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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Mnnd" Y. Feb. 19, 1!179

Montgomery arraigned in municipal
court, hearing scheduled Thursday
lnv·esti gation continued
througbout the weekend into
the Sat urday morning
shooting death of Michael
Bane, 19, Gallipolis.
Bane sustained a fatal shotgun blast to the chest shortly
before 3 a .m. Saturday while
visiting the dormitory room
of Rio Gr ande Co ll ege
student , John D. Mont-

Heavy
(Continued from page I I
hitched a kayak Ill a pick-up
truck and took turns sliding
through the streets.
Weather s e rvi ce
spokesmen said it was the
colctest February ever in
Detroit, with temperatures 16
degrees below normal, and
the coldest in 84 years in
Washington, D.C., where the
mercury has climbed above
freezing on only one day since
Feb. B.
Temperat ure r eco rd s
tumbled throughout the
Midwest and East thi s
weekend . A ·sampling : 9
below in Youngstown, Ohio;
3/ below in Traverse City,
Mich.; 31 below in Sault Ste.
Marie, Mich .; zero in New
York City ; 52 below in Old
Forge, N.Y.; and 11 below in
Erie, Pa., where police

officer Harry Staszewski
said, " You f~el your nostrils
tingling in this kind of
weather.''

gomery, 22, Zaleski, 0.
Montgomery, who has beeri
cha rged with murder in
connection with th e death,
was arraigned in municipal
cou rt thi s. morning. A
preliminary hearing has been
scheduled 2:30 p.m. Thursday. Bond was set at .$50,000.
Montgomery is still in
custody in the county jail.
Inve stigating O!fi ce r
Preston Mustard, of the
Gallia County Sheriff 's

HOSPITAL NEWS

Disrharges, Feb. 17
Veterans Memorial Hoojlital
George Arnold, Jonathan
Saturday admissions Harley Koenig, Reedsville; llradley, Lana . Caldwell,
Norma ·Goodwin, Pomeroy. Gloria Carpenter, Jeremiah
Carpenter, Ethel Cook ,
Saturday discharges Timothy Brewer, Marion Wilma Cooper, Carol Curtis,
Department. said this small points of entry, with no · Kesterson.
David Railey, Pearl
morning that the results of an visibl e pattern of . shot
Deweese , Troy Fraley,
Sunday admissions autopsy parformed Saturday distribution.
Goldie Lawson, Minersville; · Farrey, Evelyn . Goo~h ,
The gun, which has ten' Wallace Hatfield, Pomeroy; William Hamilton, Letha
should .be available by
tatively been identified as Helen Slack, Racine ; Robert Long, Brett Mahone, Lewis
Wednesday .
Bane was shot once in the belonging to Montgomery, Gardner, New Haven ; Mitchem, I .ena Raike, James ·
chest at point blank range was reportedly being kept in Barbara Fetty; Langsville; Rake, James Rhodes, Wayne
with a single shot; 12-gauge the dormitory room by the Charles Lewis, Pomer.oy.
SeKlon, Madge Shahan,
college student.
shotgun.
Sunda} discharge• - None. Catherine Shiflett, Ruth StebGallia County Sheriff
Two other shots had been
bins, Ralph Thompson, Roy
fired into the ceiling of the James Montgomery said this
Ward, Jeremy Willis, Zelia
In - morning that the weekend
dormitory
room .
Wood.
Holzer Medical Center
vestigating Officer Timothy investigation so far has yet to
Births, Feb. 17
Discharges, Feb. 16
Brumfield said Saturday that reveal a motive in the alleged
Charles Ball, Debra Bishop, Mr. and Mrs. Steven Martin,
both shotgun blasts had murder .
'
Rosemary Boggs, Chad daughter, Jackson
penetrated the ceiling lem·ing
Clary, Terry Denney, Daisey
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Exline, Mark Floyd, Judith Richards, daughter, Jackson
Gaines, Linn GArner, Mrs. Elsworth tusk, Denise
Thomas HarkinS and son, . Danise Mitchell, Louise
Mrs. Virgil Hartley and son, Morfe, Mrs. Raymond Neal
Alene Head, Philip Hen- . and daughter, Mrs. · Ken
(Continued from page I )
neman, II, Benson Jones, Newsome and son, Leonard
Donald
Kirk, Lula Lawrence, Webb, Yvonne Zornes.
50 years and to his loyal of Meigs County for choosing
SHOVEUNG WHITE STUFF - J. R. Hunnell is
Robert
Legg, Jeanette Births, Feb. 18
employes.
Webster who he termed .
shown helping to dig out dOwntown Pomeroy froin the
Leislie, Mrs. Randy Lieving Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Gheen,
Knight also introduced his "truly a man of disctinction."
heavy snowfall that hit Sunday and early today. Hunnel is
family, his wife, Evelyn, son Webster has worked very aod daughter, Mrs. $andy son, Racipe.
pictured manning a shovel here on Court St.
Bill, son Vincent, and his wife diligently for the mentally Matherly and son, June
Mayes, George Miller,
Susa~ . daughter Charlotte retarded and is chairman of
a~d her husband, Roger.
the Mental Retardation Robert Moore, Beverly
Norse, Kristy Redmond,
Hobstetter, president of the Board.
Hilda
Roush, Brian Smith, 1
Pomeroy National Bank,
Judge Webster in his
Bertha
Stanley, Alvin
KABUL, AfK~U~nistan ( AP)
extended his thanks to all opening remarks told Jones
Dubs,' 58, was kidnapped release ol a political prisoner
Stewart,
Elmer Stover, - Afghanistan today denied last Wednesday by four nam\!d Bahruddin Babes. ·
those who attended for the that he considered him a true
honor bestowed upon him.
friend . Webster thanked Robert Swann; Doris Ward, it mishandled the abduction gunmen while being driven to
of American Ambassador work. He was taken to a
Last year Hobstetter Struble, I!au! Simon and Lucille Watson.
.
Births,
Feb.
16
Adolph Dubs, who was killed (lowntown hotel, wbere his gunbattle. Dubs, 58, was
marked 50 years with the Crow for the honor.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobbie Bays, in a gunbattle between pollee abductors demanded the critically injured during t~
"You will never know how
bark. He introduced his wife,
and his kidnappers.
Marcia and recognized all of much I appreciate this honor, son, Rodney.
fightil!g a11d died after being
"I see no reason for any ashis employes of the bank that to all the people here I extaken to the embassy
pect for which we could be
attended. Hobstetter was the press my thanks," Webster )linor accident
dispensary.
blamed," Vice Premier
first president .or the · stated.
Haflzullah Amin said.
Pomeroy Chamber of
"I wish I could eonvey what
'!be United States has acAmln denied that · Soviet
Commerce which was . is 'in my heart. I live in a checked Sunday
cused
Afghanistan
of
disofficials
had advised Afghan
organized in 1941 and had 100 small town, I love Meigs
Two cars were damaged in
police on how to handle tbe
members. "I owe a lot to County I am glad to live in a collision on Locust St. at regarding its request to avoid
incident. Soviet officials also
Meigs County," H6bstetter Meigs 'county, I share (he. 2:19p.m. Sunday Middleport force and to negotiate for
Dubs'
release.
have denied the American.
concluded.
,.
sorrow and joy of my friends police said.
Amin,
speaking
at
a
news
allegation'
that Russian!(
Richard Jones, president of here," Webster observed.
A car driven by Hugh
said
the
eonferr"ed with Afghan police"It is people such as you · Ogdin, .. Middleport, backed conference,
the · Meigs County ComPomeroy pollee are in- during the incident.
:
mission~rs and manager of have done great things here.! from the Cardinal Market ambassador had refused a
police
escort
that
was
offered
vestigating
a
breaking
and
the Meigs Branch of the would embrace aU of you if I into a car owned by Jeff
Athens County Savings and could" Webster stated.
Howell, Route 2, Pomeroy, three months ago. Amin also entering at the Elcelsior Oil
said Dubs had been warned Co., E. Main St.
Diplomatic sources have:
· Loan, introduced Manning
Webster introduced his parked on Locust.
was
being
followed.
that
he
Poliee
Chief
Jed
Webster
said
two Soviet pollee,
Webster ..Jon~s placed Judge wife, Mary, and added her
Snowy conditions were
"We
consider
the said the incident occurred be, advisers and a Soviet·
Webster m high esteem.
name too should be listed on blamed. No charges were
(American)
protest tween 5· p.m. Saturday and Embassy security official
Jones gave a . resume of the award. "I have sincere filed police said.
comple~ly baseless .because
7:30 Monday morning.
conferred with Af(!han au;·
Webster's life and li~ted appreciation for all of you for
we took measures with a high
'A glass was broken out of thorities
during
the
many of hiS accomplish- · honoring us tonight," Web,
Spirit of hwnaillty and (for the front 'door to gain en- kidnapping. The Soviets said
ment•.
ster concluded.
the) purpose of saving the· life trance and a safe was opened its officials were present only,
"Manning had to leave the
Struble
in
closing,
or
the ambassador," Amin with an undetermined to make sure that no Soviet·
POLICE
TARGET
bench because the law made remarked "People here have
said.
PAULDING,
Ohio
(AP)
amount of money taken.
citiz~ns were endangered. ·
h~," Jones noted . "A man a willing~ss to work. There
He
said
he
hoped
his
A
representative
from
the
·
The identities of the low:
The
Paulding
pollee
With such capabilities had to is a mutual feeling of love for
of
govenunent's
expression
Bureau
of
Criminal
Inkidnappers,
who pollee say.
department
has
beeli
the
retire as Probate Judge the citizens, and they work
because the law said so," for a better tomorrow for a target of some brassy van- grief over Dubs' death will vestigatlon was ·enroute to were killed during the
help ease the strain between Pomeroy Monday morning to gunbattle, have not been
dals lately . .
Jones commented.
better Pomeroy.
assist with the investigation. established ret, Amin· said,
'lbleves hroke in the front Kabul and Washington.
Struble extended thanks to
"I hope you don't retir.e as
we need you in Meigs Dwight Goins for his door late Friday when the
County," Jones remarke.d to assistance. Dinner Music was office was lf"'pty and made
Judge Webster.
provided by Margaret off with several handguns
"No one has been given so Neuman who also ac- and a rifle. Also taken were
a
little for so much," Jones said companied on the piano for a camera ' equiphlent,
of Webster. "You have bee.n a sing-along. The invocation selection of h11ndcuffs and
man.
of
outstandmg was given by Tom Bowen and containers of chemical Mace.
B E N D ® F o r cooking convenience, it's the
Police Chief Chuck Watson n ...
multitude, a respected at- the benediction by the Rev.
estimated the loss at $7,000.
torney, dedicated, helping Robert Graves.
those stricken, a public official good and decent,"
Jones told Webster.
Comes commended the
... where craftsmen still care®
with
Chamber and entire citizenry

Emotional

Mishandling charge denied

__....
Faithful Margaret
Neuman was on hand
Saturday night to entertain
with
dinner
music.
Margaret
also
accompanied in a sing-along.

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BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) along the Red River to within
- Hanoi claimed today Its 60 miles of Hanoi.
forces stopped all of China's
There were no reports that
invasion columns, killed the Vietnamese Air Force
more than 3,500 Chinese sen\ up its own MiGs to
troops and destroyed almost challenge the Chinese
80 tanka sirice the Chinese raiders.
attacked Saturday. Western
'!be Soviet Union warned
sources said China may have China to withdraw its troops
halted its drive after "before it is too late" and
achieving its goals.
said it would honor its
Vo Vlin Sung, Vietnam's obligations to Hanoi under
ambassador to France, the treaty of friendship and
charged the invasion had the cooperation signed last year. .
"tacit approval" and possibly However, the amouncement
the "complicity" or the by Tass, the official Soviet ·
United States. He linked it to 11ews agency, indicated
the American visit of China's Moscow would not aid its
Vice Premier Teng Hsiao- Vietnamese allies with an
ping and said at a Paris news attack across the Soviet-Chiconference "an attitude of nese border.
American encouragement"
The U.S. government told
was clear.
the Chinese government It
With Asia's newest border $'ongly disapproved of Its
war in its third day, Western invasion and urged the Soviet
intelligence sources in govenunent not to attack the
Bangkok sail! the Chinese Chinese,
officials
in
hav~ halted their offellBive
Washington said. But they
after driving no more than six said they saw no threat to
miles into VIetnam and may U.S. interests, even if the Sobe withdrawing some Units. viet Union got involved.
They said the Chinese
A senior White House
objective was extremely official said be had seen no
limited, ''to teach Vietnam a evidenCe to indicate China
lesson."
planned to overrun Vieblain
though
he would not predict
There were no reports from
hOw
far
tbe Chinese would go,
Peking on the fighting. But
the official Peking People's
Daily said China "does not
CLOSED TODAY
want 'a single inch of
Vieblamese soil; what we . CINCINNATI (AP) - '!be
want is a peace!ul.and stable . Cincinnati Union Stock Yards
frontier. After hitting back at were closed Monday because
the aggressors as far as is of the Presidents DAy
necessary, our fr&lt;J!tier forces holiday.
Trading will resume on
will tum ta guard 'strictly the
Tuesday.
frontier of our motherland."
'!be Vietnain News Agency
also reported that the Chinese
PARTY PLANN)':D
Air Force bombed faetorJes,
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
power plarita and commu- Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
nication facilities Sunday, in- bold a pizza party at 7:30p.m..
flicting "terrible damage " Tuesday at the home of Judy
and causing nlany casualties. Crooks In Middleport. ' The
Intelligence sources in cultural program will be
Bangkok said · Chinese MIG presented by Debbt: Buck and
fi.ghter-bombers attacked . Roberta Maidens:

~il\'~··~t····~·

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The Premium Non-Stick Surface

«'

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PARKING PROBLEM - Motorists driving into
Pomeroy Monday and lucky enough to make it, had the

problem of where to park. However, Monday afternoon
village street department workers were able to get to the
chore of clearing the upper parking lot.

Karr named
to council

•

MEETS TONIGHT
Syracuse Council will meet
this evening at 7:30 p.m.

TO MEET WEDNESDAY
A ·special meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council has
been set for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Village Hall.

VOL NO. XXIX

NO. 216

.

-,-_

By The Associated Press
Surprised by a fast-moving
storm that dumped up to two
feet of snow, the East today
awaited an equally sudden
thaw with temperatures that
promised to feel positively
balmy after weeks in the
deepfreeze.
.
.The aftermath of the storm,
whi ch approached blizzard
conditions in some places as
it raged from Virginia to Connecticut after burying the
South on Sunday, was
sometimes grim.
Looters were arrested in
Baltimore, Washington's
Birthday
sales
were
canceled,

schools

Philadelphia and New Yorli ·
were shut down for most of
Monday .
Baltimore police said they
arre sted more than 200
persons in at least 700
instances of looting after the
city 's worst snowstorm on

record - 20 inches in a 24hour period. Officials said
bakeries, liquor, grocery,

auto .supply and furniture
stores were looted .
Mayor William Schaefer
imposed a 10-hour curfew
beginning at 7 p.m. Monday .
Police used four-wheel-drive
vehicles for their patrols.
About two feet of snow fell
on parts of New Jersey
Monday . Temperatures
today were to climb into the
upper 30s to low 40s. The

were

closed, mass transit was
paralyzed and major airports
in Richmond, Washington,

By V. SANGUANPONG
Associated Press Writer
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP )
- Intelligence sources said
today China's invasion
columns have resumed their
advance into Vietnam, but an
official in Peking reportedly .
told a diplomat that Clubese
troops have halted their drive
and will soon pull out of
Vietnam.
A Lebanese Embassy
source in Peking said Chinese
Deputy Foreign Minister Ho
Ying
told
Lebanese
Ambassador Elie J . Boustany

that Chinese forces would
move no deeper into
Vietnamese territory and
would soon
withdraw,
Japan 's Kyodo news service
reported.
It said the Foreign Ministry
official did not divulge a
timetable for the expected
pullout.
Another Japanese report
from Peking said Chinese
troops in north China have
been alerted for possible war
with the Soviet Union and
civilians
have
been
evacuated from some border
The intelligence sources in
Bangkok said that after withdrawing some. units Monday
the
Chinese · sent in
replacements and pushed
ahead a mile or more.
Previously the Chinese
were reported to have
penetrated no more than six
miles along any of the various
invasion corridors they used
across a 450-rnite front.
Kyodo said Soviet and Vietnannese sources in the
Chinese capital said heavy
fighting was continuing
between Chinese
and
Vietnamese forces in the area
of Lao Cai, a northwest Vietnamese city just south of the
border.
.
Since launching the
invasion Saturday, China has
stressed that it would be a
limited military operation
aimed at "teaching a lesson"
to Vietnam.
The Bangkok sources
reported Monday that the
Chinese advance had halted
and some or the invaders
might be pulling back,

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MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

TUESDAY, FEB.RUARY 20, 1979

15 CENTS

National Weather Service
said it was wo early to tell if
flooding would be a problem.
The weather service said
Monday'S snowfall in the
state was equivalent to less
than one inch of rain .
Showers were forecast for
later in the week, and
temperatures are to rise to
the upper 40s throughQut the
week.
In New York City, where
about a foot of snow fell Monday, temperatures today also
were to be in the 40s , after
nearly two weeks of below
freezing .
We ath e r
forecasters were concerned

that a quick melt could cause
flooding .
More than 14 inches of snow
sock ed Philadelphia , and

By The Associated Press
Milder temperatures are
moving across Ohio today
as the large high pressure
zone that brought cold
weather to the stale
Monday moves off th e
Carolina coast.
The National Weather
Service says skies will be
cloudy tonight , with a
chance u£ precipitation. 1'\.
winter storm moving into

the Mississippi Valley is
e&lt;pected to push snow Into
northwestem Ohio and rain
or freezing rain into south-

western Ohio tonight. The
loW temperatures will be in

the 20s and 30s.
Rain Is expected Wednesday, with highs ranging

from the lower 40s in the
northwest to near 50 in
southeastern sections of

the slate.

temperatures there were to

rolled their tractors into the
city ea rlier this month to
protest
th e
Ca rter
administration's agricultural

po li cies, were allowed to help
plow streets and tow
motorists out of snowdrifts.
Alon g . the Ne w Jersey
coast , Monday's stonn cut off

rea ch into the upper 30s
toda y.
And in Washingwn , 18.7
inches of snow fell Sunday
night and Monday - the largest. snowfall dur ing a 24-hour
period in 22 years. Temperatures today were to be in the
mid to upper 30s.
Nearly all federal civil

Beach Island, a 12 11z~nile­
long stretch of sand. Abo ut 20
inches of snow closed the
Long Beach Island Causeway
aridge - the only land route
to and from the island .
Although electr icit y was out
for a while. people made do .

ser vice employees got a oneday extension on their three-

wonderful ," said Rose Lippy,

residents ami

HEv er yone

~;uests .on

was

lnng

j ust

a housekeeper at the island 's

day Washington 's Birthday Ship Bottom Motor Lodge.
holiday . J&lt;' armers, who had "We were mostly full over the
weekend. and when the snow
came. most of the guests just
stayed over.
" We all pooled our food,
and one of the guests had a

China's invasion forces ·withdrawing

-~

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2 QT. COVERED SAUCEPAN ..
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10" SKILLET (SHARES
DUTCH OVEN COVER)
8-3/16" ROASTING RACK
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enttne

East residents await quick thaw

areas .

w

inch snow. Later in the day with temperatures climbing
above freezing some of the snowstarted to clear .

•

at

(USPS 145-960)

BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Monday night named
Rod Karr to fill the vacancy on Pomeroy village council
created by the resignation of Larry PoweJl.
Karr is commander of Drew Webster f'ost 39 American
Legion,, and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dick 'Karf,~ Jr. ,
Middleport. Powell's term expires this year.
In other business council gave the first reading on an
ordinance for the paving of U.S . 33 from Butternut Ave. to the
. Pomeroy-Mason bridge. The paving will cost $2,500.
Council earlier passed an ordinance to pave US 33 from Nye
Ave. to Sycamore Street. It is hoped the paving will get
underway this spring.
Co!lllcil approved the third reading of a pay increase
ordinance calling fbr a seven percent increase in wages to all
village employes..
Council also approved the second reading of a fair housing
ordinance to comply with the HUD grant.
An ordinance increasing the fire chief's salary from $300 to
$500 a year was given its first reading.
A request to transfer a liquor license from Shamrock Motel
to Morris and Johnson , dba, Rainbow Inn.was tabled for the
second time.
Council agreed to avertise for bids on a new police cruiser.
Mayor Andrews reported the only difference in specifications
was that the new cruiser calls for a back glass defroster.
· Council gave Mayor Andr.ews permission to purchase
paint for two rooms in the Ciiy Hall and a stairway.
Council agreed to draw up a contract arrangement for
polic,e officers employed by the village.
Under terms of the agreement , an officer who receives
police training but quits the first year, must reimburse the
'!illage 75 percent of the cost of his schooling.
If the officer quits after the second year he must pay 60
percent and 50 percent should he leave within three years.
Harold Brown, councilman, suggested ceuncillook into the
possibility of maldng application for a FHA grant along with
the HUD grant. Brown stated that HUD would look more
favorable if another federal agency was involved. The grant is
for rehabilitation of homes and eXtension of the sewer project.
Mayor Andrews' report showing collections of $6 110.20
was accepted. It is believed that the total was the l~gest
collection ever in the history of Pomeroy.
Attending were Mayor Andrews, Brown, Larry Wehrung,
Lou Osborne, Bill Young and Betty · Baronick, council
members, Chief Jed Webster, Steve Hartenbach, Jr., J. R.
Hunnel. The meeting was opened by prayer by Lou Osborne.

