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·· 'l:C-'1'1'11! uauy lienti1f.IJ4iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Feb. 22. 1979 ·

___ t_h___s--·.·~ Chinese. • •

~ .t-:.--A--i;i.~.-~
·- ~_--De_a
__

~-

,C l

....{

\- • · . _ BETHEL COLWN
•'
Bethel Colemall: :lf. Route
1, Albany, died WN!ilesday
.J
morning at the ' Holzer
· Malical Center.
,.
.
, Mr. Coiema'l .,... born
Sept. 9, 1909 at Shelllf1._Ky., a
• · son of the late J01111 Ell
... Coleman who diedlbr11167. He
wasalso preceded iu~ath by
'
M daughter, Mary AM. and a
'
brother, Steel Colerilan.
Surviving are hie wife,
'· ' Alice Dailey Cole man ,
· Albany; his mother, Mrs.
Maude Coleman, Porter; six
sons, Jack Coleman, Mid'
.dlcport; Clifford B. \Aileman,
.'ii•ckson ; Gene Coleman,
·' Rutland ; Roy Coleman, West
Carrollton ; Jarnes E, Sanborn, Houston, Tex~ and
• Daniel Sanborn, Pandena,
Calif.; .five sisters, Mrs .
Cbarles tBessie) .Baker,
it .Parma; Mrs. Homli .(Tiny)
• • . 'Hopkb1s, Collins, k;r;,- Mrs.
~
William (Jessie) ·. ,letrie,
Vinton; Mrs. Jack (!lernice)
• Thacker, Collins, Ky., and
Mrs. .Ca rl (Frances) MeDonald, Cievelantl; . two
. tirothers, Robert and James
Co leman oi Por!et; 14
. grandchildren and one .great;
grandchild.
·4
Mr . Coleman ·~4_s a
member of the Mtildleport
First United Presl!iterian
,
Church where he sei-1111 as a
deacon and an usher:Jie was
a vetera·n of the ·;Mariile
.'

:1

Corps. He worked as a printer into Hoang Lien Son
lor the Royal McBee Co.. provin ce. where the Chinese
Athens.
captured the major town Of
Funeral services will be Lao Cai on Tuesday. Other
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Vietnamese forces were said
Rawlings-Coats F uneral In have destroyed pontnon
Home in Middleport with the bridges the Chinese were
Rev . Robert Colvi n. Jr., using to cross the Red and
officiating. Burial will be in Namthi rivers in the area. :
Gravel Hili · Cemetery,
The Chinese have been reCheshire. Friends may call at ported as deep as 12 miles inthe fun eral home from 2 to 4 side Vietnam but the depth of
and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday and the invasion as. well as ail
until time of services other information about the ..
Saturday .
war have been impossible In
verify . The Vietnamese claim
tn have killed 5,000 to 8,000 of
ERA EBERSBACH
the Chinese, and the Chinese
Friends here have received cl~im to have wiped out 10,000
word of the Feb. 5 death of Vietnamese.
Mrs. Era Ebersbach, widow
Foreign gove rnm ents
of th e late Walla ce continued on the lookout for
Ebersbach. Mrs. Ebersbach indiCations of more active
died · at th e Sarasota Soviet support for Vietnam .
MemdrialHospitaiafteranil- But despite rumors and
!ness of three weeks. She is reportsoftroo paiertsonboth
survived by her mother-in- sides of the long Sovietlaw, Mrs. Eipha Ebersbach, Ch inese border across Asia,
and. her sister-i n-law, Marshall D. Shulman, the
Kathleen Bailey, Osprey,' U.S. State Department's top
Fla.
Soviet expert, told newspaper
Burial was in the Sarasota editors and broadcasters in
Memorial Park.
Wa shington Wednesday
"there are no indications"
the Soviets are preparing
BROTHER SURVIVES
military action ag~inst
A survivor of Mrs. Anna Ch ina.
'
Mae Thomas Terrell; 52, who ·
died Monday not included in
an earlier obituary is her
brother, John Thomas of
Philadelphia, Pa.

Four couples
end marriages

uosfiiTAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial "-"ilal Brian Hartwell , James
-~~~rge Henderson, Janet Herron,
· ··lfackett, Sr., Mfddi'l(port; Hazel Holley, Haley Howell,
• , Pearl Darst, Cheshire; Janet Lana !son, Maudie Jenkins,
nussell, Middleport ;-Neinita Joyce Lambert, Mrs. Steven
1, ..j:IUto11, Reedsville ; f'il'fricia Martin and daughter, John
; .i fers, Syracuse; Karen Morgan, Donald Nibert,
'
~bert, Reedsville; · Robert Garland Oldaker, Joseph
; . , urtis, Middleport;...f4ary Queen, Mrs. Bruce Richards
!'! · cher, Pomeroy; Ki,tman and dau ght e r , Sonia
\.!' Werry, Pomeroy.
,:.:
Sidenstricker, Donald Stem,
c, ' • Discharged - ~rbara Clarence Stutler, Mary
f.etty, .Tames Gibson .Her- Thompson , Edna Tope,
·~ ~~~~an Warner, Gpldie ~~n. William Vjars , Micha el
~ l!:!eanor Thomas.
''-~- ·· ········walker, Jane Walton.
.. ·
Births, Feb. 21
·Mr. and Mrs. Carl Veith,
.~:·.,. llolrer Medical ~!ii'r
daughter, Cheshire.
••
01scharges, Feli; ·
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Mrs. Bobbie Bays ahd son,. Dunfee, daughter, Crown CiTamela Bearhf, Ray , Roy ty.
Canterbury, John · Dailey,
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Collier,
Charles Camink Dotson, son, Lawrence, 0.
Driscol, ~illiam . Mr. and Mrs. William Lee,
1iaimilto1~. Bert d!imlley , son, Henderson, W. Va.
·--" .,

Two action ~ for the
dissolutions of marriage and
two divorce actions have
been filed in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court . . ·
Seeking dissolutions are
Patricia Lynn Chadwell and
James L. Chadwell, Route I,
Reedsv ille, and Ricky J.,
. morris and Cindy Mae
Lawson Morris, Route 2,
Racine.
Richard E. Phillips,
Middleport, is seeking a
divorce from Barbara G.
Phillips, Jacksonville, Fla.,
and Jennie RusSell, Middleport, from Eddie Russell,
Middieport. Gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty are
c~arged in both actions.

~· ·, Admitt ed

· Coin club plans

~

.
•

We Salute dtlr Local Chapter of the
FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA
A Week-Feb.I7-24
• - •

..

'

'

e

.

Laos WC're reported moving

'

t~..

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

(Continued from page 1)

~ ·. . .

;

. .

'!:&gt;

FFR

FRIDAY

(USPS 145-960)

AND
SATURDAY

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHl TIL 8

•·-··If'

BUSTER BROWN

M

and e&gt; tend out appreciation Cor their ··
'
y
work wi th our •you ng peo ple toward excellence in coinmunity leadership and
-agricu ltural vo~·tional exp ertise.
'

~~C~a; A Home na11k 1

WE ERRED
A report from the court of
Ma yor Fred Hoffm an in
Wednesda y's , Sentinel read
that Cha rles R. Knight, Oak
Hill, forfeited $150 bond on.
charges of assault and battery and disorderly manner.
The name should have read
Charles R. Wright.

For
Meigs County

Prople

RACINE
t«JME NAnoNAL
.

BANK

Racin ... Ohio

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the
Bailey Run Road at 9:42p.m.
Wednesday for Mrs. Griff
Archer who was ha ving
difficulty breathing. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
· DINNER CANCELLED
Aspaghetti dinner planned
for Saturday evening by the
Busy Challengers Class of the
Racine Baptist Church has
been cancelled.

MISSY SIZES
ONLY $600

FRIDAY - SATURDAY SALE

JACKETS

Discontinued style, fancy plaid,
pattern in decorator colors .
qu;3nlity Js limited.

SALE s15.29

Smal l quantity reduced for
clearance. Blue denim with warm
blanket lining. corduroy collar.
not every size.

REG. '21.00

Men's 23.95 Overall Jackets
89

REG. '23.00

8.49 Full Size (Flat or rttted)

1

SALE 118.89

1

SALE s18

'5.19
16.49 Twin Size (Fiill or F'rtted)

SALE 520.69

Men's
. 118.95 Overall Jackets
89

One person was injured
during a one-vehicle accident
today on CR 7, one-hall mile
east of SR 7, at 1:35 a.m.
Th~ Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway ~atrol, reports a
west bound auto operated by
Thomas Hysell, 31, Pomeroy,
swerved to avoid an animal
on the roadway, ran off the
righl side of the pavement,
struck an embankment, and
overturned.
Hysell displayed visible
signs of injury and was transported to Veterans Memorial
. Hospital.
'
There was severe damage
to the vehicle.
. Two persons were · injured
during an accident involving
six vehicle Thursday at 6:45

NO IRON
MUSLIN. SHEETS

SALE _s12.5$

OVERALL ,

'3.99

5.99 pr. Matching Cases

1

SALE s14

•3.49 pr.

SALE

ACCESSORY
·CLEARANCE

.HAND
BAGS

.Nationwise
.

WINTER
CLOTHING

Measures lead to diSmissals
Gloles,

*alORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

Hat and
Scarf Sets

•· SWEATERS

~

MEN'S WRANGLER
$1~

SJ,49
RED HEART

BLUE JEANS

YARN
~~

Si zes 28 to 42 lengths 30 to
36 inches. 100 per cent
cotton. No Faull denim .
flare leg style .

.,..
SALE!

3 1f:~ ounce ske ins, big selection of
colors an d var iegated, stock up
now.

19 SKEIN

CIRCLEVILLE, ·Ohio (AP). - A massive power
outage in the service area of South Central Power Co.
was caused by bullet holes in insulatnrs on a 65,000 volt
transmlsalon line, power company offictals say.
The outage short-circuited e(ectrfcaf service to
3 112 customers in a wide area north of bere
Wednesday. The insulators apparently were damaged
by .22-caliber bullets, comp~~ny spokesmen said. The
outage occurred at about 4:35 a.m. Service was
restored to all customers by. 9:40a.m.

SALE! MEN'S

-Hanes®

BOYS JEANS
Sizes a to 18 in regulars and slim ,
st udent sizes' 26 to 30 waist.

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

Choose your co rrect length .
Includes our entire stock of
denim and fas hi on jeans,
excelle nt select ion .

Boys $8.95 Jeans

extra large,

lo~.g sleev~

ZURICH, Switzerland ( AP) - Oil company
sources say gasoline prices will reach a record $2.45 a
gallon here soon. That's three Urnes the average U. S.
price of 70 cents per gallon.
·
· . In Paris, gasoline already costs $2.50 a gallon for
premium. Esso Switzerland announced Thursday a
nine-eent..a-gallon Increase effective Frtday and other
brands were expected to follow.

shirts,

ankle length drawer , wt~rm,
comfortable, shrink resistant .

Boys $10.95 Jeans .

.' 9.39

Regular $4 .69
Thermal Underwear

Boys $11.95 Jean

·3~99

'10.19

Reg . $5.99

Boys $13.95 Jeans

·Peacemaker troops discussed

Thermal Unc!er·we;u

'11.89

SERTA VAWE PWS

Gas prices reach record

Sizes small, medium, large and

•7.69

SERTA HOTEL

PERFECT SLEEPER

MATTRESS
.&amp; BOX SPRINGS

MATTRESS AND lllXSPRING

FIRM. AND EXTRA FIRM

BAL HARBOUR, Fls. (AP) -Hoping to kick the
teeth out of President Carter's voluntary wage-pr:lce
gul~es. organized labor will ask a federal judge to
deClare the program Illegal on grounds it's a
mandatory program in disguise.
AFLCIO President Ge&lt;l'ge Meany, charging
·Carter Is overstepping his aut!Jority, said Thursday his
federation will.fUe suit in federal court within a few
weeks to prove that Carter's anU-inflatlon guidelines
violate a 1974 law prohibiting_mandatory wage,price
controls.

YOUR CHOICE
•QUEEN

•QUEEN

(SETS ONLY)

(SETS ONLY)

$

00
EA.
. PC.

Drugs can be used in trial

OOVJNBTON~ Ky. (AP) - A federal judge has
ruled that $1.8 million wor:th. of illegal drugs can be
used In evidence against a Cincinnati man, although
the contraband was examined and ·lie~ wjthbut a
search warrant.

OPEN SATURDAY TIL 5 PM

Elberfelds' In Pomeroy
•.

•

WASHINGTON (AP)- President Carter, staking ·
out a peacekeeper role f&lt;l' Egypt in the Middle East,
says Its troops might legitimately be used to protect
other Arab countries against outside aggression.
Appearing Thursday before hundreds of out-of.
town editors, Carter alsci hinted he will approve new U.
S. weapoos shipments to Egypt, but J)ot at tbe level
requested last week by President Anwar Sa~~-

.·Seeks federal declaration_

YOUR CHOICE
•FULL

'·- ··

Bullets caused big outage

lhPRICE

*BLOUSES

COATS AND ClARKS

•lWIN
•FULL

WASHINGTON' (AP) - Tighter security measures
aimed at preventing leaks of claaslfied materials have
resulted In' about a dozen recent dismissals or
reprimands at the Central Inte!Ugence Agency, a CIA
spokesman says.
·
"Yes, there has been more security in the past six
months or so," public affairs officer Herbert Hetu said
Thursday night. He acknowledged more-frequent
polygraph tests and a new policy of searching
employees' briefeases and purses at the d~rs of the
CIA's big Virginia headquarters near Washmgton.

Winter Hats,

*ROBES AND GOWNS

$}

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A gun batUe during the
apparent robbery of a grocery carry~ut store early
Thursday resulted In the death of a Columbus man and
~g of,p policeman. . ·
Robert'!'. Aldehderfer, lll, was pronounced dead of
multiple gunshot wourids at about 5:30a.m. at Mercy
Hospital. Police officer Rollie K. Whiting, 41, was in
good condition in Grant Hospital with gunshot wounda
in his right hand and right thigh.

OFF

WINTU~

a.m. on SR 7, at milepost-9.
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports the
pile-up began when an auto
operated by Vicky Smith, 18,
Crown City, backed from a
private drive onto 7, and was
unable to move on the ice
covered roadway.
A north bound vehicle
driven by Wanda Waugh, 25,
Crown City, was unable to
stop and struck the Smith
auto.A north bound auto
by
Steven
operated
Schumacher, 46, Crown City,
stopped at the scene of the
accident, and was struck by a
vehicle, which was unable to
stop, driven by Thomas
Sanders, 33, Barbersvllle,

Gun battle leaves one dead

lhPRICE

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1979

15 CENTS

The Nationa[Cattlerrien's Association said retail beef prices
jumped at least 5 percent in January because of severe winter
weather, increased costs and the decline in beef prcx!uction.
Average retail prices of choice-grade beef rose 1o a record
$2.06 a pound in Jahuary, up 6.6 percent from $1.94 a pound in
December. A year ago comparable prices averaged about
$1.60 a pound.
The government's producer price report for January, released eadier, showed wholesale prices of ali products rising
1.3 percent. Although beef showed the biggest increase, the
gains were widespread, including steel, automobiles, tobacco
and gasoline.
Alfred Kahn, chief of the Carter administration's anti~n­
flation program, called these increases "clearly trou'&gt;le-

some."
Besides the new price reports, the administration is faced
with a suit by the AFI..C!O against President Carter's 4-monthold anti-inflation wage and price guidelines.
AFL-CIO President George Meany said in Bal Harbour,
Fla., Thursday that the labor federation would go to court to
have the standards declared illegal.
Meany has maintained that it is easier to enforce the 7 percent limit against wages than it is In enforce price standsrds,
which are more complicated. •
The program is described as voluntary but Meany said it is
really mandarory
·
threatened against
companies that don't
are no laws now on the
books permitting
he said.

·The administration is counting on the guidelines to hold
inflation to 7.4 percent this year. However, Data Resources
Inc., a private economic consulting firm, has raised ilq estimate for the year from 8percent to 9 percent.
And Federal Reserve, Chairman G. WiUiam Miller told the
Senate Budget Committee Thursday it would be difficult to
imagine that inflation in 1979 will be significantly lower than
the 9 percent recorded last year.
Many private economists are predicting a recession at thr
end of the year as the administration tries to fight inflation.
ACommerce Department report Thursday showed that t h•
gross national product- output of' goods and services - gre
at an amiuakate of 6.4 percent in the fourth quarter, up fro
the 2.6 percent rate in the third quarter.

Five persons injured
•
m 16 traffic wrecks

$700

ONLY

SALE 110.89

BLANKET LINED

One group of winter
. styles in fabric and
leather.

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OH 10

enttne

.

'

EXTRA SIZES

REG. '12.00

FRIDAY-SATURDAY

OAPSE MEETING
Meigs Local Chapter 17
OAPSE will meet Tuesday,
Feb. 27 at 7:30 p.m. at Meigs
Junior High in Middleport.

ASSORTED COLORS

REG. '14.00

FRIDAY-SATURDAY
TRAINING SESSIONS
Aid to Dependent Children
workers and food stamp
workers of the Meigs County
Welfare Department office in
Middl eport
were
not
available today due to a
training meeting held in
Columbus.

POLYESTER
SLACKS

*STRAIGHT LEGS
*RARE LEGS
*CINCH WAIST STYLES
*BELTED STYLES
JUNIOR - MISSY
EXTRA SIZES

Reg. $2.59
Sate $1.79
Reg . $3 .25
Sale $2.25
Reo. $4.59
Sale $3.20
Reg . S5.25
Sale $3.65
Reg . 6.59
, Sale $4.60
Reg . $7.50
Sale $5.25
Reg. 10 .50
Sale $7 .35

By MICHAEL DOAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sharp new increases In consumer
prices, particularly beef and veal, are giving the Carter
administration a new case of economic indigestion.
SOme government officials said they expected tbe Consumer
Price Index Ill' January, due out later tOOay, would show a
star'tling I percent increase from December prices - perhaps
even more.
A 1percent monthly 4tcrease would tranalate to a 12 percent
annual increase, but most analysts do not expect it to be that
high over the course of a full year.
Most, but not all, of the latest increase Is attributed to the .
soaring cost of heel, which is in short supply.

SPECIAL PURCHASE

JEANS SALE

CHILDREN'S
PANTS AND TOPS

NO. 219

at y

•

Meat prices give administration .indigestion

Monday session
The OH KAN Coin Club will
conduct a regular business
meeting Monday evening at
the Riverboat Room of ·the
Meigs Branch of the Athens
County Savings and Loan_Co.,
West Maui St., Pomeroy.
Out . of town coin dealers
will be present to buy, sell or
trade collector items during
the socialhour preceding the
8 p.m. meeting.
Club members will complete the planning of their
16th annual coin show to be
held at the Holiday Inn near
Gallipolis on Sunday, March
11. Following the business
meeting a·coin auction will be
held and refreshments will be
served. Anyone interested in
coin collecting Is invited to
attend Monday evening's
meeting.
·

VOL NO. XXIX

•

I

Ky .
A north bound auto
operated by Debra Harris, 18,
Crown City, then struck the
Sanders vehicle.
A north bound four-wheel
drive truck driven by Santa
R. Suver,l9, Crown City, was
unable to stop at the accident
scene and collided with the
Waugh and Sanders autos.
The Waugh auto was forced
off the left side of the roadway.

The Sanders vehicle was
Impacted into the Smith auto.
The Smith and Sanders
autos then struck a guardrail.'
Smith displayed visible
signs of injury, and was
transported by SEOEMS to
Holzer Medical Center, .
where she was treated for a
contusion of the forehead, an
abrasion of the nose, and a
non-displacement of the nasal
bone, and released.
Waugh clailned injury, but
was not immediately treated.
There was severe damage
to the Waugh , Sanders, and
Suver vehicles, moderate
damage to the Smith,
Schumacher, and Harris
autos. ; ·
OSP r'ficers investigated
15 other accidents Thursday.
One person was injured
during a one-vehicle mishap
on SR 554, three-tenths of a
mile west of Fairview Rd.
Officers report that a west
bound auto operated by
School. The event is free. The group which has performed in the United
FINAL CONCERT TONIGHT - The Allinations Dance Company, a
Marguerite Gilmore, 30,
States,
South America, Europe, and Iceland, has been Inuring Mason
multi-ethnic
troupe
of
professional
dancers,
will
give
their
final
Bidwell, went out of control
County
School this week.
performance
in
Mason
C9unty
tonight
at
8
p.m.
at
Point
Pleasant
High
on the ice covered roadway,
and passed off the left side of ::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;::::::::::::::
the pavement into a ditch.
Gilmore clailned injury,
PUBLIC HEARING
and was transported by a
A public meeting to
relative to Holzer Medical discuss details of a planned
Center, where she was annexation wUl be held at 7
treated for a contusion of the p.m. at the Town Hall in
right shoulder and small Racine Monday.
abrasions, and released.
Ways 'of financing water
There was moderate line and streets for the
dsmage to the vehicle.
annexation to Racine
An auto .operated by Debbie VUiage wUl be dlscussed. A
Gooderham, 25, Gallipolis. representative
the western side of the J?angkok also had no word of Ninh pro-vince before halting
from
By DAVID TERRY
incurred severe damage Buckeye HUls - Hocking
any fighting after Wednesday their advance at midnight
Associated Press Writer border.
during a one-vehicle accident Valley Regional Planning
night.
The
report
said'
the
militiaWednesday.
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP )
on SR 7, two-tenths of a mile Commiss ion will be
A decisive battle was beThe Bangkok sources said
- Soviet ships unloaded men were being llSed for
north of SR 218.
present.
and
radar transportation , evacuation of lieved shaping up in the Lang the Chinese troops who
missiles
Officers report that_ the
equipment at the Vietnamese wounded and sweeping of Son-Dong Dang area, 78 miles punched into Quang Ninh
Gooderham aulD went out of &lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: port of Haiphong and China mines under fire . Kyodo said northeast of Hanoi, on a cen- proba bly· intended to cut
control on the ice covered
. launched air strikes deep into some observers in Peking turies-&lt;lld Chinese invasion Highway 4 and then push
roadway, passed off the left
Vietnam to destroy 1he interpreted this In mean the route through the mountains inland in an attempt to cut
side of the pavement and
Russian supplies before they Chinese. government was not whe re one Chinese force Highway 1, the highway from
struck a utility pole.
a
speedy crqssed the border last Satur- In Hanoi tn Lang Son. They
could reach the batUefield, planning
Gooderham
displayed
wa
s de- day .
said the Chinese drive intn
withdrawa
l
but
Thai intelligence sources said
visible signs of injury, but
The
Chinese
we~e
termined
to
continue
the
inGao Pang province probably
today.
was not immediately treated.
entrenched
in
positions
on
was a diversion intended In
vasion
it
began
si.x
dsys
ago.
The sources said Chinese
The Galiia-Meigs Post
hill
s
three
miles
inside
Radio
·
Hanoi
claimed
a
draw
off troops that might
'a ircra ft struck an area
investigated 13 other Thurs(Continued on page 12)
northwest of Haiphong on "great victory" in the first Vieinam overlooking Dong
dsy accidents during which
Thursday, shortly after the five days of the invasion, but Dang, with Vietnamese
the vehicles involved inSoviets ships began their it• battle reports stopped with batieries on the hills fa cing Additional rain
, curred minor dsmage.
deliverie s. The · raiders Wednesday. Peking has not them on the other side of the
apparently hit outside the been issuin g military village, intelligence sources
city so as not to risk born bing co mmuniques , and in Bangkok sa id Thursday. slated Saturday
WTI'ERY WINNERS
The Chinese put another
the Russian ships and trig- in telligence . sources in
Gold- 5
regiment
of reinforcements
gering a Soviet reprisal.
White- Of
By The Associated Press
into
the
Dong
Dang area
•
Blue - 068
Heavy
fighting
was
Mild temperatures and rain
Wednesday,
the
sources
said.
reportep, meanwhile, along
Wln·A-Thon ;_ 3%393
will
continue over Ohio
Meanwhile,
Vietnamese
100 miles of the eastern
tonight
and Saturda y.
columns
of
reinforcements
$i00,000 ROBBERY
Vietnam-China border, with
OVer
Tonight's
low
will be in the
were
reported
pushing
up
the
VENICE, Italy (AP)
some of the sHarpest action'in
30s to the low 40s, and the
highway
from
Hanoi
to
Lang
unmen
the
Lang
Sonand
Gao
Bang
The Middleport. fir e Thr ee masked g
John D. Montgomery, .22 , Son.
high Saturday will range
Mark's Basilica areas.
f
· Zaleski, was bound over to
department'was called to the robbed St. ·es
from
nea r 40 in toe northwest
About
60
miles
In
the
northThe report came rom
G
Of rubl and diamonds
Tom Rue Apartments, South today
the
Galiia
County
rand
Jury
e
to
near
50 in the southeast.
west
of
Lang
Son,
China
sent
valued at a bout $6 00,000, Kyodo, the J apanese n ws
Third - Ave., Thursday
Heavy rains and thunderservice, in a dispatch from . on a cha rge of murder another regiment across the
·t following a preliminary border into Cao Bang storms were moving through
morning where the motor on police said. .d the nigh_t- Peking . . It sal'd
Is
G
11
They Sal
a furnace had burned otit
in!
f
f
hea ring
in
ailipo s province Wednesday, and 150 Ohio tOday ahead of a cold
3
orma IOn . . came rom · Municipal Court Thursday miles fa rther west Vietnam front which stretched from
causing considera)lle smoke watchman, Stefano de
Martin,
was
pistol
whipped
Weste~n
mihta:y source m afternoon.
dsmage.
Wisconsin to Texas.
by
the
thieves
who
then
.
the
Chmese
capital_. but _there
The Rio Grande College was rushing reinforcements
Thursday morning at 11 :15
A flash flood watch was
to Lao Cai, northwest
a.m., the eme~gency unit of . smashed the protect ive glass ":as no other identifiCatiOn or . student has been charged in Viet n a m 's major posted for the entire Buckeye
of the lOth · century him.
'··
.
coimection with the Feb. 17 communications and railway state. The mild weather of the
the fire · department was case
r M' h 1
B zantine painting "La . Th? report saJd there was
called for Richard Qualls, Myadonna NI'co pel· a" and f1ghtmg 12 nu
center on tbe Red River , the past several days has caused
_ les InSide VIetshooting death o
lc ae
Beech St. He was taken to
te t
bt t
Bane, 19, Gallipolis, in a sources said. It was captured considerable water runoff
.
gr abbed the gems adorning names_e rn ory, u I gave coll.ege dormi'tory.
Veterans Memorial Hospital th
Tuesday by two Chinese divi- from the melting snow cover.
k
no mdicahon how the battles
e wor · ·
were going.
The current grand jury, sions.
This has resulted in minor
where he was admitted.
At 11:17 p.m. the squad
Kyodo also said the which has been seated since . t::ifty miles to the southeast rises in rnany of Ohio's rivers
POWER OUTAGE
received another call for
Peking's People's Daily, the Tuesday, has reportedly ' of Lang Son, thrBe divisions and moderate rises in a few.
Th,e Racine area and Chinese communist Party remained lmpan ~led longer of . Chinese
Buddy McKinriey who had
Urban drainage flooc!ing
infantry,
fallen on North Seconil ilve. sections of Syracuse were newspaper , reported that than any gran_d .Jury m the supported by heavy tanks, was also likely to be a
He was taken to Veterans without power Thursday men 18 ro . 35 were being · history of Gall1a County.
were reported to have pushed problem. Partially melted
Memorial Hospital by the night due to a defective in- organized into militia units in · Bond for Montgomery was to within 10'» miles of snow and ice clogging some
Middleport Police Depart- sulator, Ohio Power Com- Chi na 's Kwa ngsi Chuang continued by Judge James A.. Viet nam 's eas t -west sewer drains could hinder
pa0y of!iciais reported today. Autonomous Region, behind Bennett at $50,000.
ment.
Highway 4 in coastal Quang proper drainage.

Missiles delivered to
Vietnamese port today

. Fumace motor
causes nnnor
· smoke damage

Rio student

bound

•

I
I
I

I

�2-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb. 23, 1979

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb. 23, 19'19

•

Penrod, Buckeyes end Meigs' season

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

COMMENTARY

MEDlCI

An inappropriate success

Donald F. Gfaff

Playing computer catch-up ,

By Martha Angle and Robert Walter•

By DOll Graff

WASHINGTON\ NEAl- In these first months of the 96th

Congress, there has been no more discouraging event than
the ascension to power of a legislator who has compiled a
37-year-long record of failure to provide even minimal
leadership.
He is Rep . .Jamie L. Whitten, O.Mi&lt;ls., who has just
asswned the chairmanship of the House Appropriations
Committee, a panel whose ubiquitous influence is the .
product of its authority to originate all federal spending
legislation .
.
The most senior member of the House in tenns of

continuous service, the 68-year"()ld Whitten was first
elected in 1941 and re-&lt;!lected 19 consecutive times. He
seldom has faced opposition in either primary or. general
elections, and few challengers have ever attracted even 15
percent of the vote.
Whitten can be courtly when the occasion calls for
reserved demeanor. He can be folksy and channing with
constituents. And he can be autocratic, abusive and
belligerent when dealing with national issues of considerable import.
.
The venue for Whitten's misuse of authority has been the
Appropriations Committee's agriculture subcommittee,
which he chaired from 1949 until he moved up to head the
full conunittee last month.
A typical case involves the Grain Inspection Siandards
Act, passed by Congress in 1976 in the. wake of a national
scandal that produced evidence of a p10ttern of short- .

:u~~~~
aJid contaminated grain shipments to other
When Agriculture Department officials appeared before

Whitten's subcommittee last year to seek additional funds
to hire federal inspectors to implement the Jaw, the

·congressman charged that Congress had "overreacted" to

Ed

• l · ' ·•

to you."

in .the news
LONDON ( AP) - QueenEiizabeth II is being showered with
jewels estimated at more than $2 million by the rulers of the
Arabian peninsula as she tours the region, say British reporters.
.
·
Norman Luck of the Dally Express said a double string of
pearls as big as marbles came from Kuwait, a gold tray encrusted with amethysts from Saudi Arabia and a knee-length
gold necklace decorated with precious stones from Qatar :_
"more like chain mail," the reporter SaJd . .
The queen's husband, Prince Philip, has received jeweled
golden swords and valuable carpets.
--·~OME

(AP )- Pope John Paul Il's first encyclical will be
issued before Easter and will deal with human rights and the
Gospel, several Italian n~wspapers report.
Encyclicals are the most authoritative of papal documents .
They have been used by recent popes to outline the policies
they planned to follow during their pontificates. ·
John Paul,"58, who is Polish, was elected OCt. 16 as the first
non-Italian pope in ahnost 500 years.

PHILADELPHIA [AP)- Mamie Eisenhower and the late
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey are among 28 recipienls of principal
awards from the Freedoms Foundation.
Other recipients include former Texas Congresswoman
Barbara Jordan; businessman John WiUard Marriott Sr .; Joseph Maxwell Cleland, administrator of Veterans Affairs; and
former "Hanoi Hilton" POW, Navy Capt. Eugene McDanieL

Thomas Mullen, an instructor at the ~arlham School of
Religion , and an author, writes: " ... the fondness children
have for the hamburger may allow them to grow up without
ever having to use a fork oc knife:"
The above comments started the thought in my mind, that
in this day of so much T.V. tube religion that many persons
may believe they are eating much spiritual food without the
need of physically involving themselves with such spiritual
implements as singing hymns in church, praying with
Christian friends in public, speaking to the populace of God's
love through Christ.
Religious programs via TV and Radio must certainly be
meeting some needs that peogle have- the sick, shut-ins, etc.
But so far as I am concerned, the physical presence of my
brothers and sisters in Christ in worship and praise give me
greater strength than I can possibly find by the .electronic
media.
The financial gifts lo T.V . religion may help to meet the
needs of both donor and recipient. But the most needed gUts
which I find I need are those I experience in face to face fellowship with persons who sing and pray. They give me ilomething
I need, I hope I give them something in return:
Let us use the implements of hymns, prayers, service and
witness in person to person relationShip, in "live" and not
" taped" settings. - Robert T. Bwngarner.

