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                  <text>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
UNDERWEAR
FOR MEN
•Cord

... del
Neck T
shirts

V

• Boxer

OVER 30

gripper boxer
shorts
• Athletic
undershirt&gt;

..

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:

• •

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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.
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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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3-~ Daily Sentinel, Middle~rt~Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 15, 1979

. ..........

2- TIIe Dajly Sontinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 15, 1979 ·
'

'T oday's

Ill WASHIIIGTOII

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

fr~

fever hits D.C.

vehicles bear Califorma license plates: Signs ideoas "Burbank, Calif." or "Hollywood.:' In a
II" camper, film star Peter Sellers hides
seekers behind drawn curtains. On the
street from the headquarters of the
Administration, dozens of electnmen and other technicians bustle around

-:~ii~~~~~ma~
On this chilly
February
hasssive
comedollies.
to Washington.
Lorimar
Inter.

motion picture, " Being There,:' to

street scene has been duplicated dozens of times in recent years, with this capital serving as a setting for films ranging from " Topaz" and "Vanished" to "Billy ' Jack Goes to
Washington."
Much of "The Exorcist" was filmed in fashionable
Georgetown. Parts of "The President's Analyst," "Black Sunday, " "Airport," Sylvester Stallone's "FJ.S.T." and a host of
others also were shot here.
The Watergate scandal spawned "All the President's Men,"
the saga of two Washington journalists, as well as two films
adapted from books written by former White House aides John Ehrlichman 's "The Company" (filmed as tbe television
series "Washington : Behind Closed Doors" ) and Charles Col-

son's Bom Again."
The world premier of this season's most highly promoted
new release, "Superman," was held not in Los Angeles or New
York but at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on the
banks of the Potomac River.
Gossip columns once devoted exclusively to the antics of
"Hollywood stars" now have been expanded to chronicle the
private lives ofthis city's politicians.
1
Shirley MacLaine, Sellers' co-star in "Being There, :' was a
delegate to the 1972 Democratic National Convention. Stars
such as John Wayne (on the right) and Jane Fonda (on the
left) have become highly visible participants in national
debates on major political issues ranging from the war in VietIIBffl.tothil Panama Canal treaties.
•· Til4i Democratic party's most generous contributors and ac. :li:v6 1111\d-raisers include Lew Wasserman, board chairman of
MQ,\:."Stinie 'R!&gt;Ss, board chainnan of Warner Brothers, and
-Ai'thllt Krim, fanner board chairman of United Artists.
In' the tace for the 1980 Republican presidential nomination,
the'·il)a!)to ' be~t is Ronald Reagan, star of ':Cattle Queen of
jltqntiina,' ·' ''Million Dollar Baby,"· "Hellcats of the Navy"
llitd .48 other feature films before he. turned politician m the
·mfd·l%05.
·: ." Wiishington," says Frank Mank1ewicz, "is the Hollywood
ot·the 1970s-''
.' ''Marudewicz ought to know. He grew up in a film family (his
·f!itlier, Herman, was the author of "Citizen Kane" and his un~le Joseph was a noted screen writer and director) but has
been actlvely involved in politics for more than a decade.
"Television has turned public officials into celebrities," says
John Horton, a motion picture representative here who con(irms his industry's growing fascination with this city and its
._ pi\Jiticjans. "Washington even has its own star system."
· ·..:,.Bill Mank'iewicz argues convincingly that "it's all very
, .~ilOUS for those who care about government, because
. poUticians:.turiled-&lt;!elebnties are beld to no higher standard
.tlliliiwe apply t_oshow-business folks ."
:: ~p. TOby Moffett, a thoughtful young Connecticut
: ~rnocrat, obser.ves that "the line bet)Neen this job (being a
meinber·of Congress) and show business is a very line line."
·. : 1'1iat line is becoming less distinct with each passing day as
rnQI'e !!Rd more politicians embrace a cynical philosophy that
._m)l!!i;ures success or failure by " show biz" standards. None of
us will benefit from "The Governance of America" in the form
. 'ot a movie ~r weeklr television series.
11

r ' '' ·,,:,

'

HEALTH

The New Foundation
'******•~•ww~~****************************~**~

!:: ..Editorial oninions
!
r
:s
t*************************w*****************~~

Jimmy's White House
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
MEXICO CITY (AP) Preparations for President
Carter's current visit to
Mexico were suspended once
because of tremors that hit
this crowded but inviting
capital city.
Not the tremors from the
two earthquakes that have hit
here this year. They were insignificant compared oo the
tremors occasioned by the recent visit of Pope John Paul

n.

On the eve of the pope's arrival, chief White House advance man Ellis Woodward
headed back to Washington.
As long as the pontiff of Roman Catholicism was in the
country, Woodward reported,
there was no prospect of
engaging Mexican officials in
planning Carter's visit.
Once the pope returned to
the Vatican , Woodward
returned to Mexico City.
Speaking of churchmen,
Archbishop Fulton J . Sheen
oold Carter and 3,000 others at
Washington's annual White
House prayer breakfast that
he found it remarkable no
president since Abraham
Lincoln had talked publicly
about sin.
Perhaps someone should

•

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

time to time that some patients get well in spite of their
treatment, not because of 11.

send the eloquent cleric a
copy of "The Spiritual
Journey of Jimmy Carter," a
just-published compilation of
presidential statements on
religious themes.
Surely no president in
many years has had so much
00 say about his religious
faith, Wesley G. Pippert, tbe
Whilfl. .House reporter who
complied tbe book, has a
whole
section
on
" Temptation, Sin,
Forgiveness and Grace."
For example, at the funeral
of Hubert H. Humphrey last
year, Carter recalled a visit
to the Mahatma Gandhi
memorial in New Delhi
wbere be read a Gandhi
statement on "The Seven

"Mustard seed" is used
"According to Gandhi," proverbially
for anything
said Carter. " the seven sins exceedingly small. The musare wealth without works, tard plant, an annual, outpleasure without conscience, grows the other (larden
knowledge without herbs and because of lis siZe
character, commerce IS called a tree. (Luke 13: 19)
without morality, science
"The kingdom of heaven
without humanity, worship i• like to a grain of mustard
without sacrifice and politics seed.... " Matt. 13: 31.
without principle."
Carter concluded that, by
Gandhi's definitions,
Humphrey was "without
The Daily Sentinel
sm."
!USPS 145-MO)

AWashington magazine reported recently, presumably
with tongue in cheek, that national security adviser Zblgniew Brzezinski's press
secretary had acquired a
press secretary of his own.
Well, it isn 't quite that way.
Jerrold Schecter, former

Poet's Corner

a

. a)l

'

•

'

Time diplomatic editor who Is
an associate press secretary
handling national security
matters, has an assistant.
The current assistant is
Terry B. Shroeder, borrowed
from the International
Communication Agency.
There's no guessing how
long Schroeder will remain at
the White House. Supposedly
be's on Joan for 90 days. But
his predecessor, ICA's Ed
Penney, joined Schecter on a
short-term basis and stayed
about a year.
Brzezinski and Schecter
are in Mexico with Carter.
Shroeder Is minding the
office_back home.

Sins."

bloodstream.
I'd like to correct one
m1simpression you have
about daily requirements of
Oli:AR DR. ·LAMB - We vitamins. The values printed
tead your column saymg that · on all bottles these days are
IQO' mg of vitamin C was all recommended daily dietary
the ·. biOQdstream would ab- allowances (RDA). That's a
· sorb~ We were very surpnsed great deal more than the
~ .abbtlt that. We haven 't had a minimum daily requirement
LET'S NOT STIR UP TROUBLE
;col~ _for two years now and at- for health. If you are consumH we would stop the trouble,
trlbuted it to the fact that we ing the recommended daily
That troubled in the past,
ali! a grapefruit and at least • allowance of vitamins and
We must not keep it stirring,
ohe orange a day in addition are an average, healthy perWhich causes it to last.
td the JQO mg of vitamin C we son' that should provide you
We all have had our troubles,
\OQk •. Now we wonder how good safety factor against the
But telling can't un-do,
many other vitanuns fall into possibility d havmg any
Or take away the m~m'ries
this' category. We know that vitamin deficiency.
Of grief that we've passed thru .
; the minimum requirement is
The only people who need
p~inted on ali the bottles, but more vitamins than these
So, Jet's not stir up trouble
··we,don't know whether more amounts are those who have
By harping on someone,
would be beneficial Could too an illness or, for one reason
About some former trouble,
tritich be harmful ?
or another, can't absorb
Or things that they_ ~ave done.
- DEAlt READER- You ca n vitamins. It follows that a
Instead, let's be forgiving ,
absorb quite a bit of vitamin well-balanced diet will work
And think about the good .
C into the bloodstream, but it very well for most people. If a That
we should do for others,
won't stay there very long person isn't getting a wellAs all good Christians should.
beeau8e the excess will be bslanced diet for any reason,
eliininated by the kidneys In any of the common dally
When trouble overtakes us,
facto vitamin C is eliminated vitamin supplements that
The best thing we can do,
on, a da)ly basis. That's one contam the RDA amounts IS
Is, put our trust in Jesus,
rea~on people need an ade· all that is needed.
And He will bring us thru.
quale vitamin C intake every
I am sending you The
He knows that we are human,
daY· I like to see people get Health Letter number 3-3,
And knows about each test
that from good fresh fruit and VItamin C (Ascorqjc Acid) to
Which
we have been enduring,
vegetables. n :s hard to 1m- give you detailed information··While longing for sweet rest.
prove·on that source.
on why you need this vitamin
I wish everyone would and what it does and does not
So, let us trust Him fully,
~eai1Ze that the kidneys are in do. Others who want this
Then in a little while,
t~e body to filter out things issue can send 50 cents with a
Our faith will be rewarded,
. your body doesn't need. The l ong, sta mped , selfAnd we can wear a smile.
specific and clearest example addressed envelope for it.
Let's not stir up more trouble,
i~ ordinary water. If you send your request to me in
But let us humbly pray,
drink a lot of water, it wont · care of this newspaper, P.O.
Beseeching
our dear Saviour
be too long until it will runn- Box 1551, Radio City Station,
To gwde us day by day .
' 1ng :out your kidneys. Why] NewYork,NYI0019.
Because it's more water than
Now about vitamin C
We cannot stop all trouble,
'·yout bOOy needs.
preventing colds. People
For it keeps popping up,
:: .If the blood level of sugar often get trapped into thinktimes wben least expected,
.. gelS too high, the sugar goes ing that what they've done · At
And bitter Is the cup.
out·in the urine. You see this results in a cure or prevPnts
But we can keep from adding
ine time in diabetics who illnesses. That's why dancing
More fuel oo tile fire,
: nave high blood sugars. The by the light of the moon and
By being kind and loving,
. ·118ft&gt; · thing happens with wearing a bag of asafetida
Which is my heart's desire.
water soluble vitamins. around your neck cures all ·
Composed in July and August, 1968 by Mrs. Riley Pigott,
''l'lult's why you can't have a sorts of thmgs. Even doctors Long
Botoom, Ohio .
!iupedevel of vitamin Cin the have to be reminded from
6

Jlirlitt
h der

ot own

by mistake
LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) ·Guerrilla leader Joshua
Nkomo said Wednesday his
men shot down a Rhodesian
commercial airliner because
they mistakenly believed
Rhodesi;~'s supreme military
commander and 21 soldiers
were on board. All 59 people
aboard the plane were killed.
Nkomo's admission was
expected to result in
retaliation by Rhodesia .
Following a similar incident
last September, Rhodesia
launched attacks on Nkomo's
bases in Zambia . And
Rhodesian officials have already vowed to avenge Monday's downing of the Air Rhodesia plane.
Guerrillas of Nkomo 's Zimbabwe African People's
Uruon have been fighting for
control of Rhodesia for slx
years, first against a whiteminority administration and
now against a bi-racial
government .
Peter
Walls,
Gen.
Rhodesia's supreme military
commander, flew from
Kariba to Salisbury on a
flight that left 15 mmutes
alter the ill-fated plane. Both
planes were four~ngine Viscounts.

By Will Grimsley
AP Corrt•s[iondent

mgs.
"That's why I'm so hepped on kids. They 're our only hope ,"
Rosie flew across country from his home m Los Angeles
Wednesday to attend the Pre American Toy Fair, featuring
among other Items strategy football games promoted by a pair
of the NFL's current stars, quarterback Steve Grogan of the
New England Patriots and punter Ray Guy of the Oakland
Raiders.
Themassi_ve defensive tackle of the 1950s and 1960s agreed to
attend only 1f allowed to say a few words in behalf of his pet
project,_the l}mted Nations International Childrens Appeal,
which shares m the proceeds of every game sold .
Two dozen people showed up.
"Look, man, if we'd advertised a murder down here the
place would be jammed," Grier said. "But something fo; the
kids - who cares? Can't be bothered. Kids were made to be
seen, not heard - remember ?
"That's our trouble. We got to talk to the kids. we got to
llste_n oo them. We live in a chaotic world where everybody's
talking about bombs and war and revolutions. We're all
frightened, suspicious and uncaring.
"Let's start commumcatlng - especially with the kids.",
. It Ia a umque ]lnd !firongfuousrole for the monstrous
lineman who had a reputation for savagery as a player and
who went on to adopt a tough guy image in numerous movie
and TV appearances
He had a key part in "Hijack," featuring Charlton Heston ,
~d _PI~red .a vengeful,, beak-bustmg private eye in TV 's
KoJ8k senal. He has been 1n eight or nine movies, twice as
many TV shows.
Grier said his life took on new meaning alter he saw Robert
Kennedy gu~ed down in a ,Los Angeles hotel in June 1968. He
~d Olym(llc decathlon champion Rafer Johnson were
~rumental in apprehending the assassin, Sirhan Sirhan.
For a long lime, I was so distressed and miXed up 1 didn't
know what to do with myself," he said. "I wandered listlessly.
1Then I got mvolved m a movement called Giant Step of which
I am the president. It 's simple - just everybody h~king up
together."

With three players in
double figures Wednesday
night, Eastern of Pike County
won its 15th game in 19 starts,
85-61 over Southwestern.
Leist led Eastern 's offensive disp\ay with 30 points

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON , Ohio (AP)
Gun Flint, in his I ourth
victory in five outings, won
the $1,300 featured claiming
pace by four le ngths
Wednesday night at Lebanon.
The winner returned $4,
$2.80 and $3. All five outings
were claimers, the !rack
srud, Kay Krel placed, pa}'lng
$3.60 and $3. Prmce Kay Abbe
paid $3.80 for show.
Kubla Khan and Almark's
Sue paid $140.20 In the double
on the combination 5-5
The crowd of 1,070 bet
$101,796.

in the news

given Bhutto

Berry's World

ATLANTA (AP) - John Connally aays the United States was
caught off guard by the Iranian revolution because of a
weakening of the CIA's international spy network.
A candidate for the Republican presidential nominaton,
Connally told reporters Wednesday the United States "should
have been aware" of the Impending revolution as .eerly aa 18
months ago.
The revolution came as a surprise to the administration,
Connally said, "because, once again, we have destroyed the
counter-lntelligence capabilities of the CIA, and this Is one of
the prices we pay for foolhardy treaUnent of our intelllgence
capabilities throughout the world."

&lt;

"
(

,,

"••,.
~
••"'

,

'

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Ohio State Buckeyes are
still in control of their own
destiny. Repeat. The Ohio
State Buckeyes are still in
control of their own destiny.
"We have six games to go
and 11 we go out and play up to
our potential, we will be in
this thing right down to the
wire," , said Buckeye Coach
Eldon Miller, who has seen
h1s club drop three of their
last four games.
"We are still the masters of
oudate." he said Ohio State,
\l'hich once led th e Big Ten
with an 8-0 mark, is now tied
with Iowa and Purdue at 9-3
and plays Minnesota , 4-12,
tonight at Williams Arena
The 17th-ranked Buckeyes
were clobbered 73-57 by
surgmg Michigan State last
Saturday, the second time in
four games they 've been
beaten by the Spartans, but
Miller isn 't pressing the panic
button .
"You don 't make any big
changes when you are 9-3 1n
the league," Miller added.
"We 've been in a little slump
lately, but you don 't come out
of a slump by panicking. You
work on the things you are
doing wrong ."
Miller said he planned oo
attack the wne defense he expects Mmnesota to use by
working the ball into sophomore center Herb Williams,
who owns an 18.9 Big Ten
scor1ng average.
"We especially want to get
Herb more active and get the

SUPER ECONOMY SPECIALS

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t:,,

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trans., A.C., rad ials. radio

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1976 MERCURY
BOBCAT

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Wednesday ' s College

Basketball Scores

By The AssoCiated Press
EAST
California 82. Sltppery Rock

76

Ca rn eg te-Mel lon 84, Th1el 51
Fairletgh Dic ki n so n
Brt dgeport -65

70 ,

Wa sh1 ngton 81 ,
Duquesne 84
lona 55, Army 53
Lehigh 48, Delaware 44
New Haven 98, Amer ican 88
Prttsburgh 54, Penn St. 45
Providence 62, Brown 60, OT

George

Rrder 94, Bucknell 89

Rochester 86, Clarkson 75

St.

Franc rs,

N. Y.,

70,

Baltimore 66
St. Francis, Pa , 90, James
Mad tson 80

Asheville 75
A

Local one owner, good ges
mileage

.'2995

19 35 55 85
14 25 37 61

Georgetown , D C. 69, Stonehill 59
Marshall 88, VMI 66
Morehead St. 99, N Caro-

COMET

'3995

By Quarters :
Eastern Pike
Southwestern

Duk e 66, N Carolina St . 48

1977 MERCURY

::..

20-21 -61.

Alcorn St. 98, BIShop 81
Appalachoan St 68, Citadel 64

~
d

••

Nel so n, 5-5-15, New berry, 7 4
19 , Baker, 3 3-9 ; Russell , 2-04, and La yton, 3 9-15 Totals

63

VW-AMC-JEEP

~

McGraw. 0-2·2 and Ph1pps, 40 B. Totals 36-13-85.
Southwestern (61) -

SOUTH
Alabama St. 86, Huntingdon

.'"

......

claimed he was not a good
Moslem, and that although
the Supreme Court threw out
this argwnent It -faUed r to
reduce
the
sentence
accordingly.
Bakhtiar,
a
former
attorney general, applied to
t.be court for the review
Tuesday, wben the aeven-Gay
period allowed for appeu for
executive clemency aplrad.
Had th~ stay been refuled,
Bhulto could have been
hanged Thursday.

while King had 20 and New
added 12
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Highlanders were led by Dale
Newberry's i8 points. Seniors
Gene Layton and Greg
Nelson finished with 15 points
each.
Eastern j ump~~ mto a 19-14
first period lea~ and were
never seriously threatened.
The visitors led 35-25 at the
half and 55-37 going into the
final period.
Eastern · a1so took th e
reserve game, 64-30.
Southwest~rn fini shed its
regular season with a 9-9
record. The Highlanders are
idle until Thursday, Feb. 22
when they meet the winner of
the KC-North Galha game in
the Class A Sectional at
Meigs High School.
Box Score
Eastern Pike (85! - New
6-0 12, King . 8-4-20 ; Slone, 2 2:
6. M&gt;ll er, 2 0-4; Leist, 13.4.30;
Lawhorn , 1 0-2; Wells, 0-l-l ;

RIVERSIDE

I

witness, Masud Mahmud,
who headed the political
police and was pardoned for
turning state's evidence, had
his own motive to kill Kasurl
and that Bhutto was not part
of the plot.
Kasurl escaped the ambush
in 1974 but hts father was
killeu.
Bakhtiar's petition also
said the Lahore High Court
that sentenced Bhutto argued
for execution, rather than life
Imprisonment because it

Bucks on road tonight

Eagles stop Highlanders

Names •••

VERONA, Italy (AP) - A urn containing the ashes of opera
star Maria Callas has disappeared from a Paris cemetery,
says her ex-husband, Glova!Uii Battista Meneghini.
DEVOTED T0111E
Meneghini said Wednesday that Jacqueline Loiseau, a close
KARACHI, Pakistan (AP)'
INTEREST OF
MEIGs-MASON AREA
friend of the diva, told him the urn had been removed from the
The
Supreme
Court
on
ROBERT HOEfiiCH
Wednesday stayed former Pere Lacahise cemetery.
aty Editor
DAVID BUSKIRK
The city of Paris confirmed to Ms. Loiseau tbe urn was no
Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali
Advertising Manager
longer
there but explained it had been removed sometime in
Butta's
execution
for
at
least
Published daily ex l'ept Saturday
b}' The Ohio Valley Publishmg
10 days. His lawyer had asked January 1978 at the request of the Callas family, Meneghlni
Compllny-Multimedia, Inc ,
Ill
said.
at least 30 days.
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohto 457~ .
"I find the whole thing mysterious," the 13-year-(tld Italian
The seven-man court will
Bwlness Offl4.-e Phone m- 2156.
Edllorlal Phon e 992-2157.
..
industrialist
said. In Paris, cemetery officials referred all
review the 51-year-old
Set'Oncl class postage paid 11t
queries
tO
the
director, who was not immediately available .
politician's conviction and
Pomeroy, Ohio
N11.t1onal advert1smg represen· I ' sentence on charges he
The New York-born soprano died after a heart attack in
t.atlve, Landon Associates, 3101
conspired to murder political Paris on Sept. 16, 1977, at the age of 53.
Euclid Ave , Cleveland , Ohio44l l5
Subscription rates Delivered by
opponent Reza Ahmed
earner where available 75 cents per
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Rosalynn Carter conunandeered a
Kasuri , and convene Feb. 24
w~ek . By Motor Route where carrier
to hear arguments py surrey-topped golf cart for a spin around the estate of Mexican
~rvk.-e lXII availilbli , One month ,
, S3 25 By tnail in Ohio and W Va ,
Bhutto's lawyer, Yahya President Jose LOpez Portillo, but stopped her ride when the
Onl! Year, $27 .!iO: S1x months,
cart began to smoke.
Bakhtiar.
SH 50; Thret monlhs, $1.50:
Elsewhere $32.00 ye11r; S1x month!;
Mrs. Carter and Lopez Portillo's wife, Carmen, met at the
Bakhtiar 'said he will in$17 00 , 'lhree months , $9 Clfl.
Los
Pinos residence Wednesday while their husbands
troduce
new
evidence
to
show
Subscription price mel .... .i Sunday
1 _Times&amp;ntinel.
the government's key discussed world affairs at the National Palace.
They climbed into the cart for a short trip around the hilly
•
estate.
"I drove it until It started smoking and I had oo quit," Mrs.
Carter said later.
• The two first ladies exchanged gifts, with Mrs. Carter
presenting her host with a Steuben heart for Valentine's Day
and an antique knife and fork from the Emperor Mulmlllan.
Mrs. Lopez Portillo gave Mrs. Carter a sliver necklace with
a tiger~ye jewel.

e~~--

NEW YORK (AP ) - J:(oosevelt "Hosie" Grier pointed with
pride at the rose patches that decorated the arm and leg of his
blue denim jeans.
"Needlepoint- I did it myself," said the hulking, bearded
~ollath,"!lce, at 320 pounds, the terror of the New York Giants
mthe National Footb~ League.l_le was notorious in his day as
the crusher who d1dn t indulge In mdivldual tackles. He sunply
gr~bbed an armful of the enemy and peeled them off - as he
nught a ban:ma- until he came to the man with the ball.
The pract1~e became one of th ~ sport's hallowed cliches.
Now he IS Involved in gentler pursuits. His priorities, in order, are: kids, love, understanding, kids old people communication, kids .
'
'
'~Look at national_budg~ts all o~~r the world," he says. "The
Uruted S_tates, Russia , China- billiOns for defense. Billions for
deth_struction. Less and less for education, recreation, human

Never underestimate the power of a popular movem~nt to
pimic the polltical establishment - particularly a movement
concerned with something as popular as money.
California's Proposition 13 IS perhaps the most recent spec·
tacular case in point. But that tax-slashing measure, affecting
directly oruy one state and the result of a mere referendwn, Is
bush league compared to the movement now unperway to im·
pose a balanced budget upon the federal govenunent.
The means would be a constitutional amendment. And with
approval already having been voted by more than a score of
legislatures, the movement is almost in sight of the 34 states
necessary to summon a constitutional convention for the purpose,
California's Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., from whom new
highs - or lows - in political trendiness come as no surprise
since Proposition 13 opened his eyes to the relationship between wallets and votes, joined up early. He is reported preparing to launch a nationwide "balance the budget" campaign
which oruy incidentally might also enhance his presidential
availability. Right on, Jerry!
Other polltical names, especially of the governor's own
Democratic persuasion, take notably different views of the
prospective amendment. President Carter finds it
"dangerous," to Sen. Edward Kennedy it is "ominous" and
from labor's George Meany comes the definitive evaluation of
"a very dangerous right-wing legislative threat."
The predominant response in Republican ranks is handwr·
inging. On the one hand, there is concern that Democrats could
pre-empt ~ traditional Republican issue -economy in government. On the other, there's recognition of the dangerous oversimplicity of the idea and the possibility that as political Issues
go, it nught well turn out to be more effective as a boomerang.
It is not necessary to oppose fiscal responsibility on the
federal level to be able to shoot holes in this proposal for
achieving it. A constitutional convention Is a cumbersome approach, has not been utilized since the original gathering and
conceivably could become a "runaway" - rewriting the entire
document.
The foremost consequence of a constitutional budgetary
limitation might be fiscal chaos, depriving an administration
of the flexibllity necessary to meet economic and political
crises. The entire nation could become a Cleveland. Further, it
is no service to the nation to clutter the Constitution with matters better handled through the existing political processes. An
amendment would not be an adequate substitute for responsible performance in the public interest on the part of an administration and the Congress, or of state government.
The latter has not been showing up too well on the amendment business. The kindest word for the haste with which
many legislatures have endorsed the convention call is
"unseemly." Less thought and debate has been devoted to the •
Issue in several chambers than to changes in local speed limits
- considerably less, since deviations from the nationwide 55
miles-per-hour could cost a state funds from the federal
highway program.
Which brings us back to money and a · possible do-itourselves way of easing federal budget problems. As a New
York congressman, Rep. Peter Peyser, suggested to Governor
Brown, California might consider giving up the funds it
receives from Washington under the myriad state and local
aid programs. That at a stroke would cut the budget deficit by
close to $4 billion. And if all the states renounced their federal
doles, 1t could be Wiped out altogether.

