"These diseases accounted
for nearly 1,000,000 of the
nation's deaths last year,"
_reported Stephen F. Schaal.
M.D., president of the Central
Ohio
Heart
Chapter,
head~uartered in Columbus.
"That's over one-half of the

CHOICES

deaths from all cases."
research , education ;md
More than_ 2,000 ,000 ~manily oL'!'Vice projeL'Is.
volunteers nationwide will
ese programs are auned at
join the effort to di'stribute reducing premature death
~earl-saving information and
and disability from diseases
collect contributions for heart of the heart and circulatory
system. Here in Franklin .
County, nearly 17,000 local
lx.•t·ause ht&gt; wasn 't around residents will canvass their
ve1·y much. ll was upsetting neighborhoods during
because I knew he wwld February lor donations to
know whn made those muddy support Heart Association
programs. The door·to-door
f•••lprints down the hall.
convassing
will culminate
"Then, when I gut a lillie
Heart
Sunday.
scheduled this
older, I figured anyb&lt;Kiy
for
Sunday,
Feb. 25.
year
would have. known who ma&lt;lc
Gov
e
rnor
Rhodes'
them sint t&gt; there was only one
pers on in the house whn wnn•
a Sizl' fi ve shoe. J also figun'&lt;l

Karen J:Jiak,er Ph.D.

that my father didn:t knuw
much at all , because my
never do that.
mother told him everything
Adults are
Will I be able to sneak by or and she was the one to be
will I be found out before I feared.
people, too
l'!Uike it as an adullc
"Rut then I discnvered !hal
DEAR READER - You'll neither of lhem mold mullip•
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I'm make it_, but please slop closdoing OK in the loth grade. ing your mind and assuming ly 27 by 56 as quickly as I ·
t•ould, and l cast both of them
But sometimes I gel scared thai adults are always
off ineuntempl. llhuughl that
ix'eause I'm not sure I can brilliant.
it was the teacher who knew
make it all the way through
A young woman in Marilyn everything.
•
high school and college and French'~ " The Women's
"Well,
that
didn
'I
last
ton
out into the world .
Room" once had the same long, but by then I was in enlEver yone else seems to problem. Then her thinking
know so much about changed to the opposite ex· Jege and l really figured the •·
everything. For example, my t reme. Think about her pmfcssors were the nne.s who
teachers are so bright. homespun philosophy and see knew everything . Thai
Sometimes l just kind of close if you can reach some happy dm•sn 'l last too long either.
When you get your first A,
my mind to what they are medium :
you're overjoyed . Then you
saying and sit there in awe
"When I was lillie, I
while they talk on and on thought my father knew get another, another cmd
You are l'OJtvinced
about their subjects. I could everything. That was another.
by nnw !hal none of those prolessors know anything at all.
"You keep going. You
move through the mine field
on tiptoe, wailing for the explosion ." Hut it never comes.
Years and years go by and
nolhing .happens, nobody
finds out. You keep being suc.continues
cessful and you keep getting
to bring you

Today's Topic:

Professionals
and advertising .

Ry .JEFFREY MILl.'!
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) "Dentures $129 each. Free
consultation. All insurance
programs accepted."
The price quoted in the advertisement by a Silver
Spring, Md ., dentist Is
hundreds of dollars lower
than is usually charged by
suburban Washington
dentists for dentures.
The newspaper ad is one of
a growing number across the
country quoting prices for
dental work. Dentists, under
pressure by the federal
government, are slowly
moving to competilion over
prices, and the result is that
consumers can shop for lowcost dental work .
prttmoted .
The American Dental
"One day you wake up and Association, slapped In 19n
you're president and then you with a Federal Trade
are really scared . Because Commission price-fixing
then you know that nobody charge, has been moving to
•60" SURALINE.. ........................ lfz OFF knows anything and they lower its restrictions against
tl)ink you do. It's at thai pdinl advertising by dentists.
Group
you begin to wurry abuul
The association, which
•60" COTTON &amp; POLY KNITS ............ lfz OFF that
the future of mankind."
represents most of the
Maybe adults ought lo stop
dentists, first
•60" CHALIS ............................... lfz OFF assuming that everybody else nation's
removed
a
bar
on
is better olf; maybe ·they membership to anyone who
•52" VELOURS ............................ 1h OFF ought lu stop ~ing so afraid . advertised his prices, Then,
of being "found out." But last !all, the ADA changed its
•56" WOOLS •.•.
1/3 OFF lhat 's easier said lh done code of ethics to say it was
because adults are people, acceptable lor dentists to
Table of
their fees.
•60" KNITS ....... . ......... . ............. lfz Off too.Learn to cope with-the fears advertise
Local dental boards in
Table of
that threaten to disrupt your many areas have joined the
life.
Write for Dr. Blaker's movement by eliding legal
•45" PERM A PRESS FABRIC ............ ¥z OFF hotline,
"II,You Are Phobic." prohibitions on dental
New Fabric Available For
Send
50 cents plus a stamped, advertising.
_
Early Spr.ing Sewing
_ self-a ressed envelope to Dr .
Now the FTC and the ADA
Blaker in care of this are ready to settle the two··
newspaper, P.O. Box 475, year-old
case.
The
SINGER MODEL
Radio City Station, New government and dental
York , N.Y. 111019.
association lawyers have
I SEWING
s149 _95
I Write to Dr. Blaker in care agreed
in principle to settle
_i of this newspaper, P.O. Box out of court,
sources on hoth
475, Radio City Sllltion, New sides say. The terms, which
York , N.Y. 111019. Volume of have not been revealed, are
mail prohibits personal still subject to approval by
115 W. 2nd
'replies, but questions of . the
live-member
Pomeroy, Ohio
·genera l interest will be commission.
:;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. discussed in future colwnns.
The
original
FTC

FABRIC
.SHOP

•

BARGAIN SALE

I I

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I •••••••••••••••• • ••••••

r:-·c;rosrour-siiiCiA1 ____1
1

248

$11995

MACHI~~g.
L_.._..,.._____ _.._..._.__.._.. ·- . ,_

pro·cl•mation
r e ad s:
'·Whereas. heart and blood
vessel
diseases
are
·responsible lor 53 percent of
deaths in Ohio, a total of
which exceeds all other
causes of death combined:
and
"Whereas, mQre than one
of every two of these victims
die of heart attack or stroke:
and
"Whereas, heart and blood
vessel diseases cause serious
economic hardship · and
emotional distress in our

1

FABRIC SHOP

homes ,
families
and
businesses ; and
"-Whereas, public contributions to the Heart Fund
over the past 30 years, have
accounted for nearly every

Examiners,

'
most

said

dentists resent advertising .
"It 's against tradition. It's
unprofessional. It's unbecoming to the.conduct of a
Professional man," he said .

" We just don't !eel you should
get your patients by
advertising your fees."
Consumer groups disagree ,
saying professionals should
comnete, a step they feel will
lead to lower lees. Price
advertising will allow
consumers to shop for
professional services just as
they do for specials at
grocery stores , consumer .
advocates argue.
II small number of professionals agree, including Dr.
Daniel Lee Maloof, the Silver
Spring, Md., dentist who
advertised his prices for
dentures and other services.
"I used to charge $300 for
those dentures that I now advertise for $129. I make more
money by charging less and
seeing more people. l don't sit
armmd as much as l used

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PLUS FREE (;t:STo:\1 F&amp;\Tl'RES! :

••
•' •

.

Deoign your own class ring

•

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umft-r ~tum•
complaint said the ADA
••
restricted competition among
dentists by declaring price
.. lf).'ll Sunlit!'
:
advertising 'to be unethical.
to:ncru.s tin g
tuu.lt•r !Jiunt' l
ADA ollicials feel the
•. '•
change in the ethical code
.'
makes the case moot. FTC
•',.
lawyers don't agree with this,
indicating that the settlement
IIHING IN TillS AD TO GET THI S iJHER WHF.N
'•
YOU ORDER YOUII SILAIJI UM RI NG.
in the case may make the too," he said.
dental association go still
"Some dentists will charge
further in encouraging ad· $200 for some work and then
.
CLAS~ RINGS
'
. ..
.
vertising. .
· sit around lor a while. I migh~
•
Price advertising by charge $100 and see one
•'
dentists is oneof a variety of patient alter another ," Dr.
'
areas where the govenunent Maloof said. "I make. almost
is trying to promote twice as much as I used to but
H-874~
competition among I w~rk harder, too."
~7.cx:&gt;e&gt;c::&gt;c&gt; 212 E. Mlln, Pomtrov•::o::::o:::::o::::::O::::;o:~
professionals. In 1975, the Su.preme Court prohibited bar
associations !rom selling
minimum fees. Tbe same
year the FTC brought a case 1
against
the American · ·
Medical Association on price 1
advertising. The FTC won a
Victory in the liMA case last
year but the decision is on
If THE COLD AND SNOW KEPT
appeal.
Since the 1975 Supreme
YOU IN LAST WfiK , HURRY ON IN NOW
Court decision and another in
1977 6n price advertising by
Did You
lawyers, low-cost legal
Miss Out?
PRICES IN EFFECT RIGHT NOW
clinics have proliferated . In
these clinics, relatively
PLASTIC TRASH BAGS
simple cases such as unWOMEN$
contested divorces have been
30 GALLON SIZE
VALUES JO 14.00
handied at.a fraction of what
they used to cost.
eUAKPROOF
' While a!most all physicians
A'1.39 ValuH
still resist price advertising ,
dentists are seen by some observers as more likely to ad·
vertise prices. Most dental
work is elective, meaning
consumers will probably
comparison shop lor it than in
the case of a medical
emergency.
However, there remains
strong resistence in dental
groups, as with other profes·
sions. They fear misleading
salesmanship that may be in
poor taste.
OUR SPRING ARTIFICAL FLOWERS ARE INI
Dr. Montague Cashman,
secretary of the. Dlstric of
CQlwnbia Board of Dental
LIGHT BRIGHt

,.'.I

JOHN ROBERTS '""""''" ,.........,

09"
ttelers

.

.

'

.

'

.
NEW YORK (AP) - The
week's top rated-program?
"Elvis"? "Gone with the
Wind"? "One Flew Over the
Cuckoo~s Nest"?
,
Actually, It was none of the
above. Try "Mo(k and
Mim!y,"
followed · by
"Three's Company,"
"~.!a verne and Shirley,"

"Happy Days," "Angie/' and

'l

..

.
!

BRAS

...

WHO ALWAYS HAS THE BEST SELECTION?
Daisies,

ro~s.

sweet pea, gardenia ,

mUm , peony, shasta d11lsy , cebbl!ge

roseS, boxwood picks. Palm Foliage
and many, many more. Our first .
spring sh lpm!!nl has l!lrrlved,

hurry

BOSTON

FERN
Pot 1nd H1n1er
llot Included

needs.

·¥1

.AND 'Z.99

·

9~-~s~.

2s"l -

Deslgner1 I 20ic40

ll1rkdowns Up To_ 601,

terry

Jacquards. Regular 12.:HI .
On Sale thru Sunday .

We need room, so pick
your shoes now at
BARGAIN PRICES!

BUY ANY LIVING ROOM SUITE AND
GET ANY IN STORE PAIR .OF
LAMPS

GREAT SAVINGS

Women• Polyester

FOR ONLY
'

QUEEN

SI%E
PANTYHOSE
F!tx

h;

to .5x: From

Regular stock. Beige

tolor .

iO'

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
"TWO

106 N. 2ND

.

AVE.

IN ONE STORE"

59'

PANT SALE

r

New Spring Colors , do&amp;rk; tones---:- A
big selection at the lowest prlc•

you 'll '"· Well mede. In regul.r,
extra l11roe and super 1lze.

1st Quallt~ . Values to
15." . E:arl~ Seewn

V1lues
To

'7.99

PR.

$299PR.

:_ ·
!

$5.22
•

0.

Run Of Mill

Sandwich Spread•••• ~a~
ALL MEAT
QUALITY
PLUS .
.
.

.!

POINT PLiASANT OR MASON

..
.."

· ···-~­

•

12 Ol

WIENERS ........ !~~~
$
149
CHOPS.......L!~.

CENTER CUT RIB

P.ORK

CENTER CUT LOIN

PORK CHOPS........~8~

$159

Your Choice ol Three ExGuisitll PaUernt~
• Summer Time • Spring Time • Foliage Time
f. &gt;&lt;kP• oc•On,.,

•• _

·-.
~~

'--e . .,.,.
c_.... . ,,

.)..A

$}39
PORK .SAUSAGE ....L~- ~

. HOMEMADE

.

1· ••,

·~·

'··

,·

.,

••

~=q
1 11

With 5° Purchase

THIS WEEK'S FEATURE:

CEREAL BOWL
1

. massage }iarlors, sex shops,
QyJOE WING
racy entertainers, girlie
For AP. Newtfeatures
magazines
and peep shqws.
This beln&amp; the seaion of St.
•
Police
are
hampered in ef·
Valentine,
I«
us
conalder
the
' atatqs ollqve In America. The forts to control
this, they say,
'
by
court
rulings.
atatwl of romantic love, since
I I
With such goings on, it
Its
·invention ·In the 12th
I
might
l!e expected th_at \he
century , by
French
nation's
birth rate would
troubadori, · bas rarely
·
ahooi
up.
Instead,
there was a
changed more than In the
ctecllne
irom
18.4
births per
past. .Or1glnally, the
l d,ecade
thousand
to
14.7
In
1976. This
Idea was for a knight to slsh
• after
edged
up
to
15.2,
-however,
the favors' of a high-born
'•
~dy. Now; hopelesa sighing Is .part way through 1978. Even
•
''
out of fllblon. AyoW!g m1111 is this smaU rise was puzzling to
•I
likely tn .!DOve right in with those who noted that in a
decade the number of
girl Mind.
r hllRecently,
the Population working women had risen
. Referenet Bwuu estimated from 29 million to 35 mllllon,
that nearly · a million on- legalized abortion had
wedded ~uplel are living spread, zero population
together, an .83 percent In· growth bad been touted aQd
• creuellnte 1t70.1t'snot only birth eontrvl techniques and
' ' Uie yoqllter~ *110 are doing . materials had proliferated.
It, but a1lo oldlters who fear · A rise In the marriage rate
'
maniaS!! wU1 dub their to 10.1 per thousand
population was reported In
Soda! Security benefits.
Unmarried bliss Is not 1977 after a drop from 10.6 in
1970 to 9.9 In 1976. That was
uoalloye~; however.
still
double the divorce rate,
Psycholoti~U · ob&lt;lerve that
even
though the latter had
UMJ&amp;rrteds
blve
many
of
the
'
' 11111e ·problema of money, risen spectacularly.
still, when aU statistics are
peraonlllty c:onfileta, divlldon
I
~aid
and done, and
of labor IIIICI rruua1 conflldl
aoclologlcal
· developments
U do iJI~rrleda. ADd their
tkked
off,
the
spirit of
·; brealtupa are often as
Valentine
lives
on.
' traumatic·u c!lvon:es.
One story II that the third- .
;
By no me11111 are llllsln8lea
century
saint, 01\ the ntgllt
:
enamored of OIIHilsht stands
before
be
was beheaded,
•
or lworname bbusebolds, A
wrote
an
aHectlonate
to·
i ' New York mail who an· the jaUer'a daughter, note
whom
-oouactd In llDI1H bare that he had cured of blindness,
he wu !Oollinl for a wife
recelvtd &amp;,ooO lettet:s_ from and signed (I ''Your Valen·
women.
..
. tine.'~ ·
In America, Valentines
· .There bl'l'e ,been comhave·
· been exchanged since
mentllrlesby.tbeyardon·bow
pervulvuri IIIII Amerlce'a earlytntheeountry'shlstort.
cultlli'f• AdvertiMmenta and . ADd · Valentlne'a Day ron· ·
I nov,ll, u weu u movie, -TV . tiiluea to be • red·letter day ·
and lheater.thellies, bear~
stores, flower shops • · out. Ob\iloUI a1lo - II the candy
tor ·greeting-card shOps.
" ' spread of prosttut
I I on, and lovers.

:

•PERFECT QUALITY.

Fils
Full or Twin
4 Stlid Colors

Sale Ends Feb. 19. 1979

'

Womens, Ju1iors .
SPRING
TOPS
Value.

HOMEMADE

BANANAs
..
:
......
~
1
----$

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK ......~~... }

'.

towels. Sol d colon and

' All Winter Stock Goes !

REGULAR '1.19

.••

r•

BATH TOWELS

5 SHOES

AT: FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

.
SJ09
Pork Sausage ....L~

estimated an audience of 43
million for an average minute
of "Elvis," 36·· million for
"Gooe With the Wind" and 32
millian lor "Cuckoo's Nest."
ABC's rating for the week
was 21.9 to 18.9 for NBC and
18.3 for CBS. The networks
say that means in an average
prime-time minute during the
week, 21.9 percent of the
· homes in the country with TV
were tuned to ABC.
The rating for "Mork and
Mindy," the season •s top..
rated new program, was 34.6.
· Nielsen·says that means of all
the homes in the country with
television, 34.6 percent saw at
least part of the program.
NBC had three of the
week's five least-watched
shows, No. 58 "Little
Women," which waS in its
premiere, No. 59 "Sweep·
stakes" and
No. 60
"Weekend." CBS' "The
Paper . Chase" was ranked
61st, and "Kaz," also on CBS,
was last.
Here are the week 's Top 10
progranlll:
· "Mork and Mindy t with a .
rating of 34.6 representing
25.8 mUllan homes, "Three's
Company," _29.11 or 22.2

•'

on In for your decoratln'g

W1sh1ble POIJ·
St1rt ll1kinc Your ·
Arr1ncements Ri&amp;ht Now

$p9

INGELS

BALLARDS

Love 's not what it was

looK I

LARGE

PRICES GOOD THROUGH

! Valentine 's Day 19 79 .·

spring -wanted colors.
GI'Ve your !'lome a new

having a really BIG

POMEROY, ·0.
17. 1979

1

In

By George, we're

298 SECOND ST.

I

BUSHES AND PU~NTER!il
poly

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

then "Elvil," ABC's sunday
'
night movie on the life of the
''
lat~ _
rock superstar.
. All 1lx shows,- In fact, were
!rom ABC, bUt lh)lt is only
part of the story. NBC, with
the second installment In its
•
•
"Backstairs at the White
•1
HqUBe" miniseries ranked
'
seventh, escaped the ratings'
cellar for the first time since
22.
' ' Oct.
the C\Oflguralion at the top
wlis, indeed, Interesting com.
mentriry on the slate ol tele·
'•
vision .
· The
three
networks
sch~uled
some
powerful
''
entertainment for Sunday
night, aild none of the
'
program8 captured an overwhelming Share of the au.
figures from the A.C.
.• ' dience,
Nie~ Co. show .
CBS's &amp;lnday telecast of
·I •
' Part I of "Gone with the million, " Laverne and
I
Wind" ·was No. 10 in the Shirley," 29.5 or 22 million,
I
ratii!IIS for the week ending "Happy Days," 28.5 or 21.2
l '
Feb. 11. The rating for Part million, ''Angie," 27.9 or 20.8
l ' _n, ·broadcast r.tonday night, million, and Sunday movie·
'1j .' will be included in next · "Elvis/' 27.3 or 20.3 million,
all ABC; Monday movieweek's tally.
'
NBC was, perhaps, the eve· "Backstalrs at the White
ning'S big loser with the House," Part II, 26.6 or 19.8
Oscarwinnlng "One Flew million, NBC; "Taxi;" 25.7 or
Over the Cuckoo's Nest." The 19.1 million, ABC, and "M-A111m stat'\'lng Jack Nicholson S-H," 24.4 or 18.2 million and
was third Sunday night and "Gorie witll the Wind," Part
;
I, 24.3 or 18.1 million, both
14th ove-all.
CBS's research department CBS.