CARS COVERED - Many Meigs residents found
their automobiles "missing" Morlday morning after a 10

' • •'::...~11

ICY RIVER- Large quantities of ice were flowing
Ohio
as a
result of the recent freezing temperatures. Officials hope that the ice will create no major
problems in the river this spring.

Residents of the Tuppers
Plains area interested in
taking emergency medical
,technician training should
respond immediately to a
survey being , made to
determine interest in the
program .
. The program may be
established to provide an
E.M.S. unit to serve the
Tuppers Plains area. Persons
interested in taking the
training should call Terry
Deem, 667-3933 ; Richard
Spencer, 667-6130; Clifford
Longenette; 667-3890, or
Charles Weber, 667-6335.
1

kerosene hea ter," she added .

arousing speculation that the
invasion was over. But U.S.
analysts in Washington said
at that time they were
unaware of any withdrawal
or of a slackening of the
assault.
The.local analysts also reported indications of Chinese
aerial reinforcements, saying

they believed more MiG-19s Vi etnamese claims.
"So we all gathered around
Vietnam's big C&lt;immunist tile heater in th e lobby, talked
and MiG-20s had been moved
to South China fields within ally, the Soviet Union, was and made soup ."
st riking di sta nce of the reported to have cancelled all
In the South , snow and ice
border war. But the sources military leaves and put its that slammed into the area
discounted reports of Chinese troops on the alert. The before th e storm moved north
air attacks along the Red report was considered to be a beg an melt ing Monday.
River north of Hanoi. Thai deterrent show of force for Tempera tures were to reach
intelligence officials said the Peking's benefi t rather than into the 50s today across
only planes the Chinese were th e prelude to an attack along muc.h of the region .
the long Chi nese-Sov iet
using so far were spotter
planes di rec lin g art illery border .
Earlier the Krem lin
fire.
Peking said it invaded its warned China to withdraw
southern neighbor Saturday "before it. is too late" and Deputies probe
to put a stop to Vietnamese
attacks across the border and
theft com plaint
not to take Vietnamese
The Senate ot the ll3th territory . There wa s
Meigs count y Sheriff
General Assembly of Ohio speculation that the Chinese
James
J . Proffitt reports
Clouu; tonight and Wedhas approved a resolution to were also trying to pressure nesday with rain Wednesday. deputies are investigating the
in to
congratulate William C. the · Vietnamese
l-&lt;1w tonight in low .30s and theft of approximately $30 in
Quickel for being named Man withdrawing from Cambodia , high Wednesday near 50. quarters from the Racine
of the Y~r by the Pomeroy where their invasion two t'hance of precipitation 20 Laundromat recently.
months ago ousted a governChamber of Commerce.
Deputies· also received an
percent tonight, 70 percent
The reoolution states, In ment allied with China.
accident
report fr om J ames
Radio ·Hanoi claim ed Wednesday.
part : " Selection for this
E. Counts, Union Ave .,
coveted honor is fitting l.!onday that Vietnamese .;.;:::·:::::::::::····:::::-.-.·.·.·:·:·.·.·.·::::.:.:.:_:;:::.:.:.:;:;:;:_:_: Pomeroy, who sa id that on
recognition of William forces have killed more than
Saturday afternoon he was
EXTENDED FORECAST
Quickel's exceptional service 3,500 Chin ese troops and
traveling
west on County
Thursda y through
to the economic stability and destroyed more than 100
Road 18 when a deer ran into
Saturday: Fair Thursday. the side of his pickup truck.
philanthropic institutions of Chinese tanks . It gave no
Rain Friday and fair
the Pomeroy area. His in- , Vietnamese casualties.
was slight damage to
Saturday.
Highs In the 40s th There
Peking gave no reports on
volvement in almost every
e
tru
ck own ed by
in the north to mid 50s in Ridenour 's
phase of the insurance the progress of the fighting or
Gas ,
the south. Lows in the 30s. Chester . The Bottled
business has earned him the casualties, and there was no
deer was aprespect and admiration of all way to verify or disprove the
parently not injured.
(Continued on page 10)
his colleagues, associates and
friends .
"Active in the lnternatimial
Order of DeMolay, the White
Oak Baptist Church, the
Middleport Masonic Lodge
and the International Order
of Job's Daughters, William
Quickel has used his superior
financial management experience to benefit groups
outside the business world.
Indeed, this distinguished
individual has never been
content to accept a passive
role in any organization with
which he has been affiliated
,and, as a result, has proven
himself to be a dynamic
leader.
" In applauding William
Quickel's willingness to
assume important leadership
roles
in
key
local
organizations and his
devotion to the betterment of
comrn_unity business, we note
it is tllrough the exemplary
efforts · of such dedicated
individuals that Ohio's cities
and towns continue to prosper
and provide the citizenry with
SNOW PILES- There was plenty of snow everywhere in Meigs County Monday. These
an ever-expanding array of
high
mounds of snow were created as Middleport Village workers cleared streets for traffic
progressive civic, economic
now
.
and religious 'Prog~ams. ;•

Quickel

applauded

Weather

'

'I

l

�3- The Daily Sent10ei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. :m, 1979

IN WASHINGTON
.-'

'•

. Donald F. Graff

1

No sign of tax refonn

Of money and masterpieces

WASIUNGTON (NEA) -~Logic would suggest that the great
tax revolt which began with California's Proposition 13 m1ght
eventually provide Impetus for genume reform of state and
local tax systems But 1! hasn't happened yet
Pressure for tax and spendmg reductions remains strong
thts year, w1th lnrutahon proposals due for consideration mat
least 37 states But tax reform - as opposed to reduction seems to be gomg nowhere.
A year-long study of state and local taxes by the Coaltt10n of
Public Employees shows tremendous d1spar1t1es m the
relative fatrness of the tax systems in the 50 states and the
District of Columbia
"There's not a doubt m the world that taxes are unfair," sa1d
CAPE executive dtrector James Fanner. "The way state and
local tax systems work now 1s that low- and moderate-mcomc
farrulies carty most of the load. The laws have been
mampulated to the pomt that they condone and even encourage large-scale tax av01dance by b1g corporatiOns and the
rich."
The CAPE study analyzes sales, mcome, busmess and property taxes m all 50 states, plus the way m which tax laws are
enforced and admimstered.
States wh1ch attempt to follow progressive tax policies,
geared to ab•hty to pay, receive high rankmgs m the CAPE
study. Those that rely on regressiVe taxes w1th httle offsettmg
cons1deratton for low- and moderate-mcome farruhes get low

ma;Yk~hese standards, the 10 best states m terms of tax equity

are, m order- Oregon, Michigan, W1sconsm, Cahforma, Mmnesota , Idaho, Hawaii, Colorado, Maine and Alaska.
The 10 worst, startmg at "the bottom and working upward,
are Alabama, MISSISSlppl, Wyorrung, Tennessee, Texas, LowSlana, Rhode Island, Indiana, Kentucky and Illinois.

Inexplicable response

Land bill

ERA deadline: no dead issue

HEALTH

'

It,

Even in hy!J&lt;'r-inflationary times, $1.2 billion can buy a lot.
Qmte possibly even, the vast improvement m public broad-,
casting proposed by the latest Carnegie CommissiOn report lit
case you missed or skipped over the considerable attention to
that document m recent news columns, 1t surveys the present
and poten!tal of noncommercial television and radio. and
comes up with a clutch of recommendations for restructuring
them to better serve the public and "help the creabve spmt to
flourish''
Key proposals mclude replacmg the existing Corporation lor
Public Broadcasting and the Public Broadcasting Service
(themselves creat10ns of a 1967 Carnegie Commission study)
w1th two new bodies A Public Telecommunications Trust
would head the system with responsibility for administration
and long-term planmng. A Program ServiCes Endowment,
serru-autonomous of the trust, would underwrite programming.
Funding would be increased from the current level of less
than $500 rrulhon annually to around $1.2 b1ll10n by 1985, w1th
half to come from federal appropriations. A major source
would be fees raised from llcens10g commercial broadcasters.
Facilities would be expanded to reach 90 percent of the US.
populatton.
As the Carnegie CommissiOn sees it, the result would be a
communications service lor the viewing and listening publics
rn
1tul**"''"**"ft********************************** .... "' .hat "can illuminate the dark corners of the world and the dark
II'
"'f corners of the rrund. It can offer forums to a mu)titude of
llvoices ... Above all, it can add to our understanding of our own
0
tmnerworkmgsandofoneanother"
:
&amp;.0
t · Well, maybe. At the very least, the report's authors are cer·
ll:~Binly flourishing creatively. But without doubtmg their
f*•******************** ........ *'~~~****************"'*":i"mcerlty or dtsm1~smg the baste conclusions, q~est1ons mtght
"~.be ra1sed concernmg some pomts and asswnpt10ns. Conunerctal television, for example, comes m for scathing cnlicism for
1ts concentra!ton on "audience maximization" and for denying
Americans "what other societies consider vital: a flourishing
public commumcat10ns serv1ce uncensored by commerctal
imperatives.''
No argument, but It should not be forgotten that the creative
spmt
has been known to flourish m commercial broadcasting,
By ROBERf E. MILLER htter and damage to the the Senate where there IS bein the early days when money was in shorter SUJ&gt;particularly
,\ssoctated Press Writer env1romnent They include heved enough votes to
ply
and
commercial
constderat10ns were for that very reason
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP ) the Ohio Alliance for Retur- complete enacbment
no
less
tnlperattve
Much
that came out of that era is now con·
Nwnerous hearings are on
Opponents of a bill to reqmre nables wh1ch circulated peltsidered
classic
S1d
Caesar's
"Show of Shows," Erme
liken! depos1ts on beverage lions to get the btll before the tap thts week, mcludmg a Kovacs, the long-run "Omnibus," the last perhapa yet to be exsenes by the House Finance
cans and bottles will get their legislature
and
1ts celled in bringing culture to a mass audience.
chance to ,testify Wednesday
Comm•ttee Cha~rman Committee
As for today's audiences, the Nielsen-eompuled multitudes
subsecllons
on
Gov
James
A
before the House Energy and Thomas P G1lmartm, Dwho
respond to the Jiggle appeal of "Charlie's Angels" may
Environment Committee
Youngstown, plans to conduct Rhodes ' $17 7 billion budget
not
in
the least care to have the dark corners of the world, let
For the past two weeks, a second hearing for bill Offtcwls of Ohio's higher
alone
their
rrunds, Illuminated at whatever cost. The ultimate
hearmgs have been devoted opponents on Feb 27, after educatiOn mst1tuhons are
cost
of
pounng
vast nwnbe~s of public dollars into expanded
to proponents of the wh1ch the panel is expected to among those who wtll testify.
be simply the subsidization of what concreative
effort
could
The Senate Educatton and
controversial leg•slatwn vote on the b1IL Its fate
tinues
to
be
a
v1ewmg
ehte
Health Committee will start
auned at cuttmg down on appears uncertam.
And
in
the
process,
public broadcasting might lose
The legislature, for the past hearmgs Wednesday on a
something
of
present
value
-Its d1verstty. The fragmentation
rune years, has declmed to maJOr bill to allocate a record
of
production
among
a
large
number of loosely linked stations
pass similar b1lls, heeding $3 3 billion to prunary and
may
be
an
organizational
weakness,
but it IS also a strength.
warnmgs from the contamer secondary education over the
There
1s
a
vanety
and
freshness
10
programrrung
ortglnating
and beverage industries or riexftwo years The proposed
from
Boston
and
Philadelphia
to
Atlanta
and
San
Francisco
jOb losses and higher pnces. amount would represent an
public
broadcasting
might
lose II
that
the
networks
lack
and
mcrease
of
$6:16
m1lllon
over
They are back this year with
restructured
and
centrally
funded
the current bieMium .
.-,1mdar admomtions
Particularly with federal funds. The Carnegie proposals
A proposal under wh1ch
However, the alliance sa1d
stress
careful msulat10n from goverrunent control, but this
Wilbur E. Baker, dec. to at the outset that 1f the Oh1oans would have to carry rrught be easier m the stressmg than the achieving. W1th the
Pearl I Bak~r. Cert. of legislature doesn't act th1s at least $25,000 m motor bucks inevitably goes influence.
year, they w•ll collect enough vehicle llab•hty msurance, m
trans., Olive.
As for bucks, the corrurusston may be inadvertently taking
additional
Signatures to put order to get veh1cles
Donald W. Mayer, Unda L.
somewhat
u. •arne attitude for which the networks are often
proposal on the registered, wtll get 1ts initial
Mayer to Mickey Williams, the
criticized
that money IS the remedy lor shortcomings, parhear~ng Tuesday m the
Edith, Joanne Williams, Lot, , November ballot ,
ticularly
m
programrrung. Pubhc televisiOn's expenence m
Senate ElectiOns, F1nancial
~·ormer U S. Ambassador
Pomeroy.
this
res~oct
"The Adams Chronicles," estimable but costly
Corbett 0. Cleek to Mary H. W1lham B Saxbe may tesltfy lnshtutions, and Insurance to produce anu short of gripping, comes to mind -has not been
Committee
agamst the bill as a
Cleek, .SO acre, Sutton.
too encouragmg
of the newly
representative
Donnie Whtte, David Wh1te,
It might be welcome to be able to pass out bundles with inLela Wmdon, B1lly L. Win- formed Ohio Alliance for
structiOns
to create masterpieces, returns guaranteed. But it
don, Mabel King to Edithe E. Energy, Growth, and Jobs.
rarely works that way.
He sa1d that he or someone
King, .93 acre, Chester
from
hts group wtll tell the
The Daily Sentinel
John M King, Sandra P.
committee
that by attacking
\USPS U~!\001
King, Dolores J. Kmg to
Wayne Peyton, Kathleen bottles and cans "we'd be tgPeyton, 18 acres, 11h acres, normg 80 percent of the hiler
problem. Moreover, such a
13~, acres, 15% acres,
DEVOTED TO mE
measure
could cost Oh10
Rutland
INTEREST OF
more than 3,000 sk1lled jobs
MEIGS-MASOI'J AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
and $45 million m payrolls."
Clly lldltAJr
Saxbe sa1d his coahtwn faDAVID BUSKIRK
Adnrtlslng MnTIJiger
vors a total approach to the
Published dlllly except Saturday
problem, to elimmate "most
by The Oiuo Valley Publishing
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Because they're "just a couple~'
Compan)·Mull!medw, Inc,
Ill
of the htter problem and not
Natoonat
Court St, Pomeroy, Oh1o 4576!.
young fools 10 love," Patty Hearst and her pohcemanflance
Basketball Aosoc1alion
just a small port10n." The
Busmess 0£f1ce Phont! 992· 2156.
AI A Glonce
Bernard Shaw probably will get married April 1, says Shaw.
former U S senator and
Editorrnl Phone 992-2157
Eastern Conference
Second class postage pa1d ot
Shaw made the comments after returning to work from a
attorney
general
d1d
not
Allanllc Dlvtston
P'Waif~f~ 1Dh~~vert&lt;smg represen- 1 , two-week vacation with Miss Hearst following her Feb. 1
W, L. Pet GB elaborate
Washmgton 39 18 684
The House 1s expected to
"''''"· Landon "'"'"'""· 3101 prison release. He told a reporter the wedding site was not yet
Euclid Ave, Cleveland,Oh•o44115
Chosen but likely Will be a church.
Ph1la
33 22 600 5
vote Wednesday on a bill that
Subscription rates Delivered by
'
.
New Jersey 28 28 500 lO'n would remstate Ohto's death
corrler
where
ova1lllble
76 t~n,. per
MISS Hearst served 19 months In priSOn on a bank robbery
New York
25 36 410 16
week RyMolor Route, whete camer
conviction. She helped rob a San Francisco bank five years ago
penalty, replacmg one that
Boston
23 34 404 16
-Sel"'.tee nOI. available, One month,
hi1e on the run WIth her Sym bionese Ll be ration ''nny
-, "-$3
25
By
~nan
Ohio
and
w
va
w
Central 01vis1on
was ruled unconstitutiOnal
10
San Ant
35 25 583
last July 3 .bY the U S . One _ Year, 12150, s.. months; kidnappers. She announced her engagement while in prison.
Houston
32 26 552 2
114 ;o, Thre~ monlhs, 18 ;o,
A Valentine's Day wedding date originally was announced '
El s~ whtre t:l2 00 year, Stx months
Atlanta
30 29 .508 4'1' Supreme Court
$17
oo;
Three
monlhs,
$9
oo,
but
that was changed because her seven-year sentence was not
Passage
1s
expected,
which
Cleveland
24 34 414 10
S"b"·ropt&lt;on prlt'e mc\udcs Sundoy conunuted by President Carter as early as had been expected
Detr01f
22 37 373 12'12 would send the measure on to
TtmL'S-5e:.1_1!J..nel.
•

Ed ztory
• • l Qlnznzons
• •
.I:'

conSI"dered *

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
In a related deveiopment, the Nationai Governors Assoc1aCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Oh10's legislature is being
bon has JUSt concluded 1ts own study of the vanous tax and asked to enact a law to
spendmg limitation proposals that appeared on the ballot last protect
the
state's
November m 18 states.
mcreasmgly tnlportant and
According to M1chigan Gov W1lliam M1lhken, the analysiS productive farmlands.
found no discermble relationship between the relative tax
Rep Eugene Branstool, 0.
burden m a state and the voters' deciSIOn to tmpose or reJect Utica, a farmer himself, says
fiscal controls.
mlllions of acres already
'Voters m some states wtth relatively h1gh tl''&lt; and spendmg have been lost, not only to
levels reJected fiscal controls, wh1le voters 1n other states w1th state and local governments
relatively low levels tmposed them," M1lllken said.
through the power of emment
For mstance, voters approved local property tax mittat1ves domam, but also to private
m seven of the 10 states where such proposals appeared on the non-agr~cultural
IOterests.
ballot. But in fiVe of the seven states where initiallves were apHIS blll, under study hy tbe
proved, the local property tax burden was etlher at or below• House Agriculture and
themed~anforthecountry as a whole.
Natura 1 Res 0 u r c e s
"ObviOusly, the level of taxatiOn alone does not explain the • Committee would allow
tax revolt," M1ihken observed, although the ~GA study of- voluntary .;,eatwn of agfered no guesses as to why voters acted as they did last fall.
ricultural dlstncts by
Interested farmers and
landowners mutually
desirmg protection.
We may not have heard the last of the arguments over extenCounty commissiOners
ding the deadline for rallf1cation of the Equal Rights Amend· would have to approve such
menI.
districts, for a period of e1ght
While women's groups concentrate on seekmg support for years, after wh1ch the
the ERA from three more states by the new deadline of June participating parties would
30, 1982, foes of the amendment are preparmg to challenge the have to renegotiate their
conslltutwnality of the extensiOn voted by Congress last year
agreement. Before acting,
Lawsuits are bemg prepared by the Mountain States Legal commissioners would hold a
Foundation, a conservative-{)nented non-profit group head- public hear10g
quartered m Denver. They wtll be f1led before the origmal
Once the desiguation was
deadline, March 22, arnves.
offtclal, the state or 1ts
subdivisions could not take
land from the agricultural
dtslnct until after what
Branstool called a thorough
revtew of alternatives and an
tmpact statement.
"My bill is not ironclad. It
doesn't lock things up, but 1t
will tend to reduce the pressures on our agricultural
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
land," the licking County
lawmaker said.
His bill resulted from a report by a subcommittee of tbe
Ohio Land Use Review ComBy Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
The Big M1ddle. Other mittee, a panel which conDEAR DR LAMB - Is 1t readers who want this tssue
necessary for rruddle-aged can send 50 cents w1th a long, ducted hearings around tbe
women to get b1g stomachs stamped, self-addressed state on a broad package of
and all out of shape? I am 50 envelope for 11. Send your re- proposals designed for
years old ana have begun to quest to me in care of this future, mostly local controls
nohce how women my age newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, on all of Ohio's land.
The parent committee's
look I am 5 foot 3 and we1gh Rad10 C1ty Statton, New
package
was introduced late
130 pounds. I am small-boned York, NY 10019. This ISSUe inand thmk I'm about 15 pounds cludes exerc1ses that could be last session in the Senate by
overweight. I have been try- used to help reduce tl1e girth. Sen Kenneth R. Cox, Q.
Barberton, the review
mg but 1t seems tmposs1ble to
You might discuss this w1th committee 's chatrman It
lose these pounds
your fam1ly doctor who 1s
I had a gall bladder opera- fatruhar w1th your surgery. failed to move.
He is expected to bring 11
lion five months ago I walk At the very least, I'm -sure
back
agam this year, but
about two rrules a day, but that he will agree that you
Branstool
said he feels tbe
I'm afratd to try any other ex- can he on your back and .
ommbus
b1U
will be too conercise I have heard women voluntanly contract your abtroverSial
to
be passed. Cox
gam we1ght durmg and after dommal muscles, lower and
and
his
committee
members,
the menopause. Is thts true?
upper.
Contracting and including Branstool, were
DEAR READER - I'm r e l a x 1 n g ,
afra1d 1t's true that women do ,contractmg and relaxing will met w1th hostility in some
tend to gam at the t1me of the work the abdommal muscles areas of the state when they
menopause and thereafter, without puttmg them under aired the plan at 1977
bearings_
but that doesn't mean that excess load. This is another
Residents of the mostly
you have to Of course, hav- way people w1th back trouble
areas assailed the
rural
mg recently had abdorrunal can also help to strengthen
nohon
that government
surgery and not havmg been thetr abdominal muscles.
rrught
try
to dictate the use of
aule to do any abdomunal CX·
If you're pernutted to do pr1vate land, sweepmg aside
erctses since then would leg hft exercises, which are
by
committee
cause you difficulty m keeJ&gt;- the ones that work for the claims
that
,
members
mg your wa1st measurements lower abdomen, you rrught lie orderly plann10g IS ratwnal
vital.
down
on your back, bend your
Branstool, who headed the
I'm pleased to see that you knees as you draw your heels
subcommittee, sa1d he thinks
reahze that whether a person toward the buttocks, at the
has excess fat depends upon same lime lilting your knees his more limited bill has a
both how many calones he up so you are literally better chance, although be
anticipates opposition from
eats and how many he uses. shortening the length of your
realtors
and developers wbo
That 's why I hke to see a sen- legs. Then push your feet up
want
no
shackles on their
sible diet combmed w1th a and out as you straighten private transactions
sens1ble exerctse program to your knees. As you do this, be
His legislation is similar to
lose fat
sure to contract the lower ab- a law which has worked very
Walking two miles a day, dominal muscles This way
for a woman of your we1ght, you don't have any Jerky well in the New York state,
uses less than 120 calories, leverage agamst the spme or Branstool said.
but if you multiply those abdominal muscles while
limes 365 days a year, that's WQ.rking the lower muscles
equivalent to the calories in that contribute to the "lower
12 pounds of fat a year.
pot. !I
I'm reluctant to tell you you
Try to mcrease your walk·
Isaiah was probably the
should start domg abdorrunal ing. Take advantage of every f~rst advocate for good
exercises to lighten up your opportunity you have to be roads.
alxlominal muscles, because "physically actiVe. It's the ac"lo that day shall there be
I don 't know about the status cwnulation of repeated sub- a Jilghway out of Egypt to
of your recovery.
rnaxunal exercises that helps Assyria, and the Assyrian
However, I am sendmg you to use calones dunng the shall come Into Egypt, and
the Egyptian Into Assyria
The Health Letter number day
.. ''-lsa 19:23
3-7, G1rth c;ontrol : Avot&lt;ling

•

Tournam(!nt
play
begins
tonight
SPORTS

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

...-.