10 day stay

Led by Tim McComas' 30 and six free throws with 11 of quarter The Pirates atpoints, Coach Ted Lehew's his points coming during the tl·mplt'd JUst fu ur !) h ut~
North Gallia Pirates rolled to fourth stanza .
durtng thl..' l anto
a· 63-55 SV AC victory over
Because of foul trouble
Overall. NCaiS hit 26 of 47
'lost Hannan Trace Wed- North Gallia went mto a lou; field goa l attempts for a hot
nesday night.
corner offense during the 55 percent and II of 21 at the
McComas had 12 baskets latter part of the thi rd foul lines.
•
Othe r Pirates hitting

Donald F. Graff

Son of ,f roposition 13

WASffiNGTON (NEA) -An annada of trucks , vans
lines tht: curb for an entire city block on a
here. The legends on the trucks ' cabs identify
as "Cinema Art Transportation" or "B&amp;A Studio

'

.
P
irates
dump
Wildcats
SPORTS
Sports World

Newberry 75 , Coker 65
Norfolk St. 86, 51 Paul's 68
N Carolina 85, Wrll ram &amp;
Mary 60
N. Carolina A&amp; T 78, N.
Carolina Cent. 55
N Geor9ia 82, Shorter 67
S. Carolina 66, F,urman 61
S. Carolina St. 100. Benedict

77

4 cylinder, 4 speed, black
with gold pinstripes and
gold wheels.

S Florida 59, New Orleans 56
Virgima 72, Clemson 68
Virgin1a Umon 116, Shaw 60
W Virg inia St. 66, Morris
Harvey 63
MIDWEST
Dayton 69, Toledo 6B
DePaul 85, Ball St 76
DePauw 77, Valparaiso 75
OT
'

2 door hatchback , a ir
con.difion1ng, 4 speed,
rad 1a ls. "We sold It new."

'4995
1976 AMC

S speed

trans , AM-FM
radio. Michelin radials

•2495

cy l.. automatic. A.C.,
P S., w~re wheel covers.

'2555

RIVERSIDE VW-AMC-JEEP
'Thr&gt; 0Paler That Cares Ahout
0 uality"
Uppt't f&lt;t. I
446 9800
Gallipolis

betro1f 106, St Bonaventure
101 , OT
E. Michigan 87, Defia nce 78
Evansville 78, Butler 76
Iowa St. 68. Kansas 66
Kansas St 59, Oklahoma Sf
50
Kentucky St 107, lnd-Purdue
Indianapolis 56
Loyola, ill ., 93, W. Michigan
80
Missourt 81 , Co lorado 69
NE Mi ssou n 96, Blackburn 79
.Oh1o No 94, Demson 78
Oklahoma 79, Nebra ska 58
Otterbem 83, Muskingum 64
St. John 's, Minn .. 77, St.
Thomas. Minn .. 62
St. Joseph 's, Ind . 67, Ind.
Central 65
St Olaf 92, St. Mary's 75
St Xavier 67, Illinois Tech 62
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 71, SMU 55
Cam eron 98, Texas Wesl. 89
Lamar 95, McNeese St. 79
Texas 102, Baylor 83
Texas A&amp;M 61, Texas
Christian 56

for Big 10 play

1

Yaz goes
back home
to fish

Ohio College Basketba II
By The Assoc1afed Press

Wednes da y N1ght
Conference
(Ohio I
Cap1ta l 74, Kenyon 60
Manet ta 74. Mount Un1 on 69
Ohi ONorthern 94 . Den1 son 78
Otterbein 83, Musk 1ngum 64
Wi tten berg 76, Wooster 58
Hoos1er Buckeye
F mdlay 98, Wllmtngton 63
Presidents
Case Rese r ve B 1. J o hn
Car roll 80
Other Games
Day ton 69, Toledo 68
E Mich1gan 87, Def1ance 78
Ste ubenville 58, W Liber ty
St. 51
Youngstown S t 67 , Buffalo 53

victor y over W1sconsm, and

freshman Kevm Boyle of
Iowa, whose 19 pomts helped
the Hawkeyes to a VICtory
over Wi sconsm on Saturday.

Wednesday 's Sports
Transactions
By The Assoc1ated Press
BASEBALL
Amencan League
MI LWAUKE E BREWERS
~ An noun ce d that Jerr y
August me, ptfcher, and DICk
Dav1s, ou tfie lder have
agreed to term s
MINNESOTA "(WI NS Sold the con tra ct) at Dale
So derho lm. tnfte ld er, to
Evansv ill e AAA ol the
Amencan Assoc•al 1on
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Announced that Bob Bat lor ,
ou tf1 elder, has agreed to a
two yea r contrnc1
Nat1onalleague
MONTREAL EXPOS Wa ived Wayn e Tw1 tch e ll.
p1 tcher, for the purpose of
gt vmg h1 m h1s ou tright
relea se
BA5K ETBALL
Na tional Ba sketball

Assoc1at1on
MI LWA UKE E BUCKS
S•gned Sam Smrth , guard. for
the rema1hder of the season
NEW YORK KNICK S Acqu1red T om Barker,
center , as the player to be
named later tn the Bob
McAdoo trade
HOCKEY
War ld Hockey Assoc1at10n
CIN CINNATI STI NGERS
- S1gned M1 chaeJ Panzeau,
forward , for the rema1nder of
lhe season
FOOTBALL
Nationa I Footba II league
CLEVE LAND BROWNS Named Tommy Prothro
executtve v1ce pres•dent m
ch arge of pl ayer personnel
NEW YORK GIANTS Named Geo rge Young
general manager
COLLEGE
BETHUNE COOKMAN Named Bobby A Fraz1er
head footba ll coach

,\P Sports Writer
l'a&lt;'l•rs 106, Knick.&lt; 97
BOSTON
(A P) - Veteran
R1cky
So bers,
held
slugger
Carl
Yastrzemsk1,
scoreless in the fir st hail
rebuffed
by
the
Boston Red
scored 10 third-quarter point;
Withm SIX minutes, sparking Sox in efforts to renegotiate
lnd1ana over the saggmg hiS contract a Ia Jim Rice,
Kmcks . Billy Kmght and 1eturned to his Florida home
Mike Bantam with 21 points today, determmed to "sit and
apiece led a bala nced Indiana fi sh" unti l h1 s sa lary
demands are met.
attack .
Capta m Carl, who has
Spurs 149, Celtics 119
18 of his 39 yea rs with
spent
Sa n Antonro rode a 32-pomt
the
Red
Sox, too k the heat
performan ce by George
W
edn
esday
mghl a!ler
Gervm to its rout of Boston.
meelln
g
wit
h
Red Sox Oh1o H1gh SchooiBasketba II
Gervm was supported by
WE'VE LOWEREii
By yhe AssociCJted Press
Larry Kenon'a 22pomts while General Manager Haywood
THE COST OF
Wednesday N1ght
Allan Bnstow contributed a Sullivan man apparen t effort C1ncrnnah
Madetra
68,
CARPET CLEANING
to pick up some money left Lovela nd 60
caree r-high 11 assists.
over from the club's recent Cmc 1nnat1 Mar~ emo n t 6 1,
Kings 108, 76erS&lt; 106
NOW RENT
Otis Birdsong 's 26 pomts s1gnrng of R1ce to a oew !nd1an Hi ll 60
Sycamore 95 , Deer
and Bob Nash's season-/ugh seventy-year contract worth (lnCLnnatl
Park 46
24 _helped Ka,nsas City snap about $5 million
Mrlford 73, CmCinnatr Glen
"It 's up to them to make Es te 56
Philadelphia 's three-game
winning streak. It was the the next mov e now, " Spr1 ngf 1eld Nort h 10 1.
fe~~!'7. CLEANING
The Tecumseh so
Kings' fir st triumph in Yastrzems k1 told
AT NEW
Tilton
sv
ille
Buckeye
South
Philadelphia since 1973, 11 Associated Press. "I'm flymg 102. Belmont Unton 7&lt;1
back to Flonda and will Whee l1ng Park, W Va 58,
games ago.
Juhus Ervmg, who missed watch my son, Mike, play h1s Steubenv tlle 56
the 76ers' la st game with a high school games. The rest
sprained ankle, returned to of the time I'll sri and fish . It
the hneup but was held to looks hke I 'II be doing a lot of
,•
sitting
and
nin e pomts. Team mate watchmg,
f
Darryl Dawkms was high fishing'"
Sullivan, who earlier
with 27
he didn 't expect any
said
Pist!lns lll, Nuggets 107
"sen
ous
problem s" fro m
Rookie John I...:Jng scored 27
points and veteran M.L. Carr stars disgruntled by the big
added 24 as Detrmt snapped a multi-year payoff to Rice as
Do-rt-yourse/1
five-game losing streak . The the American League's 1978
lif1d get professfone.l
19SVItS
Piston s, despite the absence most va1uablel player,
of star center Bob ·Lanier decil ned comment when
with an injured toe , led aU the asked about Yaz' comments
Baseba II writer Bill Liston
way.
Denver' s George
of
th e Boston Herald
McGinrus got 33 points . and
American
quoted
David Thompson 28. ,
Yastrzemski
as
saying:
"If I
SuperSonics 116, Hawks 104
Gus Williams and Denms don't get the figure I want, I
Johnson each scored 22 pomts will s1t out the entire 1979
as Seattle snapped a four- season."
"I don't know about that ,"
WMPO .
game losin g str eak . The
949-2525
SATURDAYS
Sanies' defense took ove r in Yaz hedged while not denymg
til
Noon
Racine,
0.
the last 14 mmutes, limitin g the statement "I'll cross that
9
patch when I come to it. I JUSt ' - -- - . ~ -- - - - '
the Hawks oo 21 points.
hope we can reach an agreeBucks 115, Nets 94
ment
soon. I've been working
Junior Bridgeman scored
out,
as
usual , all winter, but
19 o( h1s 29 points •. and
I'm
stopping
as of now. I'll
Marques Johnson 15 of his 23
start
again
when
the situation
In th e second
half as
Milwaukee rallied from a 14- ts resolved .,
Yastrzemski, who lives in
point fir st-quarter defi cit.
The Nets, who had a four- Boca Raton, said he has met
game winning streak broken, with Sullivan "lour or five
were led by Winford Baynes times." He said he didn't
want to say any more ,
With 17 points.
adding
· "Ask Sully and (coWarriors 113, Jazz 101
owner)
Buddy Le Roux. They
Phil Smith scored 34 points,
know
what
I want. "
inclUding 12 in the first
Yastrzemsk1,
movmg up
and
14
in
the
third,
as
quarter
Golden State broke a four- among baseball's all-time
game losing streak. The leadf rS in most hittin g
fourth quarter started with deparlments, signed a new
the Warriors ahead 83-71 but two-year contract last spring
'
.
they broke It open with a 14-7 for an estimated $265,000 a
run . The loss w.as the Jazz' year. He ha s claimed he has a
27th m 30 road games, worst clause enabling him to
renegotiate his salary .
in the league.

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Casey Kasem

STAR SUPPLY CO.

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.

By OA VE O'HARA
By The Associated Press
Who got the best of the b1g
trade between the New York
Knicks and Boston Celt1cs?
The Indiana Pacers and San
Antonio Spurs, that 's who .
The outmanned Knicks ,
minus high -sc oring Bob
McAdoo, were no match for
the Pacers, dropping a 106-97
decision after trailing by as
many as 2!i pomts.
And the Boston Cellics, despite McAdoo's 21 points,
were blown away by the San
Antonio Spurs 149-119.
"From the psychological
standpoint, you know guys
hke McAdoo and (Spencer )
Haywood are gone," said
Indiana Coach
Bobby
Leonard, "but you'-ve still got
00 go out and do it."
McAdoo didn't.
"I don 't know what I'm
doing on offense right now,"
the league 's third leading
scorer admitted alter getting
19 of his 21 points in the final
penod. "I felt lost 'out there.
It's a feeling I've never had
before."
In
other
National
Basketball Association
games, Kansas City nipped
Philadelphia 108-106, Detroit
shaded Denver 111-107 ,
Seattle drubbed Atlanta 116104, Milwaukee trimmed New
Jersey 115-94 and Golden
State whipped New Orleans
113-101.

Johnson ;honored

.CHICAGO (AP ) - Earvm
" Metgic' ' Joh nson, \\ho led
Mrdrigan Slate to road vicgo wrong In the last mmute
tmtes
over Iowa and OhJo
and wind up losing "
Stale
last
week, has been
When the Gophers met OhiO
named
B1
g
Ten basketball
State .Jan 18, they trailed by
player
of
the
week
four at halftime, managed a
H1s selection on Wednesday
three-point lead m the second
made Johnson, a 6-foot-8
ha lf, but eventually lost.
sophomore, the frrst repeat
"One of these times the
winner this year He won the
Over
a
U,
the
Pirate
r
eserve
breaks wlll go our way," Dutsquad
IS
12-4.
weekly
award after the third
cher sa1d .
week
1n January
F.riday
night.
North
Ga
lila
The game Will feature two
of the league's lop scorers m travels to Southern whil e · .Johnson scored 12 points,
Ohio State's Kelvm Ransey Hannan Trace is at Kyger hauled down 13 rebo11ltds and
handed out four asSISts m
and Minnesota S Kevm Creek.
M1chrgan
State's 60-57 victory
McHale.
Box Score
o-.
r
Iowa.
Agalllst Ohio
North
Galha
(63)
Sm
1fh
,
Ra nsey ranks second
State,
John
son
scored a team52
12,
W1n
ston,
6
1
13
.
behmd Purdue's Joe Barry McComas, 12 6 30, Peck, 3 o.
high
26
points,
pulled
down 10
Carroll " 1th a 20.3 averarge. 6 Lott ie, 0 2 2 Totals 26-22-63
re
bounds
a,nd
had
seven
McHale IS fifth With a 19 4
Hannan Trac e (55) Spartans
won
the
assists
The
mark and also Is th1rd in Shaffer, 6 4 16, Campbell . 2-2
game
73-57.
6,
Pa
ck
.
8
4
20.
Webb
,
2-3
7,
reboundmg at 8.5 a game.
Beaver, J . Q 6 Totals 21 -13-55.
In tile two games John son
Williams IS the leading reBy Quarters
was
20 for 24 from the free
bound er m the Big Ten with North Ga H1a
12384463 throw hne
'
Han
Tr
ace
14 34 40 55
an II 0 mark a nd th e
Rwmers-up for the honor
Buckeyes are third m team
Joe Barry Ca rroll of
were
rebound s, while Minnesota 1s
Purdue, who scored more
seventh .
than 20 polllts for tile siKth
and seventh straight games :
Kevm McHale of Mmnesola,
who scored 32 pomts '" a

Knicks -drop
106-97 tilt

SHOP

"

'2395
1974 RAT
SPORT COUPE

bali in side to him more," said
Miller The Buckeyes downed
Minnesota 83-80 a month ago
at Columbus, but Miller also
expects the Gophers to be
tougher at home .
"Minnesota is better now
than they were the first time
we played them and we only
won that one by thr ee
po1nts," Miller said.
Gopher Coach Jim Dutcher
isn 1l so sure his team is improved, however. Minnesota
is currently ndmg a six-l!ame
losing strmg, the latest a 59-57
defeat by Illinois m which the
Gophers had the ball and a 5555 score with 35 seconds oo
play
"It 's getting to be an old
story, " said Dutcher "We've
been f1ghtmg back from as
much as 10 points behmd oo
get ourselves in position to
win, only to have something

Coach Donmc Saunders'
Wrldcats were led by Ron
Pack's 2Q pomts Paul Shaffer
added 16
Hannan Trace, trailing all
the way, made It close until
the fina l minutes '!be wm
evened North Galli a's season
record at 8-8 and 5-4 in the
SVAC
Hann an Trace dropped to 113 overall and 1-8 m the
SVAC
Nort h Ga lli a's reserve
rcm amed unbeaten m SV AC
play with a 71-46 romp over
the WIIdkittens. Keith Payne
led the way with 19 pomts.

TRI-STATE AREA
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BEFORE YOU BUY I

MOn., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat .
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,773-SS92

••

The Daily Sentinel

doubl e figures were Stacey
Wrn;ton with 13 and Sam
Smith added 12 points
respectively.

''·

TIRE SALES

Mason, W. Va.
N.2nd

"

"

.' ' ' .

�.•

STANDINGS .
National Basketball
Association
. AI A Glance

'Bv The Associated Press
National Hockey League
Campbell Conference

Atlantic Division
•W. l. Pet. GB
Wash .
38 16 .704

Phila.
N. Jersey

32 20 .615 5
27 27 .soo 11

New York

25 34 .424 15 1 1

W L T

NY Island
34
NY Rang . 30
Atlanta 29
Ph ila .
23

Central Division

34 24 .586

Houston

31 24

Atlanta

.564

Chi cago

41 2

Cleve.

22 34

.393 11

Detroit

20 37

.35 1 ll 1 1

Vane .

Adams Division

Boston
Buffalo

Midwest Division

35 21 .625

Chicago

20 36

Minn

227
200
180
179

171
Wednesday's Games

132
196
185
231
212

New York Rangers 5, Boston
1

27 31 .466 91f2
26 32 .448 IQ &gt;;,

Golden St.

22 11 55 176 174
176

Mont . · 37 9 7 81
Los Ang . 24 24 7 55
Pitts .
21 23 8 50
Wash.
17 29 B 42
Detroit 11 3 14 36

15

3522- .614 I·
33 22 600 2
16 25 .528 6

San Dieg o

2~

22 24 7 51 176

Norris Division

. Pacific Division
35 20 .636

Sea tile
LosAng.
Phoeni•
Por tland

32 14 9 73 222 171
22 19 11 55 171 165

Toronto

.525 S!n
.424 llln
.421 1Pn
.357

B 44 165 215

13 35 8 34 166 240
12 34 8 32 151 222
Wales Conference

Western Conference

31 28
25 3.4
24 33

10 78 243 146
5 65 221 183
5 63 221 194
12 58 172 165

19 25 to 46 161 195
18 30

St . L.
Colo.

New Or lea ns 19 39 .328 15

Kan . City .

Pts GF GA

Smythe Division

30 26 . .517 4

Denver
M il wau .
Ind iana

10
18
22
18

Los Angeles 3. Detroit

2

Ph iladelphia 2, Toronto 2. ti e
Buffalo 2, New York lsla n.
ders 1
Atlanta 4, Chicago 4, tie
Minnesota 8, Vancouver 1

Wednesday 's Games

Kansas City 108, Philadelphia

106
Detroit 111 , Denver 107
Thursday's Games
Ind iana 106. New York 97
Sa n Antonio 149, Bost on 119 , Minnesota at Pittsburgh
New York Rangers at Buffalo
Milwaukee 115, New Jersey
Boston at Philadelphia
94
Go lden State 113, New Los Angeles at Montreal
Wa shing ton at Colorado
Orleans tot

Sea ttle

116,

Friday's Games

Atlanta 104

No games scheduled

World Hockey Association

Thursday's Games
Philadelphia af Cleveland
Portland at Houston
Washington at Phoen ix
New Orleans at San Diego
Friday's Games
lnd 1ana at New Jersey .
Houston at Detroit
Portland at San Antonio
New Y_or k .at Chicago
Los Angeles at Milwauk ee

W L T Pis
Winni.
26 21 6 58
New Eng . 25 17 7 57
Edmon . 28 21 0 56
Quebec 25 21 4 54
Cincin. 22 26 5 49

GF
208
204
198
184
167

GA
195
174
162
169
194

Birming . 20 27 4 44 183 206
Wednesday's Games
Birming ha m 7, New England

Ph iladelphia vs . KC at St .

Louis
San Diego at Den ver
Phoenix at Sea ttle
Washington at Golden State

.4
Winnipeg 5, Cincinnati 1
Thursday's Games

No games scheduled

Friday's Games
at New England
Winn ipeg at Birmingham
Edmonto~

H•:RSCHEI. NISSENSON
AI' Spurts Wrilt:r
The old gag used to go that
·there were only two sports at
the University of Texas ·football and spring footba ll.
Well, it's time to make room
for · basketball...and Texas
may be playing that this
spring.
The
1 2th-ran k e d
Longhorns, led by Tyrone
Branyan's career-high 41
points, played the game the
way it was meant to be
played Wednesday riight,
thrashing Baylor 102-83 .
Texas captured the National
Invitation Tournament last
spring but Baylor Coach Jim
Haller sees bigger and better
things in the Longhorns'
future.
"U th ey keep playing this
well, they will win the
national championship," he
raved . Well, perhaps, but if
they beat Texas Tech and
Southern Methodist in their
next two outings they will at
least win the Southwest Conference crown .
Texas was one of six mem·
bers of The Associated Press
Top Twenty in action
Wednesday night and all six
came through unscathed .
Fourth-ranked North
Carolina crushed William &amp;
Mary 85-UOas AlWood scored
16 points and Dave Colescott
added 14 ; No . 5 Duke got 21
points from Mike Gminski
and walloped North Carolina
State 66-48 in an Atlantic
Coast Conference game; No.
II Arkansas trounc~d SMU
71-:&gt;5 in an SWC ·contest
behind U.S. Reed's 18 points;
No . 16 Georgetown used
Hy

Patrick Division

23 33 .411 16

Sa n Ant.

·-.••._

Pro Hockey
At A Glance

By The Associated Press
East•rn Conference

Boston

5-The DaUySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 15, 19'19 _

C rai~ ShL'hun ·s t:J puiilts and

point s uf the fir ~J!rtl C~Ue

llliiJUtcs into the "ecund half
but I letroit gut duse with a
14-2 burot .
Detroit still trailed 89-lll

hnldir q.! SMl ! st·oreless for 41 ~

.Juhn IJw·en 's 18 to defea t Stonehill 69-59 and Earl Cureton
scored :12 points and ~rabbed
23 rebounds to pace No. 18
Detroit past St. Bonaventure

ami l'oasll'U home. •

106-101 in overtime .