SAVE UP TO 60%

Washable

Mon.·Sat. 8 am·IO pm

.

"•'

.

Store Hours:

Top televisio_n
shows rated

.I

'
1-'i rl'llunt
·~
undt·r ~~~m t; ~ '

Mu At·ut

'

·. ' '

•

;e$~:~gDs

~

' '.

.

.

Sunda~, Feb. 18, · the morning worship hour .-There
Pomeroy Chiii'Ch of Christ will be a pltch·in dinner a_t
wU1 be- celebrlltlng its 62nd 12:30 followed by a special
!IMiv~nary. It was on Feb.
afternoon service at 3 p.m.
18, 1917 !bat the Middleport
The apeaker lor afternoon
Chureb of Chrllt passed a will be Don Seevers of Belpre.
re~alutlon calling for the
Seevers was a minister at the
formation of a Mission Pomeroy church in 1952-19_57.
Church In Pomeroy.
At 6 p.m. dinner will .be
To mark tbls special day served in . the church
this year, the Pomeroy basement. The day wlll wrap
church will be having an an · -· up ,vlth even~g services at
day
•' F o unda 11 on 7;30 p.m. Hoyt Allen, who
C t ·l e bra t1 on. "
T be preached here in 1969-1973,
celebration wt11 be at the will deliver tbe message.
chureb building located at 212 Allen Is presently living in
W. Main st.
Mt. Orab, 0.
The ' celebration will begin
There will be a ·special
at 9:30a.m. with the regular picture board set up during
Sunday school hour. There the day diiPlaylng pictures of
are classes for aU ages to the church and ·her activities
attend. At 10:30, John throughout the years. And a
McArthur, the present history of the c!rurch is being
mlnllter at the church will prepared to be given to
be speaking during' the everyone present on the
·
special day.

,,

advance in cardiovascular slgned by the governor ori ,
medicine throu gh 1\merica_n Jan. 17 and witnessed bf ·
Heart Association programs Anthony J. Celebrezze r
•
of research , ed ucation and secretary or state.
Current
programs
in
community service:
"Now, therefore , I, James Franklin County supportecl
Rhodes , Gove1·nor . of the by Heart Fund donatlonf
State of .· Ohio, do hereby include 29 research projeetsr
proclaim February -as Heart classes In CPR (car.
Month in the State of Ohio, diopulmonary resuscitation,)
for
health
and urge all Ohioans to programs
·
education
in
the
school
support the Central Ohio
Heart Chapter in their efforts systems, programs of cal'
stroke
1and
to speed greater advances in dlae
rehabilitation,
ana
the conquest of our State's
dissemination
f·
iq:.
0
'leading killer and disabler."
formational
health
literature-.
The proclamation was

69

PAR KAY

KIDNEY BEANS..
SAUSAGE, HAMBURGER OR PEPPERONI

•
.
.
N
SJ
09
DAW •••••••••••••••••••••• ·Tony's P1zza...~K:~ ...
DISHWASHING
LIQUID
·

-

.

•

HOUSE

CQFFEE
2 LB.
CAN .

32 Ol

COUPON
- --

MAXWELL

HYLAND CHUNK
COUPON

COUPO N

THANK YOU

CHERRY
PIE FILLING

DOG FOOD

$399

25

LB.

BAG

N!C

Limit i per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Off
·
F b 17 1979

09

14¥z OZ.$}

$299

Limi i 1 per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 17 , 1979

21

0~

99¢

LIMIT 3
Limit1 per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer E
Feb. 17,1979

I - COUPON

I

FAYGO

Dl ET POP 16 Ol
NO DEPOSIT

BOTILES

7I '$1

Limitl per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer
res Feb. 17.1979

, ~~~=!e~r~!~~re~s~=e=.=·~~- ~~!~~~~e~~~~~~5!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;~~~~~e~~~!!~;·~!~~
'

�9_- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday. Feb. 14, 1~.79

8 - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Wednesday, Feb. l4, 1979
:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:-:.;;:-:;:;:;:;:-:_:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:;:·,·. ··:. ·&gt;.·._:; ;:;:·::.:.:: :_;.: :-: . ·.•.·

Helen
Help
:- u

:;

,,,,.,;.... ....... ...
1:nllst•rvt•d
wlwu Hadlll'
::: l lri!Jlll'l' 2:H. Ordt·r· nf I he

1:

:, s •
{
..

•

•

B H }
y

e en

B

-Eastern Star-- observes Obligation Night

ottel,,_:•. p,, (('J'II st.. r, rnd rt·C '('Jltly at
1ht• Ma!-lonit' Tt•lllfllc. Donna
J ohnson ;uul

LESSON LEARNED- TOO LATE'~
DEAR HELEN :
I'm another of the many women who fall for shi ftl ess n~
good, cheati~g cha"!!ers; smarten up, marry an industrious,
kmd and lovmg type- and spend the next few years dreaming
aboutthe wrong man.
.
I couldn't really love my fine husband , Nick, because
thoughts of Sam got in the way, no matter how "sensible " I
tried to be.
Recently Sam came back to town and I had a brief affair ·
with him. before he dumped me (again ). All along, I treated
Ntck so mtserably I can't blame him for turning to another

woman.

Richard Shockey and Gayle Cairns

Engagement announced
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Cairns
University in 1976 with a B..S.
of Tipp City, former resi'
degree in biological sciences.
residents of Racine, are anHer fiance is employed by
nou nc ing the engagement of
Delco-Air in Moraine and
their daughter, Gay_le Ann, to
works as a realtor with
Richard J. Shockey of Ketter- ~ Representatives Realty in
ing .
·
Dayton. He graduated in 1967
The wedding will be an
from Fairmont East High
event of April21, at the First
School and has attended Kent
Baptist Church, TippCity.
State University, Wright
The bride-elect is employed
State University, and Sindair
as a research chemist at College. Mr. Shockey is the
Monsanto Research Corporason of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
ti o!' in Miamisburg . She
Shockey of Kettering.
9ra duated from Tippecanoe
The couple will make their
High School in Tipp City in
home in West Carrolton.
1972 and from Ohin Slate

n ~llph

W1·bb.

worthy m~\1 ro n and wurthy
pat.r·nn 1 pn•sid cd at th~·
mt•l•ting .

. Tilt· C:z·and

Rc prc~entati vt•

to
W&lt;-~ s hin g t n n,
J.ouist.·
Stewart. was pn•st•nt at th&lt;·
m t•Pling Cllld se rved as
e haplain pro lem. The distric•t
school of instruction Wi::I S
d iseus~~d and the worthy

rncrlrnn nott•d that .:1 mct•ting
of llw star points will he held

Jatf 11'.
,\ gilt'S Pril'e wa:-; n·~orled
Sl'riouslv ill at 111&lt;' honw of

lwr dmtghtcr in N€·w .Jcrsev.
ill and ('Oilf irH:d
,l'o St. .JosPph 's Hospital in
Parkt· r ~ ln rrg
was Mrs.
Mildr·ccf Donnhew . C:;nds
wcrl' s igned by all tho~c :-~t
llw meeti ng for Mrs. Price
and Mrs. Donohcw. 1\ card
was Hlso ~ sent to Rcrniee
Thl'iss who has been ill at her

home.
C:ora Webb . ·and Grella
Simpson were appointed to
write u brief history of
Ra t'inc Chapter for the Meigs
County• hist nry hnnk

Now he has asked me for a divorce so he can marry her. And
I finally realize how much my husband means to me.
The third birthday of
. When I think of Sam it's with hatred for making me waste Christina I.ynn Cummins was
f1ve years that I could have spent concentrating on a good mar- celebrated on Feb. 6 at the
nage.
horne of her parents , Mr. and
How can I show Nick I love only him a nd it isn't·too late for Mrs . Russell Cummins ,
us?- NO LONGER SPELLBOUND
.
Radnt!. A valentine theme
DEARNLS :
was carried out and a pink
Five years of non-love will make Nick hard to convince panther cake a nd ice cream
especially since he no longer needs you.
' were scrvc'&lt;l to iler brother
Honest now, have your feelings really changed or has dou - a nd sister, Rusty and Tonja,
ble rejection (first Sam's, then Nick's ) proved how lonely it her gra ndmother, Mrs. Floyd
can be without a man?
Cummins, Mr . and Mrs. Bob
If Nick is still second choice in your life, let him go to a Roy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cumwoman who really cares fo him . I s uspeel you're still the type mins and Tassi , Mr. and Mrs .
who wants most what she hasn 't presently got. -H.
Jack Bostick, Jay, Angie,
Chris and Nick, and Mrs .
•
DEAR HELEN :
Flurenec Thornton and Rex .
I am a 70-year"'ld man with cancer. My concern it: how can
I cope, when and if the pain becomes intolerable and the prognosiS 1s lermmal' I asked my family doctor if he could end
my life, and he said he could supply legally only limited
amounts of morphine or demeral, and that I should save one
pill from each preseriplion until I accumulated enough to do
the job myself.
Now isn't it a sad situation when one must contrive toward
one's own wanted death? How much better eutlianasia - if
· everyone agrees it's the best way ' - WORRIED DEAR
. FEB. 211 THRU 24TH
WORRIED:
Heg. $211.tlo
I agree we. s houldn't be forced to live past our time for dying,
but we can l ms1sl that doctors pla y executioner. Even if
euthanasia were legalized, some couldn't face the decision to
terminate life : they're geared for saving it.
Heg. $25.011
However, most physicians prescribe enough drugs so thal
the final stages of cancer are bearable ... and usually brief.
May you go gently. -H.

was served with homemade
iee cream, punch, and potato
chips.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard R. E~n,' Sr.,
Racine, Mrs . F~~n~es
Carleton, Pomeroy, (;lnlndparents , Mr. and Mrs. ~leve
Dailey and Shawn, ~~ine;
Mr . and Mrs. David !'lhfets
and Mandi, Pomeroy;' Mrs.
Beverly Willford, Tuppers
Plains;
Herb Ervin,
Mr. &lt;;~ nd Mrs. Howard Ray- Cheshire; Teresa Ervin and
mund Ervin, Jr ., Racine, Ta~y Ervin.'
'and
r·ecentl y entertained with a Mr. and Mrs. Gary, Dye,
·,
party honoring their son , Hockingport.
Sending
cards
and
· gifts
· Howard Raymond Ervin Ill
on his first birthday.
' w~re Mrs. Bessy Ervin,
,\ Mickey Mouse theme was Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
carried out in the eake which .Jeffrey Needs, Gallipolis.

DEAR POLLY - A redwood rocker that was on my
porch was so comfortable
tha t r decided to bring it into
the house. After a thorough
cleaning it looked so washed
out that my husband put redwood stain on it and it lnGks
better but feels very rough.
Could I use clear s hellac on it
or do you have a better solution '-MRS . E.K .M
DEAR MRS. E.K.M. - I
know of no cure for your trouble except a thorough sanding
with sandpaper. This will
doubtless remove the new
stain and that process would
have to be repeated . Perhaps
some of lhe readers have had
such a problem and can offer
further suggestions. - POir

ed prices on nems 1r
groeerynd drug stores. Those
who live on limited incomes
have to be very careful, make
comparisons and know what
they are paying for the things
they have to buy. -VIRGIN!,\
DEAR POLLY- A wonder-'
ful plate scraper can be made
from the plastic lop off one of
those containers that holds
dessert topping. I first cut off
the outside rim and then eul
across the plastic circle about
an inch above the center. Thi s
is similar to the scrapers used in bakeries. Carried in the
apron pocket they are most
handy. - MARY T. •
DEAR POLLY - Anna
wanted to know what she
could make with those plastic
rings that rome around sixpack soda -cans. Make hot
dish mats of course. Six of the

I.Y

rings are needed fur each

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the many unrk-

mat. With four-ply yarn
single erochel around each
ring, separately, and find it
will take about 32 stitches.
Overlap the rings to make a
cirele.
Next make a short lace to
fasten the rings together. For
this crochet a chain of about
45 stitches plus a chain 3 for
turning, make about 45 double stitches onto the ehain
and break off. Weave this
lace over and under the Sides
of the overlapping circles.
Fasten the ends of the lace
and then finish the ·outside
edge of the mat with a single
crochet stitch. -MRS . E.S.B .
DEAR READERS -I think
heavy cotton crochet cotton is
better for both pot holders
and hot dish mats as the heal
does not seem to penetrate as
much as through wool. POLLY
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank -yo u
news paper-coupon clippers if
s he uses your . favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
Wednesday, February 14

Rocker feels rough

r-------~

Social II
1 Calendar 1
I
I

WEDNESDAY
REGULAR
MEETING
Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM
MIDDLEPORT Lite rary
Club , Wednesday, 2 p.m. at
'the home of Mrs. Nan Mllilre ..
Mrs. Dwight Wallace will

review , "Six Men . n
and r egula r meeung o•
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters Wednesday night. Work in Mark
Master Degree and Past
Master Degree.
POMEROYMIDDLEPoRT Lions Club ,
regular meeting, Wednesday
at noon at the Meigs Inn . All
lions urged to attend.
MEIGS COUNTY GIRL
SCOUT unit meeting, 7 to 9
p.m . Wednesday. Meigs Inn .
BROTHER DAYMOND
ADAMS
speaker
at
Fellowship Church, 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.
ROCK SPJHNGS BETTER
· Health Club, Thursday, I: 15
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Jackie Zirkle . Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner will have the contest.
LAUREL CIJFF BETTER
J-Iealth Club, 7:30 Thurs day
nig ht at the Riverboat Room,
Athens County Savings and
I .oan, Meigs Office.

'·

FR~AY

FUND DRIVE for new
building, 30x40 two story, for
the/ Racine
Volunteer
Emergency Squad underway.
Donations can be sent to the
squad at Racine, Ohio .
Grounds for the building
provided by Racine Village
Countil.' Camisters are in
business houses· also for
contributors.
MIDDLEPORT
Masonic
U&gt;dge 363, F&amp;AM, anriual
inspection 7:30 p .m . Friday
at temple in the Master
Mason Degree. All Master
Masons invited.

Eac:h of th... tdvtr1i1Md itemt it
~ired to be rNdilv li'llila~ lor 111le

Kroger Store. e.lcept ••

IPkrlall'll noted in !hit td. If we do
run OUI of •n tdvtniMd item we Will
offtt vou ~· choice ol 1 co~perable
iWn, when IVIillble, 1efleciH'lg the
Mme 1o1Ying1 or • r1in&lt;:htck wh•cn wiN
lllltttle you to purchiM the 1d,.en1sed
11.-n 11 1he ldVtntNd pii CI Wtlh11'1 J0

"'
1,...rwelco•11

CorntGHT 1919- THI KltOGU CO . ITEM$ AND
rltiCES GOOD SUNCAY FEI . 11 THRU SATURDAY
FU. 17, 1'791N

,.,., , ......1

Food Sttnwpa

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

Kroger Catsup

Any~e who ha ~ trouble hearing is welcome to hav~ a
heanng_ te~ t u.scng t~e latest electron ic equipment to

determrne 1f h 1s loss 1s ~me which may be helped. Some
~! the causes of heanng loss will be explained and
1agram s of how the ear works·will be shown.

32·oz.7
Btl.

We Als.o Serwice .and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids

Batterres and Supplies For All Makes For Sale

·

7C

Fatal road accidents in

South Af rica arc dcdining, a
sy mposium on alcohol and
drug!) in roCJd traffic was told
recently.

$ 19

KROGER

Macaroni

33c

PEAR SHAPED OR

(;~ntry Club 9

Instant
Coffee
IO·n
Jar

$

AVONDALE YELLOW Cl.lNG
SLICED OR HAI.VE5

Peaches

·~-4sc

•

These coupons can save you money when_you
AVONDALE

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

Pre sen1 coupon when ordeqng

Coupon elC p Jros Mar ch J, 197 9

;:;:;;==

Cheeseburger,
regular french fry,
small soft drink

S h ac k '~

parcJJt

company .

Ta nrl:

po r atton .

n .purtt.'d
~m i t·~.

consolidated

( :or ·

1IJ&lt;:~t

!ur thl'

month of J iJJt Ual\ ~~ ~..-r~
$!l4 ,13H.OOO , an lncrc~ s ~. · o: l\1
p('rcent O\'C·r

thr

~.:.t il l I' H~&gt;.J iit1i . .

!&lt;J st yea r .

.;;•·.-'-:. .

HI i 1 IHI

·Canned Hams.,~:~
Whole
Smoked Picnics
IN THE PIECE

(SLICED ...

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Fruit Cocktail

l·lb.
Pkg.

$299

Kroger
Mix
Fres
Mushrooms

ALL PURPOSE

Kroger
Meat Bo

ae

$
38·01.

'II
I
I
I

UMIT 4CARTONS WITH COUPON AND Sl . ~ADDITIONAl PIIRCHm
(UCLUDINC THIS ITEM!
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER fA M il V
COiptl. COOOSUIIDU Ill lllNI~ UTUIDU Ill 17 Jm
SUIHtT TO .P'P'liCUlf Sfll( I lOCH IU!5
-

~:

.r.;;f

.ul

KROGER

Grade A

!i

Kroger
Fl our ................... Ba~

Large Eggs

-lb

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
GRADE A FROZEN

I

1-lb.
Carton

Btl.

Kroger's
Pro

I
I

$ 29

Kroger
Oil

18. SI.D9 )

REO VEGETABLE PROTEIN

.I pons.

Eacncoupon rcquues separa te purcnase ""'-·~""

pt~ t'C'l'nt

$

'&lt;"J,tN,rA a ..... u OF BEEF ANci-HYDR

Saveu to $1.37 when you

o.nlv$1.49

tllitll

1\1

du ring .Ja n u :Jr:~ !~179
Httdi o

Council.

ro~c

liMIT J.IAC WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ADDI!IONAl PU ~CHU!
(UCLUDINC THIS ITEM )

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

Btl.

onlv$1.39

cording to the National Safety

ye&lt;:~ r

Country Club
Ice Cream ........ ~:~~~!.

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Roast

IF YOU CA NNOT COME IN - CALL THE HOTEL
FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 992 .3629

32·01.45 c

Fish Filet,
regular french fry,
small soft drink

one

&lt;J C·

I

r,;:;:;c:'i~ ~l;qC){\J .S. GOV'T GRADED CHC&gt;ICE
BEEF CHUCK

Detergent

onlv$1.59

.st ores in exi~tr·n C'c mvn·

when driving on icc,

-lb.
Bag

LEMON OR PINK , MI5SV

Each r.oupon requ11es sep.-!ral t&gt; tx.Jrch ase
Prc~l'll! COUJlOn when order1nq
Couoon f.' ~pirt&gt;S Mil rrl • l , 1\179

Hodia l t ires offe r no
Jdv:mtagc over regular tin•s

WI RISUYI THf !tiGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIU
NONISOlO ·To DIAl US.
.

MEIGS t_NN, POMEROY, OH
Thursday, Feb. 15
9 a.m. to 12 noon

BigShef,"'
r~gular french fry,
small soft drink

$1i0,470,000 i11 .fcmuan . 1978.
Sales of U. ·s. Hoell~ Shack

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMIL v

lb.

SuperShef,"
regular french fry,
small soft drink

detent ro n
'

percent gain owr :-ai(·s uf

TOTA L SATISFACTION
GUARANTEE
E"'el"(thing you buy 81 Kroger II
guaranteed ltJr 'fOUl total NlilfKtion
reg.,dleu ol rnenutactur-.. II 'fOU 111
not ul itf ied , Kr~ w~l r~ yo01
111m with the wme br1nd or 1 com·
Plll!ible blind or rahmd your pur thiM

5-7-LB. AVG .