"

-'

&lt;I

t

•
I'

Opponents get chance

'

..

.'
''

Meigs
Property
Transfers

~'~~--...·-

"

76

M1dwest Division ·
Kan C1ty
37 21 .638
Denver
32 29 525 6ln

Mi lw
Indiana
Ch1cago

26 35 426 12'12
25 34 424 12!12
21 37 362 16

Seattle
LosAng
PhoenIx

36 21 632
36 23 610 1
35 23 603 1'12

Berry's World

Pacific Div1s1on

Port land

San D1ego
Golden Sf

29 27 518

61n

30 31 492 B
27 J2 458 10

Monday's Games

Q

No games scheduled

Tuesday's Games
Phoenix at New York
Houston a1 Washington

Atlanta at Cleveland
Seattle at San Antonio
Portland at Ch1cago

Golden
Angeles

State

at

Los

.'

snow

.,

t

Oh1o H1gh School
Basketball

59

66

Amelia 42

Purcell

N Alabama 72. MiSSISs ippi
Col 71
N Caro-Charlotte 93,
Davidson 83
N. Caro Wilmington 85,
Maine 6-4

NE Louistana 82, Georgta
So 70

,.

S. Alabama vs Campbell,
ppd, snow
S Carolina 79, Georg1a Sf
76
Stetson 71, Samford 75
Tennessee St. 81. Tenn.
Chattanooga 64
Vlrg!Dia Tech 76, Cl n
cmnati 75

Midwest
E. IllinoiS 88, Butler 74
Eisenhower 79, Robert~
Wesl 74
Ferris St. 94, Oakland 68

..:;
:•
••~

3

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)- The New Mexico trio that made
the first trans-Atlantic balloon crossing will be In a Kentucky
Derby-coonected race, but they won't be riding horses.
Ben Abruzzo, Maxie Anderson and Larty Newman, who
piloted the Double Eagle II on its historic flight, will compete
1 April 28 in the Great Balloon Race, which will be held in connection with the Kentucky Derby Festival.
Tl)e historic 3,105-roile flight of Double Eagle II began Aug.
11, 1978 and lasted 137 hours, 6 minutes, ending near Mlserey,
France, on Aug. 17.

;
.."'....•
.

3..."

'
"What do I need w1th a magic lamp? I'm
loaded wtlh oil' ' '

AWARNING RHYME
NEW YORK (AP) - There
Is an ancient piece of racetrack doggerel which offerg
advice to anyone abo'lt to buy
a horse. It goes like this:
"Ohe white foot,

tide him for your life.
Two white feet,
give him to your wife.
Three white feet,
send him far away.
Four white feet,
keep him not a day."

J,.

0

-

Denver 75, Pan Amencan

Crooksvill e ended the vcar

Portsmouth, the defending
Class AA state tourn8111ent
champion, also posted an 111-&lt;l
regular season record The
Trojans, however, had the
st1ff:::' '•"hl, '101shmg w1th a
307-290
margm
over
undefeated
Youngstown
, Ray en
Uhnchsv11le
Claymont, 16-1, was llurdranked m Class AA w1th 197
pomls
Ind1an Valley South, the AP
poll king m 1972, 1973 and
1976,
lost
only
to
Newcomerstown m 18 games
thiS wmter The Rebels rolled
up the most Impressive
margm of the three diviSional
wmners , totalmg 313pomts to
254 for runner-up Botkins, 2110
Mansfield st Peter's, 17-3,
the mythical state champion
m 1974 and 1975 and the
defendmg state tournament
king, fm•shed third in Class A
With 240 pomts
Wtthrow, assemblmg •ts
first unbeaten season smce
1965, has one of the best b1g
men m h1gh school basketball

anywhere, 6-foot-11 LaSalle
Thompson. The semor center
averaged 22 4 pomts and 24 3
rebounds per game th1s
wmter
Portsmoutll , stocked w1th
three ~egulars from its 1978
champ!onshtp team, has a
stnng of 26 stra•ght v•ctortes
over two seasons It's the first
perfect regular season for the
Trojans smce the 1921 team
went 8-0 and was coached by
Dtck Hopkms Sr , the father
of current Portsmouth Coa( h
Dtck Hopkms Jr
Indian Vall ey South 's lone
setback came 1uth Larry
Huggms, a 1,000-pomt career
scorer, s1deimed w1th an
ankle spram . Huggms •s the
th1rd and last son to play for
h1s dad, Charlie Huggms, the
coach of the small school
power at Gnadenhutten tn
Tuscarawas County
The youngest Huggms, a 6-3
semor who plays any position
on the floor, aver aged 2.1 B
pomts thiS season H•s older
brothers Bob and Harry were
also all-state performers
In Class AAA, Cleveland St
Jos eph hmshed fourth,
Fmdlay f1fth, Celma sJxtll,
I. Toledo Scott seve nth,
Mar•etta e1ghtll, Grovep01 t
nmth and Chilltcothe loth
COLUMBUS, Oh•o lAP) How a pane l of sports wr1ters
and broadcas1ers rate s Oh1o

boys h1gh school basketball

teams m 1he f1nal Assoc1ated
Press poll th1s season { 10
get the ball ms1de for Robb1e pomts
for f1rst to 1 pomt for
or (freshman forward Dale) loth I
Solomon . But when we got
Class AAA 1. Cmcmnah
pushed we had to go to the W1throw, 18-0, 339 pamts.
2 Ketter1ng Alter 17 1, 301
peruneter and Dexter Re1d
3 Canton McKm ley, 17 1,
took the shot from the corner. 252
"Robbie d1d a great two4 Cleveland St Joseph, 16
way JOb He was guarding 2. 186
5 Fmdlay, 16 1, 174
(Cmcinnati semor Pat)
6 Celona, 17 1, 128
Cwnmmgs, and the btg guy
7 Toledo Scott. 15 2, 95
had 24 pomts - but Wayne
8. Manetta, 16 2, 82
9 Groveport, 16 I, 74
rqade hun earn every one.
10 ~hliilcothe. 15 2, 51
Maybe h,e IS ~ommg of age."
Other schools rece1v1ng 10
Badger agreed
or more points 11 Wafren
"We just got out-powered.
Robmson has come around
tremendously, even smce the
last time we played them,"
Badger satd ''They were too
strong for us on the boards "
Robmson fmtshed with 19
pomts, tops for the Hokies ,
who improved to 11Hl overall
and 3-9 m the conference
Cummings had a game-lugh
24 pomtsand also hauled m 16
rebounds for Cmcmnat1,
which dropped to 12-13 for the
season and 4-7 in Metro play.
In other basketball act1on
Monday mght mvolving Ohio
teams, Cumberland beat
Central State, 91-86, and
Defiance drubbed Goshen,

104-llB

We st er n

Rese r ve 45 12
Akron Central Hower 42, 13
Mount Healthy 39 , 14
Cleveland West Tech 29 15
Akron Copl ey 22 16 Man s
f1eld Mad1son 20, 17 Tol edo
Star t 19, 18 (lie) Cl eveland
Glenv ill e dnd All1ance 17 20
Napoleon 15, 21 Cmcmnali
Elder 14 22 Ath ens 13
Class AA
1 Portsmouth
18 0 307
po1nts
2 Youngstown Rayen 18 0

290
J

-,

Crooksville

IS

also a team

that 1s hot at the foul hne
Tomght at Me1gs, defendin g Sectwnal champ1on

4
\93

balanced sconng attack m

\\hlch all f1v e starters
averaged m double figures
promtse to have the Southet n

crew m t11 c fmals agatn
f1m Brmager IS averagmg
J:l pomts pe r contest and
JUnior Dave For eman at

Cleve land La t1n

the rate of 12 per outm g
Jumor .l,Jck Duffy an d sem01

15 3

'

5
Mill er sbur g
We'4_t
Holm es 17 1 170
6 W11Jard 16 1 132
7 Be ll a~re , l 7 1 118
8 Dayton Je ff er son lJ 2

87
62

Coach Ca1l Wolfe go agamst
hapless HaMan Trace wh1ch
fini shed the year at 1-15
Southern, on th e other
'hand. won 1ts third SVi\C title
m a row w1th an 1mpress1ve
12-5 overall record
Southern has been m the
Sect10nal fmals at Me1gs fo•
fl\ e stra1ght years , "mnmg
the last two !tiles and !rips to
t'hllhcothe for d1stnct pia}
Fme team play and a

crnter

9 Orrville 16 2, 63
10 Colu mbu s Mtffl1n

15 3

Other schools r cc c1v 1ng 10
or more po1n t s 1l Wh eeler s
burg 55, 12 Bel l vil le Clear
Fork 35, 13 Swanton 30, 14
St eubenv ill e Catholic Cent ral
26, 15 Ott alfo.a Glando1 f 25
16 Km gs Mdls K1ngs 20 17
Ne l sonv il le York 19
18
Chag r• n

Fall s
16 ,
19
Warr ensvil le 14 20 Bu cyrus
Wynf ord 12 , 21
Lora111
Ca th olic 11 22 (t1 e) M.:m on
Elgm and South Po mt 10
Class A
1 Gna denhutt en lnd1an
Vf'll ey Sou th 17 1, 31 3 po1nts
2 Bo fk 1n s, 20 0 254
3 Mansf teld St Pe t er s 17

3, 240
4 Sebnng . 15 I 174
5 Mogadore, 17 1

~ )36

6 019 Washtngton Buckeye

Traol 16

1

IS

toss1ng m pomts f'.l t

Dave r'mdley are r1 veragmg

We ask the nght questions We dig for every
honest deduction and credit We take the
time needed because we want to be sure
you pay the smallest leg1t1mate tax That's
another reason why H&amp;R Block should do
your taxes whtchever form you use, short
or long

120

H&amp;RBLOC~

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THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

9 Zanesv1 de Rosec r a ns, 16

2

99

10 Canal W1nchester

II pomts, and sen•or Dw1ght
Hill 1s nght at 10 pomts per
game
L&lt;admg the HaMan Trace
attack ts Paul Shaffer w1th 17
pomts per game, follo,.ed
closely by Ron Pack Other
starters for the Wildcats are
Ca rlos Campbell, T1m
Beaver, and M1ke Webb.
Southern beat the Wtldcats
tw1ce th1s season, 91-58 and
79-50 But on the tournament
trml, records don't mean a
thmg
North Galha goes agamst
Kyger Creek m the first game
of the mght at 7 p m
North Ga llia posted a
season record of 8-9 and a 6-4
mark m the SV AC
Durmg two league games
th1 s season , the P1rate s
defeated Kyger Creek tw1ce,
once 1n an overtime and the
other by JUS! a slim margtn
Kyger Creek goes Into
tonight's tournament game
w1th a 4-14 overall record
Ins1d e the SVAC, the
Bobcats had a J-9 mark,
shanng last pla ce w1th the
Ha nnan Trace Wildcats
Scmor forward Von Taylor
has been KC's b1g sconng
plus this season averagmg
nca r!) 22 pomts per outmg
Scn1or guard Sam Smith and
center Ttm McComas have
led the P1rate attack

"We'll take
all the time
needed to
the job right:'

7 South1ngton Ch alk er, 17
1 110

15 2,

50
Ot her schools rece1 v1ng 10
or more pomts
11
New
Ph 1lad elph1a Tu scarawas
Cen tral Cathol1c 49
12
Cmc mnat1 Summ1t Country
Day 46 13 Lees Creek East
Cl1nton 32, 14 Richmond Dale
Southeastern
29,
15
Strasburg 25, 16 Ada 21, 17
Woodsfield 16 18 Newbury
12, 19 Adena Buckeye Wes t

618 E MA IN ST.
POMEROY, O
Open 9 A M to
6 P M Weekdays
9 5 Saturd&lt;ty

PHONE 992 3795

2nd- BROWN ST
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OPEN TUES.
THURS &amp; Sal
9A.M -5PM.
PHONE 773 9128

10

Now you can call
32people
without even knowing
their phone numbers.

Don Thornton scored 23
points and Mark Meyer
added 22 for Def1ance, while
Goshen's Gary Nofsinger
topped all scorers with 26
pomts The v1ctory lef, the
Yellow Jackets at 17-6, while
Goshen sank to 5-13.

Whether you re mvo lved m comm unity aciJvJtles
or busy organ1zmg on oct1ve househo ld , lhmk
how much lime you spend looking up and
d1almg the some phone numbers , every day
Well , you could keep domg thmgs the same
old way or yo u could come to the GTE Phone
Mart and gel our AutomatiC D1aler 32
II remembers ihe nu mbers you ca ll mos l
often and d1als them for you oulomatJcOIIy All
you do "f1nd the nome and press the button
Four of the bultons are co lor coded for
emergency num bers for th ose !1mes when
every second counts And they re easy for bds

A Look At Quality-It Costs Less In The Long Run

FRIGIDAIRE
Quality Comes In
Many Ways.

POMEROY, 0.

With a 6-1 ~ mark . but the
team played no smgle A
teams all year 6-1 Jumor
Da le Va lley lc.tds the boys
from up North They play a
slow, controlled type offense
th at Wdlls fo r the good shot,
avcragmg abo ut 40 pomts per
contest

Uhrtchsvillc Clay mont

16 1 197

Nev -Las Vegas 95, Utah 86

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

'

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, OhiO (AP) Cmcinnati Withrow and
Portsmouth won their first
Oh10 boys h1gh school
basketball poll titles today
wh1le Ind1an Valley South
claimed 1ts fourth state
ratmgs crown m etght years.
,\ statewide panel of sports
wnters and broadcasters,
making the annual selections
for The Associated Press,
accorded
all
three
comfortable margms over
their opposition
Withrow, the Class AAA
tJtleholder, became the f1rst
Cincinnall b1g school smce
Elder m 1961 to win an AP
state poll title Iromcally, 1t
was Elder's upset over
Kett~rmg Alter, topranked at
the !tme, that cleared the way
for the Tigers' move to the
top m January
Withrow, 1~, rolled up 339
pomts, 28 more than runnerup Alter , 17-1 , and 87 m front
of No 3 Canton McKmley, 171

Bea rca ts lose tl•1.,
in final Secon dS

Arlington 103
Far West
68

IS

Senior

Lamar 103, McNeese St 83

992-5130 or 992·5139

.

~v Ar

I~ J nor1

Don

SW LouiStana 115, Texas

'214 E. MAIN ST.

1;
•

thro

per contest

anoth er s t~rtcr \\ho h"s
played soltd ball all year
Sophomore Joe Bowers w1ll
be the fifth sturtcr. and
so phomores Brct M.1th e &gt;~ s
and Gene Cole also ~&lt;Ill sec
actiOn as Will Ke~th Wolfe , a

Portsmouth Trojans crowned
Class AA champs by AP voters

Aust 1n 56

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE

"

1n

throughout th e seaoon
averaging nca r!) ten pomts

hne as the 'I ornadoes of

A&amp;! 75
E Texas St. 76, Stephen F.

SALUTING. FFA DURING NATIONAL FFA WEEK

..

leadmR srnrr-r

and th~rd best m th e area
Spencer also led the team m
rebounds \Hth 12 per game to
go along w1th h1s ~o pomts
Scmor guard Jeff Goebel
also averaged 1n double
figures with 14 pomts per
game, three assists, and four
steals
Junior guard Bnan Bissell
Will be another start er
Bissell has Improved stead1Iv

South&lt; n puts Its title on the

Southwest
Abilene Christian 85, TeJCas

Learning by doing is a basic principle
behind the vocational agricultural education program. FFA encourages that principle. And gives the student-member a
chance for GROWTH.

""

years
Eastern hmshed the year 99 by whippmg Wahama last
week 60-56 Head coach John
Boston's Eagles take on
Crooksville at 7 30 p m
Wednesday m the only game
of the night.
Eastern has been led this
season by senior Dan Spencer
who ended the year as the

prrYinn~

By rhe Associated Press
Cmc10nati led nearly all the
way, but a basket at the fmal
top Bohkittens
buzzer gave Virg~ma Tech a
Last week at Kyger Creek, 76-75 Metro Conference
the Eastern Junior H1gh Girls victory over the Bel)l'cats
rolled to an easy 21-9 lead Monday mght
"Not a very pleasant way
over the hosts Kell1 Headley
to
lose," sa1d Bearcats Coach
led the wmners with e1ght
Ed
Badger. "When you get
points while Lisa Collins led
that close, there are many
the rebounders with six ways to replay the game to
caroms.
Becky Ambrose had four come out a wmner "
The culprit was Tech's
pomts and f1ve rebounds for Wayne Robmson, who
the wiMers, Dee Dalley had
scooped up an offens1ve
six pomts and four rebounds,
rebound and poured m the
and Collins had three points. game-wmnmg basket
Eastern made 10 of 29 field
"Someone (tied to box me
goal attempts and one of
out I rolled around him and
several free throws. Their maybe pushed a httle,"
record 1s now 3-4 wtth thetr
Robinson said. "I grabbed
next game being Thursday the bali and I JUSt laid It in. I
against visiting Trimble.
heard the buzzer go after the
A Roush had s1x po10ts for
ball was coming out through
Kyger Creek, L Sheets had
the net."
two, and C. Beebe had one.
Cincinnati led from the
E
6 7 4 4-21
early gomg, held a four-point
KC
3 2 2 2- 9
edge at halftime and seemed
to have the game in hand,
leading by three With 39
seconds left
But Dexter Reid hit a
Grand Valley Sf 86, Lake
Super~or Sf 62
basket to narrow the gap to
Gustav Adolphus 78, St. one point and the Hokies got
Olaf 67
the ball for the final 14
No Iowa 73, St. LouiS 62
seconds,
setting
up
Oklahoma C1ty 88, Hardm
Simmons 78
Robinson's play.
St Joseph's, lnd SO,
"Robbie got the biggest
Kentucky Wesl 57
rebound
of h1s career - cerSt Mary 's Minn . 94,
tamly the btggest two points
Ham lme 93, 2 ot
SW MISsoun 80. Pittsburg, he could have gotten for us,"
Kan 75
said Tech Coach Charles
Tulsa 79, W Texas St 77 Mmr. "Our plan was to trv to
W1s Oshkosh 117. IndianaPurdue 78

LEARNING

..•"•

nament At Mf"!q&lt;l 1n

Eastern girls

I

&amp;

52 ,

Prmceton 62, Colerain 59
Ham1 llon Taft 64, Mid
dletown 53
Harnson 99, New Rtch
mend ' 43
Made~ra BS1 Wyom1ng 66

Murray Sf 66, W Kentucky

64

By The Assoc1ated Press
Monday's Results
Logan Elm 60. C~rclevlile
C1ncmnati

Domtn ton 84

E Kentucky 100, Tennessee

Wednesday~

lnd1ana at Denver

Tnmty 47, Tufts 46, at
South
Alabama 90, Flanda 76
Alabama St 76, D1llard 66
Appalachian St. 83, E.
Tennessee St. 56
Citadel 75, Marshall 69
E Carolina 99. Old

Tech 72
Furman at VM I, ppd, snow
Georgia Tech 61, Col of
Charleston 43
Kentucky 20. Georg•a 74
Mid Tennessee 58, Austin
Peay 56, ot
MISSissippi St. 73. Auburn

NEW YORK (AP) -Singer Tony Orlando says he lived and
worked "night and day" in a Hollywood saturated with drugs
and that he never pa1d for cocaine because, "People would
say, here's a little gift."
- - - - - . Orlando also says that wben he was hospitalized in July 1977
for a nervous breakdown, he was suffering from "di-ug psy·
chosis, which is not too far removed from an acid (LSD) trip."
Orlando, in the March 1ssue of Ladies Home Journal maga·
zme, says a "three-month involvement with cocaine" triggered his nervous breakdown.
The article reported it IS common for Hollywood agents to
provide clients with drugs, especially cocaine.
,QrJando said he was having ''personal and professional
problems," and cocaine became a "synthetic boost." The
drug's effects became "a nightmare" later, he said.
The magazine said that just before h1s hosp•tallzation, Orlando's Sister had died and his friend, actor-comedian Freddie
Prinze, killed himself. Orlaitdo •s now performing again, but
not With' the duo, Dawn.

