<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15726" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15726?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T04:35:30+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48848">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/89c35184a7e28cabf57723607ec021ad.pdf</src>
      <authentication>385efce002968d06ced532a366e80418</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50386">
                  <text>8- ·The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday , ~'eb . 27.

1 97~

River crests, begins slow retreat

Ohioans keep watch on rising river
The Scioto River at CircleState employees were
ville was expected to reach allowed ,to report to work at
an 18.2-loot crest early today . noon Monday , four hours
Flood stage there is 14 feet. later than usual, because of
Crests above flood stage poor road conditions.
also were· forecast on the
In Miami and Darke
Scioto River in Piketon and counties, only the interstate
the Ohio River in Pomeroy, h ighways wt-rP n ~ r;:c: ~ hf,.
East liverpool, Steubenville
_ _ _ .. _ .._
and Marietta. Cresting of the
Hocking River in Enterprise - ~·--·an d Athens was reported I
Monday night.
o.. OCI
Resident s
of
New
Cin cinnati ,
from
a
Richmond and Moscow in ,,·.
submerged car in a parking Clermont County were set for
lot near the city 's Lunken the possibility of a second
floo d in three months on the
Airport Monday night.
TUESDAY
Gov . James A. Rhodes Ohio River.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Red Cross officials in the Beta Sigma Ph i So rority
called out about IOOmembers
esta blished
an meeting, 7:30 this evening at
of the Ohio National Guard area
emergency
shelter
at
a
school
late Monda y to assist officials
Meigs Inn.
in
Clermont ,
Galli a , administration building and
WEDNESDA Y
Washingto n and Meigs classes were canceled for the
MIDDLE PORT Literary
counties. Minor flooding was week.
'Club, Wed nesday , 2 p.m. at
!'They'resaying the river is the home of Mrs. Robert
r eported in those areas and
the guardsmen were planning going to crest at 58 feet on Fis her. Mrs. Arthur Strauss
to evacuate some famili es Friday mornin g. That's will review ' 'Anna Hastings '',
whose homes were being exactly what we had before and the roll ca ll will be ',The
threatened by flood waters. (on Dec. 13)," said New Da)' l ·Grew Up."
In addition, the governor Richmond Poli ce Chief
THURSDAY
said a helicopter was being Harold Kennedy.
SPECI
AL MEET I NG ,
While residents of southern
sent to Gallia County in case
Bosworth
Council 46, R&amp;SM,
medical ev a cuati ons were Ohio were wa tchin g the
7:30p.m.
Thursday.
Work in
needed , while a National rivers, people in the northern
the
Royal
Master
and
Select
Guard crane was being sent half of the state were slipping
Master
degrees.
to Portsmouth to help put to work Monday on snow-and
ice-covered roads.
F.VANGEIJNE CHAPTER
floo dgates in place .
1i2, Order of the F.astcrn
Star, Thursday 7: 30 p.m. at
the Middleport Ma sonic Temple. Initiation will be held and
off it'ers are to weHr gowns.
Dues at·e payable.
SQU ARE
WES TE RN
dance workshop, 7: 30 p.m.
Thur sday
at
archery
building, Royal Oak Park. C.
John son, caller. All persons
interested in Western square
dancing invited.
• Regular
Savings
• Certificates
LULA MURRAY
or Deposit
Mrs.
Lula Murray of Grant
• Checking
St. , Middleport, is now at the
Accounts
· home of Richard Ward, Route
• Farm Loans
1, Box 45, Cottageville, W. Va.
• Auto Loans
25239. Mrs. Murray has been
• Home
ill for several weeks. Ca rds
Improvement
may be sent to her at the
Loans
Ward residence.
• Personal Loans
• Business Lo"""
• Christmas Clubs
• Safe ·Deposit Boxes
AAUW CANCELLED
• Estate Management
A mee t i ng of th e
• Home Mortgages
Middleport-Pomeroy Area
• Bank By Mail
Oranch of the American
• 24 Hour Depository
· Association of University
• Direct Deposit of
Wom en scheduled for Tues·
Social Security Checks
day night has been cancelled.
• Drive-In Banking
The silent auction planned for
• Travelers Checks
the meeting will be held in
March. The meeting program
will be presented at a May
meeting.
lly The Associated Press
As Ohioans in nor thern
co unties dug out from
another !&gt;lowstorm Monday.
residents of so uthern areas
kept a wary eye on rising
rivers and streams.
The rising waters along the
Ohio River in Cinq} nnati
apparently were responsible
fo r at least one death .
Cincinnati Eirefighters said
they recovered the body of
J oseph Hippie, 81, of

I

s ."a}

Calendar

t Marietta rna,.,
1
I hurt in wreck
I A [ Marietta man was

LISTEN HERE

are all part of the
services we offer you
And the list goes on! EnJOY the
benefits of our one-stop, full ser·
vice bank ing ... you might just
save more than steps' Come in!

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

l:ilitens /4alional Bank

\

,.... .

Member F'. D. I. C.
Deposits Insurance to $40,000.

POSTPONED
World Day of Prayer service scheduled for I :30 p.m:
Friday has been postponed
until March 16 due to the high
water. The service, spon·
· sored by Church Women
United of Meigs County, will
be hel d at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.

,,

Walk - Up Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings, 5 to 7 p .m .

Veleran.s Memorial Hospital'
Admitted
Marion
Kesterson, Pomeroy; Mary
Laudermilt, Rutland; Mark
Fate, Rutland; Rick Wilson,
Racin e; Dav1id
Paige,
Marietta.
Discharged - Martha
Warner, James Bing, Linda
Stewart.

has a tot more "borrowing power"
than you thought. To start your appl ica tion for a Ca pi ta l Home Equi ty
Loan, just send in the coupon. Or call

This coupon is the key to a
Capital Home Equity Loan!

demolished.
Sheriff Proffitt advised
today that amended Senate
Bill 389, effective March 15,
authorizes a fine up to $500
and a driver's licens e
suspension of up to one year
for failure to stop for a school
bus. The section also provides
a procedure for officers to
follow.
The bill provides that by
Aug. I, 1980, all school' buses
must also have alternately
flashing amber lights in
addition to the lights now
required.
.n ilbis bill also requires that
school buses be equipped with
an automatically extended
"stop' ' warning sign·.

Pu rsuant to lhe Company's Capacity and Energy
Emergency Control Program
approved by The Public Utili·

The Company's electric
power supply facilities - In·

300 West Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 (992-211l•

..

\
,\

l

. (USPS 145-960)

shutdown, Schlesinger told
the
nat ur al resources
committee of the Nationai
Governors' Association.
Schlesinger spoke as the
White House was about to
send Congress its standby
plan for rationing and other
steps, including allocation of
crude oil among refineries
and possible restrictions on
weekend retail sales of
gasoline and diesel fuel.
Schl es inge r predi cted
possible gasoline shortages
this sununer due to the
OMISSION
Bob and Julia Hysell, An· Iranian shutdown, and said
thony and Sharon Russe ll, some mandator y steps
Charles lind Catherine contained in the adminisHysell, and Mr. and Mrs. iration 's contingency plan
John Smith presented gifts to might be triggered.
Asked about the plan for
Miss Vicky Pickens at a re·
barring
gasoline sales on
cent shower held for her at
weekends,
he said that if this
the Bradford Church of
step
is
taken
the
Christ. Miss Pickens is the
admini
stration
might
bride-elect of Greg Smith.
Their names were not includ- consider allowing states to
ed in an earlier account of the pick a weekday if they
preferred.
shower.
However, Schlesinger said
he hoped such harsh steps
would not be required at all .
He told the governors that
MEETING SET
The Meigs County Pomona gasoline prices probably will
Grange 46 will meet in a rise 10 cents a gallon because
regular bi·monthly session at of the combined effect of
B p.m. Friday at the Rock lrancaused shortages and
Springs Grange Hall. Star recent price increases voted
Grange will serve refresh· by oilproducing nations.
Asked about published rements.

of the loss of Iranian oil , but
that other mandatory ,
energy-saving mea sures
proposed by the administration might be
imposed if the Iranian cutoff
continues for a year or
·
longer.
"We will not come to rationing because of what is a
relative shortfall in supply"
as a result of the Iranian

Approximately 83% .of ihe
AEP System's power general·
ing capacity is coal·flred , 12%
is nuclear and the remainder Is

oll·fired or hydroelectric. FOI·
lowing settlement of the
1977-78 coal strike, coat sup.
plies at the AEP System's pow·

Guard.
Locks were closed at the

Racine and Gallipolis dams
and all ferries were shut
down in the passenger and
vehicle shuttle that ha s
serv ed Portsmouth and
northern Kentucky residents
since the closing of th e U.S.
ot her emer gencies were Grant Bridge.
reported, according to Lt .
Law enforcement agencies
Victor Dubina , public in flooded areas reported
information officer for the o r d e rl y e m e r g en cy

•

at y

procedures. No flood damage . with flood emergencies.
estimates had been tabulated
The Guard was on duty
yet.
thro ugh the night in
A flood warning also re- Clermont , Ga lli a, Meigs,
mained in effect for the Scioto Scioto and Washington·
River and its tributaries.
counties.
Gov. James A. Rhodes this
Guard members have been
m6rning ordered additions l assisting local county
National Guard troops into disaster services directors
Man ches ter in Adam s and civil authorities with
County, bringing to six the tr affi c control and loca l
number of coWJties in which e merg ency ev acuation .
guard members are helpin g About 100 troops are now on
duty.

•

enttne
WEDN ESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1979

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

.....

ports the rationing plan
would limit gasoline use to
two gallons or less per day
per registered vehicle,
Schlesinger said that figure
was an average based on "the
typical car."
However, when pressed
further on the matter, he said
he did not recall what the
actual rationing quantities
would be and would have to
check it further .
Earlier , Energ y
Department spokesman
James Bishop said reports of
the two-gallon limit were a
"total fabrication" and that
the standby rationing plan
contained no specific gallon
figures.
·
Any gasoline rationing
plans probably will be based
on the assignment of coupons
to owners · of registered
~ ehicles,
according to
sources who asked for
anonymity . The coupons
could be freely bought and
sold.
Schlesinger told the !louse
Budget Committee last week
that the loss of Iranian oil
production during the
political turmoil there could
lead to mandatory steps to
insure an adequate supply of
heatin g oil next winter,
causing a reduction In
"gasoline availability."

lbs.)

1962
1963
1963

Mar . 3

1964

Mar. 13
Mar. B
June 26

1967
1972

Chest er area men Ill ·
terested in self and com·
munity improvement are
invited to a meeting from 7 to
8:30 p.m. Thursday at which
time plans wlll be fonnulated
for a Jaycee Chapter in that
area.
The Meigs County Jaycees

• Top-Filling diSposable dust bag avoids
clogging, needs fewer changes .
• Daylight Headlight linds dirt in darkest corners
• Exclusive 6-way Oiai·A·Nap• lowest
nap to deepest shag or any other carpets .

REG .

$119.90

46.7 Ft .
51.6 Ft.
49.6 Ft .
2nd Flood this month
52.8Ft .
50 some ft .
45. 6Ft.
Boat Docks under water .
41.5 Ft.
Eichman canaday's Records ).

Organizational meeting planned

The 'bright idea' in a
6-way adjustable cleaner

January 16, 1978, the Com·
paoy hereby apprises the
public of the state of electric
supply In Its service area.

Mar. B
Mar. 21

1975
Feb. 26
(From -Bertha

SAVE s3995

Ohio River
receding at
slow pace

Pomeroy's flood
stages reported
Over 100 years of flood stages in Pomeroy and also
other records of the river follow :
1862
Jan . 23
55.6 Ft.
186!i
Mar. 5
51.2 Ft.
186!i
May 13
45.0 Ft.
1867
River overflowed Main St. 5 times in 5
weeks, reaclling a stage of 36 Ft. Aprill4.
1869
Apr. 2
45.6Ft.
1870
Jan. 20
48.0Ft.
1870
Mar . 29
47.0 Ft.
1873
Dec. 16
49.0 Ft.
1874
Jan . 10
49.0Ft.
1875
Aug. 4
52. 0Ft.
1877
Jan . 17 River full of ice
1880
Feb. 16
46.0 Ft.
1881
Feb. 14
50.8 Ft.
1881 in Sept. the Ohio River was lower than ever known
1882
Feb. 23
45.0 Ft.
1883
Feb. ~
57. 0 Ft.
This flood continued at various heights until Feb. 21,
never dropping below 45 Ft.
1884
Feb. II
64. 6 Ft.
Highest to date known
Apr. IO
1886
54.0Ft.
1890
Mar. 24
50.6 Ft.
1891
Jan. 4
46.6Ft.
1891
Feb. 22
54.4 Ft.
1897
Feb. 26
53.8 Ft .
1898
Mar. 26
61.5 Ft.
1913
Apr.
68.8Ft.
The highest flood yet.
1927
Jan.
55.8 Ft.
1933
Mar. 20
53.5 Ft.
.1936
Mar. 21
56.8 Ft.
1937
Jan . 28
68.0 Ft.
Higher than the 1884 flood and lower than the 1913
flood.
1939
Feb. 6
50.0 Ft.
1940
Mar. 23
54.0 Ft.
1943
Mar. 9 to Mar. 14,
47.0 Ft. to 56.2 Ft.
1948
Apr. 16
56.5 Ft.
1952
Jan. 30
51.9 F t.
1955
Mar. 7
52.2 Ft.
1958
May 9
47.5 F t.
1959
Jan . 25
47.7Ft.
The Allegheny ice broke loose during this flood and
came down the river. Everyone was afraid it would
tear out the front of buildings on Main St. The river fell
before it got here so no damage was done. It left large
chunks of ice on the Parking lots (around 100 to 200

ELBERFELD$

MRS. J. 0 . RODEL
Mrs. J . 0. Roedel of Main
St. , Pomeroy , is confined to
the Medical Center Hospital
at Chillicothe. Her room
number is 2A 33.

$7

w/ tools

"
load. Reserves of at least this

·level are expected to be avail·

Generating -capacity re·
serves are reQulr¢ In order to
meet unexpected Increases

NO. 222

A
National
Guard
helicopter and crew were
standing
by at
the
Southeastern Ohio Medical
Services Center in Gallipolis
to transport pa tients to
hospi tals in Hun tington ,
W.Va. Two kidney dialysis
patients were airlifted but no

'

Gasoline rating plans ready

(1979·80).

VOL NO. XXIX

feet.
The river is expected to
crest at 59 feet at Cincinnati
late Thursday, leaving up to
80 downtown intersectio ns
flooded.
National Guardsmen remained on duty in five
counties along the rive r to
evacuate residents, ass ist
with tr affic control and
provide emergency medical
transportation .

L...-..........._

· THE FLOOD WATER is shown on the steps of the Pizza Shack and downriver stores on downtown Main St.,
Pomeroy, Monday afternoon.

able throughout the year and

extending Into the peak load

are heading the movement to
organize the new group with
the meeting to be held at
Gaul's Shake Haven.
Anyon e
having
any
questions before Thursday
evening is asked to contact
Vic Gaul, 985-4329 after 6 p.m.

'

.

·•

POMEROY FLOODED OUT - Emergency
conditions exist at Pomeroy where the mighty Ohio River
has inundated the village. Picture above is an aerial view

of the fl ooded town. The river crested at 51.4 feet, 51;, feet
above flood stage. It is hoped business can reopen late
Thursday or early F riday,

Hall trial ends in hung jury
The three day trial of stopped within 10 feet of the 1 did not hold the gun," Hall
Rocky L. Hall, Ewington, Neece ·car, and a passenger, said. " I did not know what
GaUia County, has ended in a later identified as Donnie h a ppen ~d to the gWJ."
King, got out and came over - Monday, a Mason County
" hung " jury.
Maso n Co unty Circuit to the Neace car according to Circuit Court jury hea rd
Court jurors hearing the case Hall.
opening remarks from Dan
According to Hall, !he man fioll, prosecuting attorney,
reported to Judge James
Holllday shortly before II said, " I'll show you who I and Tom Pettit, an assistant
a.m . today that they were am."
defense counselor. Hall is
The man was alleged to also
hop eles sly . deadlocked
re prese nted
by
following deliberating which have struck · Bertha Roush Raymon d G. Musgrave.
began around 4 p.m. who fell across the car's
Roll .
in
pr ov iding
console on which a pistol was background for the state's
Tuesday .
·
The judge ordered the laying.
case, gave an account of the
Hall said the man came events of May 19.
jurors dismissed and has
rescheduled another trial for through a window and started
He stated tha t the
hitting him . Hall said he told de'ceased, Be rtha J ea n
the May term of court.
Hall was charged with the the Roush woman , " Let's get Roush, was picked up in the
May 19, 1978 shooting death of out of here." Hall said she early even ing by a girlfriend,
Bertha Jean Roush, 19, managed to move the car a Diana Nease, and the two
form erly of Meigs County, in couple of feet with King still then went to Hall 's home and
a remote area of Mason hanging in the window.
picked him up.
" We were fighting right on
County known as Indian Lake
They drove to the Athletic
located in the West Columbia top of the gun," Hall stated. Club where they had about
"I don't know whose hand the two beers, Roll said, and then
area.
Tuesday' s testimony in- gun was in ... I just know it left accompani ed by Eugene
McKinney .
cluded that of the defendant, went off. ,
Hall showed the jurors a
Rocky Hall, who took the
The four were parked at an
wound in his left hand
stand in his own defense.
area known as Indian Lake,
Hall described how the allegedly caused, he said, by
back of West Colu m bia ,
Roush woman and a friend, the bullet passing through his . according to Roll, when an
ind iv idu al identifie d as
Diane Neace , drove to a hand. It was this same bullet
house at Cheshire, picked which apparently struck Mrs.
Donni e Kin g got out of
him up and drove to the Roush.
another vehicle and came
Hall said that after the shot
over to the Nease car.
Athletic Club at West
off, his assailant backed
went
Columbia. They were joined
by Samuel 'Eugene Kenney. out of the window and took :;:::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
The four · left the club, off . " After the shot was fired,
EXTENDED FORECAST
driving to Indian Lake,
Rain or snow likely each
followed by another car, Hall
day.
High In the mid 30s to
Rain expected
said.
mid
lOs
Friday and In the
At that time, he claimed he
40s
Saturday
and Sunday.
did not know the occupants of in Ohio tonight
Low
in
the
20s
early Friday
that vehicle.
In
the
upper
20s to mid
and
The unidentified car
By The Associated Press
30s early Sunday.
A low pressure center now
in the ~ulhwest will push ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
clouds into Ohio today with
rain expected over the state
by this evening.
As the low moves closer to
Ohio the rain will spread,
covering most sections of the
state by Thursday morning,
the Nation al Weather Service
said.
A flood watch has been
continued by the weather
service for areas along the
Scioto Ri ver and its
tributa ries today.

Roll said that hostile words
were exchanged and that
King allegedly came through
the window ahd str uck the
defendant.
As Joh·nson backed out of
the ca r', Hall is alleged to
have grabbed a small calibre
pistol , aimed and killed the
Roush girl who wa s sitting
alongside .
Pettit, who described the
state's ca se as a " fishiilg
expe dition." cautioned the
jurors that they had fou r
different choices under the
terms of the indit1ment and
that the "scales of justice
have to be tipped all the way
to be proved beyond
reasonable doubt.''
He claimed that Kin g
leveled an " unprovoked
assault against Hall. "
Among the first witne;;ses
called to testify were Cpl. .1.
L. Fitzwater of the Point
Pleasant State Poli ce. who
handled the investigation of
Roush 'f death . and Dr. Ervin
Sop her. Ch ief Med ical
Examiner fo r the State of
West Virg inia. who per·
formed the post mortem on
the body of Mrs. Roush.
Sopher testified that Mrs.
Roush died of a gunshot
wound to the chest, causing
severe internal bleeding. He
stated there was no powder
residue on the dead woman's
clothing or body.
Dr. Jolm Grubb, Ma son
County coroner, WH S the last
witness to testify before the
trial was recessed after 4
p.m . Monda y.