W&amp;M as Wood scored 14 ofhi s

The last 10 Texas-Baylot·
games had been decided by
five points or less but ·
Branyan
helped
the
Longhorns pull a way from a
10-10 tie with 24 first-half
points, connecting on II of 12
from the floor . Meanwhile,
.lim Krivacs ." Texas' all-lime
leading scorer, was shut out
in the first half but poured in
18
points
after
the
in!ermiss10n.
Coach Abe Lemons , who
once called the 6-foot-7
Branyan too slow to play
major college ba sket ball,
now terms him an "amazing
individual. He's like a white
buffalo - very, very rare.
He's the rarest of them all.
There will never be another
like him ."
Branyan may be stow, but
he can'•t jump, either.
"Well, he tried a little,"
l.emons joked. "He jumped
from the waist up . But then
he did get some rebounds.
Any guy who gets 41 points is
a friend of mine."
While Texas was boosting
its SWC record ' to .12-2,
Arkansas kept pace at 11-3 by
trimming SMU for its eighth
consecutive victory. The
Razorbacks scored the last 11

16 points and Mike O'Koren
got all 13 of his in the first 20

minutes to take a :J4·22 lead

Nurlh Carolina breezed lu a
'l :l~27

halftime

bulge over

minute s. The Tar Heels

pulled out of sight bY scoring
the first 10 points of the
second half.
Duke's Gminski bad help
against N.C .. State from
Gene Banks with 13 points
and Jim Spanarkel with 12.
Spariarkel becoming the
second leading scorer in
Duke history with 1,-891
points. The game was tied at
~8 with 11 1.'.! minutes left but a
12-point run helped the Blue
Devils pull away.
"Mike was great, just.
kicking the ball in and out like
that," Coach Bill Foster said
of the 6-10 Gminski, who had
10 rebounds to go with his 21
points. " Mike is a tower of
str ength."
Sluggish Georgetown led
Stonehill by only 54-51 with
5:58 left but went on a 10-2
spurt to put the game away.
The Hoyas shot 61 percent in
the second half after leading
30-27 at the intermission.
Detroit's Cureton, a 6-9 junior, hit on 14 of 18 shots
against St. Bonaventure,
posting season highs in points
and rebounds. The -Bonnies
held a 76-58 bulge seven

"'

"Using the
Short Form
could cost
you money!"

with three minutes remaining
but tied it with an 11-3 spurt ,

includin g Wilbert
McCormick's driving layup
with se'ven ~econds to go.
"Coach (Dave ) Gaines told
us during halftime that we
wcren 't getting the second
shots and that hurt us," Cureton said. " It has hurt us all
season. The coach said we
had to give it to the big man,
so I put it in my mind that I
was him and went in and did

"Must have the potential to
become an athletic director."
The other criteria included
ability to recruit, be

Thursday," sald William

BOSTON - Carl Yastrzemski , the Boston Red Sox'
39-year -ol d sup_e rstar,
threatened to sit out the 1979
season unless his demands
are met for a new contract.

Daily, chairman of the
athletic board.
He said that any decision on
McCaff(erty would be up to
Xavier University President
Rev. Robert W. Mulligan, . Yastrzemski wants to
s.. J.
renegotiate his contract on
Baker previously said he the basis of Jim Rice's sevenwould retire at the end of the • year pact worth about $5
current basketball season but · million.
would remain on the faculty . · Yastrzemski said earlier
Daily said the board- had thai he would honor his 1979
decided the salary for the contract while negotiating for
new coach · would be "very 1980 and 1981. He claimed the
high ."
two-year contract he signed
He said the board setUed on last spring contained a
nine essential qualities for renegotiable clause for
the candidates . One was, salary.

"
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it."

l·:lsewhere:
- Iona, 16-5, won for the
11th time in 12 games, edging
Army 55-53, · while 18-5
Wagner made it 13 in a row,
nipping Boston University 7~
72 on · Jamie Ciampaglio's
jump shot - the last tw~ of
his 25 points - with 15
seconds left.
- DePaul,'. 17-4, defeated
Ba II State 85-76 behind
freshman Mark Aguirre's 23
points while Dayton , 17-U,
survived the absence of
injured star Jim Paxson and
edged Toledo 69-Ua with 6-10
fr eshman Mike Kanieski
scoring 19 points.
- In the Big Eight, it was
Oklahoma 79, Nebrask~ 58;
Iowa State 68,. Kansas 68;
Missouri 81, Colorado 69 and
Kansas State 59, Oklahoma
State 50.
·

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Sports briefs.
BASEBALL

...,-..·

Henry W. Block

McCafferty may he out as director
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
athletic board at Xavier Unive rsity indicated it may be
wjthout an athletic director
when it decides on a replacement for retiring 'basketball
Coach Tay Baker.
The status of present
Athletic
Director
Jim
Mccafferty was uncertain
following the board's meeting
Tuesday night.
" There will be an
annoWJcement forthcoming

·"
l o." '

• •

·FOOfBHL
NEW YORK - The New
York Giants ended almost
two months of internal
squabbling between the
team's uncle-nephew coown crs by signing George
Young , director of pro
scouting for the Miami Dolphins, to a 5-year contract as
general manager.
Wellington Mara had been .
' feuding with his nephew , Tun
Mara , over the naming of a
director of operations and
coach. Each Mara owns 50
percent of the team, causing
the standoff.
The Giants are also seeking
a coach .. following the
dismissal of John McVay one
day after their 6-10 season.

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Today's Topic:

r-·----1

Researcher to revolutionary

Social
1 Calendar

By ROB WOOD
A~sociated Press Writer
HOUSTON, Texas (AP) Two years ago Ibrahim Yazdi
was a researcher at Baylor
University in Texas, studying
cancer and its causes. Now
Ibrahim Yazdi Is the man
who told Americans huddling
in the .besieged U.S. Embassy
in Iran that they were safe
from attackers poWJding at
the door .
Yazdi, who for 10 years at
the medical school here was
known ·as a man of quiet
mien, today holds the title
deputy prime minister for
revolutionary affairs ·in
Iran's new government.
·Much is rmcertain in Iran
tOday, and little could be
learned about how Yazdi
went from researcher and
professor to leader in a
movement - headed by the
Moslem Ayatolla Ruhollah
Khomeini - that managed to
overthrow Shah Mohanunad
Reza Pahlavi and his wellequipped army.
His ' daughter4n~aw, Roya
Yazdi, said simply : "He was
asked to help the Ayatollah
Khomeini and he accepted for
the people. That is the kind of
man he is."
Dr. Harris Busch, head of
pharmacology at Baylor, said
of the Iranian native : "He
was a quiet, hardworking
fellow . He was a person
everyone liked. He broadened
his knowledge in cancer
research while here and held
a Ph.D. in biocliemistry. He
was a good laboratory colleague, He was sensitive and
a man of integrity."
Yazid held a bachelor of
science degree and a
doctorate of philosphy from
the University of Tehran
when he came to Baylor in
August 1967.
He lived here WJtil July 19n
and was an assistant
research professor
of
pathology and a research
instructor of pharmacology
at the Jlaylor &lt;;:ollege of
Medicine and was associated
with the Veterans Administration Hospital in Houston.
When he returned to Iran, he
left his wife and six children
here.
Wednesday , when
guerrillas
thought
to
represent a left-wing faction
stormed the embassy in
Tehran, Ambassador William
Sullivan
called
the
Khomeini's headquarters to
ask help for the 101
Americans who had taken
refuge there. Marine Sgt. Keq
Kraus described the scene:
"They shot in all the windows
and were pounding and
pounding on the door."
It was then that Yazdi
emerged as leader of the
Khomeini forces and, as
Sullivan said, told the
Americans '''we were all
safe."
Busch
said
later
Wednesday that he bad heard

that Yazdi had helped save
the embassy personnel and " I
think that reflects the kind of
man he is. "
Roya Yazdi, the daughterinlaw, said the family had
spent the morning listening to
radio reports from Iran.
"Those who took over the
U.S . Embassy must be

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-. -RAP :
.
"J.T," described her convict husband as a guy who would
always be a loser, and warned everybody not to feel sorry for
cons, or even wt1te·them letters for fear of getting involved.
If everybody followed her advice none of us would have a
chance, and we'd all end up back in the joint. A lot of us do,
because ex..:ons can, get jobs or make friends with anyone but
criminals.
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their love can change a con": it can! Love is the greatest force
on earth. -PRISONER IN CALIFORNIA
DEARHELENANDSUE:
,
"J.T." judged all cons by her husband when she said " once a
con alway a con."
My friend and I are on the County Farm, but we aren't going
to be here again! A guy in jail can straighten up if he wants to.
Maybe J.T.'s husband didn 't have anything (or anyone) to
straighten up for.
J.L . AND NIP, Pa .

' B ~t "-Cd o n

TV

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.·.·

DEAR HEI.EN AND SUE :
In my high school t~ere are special education classes for the
mentally retarded: These kids aren't helplessly backward,
just "slow." They don 't bother anyone, but nwnerous regular
kids delight in mocking them.
The "specials" know they're being laughed at and some
even end up crying. How can people be so mean' How can I
stop them?
Another thing; The retarded students often dress odd. They.
wear old-fashioned clothes, and sneakers with dresses.
Sometimes their clothing is wrinkled, torn, or several sizes too
large and their hair is messy, as if no one at home cared.
If they were -went to school properly dressed, kids would
bave less to tease about. Maybe their patents think the "defec. lives" don't matter, but they do 1 -CONCERNED AND CONFUSED
'
DEARCANDC :
They certainly do!
Given proper support, encouragement, and acceptance,
many retarded yoWJgsters become self-sufficient adults who
would scarcely be recognized as "slow."
Why don't you and sympathetic friends vulunteer your help
as part-time tutors? You might teach style as well as the Three
Rs, for
makes all of us feel more "nor',, pt1de in appearance
.
rna1.
And if you can interest some of the "mockers" in the project,
they'll becomemorehwnan. -HElEN AND SUE

10-DIGIT DESK CALCULATOR WITH MEMORY

as
seen on
national

GAS MODELS

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Loot for this

sign in your . ._ a•aa.a•
n,;ghborhoocl
_ _ __

PRICES

MAY

•

••

fASHION BOOTS

LARGE STOCKI
BAmRIES

~PRICE

MOORE'S

rltage
OF SHOES

W. 2ND STREET OR
W.-N!AiN STREET
POMEROY, 0.

N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

Open Friday Night Til 8 P.M.

Phone 992-2811

110 W. Main

Pomeroy, 0.
' .

'.

......

...

•

a~

bridges, roads
fortlficatioos. He also studied
the use of demolitions, landmine
warfare • and
camouflage techniques. ·
He jollied the Marine Corps
In June, 1978.

15%x1O'Ve''. 40-2028

(MOST STORES)

MOR-FLO

· ' ONLY ·

r"G;;;;;ti;;;'tt;Pl ;:fi~[~~~~~~~~~

Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Tyree
Today In History
By Tbe Associated Press of Pomeroy are announcing ·
TodayisThursday,Feb. l5, the birth of a son, Charles
the 46th day of 1979. There are Albert, born Monday at
University Hospital. The
3.19 days left in the year .
Today's highlight in baby weighed four pounds,
history ;
three ounces and was 19 inOn this date in 1898, the ches long.
U.S. battleship Maine blew up
Grandparents are M1·. and
in Havana harbor, and 260 Mrs. Albert Roush, Bailey
crewmen were killed. Spain's Run Road, Charles Tyree,
guilt in the act was not Middleport, and Josephine
established, but public
opinion in the United States
·was inflamed, and the ::~:~=~=~'~'ff'f~=~=:::::t:r::::::::{::::::::::::::=:::::::::
Tyree, Pomeroy .
·
Spanish-American War
followed.
On this date:
In 1564, Italian astronQIIler
Galileo was born in the city of
Pisa.
In 1764, St. Louis was established as a fur trading post.
In 1933, President-elect
Franklin Roosevelt narrowly
escaped assassination in
Miami. A shot fired at Roose·
veil misSed him but kllled
Mayor . Anton Cermak of
Chicago.
In 1942, the British colony
of Singapore surrendered to
the Japanese in World War II.
In 1973, the United States
and Cuba signed . an
agreement calling for the
prosecution or extradition of
hijackers of planes and ships.
In 19n, President carter's
mother, Lillian Carter,
received a warm welcome in
a town in India where she had
served in the U.S. Peace
LADY EAGLES
Corps 10 years earlier.
TO MEET
Ten years ago: Four U.S.
The ladies auxlllary of the
aquanauts
began a twoPomeroy Eagles Club 2171
of Fving in
month
experiment
wlll meet Feb. 20 at 8 p.m.
a
capsule
moored
42 feet
The last reading of the by-· ·
sea
in
the
Virgin
under
the
laws will be given.
Islands.

Highly praised by a major audio

·YOU

'·
THURSDAY
WILLING \wORKERS
CLASS of Enterprise United
Methodist Church Thursday
7:30 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Thomas Bentz.

ROCK SPRINGS BF.ITER
Ht•Hith Club, Thursday, 1:15
communists," she said . p.m . at the home of Mrs.
"They are not Moslems and Ja('kie Zirkle. Mrs. Phyllis
they 're not supporters of Skinner will have the contest.
Khomeini. 11
1.,\UREI. CJJFF RETTER
Later the family reached Health Club, 7:30 Thursday
Yazdi . in Tehran by night at the Riverboat Rmm ,
telephone, she said, adding, Athens County Savings and
"He is all right and very, l&lt;&gt;an, Meigs Office.
very happy."
SHADE RIVER lodge 453
She said Yazdi "loves· his
family and his country. When F&amp;AM Thursday 7:30p.m. to
. things of this importance confer entered apprentice
happen, he believes au people degree. All masons invited.
are important. He is a very
MEIGS · COUNTY
devout Moslem and he is very · Democrat Central Comdevoted to his family ."
mittee, 7:30p.m. Thursday at
Busch said that Yazdi spent Meigs Inn.
much of his time at tlie
BRADBURY PTA Thurslaboratory doing research day at 7:30 p.m.
during his years at Baylor.
FRIDAY
Roya Yazdi said, "He hever
POMEROY CHAMBER of
had time for what you would Commerce Friday at noon at
call a real hobby. He spend Meigs Inn.
most of his spare time
RETURN
JONATHAN
reading books or talking to Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
students from foreign coun- American
Revolution,
tries."
Friday, I :30 p.m. in River
Texas, with its oil Boat room of Meigs Branch of
technology, has many the Athens CoWJty Savings
Iranian students - federal and Loan. Program tracing
immigration officials ancestors. Silent Auction .
estimate about 5,600 this Hostesses Mrs. Dale Dutton,
school year- but it could not Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Mrs.
be learned how much of Everett Hayes, Mrs. Charles
Yazdi's discussions with Lewis and Mrs. Robert D.
students were on Iranian Craig.
·
politics.
FUND DRIVE for new
His daughter-in-law building, 30x40 two story, for
recalled that when the the
Racine
Volunteer
troubles began in Iran, set off Emergency Squad underway.
by an anti-shah movement, Donations can be sent to the
Yazdi bad said "he didn't squad at Racine, Ohio .
know whether to cry or to Grounds for the building
laugh."
provided by Racine Village
Roya is married to Yazdi's Countll. Cannisters are in
oldest son, Khalil, who business houses also for
recently graduated from the contributors.
University of Houston with a
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
degree in econot:nics and lodge 363, F&amp;AM, annual
plims to study international inspection 7:30 p.m. Friday
law.
at temple in the Master
Yazdi's wife could not talk Mason Degree. All Master
to reporters because she had Masons Invited.
a fever and cold, Roya Yazdl
SATURDAY
said. She noted the family
BEAN Dinner Saturday,
may go to Tehran to visit but
the children - aged 6 to 23 - 4:30 to 7 p.m. at Middleport
Masonic Temple by Meigs
want to stay in the United Chapter, Order of DeMolay.
states.
The daughter-in4aw was Beans, salad, dessert and
evasive to specific questions com bread, $2; public invited
about Yazdi's return to Iran and tickets will be on sale at
'
last year but said : "He left the door.
because he wanted to help the
people of Iran and he was
with Khomeini , ••
DEAN'S LIST
Joy C. White completed the
1978 fall quarter at Ohio
University on the dean's list
MEETING SET
with a four point average.
The
Meigs
County Miss White will receive ·her
Genealogical Society will bachelor of science degree in
meet at 2 p.m. SWJday at the applied mathematics at the
Meigs Museum. All persons end of the winter quarter.
invited in the family history
Miss White, daughter of
are invited to attend. In case Mr. and Mrs. George White,
of inclement weather the Rock Springs Road, is also
meeting will be cancelled.
presently
engaged
in
graduate work in industrial
and systems.

magazine . Passive radiator design acoustically couples an
active 8" woofer with a passive
even at low volume levels. And
there 's a 3 1.4" dome tweeter

1

During the six-week course
at Camp Lejeune, N. C., he
studied the fundamentals · of
eng ineering support for
:;:; Rccdsvillc, has completed combat units. He received
the Marine Corps Basic instruction on the tools and
( Combat'Enginecr Course.
procedures for ~utlding

18 rnpg 6-cylinder
300 CID manual
transmission
15 mpg a-cylinder
302 CID manual

FORD

�Meigs Co. ·celebrates 'Right to Read. Week
tta·
rtatt·t-:·M~H· g inllis
''llfttl H_ll(t ry antl em tlJWt•hcn-

Ry CHARI ,f.NF. HOF.FJ.ICH
" Ruses a re fed, vi1.1h•t.o; are
blue; I like to read books, how

READING TEACHER - Mrs. Sabra Morrison, Title I reading teacher at the Bradbury
School, is pictured here with one of her
reading classes.

several years.

One of the main purposes of
the Right to Read Week is to
create community awareness
j
of the school district's focus
•
on reading and to solicit the
~
help of parents and others in
the school's endeavor.
In Meigs County a Right to
Read Advisory Council head.ed by Mrs. Greta Suttle of the
Meigs County Superintendent 's Office, and consisting
of teachers, principals and
parents from all three school
districts, are implementing a
five year reading improvement effort plan of action.
- ~ ~ · ·. .
More basic to teaching
. ' ...· .
reading to students who have
a problem are the Title I (a
federally funded project)
reading teachers.
Sabra Morrison is a Title I
teacher at the Bradbury
school. for fifth and sixth
graders. "Title I" means that
the cost of administrators'
teachers, and materials is
RIGHT TO READ WEEK and Valentine's Day were both featured in this bulletin board
paid, not from local tax
display at.the Bradbury school.
dollars, but from federal
chestra which will perform monies. It has been in operaTuesday, Feb. 20, at 8 p.m. in lion since reading scores
the Keith-Albee Theater as were recognized as declining.
part of the Marshall Artists Some statistics show that as
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. sity's Smith Recital Hall.
Noted . pianist Bela Szilagyi
There will be no charge for Series' Community (Baxter) many as 40 percent of
Series.
children in some city school
will conduct a master class the master class.
- ·
Reserved seat tickets for districts are underachieving
for interested students of . Szilagyi also will appear as
piano on Monday, Feb. 19, at guest soloist with the the Artists Series programs in reading by as much as 40
2 ·p.m. in Marshall Univer- Columbus Sy mphony Or- may be obtained at the Keith- . percent. The under achievers
Albee Theater or the Artists a re not always the
Series Office Memorial econornicallydlsadvantaged.
Student Center· Room 2W23.
Children with learning
Tickets will be $9 for loge or disabilities or .the educatible
orchestra seats and $7 for menll\lly retarded are not mbalcony . Youths under 17 eluded in t~ Title I reading
years of age may purchase programs smce other classes
balcony seats for $3.50. MU are specifically designed to
students with ID and Activity meet their needs. ~ccepted
Cards will be admitted free. for Tttle I readmg are
Curre ntl y artist -in - children who have the ability
at
ca pital to unprove m the baste sktll of
res id ence
University in Columbu s, readmg. The program, acSzilagyi has received several cording to Nf,rs .. Morr~;ron ts
awards in national and in- destgned for catch up . .
Of the 90 fifth and stxth
tern ational piano competitions. He ha s been graders en~olled ~t Bradfeatured with the · Seattle bury, 39 are m the Tttle I proSymphony. and the Boston gram.. These chlldren were
"POPS" Symphony and the tdentifled as bavt~g reading
Symphony of the Air.
problems, lastsprmg through
Szilagyi also is scheduled to
appear on WOWK-TV's noon

'

-

·ll10sc

s1tuh•nts

with

•
in the hnmc including dic-

tionary or an almanac.
Praising the child on his efn•ading level classes in
!'IV t' tCStb.y_{ Drt~l!!'[!JII\.
Twenty -live t•f ~ht• :39 art• re~ul a r l'iassroom study are forts and accomplishments so
boys. Mrs. Mprri .'~~J lain­ prov ing moderately suc- !hat he will have selfcd. that mos("jj('i)-s """ not . •·cx.&lt;ful. additional emphasis confidence and enthusiasm
ready to read until they an• un rl'odim: is being stressed for new adventures in Iearna
t•ight ur over, while J~irls arc by the Oh io Department of ing.
ready to read at about six. Edueatiun .

(!bout you ?"

So reads a bulletin board
display at the Bradbury
Elementary School, where like in all other elementary
schools in the . county - the
Right to Read week, Feb.
11 -17. is being celebrated.
The observance began
Monday with 15· minutes of
sustainell
observance
reading time, 9:30 to 9:45
a.m., with the students being
joined in reading by the
janitors, the cooks . the
teaching and administrative
staff. In some schools sustained silent reading is a daily ritual as an effort to promote reading for fun as well
as information.
Also underway in Meigs
County schools is the "Read
to Win" con test where
st ud ents ea rn iron-on
emblems for reading books.
While special emphasis is
on reading this week, the concern for students with
reading problems and the effort to do something about
them, has been going on for

fur

Tht• economic lcvt•l n£ the

family seems to have little influenc-e on the child 's reading
scores, a lthough there is
some indication tha i. parental
interes t in the child 's
development docs affect the
·reading scores. ,\s a part of
the Title I program, three
parent advisory meetings arc
held each year.
Mrs. Morrison who has
been a Title I reading teacher
for the past four years,
reports an average ga in last
year of one .year. two months
per st udent. A normal
classroom gain would be nine
months. Fiftee n of her
students tested out of the·program, she noted; with this
mea ning that they were able
to read material at their
grade level.
The approach taken · by
Mrs. Morrison in beginning
her work with those sh9wing
a reading problem in either
vocabulary or comprehension, is to determine the extent of the problem through
individual testing on 220 sight
words and 50 basic nouns
usually lea rned in the first
and second grades. Once
these words are learned, then
she turns to teaching phonics
so that a student has a technique for attacking a word.
Along with this, Mrs. Morrison says sJ1e works· toward
an improved sell image and
more positive attitude about
personal ability to achieve.
For comprehensive study.
she uses a five point systemnoting detail , getting the
main idea , finding sequence,
drawing conclusions, and us· ing contest clues.
While the Title I pro~ram
.

l"&lt;'mling prohlems, and the

parent 1S checklist

1\

.

1

"Schools and Community
Ongoing Reading Effort" is
.thetheme ofthe Ohio Right to
Read Week and it calls for a
conuni.tment of Ute community. parents and the schools to
bring about reading improvement.

There's Much
·Here For You

somethin g he has seen or

done.
•
Being sensitive to the
child's shifting interests in
books and staying out of his
way when he wants to explore
the world of books on his own.
Exposing the child to books

'
Discou11t
on all
Prescriptions

·.::;:::;.:

::::;:: adequacy of benefits ... will
either requir e increased
funding or mean reducing
Cuauhtemoc, 11atelolco fell other benefits. The nation
under control of Hernando m ust begin to fac e this
Cortes. If was neither a difficult choice ."
triumph nor a defeat. It was
Under the option in which
the painful birth of the mixed all SoCial Security credits
race people which is . the wo uld be divided eve nly
Mexico of today. The square between husbands and wives
in Mexico·City contains pre· during their marriage, the
Columbian ruins, old Spanish individuals could accumulate
colonial buildings and the additional credits based on
glass and marble skyscraper their
earnings
while
of the Foreign Ministry. · unmarried. The credits from
Two centuries
ag o, th e marria ge would be
Mexico 's Jesuits were Ute divided upon divorce or when
original boat people. After one spon'e turned 62. When a
founding 103 Indian missions spouse died, the survivor
and 23 colleges, lbe order fell would get credit for 80
from favor with lbe Spanish percent of the total annual
authorities and was expelled. earnings of the couple, but
In 1767, nearly 700 Jesuits not less than 100 percent of
were seized in their th e . higher of the tw o
monasteries and put aboard individual credits.
ships at Veracr uz. L ike
today's Vietnamese refugees,
no European country would
take them . They wandered
around the Mediterranean for ,
more than a year before ·
finding refuge on the isle of \
Corsica.