Berry's World

MIAMI ( AP) - Former Attorney General John Mitchell
received frequent telephone calls while in prison from his old
boss, former President Richard Nixon, according to a
"MJami" magazine article.
The copyright article appearing in the magazine 's March issue was written under the pseudonym Ronald James by J.
Ronald Beasley, a former Miami television news producer. He
met Mitchell while serving part of a 14-month sentence at
Maxwell Federal Prison Camp in Montgomery , Ala ., for
cocaine possession and conspiracy.
.
The article also said Mitchell blamed former White House
counsel Charles ColSon for Watergate.

I

~

·Library

..... Letters

_.,...1

By halftime, ·the Buckeyes
were in front 34-25, but the
key factor in Meigs staying
close was the fact that the
Marauder
defense was
bottling up Penrod.
The six-foot senior was held
W "just" 13 points In that first
half, but as luck would have
it, the Buckeyes were having
a hct night as the rest of the
team picked up lhe slack .
Jeff Pritchard and Chris
McDonald ended the night
with 12 and 14 points each.
The Buckeyes hit the first
four points in the second ha lf,
and Penrod was off and
running. He couldn't seem lo
miss in that t hird period. On
the night he hit for a sizzling
42 points, connecting on 17 of
Tl fJ®r attempts and hitting 8
of 9 foul shots. Behind his
scoring punc h, the Buc keyes
led 65-37 at the end of th ree

periods, scoring ~I points in
that third stanza.
Penrod played nearly all of
the fourth quarter too.
Three Meigs players hit for
dquble figures, ·and on any
other night the Marauders
may have had a win.
Ray Andrews had one of the
best nights of his career as he
popped in 19 points and
hauled in six rebounds. Greg
Becker also poured in 19
markers, and Steve Ohlinger
added 10 points and .six
rebounds .
Meigs
was
outrebounded 31-20.
Meigs had a good night
from the floor , connecting on
28 of 58 shots for 49 percent.
Nelsonville- York was at its
best as the Buckeyes hit an
amazing 33 of 56 shots for 59
percent. The Tri-Valley
·champions hit for 17 of 21 ~t
the line while Meigs was 7 of
11.

"This ought to be a GOLD MI(YE - a new
food product that Is full ·of sugar, salt,
calories, cholesterol, additives and has no
nutritional value! "

NBC-TV) sbootout.
'' Iowa will have to play exA:P Sports Writer
tremely
well when they come
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) here.
Ohio
State is better than
Ohio Sta te was leading
when
we
played t hem
Illinois 51-47 with eig ht
1
minutes to play when the earlier.' said Henson . T.he
announcement came that illi ni lost at home to the
Buckeyes 69~ in overtime.
Iowa had lost at Indiana.
Herb Williams matched his
A sellout St. John Arena
career
high with 34 points and
crowd of 13,489 exploded. And
the
1&gt;-foot-10
Buckeyes' sophso did the Buckeyes.
omore
center
called it his top
They outscored the lliini 12·
offensive
game.
4 in the next five minutes,
safely en route to a 13-55 • " My best all-around game
victory Thursday night for was at indiana this year bethe sole Big Ten Conference cause I played pretty good
lead at 12-3. Iowa and defense, rebo unded and
Michigan State are one game scored," he told a cluster. of
newsmen in the Ohio State
behind at 11-4 .
dressingroom.
" The announcement on the
" I figured I had to have a
Iowa game had a lot to do
good
game for us to win," he ·
with it," conceded · Illinois
said.
"Most
teams sag on me.
Coach Lou Henson, his team
They
weren't
doing that, just
now 19-8 overall and 7-il in the
going
one-on-one.
I like to
conference.
play
anyone
that
goes
one-&lt;&gt;nEldon Miller, Ohio State's
one
on
me."
coach, agreed . "I don 't think
Miller could explain Wilit (the announcement) cooled
liams'
offensive explosion.
us off."
"
W
e
did
an excellent job of
So now it 's time for the
getting
the
ball inside to him.
14th-ranked Buckeyes to
KelvinRansey
did a super job
entertain
No.
12
of
running
our
offense," said
Iowa Saturday in a regionally
his
coach.
televised (3:30 p.m. EST,

By GEORGE STRODE

And Henson had yet
another perspective of the big
sophomore's performance.
"When (1&gt;- 11 center) Derek
Holcomb fouled out (with
10 :51 to play), we couldn 't
contain Williams/' he said.
James Griffin, a 1&gt;-10 fr eshman , came up with his
highest college pojnt total of
23, keeping the lllini in the ·
gam e. Griffin, averaging
seven points coming into the
game, had 13 of his total by
ha lfti"l e, keeping Illinois
close at 35-26.
So how does Miller view the
.Big Ten race - leading by
one game with
three
conference contests left?
He grinned and said, "The
S8J;Ile way when it started.
We've been at or near the top
most of the year . We just
have to go out and play now.
We had good offensive
patience and I was very
pleased with our bench
tonight. "
Ransey, with 16 points , extended his school record to 56
consecutive games of double
figure scoring, helping Ohio
State to a 11-7 overall record .

•

Blue Angels wm fifth
Coach Jllckie Knight's
Gallipo lis Blue
Angels
defeated visiting Meigs, 5841, in a Southeastern Ohio
League makeup game Thursday on the GAHS hardwood.
It was Gallipolis' fift h
consecutive triurriph.
The victory left Gallipolis
with a 11-4 season mark.
Inside t he SEOAL, the
Gallipolis girls improved
their record to 9-4, with one
makeup game left, at Meigs
Monday evening.
Gallipolis led I!H;, 31-20 and
40-28 at the quartermarks.
Sarah Eva ns paced · the
winners with 21 points. Sara
Abels a dded II, Kathy
Danie ls eight and Janet
Groves six.

S. Ash led the Marauder
gals with 13 .points.
Gallipolis connected on 24
of 61 field goal attempts for 31
percent.
The Blue Angels were 10 of
15 a t the line for 66 percent.
GAHS had 40 rebounds, 15 by
sarah Evans and 10 by Abels :
Shirl Stoney collected seven
rebounds for the winners and
Groves five .
GAHS had 14 assists, five
by Daniels and three by
Groves. The winners had 15

turnovers.
Meigs reserves snapped
Gallia's four game winning
streak with a 23-22 win in the
preliminary game.
Zirkle led the winners with
seven points . Williamson led

the Gallians' attack with nine
points . The GAHS rese rves
dropped to 8-4 on the year and
7-4 in conference play .
Varsity box:
.
MEIGS G IRLS . (47)
Chapman 2·1-5; Ash 6·1· 13 ;
Ki ng o.o.O; Riggs 3. 1. 7;
Wil son 4-1-9 ; Anderson 1-0-2;

T. Ash 3·0·6; Lightfoot 0·0·0;
Bartrum 2-1-5. TOTALS 21-5-

47.
BLUE ANGELS (58) Abels s.1·11 ; 'Groves 3·0-6; 5.
Evans 8·5·21; Stoney 2·0·4;
Dani e ls 3-241; Fraser 0-0-0 ;

Niehm 2·2-6; Jenning s o.o.o;
M. Evans 0-0-0; Canterbu ry 1-

0·2. TOTALS 24· 10.58.
Score by quarters:
Meiqs
6 14 8 19- 47
GAHS
16 15 14 13- 58
Reserve score - Meigs 23
GAHS 22.

- ,, ... _,

_ _________
'

·~·

·-·-·

j

~

Becker
Ash ley

•••

FT·A
1-2
2·2
o.o
3·4
0·0
0·0
o.o
0·0
o.o
o.o ·
1.2

RB PF TP
4
19
6
2
8
6
I
2 10
I
2 19
2
3
2
1
0
2
I
I
0
1
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
20 11 63

1·2
Q.l
o.o
1·2
0-1
Judge
o.o
Scott
To1als
28·58 7-11
NELSONVlLLE·YORK (83)
fG .A FT· A RB PF
3
5
2·2
Pa tt on
1·3
1
5-12
Jeff Pritchard
2 ' 12
6
2
Chr is McDonald
57
T. Pri1chard
2
3·3
1·2
17.27 8.9
1
Rich Penrod
o.o 0
1.1
0
Wall ace
o.o
0
1-1
0
Spa ld ing
0I
00
0. 0
Hubbard
0
Sullivan
0
0·1
0·0
o.o 0
o.o
I
Ferns
]).56 17.21 31 11
TOTALS
Scores :
15 35 37
Meigs
13 34 65
Nelsonvi ll e-York

Ck. Kenn edy
CL Kennedy
Blaettnar
D. Kerr

•••

''

TP
4

12
14

7
42
2
2
0

0
0
83
63
83

: ;:; :;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:; :; :: ::::::: : : : : :::::::::: ::::; : ::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~::::::::::;:;:;: ;:;:; :; :;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:; :;:;: ;: ;:;:;: ;::=::::

·Bobcats advanc.e with
49-39 tournament win
By Greg Bailey
The Kyger Creek Bobcats
once again used a ba lanced
scoring attac k, a fine
defense, and clutch foul
shooting to take a 49-39 upset
win over Southwestern last
nigh! in the semifinals of the
Meigs High School Class A
Sectional tournament.
The Bobcats of Coach Keith
Ca rter are turning into t he
Cindere lla team of the
tournament after upsetting
Nortn, Gallia Tuesday night ,
62-1&gt;1.
Ky ge r Creek has now
earned a spot in the finals
again st SVA C c hampion
Southern Saturday night at
1:30 p.m.
Kyger Creek edged out to a
I ~ first period lead, but by
the half the Highlanders of
Coach Wayre Bergdoll had
narrowed the gap lo 21-20.

ONE HANDED JUMP SHOT- Kyger Creek's John
Westfall puts in a one-handed jump shot during Thursday 's action in the Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs
High School . Dale Newberry ( 42) provides defense for the
Highlanders: Kyger Creek won the game, 49-39 to advance
to Saturday's championship game against Southern.

Title bout Saturday
IJy KEN PETERS
AP Sports Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP ) -

"It's going to be a war," says
World Boxing Association
light heavyweight champion
Mike Rossman. " I'm going
after him from the start,"
retorts Victor Galindez, who
will try to regain the title
Saturday.
The first time the two met,
it wasn 't exactly a waltz.
Galindez, the bullis h

Argenti nian,

was

the

aggressor in the first few
rounds of their championship
bout in New Orleans last
Sept. 15, but Rossman's r elenlless attack on the champion's cut forehead brought
him the title when the fight
was stopped in the 13th round .

EAST
Ci ncinnati 83 Se ton Hall 77
Duquesne 93 Detroit 84
lv\aine 75 New Hampshire 61

Manhattan 64 Ford ha m 51
Phila . Tex til e 74 Monmouth

54

.

U tica 66 Eisenhower 62

Wagn er 84 St . Franci s, NY 64

SOUTH
Ala . Birmingham 77 Drexel

60

Ala. Huntsvi ll e 79 Sprin g Hill

58

Auburn 73 Georgia 69
George Ma son 88 U DC 80
Georgia Tech 79 Memphis St.

63

Ind iana 64 Iowa 62
Louisiana S t. 86 Alabama M
M iss. Col. 81 Delta St . 78
M iss. St. 68 Mi ssissippi 64
N . Carolina 71 N. Carolina S t.

56

S. Mi ss. 94 Tulane 80
W. Virg inia St. 86 A lderson .
Broaddus 82

MIDWEST
Brad ley 76 Wichita 51. 74
Michigan St. 73 Pu rdue 67
Minnesota 73 North western
71
Mo.- Kansas City 90

South.

wes l Baplisl 85
·
N. Mi ch1gan 85 Akron 66
NW Missouri 84 NE Missouri

7•

Ohio St . 73 Illinois 55
Rio G r ande 88 Urbana 73
Wi sconsin 66 Michiga n 65
Wi s. -Green Ba y 78 M o.
Baptist 55 .

SOUTHWEST
Creighton BOW . Texas St. 78,
OT
Henderson 51 . 80 Cent .
Arkansas 70

N, Texas St. 90 Ill inois St. 87
Pan American 66 Trinity 64

But the "fired up" Bobcats
wer en 't a bout to fold .
Twice in the third period
Southwestern pulled to within
two, but each time Bobcat
.Jon Thompson hi t some
clutch foul shots to give
Kyger Creek some breathing
room . The third per iod ended
34-28.
In t h~ la st can to , the
Hi ghlanders never rea ll y
made a serious run at the
Bobcats.
With 6: 20 to go in the gam e,
&amp;luthwestern'sJamie Jordan
hit for two cutting the margin
to 32-36 , but t he next
High lander poin ts did n't

come for over ·four minutes.
By then, l.he Bobcat.-; l1ad
bullt a 45-34 lead, making the

outcome evident.

and f or ced Southwestern 1nto
1!.&gt; turnovers. The team made

just 16 of 57 shots for a cold 38
percent . No Hi ghlander hit
doubl e figure s, but Tod&lt;j
Baker led the scoring with
nin e

Long Beach St. 70 Fullerton

,· .

Jordan

had

Kyger Creek (4 9) - Von
Tayl or 6 0· 17 ; Tom Springer
1-0-2; Jon Th~ mpson 6 2 14,
John Westfall 2-6 -10,· Greg
Smith 1· 2·4: Va11 Sic kl e l -2-4;
Da vi d Sands l · l-3. Totals 18.
13-4 9 .

Southwestern (39) -

The two have contrasting
s tyles, with the 5-foot-10
Galindez coming in low and
keeping constant pressure on
his foe. Rossman, a 22-yearoid from Philadelphia, likes
to jab and hook his opponent ,
at least in the early going.
Both , however, hit with
good power and both have
shown they can take a punch.
Rossman, a &amp;-footer known
as the ' 'Jewish Bomber,'' has
a 36-4-3 r ecord and has won 23
by knockout. He has made
one successful tille defense, a
s ixth-round knoc kout of
Italy 's Aldo Traversaro last
December.
Galindez is 51-6-4 with 29
knockouts a nd held the light
heavyweight crown since 1974
before Rossman took it away .
Galindez took a 15-roWld
decision over Kates in JW1e of
1977.
Galindez also said he
consi\lered Rossman only a
fair fighter, to which the
reigning champ responded,
" If I'm just fair , I han what
does that make him?

Kyger
Creek's
girl s
basketball tea m completed
its reg ular season Thursday
night by thumping Hannan
Trace, 41-17.
Pacing the Bobkittens was
Gloria Amos with 15 points.
Lana Church led Hannan
Trace with 10 point s.
Kyger Creek finished with
a n 8-1 record.
The Bobkitten girls have
been seeded first in the Class
A Sectional Gir ls Tournament at Meigs High School.
KC tangles with Soulhern
Tuesday night.

Greq

For al! your hom e
Entertainment and

.d~

Appliance Needs

ERIE~

DOXOL

SERVICE
SPECIAL NOTICE
The annual Izaak Walton
League auction will be held
this Monday at the club's
regular meeting, beginning
at 1 p.m . Meat will be furnished by bhe club, a nd
members are asked to bring a
covered dish a nd any item
that might be s uit able fo r the

RIDENOUR'S
Gas Service

~.~!.~
sERvicE

992-6681

AGENT S
JOHN KAUFF
DAVE JENKINS

Racine, Ohi O
Chester, Ohio

auction.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (A P )
Good Policy overtook Crysta l
P ines at the wire and won the
feature r ace in a photo finish
Thursdsy night at Lebanon
Raceway . Good Policy
returned $13.60, $3.60 and $4 ,
Crystal Pines paid $2.40 a nd
$2.40 and Spright's Boy paid
$3 to show.
The 3-4 daily double of
Bengal Tink and Little
Sampson was worth $34 as
1,009 harness fans braved t he
ra in and bet $108,129.

INSURANCE
GROUP

TV &amp; Appliance

...estone

" I beat him, so when he
degrades me, he degrades
himself. I know he's saying
he just ~ad a bad night
before . We'll see Saturday ."
Also on the card at Caesars
Palace is a 12-roWld welterweight match betwee n
Clinlon McKenzie of London
a~d Los Angeles' Bruce
Curry; and a Hl·round light
heavyweight bout between
Alvaro Lopez of Los Angeles
and Louis Pergaud of
Camer oons , Africa .
The card begins at 3:30
p.m. EST, with the nationally
televised championship bout
expected to begin at
approximately 5 p.m.

SOUll!ERN OHIO
INSURANCE SERVICES

· and ge t 'em'
come
. .
BlEMS .; RETREADS

~ISCONTINUED OE~IGNS

,
-1

J

GOOD USED l\RES.

HURRY ... ·
selection is limited!

.POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.
992-2094

FAR WEST
BYU 78. Wyoming )J

points.

seven.
The fourth time proved to
be a cha rm for KCHS. Dur ing
regu la r
seaso n
pl ay,
S&lt;Juthwestern defeated the
Bobcats three times, two ln
SV i\C play and one time in a
non-l eague battle.

In that last period, the Nelson ] .Q.6; Dale Newberr Y
Bobcats made good on 10of 12 1-2·4 : Todd Baker 4-l -9; Ge ne
Layton 3-0 6; Sco tt Russell 1
free throws.
0 2; Jamie Jordan 3 1-7; Dan
Southwestern made its first Forgey 1 3·5. Tota ls 16 .7. )9 .
By Quarters :
fourth period field goal wil.h
KC
112134119
just :10 to go in tl1e game.
sw
8202839
The Bobcats put three m en
in double figur es, led by · , . - - - -- - - - - - - .
Thompson's 14 points. Von : II you fe e l that you
Taylor had 12 points and I are paying too much
added a fine floor game, and
for
your
a ulo ,
John Westfall contributed 10
b u s i ne s s ,
o ·
markers.
homeowners
The Bobcats outreboWlded • insurance
Southwes te rn 35-27 with
Give Us A Call
Thompson
a nd
Taylor
leading the way wit h 10
IT OOESN'T COST
caroms. The team had 14
tur novers , hit 13 of 23
ANYiliiNG 10
rebounds, and netted 18 of 36
fi eld goal attempts for a fine
COMPARE!
50 percent.
The &amp;beats defense held
Compar e and Save
the Highlanders' hi gh-scormg

Tennessee 87 Florida 73

St. 69

Gene Layton to just s1x points

KC girls
whip HTHS

'

By The Associa t ed Press

·PASSING GAME - Gallla 's Kathy Daniels passes off to teammate Janet Groves ( 24 ) in
this cf photo of Thursday's Gallipolis - Meigs girls basketball game. Me1gs defender on
righ:is~ja Asb (25) . 1n background is Gallia'sSarah Evans ( 40) .

ALL HANDS UP- Southwestern's Gr eg Nelson put the ball up for a jump shot while
teammate Jamie Jordan (30) a nd Kyger Creek's Victor VanSickle (24) have their honds
ready if the ball should come back down . Kyger Creek won the semi final game of the Class
A Sectional Tournament Thursday night to advance to the championship round against
~uthern .

ThUrsday 's College

;:,.:

•

FG·A
9 13
3·9
5.10
8-16

Andrews
Ohlihger
Hawley

· Basketball Scores

!

.Jl.:!(A•&amp;: !.X:;::

MEIGS (63)

straight game, 58-47

.......

m'&amp;.it•ll•bte,

·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::: .

·Buckeyes wallop Illini

·

,,.
Five years ago: .A world
meeting of Moslem nations at
Lahore, Pakistan denounced
U.S. suwort of Israel and demand .ed immediate
withdrawal by the Israelis
from all occupied territories.

HEALTH

By Greg Bailey
Rick Penrod's hands were
smokin' in the third quarter
last night as the 17th-ranked
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes
dumped
the
Mei2s
M3rauders 83-63· in the
Athens Cla ss AA cage
sectional tournament.
Penrod, the area's leading
scorer
and
All-state
candidate, poured in 21 points
in that third canto to break
open an otherwise close ball
_
game.
The Buckeyes of Coach
Virgil Grandy found the
fighting Marauders ·had come
to play some ball . At the end
of the first period Meigs was
out on top, J:i-13.
NNelsonville got a hot hand
in the second period, but
Meigs was staying right with
lhem, trailing by only five
most of the way.

e~--

LONDON (AP) - Sen. Edward Kennedy says all those
participating in the 1979 Valor in Sport awards program "are
great sources of inspiration for all people all over the world."
One of the nominees was Kennedy's son, 17-year.old Edward
Jr. who lost ·a leg to cancer. Since the amputation at age 12, he
has resumed sports activities, using an artificial limb.
" I am very much honored lhatmy son has been nominated,"
said Kennedy, who spent his 41th birthday here Thursday.
.

Ten years ago : Former
King Saud of Saudi Arabia,
who had ruled as an absolute
monarch until overthrown by
lila brother, Crown Prince
Falaal, in 1964, died at the age
of fl .

·

'Ohio perspective'

SERMONETIE

.,

The United States has been taking painful lumps in world
trade during recent years in an area where it one~ was p~e­
eminent, the sophisticated products of an mdustrtal ,
society. ·
·
.
· isi
It has become a net importer of steel, autos, tele~ on ,
sets. and much else that it once not only produc ed for tlself ·
but sold to the world . The shift, the result of. the postwar
industrialization and rapid economic growth of a score of
countries, would appear to be permanent. High production '
costs and aging plants put U.S. heavy manufactu~es and ·
conswner.gooda at a price dissdvantage in world markets.
Where the United States contmues to lead, and where .
economists generally see&gt;its future to be, is in advanced .
technology. Computer science is a prime example, the ..
superiority of know-how and hardware enable a nwnber of ,·
U.S. finns to dominate not only the home but the ·world
market.
A recent report in The New York Times, however, notc:s
a cloud appearing on the Far Eastern horizon. Japan IS
moving into computer development on a large scale with
prospects of soon becoming a .major expo~er, with none ,
other than the United States as a probable prune customer. ,
e
· . The Japanese Ministry of International Trade is cited as :
lt
estimating computer exports of $1.7 bilbon by 1983. An ·
unofficial and alanned American source, however, forelt
sees a possible $3 billion in American sales alone by that
~
date 10 percent of the market and an ominous rival to
smailer producers in the U .S. industry.
,
A.LI..I.
That industry is said to be as yet largely unconcerned.
The House Judiciary The technological lag Japanese producers must overcome
is thought to be too great to permit them to become serious .
Committee voted out the
competitors.
death penalty bill on
Sure, sure.
February 15.
Although the bQI provl«!es ·Asia's economic 'gang of four'
Anthony 0. Calabrese, 0- for the death penalty, It was
Cleveland, has his way.
amended to such an ~xtend
As Jamtn has gone ~conornically, so now are going
Calabrese has introduced a that it would probably several o! its Aaian neighbors.
· .
bill under which the governor eliminate 15 percent of the
The most spectacularly booming export business in the
would name the three mem- cases where the death area Isn't being done by ·the country which has attracted · ·
bers, no more than two from penalty would apply under world attention and resentment for its top-heavy trade .
each. majoc political party. the prior law, and has sO surpluse3, but by fou• "little Japans" - South Korea,
He claims bipartisanship is many restrictions that it Taiwan, Hong Kong and· Smg~pore .
Their overseas sales have been climbing as fast or faster
needed to regulate Ohio's would be very difficult to than Japan~. the magazine Industry Week observes. In ,
1,154 insurance companies apply ·the death penalty in 1977 their combined earnings in the U.S. market came to
which last year wrote more any case.
$11.8 billion, more than half those of the much-l'!rger .
lhan $7.6 billion worth of
Some of the major Japanese economy. They supplied half the $1.3 billion
worth of transistors and similar devices imported by the
premiwns.
amendments:
.
United States; 55 percent of allleatherware imports. t:~Je .
Calabrese said it is
(I) Deletes felony murder, four are also big in electri!' motors, smaU boats and offtce
"imperative that Ohio create which is murdering someone
machinery.
1
'a
three
member while committing a felony
Asia's ''gang of four," as the magazine tenns them, have .
commission in order to give such as robbery or burglary. been specializing in light consumer production, but are ,
the,
public
better
(2) Provides for jury now upgrading to heavy industry to sustain growth and
representation that would sentencing, and the judge · develop new markets.
The rapid rise of a major economic competitor, .
enable the handling of the cannot overrule the jury's
attrlbuted
·to highly motivated workers among other local
enormous workload thrust decision not to impose the
advantages, is not going unnoticed in Tokyo.
upon
the
insurance death penalty. ·
Being one is certainly an advantage in being able to .
department ... "
( 3) The prosecutor will
know one .
·'
He said seven other states have to disprove, beyond a
have adopted the commisaion · reasonable
doubt,
the
approach, including Texas, existance of a mitigating
North
Carolina,
and factor.
.
Wisconsin.
(4) On appeal, the appellate
court must find beyond a
, For a hearing of his Hotise reasonable doubt, from the
Judiciary Committee, Rep. record, that the death penalty
Harry J . Lehman, D- Is appropriate.
Lawrence E. Lamb,M.D.
Cleveland,
bowed
to
On February 15, the
members' wishes and split Executive Committee of the
lhe seating of lhe 21-rnember Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys
panel according to their Association unanimously
it the way I 'm feeling .
smoking and non-smoking went on record as opposing Choleslerol
DEAR REi\DER - I know
desires.
.. the proposed legislation, in shellfish
it is a terrific drain to have a
When Rep. Wayne Hays, 0. lacking as It does, any
loved one ill with a nerious
Bellaire,
entered
the provisions for providing the
DEAR DR. LAMB - !love medical problem. That's
committee room a few death penalty lor the shellfish, crab, shrimp, hard on people who are young
minutes later and saw his criminal of felony murder for oysters and clams. I still like and healthy and even more
normal .seat was taken by the reason that It ls lobster but at present prices difficult as the years go by.
someone else, Lehman said:
I'm not really worried
inadequate to protect the it is a once In a lifetime treat.
"Mr. Hays, you have been citizens of Ohio.
Is it dangerous for me to eat about the vitamin B-1&gt; you're
reassigned to the nonThe Meigs
County shellfish' I've heard they are taking. It's a water-soluble
smoking area ."
vitamin and within reason the
Prosecuting Attorney, Fred very high in cholesterol.
"That ought to keep me W. Crow, III, brought the
DEAR READER - At one excess amounts will simply
alive at least a couple of more matter to the attention of time, shellfish as a group be eliminated through your
years," said lhe 88-year.old Representative Ron James were thought to be fairly high kidneys . But I am concerned
Hays.
·
and Senator Oakley Collins in cholesterol. In recent that you elected not to take
by letters dated February 19, times, th~ work of Mary H. the medicine your doctor
wherein he expressed his Thompson, published in the prescribed.
In 1942, in World War D, a
Your friends are trying to
agreement with the stand U.S. Fish and Wildlife SerJapanese. sulxnarine shelled
taken
by
the
Ohio vice, Bureau of Commercial help you but l 'm sorry to say
an oil refinery near Santa
Pros~c~ting
Attorneys Fisheries, has helped to that they are misinformed.
Barbara, California.
Sinequan is not a tranquilizer
A~ctation.
. ~straighten that out.
, Shrimp and lobster are and it is not habit-forming.
moderately
high
in There are no reports of
'cholesterol, containing about phys ical dependence or
symptoms
'twice as much as you would withdrawal
L~
L1 ,..,.
-~:get per ounce.of red meat or associated with Sinequan. It
I
1
'poultry . Clams , crab, is used for people· who are .
B
Jl ~
]mussels, oysters and scallops anxious or depressed and you
R
A
,....,,.
contain about half as much have godd reason for both.
II
When a person first starts
R .ptl.,... .cholesterolandareasgoodas
II
taking
Sinequan he may have
y ,,. ..
;the other meats in this
y
some
drowsiness.
This is'temregard. They are also low in
porary,
if
it
occurs,
but that is
february 21, 1979 lat.
Pat Neece
I am sending you The why you need to avoid driving
Veterans Hospital
Health Letter number 11-12, a car or being in demanding
Mulberry Avenue .
Fish and Shellfish As Health situations. This does not
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Foods, to give you tables and mean Sinequan is a sedative
Oear Pat,
· infonnation on fish and ' orlranquilizer.
It sounds to me like your
I know you've been sick and unable to join the Friends of shellfish for both cholesterol
doctor
has chosen medicine
the Libraries' "Help Paint the Libraries campaign", so I and fat content. Others who
figured you'd like an update on how the campaign Is going.
want this issue can send 50· entirely consistent with your
Middleport is really doing weD. So far, ifi Middleport there cents with a long, stamped, current stresses and you
have been donations from : Bahr Clothiers, Ben Franklin 5 &amp; self-addressed envelope for it should .rely on his advice. He
10, Blue Tartan Tavern, Citizens Bank, Cross Hardware, Beth to me in care of this is your friend and is trying to
Dowler, Downing-Childs Insurance, Dutton Dnlg Store, newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, help you.
Foreman and Abbott . Furniture, H&amp;:R Firestone, Heritage Radio City Station, New
House Shoes, Jack's Dairy Bar, Jinunie's Pastry, King York, NY 10019.
The Dailv Sentinel
Builders Supply, Mark V. Grocery, Middleport Bookstore,
FishfatisalsoabouttheonlUSPS 145-JIIUI
Middieport Lunch, Quality Print Shop, RC Bottling Company, ly dietary source of really
:;pencer's Market, Troy's Carry Out and Village Pharmacy. highly unsaturated fat. The ·
Pomeroy is lagging behind. Donations there have come from highly unsaturated fat may
Chapman Shoes; Cleland Realty, Landmark Town and have some beneficial effects
DEVOTED'IV 't11...
CoWltry, Bill Mayer, P . J . Pauley Insurance, Dorothy Reibel, that are not provided by ihe
MEI::=~EA
Harold Walker and pledges from Madhu Malhotra and Susan polyunsaturated fats comROBERT HOEFLICH
Oliver.
monly found in vegetable oils.
a~y l!dltor
Kathy told me that you're noi allowad to have any visitOrs, . DEAR DR. LAMB - My
·
A~!~,:':,.
otherwise I'd be up to chat with you, But if you're t111ppoaed to husband, 83 years old, has a
PubU..hod dollY except Saturda~·
he resting, I guess none of us can even call you and give you a bad case of emphysema and by The Ohio '-'•0•7 Publlahlns·
eon.,.,.Y·I-IIIlttmedla, Inc.,
111
few cheerful words. (Uke, "Get us and jog a mile; It's good for lung cancer. I worry so much · Court
St., Pomeroy, Ohlo 46189.'
hnenl(a) and that I am in a nervous condiBIUI....., Olfice Phone 11111- Z158.'
Your health" or "I remember when I was in the .......
Edll&lt;lriat Pbone 1182-21$7,
lhe nurses.:." ) &amp;l you'D just have to take our good wlsbes for lion. My doctor tells me to
Second elau ,...... paid at
granted and know that we're lhlnklng about you and hoping take Slnequan for my nerves.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
'
..IT~~~,;!'~":,.~~
you'll be feeUng better In time to see all of the Frlendlt at the . I heard It ls a tranquilizer and
March 5th meeting at Middleport Ubrary at 7:30. (And have people Jell me it ls a habitEucUdA":;r;'evetand,Ohlo4411l 1
you heard the news that Mlddlepori Ubrary wlll be open e'Very fonnlng drug. .
•
: ca~~~.~~\:~,.DeJI;:'
Monday from noon to 8? That wu Ruth's Idea; lhe said a
Now I am taking vitamin
week.ByM&lt;~~«ft.outo,whereearrter
number Of people said they wanted to use Middleport Library B~. 100 milligrams three
One mooth,
at nig~. This is their chance; U they don't we'll go back to the Urnes a day. Is it all right to ' an. YOf!,
straight 10:30 lo 5 every day but Sunday. )
take that much vitamin B) ' 114.110; ,..,"· montha, ftuo ;'
Get rested up and come back into circulation. We miss you. Please, Dr. Lamb, help me. I
~1'r.:,',*~:' ~&lt;:;:-~.~ ~
Affectionately, have to take care of iny ailing ~ prtce lnclud.S Sunday
11 1
Ellen husband and I just cannot do ,..._'!"_""'_'_·~
"'__·-.:..·.,.,---...1

***********************************************
It
* Provisions
It
·~
*lt .
l 0..,...
0
01rn lR lORS . ,.
• 1-U
~
exp}o.:-ned
**********************************************j

a few isolated instances of corruption.
He repeatedly interrupted and badgered the witnesses,
harangued them with a lengthy monologue about unrelated
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP)- granting affected school
farm policies, then abruptly adjourned the subconunittee Gov. James A. Rhodes wants districts $100 a year for each
hearing.
job
created
for
the
. In the early 1970s, Whitten abused his power as ·day care . centers and
unemployed
who
currently
vocational
job
training
subconunittee chairman to frustrate the congression~lly
mandated policies and emasculate the programs Of the programs to accompany pay no taxeS.
Howarth said Rhodes
Federal Trade Commission, Conswner Product Safety proposed tax breaks for
Commission~ Food and Drug Administration, Envlronmen~ businesses and industries would like to see the
tal Protection Agency and Council on Envirorunental expanding or locating in reimbursements hiked to $400
Quality.
_
per job, with the eltlra $300
inner cities.
.
When angry feUow Democrats threatened in 1975 to strip
He sent his top aide, Robert used to create day care
Whitten of the subconunittee chairmanship, he headed off F . Howarth Jr., to the Senate centers for children of
. the revolt only by hastily relinquishing authority over the
Ways and Means Conunittee working parents, and for
conswner and environmental agencies.
Whitten is equaUy persistent - if not beWgere~;~t - when this week with that message. vocational training that could
The
committee
is help industries fill skilled
promoting programs he favors, most notably the mindless
' support of carcinogenic pesticides. A federal ban on the consid~ring a major bill joj)s.
use of two cancer-causing compounds, aldrin and dieldrin, under which inner city job
In
extending
the
was UMecessarily delayed for several years because of creations by industry would Republlcan governor's
pressure from Whitten.
·
of
the
be rewarded with tax endorsement
Whitten also pressed the Agriculture. Deparlrl!ent to abatements, if agreed to by legislation , Howarth said a
spend m!Wons of dollars annuaUy on a quec ~ionable
program to eradicate the fire ant through aerial spraying local govenunent officials. 1977 .Jaw that gave certain
Under the bill, by Sen. Wil- limited tax Incentives, to new
of mirex, manufactured in the congressman's district.
liam
F . Bowen, 0-Cincinnati, industries generaUy, helped
His enthusiasm for mirex continues long after responsible government and scientific organizations concluded school districts would be de- convince Ford Motor Co. to
that the pesticide was lethsl to shellfish and degraded to prived of greater tax locate its new transmission
kepone, a carcinogenic substance.
revenues which otherw~e · plant near Batavia In
Whitien has been uniformly hostile to federal programs would result from new ahd Clermont County.
designed to improve tbe nutrition, work skills and expanded businesses.
eeonomic circumstances of the impoverished whites and
However, Bowen would A three-member commission
blacks in his district.
But he has maintain'e d cordial relations with wealthy provide that the state would will replace the Ohio superin·
corporate farmers and large agribusiness firms. In 1966, a make up such revenue loss by tendent of Insurance if Sen.
Whitten-authored, prD-pesticide book, "That We May
Live," was heavily financed by a trio of chemical
companies.
The congressman survived efforts last month to deprive
him of the conunittee chairmanship, but his election did
nQthing to inspire confidence in the quality of leadership on
Luke 6:38 (Living Bible Paraphrased) " For lf you give,
Capitol Hill .
you will get! Your gift will return to you in lull and overflowing
measure, pressed down, shaken together to make room for
more, and running over - Whatever measure you use to give
-large or small - will be used to measure what is given back

Names •••

.