TAKE A LOOK AT BURGER CHEF.®
r: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

and

Tht· U .~; . H&lt;1d111 Sl 1 o~tk
dlYision of T;.wtl;. ( 't,rp c1r~1 t wn
n -eordcd si.Jh'! ol $/ :1 ,;) 1/!Jrl
fur th e month uf .Jan u~tn .. l !J

liMIT 1 CU WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ADDITIONAl m r:,!$l
(UCLUDiNC THIS ITEM)
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Pkg.

05

treatment
cente rs.

I 'UiiT 1\'UH'I'II, Tex;,,

juv enile

-lb.
Can

A 'IW I UMI'lU

l·lb.

~

constr uctio n of

IUCW All JUST

BEL TONE Consultant Who Will BE At:

-··

redeem
at

miiUQ!I wou ld~ q\ ~1l a bh to
counties on the same 2~ I
mCjt ching
ba sis
fo r

NOOUCTS
~ISTID

•'

fa

would
and
addit ion s
to
facil it ies
opcra((&gt;d by the Ohio Youth
Commi~ sion . There would be
a major overhuul of hea lin g
""" coolin g syste111s a t all 10
faci li ties . opera ted by the
commission. New vq cati onal
and educationa l fa cili ties for
youthful Jawbreakers also
ttr e antici pa ted .
The proposa l allocates $5(1
million in stall:! matching
funds for -jails and detention
fa c ilit ies
oper ated
by
counti es and cities, which
would have to put up $1 for
each $2 rec eiveC: .
Fin a lly, the rem;r ining $25

SYOIII JOII
PANTAI;fiC SAiliNGS
ON KIOGEI llANO

Will Be Given By

Call for an appointment.
Debbi Powell, Manager
&amp;Diana Ash
992-3982

1~·-

renovat.ions and addili uns to
ex i ~ting.
fariliti es and

la rge r pri sons. ~o new
facility wou.hl hoUS(' more

Anot li~ r $2.J million
go fur rerwv~::~lio n

MR. H. W. MATTINGLY

Now Wider new management.

-

I 1\ ii ddition. CHI illtll &lt;Ht•
lll C dlf ·~d c·e nt er wnuld IJc
Lehman
wo n House
appr ova l of &lt;:1 s im ila r dcve loiJCd ne&lt;Jr Colwnbu s.
proposa I "'
I he
last U1 r ~l' new ju veni le fe:id! ities
legisla tive session, but it di ed wuuld be Uuilt and a new
in the Senate. He said he dormitory t~ nd food ceuh•r
thmks it will fare better this would he added tu lire Ohio
year bect~u sc of the threat or Hcformatory fo r Women &lt;ll
Mary sv ille.
having
courts
dic tate
The plan also ~nvisions
population and other types of
.
rein
t eg rati on ce nte rs in
administration for two man"
w·IJan·
are;1s and five new
major pnsons.
regional
cor red ion centers to
Under the proposa l, $1 75
relieve
overcrowding
of the
million would be allocated for

lhiJ II ~~ ;)[I llllll.t l i'S .

LOOII: JOII THIS SIGN
THIIOUI)HOUT THE

. ElfCTftONIC
HEARING TESTS

'

~

4)/l l':-.

Krogo '
.-Shorten

HEARING TESTS S£T
FOR MEIGS OOUNTY, OHIO

.....fl&gt; ~ t:&gt;,-,
.
..~~~~,.. - 'V"Cf;::,, q ,
Dorothy's Beauty Salon

~GJ. 3rd St.

wher e the state is going to put
its convicted fL• Ions .

Ill' \\'

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOII

11'1 ~h

Permanent
Special

per-gallon iiquor tax ·and a
levy on ~ee r and malt liquor
of about a fourth of a cent prr·
12·&lt;lUnce bottle or can.
Th e judi ciary chairman
noted that six of t he stale 's
eiKht eorrectional faeilities
already are beyond their
rat ed population capacity
and that prison populations
are continuing to grow fast.
"Time ha s a bou I run out for
Ohi o. It is imperative that
Ohio begin construction and
r enovation of co rrectional
faciliti es," he said, adding
that many peopte ·are asking

4JI

·-

Ra.C*·

SPECIAL '22.50

Polly Cramer ·

By ROBERT E. MIU.ER They already have been set at
Associated Press . Writer the Southern Ohio CorrecC()LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) tional Facility at Lucasville
Ce1hngs
on
. inmate and the Marion Correctional
populations at the old Ohio _ Institution. he noted.
Penitentiary and the Ohio
Lehman pointed out the
State
Reformatory
at prison population problem in
Mansfie)d would present reintroducing his proposal for
serious difficulties because of a $275 million bond issue to
the state's crime problem a upgrade not only adult and
ranking state lawmaker sa~s. juvenile correction facilities ,
House
Judiciary but
also
county
and
Committee r.hairm.:m J.hrrv municipal jails.
J.
Lehman,
D·Shaker
U approved by voters in
Heights, said he expects November, the bonds would
court hearings soon in which be r etired over the next 15
ceilings could be Imposed. years with a new 90-cents-

CANCELLATION
,\ meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary, Junior
Unit, of Feeney-Bennett Post
128, Middleport, scheduled
for tonight has been cancelled .

SPECIAL '18.00

POLLY·s POINTERS

The dining room was
decorated in keeping with
Valentine's Day. Hostesses
were Mrs. Helen Pickens and
Mrs. Barbara Dugan.

Howard Ervin III

Christina Cummins

DEAR HELEN .
l have a simpler way of slopping hiccoughs than the
traumatic one m entioned by a reader . Just eat a teaspoon of
dry sugar. -LEAH
DEAR HElEN.
Tost~p those hiccoughs,leave a teaspoon in a glass of water.
then drmk the water. Sounds nutty, but it works eve ry time. M.S.
NOTE TO READERS : I only print these " cures": I don' t
guarantee them . -H.

Ceilings would present problems

;\ ]:-;ll l'l'JlOI'tNI

Birthdays

l'IJJlSt l'lll'lllill

Tcnlotl\'4' plans t-~rl' lor lhl'
Mrm sfiC'Itl l'l'formatory to be
tu nq•rtl't1 in to ·a sJJla ll
lll J.X i Ill 'J IIH)l'CUrity
prison .

Kroger
Salad·Dressing ..... .

01 .

16-oz.39c
Can

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES ,
MR . PtBB , SPRITE,

SAVE

Sl GO

Tab or

22·'-115
Jar

onlv$1.09

ONDElUltl

Coca Cola

Florida
Oranges.

8$

!!

V!Y,~')f'"~
Cheese Pina ..... ...... ..... ... ... .... loth
SAVE SO• ON OTHER

U·INCH PIPP'IItONI Otl

Mushroom Pina .~· ..... .. :... .. ... .

KROGER

Spaghetti

1-lb.33c
Pkg.

.

GeteuiMtr9dab l'IJtLIIle

-L~.
1~.
$179
.\~.
$139
BAG
BAG
BAG

IN STOIEIA.lO

ggc

SAVE
Pie ....... ........ $1.00

Fresh Cherry
·
Ruuer Bologna ..... ....... .. ...
UESHIAICIO
Rolls . . ..... .... .. ..
ALLMUT

loth

$ 99

., '

lot h

6

c

"'
''

.'
'

..

'

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb·. H. 1979

f-M:;"-c:;;N~~;-N~t~s- 0
I

'Neill amendment reduces Rumber

By Alma Marshall

I

MASON - Plans for a minstrel were decided upon w.hen
the Wahama High· School Band Boosters met on Tuesday,
February 6 at the school. Most of the Senior High Band '
students will participate. Tentative .date of March 6th or 7th
has been announced . President of the Boosters is Mrs. John
(Jackie) Sisson; vice president, Paul Stodola; secretary, Dee
llond , and treasurer, Joann Taylor .
Another project of the boosters is to sell pizzas. Orders will
be taken by the studenls and will be delivered to the homes.
The pizza sale will be held the weekend of February 23 or
the first part of March.
·
Ladies.·did you know that skirts will be one inch shorter
this coming season? From one extreme to another wasn't good
- real short, short skirts, and then long skirts. But have heart,
you only gotta take them up one inch, and if that one inch
leaves your skirt just below the knees- then you are ln style.
With the price of clothing I'm sure many, many wiD be
individualists and wear them where they are even if they are
not be low the knee.
The skirts will be slinuner and split up the front, back or
sides - that is a necessity for many. Did you ever try to climb
into a truck with a slim skirt?
'
•
And now about jewelry - did you know that the chic way to
wear earrings reportedly is to wear then unmatched, dangly
earring on one ear and button type on the other. Until this style
catches on - someone will think - is she wacky or had one too
many?

Ry 'fOM GILLEM
,\ ssorialed Press ·Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP J _
· The number of persons \hal
could be prosecuted under
Ohio 's proposed death
penalty law has been
signilicanUy reduced by an
amendment added during
committee deliberations on
the measure.
Rep. c. William O'Neill, R·
Columbu s, offned the
amendment Tuesday as the
House Judiciary Committee
t onsidered half of ~2
proposed changes to the
ill
death penalty b ·

MASON PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel were brave souls who
weathered the elements and ventured to Columbus lo visit
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. imd Mrs. Stan Sa,unders and
fa mily over the weekend. Upon returning home on Sunday,
rlriving was rough with so much snow .
Mrs. Harold (Lucille) Schwarz became ill while visiting
her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Strother and
Tndd at Louisville, Ky. She is a patient at Baptist Hospital, E.
Room 346, CCU, Louisville, Ky., and was to undergo tests on
Tuesday.
Mrs : Helen Stewart and son, Jim, attended the funeral
service of Raymond F . McCarty at Beale Chapel Cburcb,
.\pple Grove, W. Va . on Saturday.
Guests of Mr . and Mrs. Harry E. Johnson for several days
included their two daughters, Mrs. Mildred (Jodie ) Caldwell of
f:ast Liverpool , Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tober, Toledo, Ohio.
Also visiting was another daughter,.Mrs .. Donna Glaze and
Cindv , and a son and wife, Mr . and Mrs. Pat Johnson, son,
• ~ ene and grandson , Darrell Stewart, all of Middleport.

By ROBERT E . MIU.ER
Associated Press Wriler
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ Majority Democrats and the
Republican Rhodes Ad·
ministration seem to feel the
time is ripe for better tax
breaks for Ohio's senior
citizens.
·
Added to a growing list of
such proposals Tuesday was
onf by Sen. John i T. McCormack, D-Euclid. It is a
proposed constitutional
amendment that would help
widows and widowers retain
their homestead property
exemptions following the
death of their qualifying
spouses.
Under existing law, when
lhe head of a household ~ or
over dies, the surviving
spouse loses the exemption if
he or she has not yet reached

65.
" This substantial short·
coming in the law means that
at the time the surviving
spouse' finds herself or
himself most in need of
property tali: relief, they
iristead lose the major benefit
that had been available to the
couple," said McCormack,
whose proposal would require
approval of voters on a
statewide ballot.
The homestead exemption
currently provides that
household heads~ and over,
living on their homesteads,
can get reductions in

In
•: the statement,
.lam e' .
that h.e wished to
make it dear that he is not a
rncmber of the committee.
According to James, he
was asked by the committee
to advise it. an&lt;j that he
serves purely in an adviso ry
capacity to the gro up in line
with hts duty to assist his
constituents.
Tho state representative
said that he wanted to make it
clear that he is not for or
agai nst th e management ,
that he is not for or against
tne bnard ·of directors, and
that he is not- for or against
the electrical workers' union.
.lames further stated
that he wishes to clarify the
\'ery complicated issue
with respect to the recent

property taxes based on the
value o! their property if
family income is $16,000 a
year or less.
McCormack said he also
was introducing the bill that
would raise the income cutoff
to $1~,000. Similar proposals
already have been Introduced
in both houses, and such a
move was endorsed by Gov.
James A. .Rhodes ln his State
of the State address to a joint
session of .the Legislature
Feb. 6.
The vehicle for hlklng the
Income figure is likely to be a
bill by Sen. Jerome P . stano,
D-Parma. Hearings began on
his proposal Tuesday before
the Senate Ways and Means
Committee, picking up the

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

Attendance at the mornlng
serviCes at the Free
Methodist Church Feb. II
was 68. Choir m embers
present was 8.
Pastor and Mrs. Shook
visited recently with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . Joseph Higginbotham , Columbus, their
other daughter and son-in·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Whitaker, New York, also
visited the Higginbothams.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moore
have been reported ill.
Mrs. Edna Shaefer and
da~ghter, Mrs. Fern Dora
story visited recently with
Mrs. Schaefer's brother, Mr.
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield.
Mr. Stahl is very poorlyc
Mr . an&lt;l Mrs. John
c o n r o v e r S ) o o u g l a s , Guysville, spent
Saturday evelliilg with Mr .
rate increase that was flhll
swered or studied. James and Mrs. Roy Howell .
reflected In tbe Sepfl'mber,
recommends that the board
Mrs. Della Curtis has been
1978 bills. James said lbat
of directors call at special released from VMH and is
cooperative customer bills
meeting of the members to staying with her daughter ,
last ye.ar did not Increase
address these questions.
Mrs. Ruby Frick.
56 percent. The increase
He also feels that many
after the new rate wentlnlo
members of the general
eff ec t was actually an
public seem to be geUing t)te
MONTHLY MEETING
average of 13 percent.
lmpression that this group of
The monthly meeting of the
In order to Clarify the 00 concerned clti•ens was
percent figure that has been formed to help promote ef- Southern Hills District, Ohio
mentioned, he explained that · forts of striking employees. Nurses Assn., will be held at
over a three-year period the j 8 mes states that this is not 7:30p.m. Thursday, Feb. 22, rate customers have been true, especially since the at the geriatric building of the
paying for electricity has group was formed before the Athens Mental Health ·
Mental Retardation Center.
gradually increased by a strike began.
Speaker will be Dr . Sue
total of 56 percent. He
James said he flluld not
believes that increase has speak for the citizens com· Foster, superintendent of the
been chiefly due to increased miUee, but Insisted puit his Athens center using the topic,
cost of electricity generated objective In agreeing to " The Mental Patient in the
by Buckeye Power, which is a assist was to lielp insure that Community". All registered
firm that generates elec- the customer - owners of nurses are invited. The
tricity
lor
all
rural Buckeye Rural Electric membership includes
&lt;lOoperatives in Ohio.
Cooperative received the best registered nurses from
James stated that he does possible electric service at Hocking, Meigs, Gallia and
Athens Counties.
not recommend the recall of lhe lowest possible cost.
the board of directors.' He
does feel that there are
qu estions raised by the
Committee of Concerned
Citizens that need to be an-

James states position
t
in Buckeye

mitt «&gt; ' ' mcerned Citizens.

ffiW'ders, or homicides com-

mitwd while in the act of certain othe r felonies.

In other action on one of the
busiest days of the sevenweekold session, majority
Democrats introduced in the
Senate a proposal that would
inject $700 million in new aid
lo the state's 616 local school
districts in the 1979-1961
biennium .

The proposal, sponsored by
Education Chairman Marcus
A. Roberto , D-Ravenna, is
similar to one offered by GOP
Gov. James A. Rhodes in a

'

r·urniture.

Stele Representative Ron
Ja mes ( D-Proctorvi ll eJ
issued a statement today with
res pect to hi s posit ion
relati ng to the current con·
troversy invo lving th e
Buckeve Rural · Electric
Cooper :: t;vc and the Com·

Chairman
Harry
J.
1.ehman, [).Cleveland, called
another meeting of the panel
Thursday
morning
to
complete the process and
vote the legislation out of
committee . Floor ·action
could come as early as next
week .
The O'Neill amendment
limits the scope of the
legislation by removing socalled felonymurders from
the law. About half of the 99
persons on death row when
. Ohio's death law \lias ruled
unconstitutional last July had
' been ronv i,.,t~&gt;ti o( #o1nny~

Time ripe for better
homestead tax break

Wf,ST COLUMBIA- Miss Teresa Richards, New Haven,
and Ch &gt;ri"&lt; Rickard, Clifton, were united ln marriage on
r chc
•'l
· p.m . at Salem Community Church at West
Coh11..
.1
"He Reverend George Hoschar.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 0. J. Richards, New
Haven, and the groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs . Robert
1\Ickard, Clifton .
The bride given in marriage by her father wore a floor length
white wedding goWn with lull skirt and train, fitted bodice and
long sleeve" . She ca rried a bouquet of various flowers .
Attendants were Greg and Alisa Lewis of Clifton. Mrs.
Lewis wot·e " blue street length dress.
1he bride's mother wore a blue street length dress and the
groom's mother was attired in a beige and brown street length
dress.
The new lywed~ are residing in Clifton.
She attended Wahama High School and has been employed
at Crow's Restaurant, Pomeroy, and the groom , a Junior at
Wahama High School, works part . time at New Haven

11 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Feb. H . 1970

.

endorsement in principle of
the Ohio Commission on
Aging.
Stano said he had talked to
the governor's office and
indicated his willingness to
have the administration join
the push for his legislation the same as that advocated
by Rhodes in his speech.
The Parma senator sa id
estimates from th e Ohio
Legislative Budget Office
show that hiking the income
cutoff to $15,000 would extend
the exemption to an addltional 40,000 to 80,000 senior
households, at a biennial cost
of $2.9 million to $3.2 million .
There also is a move in the
House to increase the figure
to $15,000.
Rep. Dennis E. Eckhart, D·
Euclid, earlier introduced a
proposal that would provide a
flat $5,000 reduction in the
t axa ble value of senior
citizens' property.
Under the current exemp-

X

se nte nced
to
life
imprisonment
or
to
recommend
the
death
penalty. The life sentence
would be binding on the trial
judge, but the death
recommendation would not.
An effort lo substitute life
imprisonment without parole
for capita l punishment was
killed for now with a 1().10
vote, with Rep. Michael
Sfinziano, D-Columbus, the
onl y committee member
absent.
- Sti nziano , .who · said he
promised earlier in the day lo
"considei' 11 voting for the
amendment, arrived at the
hearing 15 minutes after the
vote. He said he was
attending another committee
meeting.
Later, Stinziano, an an-

G

B

c

nounced candidate for mayor
of Columbus, told reporters
he had decided to vote
against the amendment.
the
The actions by
Co lumbu s Democrat
infuriated Lehman .
" I would have much preferred he had cast a vote
negatively for whatever . his
motivation might be. political
or otherwise, " Lehman said .
" People who aspire to high
political office should be
prepa red lo make difficult
choices."
The
am endm ent
to
substitute life in1prisonment
for the death penalty,
sponsored by Rep . William L.
Mallory, !U:inclnnati, will
likely be reintroduced on the
House floor by opponents to .
capit al punishment. ·

interviewed last week. FortyBy EVANS WITT
one percent said they opposed
Associated Press Writer
the eKecutive action . Tne
NEW YORK (AP ) Nearly half the American percent were not sure.
Miss Hearst was kidnapped
publlc approves President
Carter's freeing newspaper Feb. 4, 19i 4, from her Berkeheiress Patricia Heart's from ley, Calif., apartment by
jail, an Associated Press- members of a small terrorist
group, the Symbionese
NBC News poll shows.
Carter's
decision
to Liberation Army.
commute Miss Hearst's jail ' Oq Aprillathat year, a San
term for bank robbery was Fr ancisco bra nch of the
backed by 49 percent of those Hibernia Bank was robbed .

GALliPOLIS BUSINESS COLlEGE
State Reg . No. 71-02-00326

Courses Are Approved For Veterans Training

By Michael B. Lafferty
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ Ohio supporters of the
American
Agriculture
Movement are looking for
more tractor • driving
recruits in their assault on
Secretary of Agriculture Bob
Bergland.
About 10 Ohio farmers are
now ln Washington along with
several thousand other
farmers to lobby for expanded farm assistance. But
Ohio graln farmer Ronald
Ferrell doesn't think there
are enough Ohloans in the
capital and he's returned to
the state lor reinforcements
willing to load their tractors
onto flatbed trucks and head

407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
~

M.-SAT.
,12-6 SUN.