• '
By Hugh A. Mulligan
AP Special Correspondent
MERIDA, Mexico (AP) Yucatan sand from the
sandals of a coiunmist south
of the border:
Iri Mexico there 'is "no one
last drink" before calling it a
nlgbt.· Ordering "Ia ultima,"
the final one, is considered a
faux pas worse than stepping
on an hombre's sombrero
during the Mexican hat
dance. Instead, one asks the
walter for " del estrlbo," one
for the stirrup before riding
off into the sunrise.
Mexico is the last stand of
lbe 25 cent (5 paso) shoeshine
~nd the five cent (one peso)
subway ride, and both are
glittering experiences.
Mexico has come ·to tenns
with its violent history. A
plaque in Plaza de las Tres
Cultura.s - Square of the
Three Cultures - at. the site
ofihe last Aztec battle reads:
"On the 13th of August ,
1521, heroically defended by

* Fami~ PrescriptiOn
Records

* We Fill Ohio WeHare,

*JEANS
LEE

Compensation, UMW, VA

STRAIGHT LEG
&amp;

VIUAGE PHARMACY

And HEW Prescriptions.

Middleport, 0.
&amp;
New Haven . W.Va.

BOOT CUT

Female plot in Social Security
may improve in near future

SIZES 1 thru 48
Open 9-5 ~on ., Tues., Sat.
Friday night til/8 p.m .

Noted pianist to appear

J

\~\J..tJI~

f)l~ '1,111~

llf)N'l,ll

• 4 plumb
• 2 level
vials

·24-lnch LEVEL

REG. $11.99

Rug ged professional -style level with precision -mil led
edges and sides, for p ro fessional accuracy . Six via ls are
·fully protected by heavy-glass windows to keeP moisture
· and dirt out. Die -cast alu m inum.
(TT6~ 10117

Quantities Limited

'j

•

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923 S. Jrd Ave.
Middleport, o.
992-2709 or 992-6611
Qpen: 7:00 to S Mon. thru Fri.
7:00to3 : 00 Saturday

... .

pro g r am,

JANE RUNYAN
Navy Data Systems
Technician Second Class
Jane j. Rimyan. daughter of
Evelyn B. Thomas or' Route I,
Box 217, Middleport, has
reenlisted for three yeats
while serving at the U. S.
Fleet Weather Center. Guam,
Mariana lslar.ds.
She joined the Navy in
October, 1973.

SPEAKER CHANGE
RIO GRANDE - Pittsburgh Steeler fullback,
Franco Harris' Feb. 16 appca rancc at Rio Grande
Co llege and Community
College at 9:30p.m. has been

State Buckeyes football
team . Time of 9:30 and
speaking location at Lyne
Center on the campus of Rio
.Gr;mde College and Community College remains the

Polly Cramer

WilEN TltE

•
IS EASy •••

liviNG

Comfort is back In fashion . Here's our answer to the shOe you'll Jive in. The eas_y-golng
softie with tricot lining and flexible all-leather uppers . A variety of colors and a wtde size
range so you know you 'l l walk with perfect fit and feel. By Jolene .

AVAILABLE IN BLACK &amp; BROWN

MARGUERITE'S .SHOES
BETTY OHLINGER

102 E. MAIN

POMEROY, O.

Corduroy

Men's Flannel

WORK PANTS

WORK SHIRTS

30%

Men's

SPORT COATS

Reg . $17.95-$18.95

Men's

wools, nylons,
leather

30%
I Rack

1f2 PRICE
1 Rack .·

SWEATERS &amp;
KNIT TOPS

REDUCED 40%

Men's

'

SWEATERS
DRESS
' "CARDIGANS AND .
PANTS
/ PULLOVERS
REDUCED 20% REDUCED 30%
Ladies'

lADIES' BLOUSES
By Lady ManhaHan ,
catalina

~1agcs

in

1bc · symposiwn is open to
all professors, high school
teach ers, dociors, nurses ,
clergy . fun eral director s,
soc ial worker's, and . anyone
interested in death education.
Theone day cour.se will ~arry
.6 continuing education units
from the Ohio State
University. Registration fee
is $15 per person.
Hegistration forms and
brochures may be obtained
by co ntacting th e Ohio

l''uncral
Dir ectors
Association. F:O. Box 5706,
Columbus, Ohio 43221 or by
phoning (614 ) 486-5330.
Mr. Jay Cremeens of the
Cremeens Funeral Home has
been appointed by the Ohio
Fun era l
Dire c to r~
Association to act as PubHc
Education Coordinator f()r
Ga lli a County. Mo re info rmation on the Symposium
can be obtained by eontal1ing
Mr. Cremeens.

World Prayer Day planned for March .7
World Day of Prayer serannounced for
Mar~h 7 Missionary Society
of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church meet Tuesday night at the home of Mrs.
Doris Shook.
Also planned during the
meeting was a work day to be
held on March 5 at 1 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Tina
Jacobs. Bandages will be
· made and old sheets, either
white or colored, are needed.
Mrs. Jean Wright presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Donvice · was

na

GilmorP rPtlrlin ''

from Mark. The program
. theme was on water and
reading scr iptures pertaining
to water were Mrs. Ann
Mash, Mrs. Parker. Mrs. Iva
Powell; Mrs. Wright, and
Mrs. Shook who also read "0
Ye Thirsty Ones", and
" Piece. of Clay.'' Mrs. Wright
read " Go · Into all the
Highways". Reports were
given by Mrs. Mash and Mrs.
Gilmore and the pledges and
dues were taken up.
Mrs. Parker and Mrs.
Powell served refreshments .

c.::r. rinhwe

WITH
~
-~

l~oruw

'

IN

POMEROY
A . R. KNIGHT

Gigantic
Winter
Sale

50 YEARS THIS FEBRUARY, MR. KNIGHT BECAME ASSOCIATED WITH POMEROY
CHEVROLET IN P~MEROY. GOOD Ql]ALITY SERVICE WITH A PROVEN 1\0. l
PRODUCT- CHEVROLET. DURING THIS FEBRUARY, WE WANT HIS LOYAL
FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS TO JOIN US WITH A GIANT TRIBUTE-

s1oo.

Since then i have was hed
KNITS
Yd .
three. diffe re nt brands
to velvet
1 Group Assorted
several times and the results
were beautiful. -JEAN
FABRICS ....... yd. SO•
DEAR POLLY - Please tell
DEAR READERS - This
me how to remove chewing does not assure one that all
TRIMS ........... yd. 10'
gum from a velvet dining brands will wash but is worth
room chair seat. -PAULA
knowing for older shoes.
Drop In and Browse
DEAR PAULA - Apply a -POLLY
dry cleaning solvent to the
Polly will send you one of
gum only (not the fabric) and her signed t hank-you
while i1 is moist work the gum newspaper-coupon clippers if
off with a dull knife. After it is · she uses your favorite
removed try to brush up the Pointer. Peeve or Problem in
OntheT .
Middleport, 0 .
nap in the velvet. The fabri c her colwnn. Write POLLY •s
will not look like new but at POINTERS in care of this
least one will not be sticking newspaper.
to gum. Velvet Is certainly.•
not the most practical fabri ci
to choose for dining chairs,
especially when there are
· children, unless they are go.ing to be protected by plastic
tie-&lt;Jncovers.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Save
those ribbed plastic con- '
tainers that cherry tomatoes i
come in, glue two of them
back to back and have a
perfect place to keep your kitchen sponges dry and sweet
smelling. I keep mine .near
the sink or underneath the
kitchen cabinet.- PHYLLIS
DEAR POLLY- In the fail
when we winterize our travel .
trailer I make a list of
everything we remove and
this facilitates replacement
in the spring. We store our .
heavy• sleeping bags with
other survival equipment in
lbe car trunk as it is com·
fortlng to have them in the
car in case we are stalled in a
NOW IN PROGRESS
Nebraska blizzard. -OPAL
MEN ' S
DEAR POLLY -I use the
plastic s(rap from my baby 's
potty cbalr to strap him in the
By Johnny CarS&lt;In. PaiiT!
By McGregor, _Palm Beach &amp;
By Arrow, Manhattan &amp; Va,n
cart at the surmarket. There
Beach, Mart-Sdlaffner . ~ x
Sewell.
Heu se n .
is no danger of him trying to
&amp; Sewell. •
climb out while I shop.
1
My 2-yeiir-&lt;Jld has outgrown
~
his playpen !;Jut I put it to good
use during the recent
M en's LonQ Sleeve
holidays by putting the
Christmas tree in it so the ornaments were out of his
reach. -MELODY
BY JANmN, VAN HEUSEN
. DEAR POLLY ··::: "Since
BY HAGGAR, LEVI'S
&amp; MCGREGOR ···
most shoe store,s sell special
&amp; MtGR•"""R
cleaners for suede and nylon
""""
1
athletic shoes most people
assume they carulot be wash- . 1----~~~---1
•'·1 - - - - - - t
ed. My son's were so soiled in·
MEN'S
Men's Long Sleeve
Kenn 's Komer"
side ar\d out that I threw them ·
In the washer as a last resort
126 E. MAIN
before throwing them ln the
BY LAKELAND
trash. I was ready to see
BY ALEN-A
lbein fall apart but after tbe
POMEROY
· machine wuhlng and air dryinK they looked like new.

Ladies'

·SLACKS
&amp; CAR COATS

REDUCED 40%

Lot of Men's

JUMPSUITS

lh PRICE
Ladies'

I rack of

MEN'S SUITS
Wools, Corduroy,
Knits
reduced

30% to 50%
Men's
•

lOP COATS
&amp; CAR COATS
REDUCED 30%
PANBUITS

REDUCED
..

REDUCED 40%

40%

•

I Rack of Ladies'

.KNIT lOPS
)le1eveless &amp;

Shnort•

'n PRICE

,,

LEATHER JACKETS

,.

'

REDUCED m

SUITS

pRICE
DRESS
SlACKS

Ladies'

DRESSES

50

50
YEARS

'79 MONTE CARLO
Q)( Belts, d . lock., p. windows , p.s..,
p.b .• tt ir cond .• ti nt ed glass , J.A l itre

v .a. bod11 sil l and side mouldings ,

Elec . defogge r . sport mirrors ,
custom 2 tone green , r adial wh .
tires . ayto. lro'lns.. rilll )l wheel&lt;,, AM·
FM radio. Sugges t ed retail $7817 .84

:

%PRICE

SPORT COATS DRESS SHIRTS
h PRICE

NEW YORK
CLOTHING
. HOUSE

1h PRICE

SPORT SHIRTS

h PRICE

KNIT SHIRTS
,lh PRICE

~

..

'79 MALIBU 4 DR

Monte Carlo Sport Coupe

Dx . bel ts, body m ld g ,mills. wh
opening mdg ., L. H. remote m irror ,
p.s .. p.b .. auto. trans. wh covers,
radial wh . tires. L H. Remote mirror ,
AM radio, bumper st eps &amp; guards ,
med green , 4.4 Litre V-8. SuQgesled
retail $6 .03?.1 4.

-- ~
-

-,~

SALE PRIC£ '7200.00

·p.NNUAL.

1979

REDUCED 30%
WINTER
JACKETS

in various

operation in Ohio.
!Jr . !Janie! · J . Cherico,
Director of Pro gram and
Policy,
Foundation of
Than atolo gi•, Co lumbia
Presbyterian Medi cal Center
in New York. has completed
extensive resea rch into tht:
dying. He will present his
methods of meeting the needs
of the dying and the
berea, ed.

BLOODMOBILE
The Bloodmobile will be at
the Pomeroy Eiementary
School Monday, Feb. 19 from .
1:30 to 5:30.
'

1 Group

Gum stuck

STARTS FRIDAY FEB. 16TH THRU SATURDAY

Men's

Ho~piccs

MEETING PLANNED
The Meigs County Chu'rch
of Christ Men' s Fellowship
will meet 01t the Middleport
Church of Christ at 7:30p.m.
Monday . Members are to
take Campbell soup labels to
the meeting.

PRICE

lDNG SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS

a un it. Th ere 'are nine

i··

same .

PREVIEW OF
SPRING MATERIAL

POLLY·s POINTERS

Magazine." with Terr y Coy
on Tuesday.

Rack Men' s

ps) daologist. Dr. Stone j:-) th~
aut hor of ··suicide &lt;JJH.l
Grief."
!Jr .J ames M. Hall. M.D . of
the Ex ec uti ve Board of
Hospice of Cincinnati , will
describe the type of humane
care of the dying available in
the Hospice . Pr ese ntly
gaining accla im throughout
the country. Hospice staffs
provide medica l, spiritual
and psychological assistan ce
to the dying and the family as

. Suicide. hospice, and grief
arc the subj'ccts slated for
discussion at the Sympo!&gt;ium
on !Jeath J-:duca!ion IV
scheduled for March 10 at the
Cent er
for
Fawcett
Tomorrow.
Columbu s .
sponsored by 1be Ohio State
University Division of
Continuin g Education in
cooperation with the Ohio
Funer.al
Directors
Association.
Dr. Howard W. Sto ne.
·Executive Director qf · In terfaith Counseling Service in
Scottsdale. Arizona will
relate his vast experience in
"Counseling in
Cri sis
Situations ." A certified

~

&amp;
•·

·~ Midday

KEVIN McLAUGHLIN .
Marine Cor ps Private
Kevin D. McLaughlin, son of
Kenneth E. and Carole E.
McLaughlin of P.O. Box 209,
Pomeroy. ha s completed
recruit training at the Marine
Corps Recruit De(&gt;Ot. Parris
Island, S. C.
During the nine-week
training cycle, he learned the
basics of battlefield survival.
He was introduced to the
typical daily routine that he
will experience during his
enlistment and studied the
personal and professional
standards traditionally
exhibited by Marines.
He participated in an active
phy s ica l co nditioning
program
and
ga ined
Proficiency in a variety of
military skills, including first
aid, rifle marksmanship and
close order drill. Teamwork
and se lf-discipline were
emphasized throughout the
training cycle.
·He joined the Marine Corps
in June, 1978.

.··.·:.-:-.:.:.-:.·..·:.·:.·:.·:.··.-:.·:.·: ...:.:.· .•-:.·:.·:.:.· .• .·:.:.:.:.·:.· •· .··.·:.:.:.·:.··.·:.• :.-:.· .··.·:.··.-:.·:.·:.· .·:.·:.:.··.· .·:.-:.:.-:.-:.· .·..·.·.·:.·.·.·:.·.•·:.·.·.·.·.·.·.·..·:·...·.·.·.· .··.·•..·..•.·•..··.·.· .............
,·,·.·.·.·,·.·.•,·.·.·.·.·.·.·,:·:·:·:·.·.·=&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•.·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·····::.·
,•,•,•,•,•, •.·.· .......... ••.. .. . ' ...... ...... ...... . .
•.•,•.·.·.·.·.·

Symposium on death, scheduled in ~olumbus

lili

JM:iti;::~wrt;::si ~~~:iS~ ~i~;::~~~

* 10% Senior Citizen

Middleporl

:,·.:::::;:;~:::
::::::::::::·:·:·:·:&lt;·:-:-:::.- : ::·:·: ..:-:.;: ....:.:.:.:.: ... :.·:.:.-: ...··.:.·:.·:.·:.-:.· .-:.·:.-:.-:.·
.
:~:

By CHRIS CONNEU.
better
and
di sabilit y dertakc the study two years
Associated Press Writer insurance coverage would be ago by Congress. said it "preWASHINGTON (AP) improved for women under mature " t o recomme nd
The
Social
Security either plan. But a surviving leg islative changes and
Administration is outlining parent would get
a called instead for
a
fundamental changes that dependent's benefit only until widespread public debate on
would give married women the family's youngest child the two major options it out·
more Social Security benefits turned 7, inst e ad of 18.
lined and the issues they
in their own tight instead of
And the proposed changes raise.
treating lbem merely as their would result in a net
The 323-page report was
husbands ' dependents. .•...,.... r~_duction in benefits lor being discussed today at a
One of the two major ap- traditional
one-earner news conference by the
proaches ouUined in the study families in which the wife Health, Education and
would split earnings evenly never worked · outside the Welfare secretary, Joseph A.
between husband and wife
home and lbw never paid Ca lifano Jr .
'
regardless
of who worked' into the Social Security
" At present, nearly 90 perduring tbe marriage; the system.
cent of all women work for
other option would set up a
Although the wpman 's pay at some period during
two-tier system to guarantee benefits in those cases would their lives. It is simply not
everyone a flat $122-a-month be
credit ed
to
her fair or realistic for Social
benefit at age 65, plus individually, the co uple's Security w treat those women
whatever benefits he or she combined benefit would be up . as adult dependents who have
earned as a worker.
to 19 percent lower than never, worked when they
Divorcees would fare under the present system.
reach retire ment' age, "
The agency, ordered to un - Califano said.
·

on

helping children get ready to
reail has been distributed .
It includes·
Reading something everyday so that a child can sec his
parent getting pleasure and
information from rea ding.
Taking the child to the
library so that he can look at
children's books and select
some for reading aloud at
home.
Reading aloud to the chi ld
at least 15 minutes every day.
Encouraging the child to
tell a story or dt scribe

7~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 15, 1979

'79 NOVA
CPE.
Blue f iniSh , matching blue vi nyl
tr i m , 4. 1 l6 CnQine. du lo. lrans_, p.
Steeri ng, wh , cOvers., AM ramo . 14
wh . stripe tires. Sug gest ed retail
55 ,087.37 .

'79 CAMARO Z28
Color black., red custom vinyl. dx .
belts. console, l50 v.a. auto. t rans .
COI'll.IOrll lt , 70R)( 15 wh., l ett er ti r es.
AM FM rCidiO , r ear speak.ers. style
tr im . Low , lo w pr ic e.

SALE PRICE '7219.35

'79 CHEVETIE 2 DR.
1 6 litre engine, 4 s.peed AM r11d io.
wh . str ipe tire wh . covers, reclining
frt. !N'II bdck. S. b ldY mldg and
mor e. Rea l coo t
good mi leage .
Suggesled retai l 54.002 .1'1 7

a.

Many Mora • Discounted
to Save you Big Money.

-

Remember you gat qua"•··•

SALE PRICE •3807.72

&lt;

.
•

.

~.--~~llllliltJ·II8r"~lca when you buy your'-tt"......,....,

new car hare.
1- 71 Madel New Malibu Classic 4 Dr.- 1-71 Model New Caprice 4 Door.
Trucki - Trucks
Luv • Blazer • % • % T. - 4 Wheal Drives

..,.
'

..

'

Trucks ·

DON'T IUY ANY CHEVROLET UNTIL YOU SEE US

'·

'·•
&lt;

'
••

'79 CHEV. ClO

NEW CHEVY LUV

150 cu. ln . 6 c yl. co lor brown ! s!d.

Sport stripe, au tomatic trans ., l ong

t r a n o; ., p . s t eeri ng , AM rad1o .
bu mper , s G R 71'1J.IS tires , b wp
tamps . Suggest ed retail SS,62l.75.

bed, st ep bUmper. mi kado trim ,
· whl lewa ll 'tl res. economical~ cyl. ,

,.

•

••

••
•

wan t more . See it now.

•

..

SALE PRICE

•
.,
''
'
GET OUR SELL·A·BRATlON DEAL . ''

IN STOCK
READY FOR YOU.
. CHECK OUR DEALS NOW!

STOP IN, TALK TO MR. KNIGHT.

SEE ONE OF THESE COURTEOUS SALESMEN:
~;..,.

)

BUD WILSON, DALLAS BLEVINS, KENNY BASS

·POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Your Chevrolet
Dealer
.

OPEN EVENIN_GS TIL 8 P.M.

••
•

.••' ·
•

•

�·'

8-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThUrsday, Feb. 15. 1979.

9-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. IS, 1979

"· Farm
Scene
...

.,... . .

Project contributors listed

"

Officials predict increased milk production
Farms having fewer than
· ducers selling out altogether.
By DON KENDALL
According
to
the
latest
fig30
milk cows represented Jl5.2
AP F.arm Writer
ures
by
USDA,
there
were
percent
of total operations, a
WASHINGTON (AP)
379,-530.
dairy
'
farming
reduction
from 68.9 percent in
Agriculture Department
operations
in
the
United
1977.
Those
with 30 to 49 head
officials are still predicting
5.6
percent
up
17.9
percent of all
States
last
year.
a
made
that milk production could go
up this year after showing a reduction from 401,-!110 in operations, compared to 17.4
1977.
percent In 1977.
slight decline in 1978.
Averaged · over the year,
Dairy farms with 50 or
After increasing for two
some
10,848,000
mHk
cows
cows made up 16.9
more
years to t1ie l)ighest level
were
on
farms
in
1978,
do""
of the total last year,
percent
since 1965, mUk production
126,000
from
1977,
according
compared
to 15.7 percent in
declined about 1 percent in
to
the
preliminary
figures.
1977.
1978 to 121.9 billion pounds.
Department records show
Moreover, herds with 50 or ·
Howard W. Hjort, the
the
1978
dairy
herd
was
the
more
cows accowted for 60
department 's
chief
smallest
since
1876.
Cow
percent
of the total mUk cow
economist, told a House
appropriations subcommittee numbers have declined 8.4 inventory in 1978, up from
Tuesday that milk production percent since 1971 ; when 57.6 percent In 1977, the
figures showed.
this year "is expected to be · 11,839,000 were reported.
Meanwhile, by weeding out
Wisconsin continued as the
slightly larger" than in 1978.
the
less-productive
cows
arid
milk producer last ·
leading
Hjort's figures show that
by·stepping
up
grain
feeding
year
with
21.3 billinn pounds,
1979 milk outpUt could rartge
in
recent
years,
the
average
followed
by
: California, 11.9
between. 122.1 billion pounds
outPutof
milk
by
each
cow
billion;
New
York, 10.5
and 124.5 billion pounds.
continues
to
set
records.
billion;
Minnesota,
9.1
But officials concede this
In 1978, the average cow . billion ; and Pennsylvania, 7.9
year's milk . output will
depend to a large degree on produced 11,240 pounds of billion.
The five states accounted
whether dairy producers milk,_up from 11,181 In i977.
continue to take advantage of That is a gain of 12.2 percent for nearly one-half of lhe total
high beef prices by reducing from 10,015 pounds a cow in milk produced in 1978.
' 1971.
WASHINGTON (AP ) herds further
Looking
at
the
World
cotton output could inThe ~ :,. in m eduction last
department's
llfUIUBI
reports,
crease
sharply this year,
year was due mainly to ~rm­
trend
to
fewer
but
larger
the
meaning
there is much
ers trimming milk herds by
dairy
operations
continued
,
uncertainty
about prices
culling lower-producing cows
last
year.
American
farmers
will get ·
_from herds, and by some pro-

for their 1979 crop.
Rut the Agriculture
Department says domestic
mill use of cotton may hold
fairly steady through the
coming ~rear and that,exports
will continue relatively high.
The department's ouUook
board said Wednesday mill
use of ootton in the 1979-80
marketing year beginning
Aug. 1 ''is expected to remain
neat this season's'' level of
about 6.3 million bales.
But the board said In a preliminary report .that domestic
cotton use next season could
range between 5.1 million and
6.7 million bales, "depending
on general economic activity , .

Dairy school

Feb. 22

THE "aiiCAGO"

this year to qualify for
federal price S\Jpports,
payments and other benefits
on wheat, corn, barley and
grain sorghum.

Your "Extra Touch"

WASHINGTON . (AP) Farrners begin .signing up to·
day in the government's 1979
acreage set-aside programs
for feed grains and wheat.
Th e
Agricultur e
Department says farmers
will have until April 30 to sign
up in the progr311)S.
A participating farmer
must agree to take part of his
cropland from production

Florist Since 1957

FLORIST

PH . 992·2644
352 E. Main , Pome roy
'four FTD Floris t

The word tor our
sauinus
Spectacular
--

DM
EXPECTORANT

CONTAC
CAPSULES

Rob1tuss1n

REG•.'2.24

OOUGH

gge

ONLY

SUPPRESSANT
Reg. $2.20.