Pomeroy - hit hard by the current flooding of the Ohio
River - was a quiet town Wednesday morning as the river
began a slow recession.
The river crested a t 51.4 feet - fl ood stage in Pomeroy 46.5
-,; at 4 p.m. Tuesday and early predictions received by
'Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews indicated that flood waters
would be off the streets by this morning. However, the
predictions were revised. The river is rec eding much slower
th an usual.
At 8:30 this morning the offi cial reading was still 50.8 feet
and at 10:15 a.m. the water was still at 50.6 feet.
Business operat ions were practically at a standstill with
the Main St. business houses flooded and those on other streets
having wate r in basements to cause the discontinuance of heat.
Police officers were still at their posts - alon g with the
National Guard - at entrances into the town and those pe rsons
without good reason were not permitted to enter.
·
Meantime, businessmen stood by ready to clean their
buildings and return stock to the shelves in order to get back
into business.
According to predictions, it will be tomorrow morning before
flood waters are off the streets.
Offices of the Meigs County Courthouse remained closed
today and yesterday the banks closed at noon.
Those businesses which remained open had little business
to handle since entrance into the town is limited.
Southern Local Schoo! District Schools were closed again
today for the third con secutive day.
Meigs Local Schools were operating.
Today attendance stood at 75 percent in comparison to 59
percent who made it to the classrooms on Tuesday.
All schools of the Eastern Local District were open. again
today wiUt the exception of the Riverview School at Reedsville.
Racine Village was also hit bard by the flood waters with
,25 families having to be evacuated.

Business establishments affected by the swollen Ohio were
Racine Town Hall and fire station, post office, a church, three
ga rages, a beauty and barber shop, ha rdware store,
department store, Village Cut-Rate Store, Steamboat Inn, a
grocery store, gas station and the Racine Home National
Bank.
The Ohio Department of Highways reported this morning
that highways are still closed in a nirrnber locations including
State Route 248; State Route 124 in several locations ; State
Route 338at Antiquity and in the upper loop; Route 33 between
Pomeroy and Athens; Route 7 near the Gallia County line and
at the Gavin and Kyger Creek Plants.

Grant approval
announced today
Gov. James A. Rhodes
today announced approval of
a $212,948 grant from the
App alac hi a n
Reg ional
Commission (ARC) to the
Oh io
De partm ent
of
Economic and Community
Development lor the con·
tinued funding o[ the Tri·
County . Comm unity Act ion

Agency's Rural Home Repair
Program.
The grant will be supplemPnted with $748,241 from
federal sources.
The Rural Home Repair
Program has, as of February
1979,
complet ed
approximately 280 houses in the
(Continued on page 10 )

In system load, to provide lor
an effective program of preventive maintenance of .gen·
eratlng faci lities and to allow
for random shutdowns and
loading curtailments of gen·
eratlng unils.
·

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY

·

'

'

.,

trlc utility systems -

lmatety 25 percent of peak

. Q

.

'

period of the next winter

Power is a part, are approx·

day . More than 50 persons
were sheltered at local
schools while dozens of others
forced from their homes were
sta yin g with . friends or
relatives.
Dazens of New Richmond
and Moscow residents were
evacuated to Red Cross
shelters with the help of
National Guard soldiers
Tuesday in anticipation of the
onslaught of water with an
anticipated cr• -• of about 60

e

·:.' ' ' :'.

I

tions with neighboring elec·
are

at the Gallipolis roller dam
about 10 miles do wnstream
from the city, said the river
reached 52.6 feet at 9 p.m.
Tu e~ay and began to recede.
By'9a.m. today it was at 52.3
fee t.
The river was expected to
crest tocjay at 51.4 feet at
Pomeroy, some 5'h feet
above flood stajle.
Upstream at Marietta; the
river crested four feet above
flood stage at 40 feet on Tues-

,•

I

eluding power generating
plants, major transmission
facilities and Interconnec-

(AEP] System, of which Ohio

o.r ph011e! '.,

--

..&lt;:

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES

utility systems, generating·

@
_

~'r_&amp;~ ~

•

ties Commission of Ohio on

capacity re serves of the
American Electric Power

Where you can ~ ..
start a lo~n ,. .-~
-·-~ • .
by coupon •, 0,
..

By The Associated Press
The Ohio River had crested
at 2.6 feet over flood stage
near Gallipolis and was
falling slowly 'this morning.
At Pomeroy the river crested
at 51.4 feet.
Downstream at Cincinnati
and the southeastern Ohio
communities
of
Ne w
Richmond and Moscow,
re sidents braced for the
worst of theflooding.
Kerr Jackson , lockmaster

elsewhere.
He said that at one time or
another since an ice stonn
and heavy snows hit
northeast Ohio on Sunday,
about 70,000 Ohio Edison
customers were Without
electrical service.

\ .•

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY

electric service to Its custom·

Capihll
Financial
·servlcaa

•

By CLIFF HAAS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) EVENT OFF
The White House prepared to
An Ash Wednesday Break- send Congress standby plans
fast scheduled for 7:45 am. lor gasoline rationing today,
tomorrow at Trimly Church · but Energy Secretary James
in Pomeroy has been {Xlst· R. Schlesinger assured the
p0ned until Wednesday, nation's governors that
March 7, at 7:45 a.m.
rationing would be used only
as a last resort .
Schlesinger said rationing
EMS MEETING MONDAY
would not be used as a result
The possibility of establish·
ment an emergency medical
service for the Eastern part Bowling party held
of Meigs County will be
discussed at a·public meeting
Youth of the Middleport
to be held at 7 p.m. Monday, • First Baptist Church recently .
March S, in the Tuppers held a bowling party at
Plains Elementary School. Mason Bowling Lanes and
Bob Bailey of the Meigs then returned to the church
County Emergency Medical for a pizza party. The youth
Service will be present to were accompanied by Mr.
answer any questions. The and Mrs. Dan Riggs, youth
public is invited.
advisors, Randy and J oanne
Hayes, Dreama and Gene
Hudson , and Danny White.
MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Mid- An ice skating party planned
dleport Chamber of Com- for Sunday was cancelled due
merce scheduled for toni ght to the high water and instead
the youth again enj oyed bowl·
has been cancelled.
ing at the Mason Lanes.
MEETS TONIGHT
The Meigs &lt;lounty Board of
POTLUCK DINNER
Education will meet at 7: 30
A program on the purpose
p.m. Monday at its office on
of the church ,highlighted a
Mulberry Heights.
potluck dinner at the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church
·..l · STILL CLOSED
recently. On the conunittee
Offices of the Meigs County which presented the program
Courthouse which closed at wer e Edi s on Bak er ,
10 :30 a .m. Monday due to the Katheryn Metzger, Sue lm·
flood remained closed today. baden, Dan Riggs, Manning
Kloes, and Lacey Barton. .
MEETING OFF
Suggestion sheets for areas of
A meeting to the Pomeroy church service and growth
TOPS Club 570 scheduled for were distributed by the Rev.
this evening has been can- , Mark McClung, pastor, to
celled.
those attending.

ers. Currently, excluding tem·
por c~ry power sales to other

- WITHOU T AFFEC TING YOUR PR ESENT MORTGAGE I

I

The utility had advised
about 10,000 Medina, Summit
and
Porta ge counties
customers who were without
electricity Monday night to
consider steps to protect their
property and to decide
wh ether to see k shelt er

private auto, Paige's car was

adequate to provide reliable

LOANS UP TO 52!$,000

to day , with fu ll ser vice
e.peded to be restored by
late afternoon or early evening . The homes still without
power were clustered ·mainl y
in the immediate Akron area,
accordin g
to
utility
spokesman Dave Osterland .

I,&lt; . .

hospitalized following a
single car accident Monday
qn SR 7.
According to a report from
Sheriff James J . Proffitt,
David Brian Paige, 27, was
traveling north on 7 when he
lost control of his car while
crossing an icy covered
bridge.
The vehicle ran the left side
of the highway, striking a ·
guardrail, and fiipped over on
its top.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by a

CANCELLED
The March meeting of MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of Bricklayers
Chester UMW ha s been
and
Cement Masons, Local
cancelled.
32, scheduled for Thursday
night has been cancelled until
further notice.

Inflation Creation!
lnftation Creation! Thats what Capital
ca:J ls todays boo ming nse in home
values. It means your home pro bably

Drifting snow in Marion and Pennsylvania. Over the rest
Hardin counties also caused of the state, snow ranged
temporary closing of some from I to 3 inches, except in
th e southeast , where rain
roads.
Snow depths ranged from 4 continued . ·
The Ohio Edison Co.
to 10 inches in the central
counties nort heast into reported only 1,000 customers
we re sti ll I without oower

er genera~lng stations were·re-

plenished, and the Company
believes that current coat sup.
piles In stO&lt;age are adequate
to enable It to meet the antlcl·
paled electric energy requlr.,.
rnents of Its customers.

Model1458

See all the other models 'eureka Upright- Canister and
Pov.:er Team Sweepers.
HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT. 1ST FLOOR
WHILE STROLLING UP THE STREET-Congenial Annie and Chet Knight, who reside
on West Main street, werecaughtbytbe Sentinel camera as they viewed the flood waters in
downtown Pomeroy Tuesday morning. AMie and Chet can be seen almost every day taking
their daily stroll up the streets of Pomeroy.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

REQUEST STUDY
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Water Development
Authority has been asked by
Gov. James A. Rhodes to
study ways to dispose of
hazardous wastes in Ohio .
The authority would need to
determine the scope of the
problem, location of accept ahl~ waste sites, treatmeiat needed before wastes
can llt' ci.&gt;posed of and plans
for fi nancing disposal, the
gW.'Pf! or :mid.

OVERALL SHOT OF FLOOD 'T" This J ohn Anderson
photo, taken from the roof of Elb.erfeld's Store in

,,

)

'

'
'

Pomeroy, is an overall shot of tbe flood in downtown
Pomeroy taken Tuesday af~rnoo n .
'

,,

.,

�.

· lle1ttlnel, Middlennrt.Pn'lleroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 28, 1979

Washington ·
.
By ·Clarence
Report Miller

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

rift on debt payment

J;y ~~ Angle and Robert Walters
. .-· : WASHINGTON -CNEAl · The growing
. . ....

tension between
· the -Kennedy family and President Carter has produced a
·pi&gt;tentlaUx' serious rift in tl)e·Democratic party's suppos·
. edly _wtifi,ed effot\ to pay' off its 11}-year"Dld debt. ·
.. The · defiCit, Which totalled $8.3 million tn the months
_ immediately following the 1968 presidential election, has
been · grailually repaid during the past decade and now
alnounts tb·siighlly more than $1:4 million. ·
. Virtually 'all-of the remaining amount is attributable to
.
charges inc~rre&lt;) by two Democratic contenders in the 1968
. 'pr 0siden_tial: campaign - $1 million of Hubert H.
. · Hump~r~y·s costs .and $400,000 pf Robert F . Kennedy's
··expenses..

·

·

· . Qffida!s ofthe 'Demcicratic National Conunittee (ONC),
currently-controlled by President Carter's political opera·
tives, last ye-a r mounted a major campaign to wipe out the
deficit prior to the 1980 presidential election.
. The key to ·that effort was a formal decision by the
Federal Elections Conunission (FECJ to grant the DNC a
special exemption from the federal law governing cam·
paign . finjincing., · allowing the solicitation of unlimited
. -amounts of money from wealthy supporters.
· ..'"Fat cats!•· ~losely· identified with both Humphrey and
Carter : responded with. somewhat less enthusiasm than
·.. .pariy ·offlci81fl had !loped for, but their contributions
· nev.,rthele,.s hljve been substantial. Donations and pledges
.. ·rtow ·to\al about $750,000.
.. 'Blit DNC offiCials privately are bitter about what they
view as an unwarranted rebuff of their request for
assistance from Stephen Smith, who manages the Kennedy
£a~nily's finances - political, philanthropic and personal
-from the New York City offices of an organization called
the Park Agency.
DNC Chairman John C. White "ran into a stone wall
when he tried to contact Smith for help," says one Carter
·
political ally who is a party leader.
"'The Kennedys didn't ·produce a single contributor,"
says another DNC leader, "'so we've eanruft'ked all the
money we've gotten so far to pay the Humphrey bUis. We'll
be damned if we'll use Humphrey money to retire
Kennedy's debt."

-Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, [).Mass., Smith's brother-in·
law, was invited to a private White House luncheon held
last summer for "fat cats" believed to be likely supporters
of the debt retirement campaign. But Kennedy's brief visit
was derided by one Carter political operative as merely "'a
c~meo appearance.''
Although the luncheon . hosted by the president was
S.upposed to have been secret, unwanted publicity forced
the' JustiCe Department and FBI to conduct an investigation il)to. 'allegati~ns that the party violated a seldom·
enforced l&lt;!derallaw.
Attorney Gener~l Griffin B. Bell's recent report on that
. probe .cle~red Cai'ter of any illegal activity, but raised
questions abolit.both the .thoroughness of the investigation
and the .ethics of tile president's aides.
Citing FEC rerords, the report identified only four lunch
guests as donors, giving a total of $155,000. Four other
_ guest$, howeve~. pledged to collectively contribute another
$225.;000 to the debt retirement fund.
Fede.ral agef!ts assigned to the investigation interviewed
DNC ofiicials who were fully aware . of the additional
pledges, yet Bell's report contains no mention of that
money,
·
Amolli!. the luncheon guests who have not yet made
· donations ·-,.:as Armand Hanuner, board chainnan of the
OcCidental Petroleiun Corp., who three years ago pleaded
gUilty· to · federal charges related to illegal polltlcal
contributionS.. .
Hammer . Ulegally concealed a $5&lt;1,000 donation to
Rlchatd M. NIXon's 1972 presidential campaign fund, lied
to 'a Si!Dllte·cOininittee aboUt the gift and tried to have his
con_trtbiltion liSted .as another man's gift.
. · But· that. · undistinguished record didn't disqualify
Hammer
.
. from being Carter's guest
. at the White House.

·. -Names •••
in the news
_WS ANGELES (AP)- Vice President Walter Mondale is
scheduled to stand:in.for President Carter at what might have
been a poli!-lcally embarrassing )residential visit to Los Angeles.
·
carter told a -news conference Tuesday he will remain in
Washington thls weekend to resume negotiations with Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin.
·· carte_r had been scheduled to speak at a $1,000--a-plate fund·
raising dinner Friday for the Democratic National Committee.
Brown Is-honorary chairman of the dinner, which is raising
funds . for the -DeiJlocratic Party, not carter. Brown was
scheduled to Introduce Carter and now will introduce Mondale.

MEMPHIS, Tem. (AP)- The Internal Revenue Service has
seized fr~m entertainer Jerry Lee Lewis nearly a dozen
vehicles - including a Rolls Royce - along with furnitue and
stereo equipment.
Eve Miller, public information officer for the IRS In Nash·
ville, said a Uen was filed Tuesday against Lewis for $160,000 in
personal Income taxes. A seizure order followed.
Ms .. Miller said IRS special agents; accompanied by U.S.
Treasury Department agents and DeSoto County, Miss., sheriff's deputies, removed the property from Lewis' Nesbit, Mlss.,
home.
'
Among the articles confiscated were the Rolls Royce, two
tractors, a Corvette, a Cadillac, two antique cars, a motorcycle, a jeep, farm equipment, furniture, stereo equipment,
television sets a'nd an organ.
. Ms. Miller said the articles would be sold at a public sale to
satis(y the tax debt.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP)- A University of Alabama pay·
cholo&gt;glst saJs the late Howard Hughes probably would hlave
been committed to a mental institution ln hls latter years if be
hadn't been a billionaire.
Dr. Raymond Fowler said Tuesday hls six-month study of
Hugheil was based on taped conversations, lelephone calls and
letters by Hughes.
.
Fowler ~d Hughes' mental condition in his final years was
made worse by his use of drugs. He said the condition was
typified 'by bizarre behavior, _includlng refusing to let aides
Wash his hair and lying nude in a dark room for days at a time.
"If you hllli ~ 1!.-...J' living next to you like that, you'd call the
authorities and have him sent to a mental hospital," said
Fowler:
"The man kept everything," said Fowler. "He was a pack
. rat. He kept letters andmemos,hehada stffiographer listen to
hls telephone calls and prepare a summary. Those are some of
the things J Studied and based my evaluation upon."
· ..

'

,tape recordlng In a carnival
CHARGES l'dAY
kickback Investigation .
. BE FILED SOON'
The motion filed Wed·
·.CLEVELAND ·(AP) - An
'
nesday
by Allsistant County
assJ_stant · prosecutor has
Prosecutor
Donald Nugent
asked . -c-uyahoga County
named
reporter
Daniel
cOiruitoo Pleas Judge James
Biddie.
The
Plain
Dealer
and ·
MeGettHck fiJr 'cOntempt..,!·
court action · against a its editors. Nugent said the
.Cleveland- · Plain . Dealer newspaper refused to honor
reportet who re(used to subpoenas asking for Biddle's
surtenc;ler hls . Illites and a notes and tapes.
. ., - .
'