Boston at Golden S1ate

Bonaventure 84, Va

St Franc1s, Pa 60,
Balt1more 51
Temple at Rider,' ppd,

'·"

Names •••

Games
Portland at Atlanta
PhoeniX at New Jersey
Phdadelphia ~t Detroit
Seattle at New Orleans
M•lwaukee at Kansas C1ty

St

Commonwealth 76

311 16112

Western Conference

Monday's College
Basketball Scores
By The Assocoated Press
East
Army 76, Bryant 61
Boston U. 87, George
Washington 76
Catholic U at Seton Ha ll ,
ppd.
Duquesne 69, Fairfield 68
Fordham 89, BrandeiS 66
lana 70, Siena 68
Niagara 93, Buffalo 59
Randolph-Macon at Navy ,
pdd, snow
Robert Morr1s SO, James
Madison 48
Rutgers 95, Massachusetts

in the news

New Or l eans 19 42

Storm affects
sports events
By The Associated Press Umversity were put off until
C.ollege basketball, hockey, today and the Philadelphia
horse racing, ·track, soccer, Fever postponed Monday
tenniS and boXIng were all mght's Major Indoor Soccer
affected by Monday's storm League game w1th the New
that left much of the Eastern York Arrows
The semifinals of a natwnal
seaboard under a foot or
more of snow.
mdoor
JUniOr
tenms
at - Port
The storm forced the post· tournament
ponement of the scheduled Washington, N.Y ., were put
basketball game between off unl1l today and today's
lathranked Temple and R1der press conference for World
at Lawrenceville, N.J. Other Boxing Council heavyweight
contests affected mcluded champ•on Larry Holmes at a
Furman at VMI, Catholic U. New York hotel was pushed
at Seton Hall and Randolph- back until Frtday
.The weather problems
Macon at Navy.
In addition, tonight's were not confined to the
AtlantiC Coast Conference eastern U.S. All scheduled
game between Maryland and English Cup soccer games
Wake •'orest at Greensboro, were postponed because of
N C , was put off unhl 1ce and snow wh1le 1n
Scotland; the Scottish Cup
Wednesday night.
Aqueduct, Bow1e, game between Inverness
Keystone, Penn Na!tonal and Thistle and Falkirk was put
Waterford Park all canceled off - for the 27th time.
t\!ld Kansas C1ty Manager
Monday's racmg cards
Bowie and Keystone will also Whitey Herzog spent 25 hours
on planes and in airports
be shut down today
Bowte's track and parking travelmg from Kansas City to
lots were buried under two the Royals' sprmg tra~mng
feet of snow, forcmg camp m Fort Myers, Fla
Herzog started out Sunday
cancellation of the $35,000
but
h1s Kansas -Gty-Atlanta
General George stakes for
flight was diverted to
the first time
· Also wiped out was Monday Memphis because of fog.
night's harness card at After a livehour wait, he
Roosevelt Raceway m the returned to Kansas City, but
New York City suburb of learned that the Atlanta
a1rport had reopened.
Westbury.
So he boarded another
The American Hockey
League had to postpone Mon- flight, th•s time with p1tcher
day night's scheduled game Steve Mmgon They made 11
between the MBine Martners to Atlanta, but a connectmg
and Hershey Bears in flight to Tampa was rerouted
Portland when the Bears to West Palm Beach, agam
were unable to get out of because of fog. When II lifted,
they flew to Fort Myers v1a
Pennsylvania.
The Metropolitan Inter- Tampa and Miami.
"I fee IItke I've been traded
collegiate Track and F1eld
Champtonshlps at Princeton seven limes,'' said Mmgor1

'

By Greg Bailey
Both Eastern and Southern
open Sect1onal roundball play
this week.
Tomght, Southern clashes
with HaMan Trace at Me1gs
High School and Eastern goes
agamst Crooksv1lle at
Nelsonville-York. This IS the
first year Eastern has been m
the Sectional at Nelsonville,
having been in the tour-

The Daily Sentinel ·

!o use too

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LUX BATH SIZE

PLATEX DEOD. · 16'o

SOAP

TAMPONS

4/
WEIGHT REDUCTION PlAN

$1.69 Value

~- 89(
Reg. or Super

Assorted • 75's

P.Y.M.