PHILLIPS'
MILK OF
MAGNESIA

ONLY

~~ALL

$129

BLOWER
100 Tablets

12 oz.
Reg. $1.64

~·
~~~~.
~ iff

Reg. $2.76

ONLY

94e

NORELCO, CONAIR &amp; CI,AIROL

MYLANTA®
Effective

NOTEBOOK

' Antacid/Anti-Gas

12 oz.

PAPER
REG. 12.63

ONLY

SHOE BOX

COSMIC
CANDY
ONLY

,...,.:n,,m

MULTI VITAMINS
WITH· MINERALS

ONLY

14c

REG. 20'

SUPER

200 SHEETS

49~

FOREVER

.BEAUTIFUL

288 WITH 144 FREE

Do you want a good breakfast ·

ONLY

served fast to you before going
REG, '1.00
ONLY

to work? ·Then come to The
'

Falcon's Parkkatta's
new dining
.
.
facility - Yc mila below the

'r!miltiiDJ

Pom_eroy-Ma10n Bridge In
Clifton, W.Va.
r

Open at 6:00 A.M.

0

tc:t

Mtter 18rva you~

YOU

·••'

$42,000. llul a• of FPb, I ,

1\
I

?~I

llac:ongeStant

THE

PLANT WORKERS

demand from China, South
Korea and Japan.
"U.S. exports are expected
to remain at a relatively high
level in 1979..W but could slip
a little below this season's expected level," the report said.

Cough Mixlure

REG.
13.42

By ROBERT E. MILLER through that all over again," without hebnets.
"We have a moral
.Usoclated Press Writer said Saxbe, hlmself a someobligation
to protect society,
times biker who helped last
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) including
'\hose
who choose to
The stage is set in the year's chief llponsor, Rep~
ignore
such
protection;"
·the
Legislature for another fight Terry M. Tranter, DCleveland
lawmaker
ssid,
Cinclnnati, promate repeal on
over motorcycle helmets Saxbe questioned the
this time a bill to make Ohio's grounds of freedom of cl)oice.
staiWics,
and said he thinks
Mahnic
offered
statistics
to
cyclists put them back on.
they
came
from the
show
that
hehnelless
riders
Rep. Frank Mahnic Jr., I).
insurance
inlluatry
which
Cleveland, introduced ·the have suffered dire con·
fought
repeal
and
now
is
sequences since the current
measure Wednesday.
trying
to
get
the
old
law
It requires all riders to law took effect July 9.
He said In the first half of restored.
wear them, reversing a 1978
He said Tranter was unable
law which repealed a ll}·year- 1978, when hehnets still were
to
obtain statistics on last
old compulsory statute and reqW.ed, !here were 185 moyear's
motorcycle a~idents
. made the use of helmets torcycle deaths, and 10 of the
from
the
highway safety de·
victims
were
not
wearing
heloptional except for novices
which fought
partmimt,
mets
_
After
July
9
and
and cyclists under 18.
repeal
unsuccessfully
last
through
the
rest
of
the
year,
The freshman lawmaker's
year.
134,
of
which
94
deaths
totaled
proposal drew immediate
Later, after calling the deopposition from spoosors of · victims - 73 l"":cent - were
partment
himself, Saxbe said
last year's law, although one,
he
was
told by the
Rep. Charles R. Saxbe, R·
department
that
meaningM
Medlanicsburg, indicated he
ligures
will
not
be
avaUable
hopes Mahnic's l:ill won't set
until
AprU.
"They
said
that's
reach tieariligs.
An area daily scfwot Is when they put everything
"I_hope we don't have to
scheduled lor Thursday, Feb. together," he added.
22 at the Area Extension
Meanwhile, Saxbe said,
Center near Jackson.
"I'm not prepared to believe
According to John Rice, any statistics they (the
county agricultural agent, insurance industry) put out."
BY
Dr. Jobn staubus, Dr. Don
He said even the figures
Pritchard and Ralph Por· given by Mahnic do not
terfleld, all Extension divulge whether the ,victims
dairymen from The Oblo suffered fstal head injuries or
State University, will be the could have survived had they
resource people.
worn helmets.
Dr. Staubus will discuss
Saxbe stressed he Is "as in·
with local dairymen the terested in minhnizing traffic
nutritional needs of dairy dejiths as much as anyone,"
cows in terms of using borne but said he thinks the
grown forages and proper majority of motorcycle riders
balancing of an economical "are essentlally responsible
people who are safety
ration.
Porterfield will discuss the conscious. They have to he,
managing , of
dairy because they are always on
rejJ!acements so that they the deferise" against larger,
can come into milk heavier vehicles, he said.
Mahnic, despite being new
production early in ilfe, and
the comparison of Otlferent to the House, appeared to
types and designs of rnllklng have done some leglllatlve
equipment will be featured in spade work. He said he has
•Side Zipper Boot
Dr. Pritchard's prelilllltatlon. ~d to 28 House members
Registration for the dairy who voted last year to repeal,
school will be. between 9:30 but now have said they will
and 10:00 with the first vote the ~ther way. Tranter's
session starting at 10 a.m. All bill passed the lower
dairymen are Invited to at, chamber last year 74-23.
Middleport, o.
tend
this
educational · He also listed the support of
program presented by the the Insurance Federation of
Coop.eratlve Extension Ohio, the Ohio Coroners
Service. For further details Association, the American
contact John Rice, your · Medical Association and the
county agrlcuhuraj agent. highway safety department.

"Some priCe weakness

began in late 1978, however,
partly reflecting anticipated
larger production In 1979,"
the report said.
·rn a survey Jan. 1, growers
indicated they plan io boost

l'olton plantings to about 14
million acres this year, up 6
percent from 1978.
''This se ason 's higher
prices could lead to increased
cotto n
acreage
anc!
production in 1979 here and
abroad," the report said.
' 'Thus, while the outlook for
1979-80 is highly ·tentative at
this date, prospects point to a
rebuilding of world cotton
stocks" which are expected
to drop to 18 million bales by
Aug.), the smallest reserve
in eight years; it -said.
·
Cotton exports this season
are projected at around 6 million bales against 5.5 million
in 19Z7-J8, reflecting strong

!.

·I
~

\

Recommend two revisions
By CHRIS CONNElL
draw higher Social Security
Associated Press Writer benefits than a two-&lt;Jamer
WASffiNGTON (AP)- A coup!~ with the same total
new government study has income.
come up with two sweeping
The changes, however ,,
revisions in the Social would come at the expense of
Security system aimed at that traditional one~amer
giving women more benefits family, where the wife is a
in their own'.right.
lifelong homemaker. Their
The plan outlines two benefits _could he reduced up
options. Under one 1 all Social to 19 percent to bring them
Security credits and benefits
would be shared evenly
between husbandS and wives,
regardless of who earned
what. The other option would
set up a two-tier system to
guarantee every retiree a
minimum Social Security
benefit of $122 a month, plus
whatever benefits he or she
Ida G. Bolton to Adelio
earned as a worker.
are Z am o ran o • Be r t h a
These
options
examined in a 323-pa.ge Zamorano, int. in parcel,
Bedford.
report to Congre5s by the
Walter "L." Vaughan to
Social
Security
Ad·
ministration . HEW Secretary Robert W. Vaughan, pt , Lot
Joseph A. Cslifano Jr . sched· 422 • Pomeroy.
Clyde Parrish, Hazel
uleda news conference on the
Parrish to James S. Rucker,
report Thursday, but The Connie H. Rucker, Parcels,
~sociated Press obtained a11 Olive.
advanced
copy from
sources.
E me.
st A wm
· gett Ma m
Th
1
, x' e
e, report sa d the agency Spencer Wingett to Racine
was not recommending any
legislative changes to Wesleyan United Meth.
Congress at this time because Church, Parcel, Sutton.
the issues must be debated in
Charles R. Mash, Anna T.
Mash to Stuart W. Pullins,
public before attempting to Susan Mash Pullins, 19.14
alter the system. .
.acres, Salisbury.
The two major options laid
Carol Sayre, Carol A. Smith
out in the report would kna, Clifford R. Smith to
replace the current system
that allows a wife to get 5o Carol A. Smith, Clifford R.
percent of l)er husband's Smith, Lot 7' Syracuse.
Nancy . Hill, Patrick Hill,
benefit upon retirement,
whether she worked or not. A Jonnie Sue Kinney, Patrick
wife who worked and paid Kinney to Louise ThompsOn,
payroll taxes can draw her ·83 acre, Olive.
.
own benefit if it is higher, but -- - Btlly H. Sullivan, ida Marte
for many women the spouse's Sullivan to Robert C.
benefit is larger .
Freeman,
Nancy
F.
The two options would ad- Freeman, Par':"ls, Salisbury.
dress such inequities in the
Southern Oh1o Coal Co. !o
current system as the fact Trustee ~ of C?lumbta
that a one~arner couple can Townshtp, Coiumbta ·Twp.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

&amp;Ol

Motorcycle fight set

relative fiber prices and
reaction to the proposed
cotton dust standards."
Cotton production in 1978
dropped to 10.8 million bales
from 14.4 million produced by
U.S. farmers in 1977. Strong
· export demand helped boost
prices to an average of 60.5
cents a pound through
December, compared to 52.3
cents for the entire 1977-78
marketing year.

The eli-earn of extensive
Together, the six counties·-·· M~igs Couniy's total was
improvements to Canter's raised over $321,000. This more than $26,500. Donations
Cave 4-H Camp will come amount added · with the are still being received for
true. The six counties (Meigs, $250,000 from Bob Evans the camp. Anyone wanting to
GaUls, Jackson, Highland, provides more than ~70,000 donate can send donations to
Adams, and Lawrence) by which will be used for per- Meigs Co unty Extension
working together, have met manent improvemeMs at the Office.
the $250,000 challenge made camp.
Local4-H 'ers wish to thank
by Mr. and Mrs. Bob Evans of
Meigs County, however, did everyone who donated to the
Rio Grande.
·not reach Its original goal of ' project.

fill!~

ft[rlfii!IY

i""'nneth MlcC:iill:•::·.; Ph.
Clwlrles Riffle, R. Pit,
Hanning, R. Ph
·
Mon. thru Sal. : :001.m. lo9 p;m.
Sunday 10 :30 lo 12 :30.and 51o 9p.m.
•
PRESCRIPTION·SFriendly. Service
Open

Nights 11119

PH . 9?2·2955 "

PRICES GOOD NOW
THRU SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 18TH

New evidence
uncovered in
Flynt shooting
By BRENDA MOONEY
Associated Press Writer
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga.
(AP) - Gwlnnett County
police have evidence · that
could 'lead them to an arrest
in tl!e March 6, 1978, shooting
of Hustler Magazine owner
Larry Flynt, the district
attorney said Wednesday.
"There
is
evidence
available to the police
deparhnent now that could
result in an arrest in the
case," said District Attorney
Bryant Huff.
Huff said a Specific suspect
bas not been identified. He
described the information as
the sort that. could help
investigators pinpoint a
specific SlJl!pe~ or suspects,
but declined to elaborate.
Huff originally told The
Associated Press · that an
arrest ''could come as early
as this afternoon, or never."
But after his comments were
reported, he said he did not
expect an arrest in the near
future.
Flynt and 'his local
attorney, Gene Reeves, were
shot from ambush last year
as they returned from lunch
to the Gwinnett County
courthouse, where Flynt was
being tried on obscenity
charges.
Flynt was left partially
paralyzed · and is now
undergoing rehabilitation in
California. Reeves recovered
from his wounds.,
Meanwhile, authorities in
Sanford,
Fla .,
said
Wednesday a circuit judge
and a public defender have
received death threats from a
sell-styled vigilante group
which claims to have kUied
four people and takes
· responsillility for the shooting
of Flynt. The group calls
itself the Humane Liberation
Organization, authorities
said.
·.
The FBI said. it was in·

vestigating the bizarre case.
The threats came in handwritten letters received in the
I

Listed below are the names
of the individuals. 4-H Clubs.
orgariizations and businesses
who donated to the Canter's
Cave Fund Raising Project:
4-H CLU BS - Hillb illies 4·

H Club, Irish Leprechauns 4-H Club, Juni or Leadership

Club. Meigs Count y Dairy .4-H

DUE TO THE fREMENDOUS RESPONSE TO OUR
JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

We Are Continuing Our Sale Thru

·----1 .·

. -.....--Th_e_M_o_n_t_h_o._f_F_e_b-r_u_a~ry;..
·

Club, Five Point Sta r Stitchers J.L . 4-H Club, Pleasure
Riders 4-H Club, Five Poin t

and Mh(ed M inds 4-H Club .

•'

·-.

Reuter-

'•

to

down to the level of the twoFick &amp; . Karr Construct ion,
earner family.
ne
Food
Market ,
Both new options would ' Raci
Ra wling s-Coa ts, Chester Agri
provide greater protection S,ervice ; Da.n Thompson
for divorcees by splitting o Ford, Downing - Childs
cy, In c.,
Pom eroy
couple's Social Security Agen
Nationa l Bank, Ra c.ine Hom e
credits upon divorce. Both National
Bank,
Ke ll y
options would improv·e Manufacturing Company , .
disability insurance coverage Ohio Valley Publish ing
ny , Ewing Funeral
for women, even if they were Compa
Ho me, Ci ti zens' National
homemakers.
Bank,
Farmers
Bank ,
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy ,
Gr ee n - Up Rec lamati on ,
Meigs Tire Center, Inc., Karr
Co n s tru c t ion Company.
Kenneth E, Riggs, and MidWest Steel Corporation.

Miss Louise Michael, Mr. and
Mrs . Fr ed Goeglein, Mr. and

Mrs. Robert Murphy, Mr. and
Mrs. Garland Ca Idwell. Mr .

and Mrs . Pau I Sayre, Mr . and
Mrs. Thereon Johnson, Mrs .
Nora Rice , Mr . and Mrs.
Man n ing · Webster , Mrs .

SOFA, LOVE SEAT, &amp; CHAIR

REG. 1699.95

NOW JUST

'$55995

Picken s,

cattle prices increased more

Warr en

Ra chael Downi e, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Clay , Mr. J. B.

O'Bri en,

Mrs .

Cla ra

ZENITH
COLOR TV SETS
WE'LL GIVE YOU $100.00

• BERKLINE.
• NORWALK

LIVING ROOM SUITE

.

Sofa, Love Seat, &amp; Chair

REG. 499.95
1

NOW
ONLY

slloes.

.CHAPMAN SHOES

~-----

~----~

••

.'

• PONTIAC

&amp;OTHERS

When You Trade In Your Old Set For Any
New 23" or 25" Zenith Color TV.

3 PIECE

"..

Chairs By

Reduced

20%

On Selected Group

20% Discount
ON ALL
LOVE .SEATS

••• tables expertly crafted in the true country tradition

B.

ow you can
help your
baby learn .
~~=:.J to walk
properly.

....

For All 3 Pieces

Mrs .

mail by Circuit · Judge prtces mcreased 28 percent. Miller , Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Kenneth
Leffler
and
Cross, Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Koblentz, Mr . and Mrs.
Assistant Pqbiic Defender
Mendal Jordan, Mrs . Jea n
Tom Greene on Monday and
Spencer ,
Mr s .
Lucill e
Tuesday.
Leifheit, Mr . and M rs.
MEETING TONIGHT
The
group
cia imed
The Southern Local Board Raymond Furbee, Mr , and
responsibility for the shooting of J:;ducation will meet this Mr s. Willia m M iller , Mr .
Fred Crow·, Jr . and Mrs .
death of John Krasner, whom evening at 7:30p.m.
Pauline Atkin s.
authorities said controlled a
multistate pornography
empire.
Handwritten
and
containing numerous
misspellings . and
grammatical errors, the
letter to Greene said: "It was
0
on March 6 that Flint (sic) ·
along with his attorney Gene
Reeves were to have met
death . Somehow Tom, we
missed Reeves all together
and . only paralfl'ed Flint!'
Police made an arrest
shortly alter, the Flynt
shooting, but later released
the man, saying a hoax call
was involved.
Hui'f's
comments
Wednesday marked the first
time since. ' then that .
investigators have Indicated
they had any eviden~e that
could lead to an arrest.
The shooting, apparently
from the upper window of an
abandoned building, .was
''professionally planned and
executed," said Huff.
Huff rejected Flynt's
theory lhat the shooting was
connected with a Hustler
investigation
of
the
assaSsination of President
John F. Kennedy.
For giving proper support and protection
He also said attacks on
to your baby's rapidly growing and developing
other members of the Flynt
feet. Stride Rite&lt;~&gt; is the best choice.
organization "did not come
We have Stride Rite's Progression Fitting'"
as a total surprise to us."
Walter William Abrams,
-a fitting system designed to provide lhe fit'
33, the vice president of a sex
and support your growing baby needs. From the
paraphernalia
firm
Firstie through the lntetmediate and Advanced
connected with Flynt's
Walkers, we have the right shoe for every stage
publishlng firm, was shot and
of your ba~y·s development.
·
injured In November . .In ,
·
Be
sure
the
first
shoes
are
the
right
Septemper, the home of
Willi31J1 B. Rider, regional
Stride Rlte 00
sales .manager lor Flynt
Publications and brother-in·
'
law of ~rry Flynt's wife,
was boolbed.
"Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, 0."

'

~·'

Choose From Brown or Green Plaid

EARNINGS UP
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio farmers earned about23 Barbara Sargent, Mrs. Helen
percent more for their .crops ' Coast Hayes, Mr. and Mrs.
in 1978than in 1977 according ·Aaron Sayre and Stephan••·
' .
Mr, and Mr s. Wa llace
·to
the - Agrtcultural Bradford, Mrs. Esther B.
Stabilization and Con· Greer, Mr. James L. Eberts,
servation Service of the U. S. Mr. George HobsteUer, Mr.
· u1
and Mrs. Rex Balle~ , Mr.
Department of Agrtc
ture. Howard Stout, Mr. and Mrs.
According to the serviCe, Ga~ le· Price, Mr . and Mrs.
than 50 percent after four
ye~rs .of Iasses, an d hog

...

LIVING. ROOM SUITES

School Boosters, Xi Gamma

Norma Chapman, dec. to Mu Sororily, Chester Young
Club, laurel Cliff
Eugene Chapman, Lorena Wives
Better Hea lth Club, Meigs
Davidson, Cert. of trans ., County Pioneer &amp; Hisotrical
Pomeroy.
Society, Meigs County Farm
Truman D. Hal! to James Burea u and Roc k Spr ings
Mourning, U:Jts, Pomeroy. ·Grange.
INDIVIDUALS - Mrs .
Charles R. Mash, Anna L. Diana Eberts, Mr . and ·Mrs .
Mash to Robert L. Mash , John Rice, Rum ner Farms
(Mr . and ·Mrs. Roger Gaul) ,
Ta~ara L. Mash , 20 acres,
Mr . and Mrs . Thomas Sayre ,
Salisbury.
Mrs. Joy c:e Bowe n, Mr. and
Richard E. Havens, Mrs. Gene Jeffers, Mr . and
Elizabeth E. Havens to Mrs. Carl Barnhill, Mr. and
William M. Lswson, Margie Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Mr. and
Mrs . Robert Roberts, Mr . and
Sue Lswson, .66 acre, Sutton. Mrs
. Marvin Wilson, Mrs .
Ina Catherine Meadows·to Amos Leonard , Mr , and Mrs.
Danny Lou Meadows, 80 W. P. lochary, Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Wilcox. Mr. and
acres, Rutland.
Mrs
. Ernest Wh itehead, Mrs .
Ina Catherine Meadows to Evelyn
Knight, Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Lou Meadows, U:Jts, Oon Johnson , Mr. Bernard
Middleport.
Fultz, Mr. and Mrs . Virg il
Claude Ashley , Bessie Roush, Mr . and Mr s. Virgil
Teaford ~ Mr .
and Mrs .
Ashley , Wilbur Ashley, Charles
R. Harris, Mr . and
Garnet Ashley, May Qulvey, Mrs . Gary Wolf, Mr . and Mrs .
Richard Densmore, Bertha Ha·r old Lohse, Mr . and Mr.s.
Densmore, Flossie Phillips, Henr y Wells, Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Fitch , Mr . and Mrs.
stanley Phillips, Dale. A. · Tom
Theiss, Mrs. Frances
Phelps, Mary Phelps, Bessie Robert s, Mr . and Mrs .
Siders, Charles Siders, Helen Howard Ebersbach. Sr .. Mr .
Bail, Ronald Bail to Alpha and Mrs . Ro y Holter.
Mr . and Mr s .. Harold
Barr, Elvira Barr, parcels, Spencer
, Mr. and Mrs . Edw in
Rutland .
Cross, M r. W. S. Michael,

off

WE HAVE TWO 3 PIECE EARLY AMERICAN

Bd. of Trustees, 2.715, .241,
Columbia.
Sam Hicks,' Jr., Martha
ORGANIZATIONS
Rhea Hicks to Robert Eugene · Canter's . Cave Fund Raising
Hart, Gail Patsy Hart, 1.666 Committee,
Ra cine
Fir emen's Auxiliary, Chester
acres, Salem.
Club, Beta Sigma Phi
Jeffrey J . Lightfoot to Garden
Sorority, Alpha Delta Kappa
Janet Sue Ughtfoot, 43.491 Sorority , Tup pers Plains

Sutton.

•••

Brogal1 In surance, R. C.

Boltl ing Compa ny. Elber felds, Ohio Pallet Company.

acres,

,.

SALE ON ALL LIVING
ROOM SUITES

Bucks 4-H Club, Shepherds 4H Club, Court House Cui-Ups
4-H Club, M err ~ Makers 4-H
Club, Alfred Angels 4-H Club
BUSINESSES -

:.•,.

HEX COMMODE
27"x2l"x 20"H

COCKTAIL TABLE
54"x20"x 16"H

lndependence ... Vinyl veneer pine
finish handsomely accented with
white porcelain decorator knobs.
Fully hinged doors create handy
sto-rage space in each table .

.'

•,

'' · '
,.

·..

.. ·

�'

tO-'!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Thursdlly,Feb. 1~. 1979

Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Pomeroy. Great - great Ralph Badgley over the grandmother 18 Mrs. MOdred
weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe of Racine.
Mlsl Paige Smith of
Steve Badgley and chlldren,
Kelly and Amy !o of Pomeroy wu dinner 11uest of
Colwnbus and Mrs. Jenny Mrs. Mary Clark and 110n
Lowman and chlldren, Lori Cork on Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick
and Ben of Hartford, Weot
Virginia and Pam Hill of Grimm visited with Mr. and
Colwnbus. Pam also visited Mrs. Walter Shane In
Shane
with her parents, Mr. and Gallipolis. Mr.
Mrs. Bill Hill and . grand- returned home recently from
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Holzer Medl~l Cenl~r where
he had surgery.
Hill, Jr.
Robbie Williams returned . Mrs. Dorothy Greathouse
home from Holzer Medical visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Center
where he
Is Gary Milch of Wolf Pen.
recovering from surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Walker,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Jr. and children, Michelle
Notice is hereby given that
and Tommy of Dixie, W. Va. on Februery 17, 1979, at 10:00
and Mr. and Mrs. Delbert A. .M . a public sale will be held
lOS
Union
Avenue ,
Walker of Summerville, W. at
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for
Va. were weekend visitors of cash the following collateral,
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker fO ·Wit:
1973 Monte carlo. serial No
and Rick in Racine. They all IH57K31.62332
The Farmers Bank &amp;
visited with Rev. and Mrs. Savings
company, Pomeroy,
Mark McClung in Middleport. Ohio , reserves the right to bid
Mrs. Gamet Ervine, Mrs. at this sale .
Maxine Shain and Mr. and 121 u , 15, 16, 3tc
Mrs. Paul Smith visited
Sunday with Mr. Ross
Hoback In Gallipolis. Mr.
Hoback Is brother of Mrs.
Ervine and Mrs. Smith.
FINANCIAL REPORT
Mrs.
Garnet Ervine
OFTHI! BOARD OF
LIBRARY TRUSTEES
returned last week after
sections 117.06, 337S.351nd
having spent two weeks In
3375.36, Revised Code
Bradenton Beach, Florida.
For FISCII Yelr Ending
She was accompanied by Mr.
December lht, 1971
Meigs loCII School
an.d Mrs. Raymond CarDistrict
penter of Flemingsburg,
Llbrery District •
Kentucky.
County of Meigs
Visitors to Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Fttlruery n, 1971
Freeland Norris on Sunday
I certltv the following
afternoon were Mr. and Mrs.
report to be correct.
Calbert Allen of Charleston,
Ellen Bell
W. Va. and Mr. and Mrs.
Clerk Treasur of
th' Board of
Roderick Grimm of Racine.
Library Trustees
Mr. and' l'ilrs. Grimm visited
CASH RECONCILIATION
also with Mrs. Laura Byers. Total Fund Balances,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Oecem ber 31, 1918 S 7,987 .11
Cleland visited with Mrs. Depository 811l1nces ·
Edith Hayman who is Pomeroy National Bank
8,585.67
residing In Columbus with Total Depository
Ruth and Grace Ellis.
8,585 67
Balances
Those that wei'!' here from Investments :
out of town to attend the Certificates of
Oeposlt
3,000.00
funeral of Mrs. FaMie Sayre Total Investments
3.000 00
were Mrs. Miriam Milligan Cash on Hand :
0.00
and daughter, GweM from Cash on Hand
Orlando, Florida; Mr. and Cash In Transit to
Depository
58 06
Mrs. Lester Dressler of St. Total Cash on Hand
58 06
Albans, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Total
11,643.73
Joe Dressler and son, Joe Jr., Outstanding Checks,
December 31, 1978
of Pl. Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr.
(Oeduct)
3,656 62
and Mrs. Edward Martin and Total - Clerk-Treasurer's
two sons of Pl. Pleasant, W.
Balance, ecember
31, 1971
7,987.11
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
SUMMARY OF CASH
Beegle and two chlldren,
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
Amy and Jenny of Zanesville,
AND EXPENDITURES
Ohio; Mrs. Carol Locke and
1111nce J1n. 1, 1t71
8.507.20
three children of Columbus, General Fund
Total
8,507.20
Ohio.
Total Rtctlph
A daughter, Andrea Renee, General Fund
52,852.25
was born to Mr. and Mrs. Total
52,852 25
Totll Receipts&amp; B•l•nces
Gary Carter of Columbus,
Gttneral
Fund
61,3.59.45
Ohio. Maternal grandparents
·Total
61.359.&lt;5
are Mr . and Mrs. Gary
Totlltxplncllturtt
Sellers' of Racine and Mrs. General Fund
53,372.34
53.372.3•
Mary Forbes of Columbus. Tolal
Bill nee Dec. 31.1971
Great-grandparents are Mr.
Fund
7,987.11
and Mrs. Ward Sayre of General
Total
7,98].11
Racine and John Sellers of
CASH BALANCE,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND

Han-isonville
Society News

Mr. and Mrs. Rodger
Alkire
and
children,
Pomeroy, were Sunday
dinner guests of his aunt
Stella Atklna and Ruby Diehl.
Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alldre
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Gibson and daughter In
Colwnbus on Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Payne
purchased a house trailer and
moved it on their lot and are
living In It until repairs are
made on their home which
caught on fire.
Mr. Frank Epple and son
John, Middleport, surprised
his father, Mike Epple on hla
84th birthday Saturday
evening by preparing and
serving Mr. and Mrs. Epple a
fresh fish . dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
visited her psrents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Hart of Allensville
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey, who are vacationing
in Florida, have bought a '
trailer and lot in Inverness,
Fla., and will live there until
spring.

nentrtl Fund
Balance, Jan. 1. 1918 8,507.20
Rtc.lpti-Rtvenut
Intangible Personal Property
TalC (Gross )
.43,989.85
Contrectual Services Library
318 00
Flnu and
~elmbursements

760 .• 2
7, U5.00

WANT AD

CHARGES.
I~ Words or Under

Cuh

1.00
1.110
1.80
3.00

·

Olarge
1.25
1.10
1.25
3.75

Each Word over the mlrimum 1~
words 1a t ctnt.l per word per day .
Adii'WIIlini ~ thim COflle(.'tltive
dolya will be cl,.rged ol Jhe I day

tale.

In nl0"""1 0 Card ol Thank.! and
Obituary' 6 """ per wocd, 13.00
minlmwn. CUb in odvanco
Mobile Home Ides and Yard ules
are aecepted only with cull with
order. 25 cent charge for adl CllfTYtiitl Boa: Number In Care of The Sentinel.

The l'llblllher ......... Jhe rtght
to edll or "leclany oda deemed obo
jedlonol. '(f., Pubii.Vlor will no! be

respan.sible for more than ooe tncW:,
rect.lnaertJon

Phooe 902·21~

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Noon on S.turday

~~y

.

4 p I'd
the day before publication

Sunday
4 p I'd.
Friday aflarnoon .

61,359.45

Frldoy, Feb. 16

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

2.1U.67

- Capital Outlay
2,500..29
Grand Total · Expenditures
Including Transfers

53,37l.3•

Balance, December

31.1978

7,917.11

Total Expenditures Plus
Balaf'ces December 31,

61,359.45

Anttaand Liabilities

February 16, 1979
Th1s com ing year is an e&gt;~cel·

lent ltme to put lo work all the
knowledge you ,have been col·

lectmg You'll be able lo make
great strides and advancement
1n your endea11ors

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Be
bold and "tperlmenl wllh the
Ideas you re thtnk1ng a~out
today mstead of JUSt wondenng

11 they 'll work . You 'll never
know unless they ·re put mto
achon Find out more of what

lies ahead for you In 1919 by
send1ng tor your copy of I he an~
new As tro-Graph Letter Mail $1
tor each and a long, selladdressed . stamped envelope

enthus1asm todaY . You 'll respond qu1ckly to anyone who

shows the slightesl degree ol
eagerness and zest .

TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Com·
pltments and poss1bly a reward

for work well done could come
your way today Exert your best

eflorts They'll be not1ced .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You
may lonally get together loday
w1th one of whom you ' ve been
wan11ng to discuss a personal
matter There should be lois to

VIRGO (Aug.

23-Sept. 22)

and attenljon loday has large
dlv1dends to pay. E.ert lhe
eKtra eflort needed to pu11 11off
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The
early part ol your day may slart
siderably. Be ready lor an
active fmale .

SCORPIO (Oct. z•-Nov . 22) The
action could get a little more
hectiC around your house than
you had planned on It you 're

not one to roll wtlh the
punches, belter get prepared
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) This could turn tnto one ol

Going Out fi
Business Sale

_
... _
- .....

GIBBS GROCERY

'" EVfRYTHING'S

GOTT A' go
Hou!e ond lot, furmture ,
clotheS. cor, oil my household
ttems Drop by 7b0 Laurel St ..
Mtddleport

Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy

I.

-- - -

FROSTY'S CB Rodto Equipment .
Everything in two·woy rodlo ,
anlenno and _ accessories .
Phone Portland 843 :2181 . Open
evenings until B. Sundoy 2 till&amp;.

- - -- - -·=:=--

. _ _L~s.!_a_n~Fou."n:=:d__
l OST IN Flatwoods · Texos Com ·
mumty oreo Block long holr.
adult mole cat M 1sstng s1nce
Jon 'n Call 985 434.4 after
S JO
LOST LET AIH Foils Brown and
whtte mole. Por t Beagle port
terre tr 247 2672

--

cHrP WOOD
Poles me•
d•ameter 1o· on largest end.
$1:2 per ton Bundled slob $10
per ton Del1vered to Ohio
Pollet Co , Rt 2. Pomeroy
qq7 26Bq

beds , iron beds desks etc ,
complete households Wnte
M 0 Miller. Rt 4, Pomeroy or
coll992 776()

Yard Sa 1'-=e-,...
IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer

from Rutland Post Off1ce
Phone 7_.2 · 2255 ~ 1 delu•e
comster vacuum cleaner with
power non le ond ottochmenls
$69 95 1 Sunbeom indoor, out·
door vocuum dvoner, 1'1 h p
motor $39.95 I laboratory
sink
and cob•net.
Also
Mansfield closet comb1not1an
the New Water Saver · both

SBb q5

Mf 135 gas tractor MF I SO gas
troclor MF 1135 tractor with
cob and AC Gehl 95 MX
grtnder -mixer
Gehl 1070
mower conditioner
Shinn's
Tractor Soles oo...A58· 1630
Leon . WV .
SALt: . RENT or hire MF 200 E
Corwler-dozer. MF 711 skid
steer looder. Sh1nn s Tractor
Soles 3U.. 458 1630. Leon. WV

JOHN
DEERE
61.4 -696-1135

· · · · · - · - - - - -· ·

On January 27, 1919, In the
Meigs County Probate Court,
Case No. 22597, L.ena Belle
Pullins, Route 1, Rtedsvllle,
Ohio was appolnttd Ad ·
mln istratrix of the estate of
William M. Potter, Sr . ,
deuased , late of Route 3 ••
Pomeroy , Ohio
Manning D . Webster
Probate Judge.
l5, .JtC

Clerk

}l-"'"

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SALE PRICES

:Jr..
,,..=.... .________..,,

your life -

,.u.1HE;SWEEP
Oft

-

·· -

HOMESITES for sole. 1 ode and
up . Middleport, near , Rutlond.
Coll~2 · 7•81. -~

'niREe.eEoitOOM-,,q~.-~,;;e- in
~~~le~rt. ~-ol~ ~2:3~5~ _ .•.
FARM FOR sale. House. 2 barns.
trailer Lorge pond 10 ocres or'
82 acres 742-2566
3' J acres in Pomeroy. Se-cluded
wooded oreo on top of hill
011erlooks river Water: elec·
tnc available. 992-3886.