During the past few years · were a reported 611 transmany of our Nation's farm actions · closed by foreign
journals have expressed Investors out of a total
stroog concern regarding the reported figure of 359,979
Influx of mld-east oU money transfers of ownerablp. It
Into American agriculture. should he reiterated however,
Fearful of petri! dollars being 'that these figures did not
used as an inflation hedge to result from offlclBI reporting
purchase much of America's procedures but were obtalned
heartland pastures, fanners through · the monitoring
from Montana to Mobile netw11rk I spoke of earlier.
cautioned everyone Within This belng the ..oase, it Is
earshot about the threat possible that' some other
being posed by foreign in· - foreign purchases were
vestors.
disguised through the use of
Are these fears justified? American purchaslng agents.
There are some here in Curiously, the findlngs also
Congress who maintain that suggest . that most of the
foreign purchases comprise purchases made were by
as much as 2l:l percent of farm Europeans and Japanese,
land Sllles in the United rather than Arab lnteresta as
States.
What
would it was originally thought.
What can we do about thls
be the consequ~.nces _ if !
foreign Investors began situation of foreign In·
extensively buying up vestment in our fatmlands ?.
American farmland? :;"irst of What should we do about it?
lawmakers are
aU, it would create a ~!M.!ng . Many
war for prime farm reluctant to talk abciut an
properties around the outright ban on foreign ln·
*************************************~
country, making it attractive vestment In that they realize
action
could
for many small farmers to such
sell out. In turn, it would precipitate a similar ban _by
By JOHN CUNNIFF
make it aU the more difficult many of the nations which
AP Business Analyst .
for young farmers to get presen~ly permit extensive U.
By WALTER R. MEARS That survey of 1,600 adult implications of amendlng the
AP Special Correspondent Americans, conducted Feb. s- Constitution." That didn't _ NEW YORK ( AP) - When started on farms of their own. S. lnvestrnent withln their
Some states
WASHING TON (AP) 6, showed that 70 percent work either, and the the weather is' blamed you Both results would serve to borders.
For a while there, every favor a constitutional governors wound up where must wonder. Wonder if it further undercut the foun· however, have not been so
of
American hesitant. Mlnnesota for one
politician wanted to be a tax amendment that would they started, advocating a isn't a scapegoat (or poor dation
balanced
federal
budget
by
conception
or
execution.
agriculture,
the
family
farm. ~as p)aced a complete ban op
cutter. Now there are new require balanced Ieder al
Sept.
30,
1981.
Severe
weather
was
among
In
January
of
1977,
ln an purchases by foreigners who '
buzzwords: balance the budgets.
James T. Mcintyre ·Jr., the reasons listed by the attempt to get some in· · do not live ln the United
budget.
. But the same number say
There is little disagreemen! . 1.they don't think the Carter's budget director, said Agriculture Department for formation as to the extent of States.
and
the very sharp lncreases during such investment, the Senate
As for the Federal Govern·
on the desirability of that · politicians who are publicly Congress
goal. There is little but . . committed to balancing the administration should set a January in the prices of Agriculture Committee set up ment, It Is my position that
disagreement on the way to budget' will actually work to spending ceiling and then fruits, vegetables and ~. a monitorlng program to we watch thls subject closely
achieve it.
do it. And by 49 percent to 45 debate the allocation of the That,_ and temporarily tight gather · appropriate data and take whatever action
· through the Department of may be necessary. To
The count of budget balanc- percent, people say they dori 't money. Thatis supposed to be supplies. True, perhaps, but then It's Agriculture's ASCS and facilitate thls approach, the
lng bills and resolutions in· think it is golng to be possible the way it works now, but the
traduced in Congress is to balance federal spending product is ahnost invariably always true th~t s~vere . Extension' Services' field Congress last year adopted
we!ither occurs m wmter. · offices around the country. the Agricultural ForPign
pushing 80. In 28 states, and income in the next few a deficit.
Most of the debate so far Price mcreases are made.by From January 1,1977 to June Investment Act which will
legislatures have adopted years anyhow.
resolutions calling for a
There's a political Issue has been conducted in many fact_ors, of wh1ch 30, 1978,_ the field offices require all foreign persons
constitutional amendment to' .there, but nobody seems quite slogans and generalities weat~er ~ only one· monitored, to the best of their and corporations to officially
ability, the transac.tlons disclose exactly wbat !ann
require balancing federal sure how to handle it. Califor· about constitutional Washmgton IS another. . .
Since the Carter admlnJS-- taking place In their land they own.
budgets. They want a con· nia Gov. Edmund G. Brown amendments and spending
tr~tio~ impo_s~d voluntary respective localities. The ·
As one who strongly supstitutional convention . to Jr . advocates a constitutional ceilings.
It might work better if the guidelines, pnces have wors- findlngs l!llCOVered, though a i ported this legislation, I am
make the change if Congress amendment, by convention if
of
budget ened. In January they grew basis for concern, are not all confident that It will provide
won't act.
Congress doesn't approve one advocates
President Carter opposes and submit it to the stales. He balllllCing looked for places to at an annual rate of n~e- that alanning. In Ohio, for all concerned with a fully
an amendment, but says he lost in his own legislature, cut' spendlng. With or without tenths of one percent, which - instance, out of the reported updated and
accurate
wants a balanced budget. The where the Ways and Means a constitutional amendment, translates to a yearly rate of 7,599 transfers of ownership reading of the extent of this
that took place only sixteen situation. If It ls found that
administration guardedly Committee would not the only ways to balance the nearly 12 percent.
At 12 percent inflation, purchases we;e made by the pace of such Investment
projects _that
federal approve asking for a budget are by spending less
spending will break Into the convention. Instead, it urged or taxing more unless prices ,double in just 6 years. foreign lnvestors. In terms of has accelerated appreciably
black in 1981, but says that Congress to balance the Congress changes the Today s dollar would buJ; ju;rt acreage the foreign buyers over the earlier findlngs we
bookkeeping system.
50 cents worth of grocenes m bought only 4,304 of the will have little alternative but
depends on economic con· budget.
Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., ls 1985.
ditlons and on the need for
Brown tried again Monday
.
689,772 total acres sold. to place some form of
By many calculations, a Nationwide the percentages
new · programs or tax at a meeting of the National proposing just that. He says
restrictions on the purchase
reductions.
Governors' Association, and spending on long-term in· continuation of lnftation at were much the same. There of such properties ln the
future.
An AP-NBC News poll fared no better. Since it was vestments for things like that rate could destroy the
showed 68 percent of . the ciear he couldn't get an highways and weapons American economy, and it
people favor a balanced amendment endorsed, Brown shouldn't count against the might ruin the world too.
Because of this, the Carter
budget even if it requires cuts proposed--the creaton of a deficit. Figured as Hart
admlnistratlon
bas made it
suggests,
the
federal
budget
in federal programs they like. committee "to evaluate the
would be showing a surplus the number one economic
problem of our Ume. War, It
now.
feels, must be waged against
it.
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
That war, however, is going
The Dailv Sentinel
poorly, and it seems clear
IUSPS 115-11101
from the remarks and actions
DEAR DR. LAMB- I know Potassium Balance. Others
By .Dr. Lamar Miller
of business, labor and common salt can be who want this issue can send
8~·~consumers that despite the dangerous and I have been 50 cents with a long, stamped,
DEVOTED TO DIE
dangers and fears, a reducing my use of it in cook· self-addressed envelope for
OU College of Osteopathic Medicin:e
INTERFSI' OF
commitment to the Carter ing and on the table. it. Send your request to me in
MEIGs-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
plan has not been rna&amp;!.
However, what about sea care of this newspaper, P.O.
City Editor
CHEST PAINS
The
AFL-CIO
seeks
a
court
salt?
Is it dangerous, or !lox 1551, Radio CityStatlon,
DAVID BUSKIRK
QUESTION: I frequently get pains in my chest. How can I
decision on the right of Wash· would it be all right to use it? · New York, NY 10019.
Adnqlatog Manager
Published dally excepl Saturday'
tell if these pains are due to mild heart attscks or some other
ington to enforce the
. DEAR READER - Salt
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am a
by The Ohio Valley 'Publishing
cause?
·
guidelines. Many large isn't necessarily dangerous. 29-year-old male. After
Compuny·Multimedia, Inc.,
Jll
ANSWER: In medicine, there is hardly anythlng which is Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769. companies declined to pledge It depends upon whether or undergoing two recent ex·
BWiines.s Office Phone 992- 2156.
always - 100 percent - typical or true. However; several Editorial
Phone 992·2157.
. ·their allegiance; many small not you need it. If a person ploratory operations, I was
features of chest pain should lead you to think of a heart attack
Second class postage paid 11.t
companies have ignored the suffers from salt depletion, as informed that I could never
rather than something else. Pains due to coronary occlusion Pomeroy, Ohio.
guides.
a heavy laborer might with have children. rt·seems that
National advertising represenare usually located over the breast bone (sternum) rather than tative,
And consumers? They have excessive sweating, then it although my testicles do proL.andon Associates, 3101
on the right or left side of the chest. The pain may also radiate Euclid Ave., aeveland, Ohio 44115.
been buying up a storm sug· might be useful to replace the duce a normal amount of
Subscription rates : Delivered by,
from this central area to the jaw, the ear, neck or left arm. ·carrier
gesting
they believe what's boily's nonnal salt content. spenn, the passage that car)"here available 7$ cents per'
Having been in practice for 20 years l have seen all sorts of week. By Motor Route where carrier- expensive now will be cheap We all have salt in our blood ries the sperm from the
One month
unusual (atypical) locations of the pain associated with heart serviceBynotmallavailable,
by tomorrow's standards.
and tissues and it is essential testicles ·to the penis (vas
in Ohi(l and W. Va.:
attacks, such as one man I remember who complained only of 13.25.
One Year, $27 .50; Six months,
. Consumers have been using to our health. Without an ade· deferens) is not there. I would
a "toothache." Most of my patients with heart attacks (90 $14.50; Three months , $8.50;
increasing amounts of credit quate amount of it, we would like to know if my chances for
Elsewhere $32.00 year; Six months
percent or more ), however, complained primarily of pain $17.00;
in order to continue buying. go into chemical imbalance reproduction are completely
Three month.s, $9 .00.
located in the breast hone area of the chest.
Subscriptioo price Includes Sunday1
And they've been dipping into and die.
hopeless at this time. If so, is
The characteristic description of the chest pain is its nro~s-§el}!lneL
savings too.
Most people do use too there any' hope in the near
quality. Usually it is described as "vice-like" or crushing.
much salt or certainly more future?
Quite often a person characterizes the pain as squeezing or like
f
·than they need. There are a
DEAR READER - The
something heavy sitting on the chest. It is quite rare when
variety of medical problems, answer to your question
sharp or stabbing type pains are a result of a heart attack.
such as heart failure, that are depends a lot on what was
QUESTION: l have been experiencing some chest ,-----=--------------=-, associated with retention of really found during the exdiscomfort when I shovel snow after the recent heavy snow·
fluid and are adversely af· ploratory surgery. Men who
fails. Does this indicate heart trouble?
fected by salt.
.
have had their vas deferens
ANSWER: Yes. Chest pains due to a heart attack most
Common salt, as we use it surgically severed can
typically begins either during or following exertion or
on the table, is sodium sometimes have the sterlliza·
exercise. Strong emotional feelings can also aggravate the
chloride. In that pure state, it tion operation reversed. Of
pain. On the other hand, relief is usually obtained with rest or
has nothing else added. When course, the less damage done
stopping the ~vent which precipitated the paln.
pure salt is obtained from an to the vas deferens, the easier
The heart pain of this nature which typically reappears
area without anything else, it is to accomplish this.
again during similar exercise is called angina pectoris and
trace amounts of lndine are
'the vas deferens is just a
may he a warning of a major attack in the future. Much less
added so people will not ha -tube. A vasectomy literally
commonly this pain .may occur during the night, awakening
iodine deficiencies. Impure cuts and blocks the tube to .
the person from sleep. The attscks are called angina decubitus
salt may contain a variety of dam up the sperm cells.
and usually suggest a more serious heart condition.
other elements besides
l would think your best bet
However ,If the heart attack ls a major one which causes a
iodine. That's true of sea salt. for reconstruction to provide
permanent injury (Infarct) to the heart muscle, relief will
It is still sodium chloride, . a tube or passageway might
require narcotics and specialized medical care. When a major
and if•you had a medical con- be with one of the new
heart attsck is in progress the patient will very often sweat
dition that meant you should microsurgical techniques.
profusely and may even lose consciousness or become
restrict salt intake, you cer· It's worth a consultation with
mentally confused. The person having a major heart attack
tainly should not use it. If such a urological surgeon.
(myocardial infarct) may also go into shock .
you're a normal, healthy per· Since you've already had ex·
QUESTION: If my chest pains go away when I stop
son and wantto use sea salt in ploratory operations, I
exercising, do I need to see a doctor?
reasonable amounts, then It preswne that there ought to
ANSWER: It would be the smartest thlng to do.. The
should not harm you any be quite a bit of lnfonnatlon
management of even the most "minor" heart attacks is best
more than the ordinary salt that he could use_ to deter·
left to the judgment of a physician since he or she can evaluate
you buy at the grocery store. mine whether there Is
the many factors affecting the total health of the patient.
Don't expect any miracles anything that could be done
·Treatment aimed at preventing future attacks of a more
from It because there are .no now.
•
serious nature may be started. Such preventative measures
real beneficial effects from
Even If the answe~ you
can include the use of medications like nitroglycerin or
sea salt that you should not be receive at this tl.nw is no, I
Pr-opranalol and when appropriate a recommendation fbr a
able to get from ordinary would thl!lk there might be
change in habit or lifestyle. Further, if the physician suspects
sali.
some posslbilttles in the
these angina pains may already indicate s.!rlous heart trouble,
To give you more infonna· future becaWM! ol the rapid
he or she may order an angiograr,; (x-ray of the coronary
lion about problems with salt, advanC!eS in t:eCQDStructiV"
arteries), and depending on the resur:s of the tests, may
I am sending you The Health surgery and the 1111e af
suggest a surgical by-pass operation~ ' described in previous
Letter number 10--12, Sail: microsurgical techniques.
columns.
Your fltal Sodium and

Jfy HAL BOCK

Budget

halanc~g

pushed

"Th~ev&gt;lre homing in on our racket," quipped
"E,~ixldlr's playing second base with makeup

Bob Hope.
on."
comedian with the ski slide nose and repertoire of one·
/""-·· was relaxing in his tower suite at the Waldorf-Astorls
· and talklng about how sports celebrities suddenly had taken
over show business. .
.
_•• Jack Nicklaus is on te)eVtslon more than I am," he said. '"If
he's not hawking credit' cards or something, there's his wife,
Barbara, plugging a microwave oven. · . ·
.
· "It's gettlng 8o it's hard tO play a golf course that Nicklaus
didn't build. l played T\)l'onto recently and ·somebod;y said,
'You know, this is a Nicklaus course.'_! went to 8irJnl1tgham
and they told me, 'This Js·one that Jack built."' .
.
Hope's lament is strictly ln -jest. There 'is no bigger jock In
the country thari this Indefatigable, '15-year'Oid showman. Now
that he no longer IS making whoopee with Docothy Lamour .in
Utose "!tOad" shows, he doesn't feel comfor:table unless he is
surround!!&lt;! by famous ·athletes ..
Such is the case Friday night when he hostS "The Bob Ho~
American Youth ~wards Show" (NBC.TV, 8:3()--9:30 p.m. ·
EST). Thirteen sports stars are among the.l7 guests being honored. ..
·
·
·
..
They inClude, among others, Boston's $5.4 million outfielder,
Jim Rice; golf sensation Nancy Lopez; t_ennis champion Chris
Evert; jockey Steve cauthen; Penit State quarterback Chuck
Fu&amp;ina, and the Houston Oilers' hard--ruMing Earl ~bell .
All, picked by a panel of 100 sports editors, are under 25
years of age and, according to Hope, exempUfy "the best qual·
ities of American youth and American sports."
Hope found his niche in show business but could not divest
himself from sports. He became an avid golfer, a favorite
partn,e r of five United States presidents, and may be the only

blamed

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

.

..,

.'"
.

I•'·'

/.&lt;•

Unda O'Brien, manager; Tammy Meadows, lisa Deem
and Becky Michael. Second row, left to right, Tonja
Salser, Debbie Michael, Missy Van Meter, Teresa Hill,
Kim Maynard, Cindy Evans, Laren Wolfe, Mel Weese and
Michelle Johruion.

Catcher Christmas impres.sive

TAMPA, Fla . (AP) Cincinnati Reds catcher
Johnny Bench, who declined
to follow Pete Rose into the
free agent market, thinks
that his former teammate
has set major league baseball
salaries splnning out of sight.
"There's no way Pete
would be worth $800,000 a
year to the Reds," said
Bench. "What he's worth to -

Be rry s w0 rId

..

'' '

UNBEATEN SQUAD- Southern's junior high girls
team has finished its regular season at 1~. The squad
will be playing in the Trimble Invitational Tournament.
Team members were first row, left to right, Becky
Johnson, Tina Hill, Rhonda Smith, Larry Wolfe, coach;

a year to Reds'...Bench

1 '
1

-

. '·

'Rose not worth $800,000

Health Review

B

·Sparky hasn't
talked to Yanks

· _flavored with big name stars, such as 18-year-old jockey Cau·
-- -- · - -then. .
By TERRY KINNEY
"What a cool kid," he added. "I told him I was sorry about
AP Sports Writer
hls little slump. 'What do you mean little?' he shot back. 'I lost
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Steve
110 straight races.' I said, 'That's okay, I've made 60 movies Christmas, naturally known
without an Academy Award.'"
-as Christmas Tree, knows
As a showman and sports buff, Hope has entered the ring this isn't his year to break in
with Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis and Rocky Marciano and once with the Cincinnati Reds.
fought Sugar Ray Robinson in the latter's backyard for a Probably not next year,
$100,000 charity.
either.
"O.J. Simpson is probably the most polished superstar I've
The best he can hope for ls
had on any of m)l shows - it's as if he's made ·for show Nashville, the Reds' Class AA
business, runs right through it." Hope said. "But you would be club, this year.
surprised at who has impressed me most in front of the mike After playing at Eugene
Ben Hogan, the golfer, old Poker Face, and Don Larsen, who.. two years ago and Shelby last
pitched that perfect World Series game for the Yankees. Both · season, Christmas expects to
were great.
step up to Cla115 AA baseball
"But, in my book, they're all great."
at Nashville.

HEALTH·

r----------------------------------------,

-~--------------------------------J,

AP Sj,orts Writer

Editorial opinions· ~ Weather
**

The DaUy Sentinel

•

***********************************************

*
*
********

SPORTS

Sports World

'

I.

.·

Today's'

IN
..·Oemo

..

J- ·1.ne. lJeuy
U.. Wecuw&gt;*"'v.)'eb. :111,1979
- . .lienllllel,MtdCIIHW'-I'CIII1ei'OY.
. .
.

But just getting invited to
the Reds' . sprlng training
camp has been encouraging
to . the young ·catcher from
Orlando via Oklahoma
Southwestern Junior College.
"I had a real good year at
Shelby (N .C.)," Christmas
said. "I guess they (Ute Reds'
brass) thought I did too or I
wouldn't be here.''
Actually, the Reds have all
the catchers they need, with
Johnny Bench healthy and
two other veterans on the
roster . Manager John
McNamara said Christmas
was brought to spring
training merely to help out,
since there are many more
pitchers than catchers.
But Christmas, a carpenter
during the off season, surely
made a good impression on
McNamara when the new
manager watched the
catchers take batting
practice Tuesday.
"I'm mostly a line-drive
hitter," Christmas said. "!
hit .265 last year, and that
was a good year for me. I
caught 120 games and was
gettlng pretty tired toward
the end.''
·