TUMS

8.5 oz.- 17.98 Value

Value

•s••

,:

~~~~~~~~r·c;~~~i~~~~!~~~ nr~~

· ·

::

TH~; READERS AI. WAYS WRITF.
OEAR HElEN AND SUE :
This is to 1 ' A Parent " who says kids wouW n't give up the ir
own plans just to accommodate U1eir pa rents (i.e., if a ''super ''
date came up and the famil y had schedu1c&gt;d a picnic, "Sis"
would exP€cl her mother to understand why she couldn 't be
there I.
I wouldn 't disappoint my folks if they 'd pla nned something
SP€Cial , and neither would any o[ my friends. If my fat her or
mother were due for an award , of course I'd go, and if I were
invited somewhere else .on thai evening, I'd refuse bemuse
they're very important lome and I'm proud of them .
You predicted " Parent " would get Jots of back-ta lk [rom
' 'fl'Wplewlho don't agree with her. Did she ? - ANGEl.! A
uJ.&lt;..,\11 ANGELIA :
She certainly did 1 Read on:

HE! .F;N AND SUE :
"A Parent ' ' bel that 90 percent or children wouldn 't give up
their own plans for their parents ' pleasure, yet " kids expect
parents to jump at their every beck and call and are terribly
disappointed whenlheydon't.'-'
Our parents and we kids are good friends and we don'l disappoin1 one another. Occasionally something will come up that .
makes us change a "family" date, but we all understand
because it doesn 't happen orten .
We like doing things together, but nobody jumps to
anybody's beck and call around he1·e, and this doesn't disappoint us a bit! - WE THREE TEE NS
RAE-:
1
'A Parent" isn't talking a bout our kids ! We don't
"sacrifice" for them, we enjoy them' And they don 't let us
down. -ANOTHER PARENT
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
" Deserted at 15" complained bitterly about her mother going to work. I see from her letter a spoiled husband and
daughter, but I also see a doting woman who waits on them
hand and foot.
-~
Here's my picture of the trio :
Daughter, hair in curlers, "Mommy, my dress needs hemm·
ing, and Johnny will be here in ten minutes ." or course, Mornmy does it.
Daughter left class work at home - will Mommy drop
everything and rush to the school ? Of course!
.
Husband comes home from work . Dinner is on the table at
5:30sharp, newspaP€r beside his favorite chair.
The house is spotless as usual.
But one day, maybe on her 401h birthday, Doling Motl1er
takes an inventory of her life. Is she appreciated [or her good
works?
Let 's see: Daughter hands Mommy a cheap card : " Ha ppy
birthday, Mom, I would have gotten you something but I saw
this cute outfit at the boutique . I knew you'd understand ... "
Husband gives wife a " useful " kilchen gadget, a "birthday"
peck on the cheek, and a " What's for dinner, Mother •" Has he
forgotten her name'
So Mother begins remembering how she enjoyed working,
B.C. (before children ). She l&lt;!kes classes to sbarP€n her skills.
Now she has a job and self-esteem.
But instead of being proud or her, the family complains
~inner's not on lime, no cookies, Dad's out of shirts .. .
Don'llet 'em make you feel guilty, Mrs. Working Wife . It's
time they learned you aren't their slave.
And to " Deserted " and her dad , be happy and proud for this
new woman, and think, "Why weren 't we more appreciative
b efor e? "
LAURA

turns 92

Kunberly Grueser, daughter
or Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Grueser.
Mrs. Sarah Brown observOthers attending the obser- e'(] her 92nd birthday on
v~ nee were Todd Grueser,
Valentine's Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fischer,
She received many cards
Mr. and Mrs. Don F isher and and tele phones calls, one
son, Willi amstown, W. Va.; from her grandson, Dr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Robert Brown , in Texas.
McDo we l l,
Co lum b us . · F riends s topped by during
Kimberly was presenlcd a the day fo r a visit and were
Wonder Woman (·akc.
served coffee and cake. That
evening Mrs . Brown's family
including the grandchildren
SP€nl the evening and had
dinner with Mrs. Brown. A
birthday c ake was also served .

}

r------..-,

Social 1
j Calendar 1

1
Tim othy Starrfo rd
Timothy William Stafford,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
~ta [ford , celebrated his birthday recently with two parties
at his home.
On Wednesday his grandparetns, Mr. and Mrs . .John
Harrah presenled him with a
clown cake . After dinner was
ser.ved cake ice ci·eain
k o~laid and c~rfee were en:
joyed by his grandparents,
his a unts, Chri s and J ean
Harrah, his brothers, Deron
and Andy, and hi s parents.
Thursday another dinner
party was held with cake, ice
cream and sort drinks being
served tu Bob and Darlene
Ritchie, Bobby and Sherry.
Deron and Andy Stafford, and
Mr. and Mrs. starford. Sending girts were his other
grandpa rents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hubert Stafford and Becky
Rroderic and .Jamie.

WEDNESDAY
MEIGS
Muzzleloaders
C1 b 9
Wd d
t
u '
p.m . · e nes ay a
Jones Boys, W. Mam St.,
p
.
. t
d
om eroy , a 11 • m er es1e

persons welcome.

ANNUAL INSPECTION f
0
p
C
omeroy hapter 80 RAM
~ednesday 7:30p.m. Work on
t e most excellent master
degree. All companions in·
voted to attend.

ANNUAL BREAKFAST
The annual Le nten
breakfast sponsored by Lhe
women of Trinity Church will
be held on Wednesday mom.
.
.
• ong, 7.45 a .m ., feb . 28, 11 was
announced today.
.

.

•

\\\e. CaO\\U&amp;r\\b\e.
.~heor

g~CM«t

•BIRTHDAYS
•ANNIVERSARIES

Yo u ih o ught t he Co nvertible was_go ne·- bu t
it 's bac k in a uniqu ely st y led nn g ·o ne
s ide hi gh f ashio n, on e s id e casual

Announce birth
The Rev. and Mrs . James
Broome , Middleport, announce the birth of a
Renee
dau ghter , Kara
Broome on Jan. 30 at Holzer ·
Medical Center.
Paternal grandmother is
Mrs . Pauline Broome or
Atoka, Oklahoma ; paternal
great-grandmother is Mrs.
Wa lter Copeland, also of
Atoka ; maternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Teasley and maternal
great-grandmother is Mrs.
George Smith, all of Atoka.
The couple are also th e .
parents of two sons, James
Brian age seven, and Stanley
Dale age nine .

-,

~------ .

I .So "a} I
t
Cl
. I

from

$495.
e

Wea r it as a n opa l fo r ca sual wear

e

\

F lip it ove r io Diamonds &amp; Rubi es fo r eve nin g

e

Or c hoose

yo ur

own favo rit e sto nes

qjou Wtugt coWte" see
thig unique ~u~g( ~::.:~~~·"'

GOESSLERS JEWElR:Y.STORE
Mrs. Broome
I
and daughter

$1.55

TUESDAY
SPEC! A L MEETING ,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM , 7 p.m. Tuesday at
temple with work in entered
apprentice degree;
all
Masons invited.
LADIES AUXILIARY of
Pomeroy Eagles Club 2171
Tuesday, 8 p.m . The last
reading of the by-taws.
THE AREA Firefighters
and Emergency Squads
Association Tuesday. 7:30
p.m . at New Haven Fire
Station. All members ur~ ed
to attend. Tour of new fire
Station at New Haven will be
made .
GROUP TWO of the First
United Presbyterian Church,
Middleport, Tuesday at home
of Mrs. Joe Bailey at 7:30
p.m. Jean Moore and
Kathryn Hysell co-hostesses.
Devotions by Mrs. Helen
Sauer.
SALISBURY PrO, Tues-.
day, 7:30p.m . at the school.
Speaker from the Dr parlment of Natural Resources .
Fathers' Night fo be observed.
Ep.,:;rt;KN LOCAL BAND
BOOSTERS, 7:30 Tuesday at
the high school, weather P€rmitling. Final discussion
regarding the new band
uniforms to be held at that
time .
FRIDAY
BAKE SALE Friday at
Dale C. Warner Insurance
Agency, W. Main, Pomeroy,
by Forest Run United
Metbodlst Church .

-

Women or other churches In
the a r e a, along w1th
ministers, are invited to attend . Following the
breakfast a program will be
presented~

Court St.

I Calendar l

$119

to twice the tar.
Confirmed: Majority of high tar
smokers confirm taste satisfaction of
low tar MERIT.
This ability to satisfy former high tar
smokers over a long period of time
could be the most important
evidence to date .that MERIT
is the first real taste alternative
for high tar smokers. .

ASPIRIN

S1.23 Value

COLGATE

$1.08
Value

89(

GAl.

ALKA SELTZER

-National Smoker Study

9

FARRAH FAWCETT

SHAMPOO

or

..

Value$46

FARRAH FAWCETT

Research shows 14 out of 15
rs fi total~taste"satisfaction.

~112

POLISH REMOVER

39(

•

::::

~
By Helen and Sue Bottel

&amp;rahBrown

INGEL'S FURNITURE

WAREHOUSE
(Across from the Gas Co.)
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon1eroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 20, 1979

.

.

i:J~;;rCiij'bOlds dance for Saturday Sweethearts

,J .

.

:
&amp;weetheart banquet of the red hearts and lighted with
• \. Laurel Cliff Free Methodist red tapers by members of the
Church' ·was held Saturday Happy Harvesters Class or
night at ·,Trinity Church, .Trinity Church.
r Pon\l!roy, · .
The program opened with
1 The ' dinner .was served Steve Eblin playing on his
! frotn tables decorated with guitar. ''l .ovP l .iftP&lt;i MP" :mrt
.

'

~

i

· · . ·.
Grange banquet set
POL~J S POl ITER$
Polly

l

l

'the Grange banquet ten·
tatively set for April 20 was
ann ounced at the Saiurdav

t:';~mer

J'

'

·POLLY'S PROBLEM
better time. I was letting the
DEAR POLLY .. My hems down on some drapes
crehm-colored cotton blend and had misplaced the gadget
sweater has red oil paint on I usually use for ripping and
it. Earn afraid to try anything there on the table was the
on it until I feel sure it will clipper. I figured that if it
work.
could cut paper why not
All easy way to remove a thread and fouM it did a betuse~ candle from the glass is
ter job than the gadget made
to p~t it in your freezer upside for such use.
dol'/.n. Tapping against the
When making potato salad
palth of your hand should I boil. the eggs in the same
I remove it without any messy water as the potatoes but take
. digging. -MRS. S.S.
them out when they arc cookDEAR MRS. S.S. - Thank ed.
1
I not only save gas but
1 you :for your Pointer - I had
! several votive lights le(tover another pot. -ROSALIND
; froll} the holidays that needed
DEAR POLLY - To · keep
; to lle cleaned because the refrigerated vegetables fresh
· candles had burned so low. and crisp for a prol onged·
1
Your suggestion worked like period of time I use small
a charm. The wax all fell out brown paper bags rather than
in one clean lump. I left mine the usual cellophane or foil
. in the freezer overnight. ·
wraps. I have bad things stay
' I pope the following will fresh for as long as a month
· work as well for you and · because the brown paper ab' thos~ oil paint spots. Apply sorbS any moisture while the
. turp~ntine to spots to soften, other wraps do not. -' rinse and then rub with bar HOWARD
·
Polly will send you one of
· soap, rinse and launder as
· usual. -POLLY
. her signed thank -you
: DEAR POLLY- Thank you newspaper-coupon clippers if
: for tile newspaper clipper and she uses your favorite
: it coUld not have come at a Pointer, Peeve or Problem in

I

I

fEBRUARY
17-24

t

-.,

Twin Ci1J Gateway, Middleport, 0.
Erwins Gulf SeiVice, Middleport, 0.

Ingels Furniture, Middleport, 0.

Adolph's Dairy Valley, Pomeroy, 0.

Rutland Furnnure, Rutland, 0.
Francis Aorist, Pomeroy, 0.

Moore's, Pomer(!, 0. ·

Kiddie Shoppe, Pomeroy, 0.
Gravely Tractor Sales, Pomeroy, 0.

Reuter-Brogan Ins., Pomeroy, 0.

Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, 0.
.'
Welker's Ashland, Pomeroy, 0.

Meigs Auto Parts, Pomeroy, 0.
heritage house, Middleport, 0.

G &amp; J Auto Parts, Pomeq, 0.
RawHngs.Coats Funeral Home, Middleport, 0.
Valley Lumber,
Middleport, 0.
Meigs Equip., Pomeroy, 0.
Ebersbach Hardware, Pomeroy, 0.
Athens County Savings &amp; Loan, Pomeroy, 0: ·
•-· ,

......

Kingsbury Horne Sales Inc., Pomeroy, 0.
Sewing Center, Middleport, 0.
'
Smith Motors, Pomer(!, 0.
J &amp; R Sport Shop, Pomeroy, 0.
Baker Furniture, Middleport, 0.

Downing Childs Agency Real Estate · Insurance,
'·
Middleport, 0.
..,
Village Pharmacy, Middleport, 0.
Pomeroy Rower Shop, Pomeroy, 0.

.~tLUB '

Sugar Run Mills, Pomeroy, 0.

l)

Rutland Department Store,
Rutland, 0. .
.
Mark V, Middleport, 0.
· Goessler Jewelry Store, Pomeroy, 0.
Margueme's Shoes, Pomeroy, 0.
'

nomin ees inc luded

Scout

The scienlific and technica l

~ervice

unit meeting

scheduled for last week and
postponed due to the weather ,

Brad awa rd s have already been re-

Davis
for
" Midnight
Express," Gary Busey for
"The Buddy Holly Story" and
Alan Bates fo r "An

leased , as have the special
Oscars. The latter included

has been rescheduled for

incomparable

Feb. 27. The meeting will be
held from 7 to 9 p.m. at th e
Meigs · Inn. Topics to be
di seuosed will be the cooki e

Among those awaiting t he achievem ents as a cin ematic
nominations announcement ere a tor arid innov a tor,"

ship drive, day camp, th e

Unmarried Woman ."

Sir Laurence Olivier for his

contributions to the art of
film, director King Vidor "for
his

at

t he

glittering

new

headquarters of the Academy
of Motion Pictur e Arts and ·
Sciences in Beverl y. Hills
were a hundred Hollywood
press agents, all hoping their
studios and clients wo uld
appear on the magic li st .
Publicists with nom inated
film s planned to waste little
time

oefore

Meigs County Fair participa ·
tion, ()fld the· observa nce of
Girl Scout Woek, March 11·19 .
Mrs. Pa t Thoma is th e se r·
vice umt director _

Lantz, the Mu se um of
Modern Art' s film library and
"Supe rm an" for visual
effects.

SHOP

buying

Mason Furniture

pa per s to continu e t hei r

campaigns . An estimated $2.5
million will be spent to win

FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

attention and votes from the
Aca demy's 3,6 00 voti ng
members .
Osc ar nom inati ons are

TRI-STATE AREA

made by in dividual branches
of the Academy, so that

MASON FURNITURE

actors nominate for acting
award s a nd writer s fur
writing. All m ember~ select a

Mon .• Tues. , Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
B:JOto 5:00
Thursday tilll2 noon

choi ce for best picture. The
total Acad emy membership
will vote for th e fina l awards,

OPEN EVENINGS BY
Ar;JPOINTMENT ONLY

whjch will be prese nted
Monday , April 7, in a
ce r emo ny

sH ic, the sustaining member·

cartoon produ cer Walter

advertising space in trade

Herman Grate

te l e vi se d

national\y by ABC from the
Los Angeles Music Center.

Mason. W. Va .

773-5592

•· ·

1

4
••

79¢

YELLOW

.

Citizens National Bank, Middleport, 0.

·

.
3LB BAG

~PPLE!i ..•..•..••••....• :•....••

Pomeroy National Bank, Pomeruy, 0.

WHITE OR PINK ·

· .
· ·

.
5 LB. BAG

GR~PEFRUIT••.•..••••....••.

Middleport Ben Franklin, Middleport, 0.

69¢

TENDER LEAF

TEA BAGS

ONION!i •..•...•.....••.~.~~· ..

69
99

Elliott Ap~~nce II, Pomeroy, 0.

~

100 CT.

$}69

79

DOZ[N

4

..

9
9¢
BOLOGNA ....... .......... ..
SUPERIOR

(By The Ptece)
.

~

~~;

STAR KIST

TUNA
61h oz. Can

79¢

TAB, SPRITE
COKE
8 Pak

AMOCO

~

LARGE EGGS

·M-oTO.R OIL
QUART

.

GRADE B

CANDY BARS
REG. 1.09
6 PAK

$119

·

FRANKIES ................~~.~:..

Clark Bars-Zagnut or
Baby Ruth

"--·

ROME BEAUTY

SJ39

'

SUPERIOR

LB

QUAKER .STATE

Farmers Bank, Pomeq, 0.

$}19
.

$}69

BROUGHTON'S-2% LOW FAT

MILle: .......................~~~LP.~ ..
VALLEY BELL

24 oz.

.

$}19

COTTAGE CHEESE ...........~::0.".••

,
79¢
69
llliPIJ!I!~-----....-.---....._BUTTERMILK ............ ...........
.
MOTOR OIL
QUART

ALL STAR DAIRY

.

lfz GALLON

REGULAR or SUGAR FREE

Ohio Valley Plumbing &amp; Heating, Inc., Pomeray, 0.
Racine Horne National Bank, ·Racine, 0.
Crows Family Restaurant, Pomeruy, 0.
Crafty LJdies Handicraft, Pomeroy, 0.
PJ. Pauly. Nationwide Insurance, P~,
'

Pat Hill Ford, Middleport, 0.

and DeNiro, likely

MEETING RF,SCHEDULED
The Meigs County Girl

ROLL SAUSAGE......... ~~~ ..

!iTE~IC:!i ........······~· ··•• .• ~~. ··

'

Waid Cross &amp; Son Store, Racine, 0.
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, 0.
Teaford Realty, Pomeroy, 0.
The fabric Shop, Pomeroy, 0.
K&amp; CJewelers, Pomeroy, 0.

and the women were urged to annual Oscar presentation
make a dress according to the were to be an no unced here

Voi~ht

RATH

$299
!iTE~IC:S ••••..•.•••.••...•... ~ •.
...u.S.D.A. CH
.• OICE
$
RIB
269

Karr &amp; Van Zandt, Pomeroy, 0. .
...

~

Writer

HOLLYWOOD (AP) night meeting of the Hemlock Films about women and the
Grange 2049 held at the hall.
Vi etnam· War ar e the criti cs'
It was also ann ounced that favo rites as front;unners for
the Pomona Grange will meet the top prizes in this year 's
on March 2 if the weather per· Aca d emy . Award
mits. ·A sewing.contest to be nomin ations.
held in May was di scussed
The candidates lor the 51st

~.S.D.A~CHQlCE

Walker Funeral tbne, Rutland, 0.
Ace Hardware, Middleport, 0.

'

i\ssuciatt.:d Press

to

\~ELMONTICO
$]29
!i1riE~IC:!i •• ~.~··············~~~ ..

Middleport Lunch Room, Middleport, 0.

'·:y.,

lly 11011 :fHOMAS

Mrs. Otto Lohn , Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Mash, Jr , Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Ash, Mr. and
Mrs Ernest Ha ggy.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Fulton-Thompson Tractor Sales, Pomeruy, 0.
New York Clothing House, Pomeroy, 0.

.

ford Jacobs, Mr, and Mrs.
F.rnes't Powell, Mrs. Marjorie
~ ·
"~ ""tt , Rob'm Camp be11 , r.r1c
Hart. Lester Hart, Mr. and

Here comes 'Oscar' again!

Grange Monthly directions. today.
All Granges in the county will
EDYTHE WELCH
For the second straight
be hBving a membership year, th e best actress
Mrs. Edythe.... Ha~ellon
Welch is recuperating at the drive this spring.
category was crowded with
Next meeting will be held solid contenders. Thr ee
Holr.er Medical Center where
she has been. confined to the . on March 17 with potato soup previous Oscar winn ers are
intensive "are unit for the and green salads to be servt.&gt;&lt;l mentioned this year - .Ja ne
past seven weeks. Ca rds may altha! time.
Fonda for "Coming Home,"
For the literary program a ln grid Bergman lor ·' Autumn
be sent to Mrs. Welch in care
· va lenti ne and pres ident's Sonata" and Ellen Burstyn
of the intensive care unit.
theme was carr ied out. Mrs. for ' " Same Time , Nex t
Alice Stockton read "Month Year ,"
Al so
st rongly
of Valentine ''; Rober t supported are Geraldin e
Reed , "Maxims
frotn Page for "Interiors" and Jill
F ebruary P residents", J ane Clayburgh
for
" An
Oval Bookmobile Schedule
Hzzelton, "Love Th oughts"; Unmarri ed Woman ."
Thursday, Feb. 22
Stoc kt on,
Tw o film s about the
Salisbury, 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Stan ford
Letart, 3: 15-3 :45; Rac ine, " Washington and Lincoln"; Vi etnam war are favor ably
Hom e Nat!. Bank , 4-5; Walla ce Bradford and Sylvia mentioned by critics in both
Racine, Wagner' s Hardware, Midkiff, "Be My Valentine"; best picture and best actor
"Comin g
5·6; Syracuse, Swimmin g and Hibe Hilber Quivey and cat egorie s Ziba Midkiff had a skit entitl· Home" with Jon Voight and
Pool, 6:15..'1 :15.
ed " Farmer and Traveler" . "The Deer Hunter" starring
There was apron game by the Robert DeNiro.
entire .group and the son gs,
Other films ranking high as
VISIT HERE
" Let Me Call Yon best ptciure candidates were
Barbara Fisher, Columbus, Sweetheart" and "Smiles."
'' An Unmarried Woman, "
spent the weekend here with
During the social hour the "Days of Heaven " and "Midher parents,. Mr. and Mrs. group enjoyed cherry pie night Express."
James Ma son Fisher.
with ice.cream.
For best actor , in addition

Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, 0.

The Dai~ Sentinel, Pomeroy, 0.

Royal Crown Bottling Co., Middleport, 0.
Western Auto, Middleport, 0.

i

her colunm. Write POLLY's
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Wri~~ht , Mr. and Mrs. Steve
~bl 111
. , Mr. anu
·' Mrs. J ames
r.
Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs. f'Jif·

- - - - - - -... FOODVAI I 'JES

...

Today's Future Farmers of AmeriCa will be tomorrow's
leaders in agriculture. FF.A. offers young members the
opportunity to work and learn through on-the-job training
and various community projects all aspects of agri-business ... the
business that keeps America growing strong. We're proud to support them!

0

"0 How I ·I,ove Jesus." Mrs. r ecorded pian o accompcmi: taking part.
Atten(ling t he banquet were
Donna Gilmore read the low · mcnt by hi s daugh ter .
The group pl11yed the !11e Rev. and Mrs. Floyd
chapter from I Corinthians,
and !.loyd Wright had prayer. newlywed ga me with Mr. and Shook, Mr. and Mrs. F'J oyd
There was a solo, "The Spirit Mrs . Ernest Haggy, Mr . and
of Jesus Is In this Place" by Mrs. Mike Wright, and Mr.
the Rev. Floyd Shook to and Mrs . Charles Mash, .)r'

V. D. Edwards Insurance, Pomn,, 0.
Ellis &amp; Sons Sohio Senice, Micldlepa(&amp;, 0.
Ridenour Supply, Chester, o.
Baum True Value S1ore,.a.ter, 0.

FRIDAY
ONLYI

o:.

THURS. ONLY

• PEPPER
-.
•

•

..

8

PAK

16 Ot/ BTLS; .
Plus Deposit

'

RC or 01 ET

.

79~

REGULAR PRICE ...... ;....... 99•

-SUPER MARKET .;.. OPEN DAILY 9 TO JO P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10 .
Food Stam

We Meserve Ihe

To limit Quantities ,

.8

.

RIT~ ·

1&amp;oz. ·Bns. ·9 9 e
Plus Deposit

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb . ?Xl, 1t79

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

RogerBollen

... AND I OF COl)[&lt;9e,

WANT AD
CHARGES

THIS 16 MY De:N ...

-

'

.

-

Business Serviees

'"'

EXPERIENCED

------ ----

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

-r

Service............ ,..................

Today iD History
By The AssociDied Press
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 20,
the 51st day of 1979. There are
314 days left in the year.
Today's
highlight
in

history :
On this date in 1962, astronaut John Glenn became the
February 21, 1979
Secret ambitions you 've been
harbenng for some ttme stand
an excellent chan ce of becomtng a reality this comtng year.

Aim high . Keep your powder
dry
PISCES (Feb. ZO·Morch 20)
There is no m-between wtth
you today You 're either a
dynamo or you are a dud . You ' ll

fare belter if you slrike a happy
medium . How to get along w1th

other signs ts one of the
sections you'll enJOY in your
aO-new 1979 Astro-Graph Letter Get yours by matlmg $1 for
each and a long , selfaQdressed. stamped envelope
lo Astra-Graph , f'.O Box 489,
Radio City Station , N.Y. 10019.
Be sCJre to specify birth sign.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) In
trying to be ntce to everybody
you could forget to be kind to
yourself. and yield too easily to
someone 's ways that beneftt
onjy him
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Just
because you 've got tt'le determination loday to lollow
through doesn 't mean others
do . Trust only yourself to complete necessary tasks .
GEMINI (Moy 21.June 20) You
have what it takes to get your
points across today. Unfortunately , you may waste your
pitch on the wrong person .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) It's