Service- Front End
'

-

�r
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Feb. 23, 1979

'

..

•
.

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Feb. 23, 1979

·Rio Grande, Malone gain MOC tourney finals
. It will be Rio Grande vs.
Malone for the 1979 Mid-Ohio
Con fe ren ce po st-season
tournament
championship'
and a berth in the District 22
NAJ A Tournament at Rio
Grande College's Lyne .
Center Saturday night.
In opening round contests
Thursday, host Rio Grande,
after a sluggish first half,
came back to ·ou•t visiting
Urbana. 88-73. At Canton,
Malone College eliminated
Cedarvill e, 87-86, to gain _
tomorrow night's finals .
Opening tipoff for the

championship game is slated
for 7: 30 p.m. Admission will
be $2 for adults and $1 for
students.
Coac h Art Lanha m' s
Redmen will be shooting for
their fourth consecutive postseason MOC title Saturday
while the Malone Pioneers
will be going after their first
tournament championsh(p in
five years.
Rio Gr ande . upped its
sea
son record
ro 17-12
following Thursda
y' s

season play witH a · 10-16
mark.
The Redmen, behind Dan
Purcell 's outside shooting,
jumped off to a 15-6 lead
during the first five minutes
of play. Urbana came storming back to take a 16-15lead·
at the .12 minute mark.
The lead changed hands 12
times and the score was tied
eight times during the next
eight minutes before. Dane
Bise'stap-lnputthe
Redmen
on
top (34-32) to stay
the

triumph over the Blue
Knight s. ·Urbana concluded

remainder of the first half.
Rio led 46-38 during the

halftime intennission. .
After building up a 50-40
lead with 18:41 left in the
game, Rio hit a cold spell
during the next six minutes.
Urbana closed the gap to 5047 117:22) and finally tied the
score at 56-all with 12: 57 left
to play.
Urbana moved in front by

three, 61-58, with 9:45 left.
eight unanswer ed points
At th is point, Coach during the next' minute and 15
Lanham put guards Mark seconds to take a 66-61 adSwain and Vince Phelps back vantage.
.
in the game {both were on the · TheRedmenpulled·awayto
bench becau se of foul a 15-point victory during the
trouble) and the two spark- final minutes of play.
plugs not only ignited their
Rio placed three men in
teammates, but the crowd as double figures. Dan Purcell
well. Rio &lt;iranrle ripperl off led the way with ~~ points.

Dan Bise added 15 and Steve turnovers and 19 assists.
Lones 12.
Kris Falknor and Willie ,
The Redmen connected on Flunoy paced the Blue
37 of 73 field goal attempts for Knights with 16 points apiece.
50.6 and canned 14 of 22 free Mike Rengert was limited to
"
throw attempts for 63.6 10 points and Dave .Gustin
'"
percent. Rio had 42 rebounds, added 10 for the losers.
12 by Steve Lones and 11 by
Urbana hit 29 of 64 field
'.
Dan Bise. The Redmen had 16 goal attempts for 45.3 per'
'
cent. The losers were 15 of 22
at the foul line for 68.1 percent. Urbana had . 37
'·"
rebounds, 15 by Rengert.'
'· .
Boxscore:
.

k
Blac s .top Wahama
liary I:Uchards
Todd Rawlings
J eff ARnold
Don Russell
Greg STodola
Mike Buzzard
TOTALS

percent. They were swishing was won by the Little Blacks
18 and 20-footers in the final over the Little Falcons, 48-36,
· Point Pleasant's Big period. The Big Blacks hit 43 when
Coach
Larry
Blacks built up a fat first-half percent, cracking 27 goals in Markham's boys pulled away
in the last four minutes on
lead, then held off th charging 63 cracks.
Wahama White FalCons in
But the locals were steadier foul shooting. They lifted in 14
the second two periods to in handling the ball erring free throws out of 16 points in
earn tbeir 14th win of the only 12 times to 19 turnovers the fourth quarter.
campaign, 67-58, in the local . for the losers.
The win moved the Little
rifle pit last night.
With Bibbee, Stepp, Bar- Blacks record to 10-7. Coach
Coach Homer Preece's nett, and Vaughan showing Lewis Hall's aggressiive
Flock, despite placing four the way, Point raced into 16~ youngsters were losing only
lads in double figures, saw lead at the quarter, and · thei_r 5th. 11Jey have won 12.
their record drop to 5-and-12. doubled the score at 34-17 at . Little Blacks scoring: Ron
The locals have lost three .
intermi.ssion., Cremeans a big 23, Greg
Rick Bamitz, a 5-10 junior,
At th1s pomt oen would be Thomas 8, David Nott 5, Glen
led he hit parade, scoring 18 tempted to say PPHS broke McClellan 6 Rusty Wood 3
points lor Wahama, 14 in the on top and never looked back. · Johll Hlpes Jlmmy Stewart
last baH when he and his But it didn't work out that a foul shot. '
Peanut Harris banged in 17
mates sliced an early 17-point way. Th~y had to pee~ back
deficit to only 9 at the finish . over the1r shoulders m the and· Larry Gibbs spun home
John Bibbee pumped in 16 th1rd stanza when . the 16 to pace the Little Falcons.
for the locals and grabbed 5 F.alcons sl~ced tht gap to only York Ingles added two from
rebounds in three periods of mne, 41-32. But the B1g the line and Mike Buzzard
play. Ron Barnett netted 10. Blacks out-pointed the lifed in one.
Other double figure scorers Falcons 12 to 4 to close out the
The Big Blacks close out
for the Bend Flock were 5-10 th1rd canto and agam led by the week , Saturday night at
Buffalo Wayne (5-11). But the
junior Gary Richards with 13,_ seventeen, 53-46.
6~ junior Vince Weaver 12,
Each team had smoked he · Blsons still must visit ilnnd 6-1 junior Tim Roush 10. · wickets for 19 in that third beaten Class AA ieader
Weaver dragged down 8 quarter.
Winfield tonight.
Coach Lennie Barnett
rebounds and Todd Rawlings
5 before foullDg out early in cleared his bench, pulling
four regulars, to start the
the fourth quarter.
Overall, the Big Blacks final heat. And the Falcons
PO IN
pulled down 43 caroms irom made hay . Richards, Bamitz,
BIG BLACKS (67)
both boards to 27 for the Weave, Roush, Arnold, and Player
FG FT 'I;P
visitors . Sophomore Troy Keith Sayre all warmed to the Ron Barnett
3 4~ lO
Krebs came off the bench to task and when the smoke bad John Bibbee
7 2-3 16
rebound 12 times for the cleared, Wahama had out- Mark Vaughan
3 2-2 8
locals and added 8 tallies. scored he Big Blacks, 22-14, to John Chambers
0~ 0
Mark Vaughan, who also make the final score a Brian Stepp
4~ 8
scored 8, made 10 retrieves. respectable one. For PPHS, David Raike
2 3-4 7
The PPHS supporting cast Krebs 6, Workman 6, and Jay Minton
0~ 0
again lit up the board often to Thomas 2, did the scoring.
Doug Workman
4~ 8
In all fairness, the Big Troy Kebs
help with a balanced attack.
3 2-3 8
Brian Stepp contributed 8, Blacks were favored to win Greg Thomas
I 0-2 2
Doug Workman 8, and David and they did it. After all, it TOTALS
27 13-20 67
Raike 7. Greg Thomas added was a Cass AAA team with 13
a bucket and John Chambers, victories against a double-A
WAHAMA (58)
in he starting lin~up, did not quintet with 5 wins. No one
score but played well.
was embarrassed and that's RickBamitz
7 4-4 18
From he fie(q 1 the Falcons how it should be.
Tim Roush
3 4-6 10
held an accu,racy edge,
The prelim, closely fought Vince Waver
5 2-3 12
sinking 23 in 51 pops for 45 for more than three quarters. Kreig Sayre
1 1-4 3

LANDOVER, Md. (APJ Moses Malone, with game
highs of 35 points and 23
rebounds lor Houston, felt it
was time the Rockets handed
Washin gton on e of those rare
homecourt losses.
Houston , trailing ~79 late
in the th ird quarter Thursday

night, rallied to a 120-110 National Basketball Association
victory over Washington.
Cleveland beat Kansas City
Ill-! 07 in the only other NBA
game.
"Washington is a good
team, but we were ready for
them tonight," Malone said .
"They came from behind to

STANDINGS
National

N. Y. Rtmger s

Ba sketball Association
At A Glance

By The Associated Press
Easter n Conference
At lantic Division

W. L. Pet. GB

Wash.
Phi Ia.

30 19 .672
33 23 .589 5

New Jer sey
Boston
New York

29 28 .509 9't2
24 34 .414 15

25 37 .403 16

Ce11tral Division
Sa n Ant.
Hous ton

J6 25 .590
33 26 .559

2

Atlanta

32 2'1 .525 4

Clfvela nd

25 35 .417 10 1 :1

Detroi t

23 37 .383 1211&lt;&gt;

New Orlea ns

19 43 .306 17112

Western Conference
Mi dwes t Div isi on

Ka n. Ci ty

38 22 .633

De nv er
M ilw .
lndia'l a
Chicago
Pac if ic

33 29 . 532
26· 36 .4 19
25 36 .41 7
22 37 .373
Division

6
13
13
151, 2

Sealtle

37 22 .627

Los Ang .

36 24 .600

Pn

Phoe ni x
Port land ·

36 24 .600
29 29 .500

l iJ1
71n

San Diego
Go lden S1.

30 31 .492 8
28 33 .459 10

Thu rsday 's Games

Houston

120,

Washing ton

110

Cleveland 111. Kansa~ City

107

Tod&lt;iiy 's Games
Port land at New Jersey
Sea tt le at Washington
Ch icago at New Or lea n s
Phoenix a t Ka n sas Ci ty
Ph iladelph ia at Sa n Diego
lnd ianc1 at Golden State

Boston at Los Angeles

Saturday 's Games
Phoeni x at Atlanta
New· Jer sey at New Yor k
New Of' leans at Cl eve land
M ilwa ukee at Denver
Sunday's Games

Clevela nd at Chicago

Philadelphia at Denver
New York at New Jersey
Houston a t San Antoni o
Golden Sta te at Washin g ton

Portland at Detroit
Seattle at Kansas· City

Bost on at Sa n Oiega
Indiana a t Los Angeles

Pro Hockey

At A Glance
BY The Associated Press

. 32 19 6 70 241 198
Atlanta 32 22 5 69 237 202
Phila .
25 19 13 63 185 177
Smythe Division
Chi cago 23 25 10 56 178
Van co uver

203

19 31 9 47 174 223
St. Louis 13 39 8 34 175 264
Colorado 12 39 8 32 161 249
Wales Conference
Adams Division
Boston 33 16 10 76 234

185
Toronto 24 23 11 59 188 183
Buffalo 23 23 11 57 184 186
M in n.

23 26 8 54 19 1 189
Norris Division

Montr eal
Los Ang .
Pills.
Wash .
Det roi t

40 10 8 88 249 139
25 26 8 58 210 21 2
24 25 8 56 -197 21 2 ·
18 32 9 45 200,25 1
13 31 " 40 183 223

Thursday's Games ..
N. Y. Isla nder s 6; St . Louis

Montreal 12. Pitlsburgh 0
Chicago 4, Buffalo 2
Vancou ver J , Colorado 0
Today's Games
M innesota at Atlanta

. Philadelphia al Colo rado
Saturday's Games
Detroit at NY Islander s
Chicago at Pittsburgh
Buffal o at Wash ington
St. Loouis at Montreal
NY Ranger s at Toronto
Bos ton at Vancouver

Atl an·ta at

Minne~ ota

Philadelphi a
at
Los
Angel es
Sunday' s Games
Color ado at DetroiJ
NY I slander s at NY
Ranger s
Montreal at Wa shington
Pi tt sburgh at Chi cago

MEET SUNDAY
The SEOAL Sportswriters
and Broadcasters will meet
Sunday, Feb. 25, at I p.m. at
Jolly Lanes in Jackson to
select the all-league boys'
basketball team. Coaches are
asked to be present for the
p1eeting if possible to offer
comments about their top
players.

In l86l , President-elect
Abraham
Lincoln arrived
National Hockey League
Campbell Conference
secretly in Washinglon to
Patrick Division
take office . A plot to
w I I pis gf ga assassinate him in Baltimore
N. Y. Islanders
37 10 10 84 262 153 ' had been foiled .

o~ o
0~ 0
0~ 0
23 12-19 58
16 18 19 24 67
6 II 19 22 58

Big Blacks
Wahama

URBANA !73) - Anders 2·
Falknor 6-4-16 ; Flunoy 70-4;
_
2 16 , Frantz 0-1·1; Gustin 2-610; Huff 4-0-8; Rengert 4-2-10;
Roberts 4-0-8. TOTALS 29-15·
73.
·
R10 GRANDE (88) - Blse
6-3-15 ; Clark 2-1-5: Lones 5·2·
12; McCorm ick 0-0-0 ; Phelps
3.1.7; Purcell 14-3-31 ; Royse
1-2- 4;
Swain
4-1-9;
Washington 1-0-2; West 1-1-3.
TOTALS 37-14-88.
Halftime score - Rio 46
Urbana 38.

Personal Fouls : Wahama 15,
PPHS 14.
Fouled Out : Wahama ,
Rawlings.
Scorer : Youkoubis Uzskuriatis.
Officials: Gene Carpenter,
Dave Smith.
Litte Falcons
Little Blacks

~in~

5 16 II 16 48

Scorer : Don DeCoy.
Officials : Jay Jefferson, Jeff
George.

.·.·
&lt;::

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. , II

"

"'
•- ~

I

...

...

. ,.

··~ ·

.

.-.

'

Red Rose

"

,.,.

I l ·,

• • ..l •

THE
BEST NUTRITION
FOR YOUR

,,.,

'"

UCL!

upset~

..... t

.,
'' rln

..

, .u
~ . ,.,

·,,
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.. ........

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'

by Duquesne 93-84.
Washington's upset of
UCLA negated a late rally by
the Bruins which saw them
come from a 50-38 deficit to
take their only lead 68-67 on
Brad Holland's two free
throws with 15 seconds
remammg . Petur Gudmundsson, Washington's 7foot-2 center, led the Huskies
with 17 points and Walker
added 14 while UCLA's David
Greenwood took game honors
with 22 and grabbed 11
rebounds before foullng out
with 36 seconds left.

.•

indudl•s:

" B is for the bloom of
specimen
flowers " ,
specimens of flowers from
spring flowering bulbs ; "Lis
for the lovely soft sping

from gardening books " a
display of books from the
public library; and "E is lor
Education, see how it looks ",
a display of pidures of the
newest plants.
All of the horticulture
classes. will be open to the
public with no restrictions as
to the number of entries in
any class.

·-

·,:t:
-

,

I

ip

.q
-~
- [,~
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'

By WARREN ' E. LEARY last total eclipse visible in greater the portion of the sun
AP ·science Writer
North America this century. that will be covered at
WASHINGTON (AP ) - It will be 2017 before the maximum eclipse . For
Next Monday, over North moon's shadow again totally example, in Bismarck, N.D.,
America, a giant dragon will blocks view of the sun from 99 percent of the sun will be
seize the sun in its colossal this continent.
hidden, compared with 61
jaws and try to devour it in a
Solar eclipses occur when percent in New York City and
mighty battle across the sky. the moon lines up between the 32 percent in Miami.
That, at least, is what tbe Earth and the sun on the . The eclipse will begin at
ancient Chinese thought was same plane. The moon blOcks about sunrise on the West
happening in an eclipse of tbe out some sunlight and casts Coast and about mid-morning
sun - a struggle between shadows upon- the earth.
in the East. It should last
light and darkness.
about
two and one-half hours.
To those in the deepest
They banged gongs, shadow, the moon seems to
The moon 's shadow, about
shouted, shot off rockets and ·cover the sun. Actually, the 170miles wide, will race eastfirecrackers, and generally sun's diameter is 400 times ward at 1,700 miles per hour
raised a big commotion to greater than the moon's, but from northern Oregon and
scare the beast away.
the moon is' far closer - southern Washington across
And it worked . The dragon producing the illusion.
northern Idaho and central
ENJOY THE ECLIPSE, BUT SAFELY - The only recommended way to view the Feb.
always released its bite on
Practically all of North Montana. It then will swing
the orb.
26
eclipse
of the sun, warns the Ohio Society to Prevent Blindness, is indirectly. Permanent
America will experience at northeastward across northblind spotson the retina can be caused by direct viewing of the sun, even through smoked
, Although there may not be least a partial eclipse, with a western North Dakota, into
. glass layers or sunglasses. To be safe, with your back to the sun focus the sun 's rays through
a Jot of gong clanging this portion of tbe sun's disk cov- · Canada and onward through
a pinhole in one sheet of cardboard onto a white surface. Size of the image can be adjusted
time, the latest eclipse should ered over. And over parts of Greenland.
by varying the distance between cardboards . The eclipse, which will be approximately 70
attract some attention as the Northwest and Canada,
A potential hazard posed by
DEAR HELEN :
percent in Ohio, wi)llast about two and a half hours, reaching its maximum slightly before
My husband read somewhere that certain jealous men ac- sunlight latles and a subdued· the whole sun will be this and any eclipse is eye
noon.- x. One should never look directly at the sun through the pinhole.
·
tually are having modem versions of chastity belts made for , hue settles across the land. obscured because they lie damage from staring directly
xFor
more
exact
times,
check
with
your
local
Weath
er
Bureau.
The event takes ori 1illded · along the narrow path the at the sun. The American
their wives .
He thinks that would be a fun turn-on for us. Unlocking my significance because it is the moon's shadow will follow. Medical Association, the
The closer a person is to American Association 2f
chastity belt would be better than me greeting him at the door
this path of totality, the Ophthalmolol(y (AAO ) and
in plastic wrap only, or a blonde wig and babydolls (as the
book "Total Woman " advocated).
others concerned with eye themselves along the path of · citi es and the maximum
FOUND INNOCENT
j~{(::?::::/?: :::::::: :::: ::/:J\§?(::Ji:??):}:: :):::;::=;:::;::;:::::::)\), 1 problems are warning people totality.
I say if he gets me one of those gawdawful contraptions, I'll
amount sun that will be covto be careful.
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - ;:::::;
1"
'
(.
tum it into a bedside lamp or a container lor artificial flowers.
With the glare of the sun ered at each location. Other
Newly -electedButlerCounty '') ::
U
All warn against viewing blocked out by the moon , communities in each general
He's not jealous, just innovative. But isn't this going too far?
Judge F. Hamson Green, 38, :;:;:;
6 1
··
:;:;:;:- the eclipse with the naked scientists can study the sun 's vicinity will see a similar
--DON'T LOCK ME IN
Ol&lt;ford, was found innocent :::::::
.
:-:·:·: · eye. And it also is not safe to corona , or
DEARDLMI:
outermost partial eclipse.
Thursday of a charge of
By HUGH A. MUWGAN com~ut~r . . some
place use sunglasses, smoked .a tmosphere, mapping its
Yes!
Juneau,
Alaska ,
86
AP Special Correspondent momtormg library cards and
glass, photographic film or den s it y , c a talo g in g percent ; Eugene, Ore., 99 ;
Suggest "his and her" models and I think your husband's in- grand theft
Visiting Judge Paul Riley,
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP) book club membership lists. negatives, camera filters or composition and looking at
novativeness will cool. Fast! --H.
San Franc is co , 86 ; Los
of the Buller County Common - My heart leaps up wben I
I qu1ckly dr.opped my copy other devices , even in radio emissions.
Angeles, 78; Boise, Idaho , 98;
Pleas Court, who had earlier behold some junk mail in the of _the Mornmg Telegraph, combination .
DEAR HELEN :
This eclipse will not imperil Salt Lake City, 92; Phoenix ,
wh1ch requ~res a Jot of
"Those who have used such these scientists as the earliest Ariz., 75; Cheyenne, Wyo.,
What do you think of a male relative who knew we were hav- quashed with a second rand pile.
theft
indictment,
thre!
out
Reading
It
usually
makes
mtel11gence, and read on .
things in the past and escaped recorded one did the royal 90: Denl'er , 88 ; Albuquerque,
ing ma'rital problems, and had the gall to give my husband a
It was from a fellow named injury were just plain lucky ," Chinese astronomers, Hi and
,ticket to a local massage parlor for Christmas? The kind run the second charge saying the my day . No one seems 1o
N.M., 78; Sioux Falls, S.D., 90
had
failed
to
understand
me
as
well
as
tbe
James
H. Billmll'on, director says AAO President Dr . Ho.
prosecution
by almost-nude girls. - INCENSED
percent ; Omaha, Neb., 85:
prove its case.
scrib~s who write those
of the International Center Whitney G. Sampson, of
Act ording to historical ac- Tulsa, 0\da., 74; Houston , 58;
'DEAR INCENSED :
Green,
who
was
elected
in
ingratiating
letters
asking
for
Scholars,
which
according
Houston.
counts,
the eclipse on Oct . 22, Minneapolis, Minn ., 91 ; St.
I'd say thiS.reliltive either has misplaced sense of humor or
to the letterhead, 1s located in
November , was accused by me to take a free- sample of th
2137
B.C.
undid Hi and Ho Louis, 75; New Orleans, 54 ;
he's outto break up your marriage.
·
s 'th · Jnsti't uti on WASHINGTON: of Houston.
e .. m'. soman.
when they drank too much Milwaukee,
Wis .,
82 ;
Or perhaps it's his we;_r&lt;] idea of therapy-- a substitute for the heirs to the estate of their maga~ine, buy a
Edward L E
f condominium in Jonestown building m Washmgton, D.C.
Sampson says that when a wine and failed to perform Chicago, 79; Detroit, 75 ;
sex manuals? If so, I quote Dr. George Weinburg who says that taking
0
$9 o00 f pperson_
or belp them sell soybean
Right off, Billington said he
for an all-around faltering union, such things are about as ace t ' 'th rotm a savmgs futures to my friends and !mew I was the type that had person looks at the sun, the their duties of beating drums Memphis, 66; Mobile, Ala.,
eye focuses light on the
useful as rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. --H.
oun WI ou penn1sslon
. hb
"probably absorbed and en retina, the sensitive layer of and shooting arrows to drive 53 ; Cleveland , Ohio, 72;
of Epperson's Wl·dow H 1
ne1g ors.
•
the dragon away.
Buffalo, N.Y., 72 : Portland,
· ' e en.
" Dear Intelligent Reader, " joy"'! more education, for~al cells in the back of the
Be cause of the confusion Maine , 63 ; Boston , 61;
eyeball. These intense rays that prevailed, · Emperor Philad e lphi a, 6 0 ;
a letter began just the other and mformal, than most .
day.
He hit it. right on the nail "cook" part of the retina , Chung K'ang ordered Hi and Washington, D.C., 60; CharNow how did tbey know bead. I w1sh I could have causing permanent, in - Ho beheaded .
lotte , N.C., 56 : Atlanta, 57;
that? They must have a helped
him
out
by curable damage . And
The following is a list of and Tallahassee, Fla., 48.
subscribing to the Wilson because the retina is
Quarterly and joining that insensitive to pain, a person
" well-mixed, brilliant, can't tell when the damage is
White F1ag Over Atlanta
continually
changing" taking place.
ATLANTA (AP) -It. was
company
of
scholars.
The eli:perts say the best
Several projects including completed for the father-l!on report, Janet Venoy, the just too much.
The
trouble
is
the
Atlas
way
to watch the eclipse is inFour inches of sleet and
assistance to a missionary banquet to be held in June. · treasurer's report in the
World
Press
Review
that
directly,
using a simple
family in Japan were discuss- Ar.·angements will also be absence of Trudy Andrews; snow, Stranded travelers, a
FEATURING BETTER BEDDING BUYS
had
asked
me
same
morning
pinhole
projector.
power
failure
and
two
days
of
ed at the Tuesday night made to send a child to camp. LaDonna Clark, the flower
A projector is made using a
meeting of the Evangeline
Meeting at the home of fund report, and Mrs. Eileen fog prompted employees at to sit in with historian Arthur
Alvin
Schlesinger
Jr.,
futurist
shoe
box or two sheets of stiff,
Hartsfield
International
Missionary Society of the Mrs. Evelyn Smith, the Bowers, the motber-daughter
Toffler
and
others
lo
"find
out
white
paper. Poke a pin or
Airport
to
throw
in
the
towel
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
meeting was opened by Mrs. banquet fund report.
lrom,flrsthand
sources
what
·
pencil
hole in one end of the
and
run
up
the
white
flag.
Mrs. Holly McArthur is to Betty Spencer with a reading
Devotions were given by
"We give
up .
We is really going on all over the box or one sheet of paper .
contact Walter and Mary entitled "A Tribute to the Mrs. Clark who read several
Standing with your back to
Maxey of Japan and report on Patron Saint of Love." She scriptures on love. Janet surrender," John Braden, an world."
And I would have, too, only the sun, focus light through
their work at the next also had pray ..-. Thelma Venoy was appointed to make airport spokesman, said
meeting. Plans were also Osborne gave the secretary's up the program for the Thursday after workers it turned out that Fortune the hole onto the other end of
mother-&lt;laughter banquet to hoisted the white flag outside magazine was hunting all the box or other sheet of
paper. When using papers,
be held in May. Also atten- the terminal of the nation's over the place for me.
"You're
hard
to
find,
Mr.
the
size and focus of the
ding the meeting was Naomi second busiest airport.
Mulligan,"
their
letter
began.
image
may be changed by
been
a
rongh
week.
It's
OHiinger. Next meeting will
I
was
here
all
altering
the distance between
the
time,
but
Saturday
night
a
winter
be held in the church basethe
sheets.
the
doorbell
hasn
'
t
been
with
storm
covered
runways
ment at which time a towel
Scientists using much more
shower will be held for the snow and sleet. On SUnday working since that last big
snowstorm
and
I
felt
guilty
-sophisticated
devices than
and
Monday
,
the
storm
church camp and bandages
also
will
be observing
these
about
putting
them
to
so
moved
north,
closing
airports
will be rolled.
the
eclipse.
The
National
much
trouble.
Prayer was by Mrs .. Smith there, but stranding travelers
Science
Foundation
is
But
another
letter
warned
who served a dessert course here.
coordinating
the
work
of
against
getting
too
smart
for
A minor lire in a storage
and coffee.
hundreds of researchers,
area knocked out electrical your britches.
including
those from 20
Right
on
the
envelope
it
power lor the airport for
universities,
~ho will posiHon
asked
:
"Do
People
Hold
Your
Tuesday and part of
High
IQ
Against
You?
"
Wednesday.
Southbound Suspect
Well, since I pic ked the
Then on Wednesday, the
SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) Steelers
over the Cowboys by
fog
rolled
In
and
hung
around
The suspect got away, but
exactly
4
points, I had noti'ced
all
day
Thursday.
that's just fine with two Sagisome
clamming
up when I
"I
don't
know
anything
else
naw County sheriff's deputies
came
into
the
barbershop.
that
could
happen
to
us,"
and a local resident.
It's nice to !mow so many
Deputies Charles Frisby Braden said. "We're just
people
writing letters are so
and Jerry Wilso'l :vere called looking forward to the next
concerned
about me and the
to John Wetzel's home natural disaster."
family. The noon mail
Wed~esday night after
brought a promise from
receiVing
complaint that
Changing
Times,
the
there was someone in attempt to apprehend same.
Kiplinger
magazine :
. Wetzel's basement.
Suspect continuously eluded "Twelve Months from today,
With their weapons drawn, capture . and kept dive- you can have more money in
the deputies slipped into the bombing pursuers.
the bank, be on a sounder fibasement. They spotted some
"Deputy Wilson, with hat in nancial footing, even without
movement in a corner, ap- hand, finally flushed suspect an increase in your family inproached the figure, and back upstairs and culprit come."
were confronted by an irate made his getaway through
But my schedule was
blackbird.
SAVE YOUR R.t., NEHI, .UPPER 10,
the back door, which getting too crowded . The
Here's what the deputies complainant had left ajar.
Christlan- Seience Monitor
reported as happening:
DIET RITE &amp; DADS ROOT BEE!l
"These officers watched wanted "ninety days to prove
· "Officers and complainant breathlessly as the culprit that we can change the way
then
pursued suspect around made
BOm.E CAPS FOR CHARITY
his
getaway you look at the world" and a
the basement area in a vain southbotind toward Miami." fellow named Victor T.