the Phillies is their affair." ridiculous.'
Rose signed with the
"You can't fault anyone for
Phillies after failing to reach trying to get what he can, but
agreement with the Reds on a this isn't going to work in the
new contract and entering the long run. In the motion
free agent draft.
picture business, the star
"The problem in Cihclnnati may get $3 million, but the
is that if Rose is worth majority of the others work
$800,000 to the · Reds the~e for scale. That apparently
would be too many other lsn 't going to work in Eagleettes lose
players who would have to be baseball."
put into that category,"
At the end of the 1977 base- tournament game
Bench said.
hall season, Bench and Rose
It isn't only Rose that were in the same contractual
Albany's junior high girls'
Bench is talking about. ·
situation, but Bench decided
team
defeated Eastern's
"What Pete managed to do against playing out his
high
girls, 24·23 in a
junior
was
create
a
new
set
of
com·
option.
Tuesday's College
double
overtime
to take the
parative numbers," said
"I looked at the pluses and
Basketball Scores
first
game
of
the
trimble
By The Associated Press
Bench. "You saw what minuses and decided I didn't
Junior
High
Tournament.
EAST
ln the Dave Parker want to go through the year
Dartmouth 77, Harvard. 74 happened
T. Bartlett led Albany with
negotiations
once Pete's with the crowds at Riverfront
Ithaca 101, Oswego St. 51
15
points whl!e L. Francisco
Stadium knowing I wasn't
Navy 70, Randolph-Macon figures liecame known.
had
four.
65
"The problem with salaries signed," he said. "I didn't
Pacing
the Eagleettes was
SOUTH
being what they are today, feel I would would have the
Alabama St. 107, Auburn- guys who aren'tclose to being . support
Dee
Dailey
with nine points
of the media or the
Mont. 76
while
Rhonda
Riebel had six.
David Lipscomb 77. U. of superstars, and in some cases fans, and I thought it would
·Poor
foul
shooting
led to
the South 59
aren't even regulars, are de· have been a difficult year .''
Eastern's
downfall.
The
Presbyterian 58, Gardner- manding and getting big
Bench said his area of comWebb 55
Eagleettes
bit
just
three
of
16
money.
There
are parison during negotiations
. MIDWEST
at
the
charity
strip~s.
journeyman
infielders
was what seconl baseman
DePaul
88 ,
Ala .Dailey led Eastern's
Birmingham 77
making $150,000. That's Joe Morgan was making.
'Evansville 77, St. Joseph's,
"I didn't even lmow that rebounds with nine rebounds.
Ind . 72
exact
figure, but I 'knew the Eastern finished its regular
Marquette 83, South
National
general area and used it as a season at 3-4.
Carolina 64
By Quarters
Michigan Tech 68, SW
Baskelball Association
basls of my negotiating," be
Eastern
2 0 4 10 4 3-23
Minn. St. 55
At AGlance
said. "I agreed to a five-year
Wis. -Eau Claire 61, Wls. Albany
3 7 2 4 4 4- 24
By The Associated Press
contract on that baSI's."
Eastern Conference
·~
Stout 52
Atlantic Division
Bench began discussions
Youngstown St. 112 ,
Ashland 73
W L Pet. GB · without the help of Reuven
SOUTHWEST
Washington 41 .19 .683 1 Katz, the · attorney who
VOTED MVP
34 25 .576 6 / 2
Southwestern 95, Te•as Phil a .
MEPHIS,
Tenn. (AP)
New Jersey 31 29 .517 10
figured so prominently in
Lulheran li4
Pat
Cummings,
second
New York
27 38 .415 16'12 Rose's negotiations.
·
FARWEST ·
leading
scorer
in
the
history
Boston
24
36
.400
17
The
10-tlme
National
Adams St. 86, Fort Lewis 84
Colorado Coli. 113, Neb.
Central Division
League all-~~tar seleclion said of the University of Cln·
San Ant.
37 25 .597
Wesleyan 90
33 38 .541 3'1&gt; he will live with the contract cinnati, was voted the most
. Nevada-Reno 86, Portland liouston
Atlanta
34 29 .540 3'12 even through he would like to valuable player in the Metro
!65
26 36 .419 11
be earning more money. _ Conference by sports writers
i S. Colora~o 72, N. Colorado Cleveland
Detrblt
23 39 .371 14
"I want to do things that and broadcasters.
'67
TOURNAMENTS
New Orleans 21 43 .328 17
are right for myself," he said.
The li-foot·9 senior forward
Western Conference
Big Eight
led
the conference in scoring
Midwest
Division
'
"!
didn't
want
to
see
tblngs
First Round
40 23 .635
turn out the way they have in with 24.7 points and 11.1
Missouri 92, Oklahoma St . Kan. City
Denver
35 30 .528 6
contracts, but that's beyond rebounds per game. He
70
Kansas 91, Iowa St. 70
Indiana
i6 37 ·413 14
my control and nobody knows received approximately 75
26 37 .413 14
Oklahoma 77, Colorado 57 Milw.
percent of the votes cast.
23 29 .371 16'/2 '!'here it will stop."
Kansas St. 61, Nebraska 60, Chicago
Pacific
Division
~ ot
Los Ang.
39 24 .619
Eastern Eight
Seattle
37 25 .597 1'12
First Round
Phoenix
36 26 .681 21/2
Rutg&lt;lrs 67, Penn St. 57
33 31 .516 6112
Pift $5, George Washington San Diego
Portland
31 30 .508 7
ao
iNCREASE YOUR INCOME
West Virginia 73. Duquesne Golden St.- 28 36 .438 11'12
The -Professionally trained Man or
Tuesday's
Games
59
New
York
101
,
Golden
State
Woman
always Gets The Promotion
Villanova
7il ,
'19
Massachusetts 73. ot
and Higher Income!
Atlanta 125, Houston 111
Missouri Va iley
Accounting
Chicago
124,
Detroit
117
Conference
Denver 121, Seattle 106
First Round
Secretarial
San Diego 124, Indiana 107
Indiana St. 94, W. Te•as St.
General Office
Los Angeles 122, Kansos
~
.
- - Business Administration
.
S. IllinOis 71. Creighton 67 · City 114
· Portland J-18,. Philadelphia
Wichita St . 70, Drake 69
ENROLL NOW
·
New Mexico St. 82, Tulsa 79 115
·
"It's
_
Better
To~
A
G~C
~raduate
Wednesday's'Games
NCAA Distrlci II
New Orleans at Boston
Than To Compete With Qle.
..
First Round
Chicago at Washington .
E. Mennonite 89, Liberty
Write. Call. or Visit for lnformatton
New York at San Antonio
Baptist~
Cleveland at Milwaukee
WVIACTaurney
Denver at Houston
Flr,st Round
Indiana at Phoenix
Alderson -Broaddus 82,
Spring Valley Plata
·
Ph . 446-4367
Kansas City at San Diego
Glenville St. 77
State
Reg.
No.
71-02-08328
..
Philadelphia
at
Seattle
Fairmont St. 83, Davis &amp;
Courses Are Approved For V eteran~ Tra1n1ng
Thursday's Game
Elkins 64
Golden State at Allan!•

'I
G

Christmas, 21, has . been
called "Tree" since his high
school days. He was drafted
out of high school by the
Minnesota Twins as a third
baseman -but didn't sillll.
After a year at junior
college, the National League
Reds convinced Christmas to
sign and then made a catcher
out of him.
"I had good hands and a
good arm , but not much
speed," Tree admitted.
"Also, I used to have a weight
problem.! weigh 190 now, but

CINCINNATI (AP) -Former
Cincinnati
Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson
said he has Mt ta!lted to the
New York Yankees about
becoming the club's manager
in 19110 and said he. knew.
nothing about repocts that be
was under consideration.
" AS I stand here "
Anderson said during 'a
telephone interview T'uesday
night f~om his home in
Thousand Oaks, calif., "!
have not talked to the New
York Yankees.' ~ .
However, Anderson, who
was fired by the Reds on Nov.
28, 1979, said earlier he would
be managing a contendlng
major league team by 1980.
"I haven 't talked to
anybody connected with the
Yankees in two months- you
have my word," said
Anderson.
"Lem - Yankee Manager
Bob Lemon - caUed me two
days after I was fired to offer
hls condolences. Somebody
else from the Yankees called
me and wanted to know if IllY
family and me were all right
at this moment. I told hilil I
was as sound as a jaybird."

But Anderson refused to
identify the second Yankee
caller. ·
~'I

can't," Anderson said.

There has been speCulation
lately that Anderson might be
picked as Lemon 's successor.
Former· Yankee manager
Bllly Martin was the .
previously announced
succeSsor by owner George
Steinbremer, but there is
talk now that Martin may noi ·
get the job.
"There has to be a tremendous amount of talk be·
cause Billy wants it in
writing. l imagine there are
rumors going around.
"But every year there are
two or three managers on the
hot seat. I don't want one of
them thinking I'm after his
job," said Anderson.
Anderson was asked if Oak·
land A's owner Charles ·
Finley had approached him.
"No. He asked me in 1972
and I told him I wasn 't interested."

the last couple of years l
weighed about 210 when I
reported to camp . For a
while, I was the fat man on
the team."
But that's all changed now.
"Just being here has given
me lots of incentive," Christ·
LEBANON RESULTS
mas said. "Baseball's always
LEBANON,
Ohio (AP)
been my life.
Heidi
Ho
Tux
won
the $1,100
"It's always been my
featured
claiming
pace
mile
dream to be a majoc league
~ - Fishing Tackle
in
the
eighth
race
in
a
threeballplayer, and now that
·and Rods
dream's come true. I've got a horse, photo finish at
and Reels
Lebanon Tuesday night. The
foot in the door, anyway."
•
•
Guns and
wlnner paid $5, $3.80 and
Reloading
$2.40.
J!Ball Gloves
Cheryl N. Direct placed,
• Camping
returning $4 and $2.80, and
Royal Louann paid $3.80 for
Equipment
TAMPA , Fla. (AP)- New there for Dave Concepcion at show.
.,Archery
Reds
Manager
John the end of last season when
Dr. Lamonica and .Yankee
iii Indoor Games
McNamara indicated that Concepcion had health W. W. paid $23.80 on the
e1we
have Gt tt
outfielder Ken Griffey will problems.
double combination of 6-&lt;l.
'
Certificates
probably replace Pete Rose
Griffey showed up at camp
The crowd of 1,439 bet
as Cincinnati's lead-i!ff hitter. two days early to get Jl50,219.
601 Main St.
"It'll probably be Griffey acquainted with McNamara,
l
•t
.
Pleasant,
W. Vi.
or Dave Concepcion who was named to replace
probably Griffey," said the fired Sparky Anderson.
McNamara .
Pitcher Tom Seaver was
COACHES MEETING
"I'll look forward to it," expectedtomissseveraldays
SET
.
said Griffey, who batted because of the illness of his
The first meeting of the
Acro~s from Cour1house
behind Rose for five years. wife, Nancy; In Greenwich, season
for
coaches,
PHONE
Rose is now with the Conn.
managers and interested
~75-1988
Philadelphia PhiUies.
Pitchers got batting' parents of PomeroY Youth
However, there has been no practice for the first time League will he held March 2, 1 ,..,,pen SUnday-i. p.m.'6 p.m.
Monday Ttiru Saturday
-decision about whether . Tuesday
as
weather at 7 p.m. at Pomeroy Legion
,_ _,.. ~&amp;p.m.
Griffey, a right fielder, will conditions improved.
ball.
move to center. He played

,.

Griffey is top ·choice

'-

--

5/8" PARTICAL

BOARD
4'x8' SHEETS

.'

'•

.,
'-

.

.'

.,,

ONLY
•"

.99

.' .'

·~ .

' .~·

EACH

'c '

•. v
••
' 'I•
,.

B

C

'GAu.IPOUS·BUSINESS. COU£GE

...

..,

. ~ .....

• •. I

'".," '
' "!

,

t

•I~

�•'
••

; 5-'111e DaUy Sentinei,Middleport-Pomero)l, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 28,2979

, - ·1ne uauy ,::,enunel , MtoOleporL-Yorneroy, u ., weanesuay , r ·eo. ~, 1~1 ~

Indiana State passes
first tourney exam

Jack Nicklaus makes .rare
tour appearance thi&amp;&gt;·week

'

Connors
to head Ohio 's Cancer Fund Crusade
·-

. The a~nual fund;ratslng· $5,994,6!4 was contributed to dr~g t;eatinents for ad- American Cancer Society."
and educational crusade of the American Cancer Society · vanced cancers of the colonThe Kick-&lt;lff Meeting for
the · Am~ric!ln Cancer · in the 8il Ohio counties. Out o( rectum• and stomach have
·Society, Oblo DIVIIIon, Inc., ·each doll8r contributed last been repo~¢.
will be headed In 1978 liy Mike .yelll' in Ohio, 18~ cents was
,..- Now more than half o!
CGnnors, nationally known used in service to the cancer the. chUdren with leukemia
tehivlillon and fllm per- patient. Nineteen cenll; of · who are · treated with drug
IOIIailtY· The annotmceinent every dollar wa8 used In and radiation lherapy are
. was made by Robert · L.' edueating. the · public and . free from symptoms 5 to 10
NEW YORK (AP) - An
Westerhelde; M.O,. ~.M. Sc,,. health .· pro!essionBb about years after treatment. Thirty ebtimated 110 million people
·Ohio Dlvllion pre8idelit.c-n:cer - Its prevenilon, · . years ago tli~ . average sur- saw all or part of " Roots : The
CGnnorl will lead' the more' early detection and treat- viva! rate for ..children with Next Generations," ABC's
than 180,000· American 'ment. .
.
.
.
. acute' lymphocytic leukemia research department says,
C~~~~ter Society voltint~rs in · . Nearly .28 cents of every .was.only two· months.
compared with about 130
Ohio In aqrjlaiatng the · cont~ibuled ·dollar was InIn ad!lltion'to lhe.programs . million for Ute record·se~g
$8,325;000 'goal ·set for .!979 . . vestee! In research· abned -t carried oll in ' Ohio, fourteen
These · vcilunteer.s . Will be · ltndlng · new . 'and effective cents from each dollar
h
h /d.
· dlatrllnittnli . educational methOds of cancer preven- contributed was put toward Infant S ower e
.
A shower honoring- -Nicole
Mike Connors materiill as wellu asldnaa for tion, detect'ion, t rea tment and educa tl on aI an d servtce
contributions . for the con- rehabilttatlon . Advances programs on the national Dawn Lee, infant daughter of
,tlnuatlon of the Society's have been made on the · level.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Lee, was
three-pronged
program
areas
research
front
which
rea!-.
"We
are
hoping
for
a
held
recently at the home of
Hoog Kong was ceded to
of
research,
education
and
firm
the
American
Cancer
successful
Crusade
this
year
her
aunt,
Britain as a Crown colooy In service to the cancer patient. Society's involvement tn' the in Meigs County in order to Clifton. Mrs. Marcia Klein,
'1841.
.
Last year a record total of cancer research field.
continue our services to the
Theme of the shower was
.-----------~ - It Is now possible In people of the area," said Winkin, Blinkin and Nod .
many cases to cure 11 fonns Mary O'Brien, 1979 Crusade c k
·
,a e, tce cream, potato
f
kin Chairman. "House -to : h·ouse
crusaders will be calling on
I, .
I
Ten others such as breast . you April 1-April 15 to Lee, Mrs. Homer Jeffers,
Charlene Hoeflich
cancer and bone cancer can provide you with educational Mrs. Judy Young, Mrs. Bonl be controlled wheri detected materials on cancer and to nie Varian and Tammy, Mrs.
early.
ask for your generosity in Ann Lyons, Mrs. Audrey
. If eating pas become a bad-weather pastime for you, It's
Promising combination making a contribution to the Grant, Mrs. Ann Blake and
time to think spring and slbn down!
·
·
Ja ckie, Mrs. Sue Swisher,
It's not easy, we know, trying to make that switch irom high
Mrs. Robert Hussell, Mrs.
caloforie ftoodshin to lowtcalorie ones. Temptattion for "just a taste" ,... . . . .. .. . . ... . . .... .. . .. . . ... .. . .... . . . .. .. . .... . . ... . . ... . . .. . . . .... .. . .. . . . .. Nancy Jackson, Miss Katie
some g swee, more often·than no tw:ns into ''thlit was :;:;·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:-:-:·:-:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·&gt;&gt;:·:::: Oliver, Miss Evelyn Lockett,
sQgood,justalittlemore.''
.
.·
..
. · ~ :~:
Mrs. Cindy Litchfield, Miss
We're a nation of overweight people. struggling with one low- :;:;
Laurie James, Miss Teresa
cal?rie diet after another trying !0 achieve weightlPSS without (
) Smith, Mrs. Gerrie Lee.
giVlng up too many of the good things.
. .
::::
.
:::: Hostesses were Mrs. Klein
And it seems it can't be done. The piece of candy that you {
and Bubby, Mrs. Cancty Van
slipintoyourmouthwhennooneislooklngcanupsetanentire :;:;
ll }:: : Meter,andMrs.BettyLee.
day of dieting. Sure we talk a big gaine about dieting and los- ;::;
e
e
e
Y
0
H Sending gifts were Mrs.
jng weight, buttoo many times it's just that -a game- and for =·=·
&lt;· Sharon Roush, Mrs. Vicki,
personal, emotional and health reasons 0! the overweight perJeffers and Carla, Mrs. Dora
son, it shouldn't be.
. ·
Vari Meter, Mrs. Debbie Nor'WELCOME TO·THE 20TH CENnlRY'
thup, Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson,
- Usually It takes a reduction to about a thousand calories a
day to actuaUy lose weight. That means an average serving of
IS THE WORD FOR MAIDEN AUNT
lylrs. Clara Williams, Mrs.
cake with Icing with its 400 or so calories, can ruin an other- DEAR HELEN.
Icy Rickard , Mrs. Mildred
wise low-calorie day.
We've adjusted to our daughter's live-in love, .though we Fowler, and Mrs. Jeannine
This suggestion !rom a friend. Write down everything you can't wholeheartedly approve. He's a nice person, they're Johnson.
eat and when you eat it for several days, and tiJen use that as a adult, sothat'sit.
guide for changing your eating babtts. Remember raw .The problem• My maiden aunt, in her I!Os, is coming for a
vegetables and fruits have good food value and are low carorie. VISit. W~en she w~,s here 10 years ag~, she went m shock over
Hl!ving a ready supply at fingertip is a necessity for the nib- • our gtrl s cut-off Jeans, and she hasn t softened, according to
bier
her letters. .
·
·
.
·
Since she'll he here over a month how do we protect Auntie
Cultural programs are a part of every Beta Sigma Phi ·from "t!'" awful truth"' (The years haven't softened her
meeting and for Xi Ganuna Mu this month, Debbi Buck wrote tongue etthe~. ) -FEARING AN EXPWSION
a poem which she titled "Expansion."
DEAR F ~ ·
"
"They say that we're expanding
~rreclton: You;;~ean, How can I protect myself from AunTo horizons near and far,
tie s shaty ton~e ·
, .. . . .
We no longer ride on horses
Look, if you ve accepted your daughter s hve-m sttualton,
But go speeding in our car
why try to hide it from others? Welcome this 80-plus aunt to the
·
20th century, and if she harps, pointedly change the subject.
It's possible 10 years has mellowed her more than you think
"And it's heensucha short time ·
-H.
.
Since they put men on the moon,
And before we all will know it
DEAR HELEN.
-- They'll reach
. Mercury -and soon!
We were talking.to friends about a very popular (and posh)
•
here in town. I said we seldom went there because
restaurant
; "There's a jet they call the Concord
they
don
't
take
feservations, but have you sign in, then wait at
That flies twice the speed of sound,
the
bar
until
your
name comes up. The wait is just too long
You can get to Jolly England
unless
you're
a
lush,
Before you leave the ground.
One friend described how he got around this: Wait near the
desk
and respond quickly when a name - any name, with your
"We can speed'up all our cooking
number
of people in the party - is announced. Then follow the
With the handy microwave,
hostess
before
the "right " people make it!rom the bar. You're
So that we may do the laundry
hardly
ever
caught,
be says, because by the time explanations
.''· With t1ie extra time we save.
are made at the desk, you'rewell seated and hard to trace.
·
Is
this
common
practice,
and
how
could
it
be
stopped]
"We have dishwashers and dryers
.SHOCKED
TrashcompactorsandT. V.
'
DEAR SHOCKED:
We need only push a button
Where cheating is made easy, cheating ' will happen; I'd
_ For our favorite soap to see.
guess there's at least one pushy Impersonator for every 25 people at your average posh and popular-no-reservation
''We can view the Pope in Italy
restaurant.
The wars in torn Iran,
To cure this bltght, managers might take a tip from pizza
Dung Chow Ping has filled our screens
parlors
where you draw a number and wait your turn. Seems
"' Even the Russians are in our span .
plebian,
but it works. -H.
'.
~- ''Then there's always the computer ·
DEAR HELEN.
' And it seelllli like quite &amp; sin,
You asked if we readers can remember any item that was
,, That a work of such complexity
more
expensive 20 or 30 years ago than it is in these infla'' Could overbill us time and again .
tionary times. How about air fare? Cross-&lt;:ountry supersaver
r
. rates are about the only bargain around these days, sometimes
· "As for music, It's expanded
·
over $100 less than in the 1950s. -TRAVELER
·
" From hi-fi to grander sound,
DEAR
HELEN.
''.Mel the beat ranges from blue grass
Yes, long-distance phone calls are cheaper now than then -if
. "'Disco Fever all around. .
you direct-dial on night or weekend rates. During the same
period first-&lt;:lass pos~l rates have multiplied 700 percent!
"But to me the most amazing
·THE
VOICE
' Is expansion of a different kind,
:' It's the ever Increasing expanstoo
LB.
~ Of my once slim, trim, waistline."