nice to help out people m need
However, don't do so at the
e~epense of breaking a promise
to those at home who were
dependmg on you
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can't
be all lhing s to all people , so
don't get upset today when a
co-worker doesn't see the
same virtues 1n you as your
lrlends do
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In
your urgency to accompl ish
your purposes today you could
get carried away and handle
your possessions in a was teful
or foolish manner.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Normally 1t's more important what
you say or how you beha¥e
than how you are attired
Unfortunalely , today's appearances are most sign1f1cant
SCORPIO (0c1. 24-Nov. 22) A
misunderstanding could put a
damper on what otherwise
would be a good day . Be extracareful what you say and to
whom you say it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You 'd be wose today to
concentrate on areas yoU can
play solo, or pals may draw you
Into activities that overtaiC your
finances.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19)
You have lhe abtllty today to
turn little into much Be e xtremely careful, however, that
you don't attempt lo do so by
being too domineering .
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
It's an excellent day for projects that pique your Imagination. Inviting another aboard,
however, will mess th ings up.
INFW~P.&amp;P~Q ~NT~APAI Sf.

SIDE GLANCES

4

first American to orbit the
earth . After being launched
from Cape Canaveral, he circled the globe three times and
made a safe landing in the At·
!antic.
On this date :
In 1437, King James I of
Scotland was stabbed to
death by . an assassin in the
Scottish city of Perth.
In 1792, President George
Washington signed an act
creating the U.S. Post Office.
In 1809, the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled that the power of
the Federal Government IS
greater than that of any individual state.
In 1895, a revolt against the
Spanish broke out in Cuba.
In 1938, Anthony Eden
resigned as British foreign
secretary, charging Prime
Minister
Nevil.e
Chamberlain
with
ap
peasement of Nazi Gerr.l811:
In 1964, Morocco an
Algeria signed an accord t
end a border conflict whic
had resulted iD anne •
clashes.
Ten years ago: President
Richard Nixon proposed a
constitutional amendment to
permit the selection of a
president who had won as
little as 40 percent of the
electoral vote.
Five years ago : U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
and the foreign ministers of
Latin
American
and
caribbean nations began a
three-day meeting in Mexico

City.
One year ago: Cyprus
agreed to free 57 Egyptian
coounandos wbo survived an
airport fight with Cypriot
troops while trying to free
hostages on an airliner at an
airport near Nicosia, Cyprus.
Today's birthdays: Soviet
Premier Alxei Kosygin is 75.
President
Suharto
of
Indonesia is 58. Attorney Roy
Cohn IS 52. Socialite Gloria
Vanderbilt is 55.
Thought for today : Every.
body thinks of changmg
hwnanity, and nobody thinks
of changing himself - Leo
Tolstoy, Russian novelist,
1828-1910.

Place-kickers Lou Groza
and Don Chandler each
played in nine National
Football League championship games.

ASSN

by

Gill Fox

EWOU
APPUANCE li

~

ORGANS

GARAGE
mile oil Rt. 7 ~y-pass.,
St. At. t24 towara Rutland,

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

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ftfl\iNl

fi}'il 'jjl THAT SCRAMBL~D WOHII Qji,ME
~ ~ ·~~&lt;s
byHeMArnold andBoblee

....,
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lhese four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ord1nary words
Unscram~e

IARROD

..

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
"Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

""'"'O&lt;ot- 1·-- ·-·••''"'

•LL~ .... . -

BORN LOSER

J~T A Ml fJUTB I

·'

{t!l.AO-f-6&gt;l I't..t..
1/ffiiJ~

IT FC12.

Washing1on St., A_lbany, 0.
Phone 698-6173
David Coleman
Agen1for
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, ~isbon, Ohio.
AUTO,
HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.
1-26·1 mo.

[ NIMM ]

I I I

HE NEED!&gt; "TO GET
FIT IF HE'5 "TO 5HOW
A P'I'I:OFIT;

I I

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon

Printanswerl!ere :

ORPHAN ANNIE-IT'S COOL OUTSmE

'

HMM · ISEE"·
S~ELVES GflTI NG
A MITE BARE

AG AII'\ •·• WH~T:S
YOUR Pl~H7

..

,

.

QUILT BATCH PUMI CE SA FARI

Answer Where I he doorbell nn gs off -key MUST BE A 'FLAT"

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Friend
1 City m ap
· of Socrates Z Timber woU
-~~~~ 6 Colorado 3 On a tr1p
resort
4 Hanot
-,--=- --,II Depress
holiday
-..- .P'ZJ 1Z Ladd film
&gt;Strongarm
13 Subside
term
U Tonsorial
6 Cla ssify
service
7 Climb
.
15 Frisbee,
8 Long cigar
for one
9 Etching
16 Composer
artisan

27320 Mon1gomery Rd.
Langsville, Ohio
614-669·4245 Evenings
2 Moles Eas1
of Wilkesville
2-U -1 mo.

ALLEYOOP
1l10SE 600NS SAW

NOW il.JOSE "TWO LADS A HAND
.I'lL GIVE! l: CAN CA~ 1l1SIR
Cilm::H "TT W&gt;!ER&amp;; "n-11:'1 LIVE !

Business Services
BRADFORD. Auctioneer, Com·
plete Ser111Ce Phone 949·2-il87
or 949-2000 Racine , Ohio, Crltt
Bradford .
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweeper'&gt; . toasters , iron,, all
small appliances . Lawn mower,
nexf to Stote H1ghwoy Goroge
on Route 7.
- - ---SEWING MACHINE Repairs , service , oil makes , 992-228&lt;4 , The
Fabric Shop . Pomeroy .
Authorized S1nger Soles and
~ _s -=.r~c ~ e shdr~~S~L~~~~
EXCAVATING. dozer . loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo·boys for hi re, will houl
fill dirt. lo soil , limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Moger Jef·
fers , day phone 992-7089. night

~J::£~~~~~t&gt;}~.&lt;--

Bernstein
18 Czech river
19 Ex-cheSii
champion
ZO Undell}ing
2Z Conductor
'---'-'---~:u.._;__========-"" Queler
-

- --

Her Iittie

23 Vetch
Well, Slim .
'r'...&gt;-,·""'
· It 's
seed
4
lot depends
hopeless. Z " Rosebud,"
.
'J.
for one
On ··
It;n ~ 25 Crude

a

been

are
Ch';p!

starved!

leqs
deformed.

Prett4 bad

case'

tt ·

~\1-"'--'t

_p~o~e_99_3·35E5_o!:_~2:__ 5!~ · _

EXCAVATING, dcn:er , backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Haffteld , Bock Hoe Sarvtce .
Rufland , Oh1o . Phone 7412-2008.

10 Prodded

17 Rhymester's
adverb
18 Suffix
with favor
20 Swiss city

Yesterday's Answer
Zl Vascular

27 Bankbook

23 " Never

entry :
plan
abbr.
Z8 Cuddle up
the future
32 Jannings
by -":
33 Curve
Burke
34 Exhort
Z4 Mimster's
talk: abbr .
35 Feat
38 Vanda l
26 Fr1endless
:---r.----r,-...,.---,;:r-"1

For
busy
eleclrlcol
construction office in New
Haven, W. Va . Payroll
experience
necessary.
l'leaso
reply
slating
experience and trolnlng to:
CtVES CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
E lectricol Division
P.O. Box 1081
Auburn, Maine 04210

37 Soothing
word when
''
repeated
39 Escargot
(()Fencing

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

•

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c:;,ye HIM

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ON! Of T'HfSE
PILL$ Ev!RV

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J.:.:-+-+-+-----1-

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BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
POTENTIAL
Industry's Finest
Advertised Brands

-.

~· .

WINSTON, CAMEL . MAR·
BORO, PALL MALL,
SALEM, KOOLS KENT,
ETC.
S700 WEEK FULL TIME
$160 WEEK PART TIME
to our investors. No Invest·
ment required. Applicant
mus1 be a permanent resl·
den1 available 1o start
business Immediately ,
'
COMPANY furnishes
di rect outlets for all
cigarettes ;
Industry's
finest dispensing equip·
men1 ; we supply ell loca·
lions and company capital
for expansion purposes,
APPLICANT must be of
sound charac1er .and have
sinr.ere desire to succeed In
business. Investment
available upoq request. Applicant musf have adequate working capital.
In Gallipolis
CALL MR. B. CURRIE

'

.'

' tLL JUST PUT WE NDYS
DEBIGN ASIDE FOR A
WHILE . .. PRf:1EN D I
I'ORGOT Al'lOUT

WINN IE: WILL 13E: BACK
SOON AN D WE NDY
WILL ~E O UT OF
MY HAIR .

WAITING FOR YOUR

HU

PAPER&amp; TO CLEAR ..
LIKE: TO ~E:E
HIM tiP AND A BOUT BEFORE I RELEABE; HIM .

euT I WOt./LP

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CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Vulne rable: N e ither
Dealer : South
West North East South
2 NT
Pass 3¥
Pass 3+
Pass 6¥
Pass 511f

Pass

One teller simply stands lor another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X lor the tw.o O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and for matton or the words are all
hints. Eatll day the code letters are dilferent.

K

BCRMPV

K

BKR

DKR

GYKP

DCZDMBEPKRDVE

K

PKXV

BARNI!:Y

L{OU DON'T HAVE TO KNOW
ABOUT RA110NALIZIN6 THE
DENOMINATOR AND DVMB
Tf.l!NGS LIKE THAT

su_n ., Mon., Tues. Only

(614) 446-0090
LOR SAN, t NC.
2031 F. conyon Road
Blrmlnghom,,Aia. 35216 .

-·

2-20-A

WEST
EAST
• 765
• K 10 4 3
¥ 7
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SOUTH
• QJ 8
¥ A 10 9 5
t AK J 2

LVKZ.

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FPYVZ

G F M T J
GCTTCKB

AVKPYVZ
Yeaterday'l Cryptoquote: EVERYONE COMPLAINS OF inS
MEMO,RY,BUTNOONECOMPLAINSOFIUSJUDGMENT.LA ROCIIEFOUCAULD
© 1m Kine F01tures Syndlcate,lnc.

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Tuesday, Feb. 20

Pass

Pass

Opening lead : • 5

(:RYPTOQUOTES

·,

100 WEEK FULL TIME
160 WEEK PART TIME

9 :0Q-From Here to Eternity 3,1 5; Roots· 6,13; One
Day At A Time B.10; Country Matters 20 .
9:Jo-Jeffersons 8,10.
10.00--Kaz 8,10; News 20 ; 10 :15- Love American Style
17.
10 3~Monet 33; Dragnet 11 1 T urnabout 20 .
11 :DO-News 3,6,8,10, 13. 15; Dick Cavett 20; Hogan's
Heroes 17; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 : 3~Johnny Carson 3,15 ; Pollee Woman 6, t3; Rock·
ford Files 8; ABC News 33, Movie "Hurry Sundown " 10; Movie " The Phantom of the Opera" 17.
12 . 4~Mannlx 6,13; Kojak 8; 1:00--Tomorrow 3.
1: 3~NBA Basketball 17: 1:50-News 13; 3:45-News
17; 4:05-12 '0 '; Ciock High 17; 5:05-Dragnet 17.

+K973

'•

1

CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; My Three Sons 17.
7:00--Cross.Wiis 3; • Newlywed Game 6,13; Porter
Wagoner 8; News 10; love American Style 15;
Edward t he King 17; Footsteps 20.
7: 3~Dolly 3; Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10; That's
Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeil Lehrer
Report 20.33 .
a 00--Superlraln 3,15; Eight Is Enough 6, 13 : SpiderMan 8, 10: Great Performances 33 ; N BA Basketball
17; We Interrupt This Week 20.
8· 3G--Wodehouse P layhouse :20.

NORTH
+A 9 2
• QJ 8 3

'·
••

1

~

...
'·

A principle of good play

U Savalas
4Z Done
DAILY

~•

--"'-

move

11

.,••..•
••
..'

6 3~NBC News 3.1 5; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett 6;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

36 Resin

CLERK WANTED

·:

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1979
5·45- Farm Report 13; 5·»--PTL Club 13; 5 ssSunl'"ise Semester 10.
6 :0Q-PTL Club 15; 700 Ciub6 ,8; 6 : 1~News 17; 6:25Chrlstopher Closeup 10.
6 '30--Romper Room 17; 6 : 4~Mornlng Report 3;
6 : 5~Good Morning, West VIrginia 13;; 7:00-Today J , 15; Good Morn ing Amerlco 6, 13; Wed.
nesday Morn ing 8; Schoolles 10; Three Stooges 17.
7: 1!&gt;--Wea t her 33 ; 7:3~Famlly Affair 10 : B:'XI--Capt.
Kangaroo 8,1 0, Lea ve It To Beavel'"17 ; Sesame St.
33.
8 .3o-Hazel17 : 9.00--Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue13;
Emerge ncy One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8: Match Game
10; Phil Do nahue 15; Lucy Show 17.
9 :30--BI'"ady Bunch 8 : Hogan' s Heroes 10; Green Acr@S
17.
10 :oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of Night 6 ; All In The
Fa mily B.10; Dallng Game 13 ; Movie " The Jn.
terns" 17.
10 3~AII Star Secret s 3, 15; $20,000 Pyram id 12. Andy
Griffi th 6; Price Is Right B. 10 ....
11 .00--High Rollers 3, 1S; Happy Days 6,13; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 20.
11 3~Wheel of Fortune 3,1S; Family Feud 6,13; Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame ST 20,33 .
11 .55-CB S News 8; House Call 10.
12: ()()-NPwscenter J;; Jeopa,.dy 15; Young &amp; the
Restless a: Midday Magazine 13.
12 ~ n- Rvan ' s Hope 6,13; Password 15; Seal'"ch for
Tomorrow 8;10; Elec. Co. 33 ; Movie " The Left
· Handed Gun " 17 .
1.00--Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children o,13;
Young &amp; lhe ~ estless 10; News B: Not for Womon
Only 15.
1 :JQ-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; As The Wol'"ld Tul'"ns B, 10.
2 .oo-one Life to Live 6,13 ; 2. 25-News 17.
2·3 ~Doctors3 , 15 ; Guiding Light 8,10; I Love Luc y 17.
3.00--Another World 3,15 , General Hospital 6,13 ,
Lil ias Yoga S. You 20 ; Speed Racer 17; Cousteau
Odyssey 33.
3·3~Mash B; J oker' s Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over
Easy 20 ..
4·oo-Miste r Cartoon J ; Splderman 4 ; Hollywood
Squares IS ; Porky P ig e. Friends B; Sesame St .
20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17.
4 : 3~Bewit c hed3 ; Gilligan' s ls . 8,17; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat J unction 1r:;
s ·oll--t Dreal)'l of Jean .. ,• J; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Six Million Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch
15.
5 3 ~Caro l Burnell &amp;. Friends 3; News 6, Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec Co . 20: Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Coup le 15; Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33.

shelter
Z6 Of length
Z9 Suffix
wlth Tyrol
30 Individual
31 Pro&lt;,.eators
33 Abbott

".,'

Lodge 20 .

~~

.

.

1~

''

6 00--News 3,8,10, 13, 1S; ABC News 17; Hodgepodge

Jumble Book No. 13, contain in~ 110puz.zles, Ia available lor$1 .7Spostpald
tromJumblt,clolhls newspaper, Box 3.4, Norwood, N J 07fU8.1ncfudeyour
ntmt, edelrtll, zip code and m1kt checks payable to Newspaperbooke.

DON'T HAVE ONE
YET··· GOT TO
FIGGER SOME
ANGL E• "

••

Trailer Sales

I Jumbles

Yesterday's

...
........

e

"Dr 11 J-" .
(Answers tomorrow)

' '

M~tgom~IJ

-~

BLIDIO

'(ou oo.

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

75,000 watts.

~-

I KJ

IQlJT'Z. WHO THII0K.S
HI? ~A'? MLJGH

'· .

'

...

TADUN

MJ ~I$T 1'5 f:..

1J.1f \...A.D ...

AN
INSURANCE AGEN

TRACTOR DRiVEN
PTOALTERNATORS
from IS,OOOto

0

I I I

...

PETE SIMPSON

~

&gt;A5C IIIJATIIIJC:, VI&amp;W
OF MV O (~ANARtUM ,
A5 IT WERE !

~.

. PIANOS

---~---'--~

~ AH. ~ GOO!) MOR.t.J I ~ C:.r
G eNTLeMEN~ 1 THOUGHT
'IOU MIGHT f&lt;~J O Y THE

ROGER HYSm

PII)NE 742-2328

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

MN EASY

CAPT

2-?.mo.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

"

949-2862.949-2160

NOTICE

TUESDAY. FEBAUARY20, 1979
6 .00--News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Lodg~ 20.
6 : »-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Caro l Bur nett 6:
CBS News 8, 10: My Three Sons 17, Over Easy 20.
7: 00--Cross-Wits 3; Newly wed Game 6,13; News 10;
Love Americ an Style 15; Carol Burnett 17; loc k,
Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Marshall U. Report 33.
?: »-Hollywood Squares 3: Lets Go to· the Rac es 8;
Candid Came ra 6; Price Is Right 10. Donna Fargo
13; 'What A Yeor" 1S; Sanfo rd &amp; Son 17.
8 00--Movle " The Eag le Has Landed" 3,1 5, ; Happy
Days 6, 13; Movie " Wh'lfe Lighten ing " B. IO; NBA
Baskelball17 ; Austin City Limits 20; Clly Notebook
33.
8 : 3~Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Sneak Previews 33.
9 00--Roots: The Next Generat ions 6.13; Movie " Silk
Stockings" 33 . Academy Leaders 20.
10 :00--Paper Chase B, IO; News 20. 10 . 15-World at
War 17 .
, 11 ·00--News 3,6,8,10, 13, 15; Dick Cavell20; Book Beaf
33; Hogan ' s Heroes 17 .
11 :30-Johnny Cal'"son 3, 15; Movie " I ;4W a nd Olsor·

..'

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

AI. TROMM OONST.

SALE PRICES

TELE·VISION
tJEWING

.,•

H. L Writesel
Roofing

-

•

I

..

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

..... 2·20

.

. .•..

•

der " 6, 13; Baroaby Jones 8; ABC News 33 ; Mo1·te
" Fool ' s Parade" 10.
11 : ~s-Movle " My Sweet Charlie" 17; 12 :AO-Movle
" Mako . The Jaws of Death " 8; 1:00--Tomorrow 3.
1: 30--News 13; 1:50-NBA Basi(lltball 17; A:Os-News
17; 4:25-12 O'C lock High 17; S: 25-World at Large

DICK TRACY

For Sale

Card of Thanks

fHA NKS 10 THF J.lonn e Eme rgon COAL UMI STONE. sand grov1·l
( (I if 1\l lfl drlortde . oC'rlr frTC' I ciog
ry Squncf lor br&gt; u,g so e f1 1dent
food
onci a ll typfl ~ ol salt h
rn
their
wo
rk
Our
babY
fell
and
IS Wurtl~or Under
rrlc; ror Sn it W o r lo. ~ lnr E Morrr
hu rl h i~ h&lt;&gt;od and wa1- bleed1ng
C.sh
Ch.!trge
~ ~ , Pome10y Q9'} 381.1 I
I day
badly a nd they wNc v ery ll 1nd
1.00
12.1
2tlays
1.5Cl
1.00
and cons.irlerote rn tokmg core- t= HOS rv S CH Rodr o l::qurpmen l
J dtiY!I
22.1
of hrm lhcy al!to hod to cnver
Evc ryth rng rn t)Vo woy rodio
fi dtiys
3.00
37S
rry roods II was only a minor
a ntenna an d ocl"essor rf'S
r ut but I he heir wosmo1or
F..o~~ch word UVC!r the rnimmum lfl
l'hnne Po rtland 843 2Hn , OpC'n
Dante! and Po lt y Hl:' nsh:-r
words L! f et&gt;nts per word pe!r tWy.
uvc&gt;nings until 8 Sunda y'} trl l b
·
Alb runninl( otht!r Uwn con~utive
Radiator~
BPOWNING MARK IVCB antenna
dt~y !l will be eh~ rgOO al the 1 duy
----- - - · 1
lower.
')
rotors,
wall
me
ter.
- -- -- Notices
D· 104 Twee tr el Brrd rn rr , lr neor
"'In memory, Ql rd of Ttutnks Hnd
GUN SHOO T Racr ne Gu n Club
Col i L1llle B1t 949 'J2b 5
....._tor to tiMr
Obituary, 6 L'tmts pelt word , S:t OO
Evl:' ry Sunday I pm r-:octory
mmimwn CaNhnradnnce
HAY FOR sole Round bol es , $20
"-·
l" hoke gun!i only.
Square bol es $1 ~8 5 3537,
MobJle Home sales Hnd Yurd Sti les
GU N SHOOT Raci ne &gt;v;olunt eer
985 ·41:n
are IIL'Ce!pted only With c~.sh With
.
Fr re Depl Every Satu rday 6 30
220 E . Main Slree1,
orller. 25 l'enl ctutrge fnr cuh cHtryFIREWOOD
FOR sole 98S 3S05 or
prn
at
th
e
ir
but
lding
in
Boshon
Pomeroy, 0 .
mg Box Nwnber In Cne of The Sr.n•ss .J537
Faclory choke gu ns only
tme!.
Call 992-7113
For Free Estimates
fRH CANOY rn okin g class ot Ot's FlRfWOOO FOR '&gt; ole $25 a
The Publisher reserves the right
prr kup lrurklood Cl'49 2129
Candy
and
Cake
Supplr
es
,
Spr·
.
r~ 992·2174
to ed1t or rejt'&lt;.1. 1my ads tJeemeUob·
11 -9' 1 mo.
rn g Volley Plaza 4-46 2134 for USI::O TIHES GE ca ssetfe reco rder
jedioncd The Publisher wilt not be
regis trotton It's fu n and easy
Head cleaner Allen wrenches
resporunble for more Uum one lnwrrt·d msertwn
You'll be am azed ot what you
Wa nted to re nt trorl er or opt
con do
Phont! 992-2156
rn Mergs. Co Also odd jobs.
7-4 2 2909
Member of
ALINE S DRESS end Beauty Shop
Chlrnney
Rocrn e Ohro Ou e to bod BUY YO UR 1979 Grave ly now thru
-Room Additionswe ather
o ur per ma ne nt
March 1 and save up to $600.
Sweeps Gvlld
Speno/ co nt rnu es lhru February
5100 dawn holds til Ap rd 15th
-Custom RemodelingInsured
and March Regula r $20 now
Grave ly Tractor Soles and SC'r
SI S. regula r $18 now $16
lt' I CC , 204 Condo r St., Pomeroy .
Ceramic Tile -. Formica
Guys and Dolls permane nt Sl2
992 2975
Coun1er Tops - Ceilings
Operators Alm e Weaver and
Suspended, Texture) - Tile
1
ZENITH ALLEGRO ster eo wtth AM
Coth1e Wood 'il49.26b6 .
Floors- Paneling &amp; Trim.
FM rodt o and tope player
Phone 992 3132 o r 99'2·3119
Quality Work You Can
Wanted to Buy
Mondoy
WHITMER BLACK Dtomond l rnr
Depend On ....
Noon onSatunlay
CHIP WOOD . Pole s mo.IC .
me nt , Rowle1gh Products . Also
dr omete r 10" on larg est end,
Tu....Jay
MeNess products 1924 E Ave .
Sl7 per to n Bundl ed slob , $\0
Ga ll rpo lr!i Ohio 45631 Across
thru Fr•dHy
per ton De li ve red to Ohio
from Smith Buic k ga rage .
i -12· 1 mo.
'P.M.
Pollet Co Rt 2. Pomeroy
Telephone
614 -4.46.951
6
U~ day beforepubllcutlon
.
. .
992 2689
. . ~ . . •
FOR SALE for porls 1970 Ponfi ac
Sunday
TI MB ER POMEROY Fores t Pro·
Bonnevrll e 41 55 d bbl. Ru ns
·
"""'~~~~;,von
due ls Top prrce for slondmg
perfecl $:250 Phone 992·b270
u _ __;..:;::=:::::::::._...JL.J · sow ltm ber Co li 992·5965 or lor
rnf ormot1on or see ot 143' 1
Kenl Ha nby 1·446-8570
· --~-a·utt e r n ut
COUNTY : GALLIA
--·-- - · · OLD FURNITURE rce bo11es brass a· pool table lhree fo urths inch
PUBLIC NOTICE
The fol lowi ng doc uments
beds, Iron beds desks , elc. ,
s late top. Sef of pool bolls and
were received or prepar ed by
complele households . Wrtle
rock plus 4 s. trck s Cos t $1850
Th e Ohio En¥ironmental
MD Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
new wrll se ll for $450 Phone
Protect ton Agency dul'"ing the
call992 7760
992·997b
after 4pmprevious week The effective
.
. . 18 Years Experience
date of each final act ion is OLD COINS , pockel wa tches, ROUND HAY bales lor sole.
Will Make
stated . The ISSuance date of
class nngs, weddmg bo nds.
843-2524
Service
ta lis
each proposed act1 o n 1S
•New Home
d1omonds. Cold or silver . Co li
stated Anyo ne aggrieved or
RUTLAND HARDWARE , 2 doors
•Add-ons
Rog':r W~m s l ~y : 7~2~2~3~
adversely aflec ted by a f1nal
651 Beech Street
fr om Rullond Pos t Ofl tee
act1on to 1ssue. deny , m odify , WANT TO buy : old 45 an d 78
•Remolding
Phone 7-42 2255 1 Sunbea m
Middleport, 0 .
re voke , or renew a permit ,
phonog raph · re co rds . Coli
com ster vacuu n cleaner with
. --99-2-6011
license, or varian ce , or to
992-2356
992·6370 or Contac t Mortrn Fur·
powe r noozle a nd ollochme nts ,
approve or disepprove plans
2·11 1 mo . Pd .
H·l mo. {f'd. )
569 95 1 Sunbeam indoor, oul
and specif icat ions . m av fil e
ntture.
~ ~ _ ~ _
door
11acuum
cleaner
,
1
'
'
,
h
p
an ap peal with Th e EnvtrOn · WA NTED TO buy: old 1e wel ry.
m ental Board of Review ,
1 99 5
motor , $39 95 . 1 laboratory
Suite 305 , 39 5 E BI'"Oed St ,
Co l
2 262 or write Kay
sink end cobmet 19" x 17
Columbus. OhiO 43216, within
Cecd 67 S. 2nd Middle port
Hammond
For Rent
Gre ber faucet w1th pop·up,
thirty (30) days of the ef
0~ ~ ~ ~ _ . ~ .
. _ . _
556.69 Kennedy heavy dullf COUNTRY MOBILE Home Po rk
fective date , pursu.a nt to Ohio WANTED TO buy · hmtted trme on·
tool bo11es, 19 • x 7 and three·
Revised Code Sect ton 3745 07; ·...
Reule 33, norlh of Pomeroy
&amp; Famous Name Brand
eogths inches, $11.99. Cor tool
unless such ftnal a ction was
11f Junk Botle rres, $2 50 earh
Lorge
lots
.
Coll
992
7479
box es, $7 98
preceded by t he same or
Clea n Copper . $55 per lb.
substantially the
same
Radrators , $35 lb . Shari Iro n,
J AND 4 RM furm s hed and un
FIVE
RIVI::R
lots
rn
Mrnersville
proposed action . All such
$2 per hund re d
R1de r's
furni s h e d apl s
Phon e
Phone 992·2639
final actions are before The
Salvage , SR 124 , Pomeroy.
992 5434 .
Sales Rep. For
Ohto 992·5--408
Ohio EPA on a PI'"Oposed
1•n BACKHOE INTERNATIONAL TWO BEDROOM , kitchen furn 1Sh