992-3662
WHILE THEY
LAST

In view of the governor's

7 Piece

SPECIAl.'

east.

SCREWDRIVER SET

Ferrell said he doesn't
know how successful his
attempt to gain r ein forcements will be. In the
past, AAM leaders have said
support for the movement is
weak ln Ohio . Ferrell said the

'9.95
Red Devil 4051 Handy Bar••••••••••••

n.oo

5/8" PARTICAL

BOARD
4'x8' SHEETS

EACH

,,

15

us $4.Y9
F . E. T.

Bl&lt;T · "1110 M!#NE\1' STOPS AFTER A
70- MIN!.ITC PR!Vl' #EEO!NG 10
;WII/!.ITES Or
C4 LIS7HENICS ... / "

MEIGS
TIRE CENTER, INC:.

________..

••

Jolin Fultz. MJr.

..._
''

•. l

Pomeroy, 0 .

700 E . Main

992-2101

ju

_.

.l

'-

"

Apple Grove
News Notes

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold An·
derson held a dinner Sunday
at their home in honor of Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Wilford who
were celebrating their birth·
days. Attending were Mr. and
· Mrs: Wallie Morris, Brenda
Wile gets same
and Lori Anderson, Lisa and
Kim Wilford, and the honored
Valentine card
guests.
.
Mr. and Mrs . Ed Hupp of
LONDON (AP) - Vi.ctor Portland visited Mr. and Mrs.
Collier sent his wife, Miriam, Dorsa Parsons Sunday.
Butch Ables and friend of
the same Valentine's Day
Canal
Winchester spent the
card today that he has been
weekend
with Mr. and Mrs.
sending for 23 years, ilnd she
Jack
Ables.
was delighted .
Ted Hayman and children
"It's getting a bit tattynow,
of
Westerville, Mrs. Lillie
but I wouldn't change it for
Hart,
Racine, Mr. and Mrs .
any other," said Mrs. Collier,
Gene
Jewell
and children of
the wife of an antique dealer
Letart,
W.
Va
. visited Mr.
in Leicestershire.
and
Mrs.
Gerald
Hayman and
The card .Is covered with
Keith
Sunday.
Chinese fans and red roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pickett,
Among the valentine messages in the classified section daughter Tracy spent Sunday
of The Guardian were these : with Mr. and Mrs. Max
"Clarissima. Ave Pulchris- Pickett at Crown City .
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pickett,
sima. 1 love your chocolate
Mr
. and Mrs. Roger Roush
Biscuitissima."
were
shopping at the Silver
"Timothy daring . Thanks
Plaza Saturday
Bridge
lor last nite. Love Jan (heeVening.
he) ."
Mrs. Mae Durst spent the
"Sussex Rose. You t~rn~
weekend
with her husband,
my
head,
and
now
at Springfield.
Ralph
Durst
delightfully grace my bed."
cataract
Mr. Durst
surgery at Community
Hospital, Springfield, Thursctay. Mrs. George Morris
return ed her father, Mr .
Durst to his home Wednesday . Mr. Durst visited
with
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Durst
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas
and
family also at SpringCircle visited Mr. and Mrs .
field
.
Charles Griswald of Belpre,
On Jan. 14 Mr. and Mrs.
also Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
David
Sayre, Mrs . Doris
J'ohlison of Belpre, Ohio on a
Sayre
attended
the Holiday
recent SUllday.
Calling at the Douglas on Ice Show.at Charleston, W.
.
Circle home during the week Va .
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
David
Sayre,
were Mr. and Mrs. James
Mrs.
Peggy
Gregory
of
Werry and family of Morning
Columbus
spent
SIUiday
with
star, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Ables of Bald Knobs, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Brian Harris at
Mrs. Glen Tuttle and son, Portland and celebrated the
birthday ol David Sayre.
Eagle Ridge .
Jeff Donohew called on Mr.
.Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
and.
Mrs: Vernon Donohew
Chester was at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee a Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
recent Sunday.
There were twenty-seven Spent Saturday evening and
present for Swtday. school on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis at Clifton .
. Feb. 11.
Mrs. Vera Craig of HartThe family of Elsie Circle·
ford
spent Sunday with her
celebrated her birthday ; at
mother,
Mri. Pearl Norris.
the home of her son, Larry
Ml'S.
David
Kearns and son
and family recently,
ol
Clifton
are
staying
with her
Mr. al)(l Mrs. James Circle
and
Mrs,.Jamea
parents,
Mr.
of New Haven, W.Va. were at ·.
Young while belng employed
the home of Mary Circle on
at
the Art Hill Flower Shop . .
Sunday.

Carmel Netos,
By the Day

ONLY

1150

AAM is planning a series of
recruiting m eetings with
Ohio farmers starting ne&gt;&lt;t
week at McCom b in Hancock
County.
When they 're not lobbying
Congress · or the U. S.
Department of Agriculture,
Ferrell said Ohio farmers
have been staying at an
Arlington, Va ., motel, they
call the "Hotel Flea bag."
" Tbe way we're piling
them in. it probably costs
about $5 a night to keep a
farmer there," he said. At
least part of the expenses

-naa

.99

X

ministry, rural mini;;try:"iile " 'people who feared a retreat Alfonso Lopez Trujillo of
importa nce of the la ity. from the activesm generated C,;olombia. said there was
recognize the validity of basic by the bishops' 1968 con· unity in the conference on the
communities, give greater fer encc held a counter· document . But an Argentine
importance to the means of conference in a Puebl~ hotel delegate said the .co untersocial communication and bu t also approved t he co nference's cr iti cism of
become involved for the sake bishops' long dec laration.
conser va tism within the
of evangelization."
" It is doubtful that the church was a " mosquito
Bishop Nevln Hayes of military regimes will be able bite" compared to the debate
Chicago said the document to take advantage of the inside the seminary.
" in no way " conflicts with document ," the co unterThe conf erence. held
Pope John Paul II 's in: conferente said. " On the behind closed doors, ended
structions to the conference other hand, it will allow th e with a secret vote on the
Jan . 27 when he Inaugurated church to continue its work in document. The vote count
the session at the Palofoxian favor of the poor and op- wa s not released.
The
Seminary on the outskirts of pressed."
fi na I
doc ument
The con ference secretary, deno unced " the Jac k of
Puebla .
Militant priests and Jay conse r vative Archbishop respect lor human dignity
expressed by the lack of labor

be married to Bernard Shaw ,
Miss Hearst was identified as take part in the robbery.
one of four armed persons
On Jan. 29 , President a San Francisco policeman ..
Here is the question asked
involved. She was the object Ca rt er commuted Miss
of a nation-wide hunt until her Hearst 's sentence to the 23 on the AP·NBC News poll on
arrest .in San Fra11.cisco 011 . months she ha d served, , Miss Hearst :
" P atri cia Hearst wa s
Sept. 18, 1975.
saying she " has been
recently
freed from jail after
On March 20, 1976, Miss punished substantially" and
her
pri
son
se ntence was
Hearst was convicted for her " needs
no
furth er
comm
uted
by
Presi dent
part in the robber y and rehabilitation ."
Ca
rter
.
Do
you
favor
or opMiss Hearst, who will be 25
sentenced to seven years in
prison . She had argued that on Feb. 20, was released from pose this action?"
Support fo r freeing Miss
she had been brain washed by t he F edera l Correctional
her kidoappers and forced to Institut ion at Pleasa nton , Hearst, the daughter of San
Exam in er
Ca lif. , on t' eb. I. She plans to Jo' r a n cisc o
president Randolph Hearst
and granddaught er of newspaper publi sher Willt am
Thursday first
Randolph Hearst , was
highest in her home region ,
day to sign up
the West, and among women .
It was lowest among youn ger
Donald Mora, Cha irman of adults.
Meigs
Co unty
t he
Women backed Cayter's
Ag ricultu ral Stabilizati on decision by a ~().39 margin .
have been donated by far- a nd eonservat ion Ser vice But men split almost evenly
mers who remained in Ohio. ( ASCS I toda y reminded on the issue with 47 percent
Ferrell said 'farmers will farmer s that sign-up for the favoring her release and 44
need more help with lobbying 1979 feed grain and wh eat perce nt opposing it . The
in ea rly March when a program beg ins Thursday . remainder of the 1,600 adults
This year's program is interviewed Feb. 5 and 6 by
resolution calling for full
similar
to the 1978 program, telephon e were not sure.
implementation of the 1977
but
it
allows
more fl exibility
In the West, freedom for
farm act comes before the
normal
crop
with
the
farm
s
Miss
Hearst got the backing
House . Full implementation ,
of 54 percent of the public,
he said, means a Commodity acr eage 1NCA1. ·
Set-aside percentages are while 37 percent were opCredit Corporation loa·n rate
equa l to 90 percent of partiy. wheat 20 percent , barley 20 posed. In other sections, the
Ferrell said the U. S. per cent, corn )0 per cent and opinion was almost evenly
Department of Agriculture grain sorghum 10 percent . split between support and
forecasts the highest •tocks This set-aside will make th e opposition. For exampl e, in
of feed grains in 50 years. He farm eligible for commodity the East, the breakdown wsa
said the only way to respond loan s, prevented planting , 16-43 on the question .
The least support for
to such surplus is to reduce price guarantees, and
disaster
coverage.
There
is
's commutation came
Carter
production through Iarmer
also
an
addiponal
set-aside
among
those age 18 to 21 . only
partidpation in government
38 percent of' that group
progra ms
to
withhold on corn for payment.
Mora urges' all farmers backed the action, while 54
acreage from crop plantings.
with
an NCA to visit the ASCS percent were opposed. Eight
However, Ferrell said few
office
between Feb. 15 and percent of those Interviewed
fa rmers will sign up for the
April30
and get the details for were not sure.
1979 se t-aside program
indivi
d~al farm.
th
eir
The hi ghest level of
because the government has
was expressed by
backing
removed all incentives. ·
those
65
and
over, who supImplementing a 90 percent
ported
the
move
by a 60-29
parity and linking it to the
BEAN
DINNER
.
margin
.
set-aside program, he said,
The Meigs Chapt~r . Order
would provide farmers with
of
DeMolay, will stage a
the incentive to join the
program. A fariner wouldn 't public bean dinner from 4:30
be able to take advantage of to 7 p.m. Saturday at the
the higher loan rate unless he Middleport Masonic Temple.
participated in the set-aside Beans, salad. desert and corn
bread will be served for $2.
acreage ln the program.
Tickets
will be availa ble at
Reports of damage to ofthe
door.
fices of the American Farm
Bureau Federation and to the
Mall in Washington are
.
greatly eKaggerated, he
claimed.
" The Mall is frozen now
and nothing could hurt it," he
said . " Estimates of $40,000 to
resod it are ridiculous. It's an ·
attempt to discredit farTHURSDAY
mP.r~ "
ME IG S
COUN TY
Democrat Cent ra l Committee, 7:30p.m. Thursday at
Meigs Inn .
BRADBURY PTA Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
GROUP
POMEROY
CHAMBER of
REORGANIZED
Friday
at noon at
Commerce
. A vocal group organized in
Meigs
Inn.
Meigs · County during the
R~TURN
JONATHAN
Bicentennial in 1976 and
Meigs
Chapter,
Daughters of
known as the Voices of
American
R
ev olution ,
Liberty will be reorganized
Friday,
1:30
p.m
. in River
Mrs. June Van Vranken,
Boat
room
of
Meigs
Branch of
director, said today.
the
Athens
County
Saviitgs
The group will hold its
and
Loan.
Program
tracing
reorganizational session at
ancestors
.
Silent
Auction
.
7:30 p.m . Monday at the
Mrs.
Dale
Dutton,
Hostesses
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church and will begin work Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Mrs.
on an Easter cantata , " The Everett Hayes, Mrs. Charles
Lewis and Mrs. Robert D. .
Last Week "
by John
Craig.
Peterson,
All
former
members and residents who
would like to become a part of
MEETING TONIGHT
the group are invited to the
The
Southern Local Board
Monday night session.
of Education will meet this
evening at 7:30 p.m .

,------ -,

Social 1
1 Calendar 1
1

widen ed the gap between rich
and poor "by placing capital
befor e work and economic
intcre~t s before social in·
tcrcsts."
But the conference also
turned down radical demands

unions." Military regimes, it
said, repress' 'organization of

l abor. of peasants and of
popular groups."
Th e documen t r cj l•cted

ca pit alist
fr ee -market
systems because th ey have

for governments in Latin
America based on Marxism
or socialism and condemned
guerrilla

vi olence

and

terrorism as •·an attack on
life, which depends on the
Creator only."

LUNCH &amp; SAUSAGE LOAF. ••••••••••••• ~~-••sl.89
ALL MEAT FRANKS .•••••••••.•••.••••••• ~~-. s1.59
HOMEMADE 'HAM SALAD •••••••••••••• ~~~- s1.19
Eckrich

Ohio ·supporters seek
more tractor drivers

Ph. 446-4367

Spring Valley Plaza

Roman Ca~lics live.
It called for action to end
oppression exercised in the
name of " national security"
and vigorously denounced
persecution, tortur!: and
other repressive tactics to
control the poor and
illiterate.
It also called lor a return to
the church 's pastoral role, as
demanded bY conservatives,
larger
but
within
a
framework demanded by
activists clergy of the
" Uberatlon" school.
II said the church " will give
to
urban
im portance

Nearly half favored Hearst action

The Professionally Trained Man or
Woman always Gets The Promotion
and High er Income!
'Accounting
Secretarial
Gen era l Office
Business Admini stration ·
ENROLL NOW
"It's Better To Be A GBC Graduate
Than To Compete With One ."
Write , Call, or Visit for Information

reduction is afforded only
those whose homestead in·
()Orne is $3,000 9r less.
Eckart proposed to r etain
the $10,000 cutoff, but give the
$5,000 reduction to everyone
within it. Those with incomes
from $7 ,000 to $10,000, in the
current law, for instance , get
only a $2,000 reduction.
call for broadening th e
over all qualifying base,
Eckhart said he would ask
that House Ways and Means
Committ ee to amend hi s
proposallo make it the same
as Stano's. That way ;
passage could be expedited,
with hearings being held in
both houses simultaneously.

By Kevin M. Kelleghan
Associated Press Writer
PUEBLA, Mexico (AP I Latin America's Roman
Catholic bishops ended their
conference setting t heir
policy for the next 10 years
with a promise of in·
creaslngly vigorous efforts on
behalf of the poor.
The document released
Tu esday condemned both
materialistic capitalism and
atheistic Marxism, saying
neither is a solution to the
grinding poverty of Latin
America, where nearly half
the world's 7~0 million

INCREASE YOUR INCOME

tion law, maximum $5,000

GOODI'iEAR

31

speech to la wmakers Feb. 6,
exn~pt the governor 's plan
bears a $636 million price tag.
Like Rhodes' plan. Roberto
said hi s bill calls for no new
or additional state taxes.
In a re lated move,
however, the Ohio Education
Association, which cla im s
about $1 billion in new aid is
needed Io solve education ills,
offered results of a statewide
sw·vey Tues~ay night which
suggested Ohioans are
willing lo pay higher state
under
certain
ta xes ,
conditions.
The survey by Opinion Research Inc. of Princeton,
N..J. , said t he 3-2 voter
willingness was tied directly
to reductions in local
property taxes and earmarking the new revenue
specifically for education.
The Educ~ tion Association
held a briefing on the fourpart survey, conducted
betwe e n May 1978 and
.Janua ry 1979, for lawmakers
and the news media.
Under
O ' N eill' s
a mendme nt to the dea th
penalty
law,
murders
committed in the course of a
ki d- n ap ping ,
rape,
a gg rav a t e d
a r so n ,
aggra vated robbe ry or
aggravated burglary would
not be capital offenses.
Rep. Mary 0 . Boyle, DC l e veland
Height s ,
successfully amended the bill
lo allow juries in capital
cases either to decide the
convicted person should be

Catholic bishops set policy, end conference

.

.

1 lb. Kraft Parkay

MARGARINE ...:!~~.~~:~~..

~

69
$
CHEESE.. ..........~~ .•... 1.59

1

lb . Kr a ft Velveet a

30 cl. Florida

~

165 ct.

~

CELERY...............~~?:.~.

49
LEMONS ..............6/49

6 oz. DONALD DUCK ORANGE JUICE .•• 2/894
49 oz. TIDE ..... .... .••..... .. ......•.. •• ... .. $1 .49
wit h 10c off

6 12

oz.

STAR-KIST TUNA •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 83t
10 1 '&gt; oz. Vi e lla

PORK or BEEF BARBECUE. ••.••••• ~ ••••••• s1.19
12 oz.

ARMOUR TREET•.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.51.19
tO o z .

JET-PUFF MARSHMALLOWS.•••••••••••• ~~:. 394
12 oz . Nes lle' s

HOT COCO••~~':.~~~~~=:s.h.~:!~~~-5

•••••••••••••••

s1.19

IS';• oz . Del Monte

CHUNK PINEAPPLE ••.•••••••••••••.••••..•

c.a·n··

494

10 oz . Nesc a fe

INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••s4.59
OCEAN SPRAY ORIN K••.•••.••••••••••• 2Pl.69
32 o z. Cranapple

•

on Cold
For the best

cold

wash·
can get!
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25conanydze
L1nnclryllctef1CIII

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p- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb. !4 ,1979

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middlej,ort-Pomerov. o.. Wednesday. Feb. 14, 1979

at

lOS

Un ion

Avenue ,

Pomeroy , Ohio , to sell for

cash the fo llowing collate ... al.
to -w it ·

197l Monte carlo, serial No .

IH57K3U 62332
The Farmers

&amp;

Bank

Sa v ings Company , Pomeroy ,
Ohto . reserves the rtgl'lt to btd
at this sale .

(2)

For Best Results Use Sentinel .Classifieds

IN THE

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOt tee 1s hereby given that
on February 17, 1979 , at 10 00
AM a pub l il:; sale will be heldt

COMMON PLEAS COURT ,

PROBATE. DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SET-TLEMENT OF ACC OUNTS ,· PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
fol lowing

Wanted - Skilled Truck DriveB

CASE

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

February 15, 1979
This commg year . you may turn
a very handsome pr ofit J ro m a
stde s•tuallon yo u're quite

knowledgeable about Its yteld
co uld match or top your regular

mea me

AQUARIUS (Jan . Zli-Feb. 19)
Your c hance s l or ga1n from a
sr tua!l on co ntrolled by another
looks prom tstng today. proYtded yo u don t rock t11 e boa t
Be a good passenger Frnd ou t
more about yo urse lf by send·
ing lor your all -n ew 1979 AstraGraph Letter Ma11 $1 for each
and a long . se ll-addressed
stamped enve lope to ' AstraGraph P.O Bo x 489 . Rad1o C1ty
Station N Y. 10019 Be sure to
s pecify b1r th s1 gn .

PISCES

(Feb. 20-March

For Reasonably Steady Work Commencing About
March mh. Union Shop. Excellent Wages and Fringes.
Mu~t be Mature, Sober and Be Able to Handle and
Mi!ln!,in Tandem Vehicles .. Phone 992-5100 and We

NO.