only other appearances prior victory in
Bob Hope
to the Masters.
Desert Classic, still Is
hedul he bothered by a hand injury.
.h
e
Dave Hill told officials be
It's the IIg test sc
ever has played, and many
players feel his schedule is so faees surgery and will be out
restricted that he will be for a couple of weeks. And
unable to perform at a peak Tom Kite is sidelined with the
in the Big Four tournaments flu. All three withdrew early
- the Masters, U.S. and in the week.
British Opens and the PGA.
Bruce Uetzke, a recent · •
But, noted Tom Watson _ winner in · Tucson, is
the .heir appareot to Nicklaus' recovering from a muscle l
longtime role as golf's. pull and some extensive .•
premier performer - "he dental work.
Most of the game's other
' has a lifetime record of
coming up with an answer to . leading lights are oil hand lor
his critics.''
the Thursday start '1!1 the
With the legendary P8!mer chase fOr the $45,000 fil;st
serving as host, the prize.
Chief among them are the
tournament has drawn an
extremely strong field _ but winners of five !979 tournawas hurt by the withdrawal of ments - leading moneythree ailing players.
winner Lon Hinkle, LaMy
PGA and World Cup cham- Wadkins, Fuzzy Zoeller,
pion John Mahaffey, who Hubert Green and Ben ;
opened the year with a Crenshaw·
•
Other standouts include
Mac McLendon, who won the
I
I 1978 Citrus title on a different ~
1 course, U.S. Open champion
Andy North., Lee Trevino,
Tom Weiskopf, Lee Elder,
Ray Floyd, Mark Hayes, Bill
Kratzer! and Jerry Pate.
Pro Hockey
Two of the top title threats
At AGtance
are Watson, twice a runnerBy The Associated Press
up this season, and Andy •
National Hockey League.
Bean, who has challenged
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
strongly In three events.
w I t ptsgf ga
Palmer, who has yet to
N. Y. Islanders
make
a cut in four previoliS
39 11 10 88 274 160
appearances
this year, has
N. Y. Rangers
. 34 20 6 74 249 206 had several good practice
Atlanta 33 22 6 72 245 207 sessions over his own course
Phlla.
27 19 13 67 194 183 and hopes to have a jammedSmythe Division
Chicago 23 26 11 57 1Bl 210 up weekend schedule. Should
he qualify for the final two
Vancouver
19 33 9 47 177 229 rormds Saturday and Sunday,
St. Louis 14 40 8 36 183 271 be is scheduled to combine
Colorado 13 41 8 34 169 264
his playing time with work as
Walas Conference
a television commentator for
Adams Division
Boston 34 17 10 78 240 192 NBC.
Buffalo . 25 23 11 61 193 191
Toronto 24 25 11 59 191 190
Minn .
23 27 9 55 196 197 Girls tourney

AP Gillf Writer
ORLi\1'100, Fla. (AP) Jack Nicklaus, beginning his
' .
•
serious preparations for tbe
~ers, makes one of his
·~ ·
rare Tour apppearancs this
week in old friend and golfing
, .. foe Arnold Pabner's Bay Hill
· Citrus Open .
Pabner, owner of the 7,102. yard, par-71 Central Florida
layout and the host for this
$250,000 event, and Nicklaus
were followed by a gallery of
hundreds when they played a
practice round in bright,
warm sunshine Tuesday.
Nicklaus, who has cut his
Tour schedule thin this year,
has played only ooce in 1979,
in the opening tournament of
the season.

By KEN RAPPOPORT
team, which according to . 91-70, Missouri turned back
AP Sports Writer
Carl
Nicks
" weren 't Oklahoma State 92-70, and
Larry Bird is hard to start motivated" at the start of Kansas
State
nipped
and hard to stop.
Tuesday night's game.
Nebraska 61-60 in double
Not always one to get oft
"At haHtime, the coach . overtime.
winging in a game, Indiana (Bill Hodges ) told the guards
. In the Eastern-a, Rutgers
State 's supreme forward we're going to have to work took a 67&lt;;7 decision over
usuaUy finishes fast. And the some more, and then we got . Penn State, Pitt beat George
result this season has always into the game a little more," Washington 05-80, West
been a sudden demise for the Nicks said. ''I think it was Virginia whipped Duquesne
opposition .
because we were up so much 1~9 and Villanova trimmed
On Sunday, Indiana State's for last Sunday's game and Massachu.s etts 70-73 in
Birdman didn't score a point we had beaten West Texas overtime. . .
for nearly seven .minutes, but State very easily the last two
Elsewhere, lOth-ranked
finished with career-high 49 . times."
Marquette whipped South.
as .:the Sycamores routed
In other first-round MVC Carolina ll3-&lt;i4 alld No. 15
Wichita State.
'playoff games, Southern DePaul defeated AlabamaAnd Tuesday night, Bird lliinois defeated Creighton 71- Birmingham 08-77.
didn't take his fll'st shot until 67; Wichita State edged
Along with his 29 points,
11 :38 remaining in the first Drake 7~9 and New Mexico Bird also contributed 15
half, but finished with 29 to State stopped Tulsa 82-79.
rebounds to the Indiana State
lead the nation's top-ranked
The Big Eight and Eastern- cause. West Texas State,
But this," he said, "is
team to a ~ Victory over 0 conferences also opened sparked by the shooting of
realty the start of my
West Texas State in an open- tournament play Tuesday Eddie Harris - who scored '%/
schedule . This is the start of
ing-round game of the night, with tourney winners points - led for most of the
my tournament preparattoos
Missouri Valley Conference assured of a berth . In the first half and trailed only 5:).
, for Augusta.''
playoffs.
NCAA playoff.s.
54 with under 16 minutes left
Nicklaus also will play next
Bird's latest performance
In the Big Eight, Oklahoma in the game.
week as the defending titleseemed to reflect the general defeated Colorado 77-57,
But the Sycamores then
holder in the Jackie Gleasontenor of the Indiana State Kansas stopped Iowa State. took command with an eightInverrary Classic and ww
point streak and outscored
defend again, two weeks
West Texas State 14-2 in the
later, in the Tournament
next three minutes. The
Players Championship.
victory was the 27th straight
Those are expected to be his
for the unbeaten Sycamores.
"We just ran out of
people," said West Texas
Ohio Boys High School
State Coach Ken Edwards,
Basketball
By The Associated Press
who had four players with
Tuesday Night
. PALM ·SPRINGS, Calif.
Kuhn claimed .the Angels lou~ fouls early in the second
Class
AAA Tournaments
( AP) - Team owner Gene· had Offered assurance" to baH.
Cambridge 61 , Dover 48
Autry said the California Bordley prior to January's
Hodges agreed: "The fouls
Celina 3'1, Bowling Green 22
Cin cinnati Hughes 67,
Ang~ are considering legal amateur
got
them
into
trouble.
If
not;
The
draft.
Cincinnati St. Xavier 51
action against baseball Cincinnati Reds, picking the game might still have
Cincln'nat l Withrow 64,
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn ahead of the Angels, chose been as close in the second
Cincinnati Moeller 58
over Kuhn's disciplining the Bordley. He has since signed half."
J
Cleveland Collinwood 67,
club for alleged tampering with the San Francisco - Gary Wilson led Southern
:Madison 57
Columbus
Linden with fomier Southern Cal Giants.
lliinois to the lead late in the
McKinley
52 ,
Upper
pitcher Blli Bordley.
11
There were no papers first half and the Salukis held
Arlington 44
"I will be meeting with signed, no deal made," said off several Creighton rallies
Mansfield Madison 90 ,
CHEERLEADERS READY - Southern's varsity
Buzzie Bavasi • (Angels Autry. "Tbe boy and his to beat the Blue Jays .
Fremont
Ross 40
cheerleaders will be ready when their team plays PortsNapoleon 60, Wapakoneta
executive vice president) and father came to us to teU us Lawrence Howell sank two
mouth Clay, Tuesday, March 6 in the Class A District
68
our attocty to debate what that because of illness in the free throws with eight
Norris Division
New Philadelphia 79, East
Tournament
at
Chillicothe
.
Cheerleaders
are
bottom
to
action we Should take," Autry family he did not want to play seconds remaining, lifting
Montreal
42 11 8 92 266 155
Liverpool 63
top, Cindy Warden, Carrie Guinther, Kim Dugan, Juli
Los
Ang.
26
27 8 60 215 215 begins Thursday
said Tuesday.
Parma
56,
Parma
Padua
49
Wichita
State
over
Drake.
in the East and would be
Gibbs,
Cricket
Carpenter
and
Beth
Huffman.
Pitts.
25
25 9 59 204 215
Parma
Normandy
64
,
Kuhn last week announced receptive to a draft by the chuck Goslin scored 20 poiitts
Wash .
IB 34 9 45 209 266
Cleveland
East
63
the Angels would be fined at Angels. If that ' makes us to pa~ New Mexico State
First round action in the
Springfield North 65·, Detroit 14 32 14 42 192 227
least one draft choice and an guilty , then whatever over Tulsa.
T1.1esday's Games
Greenan 64
Class
A Girls Sectional
Colorado 4, Boston 2
unspecified amolint of cash Toledo Ma comber · 73,
John McCullough and
happened to free speech?"
Basketball
Tournament is
New
York
islanders
7.
Sylvania Southvi ew 63
.
which has turned out two
The · fine is the seeond · Terry Stotts each scored 20
slated to begin Thursday at
Montreal J
Toledo
Rogers
57,
Toledo
draft choices and $15,000.
St,. ' Lou is 4, New York Meigs High School.
slapped on the Angels for al- points to lead Oklahoma over
Woodward 55
"The commissioner is leged tampering in the past Colorado. John Crawford and
Toledo St. Johns 49, Toledo Rangers 1
North Gallia meets SouthWednesday's Games
being totally unfair," Autry three years. The club was Paul Mokeski combined for
Devilbiss 45
GNADENlillTTEN, Ohio Buckeyes.
western
in the first game at 7
St. Louis at Detroit
Toledo Whitmer 62, Port
said. "The evidence is fined $5,000 in 1977 when 29 points to power Kansas (AP) - Playing !pur years of
"Bob will sit down and talk Clinton
while
first seeded Kyger
p.m.
Colorado
at
Pittsburgh
59
strictly circumstantial. I am Autry made complimentary over Iowa State. Curtis Berry high school basketball under about it, but he won't
New York Rangers at Creek battles Southern In the
Whiteh J ii.Year li ng 54,
certain that neither Buzzie remarks about Kansas City had 24 points to spark yotir father's coaching isn't pressure me. He just tells me Ga lloway Westland 53
Minnesota
·
Washington
at
Los Angeles 0:30 p.m. contest.
nor anyone coiUiected with Manager Whitey Herzog.
Class
AA
Tournaments
Missouri past Oklahoma always easy, but Larry some things I should look for
Saturday night, Hannan
Chicago at Vancouver
the club is guilty."
Bucyrus 72, Mansfield
SVOte . . ~nsas State nipped IJuggins feels it has been in a college and that the most Malabar
Trace
plays the winner or the
Thursday's
Games
54
important thing is for me to
Nebraska as
Rolando rewarding.
Philadelphia at Boston
North Gallia - Southwestern
Coldwater 85, St. Marys 5·1
Toronto at Montreal
Blackman hit two free throws
"I wouldn't have wanted to be happy," said the youngest
Columbus Centennial 62,
tilt. Finals are scheduled for
Minnesota at Buffalo
Pickerington 49
With five se~onds left in the • play for anyone but my dsd,". Huggins.
Monday evening.
second overti;'"e.
said the senior standout for
Larry says Ohio State, ·
~
~ames Bmley scored 26 Indian Valley South, Ohio's Northwestern, West Virgina
pomts to lead ~utgers o~er top· ranked Class A power. and Virginia Tech are the
P~nn State. Pttt s . front lme "In my opinion, he is the four finalists as his coUege
. tr10 of Terry Kmg~t. Sai_D greatest coach in Ohio. He choice.
Clancy and Sanunie Ellis knows what it's aU about. "
The only returning player
.TUCSON , Ariz. (AP) to cut it. "
61
pomts
to
His
father
Charlie
with
much eXPerience for Inteamed
for
Rookie Eric Wilkins is so sure
The manager said whether
returns
the dian Valley South, Larry has
he can pitch in the big Wilkins makes the club trigger the Panthers past Huggins,
leagues, he believes he depends on a lot of things, George Washmgton. Greg compliment calling Larry carried the load well this seaalready should be considered such as injuries and how N~e&lt;&gt;:s 20 points led West the most c~plete performer son with a 25.0 point scoring
Phone 742-2100
Vtrgmta over Duquesne. Alex of his three sons who played average. But the 6-foot-3
in the Cleveland Indians' other starters do.
Bradley
scored
23
points
am!
for
him
sharpshooter
downplays
his
starting rotation.
Rick Waits, who studied
Coach Huggins owns a 195- ability.
,... Prices Effective Thru Sat., March 3nl
After posting a 15-5 record Wilkins carefully last spriilg, Aaron Howard ~t a key jump
shot
in
overtime
to
lead
22
record
in
nine
years
at
the
"I
don
't
consider
myself
at Portland last year, the ~ said he likes the rookie's
Vi l Ia n ov a
o v e r Tuscarawas County' school. that great," he said. "I was
yearold Wilkins was touted as attitude.
MassachuSetts.
He's taken the Rebels to the given talent by God to play
the top prospect in the
"One thing you've got to
South
state
Class A tournament six basketball like someone else
.
Marquette
beat
Indians' fann system.
like about this Wilkins guy is
Gahe Paul, president of the his cOnfidence. His fast baU Carolina as r;&gt;am Worthen times, .winning tiUes in .1972 might have the talent to play
. the tuba. 1 can't take credit
5
Indians, and Jeft Torborg, isn't bad, either," Waits scored 11 of hts 15 points in.. and 1~76.
the second haH and handed
He also coached Strasburg for my ability. It came from
manager of the American observed.
out nine assists !or a school to the 196'7 Ohio Class A God ."
League club, have expressed
smgle-.season aSSist record of - c~ampionship and has a
Larry, a 3.4 student, says
hopes that Wilkins will make f ' _
the club, but "hope" is not a '-£Rtl'a
r&amp;W
192. .
career marking of 316-56 he will pilrsue a career in
Curtts Watkins collected 30 going into Steubenville athletic training.
word that makes Wilkin's
pomts
to lead DeP~ul over District Tournament play
With Larry graduating and
happy.
Alabama
Bi!'mtngham,
this
weekend
his
father reported to be
"I keep hearing all this
'hope ,"' Wilkins says. "All
~hich fi~ished its fir~ season
Larry has· set a personal heading elsewhere next year,
n oz. Kraft deluxe American
10 I b. Idaho bakingIn
htstory
wtth
a goal of leading South to the wilt Indian VaUey South's
this means that I have to do
something else to make this
commendable 1:&gt;-11 record state tournament again this basketball success become a
POTA~
ball 1
under Gene Bartow.
year. "I want to win it all and thing of the past?
W1
iiUW • •• •• •••~' •'
team. What more do I have to
go out on top," he said.
"! don't see a bad year
1 lb. Cello bag
do'
\.
By GEORGE STRODE
"It's hard to Improve on 1:&gt;AP Sports Writer
1 lb . Kra_fl Parkay
~f."JJoi
HlsolderbrothersledSouth coming," · replied Larry .
5 in a league they said was
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) to state titles - Bob in 1972 "The younger players on this
.
LB
4 6 oz . Red
·
·
over my head when I went Pete Williams of Columbus
and Harry in 1976. Bob is now · team want to excel and they
•
•
;
.
1
Tuesday's
an assistant coach at Ohio ·bave a lot of pride in what
Pkgs.
there. I did what 1 think I West and Groveport Coach
Sports Transactions
State while Harry is a South stands for ."
should do and more.
Bob Miller are the recipients
By The Associated Press
"I can't say I feel confident of The Associated Press' ·
BASEBALL
As for hiS college career,
TOP BE
5 7 lb ave
·
1~
member of the Texas
American League
about making the club. But I major awards in Ohio Central
Lutheran basketball team. the Rebels' star said: "I want
- E-llENS •••••••••••••••••••••~•••; •• ,::~:...~V~ti
Milwaukee Brewers
-know the ability is there. If I District boys high school Signed
Gary Bears, pitcher .
With his brother a Buckeye anybody
to prove else
to myseif
- how -goodnotI .
don't make it this year, it's a basketball.
Seattle Mariners - Named assistant and Gnadenhutten
33/a oz.
setback that won't hurt me
The &amp;-foot~ Williams, the f George Case a minor league native Eldon Miller the Ohio am. I want to see if I can play
State coach, Larry realizes basketball at the major
agewise," the youthful hurler area Class AAA Player of the instructor.
Nationa I League
declared. ,
Year, helped West to a
Los Angeles Dodgers - that the popular thing for him college level with the best
"But if I make the club surprising berth in the Signed Rick Sutcliffe. pJt- to do would be to play with the players.''·
46 oz. Del Monte
right out Qf spring training , I Columbus · championships. cher .
St . Louis Cardinals should go right into the The senior averaged 22.6
starting rotation.
points for the Cowboys, who Reached agreement with r------- - - - - - - - - -----,
Pennlall , outfielder, 0!1
J.D3/• oz. Campbell's
'
"I'm not the type who can dropped the playoff to aDave
one-year contract.
~~
spot start. I need to know Columbus Unden McKinley.
ee
When I pitch, when I rest. I've
A district panel of sports
New · York Jets - Named
writers and broadcasters Marv Sunderland a scout.
got to get into a schedule.
Gallons of Rich ' Ready
·
'
"If they think they'd be chose Miller of Groveport as
Seattle Sea hawks - Signed
TENNIS
secondround action, Rcscoe
throwing me to the wolves, the Central Class AAA Coach Dave Brown, cornerback, MEMPlUS,-Tenn. - Defend- Tanner defeated Bruce
Jimmy Manson 6-4, 6-4; .Tim
that'swhat they did last year, ,.of the Year. Miller led' the and Doug Long, safety, ing champion
Connors easily defeated Gullikson got by Jeft Boroand I did aU right."
Cruisers to the Ohio Capital through f';:'0~~0E~ason .
29 oz.
•
Torborg was less certain Conference title , a 17-1
National Hockey League
Tomaz Smid 6-4, ~. while wiak &amp;-2, U, 7-6; Buster Motabout Wilkins' capabilities. regular season record and the
Atlanta Flames - Sent India's Vijay Amrltraj upset • tram of England beat
Gene Carr. forward, to Tulsa fourth-seeded Eddie Dibbs fl.! Switzerland's Heinz
"~e better stop thinking that No. 9 ranking In the state.
200 ct.
way," said the manager. "He
In Class AA, Rudy Reed of of the Central Hockey 4, &amp;-!, in the secood round of Gunthardt 7~. &amp;-7, 6-2, and
better concentrate on Baltimore Uberty Untoo was Le~~~~~delphia Flyers
the U.S. National Indoor John Alexander of Australia
4
winning a spot.
the area Player of the Year. Reca ll ed Ken Unseman , 'l'eiUiis Championships.
defeated Brian Teacher 7-li, &amp;Three other seeded players !.
"There are some veterans . Larry Gipson of Marloo Elgin · center, from Maine of the
.S oz. Armoui'
'
on this club who better have a and Tom Hamman of American Hockey League. were upset _ Bob Lutz
Also, sixth-seeded Arthur
good sprin.g training or they Williamsport WesUall split
Hockeyw::s~clation
downed Dick Stockton, the . Ashe downed Kim Warwick
won't make the _team.': .
the coaching title. ·Reed, a :;.
Winnipeg Jets - Fired 14th seed, 6-4, ~;Stan Smith of Australia, ~. 0-1; No. 12
10 oz. Instant Nescale ·
Torborg satd Wtlkms 11 senior, carried a 27.$-polnt Larry Hilfmon, ~ead 'coach. defeated Italy's Adriano Wojtek Flbak of Poland beat
Named Tom McVIe, head · Panatl.a the 13th seed S.! s"showed us a great deal last Sj.'OI'ing average this season.
Hank P!ister s.o, u, 7-li; No.
·
·
'
· '
'
smnmer. But Wilkins .can't
In. c;tass A, Ron Stewart, q&gt;ach.
.
· COLLEGE
4.
10 Sandy Mayer beat
pace hlmseH. He's got to the top district scorer with a
St. -Lawrence UniversitY . ~
In first-round play, third- Romania's Ion Tiriac 7~, 6-4,
14 112 oz. Show Boat
Named Andrew Talley head seet!od Vltas Gerulaitis -0-3, and Peter Fleming
make thl! club.
33.4-point mark, was the area
'
coach.
do
d • h Kr' k of So th scored a ·mild upset over
' "When I first joined thl! Player of the Year and Jim football
Stanford .....: Named ' John.. ~ n ·' 1 an le..
U
·cllib, we were filling out the Will of Canal Winchester was Godden assista nt football Afnca •&gt;-3, 6-~and Vtc Amaya Hungary's Balasz Taroczy,
pitching staff. Now we have !IJe Coach of the Year.
coach.
beat Tom Gorman, 6-4,6-3. In the 11th seed 7-5, 6-1.
11

11

f

I

I

I

.$}.39

SLICED I'UfESE •••
MARGARINE •••

.
69

2f ·

t----------1111!1----------------;.-1

Nation~flf~~b~~ILLeague

~····-

"Se

MY·T·FINE PUDDING .•••••••••••••••••••• 2/55•
TOMATO JUICE·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2!'159 .