S

'tew ;,)):;:;

Evangeline Society discussed
assistance to Missionaries

·••

I•

J•• ~

'.J.

SLEEP SALE
SOFA BEDS
ANOTHER GOOD

FOR YOUR
DINING &amp; DANCING PLEASURE

Me and my

ZERPHA BLUE

Purina!XJ.

RAT CONTROL Pfll EIS
·, The rats prefer it

•

.MODERN SUPPLY

r a ngt&gt; mc nt
con teti uin g
fl owers and bare bran ches.
The horticultu re division

use in the church (the junior
horticulture class ).
The special displays are "H
is for helps to make our
pl• nts grow", a display of
pesticides and " gardening
aides from Modern Supply:
"E is for every plant that we
know", a display of seed
ca ta logs by th e cl u b
members; "R is lor reading

a

In

69 to 68

The invitational classes
which are open to all other
ga rden dub members in the
county are "I is for Invitations We Always Send Out" ·
and is an " as you like it" ctrrangement, e~ nd " N is ror

M.Ul'/ttaan

'"

.,

beat us twice at our place. We
should be 3~ against them."
Rockets
Coach Tom
Nissalke said the hot-shooting
6-!oot'll Malone "look charge
By Herschel Nisseoson
North Carolina clinched at
in the fourth quarter" to help
AP Sports Writer
least a tie for the regular the Rockets deal the Bullets
Remember
when season Atlantic Coast Contheir sixth defeat in 27 home
Washington's Birthday used ference title by trimming
games this season.
to be celebrated on Feb. 22? North Carolina State 71-56,
"We went with our strong
Coach Marv Harshman did fifth - rated Louisiana State
lineup," Nissalke said.
and his University of trounced Alabama 86-66 and
The Rockets used 6-loot-8 WAshington Huskies went out captured its first outright
Ron Reid at guard along with
and chopped down the Southeastern Conference
Calvin Murphy and also nation's No . I college crown in 26 years. No. 14 Ohio
employed a large front line of
basketball team.
State took over sole
6-foot-11 Malone, 6-10 Dwight
The rest of the nation ob- possession of the Big Ten lead
Jones and 6-7 Rudy served the holiday on Mon- by drubbing Illinois 73-58
Tomjanovich.
day, but the Huskies while No. 12 Iowa was beaten
Malone 's 13 points in the celebrated Thursday night by Indiana 64-1&gt;2 and Pacific ·
first six minutes of the final thanks to a 69-68 victory over backed into the Pacific Coast
period pushed the · Rockets' top-rated UCLA on Stan Athletic Association throne
lead from 91-86 to 111).92.
Walker's 23-foot shot with room despite a 84-77 loss to
"Moses was sensational, three seconds to play.
Utah State when Fresno State
but that's nothing new,"
"We finally got our lost to San Jose State 49-46.
Nissalke said. "He took miracle," said Harshamn.
Two other members of the
charge in the fourth quarter "When I was driving down Top Twenty were in action .
and that was the difference." here (Seattle's Edmundson · Seventh - ranked Michigan
The Bullets played without Pavilion) tonight, I told State tied Iowa for second
playmaker Tom Henderson, Dorothy ( M~s. Harshman) place in the Big Ten, one
who had the flu , and Mitch that it would be appropriate if game behind Ohio State, with
Kupchak, who is on the Washington
won
on a 73-67 triumph over Purdue
injured reserve list with an Washington's Birthday."
and No. 16 Detroit was upset
inflamed achilles tendon.
: Elsewhere, fourth - ranked
L
After Malone extended
Houston 's lead to 110-92, he
took a breather and
Washington's Elvin Hayes,
who led the Bullets with 25
points, made three quick
baskets to pull his team
within 12 points. But Malone..
returned and stuffed in 11'·,~1,_'1''~lf
missed shot to slow the rally.
Murphy and Tomjanovich
kept the Rockets in
contention after the Bullets
bolted to a 25-14 lead.
Together !hey combined for
29 pOints in the' first hall to
help Houston inch in front 51157 at the half.
Cavaliers 111, Kings 107
Rookies Mike Mitchell, Ken
Higgs and Butch Lee
combined lor 59 points as
Cleveland upended the
Midwest Division leaders.
•
...... NO
,
Mitchell led the Cavs with
cc:N'ETITIVE
RATUIT
23 points, while Higgs had a
career-high 21 and Lee 15.
Pu rina Aat Com rol Pelle ts- Ill with the hum market •t w1th
r ats. sno uldn' tthev be 111 wilh you?
'
Cleveland was clinging to a
Ws"re atso featurinjl Purin11 "s new plat !:! pack- NEW PLACE
PAOK RAT CO('ITROL.
.
Joil--!07 lead with 23 seconds
left when Campy Russell hit a
field goal. Then Mitchell
grabbed a key rebound and
"2·21M
3" W. M•ln Street
• Pomeroy, 0. ·
Foots Walker added a free
The Sto,. With "All Klncl1 of Stuff'
throw with eight seconds
Por Pet• • Stcit.lel • Larte eMil lmell Anima Ia. Lown1 . • Garcl•l'llo
remaining.
.
. ~Puri~...
. .
Otis Birdsong topped
Kansas City with 24 points,
1llimning tomorrow ,
Phil Ford scored 22 and )lill
withresiarch t~
Robinzine had 20.

mt.•nt.

showers", specimens or
flowers from rhizomes; "0 is
for open' to one and to all ",
specimen flowers other than
flowering bulbs or rhizomes;
"0 is for Oh Gee, make this
one tall", specimen branch of
flowering shrub, bush or
tree; "M is for Methodists
who lend us their hall "
specimen flowers suitable for

WHEN IN DOUBT- DRIFT AWHILE
DEAR HELEN.
I have been going with Phil for two years and am much in
love with him.
Recently I started a new job and like my unmarried boss a
lot. He's always teasing me with come-on remarks andJ tease
back. He has a girlfriend but I don't know how serious they
are.
·
I can't picture life without Phil, yet I want to, go with my
boss. Phil wouldn 't take to the idea, and I'm not tbe type who
could sneak around. Then again, I'm not sure my boss is interested. Maybe he enjoys flirting.
When I'm with Phil, he's all I can think of, but when I'm
home or out with friends, I only think of my boss.
Help! -- CONFUSED
DEAR CON:
When in doubt, let things drift a while longer. Perhaps you'll
outgrow this sudden attraction for your boss, or maybe it will
grow mutually stronger. Wait until one or the other happens,
and then make your decision .
And remember this : sincere love for one person doesn't rule
out attraction to another. Fantasies were never meant to be
monogamous. -H.

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DOGS

Ncrvt•s, tht• Chi::lirma n llas,
Therp's No Ooubt ", for Hn a r-

A Dragon swallowed the sun

• By Helen Hottel:-:::!

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DOG FOOD

Five classes of the show are
open for exhibits from · the
Rutl a nd Garden Club
members only. They are "S
Is for Springtime with Love in
the Air", an arrangement using spring colors ; "P is for
Plant s
Coming
Up
Everywhere". an arranJ;!r-

class and is to be made in a
_ga rdening toy or to include
one as a part of the arrange-

t.•.·&lt;::

PcimfriiJ
Fklwer
Shop

mcnt showing motion; "R is
for Rutland, home of the
Show", interpretive; "I is for
Intc ~cst in Making Things
Grow", a traditional mass
drsign; and " N is for
Newc omers, Each Club
Needs a Few", a modern
design. "G is for Garden
Chores We Must Do" is the
junior artistic arrani(Jllent

ehairrmm . •

t Today's Topic:

arutQ~

8 9 9 10 36

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Ma rga ret F:lla Lewis is show

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Houston rally tops Bullets

...

6 1_2 13
0~ 0
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Plans made or 'Spring in Bloom '

RUTLAND--Plans have
been made for a "Spring in
Bloom" flower show by the
Rutland Garden Club.
The show will be staged at
the Rutland Method ist
Church, April 28 and 29 with
Mrs. Janet Bolin, an accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
to be the judge. Mrs.

·-·

BY JACK ROGERS

LONES SLIPS INSIDE FOR TWO- Rio's Steve Lones (21 ) lays in lwo points in Thursday' s Mid-Ohio Conference tournament game against Urbana. Blue Knight defenders are
Dave Gustin ( 25 )·and Lorell Huff (21 ). On right is Rio's Phil Washington .

-.

VALUE FROM BAKER'S
. BUDGET SHOP.

a

FROM PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
10:00 TIL 2:00
'

THE MEIGS INN

.,••

•

R. C. BOTTLING CO•
MILLST·REET

Middleport, Ohio
992-3542 or·m-3344

r---rr--w---CO--M--P~-o-u:- -0-D~-I
A• •
I' IY. • •

-,

~

~rs~~~gu~hf~P~.:;;a !a~y

ST., POMEROY. .

.

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:·J..etme.~ll you what I have

. m mmd.

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'._ r~ ~u

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"\~O~ R~

J talent and learning would be

1
OPTOMETRIST
.I better off selling shoes. "You
1
I OFFICE HOURS:9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 I CLOSE I could use some extra money,
1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT J, couldn't you?" he began.

1

WITH NEW INSTA-TAB

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL ·sr.

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7 The l.lally Sentmel Middleport-Pomeroy, U., ~· riday, ~'eb. 23, 1979

.Racine Baptist Boosters .Class met recently
II letter !rom Baeone- Col- class room at the chureh.
Helen Simpson presided at
lege, an Indian school in
the
meeting which opened
Oklahoma which . receives
with
group singing of the
supPQrt from the Radne
song,
''God
Will Take Care of
First •. Baptist Church was
read at a recent meeting of You" and a poem, 11The
the BOQStcr Class held at the Weaver ", with prayer by
home of Mrs. Marjorie Mrs. Simpson :
Roll ca ll was answered by a
Grimm, teacher.
Both the class and the scripture verse by each one
chureh send financial attending containing t~e.
assistance to the school. It word "heart." Valentines
was noted that chairs have were exchanged by the
been ; ,ordered for the new members and cards signed

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CHOICES

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Karen Blaker Ph.D.

MODERN WOODMAN BAND 6335- Meigs County senior citizens will really have to
test their memories to recall the Modern Woodman Band 6335 of Middleport. The photo of
the band is dated 1908 but had to be taken weB before that year. The photo is among the
so uvenirs of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark of the Hemlock Grove area.

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Beat Budget Blues
ij By Karen Blaker, Ph. D.
. . l DEAR DR. BLAKER '· ."'Alter my husband and I
l c, .f'1list-overed we were spending

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far too much lnoney, we

SoCIW
. .,_1 1
POLLY S POINTERS I Calendar :~!~i!~~::tre~~r:s~~~\~

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Polly Cramer
-~___:;?_________________

:

• T-shirts
:
C. come clean

cleaner all over the greasy
places on his pants, rub it in
well and then wash them in
1
wa rm or very hot water. All
:
DEAR POLLY - I have of the grease comes out and
: ruined several of my T-shirt his pants look very nice.• tops with pers i · r
d
BRENDA
,
'
p ra oon or.
DEAR POI.LY - To · keep
• Whenever I wear one for an
·
hour or two it starts to smell . rug edges or corners from
Since I use a good deodorant I turning up 1 cut a plastic
feel it is the shirt and not me margarine or shortening can
: causing the trouble. Is there cover to fit around either a
or squared corner and
: any way to remove ·~ il .round
1
• perspiration odor? -J.K.H. . seiv itto the rug. One is put at
rnReBr anRdAthey fit very
: • DEAR J .K.H.. - You might eac h cBoA
A
: try sponging the shirts with we11· ·
DEAR POLLY -' I find most
• rubbing alcohol or a colorless
mouthwash or soak in a rust stains can be removed
strong salt water solution . If from fabric that can sta nd the
one does not work try sun by wetting ihe stains and
another. Good luck . - POLLY covering with a mixture of
DEAR POLLY - I put a equal parts of salt and cream
safety pin in the lop of any of tartar and then puling in
stocking that get a run so I the sun .
Never bea t egg w h1·tes ·on an
can :ell at a glance that the)'
be ·
·t
·
are to be worn only with a I umonum pan
cause 1
tends to darken them.
slacks. -G. D.P.
·'
DEAR POLLY- I hope my
To get more juice from a .
I On heat l·t '·fore squeez
Pointer will help other wives em
""
·
whose husbands get grease ing. Also slightly wann an
before peeling and th&lt;i
. and oil on their pants. My orange
·
. wo'II come 0ff more east• husband does a lot of work on sk on
', cars so I put waterless hand 1Y· - MRS · E ·K·K·

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Christi Kearns honored
with shower by friends
Christi Kearns of Hartford
was honored with a bridal
shower recently in the
Bachtel Church Recreation
Room, New Haven.
Miss Kearns is the brideelect or Keith Roush of New
Haven . Games were played
with prizes going to Terri
Roush, Loretta Teameyer'
Carrie Hatcher, and Teresa
Riggs.
Attending hesides thOBe
· named were Barbara Roush,
Tammy, Tanya, Robin and
Angel, Ruth Riggs, Mary
Roush, Thelma Roush, Hank
Cleland, Thelma Reitmire,
Nettie Boyer, Mary Jewell,
Evelyn Jewell, Merri Roush,
Francis King ,
Cha rlie
Kearns, Delmas Kearns,
Rosalee Kearns, Carolyn
Richard, Carol Humphreys,
Jenpifer Weaver , Hester
Weaver, Juanita Roush,
Helen Elias, Carol Workman,
Lois Young, Deloris Riggs
and hostesses, Kathy Cleland
and Donna Miller.
. Sending gifts were Clara
Staats, Virginia Russell,
Leona Cleland, Wilda Col-

eman, Sylvia Coleman, Sis
Fitzgerald, Linda Burris,
Nancy Holbrook, Jan Roush,
Jessie Bowers, Velma Burris,
Naomi Ohlinger, Opal
Mulford, Barbara Zirkle,
Be linda Newell, Lynn
Kearns, and Dianna Eades.
AID REDUCED
WASHINGTON (API
President Carter has ordered
the U. S. Government to
"severely reduce" its $15million foreign aid program
in Afghanistan, a White
House spokesma n sa id
Thursday .
P r es id e ntial press
secretary Jody Powell said
also that a proPQsed $250,000
military aid program ls being
canceled .
Powell would not tie the
reductions In the slaying last
week of U. S. Ambassador
Adolph Dubs, but said instead
that it resulted from a review
of U. S. relations with
Afghanistan that began last
year when a Soviet-backed
regime seized PQwer.

1.
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FRIDAY
BAKE SALE Friday at
Dale C. Warner Insuran ce
Agency, W. Main , Pomeroy,
by Forest Run United
Methodist Church.
MONDAY
BETHEL 62, fnternational
I
Order of Job's Daughters,
7:30 Monday night at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
AUXIUARY, Both junior
and senior units, Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
7:30 Tuesday night at the
hall . Miss EM!"' Smith,
Americanism chainnan, and
Mrs. Don Hunnel, legislative
chairman , will have the program.
SHROVE Tuesday pancake
supper, 6 p.m. at Episcopa I
Parish House, Pomeroy, open

In ~~~1~. BLOOD pressure
clinic, 11 a.m. to 2 P.m.
Tuesday at Harrisonville
Town Hall sponsored by
bl'
Senior Citizens Club; pu oc
welcome.
THURSDAY
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, Thursday 7:30 p.m. at
the Middleport Masonic Ternpie. Initiation will be held and
officers are to wear gowns.
Dues are payable.

decided to work out a budget.
To hold up my end, I promised to buy no clothing for six

begimiing to weaken. I took
all my charge cards out of my
wallet but I am still tempted
to buy a sweater, 8 blouse or
even 3 piece of jewelry each
time I pass a store with some
moneyinmypocket.
How will 1 ever be able to
mke it through the next five
months? Can you offer any
helpful hints?
DEAR READER- Yes, but
first consider whether you
really want to hold strictly to
your promise. Your chances
of saving .Jlloney would in"crease tremendously if you
gave yourself a little leeway .
Stopping all spending is like
going on a starvation diet.
Sheer willpower may keep
you on that diet for a few
days, but then fatigue and
anxiety begin to reduce your
resolve. A less stringent cutback in eating works more
gradually but usually more
err~tively
to take off un"
wanted
poun,ds., ·
So why not give yourself a
little spending money? How
about $5 a Week? By saving
up, you could buy something
nice atthe end ofeach month.
Or you could~· pend the money
in dribs and drabs if that
makes you feel better.
•.t
1
' Here are .• dditiona ideas
that may strengthen your
resolve abou) spending less
money for clothes :
1. Limit temptation by not
carrying rno.re than $10 in
your purse. IJeave the rest of
your money at home in a safe

l
SATURDAY
SPAGHETTI SUPPER of
Busy Challengers Class of
Racine Baptist Church
scheduled for Saturday is
cancelled.
A special. show of color
RUSS AND the Gospeltones slides with 'commentary will
7:15 p.m . Monday at the be presented at Riverby on
House of Praise, back of the Sunday afternoon at 2 p.m. ,
Burger Chef in Pomeroy ; as an extra feature of the
public invited.
Tomb of ' Tutankhamun
JAYCEE-ETTES social tea exhibit that is now on display
Meigs Inn Saturday 2 to 4 in both Galleries at the home
p.m . State and district of the French Art Colony. The
regional representatives to . public is invited to attend,
be present. Open to women view the exhibit and enjoy the_
between 18 and 35.
MONDAY
SPECIAL MEETING
RACINE Elementary PTO
special meeting of
A
Monday 7:30 p.m. at school.
Oluncil 46, Royal
Bosworth
Father's Night will be observed. Program by Cub and Select Masters, has been
Scouts. Babysitting will be set lor 7:30p.m. Thursday at
the temple. Work will be
provided.
VOl CES of Uberty, vocal conducted in the Royal
group from Bicentennial Master and Select Master
year, will meet at 7:15p.m. Degrees.
Monday at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church to prepare
an East~r presentation ; new
BECKY BRODERICK
singers invited.
Becky Broderick is confinSPECIAL MEETING , ed to the St. Joseph Hospital
Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM, in Parkersburg . Her room
7:30 p.m . Monday at temple ; nwnber is 386.
work in the Royal Arch
degree; all companions 111,. i 1 • ..,
vited.
MEETING SET
TUESDAY
" g 'J Ib :OThe Long Bottom Com. MEIGS Local Chapter 17 munity Association wiU meet
OAPSE Tuesday 7:30p.m. at ·at.7 :30 p.m. Wedoesday at the
community building.
Meigs Junior High.

place.
2. Spend an entire weekend
improving your wardrobe by
mending and a lt ering
gannents you . already own.
Devise new combinations of
old clothing.
3. Search your husband's
closet for old ties you could
shorten to make fashionable
new accessories. If he doesn't
object;' wear one of his shirts
under a sweater.
4. Wash and iron almost
every gannent you own. Then
hang them up in your closet.
·Keep the closet looking full . If
it seems that you have a lot of
clothes, you will feel guilty
about buying more.
5. Most important of all,
continue to care about how
you look. Don't neglect your
make-up and hair, for exam. pie, just because you do not
have your usual selection of
new clothing to show off.
You can also use this time
to learn more about yourself.
.How do you feel when you
can 't spend · money on
clothes? Why are they so im·
portant to you? Thinking
through these issues now will
help you make choices about
spending money even after
the budget crunch ends.
Same people go on buying
sprees to fight depression.
But there are better ways to
cope, 'Find out how in Dr,
Blaker's hotline, "Fighting
Depression. " Send 50 cents
and a s tamped , se lfaddressed envelope to Dr.
Blaker in care of this
newspaper, P.O Box 475,
Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newsp~per, P .O. Box
475, Radio City Station,. New
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions of
general interest will be
discussed in future columns.

slide presentation.
The series of slides to be
used for Sunday's program
show in color some of the
spectacular and fabulous
treasures that were found in
Tut's Tomb in November of
1922. The story gives some of
the dramatic detail of the
discovery, a bit about Tut
himself, and a bout the An·
techarrtber of the Tomb.
Those who live in the area
and who have the opportunity
to watch Channel 3, WSAZ
. Television from Huntington,
West Virginia, can also see
the slides and hear the
commentary during the Noon
Newscenter program on
Friday, March 2.
The program at Riverby
will again be presented on
Monday evening, March 5 at
7:30p.m., including both the
slides and commentary. The
exhibit is open Saturday and
Sunday from 1 p.m. until 5
p.m., Tuesday and Thursday
of next week from 10 a.m.
until3 p .m., and also the first
weekend in March, Saturday
and Sunday, March 3 and 4
from I p.m. until 5 p.m. The
exhibit will close at 3 p.m. on
Tuesday, March 6.

NOW IN ' STOCK

·-- ~.
. ' . .. '• •. .

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FOAM BOARD

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5 SIZES
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J

lh", %", 1";
llh" or 2"
. CAll IN FOR AQOOTE.

0 It~ !IV I'IIE:A, lnC. ,T ... " " U •• • ~at. 011.

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Cancer treatment
.
encouragtng ·

By DAN FREEMAN
Assuclllled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Doctors battling cancer of-the
head . and neck have
combined the big three of
cancer
treatment
chemotherapy, surgery and
radiation - intn one treatment plan. And they say the
results are encouraging.
.. The plan for treating
patients with advanced·
tumors involves about nine
weeks of chemotherapy use of drugs - prior In
surgery, said Dr. Dave
Schuller, a surgeon at Ohio
State University.
Radiation therapy follows
surgery, he said .
Schuller said that in the
past, many patients who were
treated for cancer above the
shoulders by surgery or radiation alone later developed
cancer in other parts of the
body - for example, the
lungs - within 18 to 24
months.
"These are · designed to
tr eat the primary tumor
sight," he said.
Results with chemotherapy
alone also were discouraging,
he said .
The chemotherapy portion
of the treatment, directed by
Dr. Roy Smith, involves using
a combina lion of four drugs
that have in the past been
used in cancer treatment '
separately or in various
combinations, Smith said.
The drugs go to all parts of
the body, while surgery or
radiation treatment is
directed at a specific portio'n .
Hospitalization generally is
not required during the
chemotherapy portion of the ·
treatment, Smith said.
Schuller said he diagrams
tumor sights hefore patients
begin chemotheraPY and
removes all the charted
tissue during surgery, even
though the tumor may have .
been r00uced or ellrninat~ •
by chi!IRotherapy.
" We . have to hit this hard
and heavy, " he said.
Patients generally are
hospitalized for about two
weeks for the surgery portion

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985-3301

CHESTER, OHIO

'

State Farm Insurance

About His Soldiers" by Helen
Slack ; " Lincoln, A Child
Destined to Become President" by Clara. Powell; and
"For a Stronger Faith" by
Garnet Ervine.
The march meeting will be
at the home of Mrs . Ervine
and the program will be by
Velma Taylor. Refreslunents
were served by the hostess.

Attendance at the services
Feb. 18 at the Free Methodist
Church was 73. Choir
members present, 9.
Mrs. Betty Jacobs, son and
daughter-in-law, Mr . and
Mrs.
Bruce
Jacobs,
Columbus, visited over the
weekend with Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs.
Twenty-two members of

of the treatment, Schuller
said.
. The radiation therapy after
surgery is directed by Dr.
Frank Batley and lasts about
five weeks, Schuller added.
Allowing for rest breaks
between each portion of the
treatment program, the
enUre treatment lasts about
six months.
The treatment program
has reached the point where
it is ready to be llsed and
monitored on a larger scale,
Schuller said, .
_,
While he said' it is too early
for long..-ange results of the
treabnent program, Schuller
added that "the next two to
five years should be really
exciting" in terms of its
findings.

PUBLISHER NAMED
FREMONT, Neb. (AP) Gary K. Chappell, 40 , advertising director of 1 the St.
Cloud (Minn.) Daily Times,
was named . publisher of the
Fremont · Tribune Thursday.
The announcement was
made during a Fremont visit
by · Allen H. Neuharth,
chairman and Pfewdent of
Gannett Co. Inc., parent
company of both newspapers.

'I

Fulton-Thompson Tractor Sales

ll 'l ~ro y ,

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P•J meroy , 0 .

Waid Cross &amp; Son Store
~tlC I Il C.

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Po o'lero y, 0 .

SUPPORT THE
HEART FUND

Middleport, 0.

New York Clothing House

'

Moddlcporl , 0.

Erwin's ·Gulf Service

Middleport Lunch Room
.

Moddleport, 0 . ,

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Adolph's Dairy Valley
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Pomeroy . 0 .

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Pomeroy, 0 .

Pomeroy, 0.

C!J

Reuter-Brogan Ins.

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Royal .Crown Bottling Co.
Middleport. 0 .

Western Auto
Middleport. 0.
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Meigs Auto Parts

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heritage house

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support research which will help stop unnecessary death and suffering. Be
generous when a Heart volunteer knocks at your door.
'

No one is safe from heart disease. It hits old and young, and anyone in
between. The Heart ~iation has free information on heart disease that
may change your thinking and your health habits. As your Heart Association
and give to the Heart campaign.

MRS. ROBERTA O'BRIEN, COUNTY CHAIRMAN
MRS. LOIS KELLY, POMEROY CHAIRMAN
MRS. GRACE PRAn, MIDDLEPORT CHAIRMAN

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Middl e port, 0 .

cv
cv
cv
cv

Pomeroy, 0 .

Farmers Bank
Po meroy , 0 .

Citizens National Bank
Middl eport,

o:

Pomeroy National Bank
Po m er oy .

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G&amp;J Auto Parts

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YOUR HEART FUND VOWNTEER WHEN
SHE CALLS ON YOU.

Middleport Ben Franklin

SHE IS HELPING YOU SAVE A

Elliott Appliance II

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Karr &amp; Van landt

WELCOME

Middleport, 0.

Pomeroy, 0.

Ace Hardware

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Walker Funeral Home

Heart disease causes premature death and disability. Your Heart campaign dollars

cv
cv
cv

Pomeroy, 0.

Pomeroy,

P o m e roy , 0 .

HEART SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 24, 1979

The Daily Sentinel

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Meigs Inn

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Help ,YOUI Heart_
Help !lOUt Heatt Fund

Moore's Store

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STEP

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Ingels.Furniture

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Middleport. 0 .

.

the· local church had their
valentine dinner Saturday
evening at the Trinity
Church , Pomeroy.
Ten members of the Laurel
Cliff Church 1 h eld their
meeting Tuesday evening at
the ' River Boat Restaurant,
Pomeroy.
The Men's Fellowship of
the local church was held
Thursday evening at the
church.
'
Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Schaeffer en t erta ined
Saturday with a birthday
dinner for their daughter ,
Mrs . Vern Story . Those'
presnet were Mr. and Mrs.
Story and son John and Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Perry, Athens .

'

Sugar Run Mills

Moddlepor l. 0 .

Twin City Gateway

nounced that the group will ·
attend a movie in March.
Mrs . Iris Payne reported on
the March of Dimes and Jane
Bourne asked the members
for clothing for ' a family
whose home was destroyed
by fire .
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser.
noted thllt a recipe auction
will be held at the next
meeting. The cultural report ·
was given by MI'S. Debbi
Buck on the "Expanding
Community." Her program
included an original poem.

Laurel Oiff News Notes

Baker Furniture

'

'

judy Crooks hosts
sorority pizza bash
A pizza party was held
Tuesday evening at the home
of Mrs . Judy Crooks by the Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Bela
Sigma Phi Sorority.
Donna Byer read a communication from International reminding members of
the convention to be held iri
May. It was also noted that
recipes are needed for a new
cookbook being compiled.
Other communications
received were thank you note
from a family assisted at
Christmas.
Mrs. Martha McPhail an-

'

Moddleport , 0 .

•

Slide . Programs finalized

,.

2 ·Z3~

by those attending for Ura ·verses . Mrs . Marjorie
Morris who has been a pa· Grimm had prayer and a
tlent at the Jackson Care song "Give Me Thy Heart."
She 'also read "Valentine''s
Center.
/
The
program was Day the Oldest Holiday."
' readings were 'M
' y
presented by Mrs. Dorothy Other
Wish"
by
Mrs.
Valentine
Badgley. Scripture was from
I JOhn 3, 18 through 2~th Simpson ; "These Things
Abide" by Ora Hill ; " Bread
of Life" by Velma Taylor;
" Washin gton , Concerned

\ I'

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Middleport , 0 .

HEART YOU LOVE.

....

Pomeroy , 0 .

I
~

:
•

ON
OUT

Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home

Ewing Funeral Home

Rutland Furniture
Rutland. 0 .

Middleport. 0.

-

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&amp;

Valley Lumber

STEP

Francis Florist

Middleport. 0 .

Pomeroy . 0 .

Meigs Equipment

Kiddie Shoppe

Pomeroy, 0 .

Ohio Valley Plumbing
&amp; Heating, Inc.
Pomeroy, 0.

Teaford Realty

Racine Home National Bank

Pomeroy, 0.

Ra cine. 0 .

.

ON

IN

TO
BEnER
BUYS I
$42~5

WILL BUY
WILL BUY

$4995
$6895 WILL BUY
$3795 WILL BUY
$3895 WILL BUY
$2595 WILL BUY
$3295 WILL BUY
$2895 WILL BUY
$3195 WILL BU'
$1795 WILL BUY
$1295 WILL BUY
$1895 WILL BUY
$1195 WILL BUY
$695 WILL BUY
$695 WILL BUY
$995 WILL BUY
$395
WILL BUY

Pomeroy,

1977 Chevrolet Impala 4dr. (gold &amp; buckskin)
1977 Pontiac Grand Prix (bronze &amp; white)
1917 Buick Electra 225 (blue &amp; white)
1977 Plymouth Fury 4 dr . (white &amp;'blat kl
1976 Pontiac Grand Lemans Wagon (light blue)
1976 Plymouth Duster 2 dr . (red
&amp; black)
'
1975 Pontiac Grand Prix (blue &amp; white)
·1975 Buick Apollo 4 dr. (burgundy)
1975 Ford Elite 2 dr. (cream &amp; buckf kin)
1974 AMC Gremlin 2 dr. (bronze &amp; brown l
1973 Chevrolet Caprice 2 dr. (red &amp; white)
1973 Buick Cent11ry 2 dr. (green &amp; white)
1973 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr. (coppert'Onel
1973 Chevrolet Impala 2 dr. (green &amp; black)
1972 Buick LeSabre2dr. (gold)
1973 Buick LeSabre 2 dr. (brown)
1972 Pontiac Lemans 2 dr. (green &amp; white)

Pomeroy, 0 .

.

••

Veteran's Memorial Hospital

Middleport. 0 .

Welker's Ashland

Kingsbury ·Home Sales Inc.
'

.

Rutland, 0 .

Downing Childs Agency

Sewing Center
Mi dd le porl • O.

.

Po1n ero y . 0 .

Middleport, 0 .

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Middleport. 0 .

Goessler Jewelry Store

Village Pharmacy

V. D.-Edwards Insurance
Ellis &amp; Sons Sohio Service

Middleport. 0 .

Middleport. O.

Pomeroy, Q.

,.,.

Ridenour Supply
Ch e~•~ r.

0.