22184
First
Annual Account ol Frank W
Por ter Jr , Guardian of th e

ICe
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll t9) Be
sure to share equal ly today
pra1s e or benefits resultmg
lrom a ta sk someone else
helpe d you perform There 's a
possibt llty 1t could slip you r
m1nd

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Unless It is a labor of rove you
m1ght be wise to postpone your
work today If your heart's not
tn il , yo u won ' t do a good rob

CANCER (June 21-July 22) The
spt rtl I S wil ling today but the
fl es h may be weak Good
th1 ngs yo u had planned to do
lor another m1ght be sheh1ed 1t
the going gets to ugh

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Someone
may perform a ve ry necessary
service for yo u today It 's nght
and proper to show gratitu d e.
but take care that the paymen t
doesn ' t ex ceed val ue of the

deed
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept

are conce rn ed today In some
mstan ces you wtll be very
pru dent , whtle rn ot hers you
co uld be ex tremely ex trava -

15 Words or Under

22)

G1ve cred1! where c red•t IS due .
A fn end could conceive a very
worthwhile td ea today whtch
she will share with you , but you
may later c la tm tt as your own

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
21) Bu st nesswise yo u're very
levelheaded today, and capable of dertvmg ben efits In
oth er areas thrs wo n' t be true

Each word over the mlrumum 15
1$ 4 ceni.S per word J)t!r llay.
Ac.b runnln~ vlher than L'Unsecutlve
days will be charged 1:1l the I day
rate.

words

In memory , Card of Thanks and
Obituary 6 cent" per word, $3 00
rrummum . Cashm advant-e.

--- - ---

WIL L (A RE for th e rlderly m our
hnm£&gt; Pho nf' Y9'} 73 14

are accepted only with cash wi th

WATER AND mt (C hauling Ca ll
99') 58S8
PIANO TUNING lor home and
c;c hool Lone Oonrpls , o ssocr ate
of ~lh crfc lrl " and Brumcard1
Mustc
Company
Phone
99') '158 1 or 49'1 'JOH'J

Noon on Saturday
-

ROUND

bol es

HAY

f or

sole

843 -25 74

GUN SHOOT , Rocme Volu nteer
F1re Dept Every Sa turday b 30
p m at th etr butld 1ng 1n BO!&gt;han
gi~Jen

Fac to ry cho f.. e gun s only

tha t

FRH CA NDY mok mg cla ss ol Ot s
Can dy and Coke Supp lies Spr·
rng Volley Plow

4db 2 134 for
n:og is trotron II s fu n a nd easy
You 'll be omo1ed at whot you
con do

- -- - - - Lost and Found

1HS7 Kl1462l32

Bank &amp;
Savings Company . Pomeroy ,
Ohto, reserves th e ri ght to bid
at thi s sale .
The

Farmers

(2) 14, 15, 16, Jtc

-

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

-

LO ST IN Flolwoa ds· Te)(os Com ·
mun ity a rea Block long ho1r

adult mole, cot Miss1ng smcc
Jon :n Coli 965 --4344 aft er

5 oo

- - - - -- - - - - __~ante&lt;!_ t~ Bu_y_ __
-~- ,-

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF FLETCHER R.
WELCH , DECEASED

OF FIDUCIARY
'
On F ebruarv 6, 1979, In the
Me tgs County Proba te Co urt,
Case No 22,582, Earnest Lee
We lc h , 37626 Walnut Drive,
Romulu s. M lc h 1g an 46174,
was appointed Exec utor of
the estat'f of · Fletcher R.
Wel c h , dec~esed, late o f
Middleport. Meigs Co'unty ,
Ohio .

Manning 0 Webs te r
Probate Judge.
Clerk
(2 ) 14, 21, 28, Jtc

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF CHARLES A.
WAGNER , DECEASED

Cue No. 225t1

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On February S, 1979, in the

Probate Court,

Meigs County

Case No . 22591. Le op ha
Wagner , 2630 Kingston Pike,
Circleville, Ohio 4311 3, was
appointed EMecutr ix of the
estate Of Charle s w. Wagner,
deceased , tate of Bo x 126,
Ra cine, Ohio .

Mann ing D Webste r
Probate Judge Clerk

b&lt;ic
19to5 Genera l bO M 1'} '} bdr
1968 Efcona S'lx I'} ? bdr
1969 Buddj1 bOx 17 4 bdr
1970 Sylva. M x 1'J. 'J bd r
1970 Castl e, 60 M 1'J . 'J. hdr
1973 Arlmgton 60 x 1'l 1 bdr
1973 R1dgewood. 70 x 14 3 bdr
1973Kirkwood 50 x 17. 1 bdr
B8 S MOBilE HOME SALES
PT PLEASANT, WV

CHIP

WOOD
Pole s
moM
rlrom eter 10 on largest end
S 1:2 per ton Bundled slob , SIO
pe r ton Deli vered to Ohro
Polle-t Co
Ht 2, Po meroy

991 2b89
TIM BER POMEROY Fores t Pro
ducts Top price lo r stond1ng
.sow timber. Coli 992 .5965 or

Kent Honby , 1.446 -8570

OLD FURNITURE , •ce boMes, bro'SS
beds iron beds, desk s, etc ,
complete househo lds. Wnte
M 0 Miller. Rt d Po m eroy or
coli 992 77f:IJ

WANTED TO

PIANOS

PETF SIMPSON

own an

to

-!l~tes Rep. For ·
Sundins
Hammond Organs
ryreo Blvd . Racine, Oliio
Ptlone 949-2118 evenings
after s p.m. Weekends
after 12. noon.
2-5-1 mo.

grocery

business and have a nice
apartment too . Apartment

has

3 bedrooms, .living
room, bath, family room or
dining room and 2 porches .

Grocery business Is doing
very well and the price
includes
stock
and
equipment. Located on

Salem Street in Rutland.
Call for more info. Selling
price S29,500.00.
HobsleH"r ReaHy
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.

:

:Reil!§_state_t~ s _a le

-

COAL, LIME STONE, sand grove!
ca lnum ch lo r1dc fe rf1 i1ze r dog
food and all types of salt fM
rels1or Salt Work~ Inc f Main
51 Pome roy qcn 39q 1
MIXI:O CONDITIONW hoy Very
goo d
qua ltly
Oel t ve ry
avai lable Phone CW:;l . 7201 or

qrn 3309
FROSTV S CB Rod1o Equip men t

[ ve rythmg m two way rad io ,
on t enno and O((:essories .
Ph one Portland 8..4J.2 181 Open
eve~in gs until B Sunday 2 fill b .
. I::VfHYTH ING'S

Hou se

and

COTTA
go'
lot
furn iture

clothes cor , oil my house hold
item!. Drop by 7fl0 Laure l 51
M1ddl e pbrt
CHAIN SAWS use d, good condr tl on ha ve several W1ll tf.ade
fo r mos t ony lhmg
Fil es .

992 7494

.
.
~U ll A ND HARDWARE . 2 doors
from Rutland Pos t Offrce
Phone 742-2755
1 delu Me
con1 'il er vacuum cleane r wit h

powe r nozzl e end attachments
$69 95 1 Sunbeam indoor, out:
door vacu um cl eaner 1 " 1 h .p .
mo tor , $39 .qs 1 laborato ry
s1nk on d cab 1net
Al s.o
Mansf1eld closet combinol1on
the New Water Sever , bo th
$8b

95

NEW LISTING -

5

acres

tn the woods on good road
with school
and mail
route s Modern 4 bedroom

home with 2 baths, full
basement, formal dining
with ftreplace . Hot water
heat and 2 car garage.
Want only $58,000 00 for a
quick sale.

NEW

LISTI"'"

-

4

b:~.:-ili c: PE"D\"G
large
e, ~
_,..,
public
Wo•er, and one -half acre
near Guvsville. S18,500.

NEW

LISTING

Renovat ed 3 bedrooms,
close ts, nice eat-in kit ..

bath, full basement, oil tur
nace

on

ni ce

lot

$73,500.
NEW LISTING

-

want

3.33

acres rigt'lt on the Ohio
R i ver .
Summe'playground with hopku~

for,two !railers. su.'IOO.
NEW LISTING - ~''der

:':'e c n~-PE"D\"G ·~~:
drfll ~. auu 1 /:l acres of
1

land. Need $35,000
NOW IS THE TIME TO
PUT YOUR PROPERTY
WITH US TO SELL.

992-3325 will get you the
best results.

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

bedrooms, bath, fireplace,
carport, storms, S400.00
down p lus c losing _ Tota l
price $8,000.00

NEW LISTING - 1 story
frame, 3 bedrooms 1 bath,
all electric, about 112 acre,

Colt
Cec il

JACK W.
CARSE·Y

Ol;l
---~

~

Mgr.

-~

___ '(a!~_S_!ll!! _

Phone 99'1-2181

IF YOU hove o se r v1ce to offer
wort to buy or c;,ell c;ome th ,ng

oe looking lor w'ork

Appltance ·

SALE PRICES

99:2 -526'1 or wr~le Kay
87 S 7nd M rddleporl
~

your

or

whatever . you'll get resulls
foster wilh o Sentinel Wont Ad

Co ll992-215b.

MF 135 ga!; trac tor MF 1SO gas
tra ctor MF 1135 tractor wi th
r ob and AC Geh l 95 MX
grmrle r m1xe r
Geh! 1070
mower cond1l 1oner
Shmn's
Trac tor Solec;
03d ·d58-I030.
leon. WV

RENT or h1re MF 200 B
Corwl er·do:rer MF 711 ~ki d
c; teP.r l oader Shinn's Tractor
Soles 304 -458-1630 Loo n , WV.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EDNA MAE
RHOD'ES, DECEASED

Cue No . 22515.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIAR.Y

On Januery 24, 1979, In the
Me igs Count\~ Probat e Court.
Case No 22585, Jo hn M
Pickens, Route 1, Portland ·
Ohio , w es appointed An :
ciliary Adm inistrator of the
estate of Edna Mae Rhodes
deceasea , late o f Rochester '
Penn sylvania .
'

Manning 0 . Webster
Probate Judge Clerk

Manning D . Webster
Prbbete Judge
Clerk
(I)

l1 , 12 ) 7, 14, l ie

REDUCE SAFF ond fas t with
GoBese Tablets 8 E· Vop " w oter
pi ll"'" Nelson Drug
. '
. .
BROWNING MARK IV CUan tenna:
l o wer '} roto rs walt meter.

-

D l04 Tweat1e Bird m ~e, linear.
Ca ll little Blt 949 2265 .

..

HAY FOR sole Round boles, $20,
Squore boles 51 . 985 3537,

985-"3'FIREWOOO rOR !\ol e. 985 3505 or

985-3537.
FIRf,WOOO FOR soiP.
S'JS o
pidf'l•p,'rurkiCIOd q4q '1111~ . .
J'JHN

D£Eflf
l.IA -Mb· ll :lS

M

rlnt"r

. - -· .

BOWERS

ELWOOD

-.

REPAIR

Sweepers, toas ters , Irons , oil
sm allopplionces Lawn mower ,
ne)(l to State Highway Garage

14x36, deck with seat ing

capacity. Here is a genuine

bargain at $48,000.00.
WANT A BUSINESS?
We have several, and one

to suit your needs 1 am
sure. Cell on these .

WE WANT WIGWAMS!. ..
and every other · kind of
house Imaginable, Buyers

waiting with ready cash.
CALL NOW AND LET US
SELL YOUR PROPERTY ...
REALTORS
HENRY E . CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992-22S9 992-6191 992-2568

vice, all ma kes , 99'1 2284. The
Fobr 1c Sh o p . Pom e r oy .
A ut homed S1 nger Sales on d
Ser1J1Ce We sharpen Sc1ssor s

·- · ·

- ----

b98-7331.
-

. . .

--

·.:

· _ _ __

--

-· · · ·

SAVE ON
CARPmNG
DRIVE Aurn£

1,

~·

~&lt;

~·

·•'

.,.,.

-

.

-

A GOOD SELECTION OF
END &amp; Rt;lLL BALANCES .

UNEDI AIM RUGS
1
12.95 &amp; UP

. . -

-

C.ll,742-l21t
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

RUTLAND
FUINITURE
742-2211

~..:.::~:.;_

Jumble Book No 12, conta lnlnljj110puzzles, Is aullable for S1 75poslpald

hom Jumbla,c/o this newspaper, Box 34 , Norwood, N.J .07648 .1nclude your
name, addresa, zlp code tnd make checks pay1blt to Newspaparbooks.

12 .oo-Newscenter 3; News 6,10 ; J eopardy 15 , You ng
&amp; the Restless 8; Midda y M agazlne 13; Love
Ame rican Style 17 .
1:2 3D-Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Password 15; Search for
Tomor row 8,10; El ec. Co . 20,33 ; Movie " Tammy &amp;
the Bachelor" 17

.,•'
Fi\.ANK &amp; ERNIE

r

••.,

..

•'•

'·

•

,.

•

•
••

'·

Yesterday's Answer
28 Roght

20 Japanese
sea port
24 Overfill
25 He
played
Napoleon
26 High
schooler

up-to-dale
29 Instantly
31 Peg
32 Set right
34 Lady's ba;
35 Jargon
38 Glowing

••

THA~t~

•

••
...•

KCNUUZ,
Af4f4H , e,uT YOUR
HUS~AND5 Pfi)I?ICA~

CONDITION WAS MUCH
e,ETTeR Tl'EN ...

1+

the code l etters ar e different

ZXQ
WA

LKXFDCKDXXE

L C Y

X T C

I N Y F ,

CSCKZ

X AC
. '

AXF

y XT C

F X
V N H H. - I Z X E X K
E X H F X ZCS H MW
Yesterday' s Cryploqaote: WE WERE BORN TO UNITE WITH
OUR FELLOWMEN, AND TO JOIN IN COMMUNITY WITII
THE HUMAN RACE.-CICERO
·

RU11AND FURNrTURE
.-WE OFFERYOU ...
1. Two .lull floors of all new
l_u mlture .
2. Nice Mlectlons of used

furniture .
· ·
·
J . A llrgt building lull of

Opening lead : • 2
p

By Oswald Jacoby

NYFQNU

PWUU

4+

Pass

and Alan Sontag

DNSC

FX

Pass

(f ~ l979

King Features Syndicate , Inc.

IF I TOLD '-IE
ONCE, I TOLD
'IE A HUNNERT

·- IT AIN'T
PERLITE

red su its, and deciding
against retu rning a club,
the

exce llent

'.

to a trump.
South won the trump in
dummy a..._d made sho rt
sw 1tch

• 10 53
EAST

Pass 3+
Pass . Pass

the kmg , quite obviously a
sin gleton . Not wishing to
help decla r er in e ither of the
East made

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : South
West North Easl Soulh

.. AND HE WAS IN HIB
NAl\JR",L HA~I TA"Ji

SOTO SPEAK .
' FEEL

2-14

+K

0,11 ~ D.,.[~ ' "" T Y. ~~~U S Po l 001

Rutlend · "i ;
_ _-=:=::...o

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

• ---• 76 2
•J64o
•Aw9
• Q7532
• 64
+J9a2
+AQ 76 4
SOUTH
+ K"Qtl911
¥ K 75
t K 10 9

CRYI\TOQUOTES
QAFWU

...

BRIDGE

WEST

One letter si mply stands for another In this sample A 1s
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, et c Single !e11er s,
apostrophes , the length and torma ti~m of t he "'ords are all

2 · 14-

.- .

Wednesda y, Feb. 14

NORTH
+A J 8 5
• Q 82
+AJ 8

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

hmts. Each day

Her oes 17 , Over Easy 33
11 :l o--Johnn y Carson 3, 15. Starsky S. Hutch 6, 13,
Mash 8, ABC News 33; Mov 1e " lns1de D aiSY
Clover" 10; Movie " Who Slew Auntie Roo?" 17 _
12 OS--Colu mbo B; 12 · dQ-Mann Dc 6, 13.
I : OQ--- T omor row 3; 1: 25-Movle " Charge of t he
Lan cers" 17; 1·5o--News 13.
J: OG--N ews 17, 3:2G--Movie " Harrie t Craig" 17; S·2oWorld at Large 17

A game with no guesswork

!~ ~~bt!~es

•

:·'·,.

...

33
11 :DO- News 3,6,8 ;, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20, Hogan ' s

40 Cocktail

rr ';)J

••

Valley Bluegrass 20: Wild Wild World of Animals
33 .
7·3o--Hollywood Squa res 3; Bonkers 6; Match Game
PM a, $100,000 Name Thai Tune 10: Nashvi lle On
The Road 13: Dolly 15: Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil Lehrer Repo rt 20,33.
B·DO- Liftl e Women 3,15: Mork &amp; Mi ndy 6,13 0 Walton s
a. 10; Nova 20,33 ; Mission Impossible 17
8 3(}-Ang ie 6,13: 9:0o--Quin cy 3. 15, Three 's Company

Mdler 6, 13 ; News 20 ; Footsteps 33.
10 :3o--Soap 6,13 ; Best of Groucho 20; Area Showcase

J~~~,-~~~=----:------~---------------,----~r----------------------------------,39Decimal
unol

!loY ! IT' Su~!
JUMPfD THAT

Love American Style 15, Carol Burnett 17; Hock ing

'-

" The N1ght of the Grizzly" 17.

37 Expand

INTERROGATION
ROOM

Dream of Jeannie 17.

5:3o--Carol Burnett S. Friends 3; News 6 ; Sanford S.
Son a: Elec. Co 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10, Odd
Couple 15; Beverly Hillbillies 17 ; Doctor Who 33.
6·0Q-News 3,8,10,13,15; NBC News 6: Andy Griffith
17; Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 3o--NBC News 3. 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett 6:
CBS News 8,10; My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20 .
7-.()()--{:ross-Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6, 13: News 10;

8:3(}-Taxi 6,13; 10 0!&gt;-Women•ln White 3, 15: Barney

35 Invent
36 Have to
pay

•

Hollywood

6,13 ; . Grammy Awards 8,10; World 20,33; Mov te

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I Barroom
t Algerian
in .Juarez
qua rter
2
Ag, ees
j Wing
3 Stupefy
10 Grazmg
4 Seed coat
gr ound
5 Leaf a rea
II Soak
6 Equivocated
12 Guaranteed
i Highly
13 Likewise
active
14Gun
8 Moon15 Makmg
struck
eyes at
9
Expectant
17 Pan
10
Basketball's
material
- Pete
18 On the
Mara vich
defensiv e
16 Director,
19 Aware of
21 Commotion
Sergio 22 Girl
23 Hotbed
27 Lofty
mountain
30 Bemg :
Sp.
31 Senegal
seaport

sauce

'

24 Rolls of C. r~Mt in Stock
,&amp; 100's of Samples to
' Choose From.
BUY NOW&amp; SAVE

HAVE~ DAMPEN GIBBET
An swe r· That rear estate representati ve 1s certamly no
lady-at least 1t sounds that way1 -" A-GENT'

Jumbles. COMET

31 Russian
33 Mild
oath
34 Type of

--

·'1 &amp; 12' QJSHIONED
-·.
'•·
R.OOR
'3.49 &amp; '3.99 sq. yd. ''

pl~~b~n~. ~~- ~85_8 • ,_ ___ _
WALLPAPERING AND pointmg.

Col17&lt;2-2328.

birthday,
Skeezhc!

9' x 12'- ll'X12'- 12'x 15'

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

Happ~

Via
local
marlt.et!

SAVE A1DT

AND

PULLINS EXCAVATING Compl e te
. -Service
..Phone..992.2478
. - .- . - .

..

&amp;

MOBILE' HOME repair s Furnaces,
electrical work , pipes sowed,

.,

ALLEYOOP

r - - - - - , - - - - . --

Emergency coi ls. Coli 882-2q5'1
or 862·2305 .

•

-~

•I

(An swer s tomorrow)

~te~

On ....

_C~e~hi_re~ 3_67·0292.

Kitchens
r emodeled. cerom1 c tile , plum·
bi ng, ca rpentry, and general
. ma intenance . 13 years ex perience 992-3685.