· · ···-·····-·

'lfl •• I fo,

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-

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&gt;

0

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•

·.

WORSHIPPERS

1ttll CtoiVry Service wHII
Ctt11Vrr •--Now.
'
lfKia 11111. In
WM6tne. 011 .......
lo,JIIroplece Fl•••
~""" PNprl-.
Kl 1Willie,
..
2-5-1 ;,o. .

.

u•·•n• , .

AI. lROMM OOftST.

PRYAT

-Room Additions-Custom RemodelingCeramic Tile • Formica
Counter , Top• - Colli~!
(SuSPtndtd, Texture)- Tit
. Floon - Plnellll!l &amp; Trim.
Quality Work You Can
Depend On ....
.

Pfi)NE 742-2328
i ·l2-1 mo.

....

TRACTOR DRIVEN
PTO ALTERNATORS
from t5,0001a
75,000 watts.

°

MantpiiiJ

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--HALF•TOLD TALES
I STilL DON'T KNOW TH'

AT RRST IT WAS GRAND ... lHE
SARGE CAB;N ... SHE HAD SHOES ..
ANI&gt; A

COUPlE

OF DRESSES ... _,.
· ~o-1

·:

. T11iler Sales
27320 Montgomery Rd.
langsville, Olllo
614-66'1-4245 Evenings
2MIIes East
of Wilkesville
2·14-1 mo.

SEWING MACHINE Repoln, ser·
v1ce. oil makes, 992-:2284. The
Fobr~c
Shop.
Pomeroy
Authorized S1nger Sales and
~e.rv~c! ~! s~O_!P!_~ s_«:is~o!s _ _
EXCAVATING. doter . loader and
backhoe work , dump truck~
and Ia boys for kire· w1ll haul
fill dirt, to sod. l1mestone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fers . day phone 992-7089, night
ph_o'!&amp; ?9?· ~5~5 _or_~2·_
~
I EXCAVATING. dozer. backhoe
ond drtcher Charles R Hot·
field, Bock Hoe Service
Rutland, Ohio Phone7.t2 :2008 .
. ..

.

ftOt,SEROY, 0.'
proved, 1'12 story frame, 2

price $8,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 1 story
frame, 3 bedrooms, bath,
all electric, about '12 acre,

utility room, $18,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot, tots of remodeling, 3 or

~

betlrooms,

2

bat~s.

natural gas hot water heat,

NEW LISTING - 5 acres
home with 2 ba1hs, full
basement, formal dining

. .·-

AILEYOOP

eXterior
Not for
13 Meaning
Ita han
wine
16 Wooden pail
17 Lar1at
, 18 Esau 's home
19 - blimey!
20 Skid row
character
21 Precipice
Household
'--'--...J "'""-"=-"'-"::.=.::.:...:.::..::::_ _ __ _.=-=._ _ ____, . need

'

quick sale .

NEW LIST""'· ~
bP&lt;fw
large
e• ~ll £
.... Pllbllc

t'£"0\"G

wa~nd one·half acre

living room) add s room
1.tx36, deck with seating
capacity. Here is a genuine

Renovated

house Imaginable. Buyers
walling with ready cash.
CALL NOW AND LET US
SELL YDUR PROPER·
TV ...
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992-.2259 992-6191 "2-2S.II

. . - -··

bedrooms,

closets, nfce ea1·1n kl1.,
ba1h, full basemen!, oil fur ·
nace on

$23,500 . .

nice

lot.

Want

NEW LISTING - 3.33
acres right on the Ohio
.River.

'SN.£ ·r l'ho•"G

1 drill

, ..... e~uu

ar 882·2305.

.best results.

HELEN L., GORDON B.
AND SUE P. MURPHY,
REALTOR ASSOCIATI!S.

·~ -

Coll742-2328.

• '71

•

WILL CARE for the elderly in our
home Phone 992-731.4 .
-

--

WATER

.

__..-- teGAUSE: IF WE:

--- ---- - - -

WELL ddlllng
Grant. 7.t2-2879.

William T

__.--"' (,\ ·LofT You weA~

Wi,i~ 1-iAve

WATER AND misc. hauling Call

992·5858

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•

PIANO TUNING for home and
school lone Daniels, onoc:lote
pi Elb.rfeld's and ~runlcardl •
Music
Company .
Phone

992 2581 or 992 2082.
ROOM, BOARD, laundry, elderly

.

fOR AU YOUR INSURANCE
AND RIAL ISTATI NEEDS
CALL US.
.
.
"2·2342-IVE, 992·2449

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•

ot5175. ~2-5•22 .

...
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Shepord . Block with.whltt
apws and brown. J with no
totls Apporentlv good wotch
dogs Ready to go. Blue troller '
_o~. l~t-~~06 Br~~~ St .. Pomeroy

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-Ill"·

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28-;a-,-

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_,
TWO 'JEDIIOOM mabllo home on
--- · - ~=~-

", ocrelot. Garage, workahop.
Must see too oppr~tatel T P.
area. Phone 61-t 667·3109.""

.

- - ·-·-- ·· ---- -

----

'.

bau

r.r-1!:--r.:-Ro-,rem:;--,;;-

NORTH

2-15

• AK 9
¥ AK 63

• 843 2
• J 6

WEST

EAST
+Jl073
• QJ742
• Q

• 64
• 9 85

• J 76
+QJ0752 + A84
SOUTH
+ Q 8 52
¥10

tAK1095

+K93

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer: South
West North East South
It

Pass
Pass
Pass

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

I BETTER HIDE
TATER'S PIGE.V BANK
WHAR PAW CAN'T
FIND IT

'

" ~ .'
l.

NO, I Ti-liNK i.{Ol/
SHOVL.O FORGET
TJ..lE DIET

D

'

Clever ducking wins game

1¥

Pass

I+

3t

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Opening lead: +5

L..----..------'

and South made his first
good play by refus in~ to go
up with the kin g. He mstead
played the nine, allowing
West to wm with the 10. The
duck was excellent : If clubs
were divided 4-4, it made no
difference; if they were divided 5-3, however, refusing
to win with the king until the
third round of clubs would
deprive the defender, who
had only three clubs, of
'being able to reach his part-.
ner's hand in that SUit.
West persevered with the
two of clubs, driving out
South's king. It was clear
that West did indeed start
with five clubs. The diamond
suit was now the key to the
hand and South did not need
ftve tncks m the suit to
make the hand. However, If
he was going to lose a diamond Irick, he had to be sure
he lost it to the safe East
hand, since East could not
get to West's hand in clubs.
Accordingly, South led a
spade to dummy's king in
order to play a diamond
from that hand . East played
the queen and this gave
South a chance to be sure of
his contract with the possibillty of an overtrick. He let
the queen hold. West was
· g1
t· t
h
never gom 0 ge m 0 cas
the last ftwo
d ' clubs.d So East's
th
queen o 1amon s was e
third and last defensive
trick.

0

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) •

roo yo u nave a question for
me experts ? wme " Ask the
Experts, " care of this,news~per lndtvidual questions wr/1
b
r d 'f
w
e answe e 1 accompameu
by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes. The most mteresf·
mq quesftons w•ll b~ us.ed in
thrs column and w111 receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN )

BARNEY

~'

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1973 ArllnQion, 60 x 12. 2 bdr
1973 Ridgewood, 70x lA, 3 bdr.
1973 Kirkwood, 50 x 12, 2 bdr.
B&amp; 5 MOilLE HOME SALES
Pt. PLEASANT, WV
675·••2•

BRIDGE

On~ letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is By Oswald Jacoby
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Smgie leiters, and Alan Sontag
eveRt"BODY
.·
. ,
apostrophes, !he length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are difl'erenl
In the1r partnership s
methods, North's Jump to
W!AR ONe-, TH~:t
CRYPTOQUOTES
three diamonds was uncondltlonally forcing to game.
w M s South
bid three notrump,
QGLHBRSUSQ
MXRS
G
believing that with his mini..,__________!..:.;_....,:______:.;_..:._,;_.:.______________________
TH""E~ l.· IS __,
mum oc:ning bid nine tricks
:..
X U w B T QS H S G R G Z K Q G E V B D X W L • would
east'er than ll. In
addition, he had a club
WUPWM, t
W MS
LESXY
X Z Q Stopper.
In order to win this hand,
W MSJ
ZSRSU
0 S V G S R S - D S . - South would have to do a
.
credible lrnilation of a slick
H X R B p U boxer fighting a slugger:
Q G
H X.D G V V B
that 1s, he would have to do a
Yesterday's C"""toquote: UNTIL YOU HAVE BECOME lot of ducki'ng.
._.
E
REALLY, IN ACTUAL FACT, AS BROTHER TO EVERY ON • The opening club lead was
BROTHERHOOD WILL NOT COME TO •PASS.-FYODOR covered by dummy's jack
DOSTOYEVSKI
and won by East's ac~. East
returned the eight of clubs
© 19711 Klnt! Featu...., Syndica~, Inc.

.;" ·l

19611Eicona. 52xl2, 2.bdr.
19698uddy, 60 x 12, • bdr.
1970 Syl•o. 60 x 12, 2 bdr.

,1970Coatle, 60 .c 12,2 bdr.

22 Forgive
29 Lass with
23 One way
a lyre
Thursday, Feb. 15
to prepsre 30 "Cry Me a - ' ---~---=-=:-==--=-=:-----'--spaghetti 32 Gainsay
24 33 Abode
O'Fiaherty for Custer
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
26 On the
35 Composer

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1965Generot, 60x 12,2 bdr.

Yesterday's Answer

I'

SJ2.000. Phone 7•2·2826.
bdr.

' i:''

_

'

home, furnished , 3 bedr.,
washer and dryer. Air condlhon&amp;d. 1 lot, 210 ft . frontage.

1955- Prciliie Schoontr,

II

\

Mobile Homes for Sale
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile

.''

·•.

Usher" 10; Movie "Crucible of Horror" 17

27 Wavy: her.
/ --.:-_== 28 Beer
31 Poem
32 Misconduct
mark
34 One of
FIJ...- SanIa 's
reindeer
36 Talk wildly
37Meaning
38 British
carbme
39 Destitute
40 Morsel
DOWN
I.,My Name·
Is-"

•l

· ·

12 :DO-Gong Show B; Mon1y Python 33; 12 :31)-JukeBox 8.
12 ·40--lronside 13; 1 DO-Midnight Speclal3,15; Movie
"The Little Shop ol Horrors" 10; 1.30--Movle "Man
In The Saddle" 17 .
I :~o-News 13, 2 3D-News 3; 3.00--Movie "The Pink
Jungle" 3; 3 · 20--News 17.
3:40--Movle "The Marrying Kind" 17. 5 ooLMovle
"Jigsaw" 3.

WHY!

only. Private room. Price starts

GiveAway
PUPPIES. MOTHER · German

'

FRANK&amp;ERNIE

--

services Offered

Hou.\ tllif

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE ·

half~

·-

'

tower

nver

.'

MOBILE HOME repairs Furnaces ,
electricol work, pipes sowed ,
pl~~b.!_n~. !9~- ~85_8_:_ _ _ _. _
WALLPAPERING AND palnllng

acres of

land. Need 535,000.
NOW IS THE TIME TO
PUT YOUR PROPERTY
WITH US TO SELL.
"l-3325 will get you the

Where did
40u spend
theniqht?

.

Summer

playground with hookups
for two trailers. $14,900.
NEW LISTING - "'der
l)ome co~·,· 11
1u1-·
ed
l.ft 'I
lh,

'·

----- ---- ---·

ing Oh1o Volley region. Six
days o week 24 hours service
Emergency coils Coli .882-'195:2

near Guysville. $18,500.
NEW
LISTING

onl4 a da4
and a

'I'

- - -- ·-·· ·- - - ··- - ·
E·C ELECTRICAL Controctor 1er11·
~

You were qone

JOSEPH
2 Indian

3 - nous
4 Bujold film
5 High place
6 Get ready
to slnke
7 Admired
one
8 Begm
10 Dissent
11 Herninway
heroine
15 On
18 Lively ones
21 Took another's
place

:·

5:31l-Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanlord &amp;
Son 8; E lee. Co 20; ,Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33 .
6:oo-News News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Andy
Griffith 17; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Studio See 33.
6:31l-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; My Three Sons 17; Over
·
Easy 20,33
7:00--Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Sha Na Na
8; News 10; Love. American Style 15; Carol Burnett
17; Consumer Surlvlval Kit 20; Big Blue Marble 33.
7:30--Hee Haw Honeys 3; $1.98 Beauty Show 6; Family
· Feud 8,10;.; 1100,000 Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
The Country 15. Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil· Lehrer
Repor1 20; So The People May Know 33.
·: ·... . ·. : . .- . ..
8:DO-Diff'rent Strokes 3,15; Makin' It 6,13; Wonder .: • . . · · · ; .
Woman 8,10; Washington Week In Review :!0;331.'.· ..':, .':
Night Gallery 17.
· .
;•
B 3D-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3,15; What's Happenlng ·6,13; .. ·
Wall Street Week 20,33; Night Gallery 17 .
· .. .
9:0Q-Turnabout 3,15; Movie "ShampoO" 6,13;
,.
Dukes of Hazzard 8,10; Capitol Beat 33; Movie
" The Brain" 17; Congressional Outlook 20.
9:30--Hello, Larry 3,15; Turnabout 20; MacNeil· ·
Lehrer Repoort 33.
IO :DO-Sweepstakes 3,15; Dallas 8,10; News 20; When
The Boat Comes In 33
10 3D-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 DO-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Hogan's
Heroes 17; Soundstage 33.
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,15. Baretta 13; Movie "Five
Desperate Women" 6; Bonkers8; Movie "House of

25 Tinware
26 French

GASOLINE ALLEY

''

pe_r1~n:e: 9!2_:~-~--------AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
concelled? Lost your operators
license? Phone 997-'11.43

'""

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remodeled . ceramic tile . plum bing. corpentrv . and general
maintenance
13 yeors ex·
PULUNS EXCAVATING Complete
Service. Phone 992-7478.

heal and 2 car garage.
Want only S58,000.00 for a

..' ,."".,

Kitchens

II M1crospores

CAPE$ HUNG
UP ON "rloiAT STUMP!

...YOUR

. •

-- - -·- --- .
AND

Takes more than one to make It-A BLEND

Jumble Book No. 13, contelnlno 110 puul11, Is eulleblefor $1 .75 postp1ld
from Jumble, cJothls newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848 Include )'OW'
name, addr111, zip code •nd make checks pay1ble 10 Newapap•rbookt.

JOHNNY? AAD TO HER'&gt;

by THOMAS
ACROSS
French spirit
4 Hidden
supply
9 Gouda's

..
MARTIN • Ex·

with fireplace . Hot water

(low gas bills). HERE IS A
BUY .
481!, ACRES - New 1978
MObile Home, lexpando
bargain at $~8.000 . 00 .
WANT A BUSINESS? -

. . . . .. BATHROOMS

in the wOOds on gOOd road
with school and
m8il
routes . Modern A bedroom

3

WHAT HAPPENED TO

Answer

~'M\'Itlf

-- ---- - ·-·

AND

coveting , svplit sy5tems .
dozer, backhoe, dump truck ,
hmestone. gro..,el. blacktop
pav tng. Rt 1.43. Phone 1 (614)
698-7331 or 742·2170

NEW LISTING -V.A. ap·

Total

0' TH' SToRY .. · BUT
I CAN TElL IT WASH'T A
NICE ONE,_,

Sweepers , toasters, irons, oll
small oppllcnces Lawn mower
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7 .

HOWERY

down· plus closing

REST

I ElWoOD BOWERS- .REPAIR- -.:

SP.!·__

bedrooms, bath, fireplace,
carport, storms. S&gt;tOO.oo

Yesterday's ' Jumbles NEWLY MADAM CABANA JAUNTY

.---

'

BRAOFORO. Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service. Phone 9.t9-2.487
or 9.49-2000. Racine, Oh1o, Crill
Bradford

"( I I JK I I )"
(Answers tomorrow)

'

Business Services

ACTED .A"T 'THE
WEII&amp;H -; IN.

Print answer here:
LI'M'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

2-1-mo.

HOW iH~i CR:AZY
F'li&amp;H'Te~ ALWAY5

Now arrange the c1rded leHers to
lorm ll:le surpr1se answer, as sug·
gested by lhe above cartoon

_:,

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Dream of Jeannie 17.