·'

Don't forget yOu owe it to yourself to check With us before you buy any car, New ot,us~
ed. We can save yau money . See or call One of These Friendly Salesmen : J . D. Story,
~ay Douglas or Bill Nelson.
·

~~~·~~F~M·A·I·N·....~.........99·2-·2·17j4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .P.O·M·E·R·O·Y·,·b··...y

.

Pomeroy, 0 .

Mark V

REAL ESTATE-INSURANCE

•

SM·ITH ·NElSON MOTOR, INC.

.P. J. Pauly Nationwide
Insurance
Pomeroy, 0.

Rutland Department Store

.

Pomeroy, 0.

Pomeroy, O.

Smittl Nelson Motors
"Your
Friendly Dealer"
'

Crafty Ladies Handicraft

I

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.

'

Pomeroy , 0 .

Pat Hill Ford

Pomeroy, 0 .

Pomeroy, 0 .

.

Pomeroy, 0 .

Pomeroy, 0.

Athens County Savings &amp; Loan
•

K&amp;C Jewelers

Gravely Tractor Sales

Crow's Family Restaurant
, Pomeroy, 0 .

Po meroy , 0 .

Pomeroy, 0 .

o.

Ebersbach Hardware
•

The Fabric Shop

'
'

.
I,

J&amp;R Sport Shop ·

Marguerite's Shoes

Pomeroy Flower Shop
"

Pomeroy . 0 .

Porwr~ y,

P o Mer oy , 0 .

O.

'

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,,

Baum True Value Store
.

Ches te r , 0 . ·

.

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MEIGS Tiii~
CENTER, INC.
John F. Fultt, Mgr.
Ph. 992-2101

Pomerov
TRINITY CHURCH, Rev W H
Perr in , pastor , Bob -Suck&gt;, Sunda y

school su pt . Church School, 9 15
o .m worship serviCe 10 30 a m
Cho1r rehearsal Tuesday , 7 30
p m u nder dire-.:tion o l Al. ce
Nease
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZAijENE Corner Unton and
Mulberry , Rev Cl)lde V Hender
son, pastor . Sunday sc hool q 30
am Glen McCl ung supt morn
ing worsh•p 10 30om even1ng
servtce , 7 30, m•d week se rv• Ce

Wednesday , 7.30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH

326 E Main St. , Pomeroy

Th e

Re" , Robert 8 Groves rec tor
Sunday serv1ces 11 a m n,orn1ng
prayer (Holy Commu nion f1rsl

Sunday of e a ch month ) o nd ser
man , Chur ch churc h school a nd
nursery core prov1ded Coffee
hour 1n ponsh house f ollow1ng
ti-le serviCe.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST

'112 W Mo 1n St . John McArthur
pas tor B1ble schoo l q 30 o m
morning worship, 10 30 a m ,
Youth m~Jetmgs , 6·30 p m , even
mg worsl·u p 7 30. Wednesday
ntght praye r meetmg and 8 1b le
study 7 30p m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115
Butternut Ave Pomeroy En,..oy
and Mrs Roy W1nmg olf!Cer'i• 1n
charge
Sunday holtn ess
meetmg 10 om . Sunday School
IO&lt;JO o .m Sunday school lead er
YPSM Elot se Adams 7 30 p m
so lvot1on meet1ng
v or 1o us
speakers and music speet a ls
Thursd o v '0 &lt;.
to 2 p rn
l adies t-' • • l €' -..g .J tf , oi l wome n
tnvited , 7.JO p m . prayer meetmg
and Bible study
Bob Estep
leader .
Rev
Noel He rm on
teacher
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP
liST CHAPEL Route 1 Shade Pastor Bobby Elkm s Sunday
schoo l, S p m Sunday worshtp
S 45 p .m Wednesday praye r ser
VICe, 7 30 p.m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST, 200 W Mom St , Jerry
Paul , min1ster phone 992 7666
Conservative non Instrumental
Sunday worsh1p , 10 am , B1ble
study , 11 o.m ; worsh1p , 6 p m
Wednesday Btble study , 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Rev RoiF h Sm.th ,
pastor Sunday schoo 9 30 a rn
Mrs Worley FranCIS, suptmnten
dent . Preochtng serv1 ces f1r st &amp;
t~'llrd Sundays following Sunday
School
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
Preochmg 9 30 a m , first and se
cond Sundays of each month,
th1rd and fourth Sundays each
month , worship se rv 1ce at 7 30
Wednesday evemngs at
·""· 7,niO . ·IPrayer and Btble Study
SEVENTH-DAY
ADVENTIST
Mulberry Heights Rood Pomeroy
Pastor, Al bert Dittes Sabbath
School
Supertntendenl
Rtto
W~ute Sabbath Sch ool , Sa turday
afternoon at 2 00, wtth Wor sh1p
Servtce fol !owtng at 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH S1s t e r
Harrtt:&gt;tl
Warner , Supt Sunday Sc hool
9 30 a .m
mornmg worsh1p ,
10 45 a .m .
THE HILAND CHAPEl G eorge
Casto , pastor . Sunday Schoo\
9·30 a .m .. e... enmg wors htp 7 30
Thursday evenmg prayer serv1ce
730pm
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Oav1d M ann , mini ster , Will1om
Watson. Sunday sc hool sup! Sun
day school, 9 30 o m mo rmng
worshtp 10 30 o m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 2B2
Mulberry Ave
Pomeroy Paul
Sdver Pastor Woodr ow T Zwd
ing , Sunday school supertnten dent . Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m ,
mornmg worsh1p , 10 30, eventng
worshtp
7 00 p m M1dweek
prayer sel'\l1ce, 7 00 p m
MIOWA Y COMMUNITY CENTER ,
DeMler Rd , Longsv tlle Oh1o, Rev .
Clyde Ferrell. Pa stor Sunday
School
11
o m
Saturday
preochtng servtce s 7 30 p m
W~dnesdoy e¥en1 ng Btble stu dy
ot7 30p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURC H,
Bailey Ru n Road , Rev Emmett
Rowson pa stor Handley Dunn ,
supt Sunday schoo l , 10om Sun
day even mg se r v1ce 7 30 Btble
teoch1ng ' .10 r .m Thu rsday
OYES ,I l ll
COMMUN ITY
CHURCH ·~ 1 C Tu rner , pastor
Sunday schcc 9 30 o m Sunday
morntng wor shtp 10 30, Sunday
e¥entng serv1ce , 7 30
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH O F
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
lawrence Manley , pasto r Mrs
Rus se ll Young , Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 o m
Eve n1ng worshtp , 7 30, Wednes
day prayer meeti ng , 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CH URCH OF GOD
Racine-- Rev
W
H lyk 1ns
pa stor Mormng worsh1p , 9' ,45
a.m , Sunday school 10 45 a m ,
even ing wo rs h1p , 7 Tuesday , 7 30
p m , lad1es prayer meeting ,
Wednesday , 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Sncth and Pa lme r, theRe"
Mark M cClung, Sunday school ,
91 5
a .m.,
Don
Wtl son ,
supenntenden1
Lacy
Bor ton ,
osst
supt Mo r nmg Wo rshtp
10 15 o m . Youth meeltng 6 p m
even1ng wo r~ h1p
7 30 p m
Wednesday night Bible study and
prayer servtce , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, M id
dleport , 5th and Mom George
Gloze . mtntster . M1ke Gerlach
supenntendenl
Terry Yankey
youth mini ster B1ble ~chool , q 30
om . mormng worsh tp , 10 30
am .; evening w ors h1p , 7 30
prayer ser¥ice. 7 p m Wedn e~
doy
' MIDDLEPORT• CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev Jtm Broome
po ~ t o r 81!1 White , Sunday schoo l
supl Sunday school , 9 30 o . m ,
morning worship , 10 30 o .m
Sunday evongeltst1c meettng
7 00 p .m
Prayer meettng
Wednesday ,
7
p m
UNITED . PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF ME IGS COUNTY
Dwtght L Zovltz , d~rec tor
H A" R R I S 0 N V I L L E
PR ESBYTER IAN .
Rev
Ernest
Stnck lin , pastor . Sunday church
school, 9 30 a m
Mrs Homer
lee, supt , morn tng wors h1p ,

10·30
MIDDLEPORT, Su nday school ,
9 30 o m ., Richard Vaughan su pt
Morn ing wor$htp . 10·30.
SYRACUSE, Morn1ng worshtp. 9
om ., Sunday school , lOam M rs
Sampson Hall , supt .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD,
Rev . Bobby Porter . pastor Sun day school , 10 o m . Sunday war ·
ship, 11 a m , Sunday e11emng
service , 7 p m , Wednesda y Fom1-

ly Troung Hour 7 p m ,Wcdnesdoy
worshtp ~e r v1cc 7 30 p m
HA ZEL COMMUNIT Y CHURCH,
Nea r long Bo tt om Edsvl Hart
poster Sunday sc hoo l 10 am ,
prayer
Chu rc h , 7 30 p m
meeltng 7 30 p rn Th ursday
MIDDL EPOR T PENTECOSTAL
Th1rd A¥ e t he Rev Wdham Kntt tel pas tor Rona ld Du gan Sun day Schoo l Sup! Classes lor all
ages , even1 ng ser\IICe , 7 30 Btbi e
study Wednesd ay 7 30 p m ,
youth se rvtces, Fr1doy , 7 .30 p m
MIDDlEPORT FR EEWILl BAP
liS T Cor ner Ash and Plum Noe l
Her rman , pa stor Saturday eve n·
1ng se r v•ce 7 30 p m
Sunday
Schoo l 10 30om
MEIGS
COOPERATI VE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T Bumgarn er .
Otrec tor
POMEROY ClUSTER
•
Rev James Corb 1tt
PO MERO Y, Sunday School 9 IS
om Wors h1p ser v1ce 10 30 o m
Chotr rehearsal Wednesday 7
p m
Re¥
Robert M cGee
m1n1!i ler
ENTERPRI SE Worship 9 o m
Church School I 0 o m
ROCK SPRINGS , Worsh1p 10
am
Church Schoo l 9 15a m
UMYFb30pm
FLATWOODS Worsh1p 11 o m
Church School 10 o m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev Robe rt Bumgarner
HEATH , Robert Bumgarner ,
Pasto r
Wo rs htp
10·30 om .
Church School 9 30 a m UMYF b

SWISHER j LOHSE
PHARMACY
Prescriptions
992-2955

Pomeroy

MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

... . ......
~

'

1/slh% S. Thin,
Middleport
Ph. 992-7155

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL
Ph. 949-9130

RACINE
FOOD MARKET
The Store
With A Heart

2 Convenient
Markets

M1dway Markel
Bob's Markel

pm
Rutla nd -Salem Center Chorgf:!
RUTLAND Wilbur Hdt Pastor
Warsh ip 10 30 am Church Schoo l
9 30om
SALEM CENTER Ch u rch Sc hoo l
q 45 o m . worshtp 9 a .m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Harvey Koch Jr
ASBURY
Worsh1p 11 o m
Chu rch Schoo l 9 50 o m UMW
f1r st Tu esday B1bl e Study Thu rs
7 30 p m
FOREST RUN Worsh1p 9 o m
Chur ch Schooll Oa m
MINERSVILLE , Wo rs h1p 10 o m
Church School 9 o m
SYRACUSE , Ch urch School 9 00
a m Wo rsh1p se rvtce 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . Dov1d'Hams
Cl uster leader
Rev Steven Wil son
Florence Sm1lh
Hilton Wolfe
As soc m tes
BETHANY (Dorca s). Worsh 1p
9 00 am Church School 10 00
o m
CARMEL , Chruch Sd·-ol 9 30
o m Wor sh 1p 10 30 a m lnd and
4th Sundays
APPLE GROVE , Sunday School
930 am Wo rsh1p 7 30 p m 1st
and 3rd Sunday s, Pray er meet1 ng
Wednesday 7 30 p m . Fellow ship
supper ftr st Saturday 6 p m UMW
2nd Tuesdoy 7 30 p m
EAST LET ART , Chruch Schoo l 9
a m Worship 5e rvtc e 10 o m
Pray er me ellng 7 30 p m
Wednesday UMW !Jrs t Tuesday
7 30 p m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday
sc hool 10 am wors hip 11 am
Chotr procltce Thursday B p m
LETART FALLS - Churc h School
10 am Worsh1p ser¥1Ce, 9 om ,
MORNING STAR , Wors h1p 9 30
o m Church Schoo l 10 30 o m ,
M1d Week Serv1ce Wednesday 8

-

U

K&amp;C;:~..
212 E. Main Street
992 3785,

Middleport. Ohio

These Messages

f:in Doctors•

We

"•" "I ..

"

-

Pomeroy 992·2582
Mason 773-5721

I

Attend T.he Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday

locust &amp;

Of Our Religious Heritage

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

•
'
'
•'

.'

''

Many years ago an old
shepherd died H•s dog was at
the tra1n depol when the man s
casket was placed aboard the
train For years after the dog
l1ved at lhe depot ... he met
every tram , watch1ng each
passenger. always dli'ap·
po1n1ed in not f1nd1ng his mas·
ter. Everyone loved the dog
and after he died a monument
lo h1m was buill on a h•ll above
the depot

Rediscover the warmth of
a .fnendship that never falls
Worsh1p this week.
Copyr~ghl 1979

CAPTAIN EASY

..... .
'
'

'

A~! HEFtE COME MY
LITTl.e AN6EL5-!

A ";,J

'

,.....
~

P. J. PAULEY,
AliENT
Nolionwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0 .
804
Ma1n
_992-23TB Pomeroy

SANK NEXT•

,... '

Mill Work Cabinet Making
'

roads of Galilee 2 ,000 years
ago wants to be your lifelong
fnend. Noth•ng can separate
you from H1s endless love and
concern

WILLSTR I~ E

A

.'

992-3978

A true fnend IS one of 111e·s
nchesl treasures Sooner or
later, we discover who our real
fnends are
and we chensh
them .

DOING
DEAR?

"COMPUTER

......."'•

RACINE
PLANING
MILl

l'ltitl1f111 li-ielltl

S HEER GUESSWOR~

MAY I PRESENT
MR. WA5H TUI!-85,
WHO WISHES TO
JOIN OUR HEAVENLY

1&lt;11-l&lt;;DOM!

.

••
',
:~""

HEY, JoJOW

A MINU TE!
I N~VER SAID 1
WANTEP T:JOIN

WAIT

'IER CUL-T!

---...-r

WHEN YOU 5-EE
WHAT BL/~5FUt
HAPPINH!' WE GET
FROM SERVIN G O UR

WHAT'S THIS.
. " DANGIORO US
PROJE CT "~O U VE
G OT IN MIND
FOR ME'

BELOVED LEADER··
-,'OU'LL CERTAINLY
WANT TO BE OfJE

YO U'LL FIND
O UT IN DUE
riME! MEA '-1·
WHILE, TAKE
OFF '/OU R
S HIRT!

..

OF lJ5 ~

'"

•'

w.

'

.

'

.·

,....·",.

•· r

,.
~

K91Sier Adllenl!;mg

Ser~~tce,

Strasburg, Vlrg1n1a

Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan ·

Co.

-r.

216 E. Main

. '"

Ridenour
1V &amp; Appliance
Gas Service

We all need to know that
we have the kind of fnend who
really cares about us The
man who walked the dusty

,,,·'·

0.-1 , Y5AH? WELJ.. ,
GO AH5AD A ND TRY,
MR. SUPER NOSE

i

'

n' "

'

....

Chester 985-3307
Racine 949-2020

.A'

ElliOTT

...

APPLIANCE II

....

.

'

SCfiPiures selec ted by

;2-23

The Amer1can B1ble Soc1e1y

ORPHAN ANNIE-ALL PALS TOGETHER

PIZZA SHACK

DOUG'S
MARINE
SALES &amp;

Eat In or
Carry out
126 E. Main

YOU AI'W LENA

COOK'ED AN D SER VED
H1E DINNER "' THAT'S
THE IMF'ORTAIH 1'1&lt;\RTI

·.,....
·-....
'' .
•

.... .•

'fES, SlREE ' NOT HING LIK E

WHY, THE 8USINE5 5 OF
MAKI NG A I \V ING · HOW
YOU ' RE GOING "TO MAI(E
A LIVING , THAT 15"

A FINE MEA L A ND GOOD COMPANY

TO GIVE A MAN A SEMSE OF
WELL BEING .1

WELL, LENA
AND I HAVE
GOT TO FIND
JOSS ·

~

pomeroy

Reuter·BrQgan
Insurance
Services

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

992-3325

216

s. . secona

Pomeroy

Tractors,

New

;1:

:-

46 fs.

Spr.lng Ave . 9925101

.

n •

~· .

rhrro . Middleport

Aerlai - SchoolsWeddmgs
Chester 985-4155

Of Your Choice

Attend The Church

and stuff 1

1t

qoes ~

...

•
' ,'

.·"...'
I

. I

HEINER'S
BAKERY

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Bakers of

Mi~dleport·

Good Bread
Huntington,

MARK VSTORE
Middleport

Pomeroy, 0.

W.

448 Locust
992-JOt.,
Middleport

.

/

WlNNIE_ _ _ _ _-,-_ __

.." .'

This Sunday

General Merchandise
Ractne 949-2550

Professional Service ,

qoinq?

,.

'•

v1tamins

~-

Groceries-

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Keep an e4e on
We II see how her for a sec!

."

To qet her

Where
are 40u

r

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

MORSE CHAPEL , Wonhp 11
am Church School9 30o rn
PORTLAND Worsh1p 7 30 p m ,
Churc h School9 30 a m
SUTTON , Church Sc hoo l 9 30
om Wor shtp l si a nd 3rd Sundays
10 30om
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev RK hard W Thoma s
Pas tor
Duane Sydenstncker
John W Douglas
Charles Domtgon
A ssoc tote s
JOPPA
Worsh1p 9 00 a m
Ch ur ch School 10 00 a m
CHESTER , Worshtp 9 am ,
Church School 10 o m 81ble
Study , Wednesday s 7 30 p m
[Communion ftr st Sun day each
month)
LONG BOTTOM , Sunday Schoo l
a t 9 30 o m Evenmg Worsh1p at
7 30 p m Thu rsday Btbl e Study ,
7 30 p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School9 30
am Morntng W orsh 1p 10 30 o m
Even 1ng Worshp 7 30 p m Btble
Study Wednesday s of 7 30 p m
ALFRED . Sunday School at 9 AS
o m Mornmg Worshtp ot 11 o m
Wednesday
N1ght
Prayer
Me et mg . 7 30 p m
ST PAUL
(Tu pper s Plo1ns )
Sunday School 9 00 o m Mornmg
Worshtp ot 10 00 om Monday
N1ght B1bl e Study 7 30 p m
Un1tecl Methodtst W o mef'! , second
Wednesday of each month , 1 30

Good'

O~ay,S i im ~

1 feet sorrt.J for the pup, too.
but we just can't ~t.eep 1t ~

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

pm

'

! .· •

Cable TV Systems, Inc.

Attend The Church

'

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:,..

992-2196

Pomeroy

...

'

' I

Don ThlllliDSOn Ford, Inc.

Farm Machinery

~

' r,•

GASOLINE ALLEY

Holland

. ,,

~

Fulton·Thompson
Tractor Sales, In&amp;.
Deutz

EXACTLY .,, THAT
WPO THE PtJ R POSE
O F THIS DINNER, MY
CHIW 1-- NOW I HAVE
NEWS FOR YOU

S IL L,YOU'RE MJTA DEAF MUTE
THE P'Q...."""TOR SA//) SO I G IVE ME

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:7CME S IGN THAT YOU HEAR
1
WHAT I M SAYING- '

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

HE:S SQIJEEZ1Nr5
MYHAN[)/ HE'S
1.3/.INK!NG HIS

· uc HEARS ME DOCTOR
liE SQUEEZEO MY
IIAN[) HE: KNOJA.'S

EYES.'

H:JL COM'= AROUND

131RDIE,

TIM:': IN TY:O MEANT/'ll\=
H OW'D V::JU LIKE TC
TAKe HIM FOR A

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HELP HIM

PLEASE!!!

TELL STAN
APAMSIWANT

JUST S IVE H IM

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This Sunday
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ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl lay lead er
Shuler pasto r Sunday sc hoo l
CHURC H • OF JESUS CHRIST
9 30 a m , Church serv tce 7 p m , Located at Rutland on New l 1mo
youth meettng , 6 p m Tu esday Bt Rood next to Forest Acre Po rk
bl e Study , 7 p m
Rev Roy Rouse pastor Robert
RACINE CH URCH O F THE Musse r Sunday Sc hoo l su p! Sun
NAZARENE Rev John A (off · day school 10 30 a m wors h1p
man po $to r Franklin Imboden , 7 30 p .m.Btble Study Wedn es
cho1rm on o f the Boo rd ,of Chns- day 7 30 p m , Sa turday ntght
IIOn Lde Sunday School , 9 30 prayer serv tce 7 30 p m
o m . mornmg worsh tp 10 30,
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN
Sunday even 1ng worsh tp 7 30 Roger Watson , past or Ken neth
p m Prayer meettng , Wednes Byer, Sunday sc hoo l sup! Morn
day 7 30 p m
1ng wors hip , 9 30 a m , Sun
RAC INE FIRST BAPTIST Don l
doyschool , 10 30 om , even1ng
Wo lk.er Pastor , Ronn1 e Salser , serv 1ce , 7 30 Wednesday Btble
Sunday sc hoo l supt , Sunday Study , 7 30p m
school , 9 30 a .m , mor nmg war
MT
UNION BAPTI ST , Don
shtp , 10 40 am Sunday even1ng Wils on
Sunday
sc h oo l
worshtp 7 30 Wednesday even supe rintendent Sund ay sch ool
pm
111g B1ble study 7 30
9 45 a m , evenmg wor sh1p , 7 30
SOUTH BETHEl (Sti ver Rtdge)
DANVIlLE WESLEYAN Rev R p m Prayer meellng, 7 30 p m
Sunday School q 00 o m Morning
D Brown , pasto r Sunday School Wedn esday
Wosh 1p 10 00 om Wed nesday BI - 9 30 a m , mornmg worsh1p
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
ble Study , 7 30 p m
10 45 , youth serv1ce, 6 45 p m
CHURCH
Eugene Unde rwood
TUPPERS PLAIN S Wors h1p 9 e¥cnmg worshtp
7 30 p m
posl or Howard Coldwe ll , Jr ,
o m Ch urch SchooiiO a m
praye r and pratse Wednesd ay
Sunday .School Supt , Sunday
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, ser
7 JOp m
School , 9 30 a m , Morntng Ser·
v1ces each Sunday 9 30 a m
SILVER RUN FREE BA 0 TI ST Rev
man, 10 30 a m , Sunday e11enmg
George Pteken s poslor w1lh
Mor v1n Mark.1n pas to r , Steve lit
serv1ce , 7 p m
preoch •n g an l1r st and th1rd Sun
ti e Sunday schoo l sup! Sunday
L ETAR T
FALL S
UNITED
day of month O l1 ve r Swo1n , Sup!
schoo l, 10 o m
morn1ng wor- BRETHREN Rev Freeland Noms
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , ship, 11 a m Sunday e.,.en 1ng pas tor Floyd Norm , supt Sunday
Rev Ke1th Eblin , pastor Sunday
worsh1p 7 30 Prayer mee t1n g schoo l , 9 30 om mormng ser
School
9 30 o m
Leonard a nd B1ble study Th ursday 7 30 man , 10 30 am ., Pray e r serv 1ce ,
Gtlmore, f1rst elder eventng ser·
p m . you th se rvice 6 p m Sun· Wedn es day , 7 30 p m
Vl{e , 7 30 p m
Wednesda y prayer
doy
CHESTER CHURCH OF TH E
mee t1ng , 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD
NAZARENE Rev Herbert G ro te ,
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
Rev Donny R Cook po :&gt; tor Sun
pastor Worsh tp serv1ce 11 o m
OF CHRIST
Duane Worde n , day sc hool 9 30 o m worsh tp o nd 7 30 p m Sunday Sch ool 9 30
mmt ster B1b le doss 9 30 am
se rv1ce 11 o m evemng se rv1 ce
a m Charles 81 ssel l supt Pray er
morn1 ng worsh tp
10 30 am
7 00 youth serv •ce , Wednesd ay
meeting , Wednesday , 7 30p m.
even1ng worship
6 30 p m
7 00 p m
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
Wedn esday B1 ble study . 6 30 p m
lAN GSV Ill E
CHR I ST IAN CHRIST Gobrtel Mzrs, pa sto r BI NEW STIVE RSVILLE COMMUNI · CHURCH , Robert Mu sse r pastor
ble Sunday School 9 30 o m mor·
TY Church Sunday Schoo l ser - Sunday school , q 30 a m
Roy nmg ch urch 10 30 om Sunday
vice , q 45 om , W or s ~·up servtce , S1gm on sup! , morn1ng worsh1p, e11e m ng ser v1ce, 7 00 p m
10 30. Evangelt stt c Se rv1 ce 7 30
10 30 Sunday eventng se r ¥1ce
Wednesday se rv1ce 7 ~0 p m
p m
Wednesday
Prayer 7 30 m1d- week ser vice , Wedn es·
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
meel1ng 7 30
day 7pm
CHURCH Rev , Floyd F Shook ,
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST .
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE pastor , Lloyd Wn~,ht , Su nday
Rd ; NAZARENE, Rev
Pome r oy · Horr1 so nville
Dol e Bo ss, School Supt .. Morn mg Worshtp
Robert Purtell , pastor , Btll pastor , Bob ""core
Sunda y q 30 o m Sunday School I 0 20
McElr oy Sun day sc hoo l supt Sun - Schoo! ~up t Sunday sc hoo l. q 30 o m Wed nes day Proyer and Bi day sc hool 9 30 a m mormng a m
morn mg w arsh tp , ~ 10 45 bl e Study 7 30 p m . Sunday even ·
wor sh1p and communt on 10 30 o m , evangeli stic serv1ce 7 p m
lng wo rs hip 7 30 p m C ho~r Praco m Sunday wors h1p servtce , 7 Wednes day serv1ces
p rayer tiCe Thursday , 7 p .m
p m Wednesday even1ng prayer ond praise , 7 p.m , Nazarene
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
meeting and Bible study , 7 p m
youth 7 p m
Ootly p rayer Charles Russell Sr
m1n1ster
ST JOHN LUTHEkAN CHURCH
meettng 8 30 o .m Men's prayer R1 ck Macomber supt Sun day
Pm e Gro¥e The Rev W1 lh am mee lmg Saturday 7 p m
school , 9 30 om wors h1p ser·
Midd leswo rth
Pastor . Churc h
EDEN UNI TED BRETHREN IN v1ce, 10 30om 8Jbl eS tudy Tue s·
ser 111ces 9 30 om Su nday SdlOol CHRIST Elden R Blake , pa sto r
day , 7 30p m-:- 10 30om
Sun day School 10 om
Robert
REORGANIZED CHURCH O F
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF Rend supt Morning se rm on , 11 JE5US CHR IST 0~ LAT TE fl DAY
CHR IST , Mr Donald Ro ley , pastor
am Sunday mght ser v1ces Chn s
SAINTS Po rtland Ra ctn e Roan
Sunday sc hool, 9 30 o m , wor
han Endeavor 7 30 p m Son g Wdliom R o u ~ h pa .,l or Ph yll 1
~h1p service , 10 30 am , Su nday
se r v1~e B p m
Preoch1ny H 30 Stobe r ! , Sunday School Sup! Sun·
serv 1ces 7 p m , youth group., p m M1dweck Prnyer mep t1ng , day Schoo l, 9 30 a m . Mornt n!J
Wednesday , 7 p m
wor sh 1p, 10 JO a m
Sunday.
Wednesday 7 p m Roy Arlom ~

,,

ev en 1ng se r vtce 7 p m Wednes
day even tng prayer serv1 ce s 7 30

pm
BETHLEH EM BAf'ri ST Rev Earl
Shuler pastor Worsh1p ser\11ce,
9 30 am Sunday schoo l 10 30
a m. B1b le Study and prayer ser VICe Thursday 7 30 p.m
CARLETON CHURCH , Ktngsbury
Rood Gory K1 ng pastor Sunday
sc hool 9 30 om
Rolph Carl ,
supenn tendenl evemng worsh1p ,
7 30
p m
Prayer m eelmg ,
Wedn es day. 7.30 p m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Bru ce Sm1th . pastor
Wallace
Dam ewood Sup! B1ble School
9 30 a m
Preach1ng serv1ce
10 AS am Noevemngserv1ce
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Rev Herbert Ading,
pastor Sunday School 9.30 om ,
Mo rmng ser11 1Ce . 10 30 am
Evongeli sh c se rv1ce 7 p m Prayer
and p ratse serv1ce Thursday 7
pm
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ol
Bol d Kn ob
Rev
law rence
G luesencamp, Sr , pastor , Roger
Wtlltord , Sr Sund ay school sup!
Sunday school 9 30 o , eventng
Pray er
worsh1p , 7 30 p m
meettng , Wednesday 7 30 p m
Yout h meeltng , Sunday , 5 30 p m
w1th Don and Martha Meadows tn
ch arge
WHITE 5 CHAPEL, Coolv1tle RD
Rev Roy Deeter pasto r Sunday
-;choo l 9 30 o m wo rsh1p serv tce
10 30 om Brble stu dy and prayer
se rvt ce, Wednesday , 7 30p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
l arry Coleman , pastor , Herb
Ell 1ott . Sunday schoo l sup t Sun
doy school q 30 o m morning
wo rsh1p and com un1on . 10 30
o m Sunday evening serv1ce, 7
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Amos Tdlts , pastor
Don ny T!ll1s , Sun da y School Supt
Su nday Sch ool . 9 30 om w or ·
sh1p servtce 11 am
Sunday
evening servi ce 7 p m Prayer
meeting , Wednesday , 7 p m
WMPO Rod1o broadcast , Sunday
morning 7 -45.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Re¥. lloyd D Gnmm
Jr pa stor Sunday sc.' hool , q 30
om worshi p ~e r v 1 ce 10 30 am
~roo dcostlive over WMPO young
p eop le's
serv1ce,
7
p m
Evon gcli sttc service, 7 30 p m
Wednesday serv tce 7 30 p m
FIRS T SOUTHERN BAPTIS T Co r
ner o r Second and Anderson,
MD!.O Jl Postor Fro11lc. lowthe1
~u 11d oy s&lt;: hoo l , 9 .:15 o .m
war
sh1p &lt;.C"JVIfC , 11 om a nd 7 30
p .m . We ekly Bt..,l !"' St udy ,

Wednesday 7 30 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST
Mtller St , Mason, W Vo Aunce
Mtck , pastor Sunday Bible Study
10 a.m .. Woh hip 11 o .m and 7
p m Btble Study Wednesday 7
p m Vocal mustc
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD,
Dudd1ng Lone , M eson , W Yo
Chester Tennant , Pa stor Sunday
Schoo l 9 45 a.m.,
Children s
Chu rch 6 45 p m. Young Peop le's
Ser'ltCe 6 45 p m Evangelistic
Ser¥ice 7 30 p m Women's Mts
s1ono,ry Council 10 am f1rs t and
third Tuesdays Prayer and B1ble
Study, Wednesday , 7 30p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev
W1ll1am Campbe ll. pastor. Sunday
,Schoo l , 9 30 am James Hughes.
sup! , evemng service , 7 30 p m.
Wedne sday
eventng prayer
meeting , 7 30 p .m Youth prayer
servtce each Tuesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH ,
letart W Vo . Rt I , Rev . Chorles
Hargraves, pastor Worshtp services 9·30 o m , Sunday schoo l,
11 a m., evening worsh1p, 7 30
p m Tuesday cottage prayer
meet1ng and Bible study , 9 30
a m Worship servtce. Wednesd oy 1 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now
loca ted on Pomeroy P1ke, County
Rood 25 near Flatwoods Re ... .
Blackwood , pastor . Services on
Sunday at 10·30 a .m . and 7 30
p m w1th Sunday school, 9 30
om Bible st udy , Wedne5doy,
7 30 p .m
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
CHURCH , INC - Pearl St , Mid ·
dleport. Rev. O'Dell Manley ,
pastor Sonny Hudson , Sunday
sc~ool supt. Sunday school, 9 '30
om . eventng worshtp , 7 30 p.m
Prayer and protse ser¥1te ,
Wednesday . 7 30 P m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO -P.ostor Oennts Boles. Sunday
Sc hool. 10 a .m. , worship service,
11 30 a m and 7 30 p .m Prayer
meehng , Wednesdoy . 7:30p.m.
RUTLAND A:POSTOLIC CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST . Elder James
Miller . Bible study , Wednesday ,
1 30 p m , Sunday School , 10 a m
Sunday mght se rvice , 7 30 p m.
PO MEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLINESS -- Hornso nvllle Rood .
Dewey Ktng
pastor, Edtson
Weav er, oss1stont Henry Eblin,
Jr , Sunday school supt Sunday
sc hool , 9·30 om morning war·
ship 11 a m . Sunday eventng ser·
v1ce 7 30 prayer meeting, Thur s
day , 7 30 p m
.
SYRACUSE FIR Sl CHURCH OF

GOO ~- Not Pentecostal. Rev . 992-2825. Saturday evenmg M'ls s,
George Otler pastor . Worsh1p 7:30, Sunday Mass 8 and 10 o m ,
:;ervtce Sunday . 9:45 om Sun- Confenton . Saturday, 7-7 30p m
day school 11 a .m .. wor!ihtp serVICTORV BAPTIST - On the
v1ce 7 30 p m Thursday prayer Route 7 bypass. James E Keesee,
meetmg , 7 30 p . m
pastor. Sunday school , 10 om ,
MT . HERMON United Bre th"ren mornmg worshtp, 11 a .m .· evenChurch Sunday School 9.30 om . tng servtce. 7 .
Wo rshtp servtce
10 45 o.m
TRINITY Chnstt an Assemb ly.
Preaching servtces every Sunday Cool ¥tll e G1lbert Spencer,
alternating with C E Wednes day pastor Sunday school, 9 30 a m ,
proyer meeting 7 .JO p m Rev. mornmg worship , 11 o.m Sunday
James leach, pastor . Dav1d eventng service, 7 30 p m.
Holter , lay leader.
midweek prayer ser\'ICe Wednes·
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES. 1 mtle day , 7 30 p .m .
east at Rutland tunclton of Route
MOUNT Oltve Community
124 and, Noble Summ1t Rood (T- Church, lawrence Bush, pastor,
174) Sunday Bible Lecture 9 30 Bettie P1gott Sunday school supt.
a .; Watchtower study
10.30 Sunday School and morn1ng worom Tuesday, Bible study, 7 and ship, 9 30 o .m Sunday evemng
8 15 p m., Thursday . theocratic serv1ce. 7 p .m .: Youth meeting
sc hool , 7.30 p .m ; ser.,ice and Btble study , Wedn esday, 7
meeting, 8 30 p m
pm
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
FAITH BAPTIST Church. Ma so n ,
Church - Leland Holey, pastor
meet ot Un1ted Steel Workers
Sunday school, 10 a .m . evening Un ion Hall , Railroad Street ,
servtce . 7 30 p m . Prayer Mason Pastor, Rev , Joy Mttchell
meettng , Wednesday , 7 30 p .m.
Morntng worsh1p 9 45 a m . Sun CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy , day School 10 30 o m Prayer
located on the 0 . J Whtte Rood meetmg Wednesday , 7 30 p .m .
off highway 160 Sunday Schoo l
FOREST RUN BAP.TIST - Rev .
10 am Superintendent John Nyle Borden, ·pastor Cornelius
Loveday First Wednesday night Bunch, superintendent. Sunday
of month CPMA services , second school, 9·30 o.m , second and
Wednesday WMB meertng, th1rd fourth Sundays worship service at
through fthh youth servtce . 2 30p m
George Croyle, pastor .
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570 and Main St. , Middleport Rev.
Grant St .. Middleport, Rev . Don Calvin Minn i5 pastor Mrs Elvin
Bloke, pastor. Sunday 5choo l , Bumgardner ,
supt.
Sunday
9 :)0 a .m.: morntng worship, school , 9 30 o m .. worshtp ser ·
10 30 a m : even1ng worship, 7 VICe 10 45 0 m.
p .m Wednesday evening Sible
NORTH
BETHEL
Unitad
study and prayer meeting , 7 p m
Methodist Church Rev Charles
Affiliated with Southern Baptist Domigan, pastor Sunday School .
Convention
9 30 o.m , Worship Service. 10·4$
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF a .m .; Sunday Bible Study, 7·00
CHRIST - Gobnel Mraz , posfor . p . m ..
Wednesday
prayer
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m , morn
meettng, 7.30p.m.
tng chu ~ch , 10 ·30 o m. Juntor
HOUSE OF PRAYER
AND
church program under dtrectlon PRAISE , Uberty A¥e . post Burger
of Koren Mroz for children , 2-10, . Chel , Pomeroy. James Anspah ,
during regular church hour in pastor Sunday school, 10 a.m :
church basement . Sunday even · mornmg worship , 11 o.m Even ·
ing service 7 p .m .; Wednesday ing worshp, Sunday, Tuesday and
service, 7:30pm.
Fndoy 7 30 p .m.
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER BURLINGHAM SOUTHER"! BAP·
George's Creek Rood. Church liST CHURCH, Route 1, Shade .
school, 9 30 om , morning war· Pastor Don Block Affiliated with
shtp, 10 30 eveni ng servic&amp;, 7 Southern Baptist Convention ,
1 pm Proy errneetingWednesdoy , Sunday school, 1:30 p .m. ; Sunday
7 p.m
worship, -2,30 p.m. Thurs'do~
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCti,
eventng Bible study, 7 p m
~
Corner of Sycamore and Second
PENTECOSTAL
ASSEMBLy ,
Sts .. Pomeroy The Rev. William · Racine.
Route 124 , William
M iddlesworth, Pastor. Sunday Hoback, pastor. Sunday school ;
School at 9 .ol5 a m . and Church
10 am ., Sunday evemng ser\'ICe ,
Services 11 o m.
6 30 p m Wednesday eening ser
SACRED HEART , Rev Father VICe , 7
Paul D . Wel.ton , pastor PhonP.

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FRANK &amp; ERNIE

LUSCIOUS PIE
COtwtPANY

aJENt'II'J.S
You PR!:FE:~ APPL.C
Off BwE-B~~y ~
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ll1AT. '1bu Ol.D
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WHI L~ '{OJ'~
SITTiiJ(O
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to lead fourth best of h1s
longest and strongest suit
agatns t notrump and opened
lh e deuce of sp a des
Dummy's 10 held the trick
and South was tn business.
All he needed was to collect
four tncks in e1ther red sUit
and he was hom e
Th1s was a hlgh·lev el
game and South did not
visualize a squeeze, but he
did stumble mto one
He started with d1amonds
and cashed h1 s tops while
West chucked a couple of
little clubs . Then he dec1ded
to run the good clubs
West had to make two
d1seards The first was easy
- a low spade. The second
was not so easy He had to
chuck a heart and South had
his 13th trick

0

NORTH
• 10 9

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A B6 5

t A K B4
+A Q6

WEST
t K J 32
.. J 9 7 2
• 5

BORN LOSER

t AP )
Negot1aLor s for the Umted
Farm Workers have reJected
a new pay offer by growers as
violence broke out agam m
some field s.
UFW Pres i dent Cesa r
C.l lavez ca lled Wednesday's
confrontatiOn at Joe Maggio
Inc " " oolice riot" , while the

.' Difficult slam bid makes

'

EAST
t B 7 54

.. 10 3

• J 10 7 6 2
• 10 7
• 8 5 43
SOUTH
t A Q6

or

K

Q4

• Q 93

+K J

92

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
West North East
7 NT

Pass
Pas s

Pass

South
I NT
Pass

You hold . .

BARNEY
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THAT WUZ.

FAIR·TO-MIDDLIN'
BEAN SOUP--

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EVEN IF IT
DID COME
OUT OFA
CAN

THAR'S SOME LEFTOVERS

FER YE. L1 LOCK

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
As

North

dummy

he

Labled the
remark e d ,

" Nmeteen pomts plus a ten

spot should be enough to
g1ve you a good play for

seven.''

,

far away as Uma, Ariz ,
confronted wbout 1.000 UFW

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stnkcrs who allegedly en·
tcr cd the Maggio lettuce field
f1 vc mi les north of the
Mex1can border.

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~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

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Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lener to each square to torm
lour ordmary wo rd s

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by Henr1Arnold and Bob Lee

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IT'S SHEER EXCELLENCE
- THAT PLACES ME FIRST I

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BIGEE

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2-23-B

t AKQJ98 7
or A 6 3 2

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Ask tbc !xpcpts

Opening lead : 4' 2

Impenal Co unLy Sheriff 's
Department t ermed 1t a
"riotous mob action "
Deputies and police from as

NEW PACT REJECTED
HOLTVILLE , Calif

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

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BRIDGE

OF YoLJR
~iTaR!'MI:NT

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Frida}: , Feb. 23

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IHARTEG I

A Florida reader asks if
we open this hand w1th four
~~~~.es Everyone IS vulner· .