CREAM OF MUSHROOM.SOUP ········2159'
ORANGE DRINK ••••••••••••••••• :........... 89$
DEL MONTE PEACHES •••••••••••••••• 21'1.49
WHITE· KLEENEX .::i!~. :.~~f.................. 69'
VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••• ~ •••••••••••••• ~ ••. 2/95$~
INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••• $4.78
PORK &amp; BEANS ~. -~••••••• ~················· 2/Sf·

~~~s·;o".~sp~e~~:~';}'~:~~

1

By

B He}en
· B

e

:;

. r.,
.,

~

"

.

,,

, . . - - - - - · - - - Fisher: Mrs. Arthur strauss
A workshop on evangelism .ed to attend either the Friday
"
willreview"AnnaHastings", will be held at the Chester ,nightsessionortheSaturday
and the roll call will be ',The United Methodist Church Fri- session since both sessions
Day I Grew Up."
day from 7 to 9 p.m. and·on will be abnost identical in
'i'HIJRsDAY ·
Saturdayfrom9to12noon.
content.
SPECIAL MEETING ,
The workshop will deal
The workshop is sponsored
Bosworth CouncU 46, R&amp;SM, with ~w techniques in by the Meigs Cooperative
WEDNESDAY
7:30p.m. Thursday. Work in evangelism and Christian Pari sh of the United
POMERQY
MID- the .Roral l!faster and Select witness, and is designed to he Methodist Church. Further
DLEPOR'I" LIONS Club Mast« degrees.
ofbenefittothelocalchurch. information may be obtained
. urceDaVI'pedrsoL.nMwtlli
.Ueber, Mb~ co~tacti ngf ' the. Meigs
regular meeting, noon, · EVANGELINE CHAPI'ER- !theTbeRresoev
WedpeadaY at the Melga Inn; i 172 Order of the Eastern
m stries
tee m Midall.memilerl'lll'lled to attend. i sta'r, Thursday 7,30 p.m. at 1parish minister of the Hyde dleport, 992-7400, or the
LONG BOTTOM Com- the Middleport Masonic Tem- IPark Community United evangelism coordinator, the
munity Association meeting, pie. Initiation will be held and Methodist Church in Cincln· Rev . Richard Thomas,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at officers are to wear gowns. 'natt Members are encourag· 667-3960.
COI!!!IIunity buUdlng.
Dues are payable.
WILDWOOD GARDEN
.- ·- - ·- ..
1I CLUB,
Wedneaday, 7:30p.m.
WESTERN
SQUARE
at the Riverboat Roooi of the ; dance worltahop, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs Office of .the Athens i Thursday at
archery
County Savings and Loan. 1 building, Royal Oak Park. C.
205 N. Second Ave.
Eacb member Is take I JolmiiOil, ~JJer. All persons
Middleport, Ohio
something to eat. Drink will ' interested in Weatem square .
be furnlahed by the &lt;ificers. · dancing Invited.
AMERICAN LEGION
MEETING OF Bricklayers
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, i and Cement Masorill Local .32
Middleport, 7:30 p. m. ! scheduled· for Thursday
Wednesday night at the hall. : cancelled uniU further notice.
AMERICAN LEGION 1
·
At1l:ILIARY,
Feeney.Berllllett Post 128, Middleport,
7:;o Wednesday night ; .
· .FRIQAY ·
Saturday morning appointments available.
meeting. Meeting preceded . MEIGS COUNTY 'Pomona
....
-· by. 8 supper With tbe legion- Grarise 46 in bl-montbly
HOURS 8Y APPOINTMENT ONLY
n1ares at8:30p.m.
session, ~p.m. Frldai at the
. •
.
. .
Rock Springs orange Hall
1\UDDLEPORT Uteral')&lt; .. w11b Star .Grange J)rovtdlng
TELEPHONE· 99?-fib!l8
Club; Wednesday, 2 p.m. at. refrelhmentil .
.
·
the .ho!Jl.e of M11~ j\obert

&amp;ciaJ·
'
en. d8.F_ ·
I Cal
.

episode of "Roots ll.''
rating of 34.2 repr~ntm g.
CBS' top-rated program for 25.8 million homes , "Eight'is
" Roots II," as the sequel the week was "60 Minutest'' Enough," 33.7 or 25J milltoh ,
was ca lled·,- delivered an 12th in Ute ratings, and NBC's "Laverne and Shirley," 33.2
average rating of 30.1 for best was the last ~hapter of or 24.7million, "Roots,"·Par.t'
seven chapters, figures from "Backstairs at the White m, 32.7 or 24.4 million,
the A.C. Nielsen Co. showed House," No. 16.
"Happy Days," Part I, 32.2 or
Tuesday, and ABC's rating
CBS finished the week 24 million, "Roots," Part IV,
for the week ending Feb. 2:i nearly nine full points behind 31.8 or ·23.7 million, "Roots, "
was the second-highest on ABC, at 10.2, and NBC had a Part V, 31.7 or 23.6 million,
record- 27.
rating of 16.5.
"Angie," 30.7 or 22.9 million,
The original"Roots," aired
The five lowest-rated pro- "Roots," Part II, 29.5 or 22
Jan. 23-30, 1977, had an grams of the week were from million, and "Root!!i," Part
average rating of 44.9 for NBC, in order, "Brothers and VI , 28.9 or 21.5 million.
eight installments. ABC's Sisters," " Weekend,"
The next 10 shows:
rating for the week was 35.5, "Women
in . White,''
HRoots," Part VII, ABC;
the highest ever.
"Sweepstakes" and "LitUe "60 Minutes, " "Alice" and
The networks say that ·women." Aside
from "All in ,the Family," all CBS ;
means in an average pfime· "Week~nd " and ~~women in "L&lt;we Boat," ABC; Monday
time minute during th e week White," a miniseries, the Movie"Backstairs at . the·
of "-Roots II,11 27 percent of others . premiered
at White
House, "
NBC; .
the homes in the country with midseason.
"Celebrity Challenge of the.
TV were tUned to ABC.
Here are the week' s 10 Sexes" and "M-A.S-H," bOth'
In addition to the highest-rated programs, all CBS, and "Chips" · and ·
concluding six chapters of on ABC:
Sunda y Big Event-"The
"Roots II," ABC listed five
"Mark and Mindy," with a ' Sound of Music," both NBC.
other programs in the first 11,
including No. 1 "Mork and
Mindy" and runnerup "Eight
is Enough."
The ratings performance
for "Roots IJ' ' differed
considerably from the
audience build-up for the
•CHINO for
original. "Roots" attracted
Spring Suit
more viewers each night, oo a
high rating of 51.1 for the
Slacks
conclusion. "Roo ts II"
•SOFT KNITS
peaked at 32.7 for Part III,
then declined to 28.6 for the
Polyester &amp; Colton
concluding chapter Sunday
night.
Nielsen says that means of
all the homes in the country
Polyest.,-, Cotton
with television, 28.6 percent
•HOPSAIUNG
saw at least part of the last

1

01

R. CRAIG MATHEWS, D.D.S.

·I.

Is announcing new office hours,

Moo. 12:00 - 7:00
Tues..fri. 8:30-12:30, 1:~:30 ·
-'·~· -

BONEt ESS ROAST
$169

••
'

•·:'
'

H
k

l

•EMBROIDER
e have all your .
. Quilting Supplies

......

-

..,..,....~.

CLOSIEOUT SALE
Model
Model
Model
Model

1200 was $850 Now $600
1060 Was '$649 .95 Now $479 .95
3002 Was $129.95 Now $119.95
248 Was $149.95 Now $119.95

FABRIC SHOP
nsW.2nd.
PO me roy, Ohio

GROUND

BEEF
ONLY
'·'.

SIRLOIN STEAK

- •1••

r.

LB.

WIENERS
12 oz. Pkg .

DIET PEPSI,
REG. PEPSI

.,I

SPRING
YARDAGE

French City

LB.

..'r.

"Roots" broadcast two years
ago.

$139

Workshop set Friday

I

~

CHUCK ROAST

25'
;,·

I sports b. ne•

·'

1.29

CARROTS .. ,.. ,..

I

l
f.

River Boat Room of the CoUnty Savings and L&lt;&gt;ari ·at
Meigs Branch of the Athens 7:,30 p.m.

.

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD .•••••••••••• '.~~•• s1.19
ECKRICH SMOKED SAUSAGE ••••••••~;. 1.79
.ECKRICH JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••• Ls. s1.49

players eam
AP honors

'·, ~a~::r~~ ~a.::g~~r~Tse!se.

uS

RUTLAND
.DEPARTMENT STORE

l Q'L •

Fun With -Food

He en He1p \}
1

Ohio Sportlight

Rookie feels he
should be starter

the Crusade in Meigs County
will be held March 6 in the

110 million people saw . 'Roots II'

------------,.
p ro
1
IStandings!

;\utry says legal
·action considered

.

.

tiie

By BOB GREEN

••

7 , ,C: ~

SAVORY BACON
LB.

.I

·'

89C:

.

.
'

o;weet Rose

·MARGARINE
LB.

I,:

49c:

&gt;

Or

MOUNTAIN
DEW
8-16 oz. bottles

99~

2%

MILK
Galion

·..'·

�7- Tbe Daily Sentinel,Middlepott-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 28,1979

Legislation·at-Glance
. .
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) In the Legislature Tuesday:
~

corporate franchise taxes for
schools,
HB 315-I.Thompson.
Prohibits dismissing charges
against a person who has
been Indicted in return for the
person's testimony or
production of evidence in a
criminal proceeding or investlllation.
HB
316-Locker.
Eliminates the authority for
Chau.tauqua
Assembly
special policemen,
HB · 317-T.Tranter.
Allt!Jor!zes a municipality to

HB~~Pi~':~o~

immunity, indemnlflcatloo
and defenae coUII!lel for state
officers and employees In
civil actions.

HB ' 3l~albralth. Estab-

lishes a maximum tax rate
that municipalities may levy
oil
the
Income
of
nonresidents.
HB
314 - Netzley.
! EiU-marks lottery revenues
'-and atate
Income and
. ·-- . -·
.
'

'

annex
noncontiguous
territory under certain
conditions.
HB 31S-Hlnlg. Requires
th~ Industrial Commission to
give , six months prior
notification to claimants with
Inactive claims of the
Impending expiration of the
Commission's ' jurisdiction
over the claim.
HB 319-Crossland.
Creates municipal
corporation liability for
negligent 'opj!ration of motor
vehicles by their police and

firemen while responding to
emergencies,
HB 32P-Deering .
Increases the monthly
allocation to the Railroad
Grade Crossing Special
Account to $200,000 from
$100,000.
HB 321 - Deering .
Increases the amount of the
instructional grants available
to nursing school studentS.
HB 322-I.Thompson. Requires bumpers 011 trucks,
traDers and semitrailers.
HB 323-WIIkowski.

Creates a special teaching
certificate for bilingual ·
·' multicultural education.
HB 324-Wilkowski.
Prohibits local · option
elections from prohibiting the
sale of liquor at publiclyowned airport.&lt;;,
HB 325-Fox. Permits
township constables and
township dislrict police to
make arrests on state
highways for state traffic
offenses.
HB 326-Taft. Permits
active State Highway Patrol
Retirement System members
to purchase service credit for
certain past service in PERS.
HB 327-Gilmore. Requires
educational institutlons to
verify the reasons for an

applicant's leaving prior
OFFERED IN HOUSE
employment.
HJR.-Maddux. Proposes a
HB 328-Quilter, Abolishes · constitutional amendment to
the Motor Vehicle Medical limit tax increases.
Review Board, the State
HJR
23-Leonard .
Office Building Commission, Proposes a constitutional
Interdepartmental
Com· amendment providing for an
mlttee on Aging, and .the appointive~lective system
Interagency Coordinating for the selection of state
Committee.
!'JlP.eals court judges,
· HB 329-{)xley. Increases
PASSED IN HOUSE
the estate and surviving
HB20-Carney. Lets town·
spouse eJtempUons from the ship trustees establish a
estate tax.
speed limit of not less than 25
HB 330-Locker. Grants mph on a township road
deaf persons with hearing located in a residential
dogs the same rights as blind subdivision · outside
a
persons with seeing~ye dogs. municipal corporatiOn. Vote:
HB 3318R-Hughes . · !_1_:~·. (To Senate) .
Expands the clergymanINTRODUCED IN
penitent privilege in relation
Seoate
to evidentiary matters.
SB 77- Carney.
Specifies
; 1.
•
.. i'

EXTRA SAVINGS DURING KROGER'S

EMPLOYEES BUSY - Pomeroy merchants and
their employees were busy Monday moving merchandise
'to hii!her areas. Photo above was taken by Dorset Thomas

at Elberfeld's Department Sttire. Water h!15 entered some
businesses along Pomeroy's main street. Flooding will
continue until the Ohio River crests sometime
. Wednesday .

JOINT EFFORT- The Meigs and Athens Salvation Anny units joined hands to set up a
canteen in the office of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews providing food for people of the
community who were involved in flood work. From the left are Don Kollecker, Athens,
national guardsman, who is about to jJe served by Jackie Justis, Eloise Adains, Lt. .Glenn
Brookman and Major (ret.)'Gierina Rummel. Lt. Brookman brought the-food frotil Athens. ·
MacDonald's donated the hamburgers di~lbuted for several hours at village hall,
·

ePortraits

eSpecia·t Occasions

Predestination means that '
your spouse already knows good fortune unless ·. you're
where you're going for dinner · stuck on one during morning
tonight.
rush hour,

Loo• POl THtiiiGN

--...'".
IToitl-

OPENING

NEW
OFFICE

,John Kauff
lnsuran~

240 Lincoln
Middleport, o.

In The Old
Anthony Building

I'IOOU&lt;TI
ltPID lllOW A. JtMt
A 'IW IJMIPLU

bcept a.at4 s.• .., •"•1.., 111 tAM
llllteiiWWIIItt

YOUTH WEEI REVIVAL .

&gt;_I
'

S•••IJ

United Pentecostal Church
COPYIIGH1 lt7t-IKIOGII CO. ITIMS AND
GOOD lUNDA Y Fll. 21 THIU

S. Jrd Ave., Middleport, Ohio

;.as

SATURDAY MAtcH I, ltn IN

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

EVANGELIST-REV. R. L MYRE

CALL:

.· 992·3~9

fiANJAITK IAVINOI
ONICIOORIIAND

(Bob Hoeflich)
'09 High St.
Pomeroy-'

••
.

OPE
24 HRS.
ADAY

•Wecttlings

The Photo. Place
.
Cloverleafs are tokens of

------.. .
·:

'•.'

eFilssports

••

when a caboQse must he at~
!ached to a train.
'·
SB 7S-Van Meter. Create$·
·a joint legislative revie\f;
committee to renew, abolish!'
or transfers state aeencies ~
a five-year schedule.
'
SB 79--Van Meter. Per;nits
county commissions tQj
appropriate only what tiler,.
consider reasonable for the,
cooperation of courts. .
PASSED IN SENATE ,;
SB 41J.Jackson. Uberalizel.
local liquor option ·election;'
law. Emergency : 31·2"!
(Malia, Pfeifer ). Bill: 32-( •
(Pfeifer). (To House.)
:l
Am.HB 46-Carney .•;
Revises ligh(ing efficiency~
standards
for
pub)ic:;
buildings. Emergency : 3~ .· \
Bill: 3~. (To governor ,)
'

WI IUUVl '"I liGHT TO liMIT QUAN·

TIT11S. NONI SOLD TO DIALIII .

From
Circleville. Ohio

6Y2-01.

Cans

FEBRUARY 27th Thru MARCH 2nd

7:00 EACH NIGHT
Special singing- Youth Choir

MARY CHRISTY, OWNER of the Riverfront
Restaurant, at the corner of East Main and Court Sts. in
Pomeroy stands in some two feet or water which entered
the establislunent as a result of the latest Pomeroy flood.

CONGRFSSIONAL
MEEIINGHEW
.The Republican lOth Congressional District held a
meeting Wednesday, Feb, 21
at 7 p.m. at the Hocking
Valley · Motor Lodge, There
were 31 people present.
Reports were given by each

EVERYONE WELCOME
--

a

William KniHel-Pastor

~---:E:-at~more
• ..... Pka•.
Margar1ne

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

16-oz.

district represented on the
election in November '78,
Connie Hemphill, chairwomen for Gallia County and
Tresurer for the loth District,
was present to represent
Gallia County, The next
1neeting will he Aprill9.

CLOV£0 VALLI~

KROGER

Grape Jelly

c

hart

Kroger Meat
Jlologna .............. lb.

Jar

3

Brown 'N'
Serve Rolls ~1gs.

IN THE PIECE

(UCLIDINC TMIS lnll
DF

12·

liMIT ONE COUI'ON PEl FAMILY

---lfU.l$
..._,_,,1171
MIICT li!PMal mn IIIUIIIIII

14·17-LB. AVG.

'

Whole
Fresh Ham ......... lb.

KROGER

Catsup

to $1.37 when you
4
.
SALE ENDS
MARCH 15TH

HOLLY FARMS, U.S,D.A. INSPECTED

. 77c

Ice Cream

Mixed
Fryer Parts ........ lb.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

KIOGU

Tomato Sauce

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread·..........

I·OI.l&amp;c

DALE'S

KITCHEN CENTER; INC.

Country Cluti

Ctll.

KROGER

Hi Nu 2%
1owf at MI"lk: .. .. .

These COUQOQ.S_can saveyou money when_you

TAKE A LOOK AT BURGER CHEF.I'J ·

--------

PUT IN

ANEW KITCHEN!

BigShef,•
regular french frv,
smalleoft drink

onlv$1.49

BIG 40%
CASH &amp; CARRY
SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO.IT
YOURSELF.
8RING IN
lOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR

EXPERTS WILL
HELP YOU!
21T9 Jackson Ave.
PQ.int. Pleasant
675·2118

c

~'Jie;biiAj ·F~k
:seabtaecl
.c-.. sJ

Cheeseburger,
regular french frv,
small soft drink

onlv$1.09•
I

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

I
1.
I
I
I
I
I

Grade A

Baking
fHSH

I COli

KROGER

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FR&lt;)ZErl
5·7·LB. AVG.

~

•.

.

Dinner

Paperor
Pla.stlc Ctn.._

KROGER 0.511. LOWFAT MILK ... GAL. PLASTIC CTN. $1.65

MACARONI &amp; CHHSl

Winter Months
. Nothing To Do?

GaL

:aP~~~~
:/ c~\~

Fresh
Cel

flo TU

Ocean
Perch FIUets .. .. .. ... .. ... .. .. ... .
,IIIH
Dressed Flound•r ..............'.. .. .. .. ..

L~arge

Eggs... ... Doz.

UOGII GlADE A MIDIUM

·-·=

lb~
lb.

.S. NO. 1 WISICONISIN'

Russet
Potatoes

'8:8

R.C. Cola or
Diet Rite

a• oa
,lUS DEPOSIT

Chip Chopped Ham.............. ....... '"·
INCLUDIS&lt;t-NCISIAmUitflllj. l·ll. tOliii.AW .

AND HUIH I'IIPI'ID

81
$1
$481

Bucket-0-Fish .......... .;......... ...... '"'" $lZI
a.11y swl•• c~eese.. .... .... ... .... .. .. •·

Fresh Brewnlts .. ... ... .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

6...

gae

'

�..

.