I KJ

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2·30--Doctors 3,15, Guiding Light 8,10, I Love Lucy 17, : .. ·;
3:oo-Another World 3,15; General Hospllal6,13; LILI..S · · ·
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17.
3:30--Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Flln1stones 111 Over
Easy 20
4:DO-Mister Car1oon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6, Porky Pig 8; Sesame Sl. 20,33; Batman
10; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17.
~:3D-Bewitched 3; Gilligan's Is. 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Juncllon 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
S:OQ-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8,
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Six Million Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15; I

He's

I -I I

· :· .

8,10; Movie

8,10; 2:DO---One Life to Live 6.13.

! IMINGOHI

&gt;,

••

News B; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Wom-en .

0

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Only 15.
,.
30-Days of Our Lives 3,1 5; As The World 1urns

m'il

~' . (J

•

I :DO-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6,13; •

1}flji~
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~.!.~l.!~h
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

BORN LOSER

949-2862, 949-2160

.

'[

Password 15; Search for Tomorrow
" W 1nches1er ' 73" 17.

.. i &lt;••l
...

••

12 DO-Newscenter 3, News 6,10; Jeopardy 15; Young
&amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magarlne 131 ~ove
American Style 17 .
12 25-Eiec. • Co. 331 12 ·30-Ryan's Hope 6,13;

Rascals 17.

.
.
! ~;
: :~{

New, repair,
gutters tnd
downspouts.
Window ciNning
Gutter clttning
Free Estimttes

•New Home
*Add-ons
•Remolding
992-6011
2·11·1 mo. Pd.

7pm .

= _Re;~l es•te for s~

H

.,-.
:'"•&gt;,,\
·,

fle,ulqu, 11 t 1 ' ' -'

·- · ·-

lt.l FACT, THIS P1.ACE WHERE
'IOU '-lOW FIND YOURSELVES
IS WHAT MIGHT SE CALLED
MV CULT HEIIVENl

A'-ID LSAVE US NOT
FORGI:T THAT CULT
YOU RUN--WITH ALL
YSR FEMALE

Raolin&amp;

SIDING

1

20t11

Pllontfft-2111

.

CAPrAIN EASY

1

~

..

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16,1979
5.45-Farm Report 13; 5·50--PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10.
! OQ-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8; 6:10--News 17; 6:25Socletles In Transition 10.
6:30-Romper Room 17 ; 6' 45-Mornlng Report 3;
6 ·s~ood Morning, West Virginia 13. 6:55Chuck While Reports 10. News 13
1 oo-Today 3,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13; Friday
Morning 8. Schoolles 10; Three Stooges· Little

--·

H. L Writml

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

D•'t let • chlmntiy rlrt put

:a ••mpar

•nd every other klnd of

HEADQUARtERS For all your Appitohce :
Need•.
' i

,.. ~

'

WE WANT WIGWAMS! ...

REAL EST.ATE loons Purchase and
PUBLIC NOTICI
rellnonce 30 year terms'. VA ·
Notice IS heret: " given that
No money down {eli!=llble
on February 17, 1979, at 10 : 00
veterena) . Ft&gt;I.A · As low as 3
A .M. 1 public sale will be held't .
rer cOnf down ( non-vtterens )
at
105
Union
Avenue, ~
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
Pomeroy, Ohio, , to sell for
Stole, Athena 61.4-592-3051 .
cash the folloWing collateral,
to wit :
,
FAIRVIfW HTS 6 yoors ol~ . All
1973 MQnte Carlo, seriet No.
f!le&lt;"frlc home . 3 bei:lr
11 ,
IH57K3U62332
hotk lo11ely fomrly room with
the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company, Pomeroy, ,
woncf burlng slave , fully
Ohio, rt~erves the right to b d
rorpPtorl , goroge, I oae. Neor
at this sale.
MC' l!l" High School Y97-62R7.

121 u, IS. 16. Jlc

992-2356
1·ol-1 mo. (Pd.)

~

We have several, and one
to suit vour needs I am
sure. Ce ll on these.

Truckloads of new merchandise
ol Oh•o R1"'er Aucl1on . 537 High
St , Middleport, Oh1o.

&amp; Hulch 6.1 3, .
M ash 8. ABC News 33, Moy1 e " Inside Da 1sy
Clover" 10; M ovie " Who Slew Au ntie "Roo?" 17
12: 05-·Columbo 8 , 12· 4o-M anni x 6, 13
1 oo- Tom orrow 3; 1"25-Mov ie " Charge of th e
Lan ce r s" 17 : 1 ·5o-News 13
3 DO-News 17; 3:20--Movle " Harr lel Cratg" 17. 5 20World at Large l7

·-,

Sundins
Hammond Oraans
fyreo BlVd. Roclrit, dlilO
Phone 949-2111 evtnlnll
lfler 5 p.m. w..klnil•
after 12 . - .
z-5-1 mo.

742 29{)q

_ _....;A:..=:uction
AUCTION , FRIDAY

Her ot: s 17, Over Eas y 33

. . . 5a les Rep. For

Middleport, 0.

SWttPIO.. Id
•••urtd

News ,J.6. 8.. 10, 13.15; Dock Gavett 20; Hog an's

PEJE SIMPSON . ~t'

'

651 Beech Street

Cltltnney

Show 17 .

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9:30--Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's HerOMIO; Green Acres ;"':'-~ ·, ' :
17.
. .
. ,. . . : : . . "
10 oo-Card Sharks 3,151 Edge of Night 6 ; All ln .The ··· :,· ·.. · ·
Family 8.10; Dating Game 13; Movie " Move qver, : ·
· •,
Darling" 17
·•
JO :JD-AII Star Secre1s 3,15; $20,000 Pyram id 13; Andy
Griffith 6, Price Is Rlgh1 8,10
. "
11 :00--H igh Rollers 3.15, Happy Days 6,13; Elec. Co.
20 .
11 25-Sesaine St. 33; 11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13, Love oi Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20. ·
11 :55-CBS News 81 House Call 10; News 17.

II 30- Johnny Carson 3,15, Starsky

'.

. PIMOS

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11 Ytars Experience
WIIIMtke
Service Colis

-- ...~ u.

BUY YOUR 1979 Gravely now thru ·
March 1 ond sove up to $600
$100 down holds t1l April 15th.
Gravely Tractor Soles and SerVIC&amp; 204 Condor 51 . Pomero)l

H~r~ ld_ Hys~ll

{2 ) I, 8, IS, 3tc

11 00-

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

lr Famous Name BrQ4 .

USED TIRES . GE couelte recorder .
Heod cleaner Allen wrenches•
Wonted to rent frailer or opt.
In Meigs Co Allo odd jobs.

Mgr.

I

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• . •or. .;.
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_ ORGANS

Real Estate for Sale

.-

Manning D . Webster
Probate Judge
Clerk

REYNOLD'S
EI.ECIRIC MOIOA
SHOP

'

Auto&amp; Truck
'Repair
'l(tso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

M ' dozer

JACKW.
CARSEY

~

VTF.WTN(;
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 15 , 1979

.....-~:-:----~....,......,
'~
Hammond
: ) ,

-

0.

o

8 pool table. three-fourths Inch
slate top. Set of pool balls and
302 engme. ' 1t ton outo .. P.S..
rack plus 4 st1cks Cosl 51850
P B . A C 742·2826
new will sell for $450 Phone
. .
. .
992·'!WtJ _of~e~ 4p":' . _
1978LTDU . 4· door whtte. blueln·
tenor r adio. auto .. P.S., o1r
351 engine. $2500 ·741·3154

On January 27th, 1979, In
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No . 22588 ,
Jacqueline E. Menctlinl, 312
Wetzgall Street, Pomerov,
Ohio .45769, was appolnttd
Executrhc of the estate of
Gina Menchini, deceased,
late of 309 Wetzgall Street,
Pomeroy, Oh io .t5769.

I

' ,'-' II

W11hingllln $1., Allltny, 0. ·
PII!Hit6fl.6173
David c.ttman
Apntfor
MQTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES aRd SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, Usllon, "OIIIo.
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.
'1-26-1 mo.

11-9-1 mo.

•

"'• milt off Rt. 7JY·PIII "!1
51. Rt. 124 tOwt Rutland,

.

FIREWOOD FOR sole. $:15
p1ckup tr~c~l~o~ ~4!- 2129 ..

bed UB5. 7•2·3093
1979 FORD CUSTOM F 150 truck

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF GINA .MENCHIN!, DECEASED.
cue No. 22,511
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

ROGER HYSEll

,,'

qas

121 1. 8.

SMITH
· MOTORS, INC.

220 E. Mtln St,...,
Pomeroy,O.
Clllf92·1113
For Free Estlmom

. GARAGE

qn 2'175
TWO A.KC registered Pekinese
- - ·· ·-· -·
pups, $90 eoch Second house ZENITH AllEGRO stereo w1th AMbehind Silver Run Freewill Bop·
FM rodio and tope player
t1st Church Stonley Alestme.
Phone 992-3132 or 992-:)119
'1'12-2251.
WHITMER BLACK Diamond Liniment, RowJe1gh Produds Also
McNess products 192.t E. Ave.,
Auto Sales
Gallipolis. Ohio A5631 AcrosS
1975 DATSUN PICKUP , good con· · from Smith Buick goroge .
Good tires , low
ditior.t
Telephone 61,.·446·'9516.
m1lecge. Runs good m snow
· · -·- · - · · --· FOR SALE for ports 1970 Pontloc
3'179
·
Bonneville 455 4 bbl. Runs
1970 FORO three-quortar ton ,c.
perf•ct . S2SO Phone 992-6270
speed. good condition $7.45
for informot1on or see at l.t:3' 1r
1951 Che11rolet I 11t tOn , flat
Butternut.

, .

APPUANCE II

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RUTLAND HARDWARE, 2 doors

.

.

' I

Bilon

PLttUI74

RfOUCE SAFE end fast with
OLD COINS. pocket watches ,
Go.Bese Toblets &amp; E Vop "water
dOss rings . wedding bonds.
pills · Nelso'(~rug. _
d1omonds Gold or silver , Coli
BROWNING MARK IV CB antenna ,
Roger wUmsley 742 2331
tower . :2 rotors, wott meter.
WANT TO buy old 45 ond 78
0 104 Tweetie Bird mic linear.
phonograph records
Call
C:oll L1ttle B1t 949-2265
992 b370 or Contact Mort1n FurHAV FOR sale Round boles $20.
nllure.
· Squore boles $1
985-3537 .
WANTED TO buy old 1ewelry.
qas •131
Coli 99:2 5:262 or wr1te Kov
Cecil 87 S. 2nd Mtddleport . FIREWOOD FOR sole. 985 3505 or
qa5 3537
OH

--

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~

&lt;

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CHAIN SAWS . used. good condi
t1on. hove several Wdl trade
for 'most onythmg. Fifes .
'1'12 74q • .

.

TELEVISION

-• 'I

Your Hlldquartets Fer
Armstrong Carpeting

Service

good
quality
Delivery
011oiloble .,hone Qq2-7201 or
'1'17·3309

percent off, minimum
purchase $10.
Starts Friday.,
Feb. 16

DICK TRACY

.. :;

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MIXED CONDITIONED hay Very ~----..,..-,----­

All canned goods 20

~

' I

.. . &amp;;

TWO BfOflOOM k•khon fum ts h· l r - - - - - ' - - - - - - - ,
cd, opt fnll belore 8 am

---

PROBATE COURT OF
lhose unscheduled fun days
MEIGS COUNTY, DHIO
where outs1de BCtlveties and
ESTATE OF WILLIAM M.
fnends all clamor for your POOLER, SR., DI!CI!ASED
altenllon. You'll love it .
Case No. 22St1
NOTICE OF
CAPRICORN {Oec. 22-Jan. 11)
APPOINTMENT
You may be surprised to disDF FUDICIARY
cover how much strength and

Ill IS, 22, ltc

3 AND 4 RM lurn rshorl nnd un
ft lr nt shf"ti
npt s
PhonE
9Q'}5434

11 - TIIe DailvSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 15, 1979.

. ;

Business SeJ.viees.

C:O l•NTRY MOBilE Homf' Pnt
Rn1•lr :J;,t nortk of ._,o rnf"fO)
lor fj &lt;' Into; fnll CfQ'} 7.479

GUN SHOOT. Ronne Volunteer
9&lt;n naa
Ftre Dept ~ ve ry Saturday b 30
l
ARGt:
HOME tn Po!TI~roy
pm at the~r bulldtng '" Deshon
. 9971205 bofnre 5
Factory c-hoke guns only
' FHEE CANDY maktng doss at D1 s TWO BEDROOM lrCiiler Adull!i
only 942 337.4
Candy and Cake Supplies . Spr
tng Volley PlalO 4.t6-2134 lor
reg1strohon ll's fun and eo sy
You'll be amazed at who! ~ou
c.ondo
.f~2-~-~
COAL . LIMESTONE. sand grovel.
calcium thloride. ferfdtzer dog
food and oil types of salt h ·
celsior Salt Works Inc E Moin
St Pomeroy 992 · 38~1
.

wont to buy or sell something,
lo Aslro-Graph , P 0 Bo• 489,
ce look 1ng for work
or
Aad10 Ctly Station , N Y 10019.
whatever
you "ll get results
Be sure to spectly birth sign.
foster wilh o Sentmel Wont Ad
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Coli 992·2156
With lhe slightesl amount ol
encouragement, you 'll respond w1th a vigor and gb after ---=~ets for Sale
what you want today . Thai pat
RISING STAR Kennels Boarding
on lhe back wtll come.
ond grooming. oil breeds
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) It
Cheshire, 367- 0292
won ' t take much to arouse your
- . . . . .

December 11, 1911
Assets : ·
Depository Balanc:es (Active ~ ~
and. Inactive } Deduct
reserve you have to call upon
Outstanding Checks
•. 987.11 . today when a competitive situation anses
Investments
3,000.00
(NEWSPAPER ENTEAPAISE ASSN)
Accounts Rece ivable
(For Supplies, Books,
EQu ipment, etc . )
1.46 63
Inventory Supplies and
Materials
192.80
Lands (Cost)
PUBLIC NOTICE
(Building Slfes,
Sea led bids will be received
Perking Areas. etc . )
the Board of Meigs Soli
9,l30.00 by
and Water Co('servation
Buildings (Cost) CALL
District untll8 p .m, Februar-y
Library Buildings)
21, 1979 atthe office locatect 1 t
l3 •• 70.00 221 W Second St , Pomtroy,
Ohio, tor one (1) no -till grass
Eiiultrrent !Cost) (ALL
end l~umrdrlll . Instructions
Library BulldlnQ
to bidders and specifications
EQuipment)
.t,651.52
for drill art at the off let at the
Inventory-Books
30,960.31
Meigs s .w .c.o . The board
Total Antts
76,6AS.37
reserves the right to reject
Llablll)los :
any or all bldt .
Rew. E . Stltnefleld,
Accounts Payable
1,381 .73
TOtHI Liabilities
1,311.73 , President
Melga Soli &amp; water
Excess or Oeflclencv
Conservation District
Of.AIIets
75,263.64 221 W Second St .
Total
76,6&gt;15.37 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Mrs. Harley Haning of
Flatwood and Gene Lambert
of Hemlock was a Tuesday
Yisitor of Helen Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knapp,
and Tim of Columbus, Mrs.
Lena Knapp of LangSville
were recent visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
Kail, Charles and Kevin.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Reeves and daughter of,
Chester Road were recent '
vlsitii'S of Mr. and Mrs. f
James Reeves and Bryan.
Lincoln RusseU, local,
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Ruasell of
Mlddleport.
121 15, 1tc

GUN SHOOT Ron ne Gun Club
hery Sundoy t pm Foclory
r hok e guns only

OLD FURNITURE ~c-e bmu~s . bross

- Operation of
Library
13,805 ..46
- Maintenance of
Library
2, UB.67
Maintenance of

Llbrary

Notices

TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro·
duels Top pr1ce lor slonding
sow timber Call 992-5965 o r
Kent Honby 1 4.46·8570

out qulf!tly, but as time t1cks on
things begins perking up con -

3.155.85

l or !.Oi t:-

- _~a.!"l~d_t!?__ l!~ -

Somelhlng reqUiring your time

Materials

ROUND HAV half""
843 7514

•

For Rent

.Card
. - of
- Thanks

- - -- -

Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Administration 5,369.91
- Persona I ServIces
26,392.16
- Llbrarv Service

1978

Wolfpen
News Notes

,--------""'T'

Other- Revenue
lalk aboul
Total Revenue
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
Receipts
52,213 27
You 'll go about your busmess
R ecelptt- Non rtvenu•
m a QUiet. unobtruseve manner
Adjustments and
Refunds
30.16 , unt1l someone steps out of line
Other-Nonrevenue
608.82 Then you ·u show h1m you 're
not afra1d to stand up for your
Total Nonrevenue
Recelpls
638.98 nghts .
Total Transfers
0.00
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Although
To1a1 Receipts (Revenue,
you may no( have much to say
Nonreveune a.nd
loday, what you voice Is so
Transfers)
52,152.25
profound 11 ensperes others to
Totai-Bevlnnlng
Balance
follow your advice.

Plus Receipts

·,

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

·R acine Social Events

.'
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'
.
7: 15-Wealher 33; 7 · Jo-Famlly Affair 10; 8:00--Capt ::: :· ~·.:· :,'. ,:.. ·
Kangaroo 8,10, Leave II To Beaver 171 Sesarre. 5~ ... ......
...' ·.·.·
. .
33.
: . . .. .. .
9:DO-Merv Grllfln 3; Phil Donahue 13, 1~ ; Emerge~.cv.
:
One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game 10; L~_y· , '. ; .·

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GLORV BE!!
TATER'S

GOT HIM A

BRANCH
BANK

(
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•
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , F:eb. 15, 1979_ ,

·Prosecution
. NEW (\RK, . Ohio ( AP)
Tile prosecution planned to
restits case tOday in the trial
oiThaddeus C. Lewingdon for
three of central Ohio's so·
called ".22-&lt;:aliher killings."
· The trial was recessed
· early Wednesday when the
· defense asked for police
recOrds pertaining to three
other homicides.
Defense attorney Gary
Tyack asked for the records
after Columbus homicide

TO END MARRIAGES
· Janet M. Harrison, Mid·
. dleport and Ronald W.
.· Harrison, Rt. I, Middleport,
filed for dissolution of
· marriage. Rema Rae Lawson
· · was granted a divorce from
Clarence Arthur Lawson.
PATIENT TRANSFERRED
Damon Ferreil, Syracuse,
has heen transferred from
Holzer Medical Center to
University
Hospital,
Columbus. His room number
is 919 for those who wish to
send cards.

Committee. ..
(Contmued from page 1)
of eligible lands affected by
past coat mining. The U. S.
Soil Conservation Service will
provide technical and cost·
sharing assistance.
. Ruth . said, " The local
· Mei~s Coimty Reclamation
· Committee will screen the
.• applic11tioils and send the
. 'most .. ii~ely to the state
cilinmittee. The state com·
.mittee will evaluate the
applications aginst others
and assign a numerical

rating."
" Then within the next 60
days , financial assistance
will be approved for those
abandoned lands where
reclamation has the greatest
potentiaiior protecting lives
and property," Boyd con·
eluded.

r~sting

case

-------------------------- Cold front hits tonight
1 Area Deaths I
I

I

'

detective Steve Martin reminded attorneys that he is
WILBERT CHANCEY
testified for the prosecution. not trying the McCann
Wilbert
C. Q!ancey, 66,
Tyack indicated he believes murders. "We , have other
Ripley,
father
·of Charles F. .
the records would show dis- matters w dispose of, " he
Chancey,
Syracuse,
Meigs
crepancies between a taped said.
High
School
Athletic
Director
statement by Lewingdon and
Thaddeus Leviiogdon, 42, of
and Head Football Coach,
police descriptions of what Glenford, is being tried in
died
-wednesday at the
was found at the scene of the Licking County in connection
Jackson
General Hospital in
homicides.
with the December 1977
Ripley
following
a lingering
Part of Lewingdon's state- slayings of Joyce Vennilion,
illness.
ment was played to jurors 37, and Karen Dodrill, 33,
Mr. Chancey was a
Wednesday. On the tape, Le- both of Newark , and the April
member
of the Salt Hill
wingdon said hi~ brother . 1978 killing of Jenkin Jones,
Church.
He
was a retired
Gary killed Robert "Mickey" 77, of Granville . Gary
dairy
farmer
and a retired
McCann, 58, in McCann's Lewingdon, who became 39
employee
of
the Kaiser
home on Feb. 12, 1978, while Wednesday and is from
Aluminum
.
Co.
He was a
he himself was responsible Kirkersviile , also faces
·
f
ormer
sheriff
of
Jackson
McCann's charges stemming from
for
killing
County.
girlfriend,
Christine those deaths.
Besides his son, Charles,
Herdman, 2fi. He also said
addition, .
both
In
Mr.
Chancey is survived by
both brothers fired shots at Lewing dons are charged with .
his
wife, Nancy; three
McCann's 77-year -old the McCann murders, two
brothers,
Elliott,
and
mother, Dorothy, the other other Franklin · County
Howard,
.
both
of
Ripley;
W.
victim of the triple slaying, slayings and one in Fairfield
T.
(Biil)
Chancey,
The jury had heard about County,
while
Gary
three hours of the police con- Lewingdon has heen charged Wilmington, Ohio; a sister,
Gertrude · Monk,
Mrs .
versation with Lewingdon on with a lOth killing in Franklin
Olarleston,
and two grand·
Tuesday.
County . .
sons.
Tyac k said he is seeking all
Funeral services will be
summaries prepared by
·
held
at 2 p. m. Friday at the
Martin on the McCann
Vail
Funeral
Home in Ripley
murders, reports from the
·
with
the
Rev. Orland
Columbus police mobile
{Continued from page I )
Reynolds
and
the Rev. Don
crime search unit a!ld a copy
The embassy feared for the Heinzman officiating. Burial
of the taped transcript in safzty of its evacuees from
which Claudia Vasko of the time they left their homes wUI he in the Fairplains
Columbus implicated herself until they took off. With anti- Cemetery near Ripley.
;rnd two men in the killings. American feeling running Friends · may call at the
Charges against the three high among leftist supporters funeral home.
were later dropped.
of the revolution and
Licking County Common
thousands of weapons in their
Pleas Judge Winston Allen
Hospiial ~ews
hands, there was a strong
possibility of attacks on the
way to the airport or at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
field.
Admitted
Wiiliam
The British Embassy said ·Morris, Pomeroy; Naomi
Royal Air Force planes also Bentley, Middleport; Mary
were standing to fly out 500. Derenberger,
Pomeroy;
600 of the 1,600 Britons Gaye Fields, Coolvilie;
The Southern weal School believed left in Tehran. An James Gibson; Pomeroy.
District Board of Education embassy spokesman said he
Discharged - Genevieve
met in special session hoped the flights would begin Hill, Juanita Olapman, Oris
Wednesday night to discuss Friday or Saturday. •
Hubbard, Lela Easterday,
.furnace repairs at the Letart
U.S. officials in Washington
Clarenc.e Price, Sharon
falls School, sewage system said I, 700 of the nearly 7,000
Petrie.
repairs at the high school and Americans stU! in Iran were
the arbitration hearing ready to leave inunediately.
between teachers and the They said the government
Holzer Medical Center
board held earlier this month. hoped to reduce those
Discharges, Feb. 14
All board tnemhers, David remaining to no more than
' Loretta Adkins, Lena
Nease, Sue Grueser, Betty 2,000 government officials, Baker, Shannon Barrette,
Wagner , Dallas Hili and businessmen, teachers and Raymo~ Chad, Blake, Chad
Shirley
Johnson
were others.
Briggs, Harvey BrQwn,Jr,
present .
Before the revolution Joyce Casto, Mark Collins,
The board will meet in against Shah Mohammad . Nancy Collins, Glenna Davis,
regular session on Feb. 20. Reza Pahlavi moved into Bruce Davison, Jr., Bertha
high·gear last fall, there were Diehl, Robert Edwards, Jr.,
55,000 Americans in Iran .
The
evacuation was
planned because of the attack
on the embassy Wednesday
hy gunmen who killed one
Iranian employee, wounded
two Marine guards and held
Suilivan and 101 other
N
$5.99
Americans captive for
several
hours. They were
.._..._.._
$8.99
freed by Deputy Premier
Ibrahim Yazdi and guerrillas
loyal to the new government.
Some of the attackers
SALE
identified themselves as
.communiSts whle Yazdi said
they were "communists,
ultra-rightists and military
. personnel who all had one
objective: to give the world
the impression that chaos
prevails in Iran and give our ·
movement a bad name."
Yazdi stationed 40 of his
government's "Islamic
police" around the bulletpocked ·embassy compound
after the attackers were
driven out and the Ainericans
freed .