BATHROOM S

--

11 WASH'T HEAVEH , AFTER All ·"

•

TWO AKC reg1stered Pe kin ese .
pupc;. S90 each . Second house •
beh1nd Silv er Ru n Freew ill Bop trs t Church Stanley Ales h1re

I: ·C ELECTRICAl Con1roctor serv·
ing Ohio Voll ey region Six
days o week , 24 hours ~ervice .

or NANCY JASP'I!lS, ASSOCIATI Mt•HS4

COME TRUE "

YeSierda y

0[1111)

I

RISING STAR Kennel s. Boordln ~
and groom1ng. oil breeds~

-· ---

- - - - · · · -·· ·--

CHESTER Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre
land and large storage building . Price $21 ;500.
TWO ACRES- A bNuflfut ~year old, z bedroom home
with large e11t-ln kitchen, 2 badrooma, all nlce\r
carpeted, 2 baths, lull basement with TV room. Many
more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace. All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location. Will go quick lor $3S,OOO.
.
ACRI!AGE- with large beef barn near Pomeroy.
SPACIOUS 81-LEVEL- This may be vour dre11m
home. lt .has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stave, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass door-s. Large living room and
family room, and to finish this well-laid out home """
have live bedrooms, utility room and garage. Vory low
heating bill. Red barn-like storage building. Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt . 7.
Asking $55,000.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good l'h storv houM
completely carpeted wlth • bedrooms. dining room a;;;!
laundry room . Also almost new 2 car heated garage.
This home Is nlcelv located In Portland and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500.
"
.
LOTS- 1 Acre encf up near Pomeroy .
.
50 ACRES FREE GAS-Good l'h llory house with lull"
basement. Large pond stocked with fish. Priced for ,
.quick sale. $&lt;10,000.
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, almost new
kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted. laundry room, all
Insulated, natural gal ·heat, utility building, 2 lob.
$21,500.00.
. .
Talk flo 1 locol r••I estate 1gent before trying to Mil
vour homo. His experience can help vou, Wt need '
manv _types of _..tv, •lw 111 ·• all.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCtATE"94t-2311

GEE, S ANOY "' IT 'S BETTER
IF !lOME DREAMS NEVER

Pets for sale

EXCAVATING dozer, backhoe
and ditcher Charles R. Hotfield, Bo ck Hoe Serv1ce .
Ru_tl~n~. ~~i o. ~hone 7 -1 ~ ~-8
HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex
covoting , sep tic sys t e m s.
doze r. backhoe. dump truck,
limes tone. grovel. blacktop
paving, Rt 143 Phone I (614)

- -

BUT SHE WfJS AWAY FROM "fHE
FARM ... SHE HAD A BARGE AND
A HANDSOME HLJ5BAND --· 61..11

·1-12-1mo.

- · · - - - - ·-

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? l os t your operators
license? Phone 992-:2 1.43.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

!"""'=~---

•

EXCAVATING. dozer . loader and
backhoe work: dump truck s
and lo-boys for hire. wl/1 haul
fill d1rl. Ia sod, lr mes tone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fer s day phone q&lt;n -7089 ntght
phone qq2 3525 or 992- 5232.

New 1978
Mobile Home, (expando
living room) add a room

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--FOOL'S GOLD

'•

on Route 7 .

(lowgasbiilsl . &gt;!ERE ISA
BUY.

Headquarters
HEADQUARTERS

Au ctioneer , Com ·
plete Service Phone 949 -2'4 87
or q49.'}00Q Racine, Ohio Crill
Bradford.

BRADFORD

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser -

4111,: ACRES -

triTLE ORPHAN ANN,! E

PII&gt;NE 742-2328

Business Services

uti tt tv room , S18,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
tot , lots of remodeling, 3 or
4 bedrooms , 2 baths,
natural gas hot water heat,

Housing

For all
Needs.

Depend

2-7 · mO .

.

216 E. second StrH•

••
'·

(SUspended, Texlufe)- Tile ·
- Floors - Paneling &amp; Trim,
Quality Work You Can

949-2862, 949-2160

NEW LISTING - V,A. ap·
proved, 1'12 story frame, 2

'

Ceramic Tile • Formica
Counter Tops - Ceilings · ·;

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

10 31&gt;-AII Star Secrets 3,15; S20.000 Pyramid 13, Andy
Griffith 6; Price is Rlght .8,10.
11 .DO-High Rollers 3,15 i Happy Day s 6,13, 11 31&gt;Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Fam ily Feud 6, 13; Love of
Llle 8,10; Sesame St . 20; Nova 33.
·
11 · 55-C BS News 8 ; House Call 10; News 17 .

5 DO-l Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hil lbillies 8;
MISter Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle
USMC 10; Biomc Wom an 13 ; Brady Bunch 15 ; I

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug ·
gesled by the abo~Je cartoon

Print answer hera:

•I

AL TROMM OONST.

Co1199'} 7d.Bl

POMEROY, O.-·

.,••

..

TAKE$ MORE THAN
' ONE iO MAKE IT.

IUNJAYTj

..•

"
••
'•
••

-Room Additions:;
-Custom Remodeling- ~.:

Roofing

HOMESITES fo r sole, 1 ac re and
up Middl e port near Rut land

MAIN ...IIIII

.

.

,

THREE BEDROOM fram e home 1n
M ~d ~leport . C_a ll 9?2:3457

TWO BHJROOM mobrle home on
', acre lo t Garage , workshop
Mu s t see lao o ppredolel T p
oreo Phone6U 667 3109

I (J

2-11 -1 mo. Pd .

·

Family 8, 10, Dating G~me 13; Movie " Mi racle in
the Rain'' 17.

Squares 15; Merv Gr ifftn 6; Porky P ig &amp; Friends 8;
Sesame S. 20,33; Batman 10, Dinah 13; Space
G 1ant s 17
4· 30- Bewitched 3; Bever ly Hil lbillies 6; Gilligan' s Is
8, Brady Bunch 10; Petttcoat Junct ion 15;
Gilligan 's Is . 17

IBAACANI

992·6011

H. L Writesel

Heroes 10 ; Green Acres
17.
10 :0o--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of Nigh t 6; All In The

Cave tt 20

*New Home
*Add-ons
*Remolding

b75,.44'J4

buy . old 1ewel ry

Cue No. 22,319.
On January 25, 1979, In the
Mei gs County Probate Court,
Case No 22,319, Elizabeth
Ann Lu cn, Rt. 1, Sox 107,
Rutland , o~ro 4577.5 was
appointed Administrator with
Will Annexed of the estate of
Ralph R. Carman, deceased.
late of Minersville, Ohio .

(t) 31 , !11 7, 1A, lie

opportunity

lnsurecl .

G ame 10 ; Lucy Show 17 .
9 : 30--Brady Bunch 8; Hogan 's

4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3: Splderman 4:

992-2356

&amp; Famous Name Brand

Excellent

I KJ

0.

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

V1rg ini a 13 ; 6 55-Chuck White Repo r ts 10, News

13.
7·DO-Today 3, 15 , Good Morning America 6,13;
Thursday Morn 1ng 8; Schoolles 10; Three StoogesLitt le Rascals 17.
7:15--Weather l3: 7· 3o-Family Affair 10
8 .00-Capt. Ka ngaroo 8, 10 ; Leave II To Beaver 17 ;
Sesame St. 33.
8 .3!&gt;-Hazel 17. 9:DO-Merv Grlftin l ; Phil Donahue
13.15 ; Emergency0ne6 . Hogan 'sHeroes8 ) Match

Onl y 1S.
1·30--Days of Our Lives 3, 15: As The World Turn s 8, 10;
2:00--0ne Life to Li ve 6,13 : 2·25-News 17 .
2:3o--Doctors3,15: Guiding Llghta,1 0; I Love Lucy 17.
3:0!&gt;-Anolher Wo r ld 3,15; General Hosp ital 6,13, Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20: Speed Racer 17.
l :3!&gt;-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10, Fll ntsfo nes 17 , Olck

651 Beech Street
Middleport.

Black Woman 10.

1 :oo-Hollywood ~quares J , J-~.11 My Lhi ldre n 6, 13;
News B; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For ~omen

I WYLEN "b

11 Ye1n Experience
Will Mike
service cans

Mtm,orot
Chimney
Swttps G4111d

ORGANS

byHennArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble thes e four Jumble s,
one letter to each square , to form
four ord1nary words

~----. . . .~~~~~~. ~---------1--4--1-m_o_.,~t~__. l~ ::
•

Hammond

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

REYNOLD'S -: ~
-ELECTRIC MOlOR.~,. .
-SHOP
-

... tso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

aft crb

Associate

SAlf

PROBATE COUIIT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF RALPH R.
CARMEN, DECEASED

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

fA ifl VII:W HT S b y~to rc; old Atl
e iP.rlrrr hnmco 3 b e dr
1 ',
both. lovely fom1ly roo m w1t h
woocl bur in g stove . fuJiy
rorpe ted , garag e . 1 orre Neor
Me1gs H1g h School 99'} t-~287 .

jljf~~ fii)'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

r-------~--------~~-~:~

Auto &amp; Truck
"Repair

D•vid Colem•n

Roger W~rf!s l~y : 7~7. 233 ~

_
' WANT TO buy old .45 and 78
pho nagropk record s · Coli
992-6370 or C onloct~ Marlin Fur
n1 lurf'

o.

Washington St., Albany, 0.
Phone698-&lt;1173

Sto le , A them 6l.d -59'1-3051

Phone 742-200l

COINS .

!2) 1A , 11. 28 ltc

•

GARAGE

No
mo rH;c•y
down (p fl g •bh~
vcte re n5) FHA
As l ow O!\ 3
per ce nt down ( non veterens J
lrdoncl Mortgage Co
77 E

Cheryl Lemley

poc ke t watches ,
do ss nngs , weddmg bands
d1amonds Gold or sdve r . Call

OLD

'ROGER HYSEll.
mile oH Rt. 7'~V-pals on
St. Rt. l241owera Rut11nd,

fST ATE Loo ns Purcha se onrl
rel1nonce. 30 year term s V A

FACE5 t

11 -9-1 mo .·

~

fl~Al

established

REi COGNITION
ON VOUt&lt;-

--"

woorlorl ar(!O on top of h1ll
Overlook s nve-r Water eiec
tm O VO if o bh~ 99'} 3886

New LISting -

C.ll99'l-7113 FOr Free Estlmlltl

--

:J ' , orres in Pome roy Seclu ded

Broker

Notices
- ------------

G UN SHOOT Ra cine Gun Club
!:very Su nday I pm Fact ory
choke ~u_n s o~ ly_

Not ice is hereby

-·

1955 Pra1r1e Sc hooner 28 x B

THANkS TO all the lovely people
of M e1 gs County, who ha ve
been so kmd to us in our time
of loss An d a spec rol tha nk s to
the Pomeroy a nd Chester f1r e
Depor l menls who on swercd
our r oll l or help imm ed101ely . v
Gael Bless each a nd every one
of you
The Roger Stewar t Fom1ly

-

Mo"bile -Homes lor sate
- - - - - - - - -- - -TOTAl HECTRIC mob rle
home
lurntshcrl
J bedr
w asher nnd dryer A1 r con di
lt o ncd. I fo t 710 It front age
S12 000 Phone 747 2B'Jb

card of Thanks
-- ---------

By

on Febr uar y 17 , 1979 , at 10 . 00
A .M a public sale will be held
at
lOS
Union
Avenue ,
Pomero y , Oh io, to !ell for
cash the follow ing coll .!!tera l ,
to -wit :
1973 Monte carto , ser.al No .

~~---

19to7

I P.M.
Fridwy wftemoon

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

~

Monday

Sunday

(2 1 14, ltc

~ -

YOUNG pr etty co t ~
1
hlock onrl wh1 te mole. 1 t(ger
moll' . 1 gra y on d whtlf' female
Hu mane Soncty 99'} 7Mm

I P.M.
the day befure publicati on

R C. Miller
ColleCtiOn Manag er

~

WecL •GENTLe MEN, 00 1 SEiE
A FLICKER OF

Pomeroy, 0 .

1

I I'Utl-1174

2 Miles East
of Wilkesville
2-14-1 mo.

f AHM FOH sol e Hous e . '1 borns ,
trorl ar l orga p o nd 10 acres or
~~ Qfr('5 74.1 '15b6

BO ARD launrl ry elde rly
only Prtvote room Pnc e st art s

THRH

Tuesday
thruFriday

,, SMITH NELSON
'• MOTORS, INC.

220 E. Mlln SlrHt,

614·669-4245 Evenings

_ _Beat Estate for Sale

~OOM

- __G_iv_e_!.IJ,Iay _ _ _ _

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Clerk

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT

•

services offere d- - ·

order. 25 t-ent ch!u'ge for 1u.b carry·
inK Box Number In Care of The Sentinel

Manning D Webster
Probate Judge

MontgomefJ
Triiler Sales

Arlults

,

WA HR WI:L L rlrt ll rng . W1 lhom T
Grant !d.'] ')879

WANT-AD

'·•

1

Mobil!! HumelU!Ies and Vartl ~ les

jedional Tfie Publlsher will not be
re.5poosLble for more than one lncor·
reclan.ser1.10n
Phone 992-21$6

O_n Feb 2, 1979, in the
Me1gs County Probate Court ,
Case No . 22598, Frances M
Smart, .44 Lincoln St ., Mid dlep ort , Oh io was appomted
E xe cutn x of the estate of
PaulS . Smart, aeceased , late
of Middl eport , Ohio .

case No. 22,512

Today lD History
By The Associated Press
Today i.s Wednesday, Feb.
14, the 4Sth day of 1979. There
are 320 days left in Ute year.
This is Valentine's Day.
Today ' s
highlight
in
history :
· On this date in 1663, Canada
became a royal province of
France.
On Utis date :
In 1859, Oregon was
admitted to Ute Union as the
33rd state.
In 1886, the West Coast
citrus industry got its start as
Ute first trainload of oranges
left Los Angeles for eastern
markets.
In 1893, Hawaii was
annexed by treaty to the
United Stales.
In 1912, Arizona became the
48th state.
In 1929, ~ ven gangsters
who were rovals of Ute AI
--- Capone gang In Chicago were
murdered in a garage. The
killings became known 'IS the
St.
Valentine 's
Day
Massacre .
In 1973, Ute United States
and
North
Vietnam
announced an agreement to
establish a joint economic
commission to develop
economic ties and to consider
postwar reconstruction for
NorUt Vietnam. ·
Ten years ago : Peruvian .
oorpedo boats attacked u.s.
tuna boats fishing 26 miles off
Peru and captured one,
holding it until Ute captain
paid a fine . Two boats In the
·
Oeet were damaged.

1979 FOR[.) CUS TOM F 150 tr uck
307 engine
ton outo . P S
P !:l A C 7 4'} 'JB?b

---

Others w111 h e lp you fulfill your
• ambitions today If you lay all

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

'"'
300

180

:CAPTAIN EASY

Including Parts
And Labor

27320 Montgomery Rd.
Laft9sville, Ohio

o t Sl 7S . 99'1 5417

CAPRICORN (Dec. zz.Jan. 19)
your cards on lhe table . Should
you attem pl to hold back ,
lhey're likely to do the same

1470 FOR D thrl"r quar ter i on 4
&lt;,pl"c &lt;"i gor&gt;rl con dtti on $745
145 1 Ch£'v ro 1Pt 1', ton /l o t
ht:&gt;&lt;"i S485 74'1 309.3

1.25
190
225
3 15

"

.5 Year Warranty

nnly 99?-331.4

NOTICE

co mpassi on at e conc ern for an-

lt.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.

100

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

gant.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Your
oth er is admtrable today But
don't take the edge off what
what yo u do by boasting ab out

Chiirge

Cll!h
!day
Zdays
3days
&amp;days

case No. 2:2$98

BY

"

54:14

~en

TWO BfDROOM trorl er

19!5 DA TSUN PICK UP, goorl con
rldtorl
Goo d lrrps
low
mrlr ogf' f.l um, goo&lt;"i in ~ flOW
&lt;ms 39i'9

CHARGES

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF PAUL S
SMART, DECEASED. ..
.

22) A OHIO VALLEY NATIONAL
diChoto my where your finan ces
BANK OF VIENNA

HO USf 1n Mlckllf'pnrl

- Auto
- - -Sales
-

The Pul!liliher reserves the ri~ht
to ed.lt or rejed ~my ads dl!t!med ob·

Tr i umph Spitfire-,
Serial No . FM76919U .
197 3 Mercury M on tego,
Seri('ll No 3H04F6A 2169
T he sale w i tl be held at :
Parkersburg Datsun , 1627
Murdoch Avenue, P'a rkers
burg , West Ve . 26101
The unders 1gned re se r~Jes
the rig ht to bid , C!lc ce pt , and
re j ect ~~~ bids

1n

for o4 con slrurftnn
wor~f'r S
Will d ean weclc. ly
Aft e r b coli 30.J tl87 ::ISM or

\

WANT AD

Matters 20 .
9:30-Qne Oay At A Time 8,10.
10 . DO-Vegas 6, 13, Dolly S. Carol in Nashville 8, 10;
News 20.
. ..
10:3!&gt;-NBA Basketball 17; Turnabout 20 .
11 · DO-N~ws 3,6,8, 10, 13,15: Dick Cavett 20, L1llas Yoga
S. You 33 .
11 · 3()-Johnny Carson 3, 15: Pollee Woman 6,13, Rockford Flies 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Litt le Fauss s.
Big Halsy" 10.
12:4()-Mannl x 6,13; Kojak 8; 12 :45-Movle "Sergeant
Ryker" 17.
1:DO-Tomorrow 3; l.S!&gt;-News 13: ; 2:35--News 17:
2 55-Movie " The Big Canlvanlval " 17.
4:1 5-12 O'CIIock High 17; 5 :15-World a1 Large 11.

qcn 1705 bel oro !:i

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

12 1 14, lt c

45160
1978

9:00-From Here to Eternily 3, 15 ; Char lie's Angels
6,1 3: Mash 8, 10; Movie " H1g h Noon" 17; Country

Suilohi P

Robert E. Buck
JUDGE
Common Pleas Court,
Probate DiviSIOn,
Meigs County , Ohio

The undersigned will sell at
Public Sale for cash the
following Motor Vehicle
retaken from :
Chester T Bills , 719 Beech
St ., Apt 4, Middlepo rt, Ohio

HOMF

~URNISHl:O

GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Calculated (ISks m prachcat areas
should p ay off today but 1n
Situ atio ns wh ere you are tak 1ng
far-out gambles the oppos 1te
will be tru e

L A~Gf

Estate of Patn cia A. wvatr. a

M inor .
CASE NO 21808 F~rst and
F Ina I Account of Dor is E
warswlck , G'uardian of th e
Estate of Raymond L. Barn ,
hart (MIIard), a Minor
CASE NO 21189 F l fth and
Final Account of Charl!s w
Nicho ls, Guardian of OorO'thy
Edmundson , an incompetent
person
CASE NO . 22387 Final and
DlstrlbUf l \4e
Account of
Louise Templeton , Executr il't
of the Estate of Dora M
France , Deceased
Unless ex ceptions are filed
thereto, said accounts w itt be
for heari ng before said Court
on the 15th day of Marc h ,
1979, at wh •c h t1me sa1d
accounts will be colisldered
and continued from day to
day until finally disposed of .
Any person rnterested may
f i l e written except ions to said
acc ounts or to ma t ters
pertaining to t he execution of
the trust, not less than f 1ve
days prior to the da te set for
hearing .

121 7, 14, 21 , Jtc

fl orn• .. hrd nnrl 111
npt "
P h 0 11

IOUS

TWO l!f[.)JIOOM . f..r tdmn f tnni~h
N( ClJ11 Ca ll bcofor(' fl nrn
C~QI nttti .

Will Mil II You an Application Form. If you Appear to be
Qualified~ You will be mterviewed.

201

Though you may be tempted to
d•sc uss busmess With a fnend
at a soc1a 1 gathenng to da y
curb th e 1mpul se Make an
appo•ntment to talk 1n h1s ofi-

lurn1 o;hrcl

Business Services

For You

6:30.- Romper Room 17 ; 6:5o-Good Morolng , West

WEDNESDAY,FE BRUARY14 . 1n9
B:DO-Supertraln 3, 15; Eight Is Enough 6,13; Bugs
Bunny a, 10; Shakespeare Plays 33; Edward The
King 17; We Interrupt This Week 20.
8:31&gt;-Popeye a, 10; Wode nhouse Playhouse 20.