&amp;-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pome~y, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 211,1979 . .
Thurllday, March 1

ASTRO•GRAPH
·

p~oaATE cou~oF

For Best Results .Use Sentinel Classifieds

.

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF FLETCHER R.
WELCH, DECEASED
C~se

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Welch , 37626 Walnut Dr ive,
Romu l us , Michigan -46174,
was appointed EXecutor of
the esta te of Fletc her · R .
Welch , decease d , late of
Middleport , Meigs County ,

WANT AD
CHARGES

There 's a·strong possibility you Ohio .
could add to your resources or
· Manning D. Webster

enhahce yo ur income through
Probate Judge .
a creative enterprise this com·
Clerk
ing year. It could be thro ugh an {2) 14, 21. 28 . Jtc
where. you ' re
· -

PISCES (Feb . ZO·M•rch 20)
Someone you will be dealing
with today may not be as lair
and willing to share as you are.

Each word over lbe m1nlmwn 15

Ads n.rmlng other Ulan consecutive
days will be charged al Uw 1 day

rate.

In memory, Card of ThaMI ancl&lt;

WAGNER , DECEASED
Case No. 22591

'Mobile Home sales and Yard Yles
are accepted only with cuh wl.lh
order. ?:i cent chlrle for ~dl c:arry-,
lng Box Nwnber Jn Care olThe Seft..

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

When you place a paid in advance 3-day
w·a nt ad maximum of 20 words, we'll run
your ad an additional 3 days ABSOLUTELY
FREE! Total cost only 51.80. Stop in today,
offer good now thru Friday, March 2, 4 p.m.

. THE DAILY SENTINEL'
Pomeroy, 0 ,-

tinel.

.

SENTINEL CARRIERS
FROM VIUAGE PHARMACY AREA
TO THE
.POMEROY • MASON BRIDGE AND
POMEROY AREA.

PHONE 992·2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
'

opt s.

Gun

_ _F~_ct~ry ~~k':. g~~~n~y:... __ _
FREE CANOV making clan at Oi'S
Candy and Cake Supplies, Spr·
ing Volley Plaza. 446-2134 for
registration . l(s fun and eosy_.
You 'll be amored at what you
con do.

- --·- - -.- - -

- ··

CANDY WORKSHOP: . Learn to
make your own Easter condy .
Make candy in class and .toke it
home with you . For informo·
fion , call' the Carousel Confec·
tionery. 992-6342 .
.

Pomeroy .

RENOVATED -

- - - -·- - - - - - -- - FROSTV'S CB Radio Equipment .
Everything in two- woy rad io ,
ontenno and occ.essories .
'

- - ·- - - - I

8UV YOUR 1979 Gravely now lhru
March I ond save up to 5600.
$100 down holds til April 15th.

~ERQY

lANDMARK

TIMBER . POMEROV Fore!t Pro·
ducts. Top price for stonding
sow timber . Call 992-5965 or

!&lt; !n.'._~nby__:__l__·_~6· ~?~- - _ _
OLD FURNITURE, ice boxes, brass

SALE PRICES

beds .

iron beds , desks , etc.,
complete households. Write
M .D. Miller . Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
coli ~2 - 7760.
· - - - ------- ·---- .
OLD COINS. · pocket watches .
class rings . wedding bands .
diamonds. Gold or silver . Call
Roger Wamsley. 7"2·2331 .
__...

--.------

- ---.

WANT TO buy : old •5 ond 78
phonograph records . Call

992-6370 or Contact Martin Fur·

ROUND
.

HAY

boles

for

bedrooms (large master
bedropm), family room
with Wood Burner, 6 miles

sloe .

985·•137 .

Findling.

_____ _

--

----

p&amp;rtone, good conditi on . $150.
Can be seen at Landmark .

992·2181 or 992-7015.
1978 750 YAMAHA SPECIAL.

E~ ·

low
.!"~!,a_~:_9!_2:_so_:~o.!!~ ~~.:... _
cellent condition,

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, PHIO
ESTATE OF RAY RALPH

SARSON, DECEASED

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On February 23rd. 1979, In
the 'Meigs Countv Probate

Deceased, tate of 631 Ament
Street, owosso . Michigan

48867 .

Robert E. Buck
Probate JUdOt ·Cierk
m 28 , Ill 7, U, Jtc

very

Services Offered
WILL CARE for the elderly in our .
home. Phone992·7314 .

-- - - - - -·- ·--WATFR WELL drilling. William T.
Grant . 742·2879.
--- -- .. - ·- ------WATER AND misc . hauling. Coli
992·5858.

and
school. lone Daniels , o!lsodole
ol Elberfeld's and Brunicardi

PIANO TUNING for home
Music

992·2581

' Company .
or 992-2002.

Phone

----- _.!_ _- . -- ··--.
Mobile Homes for Sale
1967 TOTAL ELEC1RIC mobUo '
furnished , 3 bttdr ,,
and dryer . A lr condi·
floned. 1 lot , 210ft. frontage .

hor'ne;

washer
Wednesday

NOTICE

Notice is here-bv giver\ th't

the undersigned Intends to
make application to the
Common
Pleas
Court ,
Provate Olvtslon of Mtlgs
County, Ohio. tor l!ln' ordei" to

cha·nge her name · to Joyce
An ita Will.

Said .applicaflon will bf b)'
to be filed In said
Court , on or after the 27th day
of February 1979.
Joyce Anita Cook.
The State of Meigs County .
{2) 28. ltc

Phone
.1955
-$12,000.
- - --__7•2·2826.
...__ - - . - ·Prairie Schooner, 2B x 8, 1
bdr.
·
1965 G•neral, 60 x 12, 2 bdr,

1968 Elcona , 52 • 12, 2 bdr .

1969 tiuddy. w •12. • bdr.
1970 Sylva, 60 x 12, 2 bdr.
1970 Castle. 60 w 12, '1 bdr.
1973 Arlington , 60 Jt: 12, '1 bdr ,
1973 Ridgf.&lt;wood, 70 x 1•, 3 bdr .
1973 ll:lo·,.wood, 50 x 12, 2 bdr .
~

t 'MOBILE HOME SALES
t; . Pt ~-' .4SANT , WV
/I.'S J42d

from Racine. $38,500.00.
POMEROY 2 story
frame, 3 or " bedrooms,
some carpeting,
bath,
basement, storage building
and workshop. $8,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT -11/&gt;Story

frame, duplex, nat. gas
heat, !Part basement, cor-

ner lo,, need some repair .
5!3,000.01):
HAVE
YOU
CONSIDERED ' SELLING
YOUR PROERTY? MAY
WE SUGGEST THAT YOU
CALL ONE OF THE
QUALIFIED PEOPLE AT ·
OUR OFFICE.
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992·2259 992-6!91 992·2568

!A5-Y DUCICS. ... ANP TH6 !!'PE-AR·

"UN NIIS,II.E MERELY GRAZ.ES
Hl!!i !!iHOLJi-DER!

•
.,

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

'ftfi'\iN} fii)'ft

651 Beech Street
Middleport,

0.

INSU~CE AGEN
Washington St., Albanr, 0.

Phone 698-6173
David Coleman
Agenlfor
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio.
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.
1-26·1 mo.

""Real Estate for.Sale
FARM FOR sole. House. 2 barns ,
trailer. Lorge pond. 10 acres or
82 acres . 742·2566.

ISV~~IJA PI~
~FAlWIZ..

.'

..•·'..

-.'

ROGER HYSEU.
. GARAGE ·

AI. TROMM OONST.
-Room Additions-Custom Remodeling-

'
'·'·

.

'

~. mil• un kt. 7 'i'Y·flllll on
St. Rt. 124 towliil Rullond,

Ceramic Tile - Formic•

Counter Tops - Ceilings
(Suspended, Texture) . Tile
. Floors . Paneling &amp; Trim.
Quality Work You Can

0.
AutQ&amp; Truck
'Repair
1(1so Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Depend On ....

PII)NE 742-2328,
Your HeadquarteiS For

H. L Writesel

Annstrong Carpeting

Roofing
.

EWOTT

in Pomeroy . Secluded

.

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

APPLIANCE II

~·"•'~(
by THOMAS JOSEPH

-----------

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY
New lima Road
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742-2003
We have sold almost all of
our properties and WE
NEED LISTINGS!! II you
are thinking of selling call
us today 4!nd discuss our
listing contract. We will

you our best in ·
friendly, courteous service.
Needed Immediately - a
nice large home with 12 or
more rooms in the
Middleport · Pomeroy
area. We have qualified
buyers. We Need Listings.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
·
Phone 742·2003
Hilton Wolfe
Associate
Phone 949·2519
GeorgeS. Hobolelfer, Jr.,
Broker
Phone 992-5739
give

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, tooslers, ·irons , all
small appliances . lown mower ,
ne•t to Stote Hlghwov Garage
on Roule 7,
-- - - - -----·--~ --

loader and
backhoe work : dump trucks

and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt. to soil, limestone ond
groveL Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
fers, day phone 992-7089 , night

phone 992·3525 or 992-5232.·

EXCAVATING,

dozer,

backhoe

end ditcher . Charles R. Hotfield , Back Hoe Service ,

__ !utland, Oh!~hone 742·2008.
BATHROOMS AND Kit chens

remodeled, ceramic tile , plumbing: carpentry. and general
maintenance . 13 years ex perience. 992-3685.
PulliNS E~CAVATING . Complete 1
Service. Phone 992-2.. 78 .

AUTOM081LE INSURANCE been
cancelled? lost vour operators
license? Phone 992·2143.
E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor serving Ohio Volley region . Six
'days a week , 24 hours service .
E.mergency calls. Coli 882-2952

or 882-2305 .
MOBILE HOME repairs. Furnaces , ·
electrical work , pipes sawed,
plumbing. 992·5858.
- ~--

WALLPAPERING

AND

Coll742·2328.
HOWERY AND

pai,n ting.

MARTIN

septic systems ,
dozer boc\o.hoe . Rt . 143. Phone

covoting,

FIVE YEARS OLD - Beauilful 4 bOdroom home with'
large eat·ln kitchen, 2 baths. TV room. all nicely.
carpeted, large utility room and many more extras.!
Natural gas torced air furnace. Plenty of garden space
on 1 acre oi land. Priced right $36,000.
CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom . house • wllh full
bese,men1 and 2 baths.' Not. gas heat, approx. I acre
land and larile storaqe building. Prloe S2UOO.
ACR:EAGE -with Iaroe beef born hear 'Pomeroy.
ot'Atluus 81-L!'VEL-~ This may be your dream ·
home. It has a Iorge kitchen with lots of cabinets, .·
stove, refrlgeralltr ..and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room! wllh sliding glass doors. Large living room and
foml y room, and .lo finish this well·lald out home we
have live bedrooms, utility room and garage: Very low
heallh; bill. Red bern.llke storage building. Loco'-'!
about ten ·minutes north or .Pomeroy lust oft Rt. 7.
Asking $55,000.
·
'
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIO_N - Good 1'/2 story house
'conipJetely ciirpetediNl1h. 4 bed'rooms, cflri.lng rocim
laun«try room . Also almost new 2 ·car heated garage. ·
·This home Is nicely located In Porfland •ncl PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at .S22,500.
I.OTS - I Acre and up near Pomeroy.
.
SOACRES FREE GAS-Good 1'12 story houso with full
basement. Large pond stock«! with fish. Priced for
.
quick sale. $40,000.
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home. almOII 1\ew ·
kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpot.d, laundry room, ell :
Insulated, natural gas heat, utility building, 2 lots.
l$21,500.00.
.
Tolk ta 1 local r""l oslo~ ogant before 'tryl.ng to Hll ,
yeur homa. HI• experience con holp yeu. W. noecl ,
many l t~es of p"'~erty, 111,. .UI.J _,-.fl••
..
CALI. JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949·2lll
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE949-2654

I

old . 1 female Irish Setter 5 mo.
old . 985·3925.
'192.5288 .

I (614j 698.7331.

.SA'v'E ON
CARPmNG
ORIVE AI1T11f
&amp;
SAVE .AlDT

measure
Attendant
43 Tobacco
DOWN
Asian
wild sheep
1 Base-stealer's
13 Norse hero
asset
2 Beer
Babbled
Fish
3 Deft
4- Aviv
GI's overseas address 5 Come to pass
&amp; Fallacy
7 Wagnerian
7 Moslem
heroine
ruler
Visionary
~"'-':~ Inexperienced 8 Sideways
9 Heighten
21 German
10with
name prefix
(got rid of)
- processing
Stop: naut. .,.....,,....,,.....,..._
-R"'71l

vice, al l makes , 992·2284 . The

--~

CENTRAL

5 Doctored

I

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser·

ExcAVATING. ·dozer ,

I thinl1 her leqs
loolt. a little
straiqhter
alreadt.j,

Don't
e)(pect too
much, Slimr

She couJd be a
little lame all
her I'

been a I
fat all m4 It

Well, 4ou talt.e
what 40u qet
in this
world!

26 Old Bendix
TV role
Satanical
, 211 Tibetan
gazelle
28 Scott
I Joplin's
forte
Counterbalance

Clovia!

....

A &lt;&gt;OOD SELECTION OF
END II. ROLL BALANCES.
91Kl2'.::.:.:.\2 1Kl2 1- i2 1X15'

l.lt.BIBIM ROOS .
'12.95 &amp; UP
'1 &amp; ll WSHDtED
•R.OOR
'3.49.&amp; '199 sq. yd.

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

•
'

D·

~ ful"t THf ..JOi'~
:C. l-OVE ,.E:L\..1&amp;\IG.

-..,.

pEOPLe WHf:R!!::
~e.,. orfl
1

c;)

111.1 ~

D IIJI b, ..[ ... 10&lt; I M ~.g US P ol 0!1

,..., ...

.. '

• YOUR 'HUSMND DIDN'T
GET THIS WAY ·tN ONE

MONTH, OR ONE YEARt

.RUnAND FURNRURE\

R:)R THAT MATTER •

WE OFFER YOU ...
1· Two full floors .of all new
· furniture.
·.2. Nice selections of used

'

furnlturt .

•'

",,

3. A large building full ol
•.bf•utllul carpet.

.;;a

.,

'·

'

..

.vt'""

... DON'T EXPECT A
MIRACULDUS RE ·
COVERY. 1"1'5 GOINi3'
10 13E A LDNG 1
SLDW-'UPHILL
Flt&gt;HT.

F'ust t nc
. k se t s up ga me·
were
NORTH
• KJ6
• K8

2·28

• A 73
+ .K8764

=-1-+-1

EAST
WEST
•AQ1084 + 7 53
.•• 2
• 63
t K Q 10 52 • J9864
• Q J 10
+9
SOUTH

.... .
• 92

• AQJIO!H
+A 53 2

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: East
West · North East
-Pass

I+
Pass
Pass

37 Italian

painter
39 Whetstone ·
to "Belthwnble ... "L-...L--t.......li.-..._...__

Ia

LONGFELLOW

Pass
Pass

CRYPTOQUOTES

/YN!LE... I ALWAYS TREATED WENDY
LIKE A PAI/GHTER1 BUT IF
DFQJFNH
T X s·L
PQ
NSFC
F
SHE WANT&amp; W PULL RANK
ON ME AND ORDf:R
OXN
LX
FG
YXESYH
FG
MS AROUND
SHOW HER1.(1
A~"-.'l&gt;l- F
BF y A p Q
0 J QS . - 0 S F Q
TFJ Y
~:Ji4~1 Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: WHEN I !JEAR SOMEBODY SAY,
"UFE IS HARD," I AM ALWAYS TEMPTED TO SAY,
'-C"' "COMPARED TO WHAT?"- SYDNEY HARRIS
@ 19'19 KJng Features Syndicole, Inc.

wx

.....
...
·"'
..•

and Alan Sontag
This hand was bid and
played aggressively by Re·

nee Molson, one of Canada's

One letter simply st ands for another. In . this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes~ the. len gt h and f ormati?n of the words are all
hints . Each day t he code letters a.r e dtfferent.

rLL

..

Opening lead : + K

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X y D L .B A A X R

cashed . First,

dummy's ki .. g, then her ace.
•'
)[ clubs had divided 2·2,
declarer would have had
seven heart tricks, one. diamond and five club tricks.
Clubs did not divide , but
fortunately for Renee the
nand with the singleton club
(West ) also had both the
spade ace and queen. De· ·
clarer wisely led a spade to
dummy and West was m
trouble. If he played low,
declarer would win with the
king in dummy and discard .
the remaining spade on the ·
ace of diamonds. She would
then concede a club trick
and claim the contract.
West won the ace of
spades to avoid just such an · ••
'.
eventuality, but to rio avail.
He returned a diamond· ••
which. declarer ruffed in her
hand and it was a simple
matter to lead a spade to . .,
'
dummy's king-jack and
finesse for West's queen.
•
Declarer would up losing
"
one spade trick, but both
losers
were
thrown
club
'"
away, one on the diamond · ••
ace and the other on the
••
spade king. Everything was
made possible by the far'
sighted ruff at trick one .
'!"'
'
Declarer had to keep both
,.
spades in her hand at trick
one to allow her to make the . '·
contract when the club suit
did not break. She could not "•••
have taken the make-or·
·~ ·
break jack of spades finesse
'
with only one spade in her
hand.
"

best women players, at the
1978 Can Am Regional at the
Queen Elizabeth Hotel in.
Montreal. Renee's jump to
five hearts indicated that
was the suit she wanted to
play the hand in and asked
North to bid a slam if he had
first- or second-round con·
trol in West 's spade suit.
A key move occurred at
trick one. Declarer ruffed
the king of diamonds to
delay taking a discard on the
ace of diamonds until later.
Trumps were drawn in two
rounds and the top clubs

.,
......

...

...•.

...

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A;&amp;SN : j

(For a copy of JACOBY MO()..
ERN, send $1 to: " Win at

OF BRUSH IT OFF A
SIT WITH I{OUR SLEEVE ..
WANNA TRI{ IT?

.,•.

••

.

:&lt;
•

.... -.
..••
~

·~ ·

'

TATER PASSED HIS

MMSE lt'OO CAN KIND

......•.
..

Bridge, " care of this neWSPfJ·
per. P.O. Box 489, Radio Ctty ·
Station . New York , N. .Y. 101Jf9.}

BARNEY

.'

.. ,,

32Meaning
33Suiting
fabric
38 Son of
Bela
38 Fell

·_
_ --~O~s~w~a~ld::..:::Ja:::c:::.:o::b:2y~a:::.n::d:...:A~Ia::.:n~S:.:o:..:.n::ta=g£__
,

t,...+-4--l-

CHECKUP
. See the Grate Family at

ticated
31 Idolize

PS~f!c.T ~:;:.:~ine b:-11--+-

~

•
'

Rut lind

D&amp;.

BRIDGE

30 Sophis-

35 Caustic
substance

TRAN~rr · :t•D

.'

RUTLAND
FURNITURL

16 Chinese port
19 Grand·
parental
22 Use the phone
23 Vituperated
24 Shifty ,
25 Disburden
26 FWlction
28 Mitzi or Janet

r.;;:;:;:=.:;-;;;';ij"':;:;;'';;i';;iiT~c;no~------------ 311 U.S.-

SUBWAY
CONDUCTORS
WANTED

Call 7·2-2211
TALl( TO
Wendell or Hertl Gratr
or Gene Smith

Wednesday, Feb. 28