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Now

a~range

lhe ctrcled Jeners to
form lhe surprise answer, as suggested by the abOvE! cartoon

1 1--'·---'---'h,__.A«~
1
No. We Just open one L_.J.L....J...
spade Th1s hand is too
strong for a, preempt
1Nf-WSPA PEH ~~ NTE:HPR ISI" AS.';:-.1 I
Printanswerhere.

"[I]-( X X]"

South replied : " You
(Answers l omor~w)
!For a copy ol JACOBY MOD·
should learn to count. All ERN send $f to
Wm a t
PLOVER
ASTRAY
you have is seventeen m Bndge , · care of th1s newspa ~ Yesterdays Jumbles YOUNG CABIN
to
appear
In
court
lor
making bean
Ordered
. Answer
h1 h cards."
per. P 0 Box 489. Rad10 Ciiy
SOUP;-"SUBPOENA
"
~ven w1th 19, North would StatiOn. New York. N Y 10019)
2·23 have been stretching things LAST O F 6 BRIDGE RELEASES
Jumble Book No. 12,con111n1"V 110 puultl~o'C:II•bltlor $1 .75 ptnlpald
~~~b~;-~~ a trifle and w1th 17 he really FOR LONG LE AD SERV ICE fromJumblt, clothlansw•p•per, Box34, No
, N.J.07&amp;41. lncludeyour
~
had South in trouble
DATE 0129 , PASTE 0125 . PRIN T
n•mt,ICtdrtll, ztp codt 1nd m1kt chtckl p1y1blt to Ntwlptperbookl.
Fortunately for North and AN D MAIL 0126 ALL OUT·
South. West ho.t been taught P'ITS

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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;lrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Feb. 23, 1979
IN THE

COUN TJ.IV MO Bilf Homro Porif.
f.l nut C' 33 ""' th of PMnNoy
IN THE MAT TER OF THE lorgr- loi s Coli ~2 7470
ESTATE OF EDNA MAE
,! AND 4 I(M lurr11 ~ hml and l l,
RHODES , DECEASED
NO . 225 85
lut r, 1 ~ h 0&lt;1
opl ~
Ph otH'
NOTICE
oy -; 5434

Noltce 1S he r eb y gtven that
on the 16th day of January ,
1979 , John M P 1ckens f tled m
l htS Cour t under Do c k e t Ml2 ,
No 35.92 . an authenttca ted
c opy ol thC le tt er s of ad
m tnis tral ton ISSued by the
Orphan's Cour t of Beaver
County , Sta te o f
Penn
svtvanta, r elati n g to the
Es ta te of Edna Mae Rhodes
Not tce 1S fu rthe r gtven that

all cr ed tt or s of satd estate
who des tre to assert thetr
l1en s o n the r eal es tate o f satd
dec eden t loca ted '" lhts state

sha ll presen t thetr c tatm s.
duly sworn to, to tht s Court
wttllm stx mo nth s afte r the

ftl1 n g ot s a•d l etters i n lhts

court .o r their satd I tens snai l
for eve r be d ee med barred
and cance l ed
Mann1ng D Webs t er
Probate Jud ge
(21 9, 16 , 23, 3tc

tARCI:
HOM!: 111
qo::z 1705 b£'1 ore 5

Pomeroy

FURNI SH fa HOUSE m M,dclle&gt;porl
Su11oble l or l our co n)tru c- hon
wor ke rs
Coli oil er b pm
304 881 756b or 99'} 5434
FURNISHI:D HOUSI: 3 roorn ond
both Ad ul ts on ly 99'1 7598
MOS IU HOMf Completely f ur
n1)hed ~ bed10orn Surllflgha rn
area Q9') 7479
FUflNI SHm APT 110 1, Mulb e ~ry
Av e No ch1ldren or pe ts
depos1! ond ren t 1n advance
Reference
requ1red
Coli
44b 1788

Saturday, Fob. 24

PROBATE COURT OF
ME IGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF ELSIE M .
D ECKER , D ECEASED
Case No . 22600
NOTICE OF

ASTRO·GRAPH

ldu y
3 dt~ ys
li dt~y s

Mannmg D Webster
Pr oba t e Judge Clerk
(2) 9, 16 , 23. l!C

PUBLIC NOTICE

' ..

Se aled btds will b e r ece •v ed
1n th e ofh ce of th e Vill age
Cl er k , Pomeroy Oh1o , until
12 o'c lock no on on March 5,
1979, on any of the fol lowmg
prop osals
1 For the purcha se by the
• V ttl ag e of Po mer oy o f a n ew
1979 fo ur door ftve passenger
se dan wtlh t he foll owmg
added equ1pment
350 Cub 1C 1nch en g,ne 4
barrel carb uret or , Mtn VS
Po we r St ee r mg and Pow er
B r a kes
5 black t1r es
F oam rubber fron t se at
Spotli gh t on le ft ha nd s1 de
H eavy duty oil fil t er
Heavy duty batter y 60 AMP
A1 r Conditioner &amp; 61 AMP
A I ter n ator
Pos tf 1ve tr ac t10n r ear ax l e
Aut omat ic
tr an Sm tSSIOn
Elect ri c Door loc k s
V1ny t uphol stery
Roo f Dr 1p Mo ld1n gs
116 Wh eel ba se
Spee d ome t er
Ca ltbrat ed
Po lice Bod Y Pac k a ge
Bac k gla ss De fr oster
T r an s f er Po l 1ce Rad 1o ,
Si r en , F laSh ing Li gh t s, Ftr e
E x hn g u rshe r an d p r otect11J e
sh1eld from pre sent car to
new ca r
'2 F or sale by the Vi lla ge of
Pomer oy rt s 1976 Pont 1ac,
f our d oor , 8 cylin d er , wtfhou t
r ad •o equipment, f ~r e ex
t 1ng u 1Sher, s1ren , fla Shi ng
sig nal s and prot ective Shie ld
T h e b 1dd er may sta te e1 th er
what he wi ll g1ve fo r t he 1978
Pont1 ac o r what amoun t he
w ill al low as a tr ade rn for th e
n e w pol• ce cru1se r de sc r~b ed
abov e
E a ch bidd er may b1 d t or
ei th er the purchas e of th e
1978 Po1nt iac or for the sa le to
th e V Ill age of Pomeroy o f a
n e w polic e cru tse r descr~bed
abo'o' e or bo th Each b1d mu st
contain th e f ull nam e o f eve r y
per son or com pany ,nter es t ed
rn th e same, and th e btd mu st
b e accom panr ed by a checl&lt;.
o r bond 1n t he sum o f $100 00
t o t he sa trsfa ct 1on of th e
V il lage Counc il as a guaranty
t hat If the btel 1S accep t ed,
cont ra ct wil l be entered 1nt o
and d s per for m ance prope rl y
sec ured
Th ese ch eck s or bo nds Will
be r eturn ed a t once to a l l
exce pt lh e su ccessful b idder
H 1s chec k s or bo nd will be
h eld unt1 l th e co ntra c t or b1 d
1S pr opert y exec uted by h 1m
T he rt ght is r ese rv ed to
r e 1ec t any and a ll btd S 90 day
d e l1v ery fr om date o f ac
cep tance
Jane Walton , Cle rk
V I LLAGE OF POM EROY
(21 23 (31 2, 2tc

BALLROOM
DANCE ClASSES
AT ROYAL OAK PARK
Starting

Friday Eve., Mar. 2
F or More Info rm a tion
Call992· 2622 a fter 5 P.M .

LI MI:S TONE ~a n d g•ovt.•l
ro lc1um chlonde h~r h i,7E"r dog
food and a ll typPs of sal t h
c('b 1or Soft Work s Inc E Mom
) t Porner oy 99') 3891

F..c~eh word ovt!r tilt! rrummwn 15
words ls 4 c~ nts pt!f word per day
A!.l!i rUJlmng Lither lhan cunsecuttve
t.Wys will be ciulrgl!d ttt thl! 1 d11y
n1te

In memory, Card of Tha nks alllt
Obttuary. 6 cents per word , $3 00
rmmmwn Ca.s h m advttnct!
Mobile Home sa l~ ami Yard &amp;~ les

~:~ re llcce pted only w1th ca.!lh w1th
ordt!r 25 cent ( harge for ads carry·
lnfo.l Box Numbt!r In Care of The Sen·

tmcl
Tilt' Publisher reSt!rves the right
to ethl ur rejed t~ ny tHis deemed ob)ect wnal The Publisher wtll not be
respon.stble for more Uum one 1ncot·
rt't l1nsertion
Phone 992·215ti

Bernice Bede Osol

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mufldat
Noon on &amp;! lurday-

Th ts commg year yo u may
participate m a ve nture Wh ere
yo u have a m mor but rewardmg
ro fe . PrOfit In t h iS InSta nce Wi l l
be mor e grattfytng tha n th e

Tuesday
thru F rtday
4 PM
the day before pubhcut10n

l1mel1g ht.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)Your
mtu ltton and hunc hes are e normous fy valuable as se ts tod ay
They can p rov1de you w 1th
re vealmg 1ns 1ghts you r log 1c
may ove rl oo k Fmd o ut wh 1c h
s1gns you are co mpatibl e w1th

by sendmg for yo ur 1979 copy
o f the all -ne w Astra-Grap h L e tter . Ma t! $1 for ea c h an d a lo ng ,
se lf-addr essed s tamped enve·
lope to Ast ra -G raph, P 0 Bo x
489, 1Radto C1ty Stahon, N Y
10019 Be sure to spec1fy b~rth
Sign

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
When dea!m g wit h fn e nd s
tod ay , keep your v1ews as
rt e x1b le as poss tble Should
you show ev1dence o f s tu b·
bornn ess. you'll get thetr h ackles up

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Sub
stant1al ac hievem en ts are posSib le to day , so conc entrate o n
maJor goals
Tempora nl y
she lve tha t wh1 c h yo u d ee m to
be less tm po rtan t

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Make
an e ffo r t to b roade n your
spec ti ves at th 1s lime
w td e r y o ur h o n zons,
grea ter yo ur poss ibil ities
oppo rtumt1 es

perTh e
th e
fo r

CANCER (June 11·July 22) You r
talen ts for researc h , p rob mg o r
de tectm g are espec1al ly kee n
today
Investigate Situations
abou t w hiCh you ' ve been c un-

ous
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) There are
~des to every story Keep

th1 s tn m 1n d today les t yo u ju mp
erron eous co nc lusions and o ffen d a c o mp ant o n unnecessan -

ly
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be

care ful you don •t start somelhm g t o da y that ' s a htt!e too
comp lica ted t o handle on your
own If you ru n mto troub le
there may no t be anyone,
around to he lp

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 13) You
may exp enence a b1t o f grou p
press u re today to go along w1t h
somethmg yo u 'd rath er no t Be
a goo d sport Abtde by the w111
o f the m aJonty

GUN SHOOT Rocme Volunteer
Fire Depl !: ve ry Saturday 6 .30
pm al the•r bu dd.ng rn Bo shon
Facto r ~ cholo. ":_ g.u n_s1&lt;;'n~y
I RH CA ND Y mok mg class a t Dt s.
Ca nd y and Co k e Supplies Spr·
1ng Volley Plozo 446 2134 for
regts tro t1on l!"s f un and easy
You II be amaz ed at whol you
con do

Lost and Found
FOUND SMAll poc ke t col cu lolor
around th e Pomeroy Elemen
lory Schoo! 997 2261

--------

LOST GOLD wedd1ng bo nd wi th
c1rcle des1gns ot Southern Htgh
School Co l! Chuck Hannahs at
99?3 119or9973137

Wanted to Buy

more m entally than phySI Call y
restles s
See k st1m ul at1ng
compan1ons w1t h whom you
ca n ex c hang e ideas

CHIP
WOOD
Po les
mo)(
dtome ter 10· on larges t end.
Sl 2 p er ton Bundl ed sl ob $1 0
per ton Del1vercd to O h1 o
Pol let Co
Rt 2 Pomeroy
992 2689

!NEWSPAPER ENT ERPRISE ASS N )

One year ago. Prime
MmJSter Ian Smith of
Rhodesia predicted that
nationalist guerrillas would
eventually giVe up their
opposibon to h1s agreement
w1th moderate black leaders
lor transitiOn to majority

nUe.

'

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
·REAL ESTATE
FOR ALL' YOUR INSURANCE
AND REAL ESTATE NEEDS
CALL US.
OFF. 992-2342-EVE. 992-2449

NING.CHILDS_
MIDDLEPORT1 OHIO

Serving Meigs County
Since 1868

boles

tor

sole

JOHN D~:t:RE sp ro'yer w 1th 2
n on les
M ot qr
r ece ntly
over hauled
992 2967
after
5pm
REDUCE SAH ond lost w1 th
GoSese Tabl e ts &amp; E Vo p water
p dls N e l s~ n_D~ug

992 2689

L

"

-

~

"

-

-

- -

-

-

-

~

-

OLD COINS pocllet watches ,
cl o ss rmg s. weddtng bond s,
dtomonds Go ld or stl ver Coli
Roger Wam sley 742 233 1
WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
phonograp h r ecor d s. Co li
992 6370 or Con1 oc1 Morlt n Fur
n1 tu re
WANTED TO buy old 1ewe lry
Coli 992 5762 or wnte Kay
CeCil , 87 S 2n d. M1ddl epo rt
OH

Headquarters For
Hot point and
General Electric
Appliances

b

Phone992-2181

HA Y FOR so le ls i cufl,ng , S 70
2nd t ullmg S 60 965 -4271

~V ERY THI N G s- .GOTTA' - GO'
House ond lot
l urn1 lure
cloi hes cor oil my household
•!ems Dtop by 760 lau rel Sl
"
'
M tdd leport
.
-- ---· . HAY FOR sale Rol ph Trussell ,
Boshon 949 -2660
19bB GMC HAL F ton piCku p 1'155
Behy Roo;s Bak ery tru ck , mad e
rnto camper Hoover wa sher
ond dryer Hoove r sw eeper
Roll 9woy bed 992 57 89. 2nd
house on rtgh t on Wo lf Pen Rd
1200 BALES MI XED hoy
)976
F 250 Ford tr uck Ca ll 992 1877
alter 6pm
1965 JOHN DEERE 1010 dozer
D1esel eng tn e Pro tec t1ve co b
and w mch $5000 991· 7580
RO UND HAY
843 2514

GOOD MI XED
843 2432

bo les l or
Cod
hay

sloe

Ftnd ltng
for

sale •

2111:: Second Streeo
NEW LISTING - CD""pacl

~~~~:; E ~~tt\)\tt~bl 1,~
1

utili ~ '-"'IY $5,000 for a
q u1ck sale .
BRICK - Ca n be used as a
b usiness, a resid ence or
both . L ocated in Pomeroy

on Second Street . $25,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 or ·4
bedrooms . 11h bath s, nice
s•ze kitchen , natu ra l ga s,
electric and city water .
Ni ce ba ck yard and 2 car

garage Only $15,000.
BABY FARM - 4'12 acres

wooded 1 acre lot . Has 3

I YEAR OLD -

Nice

bedrooms , 2 balhs II
enclo sed), n1ce family

- - - -For
----Sale

room with wood burning
firepla ce and 2 car fini shed
garage.

MIXED CONDITIONED hoy Very
good
guoltty
Delr ve r y
a v01lo bl e Phone 992.7201 or

NEW LISTING -

Lot In

Fairview Hts. w ith septic
ta n k and water . Just S5,000 .

BUSINESSES - We have
seve ral d i fferent kinds that
y ou can have. Just p ick
w hat you want. Some with
good locations and some
w ith real esta te

LAND AND LOTS HEADQUARTERS
For all
Need s.

your

Appliahce

SALE PRICES
JACK W.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone992-IIBI.

~--

- Room Additions- Custom Re modeling-

SWIIPI Guild

tnsund

Coii1H£!

SWEEP

KMw · How.
s,eciiiiJing In

Century

'

In

several locations. All si zes
and prices. Want a wooded
home site?

Now is the- lime to 11ot that
house a~property with us.
we will be starting our
spring advertising soon.
call 992·3325.

Housing
Headquarters _

'I• mile o11 Rt. 7~y-pllll an
St. Rt. 124 toWI Rutltnd,

o.

!Suspended, Texture) - Tile
- Floors - Paneling &amp; Trim.
Quality Work You Can
Depend On .. . .

ltfh centUry Service wtth

JOth

GARAGE

Cer amic Tile - Formica
Counter Tops • Ceilings

Do-n't let a ch l mntv fire put
11 damper on your life -

Woodstova , Oil ~urn1c1
&amp; Fireplace Flues
,Phone : 741-3 110

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
-Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5,82

Pti.INE 742·2328

Kim Whit• , Proprlttor .

•

..

·1-12- 1 mo .

WI LL CAJ.I I: for the el derly 1n our • t ~_ _ _ __j,
2 ;,l
· 5;.!1..!m~o,_._ _,J
home Pho n e 9927314
•

WAn R AND m 1sc

houh ng Call

991 5858
PIANO TUNING for home and
sc hoo l l on e Oonrtol s o sso ct ate
ol l:lberf eld s and Brun 1cord1
Mu s1c
Compan y
Pho ne
992 25E!l or 992 2087

18 Years Experience
Service Calis

)C

tl

MOVING

$29, 500 00.
LOVELY BRICK - I floor
plan , 3 bedroom s. 2 baths ,
wood burnmg
fireplace,
ni ce kitchen. f lo or s are
hard wood and car peti ng,

covered palio $30,000 00.
GENUINE RANCH - 3
b edroo m s, bu tl t - in k1t.
d ining , large rec room ,
ut1! 1ty . Nat ga s, own water,

n1ce lot $20,S00.00.
70 ACRES - New home

(needs some work). bar n,
corn crib , storage bldg .,
river frontag e.
Owner
moved
m u st
sell

$33,500. 00
KEEP YOUR JOB - Make
, mon ey 111 off hours in
r u nn ing t h is ca r wash .
doing a
Good location
good bu s1ness If really
tnf er ested call now .

NEW LISTING -

Hammond

[

ORGANS

&amp; Famous Name Brand

PETE SIMPSON

J'

llllleM

c....

1976 FORD TORINO ............ '2195

Air , auto , P .S, P B , radia l I ~r es

Hatc hback, 6 cy l., auto

4 Dr. , P .S., P B., auto., air ,

1973 HORNET SPORTABOUT..... s1495

1974 FORD PINTO .............. '1395

1973 FORD MAVERICK.......... '1495

4 o~. wagon, 6cyl., auto, P .S., cH r .

Autc ., 2 dr., runabout, rad io.

1 Dr , auto., P

1975 FORD GRAND 'lORlNO•••• '2495

1974 CHEVY SUBURBAN ....... '2895
Sup~r 10 Cheyenne, air, P .S., P B ., white

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC,

2 Miles East
ol Wilkesville
2-14- I,mo.

1974
FORD LTD BROME ••••••• s1395
Fully eq,uippe(l .
1974 PINTO STA. WAGON •••••••s1495
Std , good shape.

1974 BUICK REGAL ............ '1695

H. L Writesel
Roofing

Armstrong Carpeting

ElliOTT
'•
APPLIANCE II
Pomeroy, 0 .

Call992 -7113

For Free Estimates-

Phone H2·2003

proper ties

and

WE

NE ED LI ST ING S' ' II you
are th1 nking of se ll ing call
us today a nd discu ss our

lisllng contracl We w1ll

QIIJe you
our b est 10
f'riend l y, cou rteou s servic e
Needed immediately - .a
n ice la rg e h ome wtth 12 or
more
rooms
in
t he
Middle p ort - Pomero y
area . We have quallfied
buyers. We Need Lt st~n·gs

Cheryl Lemley
As soc1ate

Phone 742·2003
Hilton Wolfe
Associate

AUCTION EVE RY Sunday lpm
Every Wed at 7 prn lots ol new
and used merch ond• se Har t·
ford Commu nity Cen ter, Har tf ord WV .ol mtles up from
. ~~m_!r~v_ ~o ~ Bndg.:_: ___
AUCTION FRl 7 pm, Big truck load
l rom Ctn cmnotl at C'lh1 o R1ver
Auct 1on 537 H1 gh St Mtd
d l~p~r~_9 ~r ~ ___ _

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Phone 949·2589
Phone 99'2 .5739

DRM AU1l1£
&amp;

SAVE ALOT
A GOOD SELECTION OF
END &amp;,ROLL BALANCES.

---

HOWERY
A ND MARTIN
E&gt;&lt; cov o llng
septtc sy sl ems .
d o1 er b ack hoe dump tr uck
l ~rnes t o n e
grovel
block top
pov1 ng Rt 143 Phone I (61 4)
696 7331 or 742-227 0

9'x 12'- 12'x12'-

- - - --- ---

-

AUTOMOB ILE IN SUR ANCE been
cancel led? Los t your opera tors
hcense? Phone 992-2143

9' &amp; 12' aJSHIONED

ROOR

'3.49 &amp; 13,99
Choose From

BUY NOW&amp; SAVE

E C El i:CTRICAL Contractor ser v·
tng Oh 10 Vall ey regt on S1x
days a week , 24 hours serv1ce
l:mergency call s Cal l 882 2952
or 882·2305

Call742·2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

_P iu ~b_1_n ~ ~~- 5_858 .

FIVE YEARS OLD - Beautiful 4 bedroom home with

WALLPAPER ING
Call 742 2328

AND

po1nt 1ng

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

742-2211

Ruliind

Gooo &gt; bedroom h ouse with full

besement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre

land and large storage building . Price ' ' 1,500.
AClfEAGE - wllh large bee f born "" ~ Pom eroy .
)t"A\.IUU) BI-LEVEL·- ThiS may be your oreamhome. It has a large kllchen wllh lots of cablnels,
slove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautllul dining
room with sliding glass doors. Large living room and
family room, and lo finish this well ·lald out home we
have five bedrooms, ulll lty room and garage. Very low
heating- bill. Red barn-like storage building . Localed
about ten minutes north of POmeroy just off Rt. 7.

Asking S55,000
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 1'/ 2 story house,

RUllAND FURNRURE
WE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two fu II floors of all new
furniture .
2. N1ce selections
furniture .

of

used

3 A large building full of
beautiful carpet.

completely carpeted w i th 4 bedrooms. dining room 'and
laundry room Also almost new 2 car heated garage .

This home Is n1cely localed In Portland and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy.
SO ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'12Siory house with full
basement. Large pond slocked with tlsh . Priced for
quick sale. $40,000.
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home. almosl new
kitcHen cabinets, all nicely carpeted, lau(ldry room , all
Insulated, natural gas heat, utility building , 2 lofs.
. .521 ,500.00.
Talk to a local real estate agent before trying to sell
experience can help you.

We

many types of .property, give ..\IS • call.
'
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-2388
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE 949-2654

need

sq. yd.