1197 S43d

Deceased

Thursday, Feb. 15

:J AND .4 I&lt;'M

and settlemen t

CASE NO . 22463 Fina l and
0 15 tr ibu1ive Account of Burl
Drake , E)(ecutor of the
Estate ot Ger tr ude E Drak e ,

u , 1.5, 16, 3tc

COtJNTIIV MO BIU: H&lt;'tlll"' Pm~
J.l "'''" ;fl nor th nl Po n1f' rny
lo·w· IC~ I '- C:t~II9&lt;1'J7479
•

n amed

iVdic l arles have been tiled In
the Probate Court, Meigs
County , Oh io , for approva l

ABOUT
INPIVIDUALS
IS ROUTINELY
EXCHANGED
BETWEEN

..

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY tS, 1979
5:45-Farm Report 13, 5.5o-PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrise Semester 10
6:D0-700 Club6.B ; PTL Club 15; 6:1Q-News 17; 6:25-

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DAMAGI N G
INFOR'MAT[ON

For R e nt

Accounts and vouch~Pr:. of

th e

DICK TRACY

The bidding was str aig htfor wa r d Most people, super·
ficially lookin g at the cards,
would lhmk the contract
hinged on g uessing the localion of the quee n of diamonds. Thos IS not the case .
Declarer made the contract without g uesswork . In
fact, the defense was forced
to do declare r 's work for
hom.
East won the opening club
lead with the a ce, ta kmg
note that declarer dropped

work of the hand !-le ruffed
a club, played a trump to

dummy 's

ace,

ru ffed

dummy's las t club and then

dre w Eas t 's

rema in ing

trump . With a trump r e.
mainmg in his own hand and
m dummy, South led a heart
to dummy 's queen.

East won with the ace of
hearts and returned a heart.
South s miled, knowing th e

'; -.

hand was over. He won the
tnck with t h e king of hearts
and extted w1th h1s r.emammg heart. The defense was
now helpless
It made no difference if
E a st or West won the trick.
The wmner wo uld be faced
with a los ing play. He would
either have to gove a ruff and
sluff by lead ing a club or a

'.

.-

heart, or he would have to
lead a diamond solving the
mystery of the diamond
queen.

South never did learn who
had the queen of dia monds.
When he led his last heart he
simply claim ed the contract,
showing the oppon ents his
hand and explaining that
ther e was no defense.

•.
.,.

INEWSPAPEH EN TERPRISE ASSN )

f _)

~ : '""r-

- .1

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD-

ERN, send $1 Ia: " Wm at
Bndge, .. care of thiS newspa-

pec. P 0 Box 489, Radro Crty
Sta tron, New York. N Y 10019 )

BARNEY

bfauHiul c1rpel,

,

.

AA~ VALENTINES
IN THERE?

,

AWl 'IALENTINES
IN

T~ERE?

NOTHING ECHOES LIKE
AN EMPW MAiLBOX .

,

TO POINT--

--TO A
HUNNERT
EIGHTY-

".·
:.: ·
·..

...'.-.

•.•;,.....
~

;,·

' ·.

�14-TheDailySent~el,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesday. ~'eb 14. 1~7!1

,---A;~-~-n;;;-ths-1

•

u. s. ambassador slaz.n
By BARRY SHLACHTER
As:;ociat..-.1 Press Writer
NEW DELHI, India (AP)
- The U.S. ambassador to
Afghanistan, Adolph Dubs,
was kidnapped from his car
today in Kabul and · later
killed in a shoot-&lt;&gt;ut between
his Shiite Moslem abductors
and police, U.S. officials here
and in Pakistan reported.
They said the kidnappers
had taken him to a hotel in
Kabul , - the Afghan capital,
and demand..-.! freedom for
three
jailed
Moslem
clergyme n.
But
the
government refused to
negotiate, police st()jJJJed the
building and after'1 a gun
battle
the
American
ambassador was found dead ,
they said.
U.S. sources in Islamabad,
Pakistan, said Dubs, 58, was
kill ed during the police
attack. But it was not known
whether the kidnappers or
police bullets killed him.
It also was not known
immediately wh ether the
unid en tified. kidnappers,

c

numbering two or three. were
killed or captured.
In Wash ington, a State Department spokesman sa1d the
United States had asked the
Afghan gove rnment to
negotiate with the kidnappers
to save Dubs' life but its
request went unheeded .
Arthur
L e f k ow it z ,
spo kes man at the U.S.
Embassy in New Delhi, said
two or three men stopped
Duqs' automobile, which was
driven by an Afghan
chauffeur, as the ambassador
was riding to work at about
8:45 local time. They opened
the door and told Dubs they
were "arresti ng" him , .
Lefkowitz said.
The kidnappers took him to
tile Kabul Hotel in the heart
of the city , took over a guest
room and demanded th e release of three Shiite mullahs,
or
religious tea chers,
recently
arrested
by
Af g hanistan 's leftist
government, the' spokesman
said.
The government. refused to

n&lt;•goliat•· and a pol1cc force
attacked the hotel, the U.S.
officials sa id. 1\flerward, the
U.S Embassy in Kabul was
informed Dubs had been
killed.
The embassy here did not
know why the mullahs were
arrested or how many were
being held . "Our information
is very sketchy at this point,"
said Lefkowitz.
Moslem priests have been
prominent . in sporadic
guerrilla fighting by Afghan
insurgents against the proSov iet governm ent of
President Noor Mohammad
Taraki , which seized power in
a bloody coup last April.
The kidnap-killing of the
ambassador coincided with
an attack on the U.S.
·Embassy in Tehran, the
capital of neighboring Iran.
But although the Iranian
revolution is led by that
co untry 's Shii te Moslem
patriarch , there was no
apparent connection between
the two attacks. The Shiites
are th e majority sect in Iran

Jury hears recording

..

NEWARK, Ohio (AP) - A
Licking County jury listened
for three hours Tuesday to a
tape recorded confession by
Thaddeus C. Lewingdon to
nine murders in central Ohio.
lewihgdon, 42, of Glenford,
is on trial here for three of the
so-ealled .22-caliber killings
which occured in Licking
County - the December 1977
slayings of Joyce Vermillion,
37, and Karen Dodnll, 33,
both of Newark, and the 1978
killing of Jenkin Jones of
Granville.
Final
pro sec ution
witnesses were expected to
be presented today .
On the tape, Lewmgdon
spoke in a low, emotionless
voice, telling his questioners,
"We got the two girls in
Newark." He said he did not
know either of the victims.
lewingdon said he and his
brother, Gary Lewing don,
who is also charged with the
killings , watched Forkers
Cafe in Newark from across a
street until Miss Dodrill and
Miss Vermillion left the bar.
The jury listened as
Lewingdon's taped voice
described how he and his
brother approached the
women and demanded
money.
When the women said the

money was in the bar's safe, were small and quiet and it
I.ewingdon said, the brothers was
easy
to
get
herded them behind the ammunition.' '
tavern.
"Gar y said 'do i t ,"'
Lewingdon said. "I said, 'Are
you sure?' He says, 'Yeah, do
it. '"
Three defendants forfeited
Lewingdon said he then bonds in the court of Pomeroy
shot both women.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
In describing the Jones kill- Tuesday night.
ing, Lewingdon said Gary
They were Larry Houston,
knew Jones and knew that the Dayton, $370 posted on a
elderly man did not believe m charge of driving while inbanks and was thought to toxicated and $100, leaving
keep a lot of money around the scene of an accident;
the house.
Ricky Taylor, Pomeroy, $33,
The
tape
recorded speeding
and
Robert
statement described how Nicholson, Pomeroy, $30,
lewingdon and his brother speeding.
spied on Jones at night and
then shot him by firing
Two defendants were fined
through a window as Jones and a third forfeited a bond
watched television.
Tuesday night in the court of
He said . that after Middleport Mayor · Fred
ransacking the house and a Hoffman.
tool shed, they came up with
David F . Smith, 18, Mida total of $300.
dleport, was fined $75 and
The tape also described the costs on a charge of leaving
killings of a Columbus bar the scene of an accident, and
owner, his mother and his girl Billy C. Stout, 54, Albany, was
friend . The brothers are fined $50 and costs on a
scheduled to go on trial in disorderly manner charge
Franklin County later this and $100 and costs on a
month in connection with charge of resisting arrest.
those killings.
Forfeiting a $100 bond
lewingdon said .22-caliber posted on a reckless
weapons were used in each of operation charge was Steven
the slayings because "they R. Pullen, 29, Mt. Alto, W.Va.

Mayor's Court

With the Purchase of Any
Bedroom Suite .of '599.95 or
More You'll Receive A Sealy Box Springs
and Mcattress - Queen or Full Size SeleCted By Our Salesman.

I

while in Afghanistan they are
~really outnumbered by the
Sunni
Moslems,
their
traditional enemies.
In the Tehran attack,
for ces
of
the
new
revolutionary government
came to the rescue of the
Americans· in the embassy.
Dubs, a native of Illinois,
went to Kabul after the 1\pril
27, 1977, coup that overthrew
President Mohammed Daoud
and installed Taraki 's leftist
government.

Liaht
~-

SDOW

forecasted
By The Associated Press
A combination of weather
systems is expected to
p~oduce light snow in Ohio
today and possibly some
freezing ram or drizzle
Thursday.
A ridge of high pressure
stretching from western New
York to the mid-Atlantic
Coast will move ·east today,
the National Weather Service
said. An area of light snow
over the western Great Lakes
was forecast to move into
northern Ohio before noon
and over southern sections of
the state this evening.
A complex low pressure
system developing in the
plains today should move
east into the mid-Mississippi
valley by Thursday morning.
It's expected to pass through
extreme southern Ohio
Thursday
night .
The
southerly air flow ahead of
the ridge will spread milder
air into Ohio but will also
cause a variety of weather
problems.
Forecasters said the light
snow over the state may become mixed with or change to
light freezing rain or drizzle
in western and southern
sections before Thursday
morning and in the northeast
before noon Thursday.
Precipitation amounts are
expected to be very light but
any freezing rain can cause
problems for motorists.
It was a fair but cold night
over the state. Skies were
partly
cloudy
and
lemperatures in many areas
rose a few degrees after
midnight. ·
- remperatures early today
ranged from a cold 4 below
zero at Youngstown to 19 degrees in the extreme
southeast.

KUSSW. Nf;WLON
Hussell Newlon, 65, 2112
MI . Vernon Ave . Pt .
Pleasant. died Jlt 8:50 a. m.
Wednesday , at Pleasant
Valley Hospital's Nur sing
t:are ,Unit.
He was a retired pipe fitter,
and a member of the Local
Union 521 Pipe and Steam
fitters of Huntington.
He was a former employee
of Marietta Manufacturing
Co. for 25 years. He was a
member of the Heights
United Methodist Church, Pt.
Pleasant , and a member of
the Friendship Sunday School
class and head usher of the
church .
He was born July 17, 1913 at
)\jchwood, W. Va., son elf the
late G. R. and EUa Long
Newlon.
Surviving are his . wife,
Irene Schneider Newlon: one
sister, Mrs. Richard (Luella)
S k
d
·
ic . Chester, an two meees.
Services will be 2 p.m.
F n·da
· Y at t he c row-Husse11
·
Funeral
Home at Pt.
Pleasant with t h e Rev.
Thomas Malcom off'Iciating.
Burial will follow at the

Carter•••
(Continued from page I )

chase of Mextcan natural gas
have been stalled more than a
year because Energy
Secretary
James _ R.
Schlesinger balked at
Mexico's asking price - $2.61
per thousand cubic feet
compared with the $2 .16
charged by Canada.
Demonstrators shouting,
"Carter is coming to rob us of
oil and gas," marched in
Mexico City,last Wednesday.
Police estimated 5,000 people
turned out tor the protest,
called by telephone workers
seeking higher wages.
uwe are showing our
support for the government in
its negotiations with Carter,"
•aid a marcher.
One 1 sign called for
"respect for human rights
and workers' rights for all
migrant workers in the
United States."
At a Washington news
conference Monday, Carter
said, with illegal immigrants
from Mexico in mind, "I want
to make sure that when
people are in our country,
whether they are here as
citizens or not. that we
protect their basic human
rights."
Mexico, with 4 percent
unemployment, objects to U.
S. efforts to cut the flow of
illegal immigrants,
estimated at more than
500,000 a year.
MEET TONIGHT
But Carter, under pressure
A meeting of the Meigs from organized labor to shut
County History Book Com- the door as tightly as
mittee will be held at 7:30 this possible, presumably will
evening at the Meigs have limited room for
Museum, Butternut Ave., maneuver in his talks with
Pomeroy. All persons who Lopez Portillo.
have worked on the book are
American special interests
asked to attend.
also have a stake in the trade
question Mexico wants tied to
an oil-gas package. Among
items at issue are U. S. curbs
on textile and winter
BIKE RECOVERED
vegetable imports from
A stolen bicycle has been Mexico.
recovered by tile Pomeroy
Carter said Monday he has
Police Department. Anyone "no inclination to force them
having a bicycle stolen can to give us a special privilege
pick up the bike by describing nor to do anything that would
the wheel at the office of be damaging to the well being
Mayor Clarence -Andrews. of the Mexican people."

ABSOLUTELY FREE

" suncrcstcemctcry. I
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m. Thursday .
VELMA V. NEWELL
Funeral services for Mrs.
Velma V. Newell. 82, Tuppers
Plains, who died Monday
have been changed from 1 to 2
p.m. Thursday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville.

PETER ROUSH
Peter lewis Roush, 65, New
Haven, died this morning at
his home.
He was born Aug . 27, 1913, at
Grahams Station ·to the late
Robert and Oma Lucketia
Rickard Roush.
' He was a farmer and a
honorary member of the New
Haven American legion Post
140 and he was a member of
the Broad, Run Rod and Gun
Club.
Surviving are his wife, Amy
Marie Clark Roush ; two
daughters, Mrs. Dale (Amy)
Hill, Racine, Ohio and Mrs.
Dale (Alice) Humphreys, New
Haven : three sisters, Velma
Roush, Beulah Thomas and
Sevilla Ohlinger, all of letart;
· a brother, R. Douglas Roush.
New Haven; and . four
grandchildren.
Services will be held at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
Thur$day at I :30 p.m. with the
Rev. George Weirick. Burial
will e at the Broad Run
Cemetery.
There will be rio calling
hours.
CLYDE E. SMITH
Clyde Eugene Smith, 42,
Carlington, died Tuesday at
University Hospital, Columbus.
He is survived by a son and
daughter, Kevin · and
Christina Smith, who make
their home with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Roush, and another son,
Steven of Columbus. Also surVIVIng a sister, Helen
Kanable, Mt. Gilead.
Funeral services will hi,
held at the· Curl Funeral
Home at I p.m. Friday in
earlington, with burial in the
Glen Rest Cemetery at
Reynoldsburg.

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - !Wnald Coates,
Pomeroy : Terry Proffitt,
Portland; Evelana Pauley,
Portland: Wendell Barrett,
Langsville.
Gloria
Discharged
Decker, Ethel Filcher,
Dennis Little.

Record ·lows
are recond e.d·· -By Tbe Associated Preu
Thermometers dipped · to
re c ord sub-zero
temperatures across the
Northeast today while
residents of the Pacific
Northwest were assessing
damage from the area 's
worst windstorm in 17 years.
It was the coldest
V~lentine's Day on record in
Rhode Island with a reading
of 7 below zero in Warwick at
7 a.m. Schools were closed in
East Providence because
buses wouldn't start.
But that was a heat wave
compared with the minus 43
registered at Old Forge in
New
York's
central
Adirondacks . It wa• the

second time this week the
mountain community was
caught in such a .deep freeze
and Ed Johnson of the
National Weather Service in
Albany was asked why.
'"They've probably got a
broken thermometer up
there," he joked.
· More
seriously ,
he
explained, "These fairly deep
valley areas in the high
mountains make for seepage
of cold air into one spot ."
For the fifth coosecutlve
day, Baltimore repol'ted a
record low, with a reading of
2 below zero. That was 9:
degrees below the old record. ·
for the dJlte set in 1965.
,,

..

State wants to
tear down pen

Hanes®
.

.

RED LABEL
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FOR MEN
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shirts

V

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OVER 30

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Complete
selection of sites
from 30 to 44 and Biq Men's Sites 46

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
570 W. MAIN

1nd

POMEROY, 0.
I

to 54 .
• All Hanes' Red
· Label underwear
can be machine
washed In hot or
!old water and
'""'bled dry.

Elberfelds. In Pomeroy

country.
"~e are in phase three of
emergency evacuation," an
embassy statement read to
anxious U.S. citizens said.
"We
cannot
protect
American lives in Tehran.
You are allow..-.! one suitcase
per person. Evacuation
planes will begin flying 17
February."
"Phase three " appeared to

•

e
(USPS 145·960)

VOL. NO. XXIX

refer to the recommended
evacuation of Virtually all
Americans in the country.
The embassy cannot order
Americans to leave unless
they are employed by the
U.S . government or are
government dependents.
- Ambassador William Sullivan, briefly held prisoner
along with 101 other
Americans by gunmen who

at y
NO. 213

stormed the em bassy
Wednesday, told one telephone caller : "We can't do
anything until Saturday or
Sunday. We're on an
evacuation status if we can
get people out. We can't get
anyone out yet. "
He advised the caller to
stay indoors and off the
streets. "I wouldn't go out ill
were you," ·he added.

The embassy resumed
limited operations with a
skeleton staff following
Wednesday's raid . The big
probl em
was
communications since the
gunmen shot up the
switchboard and the embassy
staff
destroyed • other
equipment to keep it from
being captured. ,
Informed sources said a

Pan American jetliner was in
Bahrain, 600 miles south of
Tehran on the Persian Gulf,
ready to ny out Americans if
the government of Prime
Minister Mehdi Baza rgan
gave its permission . The
government closed Tehran 's
international airport along
with ali frontier crossing
poi nts la st Sunday, but
Khomeini has ordered all

workers inCluding iho8e· -in
civil aviation to rettiril-. to·
their jobs Saturday 'alter .. :month s of strikes ~1\ii:h ' _.;helped drive the shah ·froin: _ .

the country.

.

' :·

Today was a national; -;-:
holiday marking the deal!) :of · ·. the Prophet Mohammed lind '; . .-:
Friday is the 'Moslem ' :_,
Sabbath.
. : . ··.. · .. .
!Continued on page 12}', . ..