action to issue, deny, mod1fy,
~ ·~ - - ,
949·2047
Sundins
revoke , o r renew a perm it,
ed opt. Co li before 8 om
license , Ol'" veril'lnce ; or to
197.4 HUSOVARNA WR 250 cc
992-2788 .
Yard
Sale
Hammond
Organs '"
appr o¥e or disappr ove plans
S250 Mossberg pum p shotgun , LARGE HOME m Pomeroy .
Tyree Blvd. Racine, C?~o
and speclf iCif iC8tlons , wlth1n IF YOU hove o service to offer ,
2 barrels Choice of 30" or lull
thirty (30) da11s of t he
Phone t49 -l118 eventngs
992 ·2205 before 5
wont to buy o r sell some thi ng.
dee r barrel
, $150 742·2408 .
issuence date ORO 37d5 07
.
.
after
s p.m. Weekends
or
oe lookmg for wo rk
FURN IS HED HOUSE 1n M1dd leport
does not provide for ad
JOHN
DEERE
sprayer
with
2
after
12
noon .
r
you
'II
get
results
whateve
iUd1 cation hearing requests
Sutlable for four conslrucllon
2·5·1 mo.
nozz les
Motor
recent ly
Ios ier wrl h o Sentr nel Wo nl Ad .
or appeals on orders. verified
wo
rkers
.
Call
after
6
pm
overhauled
992·2967 oher
complaints , or enfor c ement
Coll992-2156
304·68:2·2566
or
992
5434
5pm
compliance schedu le letters
Within 30 days of publication
Business Services
REDUCE SAFI:: a nd fast w1th
in a newspaper in the affected
Pets
for
Sale
Auto
Sales
GoBese
Tablets
&amp;
E·Vcp
"water
county , ll ny person m ay also
HOWERY AND MARTIN , h ·
pills" Nelson Drug .
(1 ) subrpit Writ ten comment s
RISING STAR Kenne ls Boarding
. - - - . . . . ca vcf1ng , septic S1fstems
relafmg to actions , proposed 1979 FORO CUSTOM F-150 tru ck MIXf:D
and groomrng al l breeds
CONDITIONED hoy Very
302 engine, ' ', ton auto , P S
dozer , backhoe dump truck,
acf10ns . verified complaints,
Cheshrre , 367·0292
goo d gual 1ty
De li ve ry
P.B . A C 742·2826
lrmestone, grovel , blacktop
or enfor cement compl iance
available Phone 992 7201 or
schedule letters ; (2 ) request 1973 CHEVY CUSTOM 10, 350 sod
pov1ng Rl 143 Phone I (6U)
992·3309.
a public meetmg regarding
b98-7331
742·2270.
. .or_,..
Good
cond1tion.
985-41
33
alter
pr,oposed action s; and or t3)
Real
Estate
for
Sale
REGISTERED APPALOOSA mores
5
BATHROOMS AND Krtchens
request notice of further
to foo t m March 22 month old FARM FOR sol ~ House 2 barns
actio ns or proceedings All 1975 DATSUN PICKUP , good con
remodeled, ceram ic tile, plum·
requests for ad1Udicat 1o n
registered Appaloos a colt. 10
bing,
corpenl ry, and general
10
acres
or
trade
r.
L
orge
pond
.
drtt o n
Good tires
low
hearing s
and
publ iC
mo nth old regrstered Ap·
maintenance. 13 years ex 82 a cres. 74 2·2566
mrloogc Run s good tn snow
meetings , an d oth el'" com ·
poloosa colt Good conf lrmo ·
------- .perrence . 992·3685
985 3979
mu n1 cations
con c ern ing
--lion Would make good show 3"1 acres rn Pomeroy. Secluded
public meetings, adludication
PULLIN S EXCAVATING Complete
wooded oreo on top of hil l
prospect. 593.7390
hear ings , tJerif 1ed com
. - . - - - . - . . 2-478 __ _
_Service
. ___Phone
~ _ 991
. ____
Ove rlooks nver. Wafe r. elec.
pl aints , and regulatio n s.
HAY FOR sole lsi cutting , S 70
Inc ovoilob!e_ 9~2..:..3~86
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
sho uld be add ressed to Th e
.2nd ~ u!fr ~g _S ~- 9_85_A37~ _ .
Legal Records Sect1on , Ohio
Rt: AL EST ATE loons Purcho!le and
cancelled? lost your operofors
EPA , P . 0 . Bo x 1049 ,
'EVERYTHING'S GOTTA GO
refi
nance
30
year
te
rms
VA
.
_
~
i ~e ~s!? ~ h?~e ~9? · ~1~3 __ _
IN
THE
Columbus , Ohio 43216, (614)
Hou se ond lot. fur niture
COMMON PLEAS COURT
No
m oney down (eligible
E·C
ELECTitiCAL Contractor serv·
466 60 37 Unless oth e rwise
d olhes, cor oil my household
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
ve te rens) FHA - As low os 3
ing Ohrq Volley region. Si x
stated in particular not 1c es,
it ~ ms . Drop by 760 Laurel St ,
OHIO
all other commun1 c St1ons
per cent down ( non ·veterens )
days a weelo: , 24 hours serv1ce.
Middleport .
HAROLD HUDNELL ,
incl ud ing comments on
Ire land Mortgage Co , 77 E.
Emergency calls. Call 882·2952
Plaintiff,
proposed a ct ions , ' should be
State, Athe ns 614 592 3051
or882·2305,
· tJS·
addressed e1ther to the Air
--. ~-- - - - - - - - JUDY ANN HUONELL,
Perm its and Comp l ianc e
THR EE
BEDROOM ranch . MOBILE HOME repairs , Furnaces,
Defendant
Mo nrtorin g
D1v ision or
electr ical work , pipes sawed,
Carpeted, oir cond1 t1oned. Prtc ·
No . 16,893
Permit end ApprotJal Section,
e
d
ver11
reasonab
ly.
In
"
__
pl_u~bing ..J._92-585_8._ _ _ __
NOTICE BY
WhiChev el'" 1S appropl'"iate , at
Slfrocuse. 992·5348
PUBLICATION
The OhiO EPA, P . 0 . Box
•
•
•
-- ..t - - -WALLPAPERING AND pointing .
1049, Columbus, Ohio -43216. TO: Judy Ann Hudnell. whose
Coii742·232B.
last known address was 141
Issuan c e of noti c e of
Warne,. Street , Marietta ,
reg 1Strat1on .
608E .........
Gallipolis Redu ct ion Co. Ohio
MAIN
State Rt . 35
You are hereby not1f!ed
Gail 1potis , OH , Effect itJe
Auetion
POMEROY, 0.
that you have been named a
date 02-16·79
defen
dant
in
a
leg
al
actio
n
Applicat iO n
AUCTION
EVERY
Sunday 1pm
No I s l
OWNER
MOVING
entitled Haro ld Hu d nell,
0627010009 8003
Every Wed at 7 pm . Lots of new
P!amt1ff. vs . Judy Ann
lal'"ge 2 story fn~me ,
Rob bins &amp; Mye rs In c.
and used me rchandi se ijo rl·
Hudnell , Defendant. Th1S
Bob Mt;: Corm tC k Rd
remodeled , enclosed front
lord Commu ntiy Cenler, Hcrf·
action
has
been
ass
igned
VIRGIL
B.
SR.
~~"
Gal li polis , OH , E rtec t1 ve
pol'"ch, lal'"ge 2 car garage,
ford
, WV , 4 miles up from
Case
No
16,893
and
is
pen
d.
date 02 16-79
992-3325
storage bldg., own water.
!~~~~ason Br idge _ _ _
ing m the Court ot Common
Appli c a t t o n
No ( s )
Nat gas heat, over 1 acre.
Pleas of Me1gs County , Oh10 ,
216· E: Second Stree1
0627010010 P002
45769
$29,500.00.
NEW
LISTING - CompaCI
The
ob
iect
of
the
compla
rnt
Feb 20
LOVELY BRICK - 1 floor
1S the obtaining of a divo r ce
home
with 2 bedrooms In
plan , 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs,
and the terminat ion of a
Services Offered
Pomeroy with all public
wood.burning
fireplace,
marriage contract between
utilities
.
Only
$5,000
for
a
Will
CARE for the elderly 1n our
nice kitchen. floors al'"e
the parties and the settlement
quick sale .
home. Phone992-7314 .
of the propertv r1ohts of the
hardwood and cal'"peting,
- - -- - - - - -- · :=:---=BRICK - Can be used as a
parties .
covered patio . $30,000.00.
WATER WELL drilling. William T.
You are required to answer
business, a l'"esldence or
GENUINE
RANCH
3
•
Grant . 74:2·2879.
the complaint within 28 days
both . located in Pomeroy
bedrooms, built-in kit .
atter the last publ 1catlon of
on Second Street. S2S,OOO.
WATER AND mi se haultng. Call
dining. lal'"ge rec . room,
th is , notice, Wh iC h will be
992·5858.
MIDOLEPORT - 3 or 4
publ ished once each week for
utility Nat gas, own water,
:---,-bedrooms,
l'h
baths,
nice
six successitJe weeks . Th e
nice lot $20,500.00.
PIANO TUNING for home and
last publication will be made
size
kitchen,
,natural
gas,
school . Lo ne Daniels , associate
70 ACRES - New home
on March 27 , 1979, and th e 28
electric and city water.
of Elberfeld's and Brunlcardl
(needs some wol'"k} , bam.
days for answer will com·
Nice back yard and 2 car
Mu sic
Company .
Phone
men ce on that da te .
corn crib, storage bldg ..
garage.
Only $15.000 .
992 2581 or 992 2082
In case of your failure to
river fl'"ontage. Owner
BABY FARM - 4 112 acres
answer or othel'"wise rescond
moved
must
sell .
as requ ired by the Oh io Rules
and
8 room farm house.
$33,500.00.
of Crv rl Pr ocedure , the final
Has a modern bath, nice
KEEP YOUR JOB - Make
hear ing on this matter will be
kitchen, and
lots of
Give Away
held after the exp~ratlon of 42
money in off hours In
carpeting . Rural wate,. and
days aftel'" the last day of
running this car wash .
2 car garage.
publi cation of this notice or as
Good location . doing a
soon thereaftel'" as can be
Nice
I YEAR OLD SIX PUPPIES. port collie. Give
good
business
.
If
really
scheduled by the Court.
wooded
1
acre
lot.
Has
3
o~o.'!'
~o i~~h-~~e~~5.:_3~6A , ~ _
intel'"ested call now.
Larry Spencer ,
bedrooms, 2 baths (I
Clerk of Court
FEMALE IRISH Setter. 10 months
NEW LISTING - 1 floor
Mannmg D. Webster
enclosed), nice family
of Meigs County ,
old . 992·7756.
plan . 2·3 bdrm home,
Probate Judge .
room with wood burning
OhiO
excellent
neighborhood.
Clerk
121 20, 27 13 1 6, 13, 20, 27 , 61c
FIVE PART shepard puppies , All
fil'"eplace and 2 car finished
121 13, 20. 27 , 31c
Wright St.. Pomeroy.
moles 7 weeks old . 7.42-23 18.
ga,.~ge .
remodeled, basement area,
HEW
LISTING
~
Lot
In
garden
space.
Only
Fairview His. with sepflc
$14.900.00.
Mobile Homes for Sale
lank and water. Just $5,000 .
NEED TO SELL NOW OR
BUSINESSES
NOTICE OF
We
have
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile
IN THE FUTURE? CALL
PUBLIC SALE
.
several different kinds that
home, furnished . 3 bedr.,
AN EXPERT WE
The follow ing descr1bed
you can have. Just pick
washer and dryer. Air condi ·
OFFER YOU IS YEARS
motor veh i cle will be offered
what you want. Some with
11oned. 1 lot , 210 ft. frontage .
for publ ic sale to the h ig hest
EXPERIENCE.
good locations and some
$12.000 Phone742 ·2876
bidder on the premises of th e
REALTORS
_._ --- -- . - ·- - -Pomeroy National Bank ,
with real estate.
HENRY
E.
CLELAND
SR.
1955
Prairie
Schooner , 28 x 8, 1
Cou rt and Second Streets ,
LAND ANO LOTS - In
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
bd•.
Pam ero y, Ohio on th e 2nd da y
several
locat
ions
.
All
sizes
of March 1979 at 10 .00 AM
ASSOCIATES
1965General. 60 x 1:2 , 2 bdr
.HEADQUARTERS .
and prices. Want a wooded
1973 Chev role t Impa la Cpe
1968 Elcono 52xl2, 2 bdr
KATHY CLELAND
home site?
$ No 1L57 HJ0 19968 8
For a ll your Appliaftce
1969 Buddy , 60 JC 12, 4 bdr .
LEONA CLELANO
Term s of sate Cash Sel ler
Now Is th e time 1o lht ihaf
Needs.
1970 Sylva , 60 x 12, 2 bdr,
992 ·22 59, 992·6 191 , 992 -2569
r eserves the r igh t to b rd a nd
house and property with us.
1970 Cos.:le, 60 x 12, 2 bdr,
the right to r eject anv and at (
we Will be starting our
1973 Arlington, 60 x 12, 2 bdr ,
bids Vehi cle can be In ·
spring
advertising soon,
1973 Ridgewood . 70 x 14, 3 bdr.
spected at Gene 's Body Shop ,
call 992-3325.
19731&lt;1rkwood, 50 x I 2, 2 bdr .
307 Condor St , Pom eroy,
JACKW.
Oh fo- during norma l bus ine ss
B &amp; S MCiBILE HOME SALES
CARSEY
hours .
Housing
PT. PlEASANT . WV
Mgr.
675 -~42.4
Phone
992-2111
Headquarters __
(2J "~'~ · He

""'

~ - The Daily sentinel, Miadleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, F eb . W, · ~~·,

.

By Oswald Jac oby
and Alan Sontag
With a m e r e 21 htgh-ca rd
poonts, South mig ht well
have let the b1ddtng die a t
five hearts, · but lik e mos t
players Sout h ha ted to s top
m no-man 's land be twe en
game and slam
Thmgs starte d out well for
him with a diamond le ad up
to his ace-king-Jack .
There were still plenty of
problems. He was going to
have to try a h eart fin esse

some time or oth e r as well as
a s pade r1n e sse.
There is a well· known
principle of good play : Take
your off-suit fmesse ftrst .
There was also the matter of
ge tting rid of his possible
doamond loser so South
sta rted by c ashing his ace
and quee n of clubs . Then he
took a nd lost the spade
finesse .
A diamond came back . He
won 1 led the e ight of spades
to aumm y's ace and was
then ready to attack hearts.
He was careful to start by
lea dmg dummy 's eight. This
held and he led the queen
next West show ed out. Now
South c a s hed the king of
clu bs to discard his deuce of
diamo nds, r e peated the
trump fine sse again, drew
the last trump and claimed .

Ask tbti!XDIPIS
You hold :

2-20-B

• 9 54
¥ KQ6 3
t A74
• J96
• An Ore gon reader asks if
we open this hand in third

seat.

The ans wer is a r esound·
ing "no,"
I NEWSPAPER F:N1'E KPRISE ASS N I

roo you !lave a question for
the experts? Wnte " Ask the
E1tperts, ·· care of this newspa~
per lnd1vfdual questions Will
be answered 1f accompanted
by sta mped, sell-addressed
envelopes Th e most tnterestmq questions wtll be used in
th1s column and will receive
copies ol JACOB &gt;- ~100ERN.)

...
' '·

"

...

'

..,
.t:·

•:
·''

._",.·•'

-.

�J

10- ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 20, 1979

Three life terms ordered
N~~WARK ,

Ohio (AP ) - A
Glenford man has been sen·
tenced to three consecutive
life terms in prison after
being found guilty on three
CtJunts of aggravated murder
in connection with the soca !led ". 22-&lt;:aliber killings."
Thaddeus Lewingdon , 42,
was found guilty Monday
night on a total of seven
charges, including thr ee
counts of aggravated robbery
and one comll of aggravated
burglary.
The three-week trial in
- Lickin~ County Common

Pleas Court ended shortly
after 7 p.m. when the jury of
fo ur men and eight woman
returned their verdict. The
jury reached the decision.
after deliberating for more

convit·tions.
The cha rges against
Lewingdon stem from the
December 1977 slayings of
Joyce Vermillion , 38, and
Karen Dodrill, 33, both of
Newark, and the April 1978
than 61·2 hours.
.Judge Winston Allen imme- death of Jenkin Jones, 77, of
diately levied the three life Granville.
The three slayings were
scnte~ces . He also ordered
Lewin gdon t o serve four part of what has beCtJme
terms of 7-25 years on the known as the " ,22-&lt;:aliber
robbery
and
burglary killings" in which 10 persons
in central Ohio were ~illed
charges.
Court officials said Lewing. with a .22-&lt;:aliber pistol.
"We ask you to find the dedun instructed his attorney,
Gary Tyack, to appeal the fendant guilty of each and every one of the charges," LickIng County Prosecutor David
Lighttiser told the jury.
Calling the slayings "cold,
planned robberies and
assassinations,'' Lighttiser
C&lt;mnection said: "They took reminded the JUror s that
everyU1ing - television sets, Lewingdon "did admit full
color consoles, everything." and complete responsibility."
The owner, who declined to
During the trial, which
·be identified, said he and two · started Jan. 29 , a tape·
assistan ts were going to r ecorde d statement
spend the night in the store. Lewingdon
made
to
;'We' ve
got
enough Columbus police was played
anununition for an army. for the jury . In the statement
Machine guns. Everything ," Lewingdon told how he and
he said.
hi s brother, Gary, carried out
Shortly after the curfew the slayings with robbery as
went into eff ect, police their motive .
broadcast a report that the
Gary Lewingdon, 38, of
Ce ntral District jail, the . Kirker sv ille , is
under
largest in the city, was filled indictment on the same
with loote rs.
charges in Licking County.
"I think they declared
The brothers are also
World War m on us," said cha rg ed ·with aggravated
Officer David Buschman of murd er. in five shooting
the Western District, where deaths· in Franklin County
37 persons were arrested and one in Fairfield County.
before dark.
Gary Lewingdon is charged
Police Co mmissioner also with a loth killing, the
Donald Pomerleau donned a sixth in Franklin County.
cowboy hat, found a horse
Lighttiser said Thaddeus
and joined members of his Lewingdon had kept a pair_of
mounted police division, fingernail clippers from the
reportedly helping break up purse of one of the female
at least one looting party.
victims in Newark.
Elsewhere, police plowed
"The evidence shows three
through the snow in four- lives have been taken for $338
wheeldrive vehicles driven and a pair of nail clippers,''
by National Guardsmen.
the prosecutor said in his
closing a rgument.
Tyack, in his closing state·
ment, contended · that the
Hos pital i~ews
prosecution had tried to play
on
the jw·ors' emotions.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - ,Wanda Powell,
Racine; Joseph Rudolph ,
Albany; Debora Lawson,
Pomeroy: Maria Foster,

Police arrest looters
BALTIMORE I AP ) - Hundreds of persons have been
arrested in more than 700
reports of looting after a
record 20-inch snowfall
crippled the city.
Mayor William Schaefer
imposed a Hl-ho ur curfew
beginning a t 7 p.m, Monday
" in the interest of public
safety." About 100 Maryland
State Police helped city
police.
· By . early this morning,
police spokesman Dennis Hill
said 302 persons had been
arrested - 232 of them for
curfew violations. He added
police received nearly 1,000
reports of looting.
State's Attorney William
Swisher ·advised officers to
charge each person arrested
in looting inCidents with
breaking and entering, which
carries a maximum sentence
of 10 years in jail.
Police said liquor and grocery stores, bakeries, auto
supplies and furniture stores
had been hit .
Looters were seen lugging
a
refrigerator
down
Pennsylvania Avenue. In the
Old,town area, people carried
armloads of clothing still on
hangers through the streets,
the Baltimore Sun reported.
The looters included , two
middle-aged women hauling
a large piece of furniture, still
in its cardboard packaging.
One woman said she didn't
lmow what it was, Hbut
whatever it is, I'm going to
take it home."
The owner of The Furniture
j.

FANTASY BLAMED
CINCINNATI (AP )
Bruce Baltzer was acting out
a fantasy of his own kid·
napping when ·he held a 3year-old child for ran som last

Pomeroy;

Winnie

Neal,

Pomeroy ; Naomi ·Bissell,
Long Bottom; Sampson Hall,
Sy racuse ; Beulah Collier,
Dexter; Madeline Neece,
Middleport; Patrick
O'Connor, Racine.
Discharged - Frederick
Stobart.

Holzer Medielil Center
Discharges, Feb. 19
summer,
a
defe nse
Mrs. Terry Brannon and
psychologist contends.
daughter, Bernard Burcham,
Dr. Robert Tureen testified Joshua Ca rdwell, Flossie De·
in Baltzer's kidnapping trial ment, Tiffa ny Ha rvey·,
Monday in U. S. District Joseph Hemsley, Patil Rees,
Court that Baltzer had Mildred Ruston, Shelly Skid·
become obsessed by the . more, Terra Thompson ,
knowledge that he was Wififred Winifred Vallance,
adopted.
Jacob Weinberger.
Births, Feb. 19
Mr. and Mrs. Robin Byers,
daughter, Thunnan.
MEETING CANCELLED
Mr . and Mrs. James
The meeting of TOPS OH Zornes, daughter, McArthur .
570, Pomeroy has been
Mr . and Mrs. Steve James,
cancelled for this evening.
daughter, Ewington.

i

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

ANNA MAE TERREll.
Anrta Mac Thomas Terrell,
52, died Monday at Ucking
County Hospital in Newark.
Mrs. Terrell was born June
2, 1926 in Meigs County. She
was preceded in death by her
father, William Thomas. She
was a member of the
Columbia Center Community
Church. ·
She is survived by her
mother, Elizabeth Guess, Rt.
4, Pomeroy; two daughters,
Mrs. Bill (Ruth Ann) Spaun,Pomeroy; Juanita Terrell,
Pataskala; grandson,
Shannon Spaun, Pomeroy,
and several ni eces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Thursday at 1 p.Il'l. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Lowell Lewis officiating.
Burial will be 'irl Wells
Cemetery. Friends may call
at·'the funeral home after 2
p.m. on Wednesday .

-- ~-·--·"

-·

._

Iran oil
may· flow

returns home

in future

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) The crew of Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavl's personal
Boeing 707 jetliner flew the
plane back to Tehran from
Morocco today and delivered
it to Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini 's revolutionary
forces, a spokesman for the
new government said.
The spokesman said the
crew "hijacked" the plane
but he would give rio details.
He said the crew was escorted
to
Khomeini 's
headquarters.
The shah was at the
controls of the plane, which
he had named Shahin or
Shah's Falcon, when he and
Empress Farah left for
Egypt on Jan . 16. After a visit
to President Anwar Sadat,
the royal couple took the
plane to Morocco, where they
and the rest of their family
are now guests of King
Hassan II in Rabat.

Livestock Report

(USPS 145-960)

TEHRAN, Iran ( AP)
The new chief of the National
Iran Oil Co. said today that
petroleum exports will
resume after the ''necessary
studies "
have
been
completed.
The appointmment of
Hassan Nazih to head the
giant stateowned company
was announced by Prime
Minister Mehdi Bazargan.
Nazih did not say when the
studies would be finished or
what topics they involved.
Nazih , a former associate
of the National Front Party
that
opposed
Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, is
a htUnan rights activist and
president of the Iranian Bar
Association.
Iran had been the }VOrld's
second major oil exporter
after saudi Arabia until the
general strike called by the
Ayatollah Ruhollah khomeini
against the shah shut off the
flow on Dec. 26.
Since then Iran has
produced enough oil for
domestic use and has
exported only small amounts
of tanker fuel.
Bazargan said in a recent
interview
that
Iran's
revolutionary
goverrunent
wquld restime oil exports as
soon as.possible ''to all parts
of the world, including the
United States." But the prime
minister has said previously
that Iran would not sell oil to
Israel or to South Africa.
Before the strike, Iran produced an ayerage of 6 million
barrels a day and Bazargari
said it would be some time
before Israel would be able to
produce enough oil for
export.

sO?

TRY OUR ALL NEW
DR!VE THRU WINDOW
NOW OPEN

'
TRUDGING THROUGH WHITE STUFF - Boomer Smith, 4, and Ray Sayre, 6, are
shown making their way through a huge pile of snow while out playing Monday afternoon in
Syracuse. In all, approximately 10 inches of snow was on the ground af!er Sunday's wintry
blast.

Strike hurts· Mardi Gras

w ·EEH
FEB.17•24

PoMeroy, Ohio

In grateful acknowledgement of contributions made
to the growth of our community through guidance
of our youth, we congratulate
•

State Police troopers and
nonstrikers patrolled the city.
Officials said· the crime rate
remained low.
Garrett ' s
carefully
optimistic
report
on
negotiations was the only one
given. Both sides agreed in
advance to stop , insulting
each other in public announcements and let the
mediator do the talking.
Earlier, Mayor Ernest
Moria! took a glum view.
Announcing the cancellation
of tonight's elaborate Krewe
of Pegasus parade, he said
the realistic outlook was that
Mardi Gras itself also will
wind up canceled.
"You're talking about
$60,000 down the drain," cried
the captain of Pegasus when
told that his parade had
joined the list of strike

Youth injured

in accident
The · Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, was called
to the scene of an accident,
which is still under in·
vestigation, in Meigs County
on SR 248, four-tenths of a
mile east of SR 7, Monday at
9:30p.m.
Officers report that an east
bound auto operated by
Gregory Hayman, 17, Long
Bottom, ran off the left side of
the
roadway and struck• a
I
tree.
Hayman was transported
by a relative to St. Joseph's
Hospital in Parkersburg.
Hayman's vehicle was
demolished .

SET wEST '-

-.........Jill"~......- ®

a

• Conveniently·
sizod canisters with
decorative
mushroom motif.

·~ !:,:.a

. ..

• ·Saamloss