Plans •••

Problems
discussed

_____ ____

'

Plains should move "'uth of
Ohio tonight. Precipitation Is
expected 1o change to IIIOW
tonlghL as the low moves east
of the state.
T: avelers' advisories were
in effect in central aectlons
this morning and in northern
Ohio during the day for light
freezing drizzle .
The freezing drizzle started
falling in central Ohio
Wednesday night and spread

Gas firm disagrees

Executions.begin in Tehran

into a few areu of northern
Ohio thla morning.
Ught drizzle or rain fell
overt!!illt ..IP ..Jhe 10utbern
portion of the state but
precipitation amo~a~ll were
light.
Temperature~~

nmalned

steady or rOle lllowly early
today. Temperatures , at
daylreak rqed &amp;om 14 In
Toledo to 38 1n Cincinnati.
Fog alao covered 1110111 of
Ohio this morning and
reduced the vl,slbiUty to leas
than a mile in many areas,
the weather service said.

physically will be able to,
on
storage
depending
facilities, and that includes

Ohio gas."

.

Vehicle
Is demolished
now •
ln mishap

John Conti, a spokesman
Consolidated
in
for
Pittsburgh , said the finn in
a surplus situation because
exploration and contracts
begun 10 years ago are
reaching full potential.
He said Consolidated will
continue to honor e:dsting
contracts but Is reducing the
nwnber of new contracts for
gas. Conti had no information
on Ohio supplies specifically
but said the firm gets gaa
from about 23,000 wells in
Appalachia and that this will
remain more or less constant.
He said Consolidated gets
about 20 percent of its gas
from the Applachian region.

is business as usual,"

Leah Eichinger, Bert Fayne, Chaddock said. "Wt~ · do not
Michael Fortner, Jean have any planned cutbacks
Gaskins, Tomi Helm, on natural gas purchases and
Marlene Houck, Michael , during the summer we plan to
Paxton Kaiser, George Keirn, take all the gas that we
Jr., Janis Lucas, Effie Mays,
PEggy Mercer, Martha Mil·
chell, Alfred Moore, Ida NApEVENT CALLED OFF
per, Obra Reed, Charles
The
Bradbury
PTA
Saunders, Sr . , Opal
Saunders, Janis Shilot; Letha meeting . scheduled for this
Sims, Tinuny Smith, Gilberta evening has heen cancelled.
Starcher, Joseph Stewart,
John Taylor, ·Mary Vickers,
CORRECTION
.Jean Wallace, Joseph
Russell
Newlon, 65, 2112
Walters, Wilma · Wamsley,
Mt.
Vernon
Ave., Pt.
Tracy Whaley, · Mrs. Dane
Pleasant,
who
died Wed·
Williams and daughter.
nesday
is
.
s
urvived
by on.e
Births, Feb. If
sister,
Mrs.
Richard
(Luella)
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Neal, daughter, Henderson, Fick of Olester, not Mrs. Sick
as was reported.
·
W.Va.

LOCATION CHANGED
The lcicallon of tbe
awards dinner being
sponsored by tbe Pomeroy
Cham her of Commerce has
been cbaoged from Royal
Oak Park to , Meigs Hlgb
School cafeteria, Paul
Simon, president ao·
nounced today.
Simon · stated tbill lhe
supply of llckets are
llmlled and persons Interested In attending
should gel lhelr tickets as
soon as possible.
Tickets may - be pur·
chased at New York
Clothing Store, Simon's
Pick-A-Pair and the office
of lhe chamber. The tickets
ore $6 and the dinner Is
Saturday, Feb. 17 at 6:30
p.m.

AMONG HONOREES - Twin sisters Beulah Utterback and Freda Lieving wiil be
presented certificates of appreciation at the awards banquet Saturday, Feb. 17 to be held a t
the Meigs High School Cafeteria sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. Tickets
may be purchased at the New York Clothing House , Simon's Pick-A-Pair and the office of
the chamber.. Dinner is at .6:30p.m.
·

One auto was demolished ·
during a two-vehicle accident
involving a Rutland Twp.
truck Wednesday at I p.m. on
TR 41, one and one-tenth of a
mile west of SR 124 in Meigs
C&lt;lunty . .
The Gallia·Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports that
the · west bound truck
operated by BUster Barrett,
45, Rutland, and an east
bound auto driven by Roger
Adkins, 20, Racine, collided
in a curve on the township
road.
Both drivers claimed in·
jury, but were not lm·
mediately treated. .
There was moderate
damage to tbe truck. The
auto was ·demolished. No
citation was wued.
Officers were called to the
·scene of a two-vehicle mlahap
on Patriot Gage Rd., one and
three-tenths of a mile south of
SR 141, at 7:30 a.m.
The patrol reports that an
east botlnd auto operated hy
Torley Clagg, 48, Patriot,
turned left Into tbe path of a
north bound vehicle driven hy
· Roger Waugh, 16, Patriot.
Both vehicles Incurred
moderate damage. Clagg was
cited on a charge of failure to
yield.

•

2/'1•

'1.69

HOOKS
Knitting Worsted
Weight Yarn
100 Pet. Acrylic

THREE DAYS ONLY-FRIDAY, FEB. 16th
SATURDAY FEB. 17th· MONDAY FEB. 19th
OPEN· FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

OPEN FRIOAY Tll8 :00 P.M .

'

"THE DRIFTERS"

Introducing the World Renowned Ronny Love and. sounds of the
Drifters who have appeared in Europe, Bahamas, Japan, Canada
and the United Slates.
·
'
Four Musicians and Three Dynamic Vocalists.
The group is known .for its nostalgiC hils of the so:s and 60's, and
has superb up-Io-date Disco sound keeping up with today's DISCO
MANIA.
They have sold over 12,000,000 records.

r. Satuid.,

UPPER DECK .
AT THI PT. PLEASANT INN

In addition to the conc ert,
the band may be used at a
clinic by Leon Thompson who
is associate conductor for the
New York Philharmoni c
Orchestra. The clinic session
is entitled " The Music
Educator as a CondQctor."
The program for the
concert includes a .variety of
stYles. The Suite in E-Flat by
Gustav Holst, " Incantation
and Dance " by John Barnes
Chance, " How the West Was '
Won" by John Higgens, and
"The March of the Belgium
Paratroopers" by Leemans.
Baroguc Trans'l'wo
criptions will be featured on
the program. Concerto Inc.
by Viraldi for two Oats and
band with students Terri
Johnson and Karen Brown
playing solo parts and
Concerto in B·Flat by Handel
for harp with Mrs. ' Lucille
Jennings, assistant professor
of harp at Ohio University,
playing the harp solo.
This is the third time the
band has been selected for
the West Virginia honor. The
band was chosen in 19'1\. 1976
and 1979.

Transplant patient now home
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ·_ Dr. Jerry Young, the
only person in history to have three heart transplants,
came home on Valentine's Day, with a heart .pinned to
his sweater and his sense of hwnor intact. After
greeting his family, Young opened his jacket to expose
a 3-inch heart hearing the words : "My heart beats for
YOU."

Young turned a crank on the back of the heart and
it heganto buzz and jump. " That's exactly howl feel,"
he said. laughing.

Sugar prices could rise ·

NOW THROUGH FEBRUARY 17th

Dinner Resemtioft RecommMided lar FridiJ

Wahama high school's
band, under the direction of
Charles Yeago, is one of three
bands chosen for the West
Virginia Music Educators
Convention March 29-31 in
Huntington. Yeago received a
letter from Patri'ck. J . Fitz·
gerald, president of W. Va .
M.E.A. informing him of
the band's selection . .
The letter reads as follows :
"We are pleased to advise
thatthe Wahama High School
Band, under your fine
direction, has heen selected
as a 1979 W.Va. M.E.A. honor
band by the audition com·
mittee of the West Virginia
Music Educators. Hearty
congratulations to you and
your superb group. ,
"The ·caliber of instruction
exemplified by your audition
surely sets the highest
standards for all music
educators in West Virginia."
Ttie band will present a
concert on Friday, March 30
for the West Virginia Music
Educators. The concert will
be held at the Huntington
Civic Center.

Nationwise

WINTER CLOTHING

· Penn State University was
originally known as Farmers
High School.

The Entertainment and Dini~~~r Spot of iJ,., Area

•

I

r.1Ge

*Women's Coats

* Men's Winter Coats

* Junior Dresses

* UtUe ~ Suits

*Men's SWeaters

*Women's SPGIIsweai

* 8oJs Wirlter Clothing

* Men's Dress Shirts

*Children's Coats

*Women's Gowns

* Men's Knit Shirts

* Men's Flannel Shirts

*Women's Sweaters

*Children's Sleepwear

* Men's Spcri Shirts

*Pre-teen Spoilswear

·* UtUe Girk ·Sp0.1swear

*Woinen's Dress•
.

I

WASIDNGTON (AP) -The price of a 5-pound bag
of sugar, forced up almost 17 cents in 13 months by
govenunent action, could rise 5.5 cents more by early
next year under legislation before the House.
l3y raislng both domestic and imported raw sugar
.prices, the bill would hike the retail cost of soft drinks ,
camed goods and bakery products as well. But the two
House· committee chairmen who introduced the
legislation Thursday say many sugarooet and cane
fanners and processors, unable to make ends meet,
will go out of business unless they find some relief.

Judge wants to learn
MANSFIELD, Ohio ( AP) - Richland County
Co!)unon Pleas Judge Max Chilcote, whose courtroom
was bugged last week, wants to know more about the ·
use of electronic listening devices by the Richland
County sheriff's office.
Chilcote has ordered Sheriff Thomas Weikel to
submit an inventory of all bugging devices the
department has and to provide infonnation on how"
often the devices have heen used in the recent past.

First family tours village
·~ · ;·

'

•

*Women's ·Winter Robes *Girts' Dresses

I

!X'I'IJI.O) EL GRANDE, Mexico (APJ
President and· Mrs. Carter spent Thursday afternoon
touring a showcase agricultural village of the sort the
Mexical government hopes will keep its peasants down
ext the farm.
They vislted the village after Carter conferred •
\with Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo. He told
repocters the talk! had "gone yery well. And I think
Lopez Portillo wowd agree with that."

Endurance records sought'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Former Apollo
astrmaut Edwin Mitchell will he making another
space fllgbt - but not to the moon, and not 1n a
spaceship. Mitchell and two others will he trying to
establish distance and endurilnce records for hot air
balloollll'during a fllcht from St. Louis to central Ohio
during the weekend fl. Feb. 24.

ELBERFELDS 1N POMEROY
,,I

Tabriz have ended, the radio military officers of the shah 's co untry ;
Man u c hehr awaiting trial on ~barges of
said, and the government is ·. regime had heen convicted of Khosrowdad, head of the elite corruption and of torturing
in control.
crimes and · would be paratroopers; Mehdi Rahimi, and killing prisoners of
·.unconfirmed reports put executed. It gave no further martial law governoc of Teh- SAVAK. The charges were
th e casualty toll in ,abriz as details, and Khomeini r an, and R¥"11
Na ji, preferred by the old regime
high as 700 dead with spokesmen declined com- governorgeneral of the while the shah was still in the
thousands wounded . Tehran ment.
central city of Isfahan .
country.
Radio blamed ihe fighting on
The executions by a llknan
Each was riddled by at
Radio
Tehr an
also
" counter-revolutionary
firing squad were announced least eight bullets. The bodies announced that Prime
SAVAK agents " and said a by state radio accompanied were tra r.sferred from Minister Mehdi 13azargan
nightly curfew remained in bY martial music.
Kbomeini 's headquarters to and his Cabinet unanimously
effect.
The state radio said the Tehran's central morgue.
approved a decree con·
Thousands . of youths generals were convicted on
Nassiri appear~;~! on state fiscating all properties of the
marched in Tehran in char ges
of
"torture, television Monday night with ro yal family in Iran,
celebration of . the reported massacre of people, treason his · fac e bruised and including palaces, lands, and
victory in Tabriz .
w the country and earthly bandaged .· He had difficulty stock in banks, factories and
Three other generals were corruption. They were speaking because a mob businesses.
killed last weekend bY guer- sentenced to death and the pununelled his throat when it
The Cabinet also &lt;!_ecreed
rillas as Khomeini's forces verdic t was immediately , seized him SUnday at a that properties and wealth of
were taking over the country, carried out by Islamic armed ransacked army barracks. government officials will. be
but the government said the forces ." It also said their
The TV interviewer asked examined, along with that of
four jusl executed were " the property had been con· Nassiriifhe ever expected w former officials arrested on
first group of traitors" to be fiscated .
he tried by revolutionaries, corruption charges.
tried by revolutionary courts.
The
generals
were and the general replied : " In
There was no official esli·
It said Kbomeini attended the Nematollah Nassiri, chief of this world anything is mate of the value of the royal
SAV AK, the shah's dreaded possible."
properties in Iran , but unoffitrial.
Th e newspa per Ettelaat secret police and one of the
Nassiri had been held in a cia! estimates place their
said 26 other officials and most hated men in the. st oc kade since November
{Continued on page i2J

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN , Iran ( AP) - A
revolutionary flring squad
executed Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi's hated secret
police chief and three other
generals at
Ayatollah
Rub ollah
K homeini ' s
· headquarters during ' the
night. It was reported 26
·other officers and 'officials of
the old regime will he exec
cuted .
'
Fearful Ainericans were
packing their bags for a massive air evacuation set to
begin
Saturday .
A
preliminary flight took off
klday with 167 of them .
Teliran radio reported that
pro-Khomeini
forces
appealed for tear gas to
disperse an attacking mob
after a night-long street
battle in eastern Tehran. But
three days of fierce fighting
in the northwestern city' of

Wahama's band
chosen again

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

LATCH RUG KITS
Size 20"x27"
'4.44
Reg.
.. 24"xl6" ......._Reg.
_____.
~ '6.88
RUG YARN
Reg. 7Sc Skein

lly The Associated Press
SAMUEL•A. EBLEN
A brief mid-winter sample"
ATHENS - Samuel A. of warmer weather Is
Eblen, Sr.. 80. Rt. I, Me· expected to he blown away by
C.:Onnelsville, died Wednesday a blast of much colder air
afternoon at the Good sweeping into Ohio.
Samaritan Ho s pital,
Temperatures in the 3ll'l toAmesville.
day are to give way to high
Mr. Eblen was born in readings in the teens Friday,
Pomeroy, son of the late the National Weather Service
Samuel and Rose Dotson said.
Eblen.
A low pressure system
He was also preceded . in developing in the Central
death by a daughter, Betty;
sister, Nettie Edwards, .and
an infant sister , and one
brother, Harvey.
..
Mr . · Eblen
attended
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Pomeroy High School and C&lt;liumbia Gas Transmission
was a retired coal miner. He Co. took issue today with a
spent most of his life in report It Is reducing
Athens County.
.
purchases of natural gas in
He is survived by two Ohio and another firm said Its
daughters, Mrs. Clark contracts IVith gas producers
~ Loretta)
Edwards, in Appalachia are leveling
Columbus, and Mrs : Bill off.
{Carol) Potter, Canal WinJames C. Mitchell, who
chester. Three sons, Harvey operates a drilling company
of Malta, Ohio; Harohl of in southeastern Ohio, said
Columbus, and Samuel of Wednesday that Columbia
Athens; one brother, Da\'id, and Consolidated Natural
of Millfield; 12 grandchildren Gas Co. were reducing the
and 15 ~real-grandchildren. number of new hook-ups for
Funeral services will he Ohio wells by· 40 percent. He
Friday at 2 p. m. at the said both firms had lined up
Jagers and Son Funeral massive sources of gas from
Home, Athens, with the Rev. the southeast, the Middle
David Holdren officiating. East and Africa .
Burial will he in Greenlawn
But William Chaddock of
Cemetery at Nelsonviile . Olarleston, W.Va ., a spokesFriends may call at the man for Columbia Gas, said
funeral home after noon on ·today that this is not true for
Thursday.
his finn.
"So far ·as Columbia Gas ·
Transmission is concerned it

Emergency water trailers
ease critical shortages

KAREN PROBERT

JANA BURSON

JAMES B. PATTERSON

Three ·students named
citizenship winners
Daughters of the American
Revolution good citizenship
winners in Meigs County are
Karen Probert, Reedsville,
Jana Kay Burson, Shade, Rt.
. 1, and J ames Brent Palter·
son , Racine.
The three will be guests at
the annual charter day lun·
cheon of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, to be
held on March 9 at the Trinity ·
Church in Pomeroy.
At that time, they will be
presented good citizenship
pins and cerlific11tes by Mrs.
Wilma Sa rgent , DAR chair·
man.

School faculties selected
the students who took the test
on Ohio government. They
will now compete in state
competition .
Karen, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Probert , is a
senior at Eastern Hi gh School
where she is a member of the
National Honor Society, serv·
ing this yea r as president.
She is also on the annual
staff, a varsity cheerleader ,
vice president of the chorus ,
in the special school chorus .
She is a member of the'United
Methodist Church of Chester.
Daughter of Mr . and Mrs.

Testimony links
murder victims
NEWARK, Ohio {AP)- A Feb. 12, 1978; two other
link between victims in two Franklin County slayings and
counties of the so-called .22- . one In Fatrfield County.
caliher killin'gs was brought
Harry B. Walker, an
out Thursday in the murder in-..esti gator of the Ohio
trial of Thaddeus Lewingdon. Public Defenders office;
Lewingdon, 42, of Glenford, testified Thursday he had
is .on trial hete for the teamed that one of the goilO
December , 1977 slayings of dancers
in
McCann's
Joyce Vermilion, 37, and Colwnbus nightclub was the
Kareri Dodrill, 33, both of former Sarah Jones, grandNewark, and the April 1978 daughter of Jenkin Jones.
killing of Jenkin Jones, 77, of
Lewingdon's sister~in-law,
Granville.
Delaine Lewingdon, also was
He also has heen indicted in a gogo dancer in McCann's
the murders of Robert club at one time.
"Mickey ' 1 McCann, . 58;
She
is
married to
McCann's girlfriend , ThaAdeus' brother Gary, 38,
Christine Herdman, 2fi; and of Kirkersville, who also has
McCann's 77-y 'e ar-old been indiCted for the nine
mother,
Dorothy,
in
murders plus .a lOth in
McCann'S C&lt;llumbus home on
Franklin CoUl)tY.

ST . CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio
(AP ) - Ohio National
Guardsmen
opera t ed '
emergen cy water trailers in
Belmont County today w ease
a shortage made critical by
broken pipes lost under deep
snow and fr ozen g round.
Gov. James A. Rhodes declared a water emergency for
the county and ordered
National Guard trailers in
from Cambrid ge , New
Lexington, Marietta, Logan
.and McConnelsville.
County
Wat e r
Superintendent David Grum
estimated 5,000 persons wer e
affected by iow or no water
pressure in :..:.n area west from .
the county seat to the
Guernsey County line. He
said most of the 20,000
persons in the region live in
muniCipalities or villag es
with . th eir own wate r
systems.
He said the viilages of Belmont, Morristown and New
Athens were tnost severely
affected.
•
Grum said his llknan staff
has worked almost around
the clock for a week , walking
routes of rural water lines

Fred Burson, Shade, Jana is
a senior at Meigs High
SchooL She is president of the
Meigs Cha pter of t'he Nationa! Honor Society and
recei ved a National Merit
Letter of Commendation.
Jana is also listed in Who's :::::::::::::::::::::::::·:;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:::::·:;:;:;:::;:::·:::::::;::::
Who Among American High
FIRST TO FILE
School Students. She parTwo
Pomeroy officials
ticipated in the Ohio Univerhave
filed
pelltions of
sity Summer Scholarship
candidacy
for
nominallon
Program, is a member of the
to their
and
reele
ction
Marauder marching band,
posts.
the pep band, the concert
They are Clarence An•
band, and the jazz band.
drews,
Mayor, and Mrs.
She is a member of the
Jane
Walton ,
clerk·
Shade Methodist Church. Her
treasurer.
Both
are
hobbies include playing the
Republicans.
trumpet, reading and ice
Deadline for flUng of
skating.
candidates
for the June
James Brent Patterson ,
Primary elections in
first boy to receive the Good
Pomeroy and Middleport is
Citizenship award given by
I
n.m. March 22 .
the DAR in Meigs County , is
:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::·:::;:;:;:::::::::::·::::.
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Patterson1Racine.
He is president ·of the Nationa! Honor Society at
Southern Hi gh School where
he is a senior and. is the yearbook editor.
He bel ongs to the Modern
Musi c Masters , the Drama
Club, was an Ohio University
American History Contest
finalis t, and has appeared in
the junior and senior class
plays and variety shows.
· He was the Da nforth award
winner at Southern, was on
the tra ck team, and scholarship team, and s ings with the
Southern High School choir.
He attends the SuttonCarmel United , Melodist
Church and his hobbies are
guitar, photography, ~n&lt;i
reading . He plans to ailend
Rio Grande College where he
· .will major in elementary

looking for a major leak .
''My men are walking zorn·
bies almost from walking
trunk Jines in two feet of snow
or more for up kl 20 hours a
day," he said. "When a man
thinks he has a break he has
to move a pickup truck load
of snow and chop through a
foot or mor e of ice or frozen
groUnd.
" We have been walking this
. whole countryside where the
mains run, cross country,
along creeks and highways.
Some of these snow drifts are
waist deep . hut if we don't
stay on the line routes we
might miss the break ....
" As soon as we find her , it .
won 't take long kl fix, m aybe
six hours."
He said some small wa ter
line breaks were found and
corrected but that there is a
major disruption along 15
miles of trunk line between a
main pumping station and a
·
buried storage tank.
Frank Jewell, counly
disaster services director,
sa id two nursing hom es
experienced low water
press ure and that lack of
pressure at fire hydrants
could be critical in event of a
fire.
A third nursing home
thought to be affected was
found to have its own water
supply.
The situation apparently

SCHOOlS IN SESSION
AU Meigs County school
districts were open for
classes Friday. Schools were
clo sed in the Eastern and
Meigs Loca l districts Thurs·
day. The Southern district
was in session all day.

began in early January and
became critical last week.
City Water Superintendent
J ames Schrum sa id the
county began cutting back on
it s normal 150,000-gallon
daily supple ment to St.
Clairsville in early January .
He said city .customers
responded to requests to
conserve water and so far
th ere has been no curtailment
of water.
Grum blamed the problems
on excess ive r a in in
December which soaked and
softened the ground and then
severe freezing in January
that caused the saturated
earth to shift . He feels this
shifting ea rth may have
caused a major rupture in a
trunk line .
,
'
The county water system
normally processes about 1.5
million gallons of water daily.

No quorum,
no actions
Due to a lack of quorum, no
action could be taken during
a special meeting of Pomeroy
Village Co uncil Thursday ·
ni ght . Co un cil informally
discussed the vacancy
created by the resignation of
co uncibnan Larry Powell.
Attending were Mayor
Clarence Andrews , Bill
Young, Harold Brown and
La rry Wehrung , cotincibnen,
and Betty Baronick, council
woman who served as clerk
in the absence of Jane
Walton.
Mrs. Walton Is a surgical
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center.

No present emergency .

education

COLUMBUS, Ohto tAP) - Although there is no
emergency at the present time, heavy snowfalls and frozen .
streams are increasing the possibility of.flooding throughout
Ohio.
Local officials and residents of flood-prone areas are being
urged by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to take
necessary precautions to reduce damage in the event of
flooding .
'
"Serious Ooods could occur In Ohio if spring snowmelt is
accompanied by heavy rainfall," said Robert W. Teater, the
director of the department .
Flood damage in Ohio has been sharply reduced due to a
system of flood warning and proper planning, Teater
explained.
•
The Flood Plain Planning Unit of the department's
Division of \fater Is creating more public awareness of flood
hazards, he said.

CLEVELAND lAP)
Here are the numbers
drawn Thursday ·io the
Ohio Lottery: blue 040,
white 75, gold 7, winathon
87651.

CANDiDATES FOR BASKETBALL SWEETHEART - Candidates for basketball
"Swee!J:leart" at Southern High School are front, 1-r, Carol Morris; wri Chapman and
Kathy Adkins ; hack, Becky Crow, Debbie Brown and Bunni McGraw. The winner will be
crowned during halftime activities of the reserve game Saturday, Feb. 17. Southern hosts
Point Pleasant .
•
,!

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