24 Rolls ot Carpet in Stock
&amp; IOO 's ol Samples to

MOBI LE HOME re p01rs Fu rnaces.
elec tn co l wo rk . pipes sa wed

large eat·in kitchen , 2 baths, TV r oom, a ll n icely
carpeted, large utility room and many more extras ..
Natural gas forced a1r furnace . Plenty ot garden space
on 1 acre nf l.:anrt . Pr iced r ig ht $36,000.

12 1 XlS'

UNEOLBJM RUGS
112.95 &amp; UP

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

BATHROOMS
AND Kll ch ens
r emodeled, ce rom1 c !ti e. plumbtng, ca rpentry ond general
mom tenon ce
13 years ej( ·
_p~r1 en~e 9?1~3~8~ _ _ _ _ _
PULLINS I:XCA,VA TING Complet e
Serv1ce Phone 992·2 478.

-- - - -

1972 DODGE' CHARGER•••••••••• '95

HA"E

or
G

on a
ood
sed Car
~·

HURRY! COME IN.
WE HAVE THE CAR YOU
NEED.

MANY LOW-MILEAGE,
ONE-OWNER TRADE-INS.
SHOP OUR BIG LOT TODAY.

1978 FORD LTD II 2 DR
VB. P.S.•

P . ~ ., radio .

'5195

1973 FORD TORINO SEDAN ........... _, __, '1395
1973 CADILLAC CPE. DEVILLE ...... ........ 11595
1975 DATSUN 210 CPE ............ .......... 11295
1973 OLDS 88 ROYALE HT SED... _.. _...... 11595
1975 CHEV:·CAPRICE WAGON ............... '3395
1977 CHRY. NEWPORT SED................ '4795
1973 BUICK LS SEDAN., ;.................. 11695
1973 OLDS TORONADO ....... .. .... ......... 11995
1974 OLDS ROYALE CPE.. ... .,. __ ,.. ....... '1995
1973 BUICK CENTURIAN CPE... ........... '1595
1974 CAD. SED. DEVILLE .......... ........ 12495
1975 OLDS 98 LS SED...................... 14195
1976 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED................. 14195
1972 CHEV. MONTE CARLQ .... .. ........... 11595
1975 FORD PINTO RUNABOUL. ........... 11695
1974 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.. .. -.... ........... 12395
Drive Home A Winner

Loc a l owner, less than 13,000.

1977 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR

5295

1

4 Wh eel drive , " 2 ton, LWB , V 8, 4 speed

1974 CHEVY LUV............... '1195
4Cyl , &lt;speed

v.a, aulo.

1

4595

1977 FORD LTD 4 DR

V -8, P .S., P B ., AM FM , air , v i nyl roo f. l ocal ' owner ,
powe r w mdo ws Very n tce

1976 FORD ELITE 2 DR

1

4095

V -B, P S, P B ., stereo, r ad io . lu,.;ury mter~or , loca l
owner

1974 FORD GRAND TORINO 2 DR

1

1995

V -8, P S, P B , air , v in y l top

1966 CHEVY VAN............... '395

1975 FORD F250 RANGER PICKUP

'3395

V 8, P .S , P. B .. a tr , d ua l gas tank s L oca l ow ner

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
See Roger Riebe I
985-3345 or 667-3463
St. Rt. 7

1

1977 CHEV. C-10 PICKUP

4295

V -8, P S., P B . , ra d1o, loca l owner

OPENTI L6 PM
.Except Thursday &amp; Saturday tii5 :00

1 mile north
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

Closed Sunday

PAT HILL FORD

1976 CHM WV PICKUP. •••••• '2895
Auto , ~ 6 ,000 m i.

1974 FORD lh TON PICKUP. ••••'2195

See the Grate Family aT ·

TELEVISION
VIEWING

2 ton e pa mt, auto , P .5. , P . B

RIGGS USED CARS
985-4100
Chester, 0. - Ray Riggs

Auction

EXCAVATIN G d oze r ba ckh oe
and d1tcher Char les R Hot·
h eld
Bo ck
Hoe Serv•ce ,
Rutl and . Oh1o Phone 742 -2008

-------

1974 DODGE POWER WAGON ••• '3295

Auto., P.S , P . B.

1·7-mo.

EXCAVATIN G doze r load er and
back hoe work dump tr uck s
and lo.b oys for h1r e w 11l h aul
fil l d1r1 . to ~o •l . hrneston e and
gravel Co li Bob or Roger Jef fers day ph one 992-7089, n 1ght
p ~one_99_2 3525 or 992 _ 5~3~ __

We haiJe sold almost all of
o ur

New, repair,
· g utlers and
downspouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862,949- 2160

220 E. Main Street,

--------

New Lima Road
Rutland, Ohio

TRUCKS

1973 FORD CUSTOM F-100 ...... '995

· ·" '"

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

V-6, P .S., A M - FM , a ir , vr nyl roof , loca l owner, 18 ,000
miles .

TRUCKS

11·9-1 mo.'
REAL ESTATE loons Pu r chase and
r el 1nonce 30 yeor terms VA (elr g•ble
No money down
ve terens) FHA A s l ow os 3
Business Services
p er cen l down (non veterens)
Auct1oneer
Com
Ireland M o rtgage Co
77 1: BR A DFORD
pl ele Servtee Phone 9d9-2487
Stole Ath en s 614-592-3 051
--------·
or 949 2000 RaCine Ohta . Cntt
THR H
B EDROOM
ra nc h
Bradford
Co rpel ed a tr cond 111oned Pn c
e d ver y
reasonably
In ELWOOD BOWE RS RE PAIR Sweepers. toaster s rr ons all
Syroc.use ~2 - 53 4 8
.
--·--smal l oppl1onces law n mowe r
79 ACRE S 614 698 2705 Vm ton
nej(l l o St at e H•ghwoy Garage
Co
on Route 7.
StVt:N ROOM hou se 2 ' 4 acres of SEWING MACH IN E Rep arr s sEn
land
g arage w llh ul tl1ty
v •ce oil makes, 992 2284 The
b utl dmg I mil e above Rocme
Fobrt c Sh op
Pomeroy
Dom 247 -3123
Authom ed Stnger So les ond
_Se_rv~ce W:_ s~o! P~'2. S:_•s_:o!s _ .

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

1974 FORD 10RIN0.4,D:..::~~~ ....'1295
1972 OLDS TORINO.... ;~~d:~ .....sggs
1973 MERCURY MONTEGO.~~~ .... '895
1975 FORD GRAN TORINO ••••••'1995

PAT -1-IILL
FORD

A uto , P S

I'lL !92·2114

Your Headquarters For

3', acres m Pomeroy Secluded 1
woorled or eo on l op of h1 1l
Ove rloo k s river Wa ter elec·
Inc ovo tlobl e 992 -3886

s .. vinyl roof

2 Dr. H.T.. AIR, P.S , P.B.

&amp; r ed .

1972 CHEVY.................... '95

27320 Montgomery Rd.
langsville, Ohio
614- 669-4245 Evenings

FARM FOR sal e House 7. barn s
tro1 ler Lo r ge pond 10 acres or
82 acr es 747 2506

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

His

1973 PONTIAC VENTUftA........'1095

2 Dr., stand
....... -~~-·-

. . . .tor . . , . .

Trailer Sales

Real Estate for Sale

AWm

your home.

-USED CARS

P B , low mites.

1972 FORD 4 DR LTD •••••••••• '1095
'1973 MAZDA RX2 ............... '495

Service
.,... the..,....

Montgomery

-""Sales Rep. For
Sun dins
Hammond Organs

GeorgeS . Hobsteher, Jr.,
Broker

CHESTER -

Agenllar
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, LISbon , Oh1o.
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.
1-26-1 mo.

TRACTORDRiVEN •
PTOALTERNATORS
from 15,000 to ·
75,000 waits.

PIANOS

I floo r

plan , 2-3 bd rm . home,
excellent
neighborhood,
Wright
St ,
Pom eroy,
rem ode le d, ba sement area,
garden
s pac e
Onl y

1974 OLDS CU11ASS ............ '2495

Auto .• P

2 door, lully equipped

Tyree Blvd
Racine, Ohio
Phone 949 -2118 even1ngs
after S p . m . Weekends
after 12 noon .

Larg e 2 sto ry frame ,
remodeled , enclosed front
porch, large 2 car gara ge,
storage bldg , ow n water .
N at gas heat, over 1 acre.

David Coleman

I

bd,
1965Generol 60 x 12 7 bd r
196B Elcono S'bcl:i' '} bdr
l 969Buddy 60 x 12 , 4 bd r
1970Sy lvo 60j( 12 2 bd r
1970C ostl e 60 j( 17. 7 bdr
1973Arl ,ngton b0j( 11 2bd r
1973 R•dgewood 70 j( I 4 J bdr
1973K trk wood 50x 1'1 7 bdr
B &amp; S MOBI L!: HOM!: SALES
PT PLI: ASANT . W V
675 ~ 4 24

Washmglon Sf., Albany, 0 .
Phone 698-6173

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

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

1967 TOTAl H EC TRI C mobil e
home
fu rnished
3 b edr
washer ond dryer Arr cond1
!toned I lo t 110 ft fron ta ge
517000 Phone7427B26
2~

1978 CHM
4X4 .............. ,,295
s,

3 Dr Runabout, 4cyl .• auto.

2 Dr., 6c yl., P .S.

Will Make

Mobile Homes for Sale

1955 Pro1r1 e Schooner

1975 PINTO ................... '1495

1975 FORD GRANADA ••••••••• '24~

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

wagon , 4 cyt , 4 sp.

4 WHEEL DRIVES

Auto , air, P. S., P. B., clean .

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

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

$14,900.00.
NEED TO SELL NOW OR
IN THE FUTURE? CALL
AN EXPERT WE
OFFER YOU 15 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR .
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992-2259,992-6191,992 -2568

CA ~ H

992 3309

Serv
Offered- ----ices
--

OWNER

an d 6 room farm house
Has a modern bath , nice
k itchen,
and
lots
of
carpeting . Rural water and
2 car garage

-- - - - - ,

IF YOU hovF&gt; n c;e rviC e to oll er
wa nt to buy or se ll so mel htll9
ae look tng lor work
or
whot~vN
you II ge t resu l ts
Iosier w 11h a Senflne l Wont Ad
Coll992 21 5b

"608 E. •.w11
MAIN
- POMEROY, 0.

JACK W.
CARSEY
Mgr.

PI I . .

•

ROGER HYSEll

AL TROMM OONST.