I

'

- ·.. ~·

~:

..

.....

I

· durable
polypropylene

.I

COVIll.
•,.

-~

1s111
.
,..

construction;

. 'i. p"'U!!!~
)
\ .

••OOLINIII't •

- --, .. .,'·~' • ·
. "• \,

aluminum

or'_,., . .,

:c-... ·•;:•••c•·....

111::•w ....

.

.. where crartsmen still eare""

Walk-Up ·Teller Window Open Friday Evl!'l)ings, 5 to 7 p.m.

&amp;b

(Continued from pa~e I l
said it would honor the peace
and friendship treaty it
signed with Vietnam· in
November.
Vietnam ' s
charge
d'affaires in Bangkok, Do
Ngoc Duong, said his
govenunent is in CtJntact with
Moscow but has not
requested Soviet troops.
Sources in Washington said
Peking had· not r~ded W
.
direct appeals from the U.S.
govenunent that it call of! its
invasion. But American
officials said they did not
expect the fighting to spread
far beyond the border. They
cited Deputy Premier Teng
Hsiao-ping's comment in
Tokyo two weeks ago that
Viebtam ''must be punished
for its actions," but that
China has "behaved with
restraint."

ELBERFELD$
CANISTER~•....._

'THE FRIENDLY BANK"

lnbens lfalional Bank·

casualties.
The costly processions,
with masked and CtJstumed
crew members riding the
floats .to fling doubloons and
other geegaws to the
imploring masses, are all
staged by private social
~&gt;krewes," a traditional misspelling.
Mardi Gras, French for Fat
Tuesday, comes up on Feb.
27. It is a splendidly boozy
street party which also ranks
as the linchpin of a $50 million
industry.
Though minus its W!ual
gaudy parades thus far,
Carnival, a party period
preceding the big basli,
staggered onward in the
Quarter
and
French
elsewhere.

Chinas
' •••

LOCAL FFA CHAPTERS

\

at y
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

•

enttne
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1979

: ,,

•·

):

Member F. D. I. C. Deposits Insurance to:_S40,DDO.

113-84)

'1695

HOUSEWARE - 1ST A.OOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Rep. Elizabeth
Holtzman departed for Hanoi today to discuss the
refugee situation and the fate of 5,000 American
dependents or passport-holders remaining in Vietnam.
The New York Democrat, chairman of the House
Subcommittee on Refugees, Immigration and
International Law, left Bangkok by commercial
airline .
,

Third suspect arrested 'NEw YORK ~ AP) - A third suspect was arrested
. early today in the $5.8 million robbery of the Lufthansa
German Airlines cargo terminal at Kennedy Atrport the largest cash robbery in the nation 's history .
FBI spokesman Quentin Urtell said Louis Werner,
46, of Queens was arrested Tuesday night as he left a
bowling alley in Lawrence, Long Island. Urtell srud
Werner offered no resistance.

Seven murder victims found
NEW YORK (AP) - The bodies of seven people,
some with their throats slashed, were discovered
Tuesday night in a three-story building in Harlem,
police said. There were unconfirmed reports the
deaths might be linked to the Rastafarian cult, which is
reportedly involved in -illicit narcOtics activities _in the
neighborhood.
.
Police said the bodies of one woman and six men
were found at about 7:20. p.m. Identities of the victims
were not immediately made public.

Court overturns judge's ban
BOSTON (AP) - A . federal appeals court
overturned on Tuesday a judge's ban on auctioning
offshore oil exploration tracts in the Georges Bank
fishing grounds of the North Atlantic.
The ruling means the U. S. Interior Department
will be able to sell rights to explore the deep-sea tracts
despite opposition from environmentalists and the
Massachusetts attorney general.
·

Thomas

applauded

PRESENTED GOLD PLAQUE - A. R. Knight,
owner of Pomeroy Motor Co., was presented a gold plaque
Tuesday by Ted Reed, president of the Farmers Bank and
Savings, on the anniversary of Knight 's Opening an
account with the bank 50 years ago, Feb. 20, 1929. The
plaque read as follows: "In appreciation of 50 years of

ATHENS, Ohio (AP ) Afte r announ c in g his
Athens County Sheriff Gary res ignation, Efaw, his
Efaw
submitted . his lawyers and the prosecutor
resignation this morning met with Athen s County
shortly before the first of six Common Pleas Judge Lowell
t rials on fel ony cha rges Howard in :m official court
session .
against him was to begin.
Co unty
Howard would have to ap·
The
Athens
Commissioners accepted the pro ve a ny plea bargaining
resignation and are expected arra ngement .
to name a temporary
The fir st trial was to deal
replacement for
Efaw with thrc&gt;e counts of theft in
sometime this afternoon.
office against the sheriff and
Efaw and his wife Betty, a a charge against his wife of
deputy sheriff; have been in- abetting one of them. The
dieted on a wide range of charges refer t o a ll eged
criminal coonts, including irregularities in the use of
theft in office. There has been sheriff's office funds.
speculation that· Efaw's
Five subsequent trial s were
resignation is part of a plea scheduled on charges against
bargaining arrangement the sh eriff of theft in offi ce ,
Continuous Business Operation of the Pomeroy Motor Co.,
worked out between defense complicity in for gery of over·
The Farmers Bank and Savings Co." Shown l-r , a re, Bill
attorneys and Athens County time records , trunpering with
Knight, a son , Mrs. A. R. Knight, Mr. Knight, Ted Reed,
Prosecutor David Frey.
evidence and eavesdropping .
Charlotte Dillard, his daughter and Vincent Knight, a son .
Deputy Robert Daugherty Mrs. Efaw, who was her husMr. aod Mrs. Knight have 15 grandchildren and two grea tis expected to be named as band's administrative aide,
' grandchildren.
EI a w's
t e m p or a r y also would be a defendant in
replacement. He would serve the forgery u·ial.
.
on an interim basis until the
Efaw admits he made miscounty's Democratic Central takes in administration but
Co mmit tee
na mes
a contends none uf t.he alleged
perma nen t replacement. abuses were done for self
at little cost to the village.
our . volunteer lire 'depart· Efaw's term in office would gain .
Presently pending with ment we have renegotiated have run through 1980.
1Contin ued on page 121
HUD is an application for aU of our flre c:nntracts so
1330,000 which would be used that a substanttal mcrease
to provide sewage service to has been made m the amount
lower Broadway St., Elm St., of money whtch ts recetved
I'
Page St. and Railroad St. by the village from fire calls
Lee McComas .and Bill
Jim Page of Fleming, Page
area.
outst&lt;lr the vtllage. Wtthtn the Childs, Middleport , were and Stult z, Engineers,
If this project is approved
next year a nc~ _ftre truck appointed to serve one year pr esented fina l design plans
by HUD, it would practically wtll t.&lt;· pu rcha~ed and patd terms on the Meigs County for the access road to the
complete the village sewage for from the flre levy and Regiona l Planning Com· multi purpose building.
system .
from the. Increased fire mission when Meigs County
Wes ley B ~eh l , count y
Also, thanks lo t he contracts. '
.
Commissioners met Tuesday engineer , also discussed the
operating levy which village
"I feel that our communtty night.
project wih the group.
residents passed, we have a can grow and unprove JUst as
The Commission received
It was decided to contact
systemati c yearly resur- much and as fast as we want just one bid for an emergency HUD to sec if additional
facing of streets which has tt to. Thts ta kes the medicalvehieleand thatwas moniescanbeobtain edon the
resulted in better roadways cooperation of all segments of from th e Hor ton Co.. project.
for our citizens to use.
vtll age government , a ll Columbus, in the amount of
The group discussed the
"I feel that maintenance Villa ge departments and the $24,612.61. The bid was tabled multi purpose building and it
and patching of streets has ctttzens wtthm the com· for further study.
was reported that the erecalso improved during the past muntty. I feel th~t I h~v e had
Scott Porterfield ·and Tom lion of steel will begin as soon
several years along cwtth thts cooperatiOn durmg lhe Lindstrom of. the Area VI as the weather breaks. All
snow· removal. " Mayor past few years and anttctpate Health Services discussed board members and Mary
Hoffman stated. Continu in g that it will continue in the possible health services and Ho bstctter , l'l e rk , we re
Hoffman said:
future to provide many mor.~ related· projects in Meigs present .
"Due to the cooperation of bcncf1ts to ou r commumty. County.

· d. I•d acy
Hoffman announces can
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman today announced he
will be a candidate for the
office of mayor at this year's
June-primary election.
Hoffman has been mayor of
~in ce 1974 when
finished the tenn of the
Mayor John Zerkle 'and
was elected in 1975 to the
or&lt;eseJot term.
In armouncing his can·
didacy , Mayor Hoffman
issued
the
followin g
statement :
" During the past five
' I feel there has been
spl1endid cooperation between
the Village Council, Mayor's
office and aU other village
departments. I expect this
cooperation to continue
during the next four years
and am sure that this will
prove of great benefit to the
village."
During the past several
years many improvements
have been completed in the
village, several will be under
construction soon and several
are still in the planning

The Senate of the 113th
General Assembly of Ohio
has approved a resolution
extending congratulations to
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas on her
selection as Woman of the
Year by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
The resolution states, in
part:
"This a ward is fitting
recognition of Eleanor
Thomas's selfless devotion to
others. :,Wit~ seemingly
boundless ~ energy,
en·
thusiasm, and a wann and
BASKETBALL
Sweet·
loving heart , she has . heart · Queen
Bec·
willingly given of herself to
ky, Crow, a senior at
do whatever was necessary to
Southern Jligh, daughter of
guarantee success for the
Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Crow,
many organizations with
Racine, was crowned
which she is affiliated.
"basketball sweetheart
"The motivating force
queen" Saturday night
SQUAD CALLED
behind the establistunent of
during half-time activities
The Middleport emergency
the Meigs County Senior
of the reserve game beCitizens Center, Eleanor
tween Point Pleasant and squad answered ·a call to 628
Thomas has been responsible
Southern. Becky was Oliver St., at 1:06 a.m.
for obtaining the necessary
chosen by vote of the Wednesday for Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman who was taken to
local, state and federal
student body.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
funding to implement the
At7:49 a.m. Wednesday the
many worthwhile services
squad went to 528 S. Second
provided by the center. In
Ave. for George Hackett, Sr.,
addition, she is an officer in
who was also ,taken to
the Ohio Association of Senior
Rain ending tonight. Low
Centers, Meigs County's tonight in mid 80s .. Cloudy Veterans Memorial Hospital.
representative to Buckeye Thursday with high in low
Hills • Hocking Valley 50s. Chance of rain 50 percent
Regional Development tonight, 20 -percent Thursday.
District a trustee for the
OFFICES MOVING
Consortium for Health
Offices
of the Meigs County
Education in Appalachia
WOTING DECLINES
of Hea lth will be
Department
Ohio and a member of the
BALTIMORE (AP)
moving
next
Monday·,
.. Meigs County Regional Instances of looting have
: Planning Commission and dwindled in this heavily Tuesday and Wednesday
the ,Home Health Service guarded city, but a state of from the present quarters on
Advisory Board.
·
emergency and a curfew Mechanic St., to quarters in
'·'Eleanor Thomas's un- continued as officials clean the Meigs Community Mental
tiring and compassionate ·up after a record snowfall Health Center.
Meigs Countians having
efforts have not gone un· and widespread ransacking.
noticed by her many friends · On Tuesday, Gov. Harry business to conduct through
· and coworkers whose high HUghes declared a state of the department should do so
esteem for her as an ex· emergency and extended for · this week before the move
. traordinary individual is another night a 7 p.m. to 5 takes place or next. week
reflected In their nomination a.m. curfew imposed Monday after the move has been
of ber for this award."
by Mayor William Scha~fer. completed.

Weather

15 CENTS

Sheriff Efaw
•
resigns post

Discusses refugee situation

By BilL CRIDER
Associated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- A
police strike still held Mardi
Gras hostage today but a
federal negotiator saw some
progress toward a settlement
that would let the good times
roll. .
"On your first day back
into negotiations you don'\
make 100 percent progress,
but I am not disappointed,"
said mediator Ansel Garrett
after a six-hour session that
ended late Monday night.
Talks aimed at ending the
four-day walkout by some
1,100 of the department's
1,514 officers resume today .
City officials remained.
apprehensive that the
garbage
collectors
of
Teamsters Local 270 might
walk out in sympathy with
the Police Association of
Louisiana ,
which
is
Teamsters Local 253.
Mitch
Ledet,
state ·
secretarytreasurer of the
MEETS THURSDAY
Preceptor Chapter of Beta Teamsters, maintained .the
suspense, saying only that a
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet sanitation department
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the walkout was "a good
Riverboat Room of the Meigs . possibility.".
Branch, Athens County · A substitute force of 650
Savings and Loan.
National Guardsmen, 126

Middleport, o.

VOL NO'. 'XXIX NO. 217

•

It was agreed to grant a request for use of the Meigs High
School for U1e Southeast Distri ~t Oass A Girls Sectional
Basketball Tournament on ~'eb . 27, March 1and 3.
Linda Yonker was granted permission to serve as a judge
for the State VIC A Conference on April 27. The boa: d
purchased 20 servicE!' contracts for teachers to attend an
arithmetic training semimtr in June ,
"'he seminar is in conjunction with a Title IV.C fa cilitation
grant dealing with a special program for students to improve
quality of their arithmetic.
AGREEMENT TABLED
,
The board tabled an agreement with the Meigs County
Council on Aging for th e Senior Citizens Center.
During the discussion on the center - located in the former
Pomeroy Junior Higb schoo l, it was pointed out that only one
mining class is conducted in the building, but the board is
spending ' 'a bundle of money'' in expen ses at the location used
also as a center for. Senior Citizens .
Supt. Dowler will meet with represent atives of the council
as well as representatives of the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency which is involved with the lun ch program for
Senior Citizens . The fin ancial report of the Pu blic Library
(Continued on page 12 1

Nationwise

Crow's Family
Restaurant

. U'\ee~.
~(s\'\~\~

Mrs. Bowen said project objectives are to give teachers lr&lt;!asurer , to secure an-advance draw of $250,000 and approved
mastery of teaching behaviors essential to prevent reading transfers of money at the Salisbury school which will have only
failure, Iosee that students significantly improve their reading on e account in the future.
A letter was read from the Ohio Farm Bureau announcing
achievement and to improve the attitude of students toward s
reading.
a quality education-ochool finance workshop on M~r c h 5 at Rio
The program uses time tested instructional methods, gives Grande. This will be attended by Supt. Dowler .
individual student mastery of r eading skills and provides a
The board approved the-use of fields by the Pomeroy Youth
total language arts curriculum.
Lea~ue for the StURmer baseball program. Some 200 young
Mrs. Bowen and Ms. Shultz received a week of int~fisive-jieople took part in the league's program last summer.
The board accepted Alice F. Scarberry of the Southerr,
program training . in Columbus and are now conducting
sessions for districtteachers who have now completed 43 of the Local District as a tuition student and entered into a
60 hours of lxaining.
cooperative agreement with the county office on the use of
Te~chers are now using the program in classrooms. Multi-Media d.rivers education equipment.
It was decided to table a request fr om the county board of
Taking part are Carol Evans, Salem Center; Carolyn
Mummey, Harrisonville; Rebecca Triplett, Middleport; education on testing seniors atthe end of the year .
Pauline Horton, Middleport; Helen Dais, Salisbury; Mary
This was decided after Dan Mo~ris . reported that the state
Hysell, Pomeroy; Carolyn Smith, Pomeroy; Ida Diehl, has a number of tests available and mdtcated that these should
Pomeroy; iletsy HorkY, Bradbury; JoAnn Hays , Rutland.
be looked over and also commented U1at, perhaps, students
The program can easily be continued throughout the should be tested at an ea r her grade' level so that any pr oblems
district at little expense if it is found to be successful, Mrs. • can be corrected before graduatwn.
Bowen reported .
Martha Coultrip, Kitty Cassell and Barbara Beegle were
ADVANCE WiniDRAWAL
named to the substitute teachers list and Ella Mae Southern
The board granted permission for Mrs. Jane Wagner, was-employed as a custodian for the remainder of the year.

e

AT

GREAT SERVICE! GREAT CHICKEN!

.....,

BY !lOB HOEFUCH .
Meigs Local School District students - providing there is
not more bad weather or flooding - will be going to classes
through June 6 instead of being diSmissed the last of May.
This seems to be the apparent plan acCtJrding discussion
held at Tuesday's regular session of the Mei1:11 Local Board of
Education.
Supt. Charles Dowler reported district schools have been
closed six days over the number of calamity days allowed by
the state. He said a tentative plan calls for students to be in
classes on Good Friday which was a planned holiday. The
original school calendar was extended through June 6 to make
up the days missed.
·
Apparently there is to be no relief from the State
Legislature which last year did provide exfra calamity days.
At last night's meeting, Larry Powell was given his oath of
office as a new board member. He was named last month to fill
the vacancy created by the resignation of Wendell Hoover.
READING PROGRAM
Mrs. Jeanne Bowen and Barbara Shultz outlined aspects of
a Title IV .C program designed to improve reading skills . The
program· is being carried out through a grant secured by Dan
Morris, Director of Curriculum in the district.

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY

I

~

MeigS Local board extends 1978-79 calendar

..

A 64 oz:, Bottle of RC with the
purchase of any bucket, barrel
or family valu peik.

- -···- ---- .. ..... - .. ··-

.....--~- ..

· MRS. G. C. KNOX
. Mrs. G. C. Knox, 66, died at
the Morgan County Care
Center in McConnelsville
Sunday.
Mrs. Knox is survived by
four daughters, Mrs. Harold
Renick, Ruskin , Fla.; Mrs.
Roy Epler and Mrs. Putman
Bragg, both of McConnelsville, and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Middleport; three
sons, Lloyd Knox and Ernest
Knox, both of McConnelsville
and Charles Knox of Zanesville. Also surviving are 13
grandchildren, 25 great·
grandchildren and three
great. great· grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. 'wednesday at
· the Miller Funeral Home in
McConnelsville.

Shah's plane

· January retail sales tax
CINCINNATI (AP) receipts in Meigs County for Cattle 300, auction early.
January were down 2.41 Compared to last week steers
percent
compared
to $1·1.50 higher, heifers IH
January, 1976, but county higher, CtJWS steady to $1
motor vehicle sales tax lower, bulls steady; 40 per·
receipt s' were up almost 50 cent steers, 20 percent
percent for the month heifers.
compared to January, 1978,
Steers: choice and prime,
according to the report of 2-4, 1,025·1,200 lb. 66.51).67.40;
Sta te Treasurer Gertrude -choice, z.•, l,IJOO.l,l75 lb.
Donahey.
64.51).66.50; good and choice,
Retail sales tax receipts for 2-4, 975•1,100 lb. 63-65;
January,
1979
totaled standard, 1·2, 900-1,275 lb. 60$56,043.27 compared to 62.40.
receipts of $59,477 .73 for
Heifers: choice and prime,
January, 1978. Receipts for 2-4,'875-1,075lb. ~. 10, high
motor vehicle sales lor dressing 66-67.10; choice, 2-4,
January , 1979, totaled 875·1,050 lb. 6:Hi5; good and
$49,600,54 compared to choice, 2-4, 875 1,000 lb. 62-63.
receipts of $33,213.79 for
Cows: utility and com·
January , 1978, an increase of mercia!, 2-3, 1,050-1,675 51.75·
49.33 percent.
57; cutter, 1·2, 750-1,150 lb .. 4554.
Bulls: 1·2, 1,075-1,900 lb. 61·
66.50.

-

"'""

Area Deaths !

Meigs retail

sales decliile

'" " " ' - "

stages.
"I have made trips to
Chicago, Washington , and
many trips to Columbus and
Marietta to talk with state
and federal officials about
grants for projects in Mid·
dleport. Some of these have
been successful an d all
government agencies are
very much aware of Mid·
d1eport and its interest in "·
becoming a more progressive
CtJmmunity."
During the past four years
the following grants and
assistance
have
be en
received by the village as a
direct result of cooperation
and action from the Mayor's
office and Village Co uncil :
- 11,100 grant from HUD
which was used by the
Planning Commission and
Buckeye Hill s - Hoc king
Valley Regional Develop·
ment District to prepare an
update to the Middleport
Comprehensive Plan. This
document has been of great
benefit to the village in
successfully applying for
. other grants.
- $21,000 grant from EPA
to be used in the preparation
of a Step I Facilities Plan for
our sewage system. This
document is necessary in
applying for other sewage
improvement funds.
- $7,050 grant from Bureau
of Outdoor Recreation to
assist in the construction of
tennis courts at the municipal
park.
- $128,000 grant !rom
Department of Housing and
Urban ·Development to
provide sewage service to the
area on Powell Street where a
,nursing home and apartment
CtJmplex is to be constructed.
Construction on this project is
expected to be underway by
early summer.
_ $60,000 grant from Appalachian Reg ional Com:
mission to assist in the Powell
Street Project.
The Page Street reconstrl{ction will also · finally
become a reality for our
community. Through the
. CtJoperatlon of the village,
Meigs County Commissioners
and the Ohio Department of
Highways this $200,000
project is expected to /8 ·
submitted for bids in the fall ,

'

Ap•nozntTnentS
,

SNOW IGLOO - It was only natural that an igloo
would be among the snow creations of Meigs County
youngsters this winter. Pictured with thei (igloo in a yard
'

approved

on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, are I to r, Clifford
Icenbower, Ivan Carl, Jeff Ginther, Jim Snider and Rod
\ Manley.
l
l

\

•

'

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