•

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1979

15 CENTS

~

CLOSED FEB. 19
Director Clifford E. Reich
of the Ohio Department of
Liquor Control announced
today that all state liquor ·
stores,
agencies
and
departmental offices will be
closed Monday, February 19
in honor of President's Da/

ELBERFELD$

By ROBERT H. REID
Iranian ·journalists
Aslloclaled Press Writer reported hundreds killed in
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) factional fighting Tuesday
The U.S. Embassy admitted · and Wednesday in Tabriz,
today it "cannot protect Iran's fourth largest city.
American llves in Tehran" Radio Tehran said 42 more
and announced plans for were killed in three southern
emergency evacuation flights cities Wednesday as the new
Saturday as heavy fighting government installed. by
was reported for the third day Ayatollah Ruhollah KhoIn the northwest city of meini'srevolution struggle to
Tabriz.
establish contro~ over the

..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- demoUsluing the olci prison 1:
State officials still would like would be included in a master·
to tear down the ancient Ohio prison construction plan now:
Penitentiary. Now they are being drawn.
linking the possibility to
He-said if the bond issue .is:
passage of a $275 million approved, in about four years:
prison bond issue.
the stone-walled complex·
Some money from 'the bond would be demolished except.
issue would be used to for a maintenance building, :
demolish all but a few newer chapel and minor cell block.:
buildings at the pen, said E. All of these buildings were.
B. Haskins, assistant director constructed within tile last 20;
of the Ohio Department of year-S. He said about 500·
Rehabilitation and Correc- prisoners would be housed at'
tion.
the site, which would be used.
The near doubling of the for a medical facillty and
state's prison population has processing center.
halted plans to tear down the
Under . provisions of the:
old penitentiary, say prison bond issue, $175 million would
officials. Inmate population be used for the renovation:
now is 13.400, compared with and construction of state
7,117 five sars ago.
prisons, $25 million for the
Approval of the bond issue construction and renovation:
would allow for additional of youth refonn schools and:
prison space. Plans were to $75 million for construction of·
demolish the old prison near . county aduh and juvenile jaif
'downtown Columbus wheri facilities.
the new maximum security
prison was opened at
Lucasville.
Currently, about 1,100
convicts are housed in the
Columbus faclllty.
11. arrests made
If the General Assembly
approves House Resolution 9,
Seventeen persons were
the bond issue would be arrested by the Middleport
placed on the ballot. The state Police Department during
would borrow $275 million January, according to the
over the next 15 years. A 90- monthly report of Police
cents-a-gaUon increase in the Chief J . J. Cremeans.
liquor tax and a half-eent-aThe single offense bringing
can hike in the beer excise abOut the most arrests was
tax would repay the loans.
disorderly manner with
Haskins said tile plans for seven. 'Two people were
charged with driving while
intoxicated and two were
disturbing the peace. There
was one arrest each for
driving under suspension:
failure to yield the right of
SEEKS DIVORCE
Charging gross neglect of way; passing in a no passing
duty , Henry J. Werry, zone; rwming a red Ught and
Pomeroy, has filed suit in speeding. One case was
Meigs County Common Pleas dismissed.
There were 12 accidents
Court seeking a divorce from
Ethel L. Werry, Glendale, investigated during the
month and parking meter
Ariz.
In other ~ction, Carole A.· collections totaled $293. The
Pickens filed for support police cruiser was driven
undertherecuprocal support 3,969 miles.
law against Calvin D.
Pickens.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Feb. 13
Patricia Call, Carolyn
Carter, Arnold Dean, Cynthia
.
Dobbins, Anna Dobson,
Angela Flannigan, Hugh
Graham , Jr ., Margaret
Greenlee, Marsha Hale, Sandra Holstein, Margaret Horwath, Frederick Lanier, Betty Lemley, Wesley McCorkle,
Jammie McQuire, Helen
Mollhan, Louise Mynster,
Donna O'Dell, Oma O'Conner, Lyla Patrick, Harold
Provens, Douglas Raike, Sr.,
Mildred Russell, Paul
Saunder, Gilda Sites, Mrs.
Ray Smith and daughter,
• MEETS THURSDAY
John Smith, William Tawney.
Shade River Lodge 453
Births, Feb. 13
F&amp;AM, Chester, will meet
Mr. and Mrs. Sandy
Thursday at 7:30p.m. for the
Matherly,son,leon, W. Va.
purpose of conferring the
Entered Apprentice Degree.
AU Masons are welcome.

PIZZA
BURGER .......... 79t
'
. PIZZA BURGER
&amp;FRIES ................ ..

Plans announced for emergency evacuation

.

Meigs cancer crusade
plans made Wednesday
Plans for the annual
were
Cancer Crusade
discussed when the Meigs
Unit of the American Cancer
Society met Wednesday in the
east-west dining room at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Co-chainnen of the annual
d,rive are Mr. and Mrs. Pat
O'Brien.
Mrs. O'Brien reported
extensive work has been done
in securing volunteers in aU
townships of Meigs County.
Mrs. O'Brien said the areas
are very well covered and
feels definit e progress 1s
being made.
Money derived from the
drive is used in publi c
education ; prof ess ional
education, patient services
and community services.
A total of 20 patients were
assisted during the past year.
They received help with
transportation.
drues .
dressings, loan closet,
rehabilitation, information

and counseiing.
The goal for 1919 is $8,625.
This amount, which the unit
hopes lo receive, will come
from house to house can-

county schools.
Mrs. Anderson reported the
executive board will meet on
Feb. 27 at 8 p.m. in the castwest dining room at Veterans
vassing, special events, Memorial Hospital.
A
special gifts and memorials. nominating committee will ,
Mrs. Bernadette Anderson , be named at the meeting for
president of the Meigs I.Jnit, the election of offiCers.
stressed that the annual
The crusade kickoff
crusade is not only a fund meeting will be held March 6,
drive, but an educational at 7:30p.m. in the River Boat
drive as well . County Room of the Meigs Branch of
residents are given a list of the Athens County Savings
seven warning signals of and Loan.
cancer.
At the March 6 meeting,
It was also stressed that John Ely, vice president of
support, both financial and the Ohio Division of the
volunteer help, would be a Cancer Society, will be the
great asset in the fight guest speaker.
against cancer and that the
Dave Diles, ABC sportscancer society does care and caster, who lS an honorary
works very hard toward the crusade chairman, has been
goals facing them.
invited to attend.
Pat
Arnold,
public
The state cancer crusade
education
chairman, kickoff will be held March 25
reported three programs at the Ohio State University
"early start to good health" Union in Columbus.
The state meeting provides
have
been introduced in three
PLANS DISCUSSED - Plans for the annual "Cancer Crusade" to be held April 1,
the
motivation and inthrough the 15th were discussed when the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Societv met in
r--------------------..,
.
spiration
to Ohio Crusaders to
regular session Wednesday in the east-west dining room at Veterans Memorial Hospital. A
carry out a successful housecrusade training meeting will be held March 27. Shown going over details are, 1-r,
to-house campaign in April.
Bernadette Anderson, president; Mary O'Brien, co~hairman of the crusade and Mrs. Pat
Emphasis of this year's
Lochary.
program is childhood cancer.
Featured speakers will
By The Associated Press
provide insight to the various
LIBRARIES TO CLOSE
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and
aspects of childhood cancer.
Libraries of both MidColumbus
&amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. reached an
Reservations for the meeting
dleport and Pomeroy will be
agreement in principle W¢nesday in Washington
in
Columbus must be made
closed
both
Sunday
and
MonThe U.S. Soil Conservation Mining in lndianpolis, Ind.,
regarding the use of Ohio coal.
by
Feb. 27.
day
in
observance
of
Service (SCS) in Ohio has and the Ohio EPA.
The company will be permitted to continue burning
Presidents
Day.
Beginning
on
Attending
the meeting were
announced the appointment
Ohio coal as long as it is washed to comply with federal
RAMP,
a
voluntary Feb. 26 the Middleport
Mrs.
Anderson,
Mrs. O'Brien,
of a five member state program, will help parpollution control rules. Coal washing involves cleaning
Mrs.
Arnold
,
Mrs. Pat :
Library
will
be
open
from
reclamation committee to ticipating landowners
coal
prior
to
combustion.
·
Lochary
,
Joan
Anderson,
oversee the new Rural develop and apply plans for noon to 8 p.m. on Mondays.
Under the agreement, Columbus &amp; Southern would
Use
of
the
library
during
the
Delores
Frank,
Mike
BenAbandoned
Mine the
use a coal washing method which would reduce the
reclamation, con- evening hours will determine
dinelli,
Hank
Cleland,
Teresa
Reclamation
Program servation, and development
sulfur content of Ohio coal before it is burned. This
Collins and Sharon Michael.
whether the extended
(RAMP), Boyd Ruth, SCS
would
put the coal in compliance with federal cleanup
(Contmued on page 12 )
will
be
continued.
schedule
District Conservationist
requirements.
serving Meigs County, said
EPA spokesman Luke Hester said in Washington it
APPEAL FILED
would be less expensive for the company to use this
·
today.
A
notice
of appeal has been
'''I'Jie committee will
process than to purchase out-&lt;&gt;f-state coal. He added ·
determine which priority
filed in Meigs County Comthat the move would save the jobs of some Ohio miner§.
mon Pleas Court by Mabel
basis projects will receive
The agreement would allow washing at the
Bearhs, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
federal funding this year,
company's Conesville generating plant near Coshocton
against Robert Daugherty,
Ruth said. It will also serve to
and a review by the EPA of the technical basis for a
administrator of the Bureau
open channels of comchange in emission requirements at Columbus &amp;
of Workers Compensation,
munication among
Ian·
Southern's Poston plant near Athens. The EPA and the
LWAN - Bob Boynton, Northeast District near
Industrial Commission of
downers, conservation
company will continue negotiating additional details of
who
piloted
·
the
I.:ogan
Elyria,
include
Oberlin,
Ohio
and the Meigs County
district officials and federal
the agreement.
Highway Department.
and state reclam!ltion Chieftains to ~ perfect I~ Lorain Catholic, Brookside,
agencies who are involved in record and eighth place in the Wellington, North Ridgeville,
final 1977 _Class AAA state Midview,
Vermilion,
the program."
rankings,
has
been
hired
as
Firelands
and
Sandusky
"First on the committee's.
the
new
head
football
coach
Perkins.
list will be projects that will
Logan has about 1,200
protect public health, safety, at Amherst High School in
Lorain
County.
Students
in grades 9-12, while
general
welfare, · and
.
"It's
a
good
opportunity,"
Amherst
has about 1,500,
&lt;4.~
.property from extreme
Boynton
said
Wednesday
Boynton
reported.
~~
danger caused by past coal
)J ~
'
y) ~
The Toledo DeVilbiss and
!
"
' ll.'.•
c,
mining practices," Ruth announcing his acceptance of
,,
ei
new
post.
"Amherst
has
a
Ohio
University
product
the
pointed out.
,•
Robert E. GuUliam, U. S. good school system, fine served as a varsity grid
Soil Conservation Service facilities and a good football assistant before stepping up
to the head job in 1977.
State Conserv11tionist, will background.
"We've been treated so
He was the defensive
chair ·the committee. Other
good
by
a
lot
of
people
that
coordinator
for the 1976
memllef are Floyd Heft, Ol!io
my
wife
and
I
both
hate
to
Chiefs,
who
staged
a miracle
Department of Natural
leave,"
Boynton
commented.
·
finish
to
share
the
SEO
·Resources, Chief of the
"There
are
times
when
you
League
title.
The
LHS
Division of Soil and Water
have
to
make
tough
defensive
unit
.
allowed
.the
Conservation Districts, and
decisions,
however."..,._
fewest
points
in
loop
play
and
Charles can. Ohio - Depart·
The Chieftain mentor-:one-&lt;over the entire season.
ment of Natural Resources
of
the Southeastern Ohio - -Hh 1977 powerhouse
Chief .of the Division of
League's
finest football earned Logan's second
Reclamation.
strategists,
said there were straight SEOAL grid crown
Also included on the state
two
big
factors
in his decision and earned Boynton special
committee
will
be
he
will
be
much
closer to honors as the league's coach
representatives from the
his
hometown
of
Toledo
and of the year and Southeast
Regional Office of Surface
he will have an opportunity to District co-coach of the year.
get a squad into the state high
Logan's season was
school
championship
shortlived
in 1978 due to the
- playoffs.
school
strike,
with the Chiefs
·SOUTHERN OPERATING
This opportunity was going D-1-1.
Soulbem ~al Schools
Boynton is now in his third
were iD operation Thur- virtually non-existent in
sday but Meigs aud I.Qgan, with the Chieftains year as guidance counselor
Eastern schools were competing in -a league made for the freshman class at
cloled d11e to freeziDg raJa up of primarUy Class AA LHS.
His wife, Sharon, also an
which fell Thursday teams .. This is Logan's
OU
grad and a former
biggest
detriment
in
the
morBID&amp;.
computerized
point
ranklngs.
women's
swimming coach at .
AU dlatrielll attempted to
Boynton
said
Amherst
will
the
college,
is an elementary
open elaues on MondJly
begin
phasing
into
an
allphysical
education
i1!structor
but stadeuts were returned
Class
AAA
league
in
1980
and
in
the
Logan
school
system.
to their homes just after
the
new
league
should
be
in
She
also
is
In
her
second
year
whea saow continued
operation by tile 1981 season. as the· LHS gymnastics
to faD.
·· .. .....
Scbools were closed · The Class AAA Comets, · coach.
"Wea re going to miss
Tuesday, but reopened who compiled records of 8-2
Wedlleaclay. All ,diltrlcll in 1977 and 6-4 in 1978, Logan," Boynton said.
HEARTLAND POST OFFICE- This was a typical observance of Valentine's Day in
are well over,lbe five days reportedly have their entire "There will always be a
Meigs County schools Tuesday with the traditional exchange of valentines taken from
with
blazing
speed
wann
spot
in
our
hearts
for
backfield
pennllled wllbou1 makeup
beautiful valeqtine boxes. This large valentine box was in Mrs. Carol' Olillnger's first grade
returning next fall.
the friends we've made
for calamity sltuatloaa.
room
at the Pomeroy Elementary. Pictured with tbe box holding a heart are, I. tor ., Mickey
Current opponents of here ," (From WedSeyler and Tammy Boggess.
Amherst, which is in' the nesday's Logan Daily News).
.(
~
·1' .

Reach agreement

Committee named

.Logan. gn..•-d coach
accepts new post

~.,.&lt;&lt;'

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RELiEF NOTED - The temperature Tuesday ·. _--:.' · :·: .
offered some relief as it rose above freezing to 33 degrees .· ·
on the thermometer at the Pomeroy National Bank. The ... _. · ··
•'high" temperature did allow some of the ice and snow to
melt.
/
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~ ·. ·. • ' .
...
' . ..·. .:.'...
:

Village funds
total $62,389
The total of Middleport
Vlllage Co uncil expendable
funds as of Jan. 31 was
$62,389.63, according to the
monthly report of ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate fil ed
with village council members.
Receipts and disbursements from each fund
during the month and the
balance of each, respectively,
include · general, $5,946.74,
$10,355 . 86 , $35,089 .72;
cemetery, $1,203, $l ,IB5.21,
$823 .96; fire eq uipment ,
$2,472, $1 ,368.86, $2,167 .13:
planning commission, no
receipts, $2.75, $34.46; •treet
maintenanc e, $3 ,184 .75 ,
$5,451.46, $4,125.22 ; pool, no
receipts, $7 .67, $6, 195 .98:

• •

.'

:-

• :

1, • •

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. ·' ..
. ·. ' .
. . :.: :

' ', '. ': · I

·,

·.:

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fed era l revenu e sharing; · ._- ._._-.
$3,450 , $717 .67 , $12 ,561.71.;

·:··-:.::.

anti-recession, no receipts, . · .~· ·. ·
$21.72, $1,391.45.
- . - : ._.....: .·
Rece ipts for the montli · .: . -::
total ed $16,256.49 artd :', : ·
disbursements, $19,109.20. . . ·· ,.
The general fund balance· ·. ·
does not reflect the fact thaf · ·. ' ·$5,000 of it is in a certificate of' ·. · -.:_- -deposit from the Park'fanilly:-·_-::· .'
and $10,508.75 is receipts .:
~
from the light levy.
· · ·.
The cemetery fund includ~ : · · .
$780 from the c. F. Rathburn .trustees appropriation aiid... ..; ·..
the street maintenance figure·. · :·:,.. :
includes $3,729.84 _from the ~ --: :..'_:-.
resurfacing levy .
. · -. ' :,. 'i ..:
The total of village coiuicil-· -. ·.- " :
ob liga ted fund s stooq . at:· ::·\-.'.:.
$20 ,772. 08 as of Jan. 31· with :no.-·. ,.-;,-._
.:
rec eipts and no . d1sbut" .-,-,~_. : .-,_·.-'
sements during the month, ·-· .:;:·: ..
:;:;:;:::.:;:::::.:;.·:;.·:;::·:·:;:·:·:;:·:·:·:;::;::·.·:·.·.·.·,·:·:·:·:::
Obligated funds by the ·_
·.': '.") :Middleport Board of PubliC ·.._-,, __.- ,_
EXTENDED FORECAST
Affair_s totaled $216,722,25:·-.-:_':;-&gt;
Saturday
through Jan 31.
:-· ,: •. .:·:·
Monday: Fair and cold
Receipts, disbursements _- -. ''.·,·.Saturday. Warmer Sunday and the balance · of ea~h : .:·;,=:;_
and Monday with snow in category making up the · ._;_:·
the north and rain or snow funds, respective, for the· ·. : ,.-.. ·
In the south. Highs in the
month include: sanitary. ·. ··:; &gt;
mid teens to lo;w 20s sewe r , $5,110.59, $4,814. u ;·. ·,: :; , ·_
Saturday and in the 30s $18,352. 19: sa nitary seivl!r . ··_._.-./.Sunday and Monday. Lows esc row, $915 , no· disbur.':' ···. ._:._ ·'· ·
five below to five abuve sements. $175,436.09; water, · :-.-.:-'.'· _.'
zero early Saturday and In $11 ,524.14, $7,394.:19, $15,413.63'; . .-.:.:.- .- .
the mid to upper 20s early water meter trusts, $1~.'- :· · :'.'.' · -..
Monday.
$250, $7,250.43. .
. ' . - .: . - ~_.(:
Receipts for the ·.month-' -;: -: r !.
::::::;:;:;:;:;:::: ::: · :;:;:·:::·:;.;:;:~;.;:: :::::=::: ·:::::=:: :: :·:·:· : ·:·:
tot aled $14,699. 73 . ·and•'.':' ,~\ '..
disbursements , $12,459.f3. · · '_."·;-·::._:.'-i:..'
'
. ,· ' '· ··. .

Langsville
man taken

Meigs County sheriff's
deputies Wednesday transported Kenneth Mitchell, 25,
Langsville, to the Ohio Penal
Reception and Med ical
Center, Columbus.
Mitchell, after processing
there, will be taken to a
proper state facility. He was
sentenced recently for
violation of probation.
Judge John C. Bacon who
had placed Mitchell · on
probation upon conviction of
B&amp;C: snd unauthorized use of
a moto~ ~chicle, re~&gt;oked the
probation.
Mitchell must serve Hi
year terms to run con·
currently.
•l

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·-: ,:.~:~~~::::~~:: : ::&gt;'~''?. ~ ;: :~~g .

A r:i~~-?~~E~or tli~- ·, ·.- ;.-:;.}. '
Meigs County Heart Assoclll":': .&lt;-:· ::.'
lion fund drive wlll _be lield : -.. -;·.::--.
Wednesday over · WMP.o· .:. _·_. ··.:._
Radio. Armand Turley will iJi, · ·.' : · ·
at the organ, and Mn·:(_:: ~-:· :_.
Margaret Neuman . ·at . _tile .'i. ·': :·.
piano for the day. Mrs, JaPiel~' -: :·.. '.;' -·..
Souls by is general chaifma!l :, :. : \Y::·.
and talent for the program- ~· : :.. :_.::;:. :.
invited to contact' her. for; j( ; :; :;c;.'-:_
lime when they can·peijoi-ftj;: __.--.: •-;-:.: :.1

:'::· : ::::::::::':::::::::::::::::::::':.-:::,~:,:::,:,:::_~{~:~f:1,'::J:6?.::

Weather-- .-:,n.-::i:-:.-.
I

,:_. •• ", , ,"~ \~ (.., '

Rain clianging to snow laie'::h.:'_;;.::;::
tonight. Low 20 to 25. Wliuly:-- (.&gt;&gt;:_-&lt;'.; ·
and cold , snow flurrje·,- .;·, ''-/ -.
Friday. Temperature · iritiy :'_- .. ' ' _..
fall into low teens by eveniilg._:_,-:- -:· : .-Chance of precipitation ·10 • · '. -:. : :
percent tonight, 50 . percent·.-;·.··:.:. ·.
Friday.
· ·, .. :-. · ·:; , -.
.\\ .: -. .,:·
'•

.·; - '
.

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