RISING STAR Kl:'nneh. Boordmg
and groo mm g o il breed s
Ch esh1re 367 0292

SALE PRICES

Ita

~~~!:~:·

Pets for Sale

WAN TE D TO buy hm 1ted 11me on
ly Junk Ba1len es $1 50 eoch
Clean Co pper S 55 per lb
Rod1otors S 35 lb Shor t ! t o r~
52
per h u "dred
R1 de r 's
Sa lva ge, SR lLd , Pomeroy
Oh1o 991 -5468
FOR 1un"' cars 24 hour
v..- r ecke r
se r v 1ce
Fr~ e &lt;
Ru tland OH 74'1. 2081

--~·

4 Dr

.

L------.,--,...,,.-----------. "'-------------~

2-5-1 mo.

TI MBER POMEROY f oresl Produc ts Top pt:lce for stondtng
sow ltmbe r Call 992·5965 or
K~nt. H~~b y_ 1: 4_46_: 8?~ ___ _
OLD FURNil URt: ICe boj( es bra ss
beds 1ron bed s d esks e tc
complete hou seho ld s Wn te
MD Mdler, Rt 4, Pomeroy or
co ll992 7760

- -· - - - - - - Yard Sale
------- -

1975 HONDA CVCC CIVIC ....... '2495

Business Services

1975 GREMLI N X P 5 P B aul a
Sl400 A f ter 5 99'139:3 6

POMEROY
LANDMARK

HAY FOR sole
985 4)37

Help Wanted

197~ fORO Pt CI&lt;U P F l SO Cn mpP.r
c,p enol Sup er ~ ab wtth tor
$5800 949 1041

WAnR WH L drdlmg Wd l1om l
C. ronl 74') 2879

TH ~

RACINE FIRE Dept ts now acca p
t1ng sealed btd s on 1961 GMC
pan el lruck as IS W e hove the
r1ght to re1ect a ll btd s B1ds w tll
be acce pted durtng the month
1979 Send btds to
of Feb
Ro Ci ne Vo lunteer F1 re Dept .
Box 246 . RaCine For more tn
for mot 1on . co ii 94'11.2050

1475 DAT SUN PICKUP good co,
dt llon
GoGd In C's.
low
mdeoge Run~ goocl 1n ~now
CHI$ 3979

ROUND HAY
!::143 252 4

CANDY WORKSHOP l earn l o
mak e your ow n Ea st er candy
Mak e can dy 1n doss and lak e tt
home w1 th you For 1nfor mo
lion coli th e Car ou sel Conl ee·
_t1 on: rr_ ~·:n · 63 ~2 .
FOllOWING des wbed tlem
wi l l be oll ere d l or pub he: sole to
lhe h1ghes t b1dde r on the
pre rrwoes of the Pomer oy No
t1on ol Bonk
Tu ppers Plot ns
Bran ch Tuppers Pl oms, Oh to
on lhe 8th o f Marc h 1979 ot
l Oam
1973 Ford fl ml o Stol100 Wagon
Ser No ;lTl 2X 190830
Terms of sole Cosh
The sel ler reserves the r1ght to
b td ond the ng ht to retec t any
and all btds

FOf.IO ( tiSTOM f 150 h uc k
P5
Pli AC 7.J'J:i'97b

:to/ C'llQine , ', ton outo

--

Notices
G UN SHOOT Roet ne Gun Club
!:very Sund oy 1 pm I oclo ry
choke gun s on ly

1~ ·;q

BU Y VOUf.l 1979 GFOvely now th ru
Marc h I o nd save up to $600
$100 dow n holds 111 Apr tl 15th
C.rov£&gt;1y Tractor Soles and Ser
vice 204 Condor St Pom eroy
'Y/'1 2975

1974 HUSQVARNA WR 250 cc,
$250 Moss berg pump sho tgun
2,6orrel s Cho1ce of 30 or full
d eer barre l S150 7 47 2d0l:l

L-J'-_..:..:.:::::!.:::.:::::::::;::__.LJ

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 13-Dec
11) Today you are l1kely Ia be

Appearan c e~
are 1mporta nt
today , so p ut on a pos1t ive fac e
1f you ho pe to in sp ire or d :re cl
oth ers H s esse nttal to look
ltke a leader

FIR I:WOOD FO R sal e &lt;JB5 3505 or
965 3537

Fntlayancrnoon-

EXPER IENCED St: CRETAR Y and
bookk eepe r fo r Oh10 Poll et Co

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

HAY FOR so l £&gt; Rou nd ho les $20
985 3537
Squar e bo les $1
9854131

1971 BACKHOI: INTERNAT IO NAl
C/ 49 '1042

Yo u 'l l s tr1v e to exerlthe p roper
effort to nea tl y t• e up loose
end s today, be c au se an yth1 ng
left und o n e wil l fru s trate you

An opportunit y may pre sent
1tse lf to d ay w h ereby you can
lay t he fo undati o n fo r a futu re
accompltsh ment
Have yo ur
trowe l and mortar 1eady

BR OWNING MARK I V C8 antenna
lowar 7 ro tors, watt meier
0 104 lwee t •e B1 rd m•c . l•m:~o r
Coli l 1!tlc B1t 949 2~b5

FIVE RIVER lots .n M1nersvd le
Phone QCI2 '1639

Snnuay
4PM

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 12-Jan . 19)

FROSTY S CB Rod1a EqUipmenl
f v{'ry thtng 1n two way ro dta.
onten no an d a r ~e ~so r1e s
Phone Por tla nd 843 1181 Open
r-vC' ntng s un td H Sund ay 'J t,tl b

RU TLAND HARDWARE , 2 doo rs
l rom Rutl and Pos t Offt ce
Phone 742 2255 l Sunbeall"
camster vocu un ( leoner w •th
power nooz le an d ottoc h men ts
$69 95 1 Su nbea m mdoor out
door vacuum cl ean er 1 ' ' h p
mol ar S39 95 1 laboratory
smk and co bme t 19 '· j( 17·
Grebe r Iouce i w tth pop up
SS6 69 Ke, nedy hea vy du ty
too l boxes ) 9 )( 7 ond three
e1g th s Hlth es Sl I 99 Cm tool
boj( es S7 98

NOTICE

February 24, 1979

Auto Sales

COAt

C.sh
100
150
100
300

2d~:~ys

APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
On Febr u ary 5. 1979 , 1n the
Me1QS County Probate Court.
Case No 22 600, F rank W
P orte r, Jr, P 0 Box ~86.
P om er oy, Oh tO ~5769 . was
appo1nted Admin 1s t r ato r o l
the es tat e of Elsie M DecKe r ,
d ecease d , late of BO )( 149,
Sy r acuse . Oh•O

For Sale

15 Wotlb or Under

n t«J

.

-

WANT AD
CHARGES

TWO St:DROOM k•trh"'"n lurn1sh
Pcl Oj:ll Coli bef ore 8 om
C~Y'J

EE

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

For Rent

COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION ,
GALLI A COU NT Y , OHIO

~."I'd
by THOMAS JqSEPH
ACROSS
I Actor Waite
in "The

40 Least
cooked
41 Sicilian
lava source

Waltons "
DOWN
5 Cotton of yore
1 No longer
11 - Harbor,
chic
Guam
2
01 the bees
12 Contented
3 Being a
13 Thailand
legal eagle
14 Abstinence
4 Old Dutch
!rom
measure
15 Part of
5
Peggy Lee
the USAF
16 Move a
song
TV camera
6 Expiate
17 Went ahead
7 Prime time
18 Lace around
8 Bring
2G Order of
to trial
animals: sui!. 9 Pith
21 Mile. La Douce 10 More
22 Fairy-tale
slender
start
23 Ancient
European
country
%5 Parking
space
fixture
26 Give of!
27 Josip Broz
28 Trio in
a tub
29 Cure-all
32 Work unit
33 Tate
display
· 34 Antiquated
35 Floor
covering
37 Cqugar

..

"Carnival of Crime " 10.

Y eslerday'1 ADswer

16 Arizona
county
19 legal
paper
22 Greek
mountains
23 Greek
goddess
:U Patriotic
U.S. hymn
25 Candy

7::io-Hee HawHoneys 3; $1.98 Beauty Show 6; Family
Feud 8,10; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
The Co\mtry IS ; Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
R"l"'rt 20; So The People NlaV Know 33.
8:0()-Diff'rent Slrokes 3,15;Nlakln' II 6,13; Incredible
Hulk 8, 10; Washington Week In Review 20.33; Night
Gallery 17.
8:311-Hello, Larry 3,15; Whal's Happening 6,13; Wall
Street Week_20,33; Night Gallery 11
9:oo-Brothers &amp; Slslers 3,15; Roots : 6,13; Dukes of
Hazzard 8, 10; Capitol Beat 33; Movie '"Godzllla"
17; Congressional Outlook 20.
9 ·30-Sweepstakes 3, 15; Turnabout 20; MacNeilLehrer ROPOrl 33.
IO :oo-Dallas 8,10; News 20; When The Boat Comes In
33.
10:30-Monty Pylhon's Flying Circus 20.
11 :oo-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Dick Cavell 20; Hogan's
Heroes 17; Cousleau Odyssey 33.
J 1:30---Colleae Basketball 3; Barella 13; Johnny
Carson 15; Movie " Rider on the Rain" 6 ; Bonkers
8; Movie "Wlllard" 10; Movie " Cauldron of Blood"
17.
12:oo-Gong Show 8; Monty Python 33; 12 :3()-JukeBo• 8.
12 :4()-lronslde 13; J:oo-Midnlght Special 15; Movie

27 Butt ol
ridicule
29 Once male
symbol
30 Famed
violinist
31 Turkish city
J6 Neighbor
of Eng.
37 "The Bells"

1:30-Midnlghl Special 3;

Mo~le

"Mask of the

Avenger" 17.

1:40-News 13; 2:3()-News 3; 3:0()-Movle " PJ" 3.
3:21l-Newst7; 3:40-Movle "Miss Grant Tllkes Rich ·
mond" 17; 5:oo-Movle "Perilous Voyage " 3.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY24, 1979
5:3()-World at Large 17; 6·oo-Sunrlse Semester 10;
6:1()-Discoverv 17.
6:30-Salurdey Report 3; U.S. Farm Rep&lt;lrt 10;
Kentucky Afield 13; 6:411-News 17
7:oo-GO USA 3; Mailers of Life 6 ; Mr. Magoo 8;
Public Polley Forums 10; Animals, Animals,
Animals
13; Three Stooges 17.
p&lt;let
7:30-CIIffwood Ave. Kids 3; Dusly's Treehouse6; Bay
City Rollers 7; Porky Pig &amp; Friends B; Pink
Panther 13; Vegetable Soup 15.
8:0()-Yogl's Space Race 3, IS, Scooby's All-Stars 6,13 ;
Popeye 8,10; Cliffwood Ave. Kids 17.
8:30-Fantastlc Four 3,15; Partrlc!Qe Family 17.
9:oo-Godzllla'sSuper·90 3,15; Bugs Bunny 8,10; Slar
Trek 17.
IO:oo-Movle "The Fall of the Roman Empire" 11 :
10:3()-Daffy Duck 3,15; Tarzan -Super-7 8; 51•
Million Dollar Man 10.
11 :oo-Fred &amp; Barney 3, 15; Fangface 13; Vegetable
Soup 6.
.
11 :30-Jetsons 3; Pink Panther 13; Glgglesnort Hotel
6 ; PTL Club 15.
11 :45--SI• Million Dollar Men 10; t2 :oo-Buford 3;
Weekend Special 6, 13; Space Academy 8; College
Basketball 20.
12·30-Fabulous Funnies 3; American Bandstand 13;
Polnl of Vlew6; Fat Albert 8; Burke's Law 9.
l :oo-Stu Aberdeen: Basketball 3; Aware 6; In The
Know 10; Capllol Beat 33.
1:15-Movle "El&lt;P8rlment In Terror" 17.
1:30-College Basketball3; Columbus Bowling Classic
6; College Basketball15; Bob Jones 8; Gomer Pyle,
38 Card game 1
39 Port with ,.,.
USMC 10; Mario&amp; the Magic Movie Machine 13; So
The People May Know 33.
a casbah
2:oo-VIewp&lt;llnl 8; Movie "Beach Party" 10; Trl
Slate: Today &amp; Tomorrow 13; Garden Spot 20;
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
When The Boal Comes In 33.
•
AXYDLBAAXR
2:30-Sports Afield 6; Junior Achievement 8; Aulo
Is LONGFELLOW
Racing 13; other School System 20.
3:0Cl-0uldoors With Julius Boros6: Track and Field 8;
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Austin City Limits 20; Movie " Silk Sackings" 33.
used for the three L's, X for the tv.:o O's, etc. Single letters,
3·3o-College Basketball3; Pro Bowling 6,13; College
apostrophes, the length and formah?n of the words are all
Baskelball 15.
hints. Each day the code letters are d11ferent.
4:_1)()-Sports _Spectacular 8; Dolly 10; Msslon :
Impossible 17; Beethoven Festlval,20.
CRYPTOQUOTE:S
4:30-Parter Wagoner 10; 5:oo-Wide World of Sports
6,13; Golf 8,10; Flohln' Hole 17 ; Growing Years 20;
GF
MGF I
AIGB L
SQ
HNU
UTI
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
5:30-Bowllched 3; Melinda's Blind 15;' Rat Patrol17;
MTHU
ZBSMGBL
SQ
J!NU
t!TI
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
6:oo-News 3,10; Concern 8: God Has..The Answer 15;
US
SCINKSSZ.- MGKKGHP
XHPIF
Wrestling 17; CrockeH's VIctory warden 20; Over
Yellerday'aCryptaqaote: WHEN AF:ELWW SAYS, "IT AIN'T
Easy 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; News 6; CBS News 8,10;
l1IE MONEY, BUT THE PRINCIPLE OF THE THING," IT'S
Newsmaker '7913; Ohio Journal20; Life Around Us
l1IE MONEY.-KIN HUBBARD
33.
'
@111'111 K1ni Feelunl Syndlcate,lnc.
7:oo-Abbott &amp; Costello 3; Lawrence Welk 13,15; Hee
Haw 6,8; Bugs Bunny 10; Forsyte Saga 20; Sneak

';:'+-1--1-t-+-

•

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill , Genera l
Man age r , for a Good D eal on a New or Used Ve ht c le.

992 2196

See one of the se court eou s sa lesm en : Pete Burns ,
Marvm K eebaugh or George Harri s

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
Previews 33

" You ' ll like Our Quality Way of Doing Business "
GM C Ftnanctng
992 -53.:12
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs unt1l6 00--ti i.S p .m Sat .

?:JD-We Think You Should Know 3, Plea se Stand By
10; World War II G I. Dia ry 33 .
S:oo-Chlps 3, 15; White Shadow 8, 10 ; Della House 6, 13;
Once Upon A lassie 20,33; Hee Haw Honeysl7.
B·3D-Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13; Marty Robbin s'
$p&lt;ltllghl 17; Great Performances 20, Turnabout
33.
9:0()-BJ &amp; the Bear 3,15, Love Boa'r 6,13 ; Movie
"Silent M VIctory " a,10; Doll y 17; Methta &amp; His
Music · 33 .
9·311-That Nashv ille Music 17; IO:oo-Rockford Flies
3,15; Fanlasy Is. 6, 13, Pop Goes The Country 17.
IO :lD-Nashvllle On The Road 17; Bo• lng 33; 11 :oo-

Poet's Corner

News 3,6 ,8,10,13,15; Porter Wagoner 17.

11 · 15-ABC News 6; 11 :3D-Saturday Night Live 3,15,
· Movie " Billy The Kid vs. Dracula" 6; Movie " The

FRIENDSHIP
True friendship 1s something you don 't usually see,
But I have a friend who 'sas true as can be
He won't leave when in sickness or when you 're unhappy.
Jesus of Nazareth is the dearest friend to me. .

Well " 8; Movie "Beach Blanket Bingo'' 10; Movie

" Lemora, the Lady Dracula" 13; Don Kirshner's
Rock Concert 17.
1 oo-Movle "The Shakiest Gun In the West" 3; Movie
" Perfecl Friday" 4; Mov ie " Terror In the Jungle"
13; Juke·Bo• 17
1·311-Movle "The Hust ler" 17; 2:311-News 3; ABC
· News 13; 3 oo-Movle " Anthony Adverse" 3
4:25-12 O'Clock High 17 , 5:3D-Big Valley 3.

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Roger Roush had
surgery at Pleasant Valley
Hospital Monday rcturmng
home Thur sday. VIsiting
Mrs. Roush at the hospital
were Roger Roush , Mr. and
Mrs Charles Michael, Becky
and Chuck, Mr . and Mrs.
Louie P1ckett, daughter
Tracy , Rev. David Harris,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush ,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Cmdy Roush , Mrs Charlotte
Lewis, Kimberly Ro~sh .
Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Barnette of Langsville spen'
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs
Dorsa Parsons.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana LewiS ,
Clifton. visited Mr and Mrs
Ronald Russell, M1ke and
Mandy, Sunday
Mr . and Mr s Kenneth
Bass, Kendra and Cor rinne,
v1sited Mrs. Katie Bass at
CHiton
· Mrs . Sharon Hupp, Mrs .
Barbara Talbott were
VISitors at the Athens Mall
Monday.
Mrs. Clara Powell is
recuperating at the home of
her daughter , Mr. and Mrs
Virgil Hill after being a
patient
at
University
Hospital. Mrs . Powell will
enter Holzer Medical Center
later for surg ery . Cards
would he appreciated.
Jobnnie Donohew ol Clovis,
New Mexico, is spending two
weeks with his parents, who
were discharged from St.
Joseph Hospital, and are not
patients at Manetta Convalescing Center, 117 Bartlett
Street, Marietta, Oh1o. Cards
would be appreciated.
Mrs. Carrie Roush, sons
Mike and Johnnie were
recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Riffle at Wheelersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hagey
'of Wolf Pen , Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert
Ro ush
spent

Friendship is lovely when bolh are at peace
But when you get angry all the love seems to cease.
You talk about them and they talk about you,
How can your l nendshlp poss1bly grow.
So many seeds of bitterness both parties sow.

Saturday evening with Mr. A fri end to me is a fr1end m good and bad.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell and They hke,you lor what you are and when you hurt they 're sad.
family .
We all have our faults because we're human bein gs
Mrs. Florence Sm1th w1ll be And some days so me would say we're actually mean,
·
spendmg the weekend at But Jesus loves us and keeps us through all our gr owings
Pastor a l Training School , Into His likeness with love always showing.
Grove City, Ohio .
Mrs. Marshall Roush en- So let's have better fnendsh1ps and be more like our Father so
t ertained w1th a dinner
true
Monday m honor of her And not gel angry w1th our fnend s who sometimes don't agree
husband, Marshall, who was with yo u
ce lebratmg h1s birthd ay .
Patty Hensler , Box 36B, Racme, Oh10 45771.
Attending wer e Mrs Dolly
Wolle, Mr. and Mrs Dall as
H11l and Dean, Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Norris, Tracy and
R)an, John Joe Sham, Joey
and Co rtncy Roush.
MEMORIES
As I sit and gaze out my wmdow

Fairview
News Notes

At the snowflakes tumbling down,
They brmg back childhood memories
Of my yo Wlg hfe on the farm.
I would awaken in the morrung,
The smell of ham was m the atr,
Morn cooking the family breakfast,
We all so lovingly would share.

lly Mrs . Herbert Roush
Mr . a nd Mrs. Ma rvin
McGuire of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs . Sid Manuel of Long
Bottom, Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Bush and son James were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Manuel and Tim.
Mr and Mrs. Dana Lew1s
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr and Mrs. Russell Roush.

Daddy was a Meigs County Iarmer,
Much loved and respected by all,
Morn was his faithful companion ,
Who stood beside him proud and tall.
I can see Ule fam1ly !~replace ,
Its embers glowing red and gold,
Cracking nuts' and poppmg pop corn
On winter evemngs long and cold.

I

But we didn 't mind the weather,
For we had much love, you see,
~t ........ ........ ... ~ -l

- '-

'

Parents who cared about us ,.

• ........ ~..c uu1u lUI uur splfLWaJ

.--------MEIGS ...I
I

I
I
I
I

Equipment Co.
Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2176

Starling Dec 2, our store
hours will be 8·5 Mon .-Fri.
I Closed Salurd•Y and
!sunday.
I International New Ideo
I Harvester
Equipment

I
I
I

I
I
1
I
1

-----·-----..
1

needs,

The little white church oo Mt . Olive,
Roy Bush was the Pastor there ,
I can still see and hear this wonderful man,
AJ; he led us all in prayer.
There were dolls, crayons and colormg books,
A sled made by Daddy 's hand,
Morn's apple pie and cook1es,
And a multitude of friends,
I' ll never forget my childhood,
My good tile on the fann ,
I have loving, beautiful memories
Tl'tat keep me happy and warm .
Lovingly dedicated to my Mom, Mrs. Emma Powell, and
to the memory of my Dad , Mr. Charles Powell. Written Feb.
11, 1979, by Pearl Powell
' '

�.. ...

No final educational
conclusions reached
'

•

By ROBERT E:: MILLER
Associate~! Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Republican Gov. James A.
Rhodes and legislative
leaders have held the fourth
in their series of "'lucation
swmnit meetings.
But they emergoo again
Thursday with the same word
as before - no final conclusions drawn and no con·
census reached.
Senate President Oliver
Ocasek, !)..Akron, the group's
spok esman, said various
issues relating to school
funding were discussoo , and
that there . was a "healthy
exchange of ideas ."
The sen a tor said the
conferees also looked at
"some data " supplied by the
Department
of
state
Education and the office of
budget and management,
with regard to possible salary
hikes for teachers. He said
they talkoo about raises, but
didn 't agree on a figure.
Despite lack of evidence
that the meetings are
a ccomplishing anything,
Ocasek said he . expects the
closed, once-a-week sessions
to continue for several more
weeks as the Legislature
grapples with scHool money
and relate~! problems.
"I am again pleased with

__,...,..,. .

these meetings." he said,
adding that " It is good for the
state of Ohio when the
governor and the leadership,
and tl)e superintendent, sit
down to talk about these
problems."
The governor declined to
comment as he left the meeting , which lasted nearly two
hours.
In floor action Thursday,
before the two houses
adjow-ned for the week, the
House approved a pair of bills
without dissent and sent them
to the Senate.
Rep . Clifford Skeen, !)..
. Akron, won House approval
of a bill exempting from
taxation the estates of
missing servicemen recently
declared dead by the U.S.
Defense Department.
The families of 34 deceased
Ohio veterans would benefit
from the bill by escaping
state and local estate taxes
totaling about $82,000, Skeen
said.
Ohio still has 24 armed
forces members listoo as
missing in action by the
Defense Department.
Also sent to the Senate was
a bookkeeping bill allowing
the state Personnel Board of
Review to record its
proceedings on sound tape.
The House received a

Ohio River Valley may
have flood conditions
By The Associated Pres•·
Severe winter weather
threatenoo portions of the
upper Midwest early today,
as snow feU in the California
mountains and flooding was
possible in the Ohio River
Valley.
Winter storm warnings
were posted ealy today in

North ·Dakota, northeastern
South Dakota, Minnesota,
northern Wisconsin, and
western parts of Michi&amp;.an 's
Upper Peninsula .
There was a chance of up to
4 inches of new snow falling
on eastern North Dakuta and
northeastern South Dakota·.
Three to 6 inches of snow was
forecast for northern Minnesota.
OnThul-sday,rainandice
knocked out power and
by~
stalled hundreds of cars in
GOLD FILLED
'MI_/
the Minneapolis area. Water
seeped into an underground
' AND
STERLING SILVER f,
Utility conduit at Fairview
3455 Hospital, causing a power
'~
interruption . The hospital
,. ,
immediately switched to
~ ·
emergency power.
~ 3456 Travel advisories were
posted for snow and drifting
snow continue overthe
California mountains into the
Tahoe valley of Nevada.
Portions of West Virginia
were under flash flood warn·
ings today, and flash flood
watches .were in effect from
southwestern Pennsylvania
across West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois.
Late Thursday , strong
winds and hail as large as
baseballs caused damage
from northeastern Texas,
across eastern Oklahoma,
northwestern Arkansas and
southwestern Missouri.
Temperatures around the
nation at 2 a.m., EST today
ranged from 14 below zero in
Cut Bank and Great Falls Air
Force Base, Mont ., to 76 in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

STICK PINS

l

fltKA
,,,• .
They go well together
Your two deposit accou nts,

Savings and Checking, belong together
here at our modern, ful l-service bank.
You benefit by greater conven ience,

second bill to help Cleveland,
and possibly other cities at
some future time, straighten
out their financial affairs.
Rep. Vernon F. Cook, !)..
Cuyahoga Falls, said his proposal would permit the state
auditor to oversee a defaulted
city 's fiscal management, as
opposed to a nine-member
commission that would be
established in an earlier bill
by Rep. Harry J . Lehman;!)..
Shaker Heights.
Cook's bill contains the rec·
ommendations of Cleveland
Mayor Dennis J . Kucini~h,
who opposes the lehman
approach on grounds it would
amount to a state takeover.
Lehman' s bill has the
backing of the governor.
Sen. Charles L. Butts, !)..
Cle.veland , introduced a
Senate proposal _that ,would
require the state to
aside
20 percent of its contracts for
small business and_minority
contractors.
Under his bill, small busi·
nesses are defined primarily
as those with 50 or fewer
employe es.
Minorities
affected would be blacks,
Hispanics, Orientals, and
American Indians.

set

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday: A chance of snow
or rain Sunday. Fair
Monday. Rain possible
Tuesday. Highs from t~e
upper 20s to the 30s Sunday
and Monday and from the
upper 30s to the 40s
Tuesday. Lows from the
teens to the low 20s Sunday
and Monday and in the 20s
Tuesday.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Missiles
(Continued from page 1)
otherwise reinforce Lang
Son.
However, a Yugoslav
correspondent in Peking said
East European diplomats
there believe the Chinese
have nm into rougher terrain
and heavier Vietnamese
gunfire than they expected,
and that Peking's declared
aim of punishing Hanoi for
border provocations and
getting out quickly has now
become a rather elastic
concept.
The Bangkok sources said
Vietnamese soldiers in
northern Laos have been
ordered into Hoang Uen Son
province to help counter the
Chinese invasion, and that
30,000 Vietnamese troops
have been ordered to return
to Vietnam from positions in
northwestern Cambodia.
The Vietnamese lnvaded
Cambodia Dec. 25 and ousted
the pro-Peking government
of Pol Pot two weeks later,
but the Pol Pot forces
regrouped for guerrilla
warfare. They claimed today
they regained control of the
entire west bank of the
Mekong River opposite
Kratie, 100 miles north of
Phnom Penh.
At U.N. headquarters in
New York, the United States,
backed by Britain, Norway,
Portugal and Japan, asked
for an urgent Security
Council session to discuss the
crisis in Southeast Asia .
Private discussions were
being held among the council
members prior to calling a
meeting, But no council
action was .expected since
both China and the Soviet
Union, Vietnam's backer,
have veto power.
the
Carter
Despite
administration 's declared
opposition to t~e Chinese
invasion , Treasury Secretary,
W. Michael Blumenthal was
leaving today for Peking with
expansion of U.S.-Chinese
trade as his goal. State
Department officials said
canceling or postponing the
trip was not even considered.

SEEK LICENSE
Marriage licenses were
issued to Ralph Larry Durst,
35, St. Paris, Ohio and Shirley
Ann Wolfe, 27, · Syracuse;
Clifford Raymond Griffith,
32, Middleport, and Brenda
Tawney Davenport, 21,
Middleport.

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported the
February distribution of
$7,302,312.93 in local. government fund money to Ohio's 88
counties and 408 cities and
villages levying local income
taxes.
Meigs County's portion was
$,!_p00.

SQUAD RUNS
The Racine emergency
squad ·was called for Penny
Wilson, Racine, Thursday.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was. admittoo. Mnday the
squad took Mike O'Connor,
Racine,
to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

pomeroy
rutl'!nd

tuppers~lams

pomeroy
nationa
bank
.,.the bonk of
the century
established 1872

R. ·CRAIG MATHEWS, D.O. S.
205 N. Second Ave ,
Middleport, Ohio

Is announcing new 'office hours,
Mon. 12:00 ~ 7:00
Tues.-Fri. 8:30-12:30, 1:3().4:30
'

Saturday morning appointments available.

FDIC

HOURS BY APPOI"TMENT ONLY
TELEPHONE 992-6658
,.

I •

EGG PRICES
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Eggs - Prices paid to
country packing plants for
eggs delivered to major Ohio
cities
cases
included
consumer grades including
U.S. grades, minimum 50
case lots.
Carton Large A .65-.69, Me·
dium A .61-.66, Small A .43.52.
Sales to retailers in major
Ohio
cities,
cartons '
delivered : Large A white .74·
.83, mostly .74--.76, medium
.7()..79, mostly .7o-.72.
Poultry prices at Ohio
farms, hens light .12-.1212.
Truck lot prices of ready to
cook broilers and fryers : Cincinnati .49'h-.52 i Cleveland
.5()..52.

Weather
A flash flood watch IS m
effect lor today. Lows tonight
in mid 30s. Highs Saturday
from mid 40s to near 50.
Chance of rain 70 percent
tonight, 90 percent Saturday.
CENTER TO CLOSE
All facilities at Lyne Center
(gym, pool, handball court
and weight room) will be
closed to the public from Feb.
24 through March 6 for the
annual' spring break. A ·new
schedule will be published on
Sunday, March 4.
SOLE OWNER
Mrs. Mary Christy is now
sole owner of the Riverfront
Restaurant In Pomeroy, the
former Blue and Grey, and
Joe Christy is serving as
manager. David Chase,
formerly a part owner, is no
longer with the restaurant.

SQUAD CALLED
The POmeroy emergency
squad was called to Peacock
Ave . at 9:59 p.m. Thursday
for Mrs. Rosa Ohlinger who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial HoSpital.
·
At 7:56p.m ., the squad was
called to Union Ave. for Mrs.
Edna Smith. No treatment
was required .

. TIME CHANGED
A meeting of the Racine
emergency squad scheduled.
for Monday evening at the
fire station will be.held at 6:30
p.m. instead of 7:30 p.m . at
originally planned.

.

Indicted were:
- Bruce A. Richards, Jackson, on
charges of kidnappiJ\1!, . felonious
aSsault and gross sexual imposition.
- Rick Williams, Gallipolis, on
charges of forgery_and theft.
- Clinton Murphy, Gatlipolis, on a
charge of aggravaied robbery.

- John Paul Jones, Gallipolis, on a
charge of aggravated robbery.
- Eight secret indictments · were
also presented by the ·Grand Jury .
-The Grand Jury. inspected the
Gallia County Jail on Friday afternoon.
The following is a report of its findings :
- The physical needs of the
prisoners are being met .

- The physical c-ondition of !he jail
and the offices i_s good , although some
items need additional attention .
- Cell lighting is inadequate for
reading purposes.
- The cell level locking system
appeared to be unreliable and not
working correctly.
Th e Kit r hP.n vPn ti1ati on is

inadequate.
- Smoke and-or heat detectors
have not been installed.
In making the report, the Grand
Jury commended Sheriff J ames M.
Montgomery and his staff on the
operation of the facility, "considering
the physical and fin ancial constra in ts ."
The jury members were : Lawrence

•

tmts
. GAlliPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT ·

.

VOL 14 NO.4

. :I~f
:m
· .:':·
}
WHO WON -THIS ONE? - Without seeing the ball it is hard to tell who got the rebound .
or who is shooting in this action shot taken during Thursday's Class A Sectional Tow-n~ment
game at Meigs High School. Kyger Creek 's Victor VanSickle ,and Southwestern's C;ene
Layton ( 12) were both off their feet in this scene. Kyger Creek advanced to Saturday's finals
with a 49-39 win . The B.obcats will play the defending champion Southern Tornadoes.

::;:
::::
.. :::

&lt;:·: .

Iran.

::::
:;::
::::

• •

::~

::::

if~i

By Cella Roush
PT. PLEASANT - You'd never
know by looking ·at _James Lyle
Tatterson that he'd been through a
harrowing experience only two days

=~ple~~ill t~~~~uld

:;::

have most

fi:
;:;:
:;!·

T

may be forced · to take ·inanda tory steps to make sure
there is enough heating oil for
next winter - meaning a
reduction in " gasoline
availability ."
"There will be a gasoline
problem - in all likelihood this summer," he said,
Testifying before the House
Budget
Committee,
Schlesinger said there still
has heen no word from the
new Iranian revolutionary
government on when exports
may he resumed.
Later in Tehran , Deputy
Prime Minister Ebrahim
Yazdi said Iran will resume
oil exports very soon. But he

did not say precisely when ternational commitments
that would come or how mucn that might require the United
oil would be sold to · which States to share fuel with other
countries.
consuming nations.
· The new government in
The extent of any gasoline
Iran has promised to resume shortage will depend on the
sales to the United States, but length of the Iranian
officials here have raised the shutdown as well · as the
possibility that it could be in degree to which these foreign
curtailoo amounts.
commitments must be
Before the cutoff in Decem- honored, an issue which the
ber, Iran had suppiied about 5 International Energy Agency
percent of total U.S. oil con- must decide when It meets
sumption, or close to 1 million next month.
barrels a day. However, the
Schlesinger predicted .
net effect of the shutdown is a gasoline prices by midreduction of around 500,000 sununer would be "three or
barrels
because other foi,U' cents higher" than at
producing nations have present. "But they could be
increased their exports considerably more" if
somewhat to help offset the producing nations decide to
Iranian cutoff.
raise their prices beyond the
Schlesinger
suggested
that
14 percent increase
recent
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)on
the
total
negative
impact
already
voted by the OrOne of the defendants in the
so--called .22-caliber slaying U.S. crude oil supplies could ganization for Petroleum Excase has been allowed to reach 8 percent because of in- porting Countries, he said.
change his plea from not
guilty to guilty by reason of
insanity.
Gary James Lewing don ·
Svmething New At Our Drive-Thru Window
• changed his plea Thursday in
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court. He is charged
with killing six persons in
Franklin · County. Judge
George B. Marshall then
continued the trial until April
23. The trial originally was
scheduled "to start Monday .
Defense attorneys said that
Lewingdon attempted to
enter a guilty plea Feb. 15 in
Licking County where he is
charged with three murders. ·
They said the attempt was
evidence of his deteriorating
mental condition.
Lewingdon, 39, is being
held in the infirmary of the
Franklin County Jail as a
high suicide risk , his'
attorneys said.
Thaddeus
Charles
Lewlr]gdon, Gary's brother,
was found guilty of three
·o ur Roast Beef and Roast Ham Sandwiches start with
counts of aggravated murder
specially selected USDA inspected meats. The meat is
Monday In Ucking County
sliced thin and STACKED HIGH on a sesame seed bun .
Common Pleas Court in the
There is plenty of lean meat nutrition that the entire
family needs daily ,
·
deaths of three county
residents. The series of 10
killings took place in FrankTry Our Drive--Thru lnotJmt_Service/
lin, Fairfield and Licking
counties.
He was sentenced to three
consecutive -life terms in
prison and will go on trial
alone Monday in Franklin
Pomeroy, Ohio
County in the slayings of five
persons in the county.

:1l

.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PcliM.

.

.I

Special Sale Price$ this weekend on Women's Jeans
2nd Roor - Boys' Jeans 1st Floor - Men's $12.95 Jeans
For sg,88 - Wintuk Yarn for .$1.19 - Bed Sheets on
Sale - And Many other items of interest.
OPEN SATURDAY TIL 5 f'.M.

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy

.

II, Wett dlty,

tax .

forms due

April 30

t

i

?

!'Businesses, professions, other

activities, enterprises or undertakings
conducted, operated, engaged ln,
PERSIAN COFFEE URN - James Tatterson managed to bring back thla .\:; prosecuted or carrioo on by residents o!
Persian coffee urn from Iran, one of several prlzoo souvenirs from that tilmuU- :::: lbe city, there is imposed an annual .tax
'ridden nation.
of I percent on the net profits earned ..

§!

crammed with passengers, was the
nelli to the last plane in the
emergency airlift to depart Tehran
Airport.
The days . prior to Tatterson's
departure were touch and go. "The
crowds were disorganized and out of

refreshments were · Marlene Harrison , Sharon Welker , June Eichinger and

Carolyn Bartels. Ruth was also presented a planter from Mary Bowen, flowers
from June Eichinger and DQIIy Hayes, a necklace from Lettie Spencer , and a
Hummel bird from Nona and Bill Nelson. For her birthday, which is today , she
. was given candle holders by employes of the clerk of courts .

"In case of a non-resident

control," Tatterson statoo. "My x· Individual, partnership, association,
fiduciary or other entity, other than ~
house was located a mile from the
CGr)lOI'atlon, engaged in the conduct,
school and it was risky to go between
:t-: operation or prosecution of any trade,
the house and the school."
business, profession, enterprise ,
He noted that he was stopped by
undertaking
or other activity, there is
Khomeinl's supporters and he and
imposed a tax of I percent of the net
Continuoo on Page A-2
profits of business conducted in or
derived from activity in the city.
"Corporations doing business in
Gallipolis, whether domestic or foreigri ,
IIIII whether domiciled in Gallipolis, or
elsewhere, there is imposed an annual
t.u of 1 percent on that part of the
corporations, which is earned by such
corporations as a result of work done or
1ervices performed br rendered and
business or other activities conducted
In the city.
"City residents having· rental
property inside or outside city limits
must file on their net profits. Nonresident property owners who have
property wi_thin the city limits must file
Gil their net profits also .
"Forms lor any of the
aforementioned filings are available at
your city income tax office, 518 Second
Ave.," Crosier concluded.

position with

~~!
~

Iranian issues complicated

result of rain

Deputy Prime Minister Ibrahim
government armed forces .
Yazdi told the newspaper Kayhan
There are reports of revolutionary
Saturday that former Prime Minister
committees controlling personnel and
Amir Abbas Hoveida, who faces
operational decisjons at Iranian
corruption charges , would be tried in
factories , military institutions and
·
public.
public corporations , including the
''Revolutionary committees'' with
National Iranian Oil Co. and the naties to Khomeini have taken over many
tional airline, Iran Air.
municipal functions and are only slowly
It is unclear whether these
being merged into the regular govcommittees will be dissolved or remain
ernment machinery.
as a second chain of command linking
Diplomats working on the evacuation
all · levels of society to Khomeini 's
of foreigners from Tehran say that
religiou5-based hierarchy.
.
despite arrangements for the
departures made through the
Faii-land teachers
government 's Foreign Ministry,
revolutionary
committee reject board's offer
representatives at the airport impose
their own controls once the evacuees
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio . (AP)
show up for their flights .
Teachers in the Proctorville • Fairland
There have been no reports of serious
school district in Lawrence County
clashes between the governments but
Saturday rejected the school board's
the Khomeini organization appears
offer of a 4.6 percent wage hike.
extremely strong and well-armed and
T~ chers said they were satisfied
able to ·do anything normally done by
with·the·dollar amount but couldn't go
governments.
along with a stipulation the school
Last week, for instance, • the l board included that called for no pay
formation of a national guard to be
increases during 1979-1980 school year.
known as the . "Guardians of the
A total of 96 teachers in the 2,00().
Revolution" was announced, not by
pupil district 'a re represented by -the
Bazargan or his military authorities
Fairland Association of Concerned
but by the Khomeinl committee.
Teachers. Nearly 70 percent of the
The Bazargan government Is · teachers have agree.d to a strike .
rllOI'ganizing the ·country's regular
deadline of 5 a.m . Monday .
army, ·and the guard may provide a
Negotiations were continuing
Khomeini-controlled check on the
Saturday afternoon in an effQ,rt to head
off the threatened job action.

••

Walker accepts

~

Streams up as
By THOMAS KENT
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Mehdi
Bazargan b«!came provisional prime
minister three weeks ago, but he still
shares power with Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini in a complex system of "two
governments" that could complicate
Iran's return to normalcy.
Bazargan's .government, appointed
by Khomeini, Is based at the sumptuous
prime minister's building in downtown
Tehran. Khomeini's "Islamic Revo-lutiooary Council," with Its secret
membership, operates from the
rundown Refah school complex two
mlles away on the city's poor s6uth
side.
,
Bazargan, 70, receives foreign
ambassadors and presides over many
government functions, but he admits
Khomeinl's council outranks him.
Bazargan's deputy, Amir Entezilm,
told reporters the Islamic Council is
"the highest authority in the country."
A secret "Islamic Revolutionary
Court" set up by Khomeini, a 711-yearold Moslem religious leader, has
executed eight generals of Shah
· Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's toppled
regime In · recent days with llttle
evidence of coordination with
Bazargan's government. Bazargan has
expressed hope that the co(lrt will be
supplanted by a new judicial system,
preswnably under his contrpl.

HONORED - Ruth Moore was honored Friday by employes of the Meigs
County Courthouse on her retirement. Ruth was title clerk in the title office of
the Clerk of Courts having worked at the courthouse for 28 years . The employes
presented her a lar ge attra ctive lamp. In charge of the event and providing

:l:

SANDWICHES

,
'

, tile •

i_i.:.i

ROAST BEEF OR ROAST HAM

_C row's Family Restaurant

PRICE 25 CENTS

.

i

:-~ =:e~e~:~':ct~lo~~

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

:_: _:
G.ALUPOUS - Edith Crosier,
:::: Gallipolis tax examiner, Saturday
;:;: reminded city taxpayers that it is time
'::: "to file your 1978 final return on
:;:: Gallipolis city income taxes and your
:::; declaration of estimatoo Gallipolis
:::: income tax for 1979. These forms must
be flied on or before April 30."
Crosier said , "TI)ose required to
·.;.
·:·: file are as follows: Residents - a one
'•'·
...·•·. percent (I percent) tax is imposed on
:;:: aU earned income. (2) Non..-esidents j~j:
.,,'•'• one percent ( I percent ) tax on all
:;:: earned income earned within the city
'•'•
limits.
:·:·
"You are not required to file a
•'·' return If your entire. income Is derived
from wages \llhere your employer has
::-i deducted the 1 percent city income tax
IIIII has filed the refiort with the tax
:::: department. Vacation pay received lor
lfl8 is not taxable.

'_,._i_.-::_.,:_

and
.;:;
"There had been 100 teachers
;::: •airlltted out of Iran three weeks
:::: blfare the evacuation," Tatter8on
? llllld. "I was one of five left behind to
( pack up personal belongings."
;_:_:.:
He estimatoo there were at least
...... 20,000 Americans living In Iran, aU
•.'!_'.
:
of which, it is believed, have
managed to leave the country.
:;:.;.
Tattenon's plane, a Jumbo 747
·.·:;:..

r

EXTI!:NDED FORECASI'
Monday tllroap Wedaesday:
Clearing Monday. Showers or rain
Tuesday and Wedaesday. Highs in
the 30s Monday, warming to the 40t!t
lllld lower SO. by Wednesday. Lows
lathe lower 20s Monday, warmlllg to

1}c1·ty

::::
Sitting on a colnfortable chair in
:;:: · the home of hla mother, Mrs. W.H.
Tatteraon, Point Pleasant, talking
:._:: and laughing with his brother
..... Richard, he seems quite happy and
':'~ content.
!:
The scene was different only a few
days earlier, however, as he and
hundreds of others were alrliftoo on
,., emergency- flights out of the bedlam
~::: that has earmarkoo Iran.
·:·:
Verbally harrassed, searched
~_:,___:: repeatedly and threatened
physically by gl:Jn..tottng, professed
~ =~: supporters of the 78·year·old
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, ·
Tatteraon Ironically claims to have
::::
:·:· felt in no imminent danger during
::: his ordeal.
:': . "Although, the situation was very
\ .teJIBll and uncomfortable, and I had
:j~ niany unpleasant experiences," he
·:· said.
Tatterson, a native of Fairmont;
::: had been in Iran since August as a
:;: te.cher at the American School of
( lafahan In Isfa.h an. There were
::: 8rouDd 2,000 ,students, mostly \!le

tnfint

SWiDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1979

. ::~:

' :;~i

Beebe, foreman ; Noah Daniel Greene,
Beulah Nevoiene North , Robert Copley,
John Wade Milh oan, Mary Elizabeth
Kyger , Gloria S. Graham Fillinger,
Kathleen C. Durst , Lester Waugh , Anna
B. Hawkins (alternate ), Kristy L.
Blazer (alternate ), and Betty McDa niel
Wallace (alternate) .

- -- ~

r;:~~';:::'""''"Wm.AAH~~·'='-~"'"'"""'"'~~-"-~~

Plea changed

time saved , better bank standing. We'll
be happy to open one or both types of
account for you . Please come in.

GALUPOUS - The Gallla County
Grand Jury presented 12 true bills of
indictment, Including eight secret
indictments, late Friday.
During the four day jury session reportedly the longest in Gallia
County's history - 30 witnesses
covering 12 cases were examinoo.

_Gasoline shortages expected

CORRECTION
Due to .a typographical
error, the total amount of a
check written by a Wellston
man held on a bad check
charge was incorrect in
Thursday's paper.
,)'he check totaled $333.68
and not $33.68 as stated.
Harry E. Moshier, Jr., 33,
Wellston, as been returned to
Pomeroy to face a bad check
charge.

...

•
Twelve iildictments ·returned by Gallia JUry

•'"!

WILLIAM G. HEAL
GERTRUDE BAILEY
WIJiiam G. (Billy) Beal, 86,
Gertrude Bailey of 1000
Williams Road, Columbus, II Oak St. , Pomeroy, died
formerly of Pomeri!.Y died Thursday.
He was a son of the late C.
Feb. 17. She was born March
C.
and Maggie Elliott Beal
25, 1893 the daughter of Ellsand
was also preceded in
worth and Vicky Diehl
death by his wile, Roma
Bailey.
Survivors include one ·Stanley Beal and a son,
brother,
Carl
Bailey, William Earl.
Surviving are two sons,
Pomeroy; three sisters, Mrs.
Leona 'Wise, Pomeroy; Mrs. Wayne of Pomeroy and
Nar,cy Hysell and Mrs. tida Stanley of Cleveland; three
Goodwin, Columbus. Funeral daughters, Evelyn Hicks,
services were held Tuesday Bristol, Tenn.; Leona Young,
Dayton,- and Leota Swart,
in Columbus.
Reynoldsburg , 3 . grandchildren and several greatgrandchildren.
Hospital News
Mr. Beal was a veteran of
World War I and belonged to
Veterans Memorial Hospital Drew Webster Post 39,
Admittoo - Linda Stewart, American Legion.
'
Proctorville; Eva Shaffer,
Funeral services will be
Racine ; Augusta Potts, held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the
Syracuse ; Paul Whaley , Carleton · Church with the
Shade;
P enny
Wilson , Rev. Jay Stiles officiating.
Racine; Richard ' Qualls, Burial will be in the Carleton
Middleport; Don Betzing, Cemetery. Friends may call
Pomeroy; Harry Smith, at the Ewing Funeral Home
Middleport.
any time.
Discharged - Sampson
Hall, Karen Probert, Joseph
Rudolph , Ruth Mulford,
SOCIAL TEA
Patrick O'Connor.
The · Jaycee-ettes will
sponsor a social tea at the
Meigs Inn Saturday from 2 to
Holzer Medleal Center
4
p.m. State and district
Discharges, Feb. 22 ·
regional
representatives wiJI
Mary Austin, Carl Barnett,
be
present.
The meeting is
Amy Brothers, Larry Clark,
to
all
women
between
open
Charles Colley, Oary Con18
and
35.
the
ages
of
grove, Christal Cornell, John '
Foster, Mrs. Manuel Gheen
and son, Christopher Gillenwater, Travis Gillespie,
Joshua Harris, Ronald Hill,
Sahnnon Hunt, MAyland
Isaac, Mrs. Steve James and
By TOM RAUM
daughter, PAtricia James,
Associated
Press Writer
Louise Jones, Robert Jones, •
WASHINGTON
(AP) Jr., Patricia Logan, Jerod
The
Carter
administration
is
Moore, Roy Pierce, Jr., Unpredicting
.
motorists
could
da Priddy, Jack Rose, Mrs.
Johnny Ross and son, Pauline find gasoline in short supply
Runyon, Wanda Scarbrough, this sununer due to the .
Scott Wells, Jack Wheatley, Iranian revolution and that it
Mrs. James Zornes and will cost at least three to four
cents more a gallon than now.
daughter.
Energy Secretary James
Births, Feb. 22
R.
Schlesinger told a House
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dodcommittee
Thursday that
son, daughter, Pomeroy.
unless
Iranian
production is
Mr. and Mrs. William
speedily,
there will
restored
Barnett, daughter, Crown Ci- ,
of
he
a
gasoline
shortage
ty.
"noticeable
but
not
.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Williams,
crippling"
severity
during
daughter, Gallipolis.
the summer driving season.
He said the administration

...

\
i

GALLI POUS- As a result of rain
the past two days and melting of last
week's seVen-inch plus sr:aow, some
area streams climbed out of their banks
Saturday.
The Gallia-Meigs Post, State
Highway Patrol reportoo Rt. 141 at
Cadmus was covered by high water
Saturday afternoon . Rt. 681, at Darwin
in Meigs County, was .also inundated.
A spokesman at the Gatlipolls
Locl&lt;s and Dam in Eureka said the Ohio
River reading on the dam's lower
gauge was 38.2 feet at 3:30 p.m.
Saturday. The big stream was rising
three-tenths of a loot an hour. AU
rollers were ont.
Initial reports indicate the Ohio will
crest at 50.5 feet at the Gallipolis Dam
on Tuesday. This figure could be
revised, depending upoo the weather.
Meanwhile, Associated Press
reported Saturday an earthen dike
along· the Sandusky River ruptured
early Saturday, flooding a one-mile
portion of a county road just south of
Fremont.
The rising water for crrl several
motorists to climb to the roofs of their
automobiles for safety.
Six persons, including a Sandusky
County sheriff's deputy, were treated
for exposw-e after they were rescued by
helicopter when boats were unable to
reach them .
Authorities said no repairs could be
made -until the water started to reced ~.

Buckeye firm

CLYDE B. WALKER

Expect decision
Feb. 28 on rates
COL UMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Customers of Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co. will have to wait a
little longer to Jearn how much more
their monthly electric service is going
to cost them .
Th~Public Utilities Comtnission of
Ohio . has decided to wa1t until
Wednesda y to ann ounce wheth er
Columbus and Southern will get the
rate' jncrease .
The commission Fr iday deferred
action at the requ est of commissioner
C. Luther Heckman , who wanted more
time to examine the request.
Originally, the utility had asked for
a $63 million emergency hike . Later it
scaled down the request to $53 million .
The commission staff has said the
company can get by on $30.6 million .
Officials of C&amp;SOE have tesllfied
that they consider the company in a
financial emergency.
. ·=··::..:::.:~.

Weather

·:·.
...

;

,.
SATURDAY VISITOR
GALLIPOLIS - Presi dent Oncita
Dease of the National Executive
Housekeepers Association wa s a Satur- ·
day visitor in Gallipolis. She, a resident
of Winston-Salem, N. C. , and Exucutive
Secy . Elaine Rees conferred on NEH1\
business. National office or NF:I-!A is Oil
the second floo1· of the Business and
Professional Building on Second Ave_.

GA LLIPOLIS- Clyde B. Walker of
Centerv ill e (Thurman postoffice 1 has
accepted a posilion as S&lt;Jlcs represen. !ali ve for Bu ckeye Harvester ,
Washington Court House.
For the past 23 years he has been
associated with the Fa rm Credit
system and recently took early retirement from the Federal Land Bank
Association of Galli pol is.
Prior to Farm Credit employment he
\\'Orked four years as ag ricultural
engineer for Ohio Power Co., Pot;lsmouth, and four years as sales
representa tive for Ne w York Farm
Sa les, Columb us.
Buckeye Harvestore System s, lne., is
the franchised dealer for A. 0 . Smith
Harvestore Prod ucts, Inc., Arlington
Heights, Ill ., serving 33 southern Ohio
counties. The products sold incl ude feed
storage
s truct ures, a ut omated
livestock feeding equipment, and Slurrystore liquid 111anure management
systems.
Walker will a lso be selling irr igation
equipment.

Retired teachers will
mret Thursday at Ri(.
GALLIPOLIS - The Ga llia County
Retired Tea chers Association will hold
its first ·1979 luncheon meeting at 12:30
p.m. Thursday in the Rio Grande College dining hall, according to announcement of Secretary Beulah J ohnson.
Principal speaker will be Kathryn
McCall, Portsmouth, an office r of the
NatJOnal Retired Teachers Association.
A choral group df Southwestern High
School, under direction of Thomas
Moore, will sing.
D. Lester Davis, president, will conduct the meeting.

METERHEADSREMOVED ·
POME ROY - Pomeroy police
began taking heads from parking lot
meters along the Ohio River Saturday
morning in anticipation of high water
moving onto the lots.
At 8:20 a.m. Saturday the river stood
at 36 feet and 36.1 fe et at 11 :20 a.m.
Flood stage is 46.5 in Pomeroy.

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