~~~~~;:~::~~~~Rowan

,,

24 Rolls of Ca rpot In Sloek
&amp; lOG's ol Samples to
Choose From.
'BUY NO'!\' &amp; SAVE

742-2211

Rama" 10; Movie " One Minute to Zero" 17.

12 :4o-Mannlx 6, 13; 1:1)1)-Tomorrow 3; 1:30-Movle
"The Happy Time" 17 .
1 :50-News 13; 3:30--News 17; 3:50--Movle "Last of
the Commanches" 17.

1 Part of a crate 42 Nylon

EIGHT PUPP~IE:::S.'-6:-o-r-:7-w-ee""k-s-o""ld.

Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Ser.,.ice. We sharpen Scissors.

. 17.

IO :oo-Card Sharks 3,1~; Edge qf Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13; Movie " Romanoff &amp;
Juliet" 17.
·. 10 :30--AII Star secrets 3, 15; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
-Griffith 6; Magazine 8,10.
it :oo-High Rollers 3,15; Happy Days 6,13; 11 :30Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; Lov~ of
Ute 8, 10; Sesame St. 20; To Be Announced 33.
II :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12 :110-Newscenfer 3; News 6, 10; Jeopardy 15; Young
&amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Password 15; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 20,33; Movie " The Truth
About Spring" 17.
1:!)I)-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Chllren 6, 13; News
8; Young &amp; fhe Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
1: 30--Days or Our Lives 3, 15; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:DO-One Life To Live 6,13 .
· 2:25-New_s 17; 2: 30--Doctors 3, IS; Guiding Light B, 10;
.. .
I Love Lucy 17.
3:1)1)-AnotherWorld3,15; General Hospltal6,13; Llll'ea
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17.
.
. ··
3:30--Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnfstones 17; .Dick ·
Cavett 20.
4:1)1)-Misfer Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 6; Razzmalau8;,.
Sesame St. 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space.
CSianls 17.
·
·h ·,o ·
4:30-Bewlfchea 3; Gilligan's Is. 8; Brady Bunc · ' Petticoat Junction 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
·
5:1)1)-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister R09ers' Neighborhood 20,33; Bionic Woman
13; Brady Bunch 15; I Dream of Jeannie 17 .
5:30--Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec . Co. 20; Odd Couple 15; Beverly ·
Hillbillies 17: Doctor Who 33.
6:1)1)-NeVfs 8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6: Andy Griffith !7:
Hodgepodge Lodge 20. •
6:30-NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell 6;
CBS News 8,10; My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20.
7:00--Cross.WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Marty
Robbins 8; News 10; Love American Style 15; Carol
Burnell 17; Dick Cavett 20; Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
7:3 )-Hollywood Squares 3; Bankers 6; Match .Game .
PM 8; $1110,000 Nome That Tune 10; Nashville Oit
The Road 13; Dolly 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNelt· ·
Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:oo-Leopard or the Wild 3,15; Mork 1!. Mindy 6,13; .
College Baskelbell17; Wallons 8,10; Nova 20,33 . .
8:30--Angle 6,13; 9:00--Qulncy 3,15; Barney Millet ·
6, 13; Hawaii Flve.o 8, 10; World. 20.33.
·
9:30--Soap 6,13; to :oo-Mrs. Columbo 3,15; Family
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, !0; Mission : Impossible 17;
News 20; Footsteps 33.
10:30--Hocklng Valley Bluegross 20; Area Showcase
33.
11 :oo-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Hogan' s Heroe• !7: Best of
·
Groucho 20; Over Easy 33.
11:30--Johnny Carson 3,!5: Starsky &amp; Hutch ,6,13;
Mash 8; ABC News 33; Movie "Nine Hours to

41 Gaelic

i'------.. . .-..,..,---'

__o~d aft ~!:_S~~e~inJI~ ----

form

I ASSURE YOU lHEY WILL
GlADLY TURN FROM 'THEIR.
OWN ME55BS 10 YOUR
DELECTA9LE PR.ODUC'TIONS ···

REAL ESTATE Loons . Purchase and
220 E. Main Street,
refinance. 30 yeor terms . VA ·
.. Pom•roy, 0.
No money down (el igible /
Call 992-7113
vetercns) . FHA - As low as 3
Free Estimates
per cent down ( non·veterens ). ;
949-2862, 949-2160
Ireland Mor tgage Co., 77 E: I
11
·9·1
mo.
State, Alhens . 614 -597 -3051 .
-7-mo.
- DRO_O
_M
_ -ro-n-, h- .
-THR Ee - 8- E
Carpeted , air conditioned . Pric·
Business Services
ed
very reaso nably . In
GiveAway
Syracuse. 992 ·534::;8c.,- - - - BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
SMAll BROWN dog. Possible
SUBURBAN LIVING with city
plete Service. Phone 949·2487
Border
'Collie .
Female .
water . One ocre wooded lots
or 949·2000. Racine , Obio, Crill '
992
·38
:.:
3.::c
3·--.,for sole n&amp;or Meigs High
Bradford.
-·- --0NE FEMALE Irish Setter. 2 years
S&lt;hool. Coll304·273'2276.
MODE THREE bedroom house, full
bdseme11t , fireplace , fully
carpeted, central air , enclosed
sun porch, located on 6 1f, acres
on CA 28. app~ox . 3 miles from
Racine . If interested contact
Lorry Wolfe 949-2836 weekends

Now arrange the circled letters 10
the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

l ·12·1 mo.

- · ------ --·--· - ·- · --- -- ~

acres

tJO KIDDI~'; I roJ'T ll!IIJK IW

'

2·11 ·1 mo. Pd.

1-4·1 mo. \Pd.)

AN

'·
•.'·

992·6011

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one ·tener to each square, to form
lour ordinary words.

BORN LOSER

..

•New Home
•Add-ons
•Remolding

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~· ~~ ®·

''

SIDING

"For

full

Tlailer Sales

992-2356

Overlooks river . Water, elec·
tric available. 992-3886.

basement,
garage, 1 acre. (really
nice) . $.16,900.00.
NEW LISTING - 24 acres,
2 year old bi-level home, 3

1143·2524 .

HAY FOR sole. Carl

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

wooded oreo on top of hill.

NEW LISTING - Five
Points Area. 3 Dedrooms,
• living room, dining. fully
equipped kitchen, drapes
and rods. About7 yrs. old . 2
large lots. 529,100.00.
NEW LISTING- Building
site In Wildwood Subdlvi·
slon, outilitles available. 2
acres. 56,000.00.
NEW LISTING - New
Home. 3 bedrooms, l'h

CAPI'AINEASY

Will Mike

3 'I~

baths[ fireplace, nice kit -

JACK W.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992'218!

2·5·1 mo-

Servlca Co lis

.

chen,

GOOD MIXED hoy for sale.
niture.
-- ·------ - - - ·- 843·2432
.
-.....,. ---WANTED TO buy: old jewelry.
Colt 992·5262 or write Kay RUTLAND HARDWARE, 2 doors
Cecil, 87 S. 2nd, Middleport , , from Rutland Post Office .
Phone 742·225S. Due to new
OH .
contract. I am .able to sell the
CASH FOR junk cars . 24 hour
KING Circ:uloting coal and
wrec\o.er
service . Frye ' s,
wood heater with blowers
Rutland , OH . 742.2081 .
assembly lor $282,95 . Hove
. -------- other type~ of wood, coal and
LOCUST FENCE po•l . 985·3538 ,
gas heaters (good prices).
___:~ening~ - __ - --- - Stove buyers ore eligible for 10
LOCUST FENCE post . 985·3538
per cent discount on regu lar
- _e~.~~~-- - - ---- . stovepipe and jet·oir stainless
steel triple woll (Ul approved)
Yard Sale
- _P~ ----· -- - 1972 BACKHOE INTERNATIONAL.
IF YOU hove a service to offer,
9·9·2042.
wont to buy or sell something,
REDUCE
SAFE and lost with
oe looking for work ... · or
whatever . .. you 'll get results GoBese Tablets ond E·Vop "water
foster with a Sef'ltinel Wont Ad. P.'~~Nelson_E~L - - - - Call992·2156.
- - ---------- KITCHEN AID dish washer , cop·

petition

Headquarters

--- ~·

9'122689.
-·- ·------ - - - - ·- - - -

noon .

11 Yeon Exporlonct ·.

Nice 3

Housing'

Wanted to Buy

_

1.9

pre&lt;;lated. Just 565,000.
NEED MONEY? WE CAN
HELP . LIST YOUR
HOUSE WITH US FOR A
CHANGE.
HELEN L., GORDON B.
AND SUE P. MURPHY,
REALTOR ASSOCIATES.

--

Headquarters For
Hotpoint and
Genl!ral . Electric
Appliances

after 12

MOIItpleiJ
27320 Mon1gomery Rcj.
Lang1villt, Oltki
614-669·4245 Evanlnv•
2Mfles Enl
o1 Wilkesville
2· 14· ! m~

SHOP

Must be seen to be ap·

_ .~.!..~~1-!Port.,•_- --

··-

and

spot. Want only S23,000.
RACING BARI}AIN - 8
rooms and bath. natural
gas, city water~ near store.
Will take $12,000.
MODERN - ElabOrate 10
room Colonial home. Has 5
bedrooms and 3 llaths.

LIMESTONE, sand, grovel ,
calcium chlor.ide. fert ilizer. dog
food. and all types of salt . E• ·
celsior Salt Works . Inc. , E. Main
Sl ., Pomercy'. CW'1 ·3B91 .

CHIP WOOD . Poles
max .
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slob, $10
per ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy.

For
Sundins
Hammond Organs
I
Tyree dlvd. Racine, Ohlti' 1
Phone 949·2118 oventngs
after 5 p.m. Weekends

.

nace , · vinyl sid ing,
ca tr peting,
large outbuilding and nice garden

Gravely Tractor Soles and Ser ·
vice. 204 COndor St .. Pomeroy .
HAPPV BIRTHDAY, Granny· Betty
992·29.75.
Kearns . We love you . May God
Bien you .
MI~ED CONDITIONED hoy . Very
~~~~ c:.nd'!!:Y.?~ ----- _ _ good guolitv . Delivery
available. Phone 992·7201 or
992·3309.
Help Wanted
- ----BABV SITIER in my home Bam to "EVERYTHING'S GOTTA' GO".
House and lot, furniture .
12 noon, n&amp;or old Pomeroy
clothes . cor oil my housenotd
High School . Phone 992·3580
- _?f.!_~~f.m_._ _ ,__ .___ _ .items . Drop by 7t:JJ Lourel St.,

-·-·-.--------

--

Sa 1es l&lt;ep.

bedrooms, enclosed bath,
neW kitchen and Oil fur -

COAL,

- - ·-

basement

i

REYNOI.C'
S
.
ELECTRIC MOlOR

years·old .

For Sale

Phone Portland 843-2181 . Open
· evenings until 8. Sunday 2 till6.

PETE SIMPSON

TRACTOR DRIVEN . , ·
PTO ALTERNATORS
from 15,0001o
75;000 wolfs.

..----------....,·r.

RANCH - N'ice modern
home with 3 bedrooms,
bath, good size family
room and large lot. Only 7

FLiR·N,SHEo-~~o~ ~, M~ibe;r;
Ave . No children or pets .
depo,.il ·and rent in advance.
, ~eference rP.quired.
C~ll

. - - - ---

3

PfANOS

~t~~-~·~-~!~--~~b.~]~~ :;

2-5·1 mo.

acres.

Every Sunday I pm . Foct~~y _ d4b-1788.
__chok_egu~~o~l~. _____ - " ·- ·- - GUN SHOOT, Racine Volunteer
Fire Dept . Every Saturday 6:30
pm at their building in Bashon.

In

. conditioo ,

full

~

MOBILE HOME . Comp.letely fur·
nished. 3 bedroom . Burlingham
oreo . 992·7479 .

.(lub .

ORGANS

&amp; Famous Name Brand ,

enClosed, modern kitchen,

APT.

GUN SHOOT. Racine

Hammond

be&lt;frooms, 2 baths, one

FURNIS~EO. HOUSE I~ Middlepo-rt.
Suitable for four construction
workers. Coli after ·6 pm .
30" ·882·2566 or 992·5•34.
·-- - --- ·- - - - - -

Notites

Asking 525,000.
LARGE IN TOWN g9od

Phone

----,·-·---

LARGE HOME in
992·2205 before 5.

FJ:klay .&amp;moon- .

·l'fttnl:·742-3111

kim
.
- we.are,
.. , "~reprtller
•'
...

and fu.ll basement.
Natural as central heat.

ed, Opt . Coli before 8 om

4P.M.

A\.Pirept•celllull

•.992:3325

. 216 E. Seconl!_SirMi

foyer,

'192 ·2288.

Sund8y

...CIIIlllll.lll
·
WoMatove, Oll wrl'i•c•

upstairs bath, and 'h bath
down . Formal dining,

For Rent

TWO BEDROOM, kitch en furn ish·

the day befcnpi.sbllcatJon

,

LARGE ROOMS •
bedrooms, suite size, large

992 ·5434 .

=J:.y
4P.M.

lttll Century Service ·wHt
.2o;ttl Century Know-Mow

,VI~GIL B. SR. ·-~~~~

. • _ •.

cylinder . 19,000 miles. $3600. ,
Colt 991· 751'1 _o~!er 5: 3~ p_m ~ ·-

-·-- ·

.

.1H£_$WEEP

north of Pomeroy .
Coll992-7479.
--- -- ·- - - - - · - ·- - 3 AND 4 RM. furnished and un·

0 . Box 486, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 was appointed An cillary Administrator of the
estate of Ray Ralph Sarson,

WANTED

~Ill...

Route 33.
Large tots.

Court, Fred W . Crow, Jr ., P .

.

.
Don't tat·• c:hlmn'v fire puf
1 d•Fnper on vour life -

.Phone
- . .61"-247·
. . . 2193.
..
1973 MAVERICK . 5600. P.S.. A.C..
good work car . Colt W2·5757

furnished

'

Insured

rebuilt transmission . Rear and
front end. Good tire S, SIOOO

.ev_e~ln~s:

'

Cfttino•y .
sw .. psGIOfld

Assoc iate.

Soles

COUNTRV MOBILE Home Pork .

Milodat

.

Memberot

.742·1798.
.
- .
1968 DODGE CORONET 8
cylinder. Good point job. Ne~

responsib~ ror mort than one incorrect insertion.
Plme 982-2llt

· Noon m Saturday

VI'EDNf&lt;nav, FEBRUARY 28, 1979
6: oo-News 3,8, 10. !3, t5 : A·Bc
6: Andy GriHith 11;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
.
6:30-NB.C News3,15: ABC News13: Coral Burnett 11.
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; My Three Sons17; Over
Easy 20.
7:00--Cross.Wits 3i Newlywed Game 6,13; News 10;
Love, Amer ican Style 15; Edward the King 17;
Footsteps 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7: 30-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6; Muppet Show 8; The
Judge 10; That's Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15;
MacNeii· Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8:1)1)-Supertraln 3; Married : The Flrsf Year 8,1 0;
Shakespeare Plays 33; NHL Hockey 17; We ln.
terrupt This Week 20.
8:30--Wodehouse Playhouse 20 ; 9:1)1)-From H.e re lo
Eternity 3,15; Charlie's Angels 6,13; One Day AI A
Time 8, 10; Country Matters 20.
9:30--Jeffersons 8,10; 10 :1)1)-Vegas 6.13: Kaz 8,10:
News 20 .
10 :30--Dragnef 17; Turnabout 20; Crosstalk 33.
11 :!)I)-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavell 20; H09an's
Heroes 17; Lilias, Y09a &amp; You 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee Woman 6, 13; Rock·
ford Flles8; ABC News33: Movie "The Third Day "
O; Movie "Sink the Bismarck!" 17.
·
12 :40--Mannlx 6, 13; Kalak 8; I ;1)1)-Tomorrow 3.
1: 30-Movle " Dark City" 17; ! :50-News 13; 3:30-News 17; 3:50-Movle " Red Tomahawk " 11 .

·News

tJH -985·4197. Virginia Hayman ,

vtnyl top . P.S.. P.B.. A.C. . 8 ·
track · tdpe, 61.000 mile s.

11le Publlaher ......... the liihl
tD edll or rejed any adl £leemed obja1ional. Tfie Publlaher will not be

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

.

__ _ ___

1976 CAMARO AUTOMATIC. 6

NOTICE

'

Real Estate for Sale
---------

RISING STAR K ennel~ . Boar ding
fRA AFFOL HN lleolty Srokm .
and grooming . ot t breeds .
Tiucior man or opts . for lease .
Cheshire. 367-079'1.
Modern 2 bedrooms include
__,
( Orpel . s to.,.~ . ref rigerator ,
-1:ater . Must sign 1 year lease .
Auto Sales
- ·-··-· -·- ·- ··-·-- $]195 per month plus 5195
1970 FORO MAVERICK , auto., no
security deposit . No pets . You
pay electric . lOth and Main in
.ru.st ~n. b~dr . 54~: 9.49: 2~4~ . _
C:oo t.,. ille , Ohi o ,
Phone
1971 PLVMOUTH Fury.• 4·door .

'A'Of'd! is 4 cenl:l per word per day.

C.,ituary ' 6 .,.Ill! per word, 13.00.
minimum. Cuh in advance.

GET SPECIAL SAVINGS
THIS WEEK ONLY!

111 Court St.

J.n

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS'COUNTY,OH 10
ESTATE OF CHARLES A.

concessions, but see
tha t the other party doe s likeOn February s, l979, · in the
wise. Find - out more about
yoursel f by sendi ng for your Meigs County Proba te Court,
Case No . 2259 1, leopha
1979 copy of Astra-Graph Let· Wagner
, 2630 Kingston Pike,
ter . Mail $1 for each to Astra- Cir-cl.evllle , Ohio 43113 , was
Graph, P.O. Box 489, Radio City .!ippointed Executri,.; of the
Station , N.Y. 10019. Be sure Ia estate of Charles w. Wagner ,
deceased , tate of Bo x 126,..
speci fy birth s ign .
Racine , Oh io .
ARIES (Morch 21-April 19) A
Manning 0 . Webster
situation over which you have
Probate Judge .
Clerk
no eontrol could delay you from
achieving a goal .that is person- (2) 14, 21. 28 Jtc
ally important. Be patient. Wail
things out ti ll tomorrow.
-LEGAL NOTICE TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Many
Nott ce Is hereby given thai
insurmountable complications Meigs
Racing Ent~rprises ,
will not presently allow your Inc ., a corporation , 748 East
plans involving others to work Main Street , Pomeroy, Oh io.
has
been
vo l untar ily
out. 'Don ' t force the issues .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be on d issolved .
guard ·,in anY dealings today
Roger Starc,her
where money changes hands.
James R. Frecker
SOmething you 've wo rk ed hard · (2 ) 21, 28, 2tc
and lan·g for could be lost.
CANCER (Jun.e 21-July 22) In
Today In Hlltory
making agreemen~s or bargains today, yotill have Ia be
By Tbe Associated Press
especially careful that the
TOday Is Wednesday, Feb.
other p.a.rty is leveling w ith you . 28, the ii9th day of 1979. There
Check out all the !acts.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) · Steer are 306 days left in the year.
Today's
highlight
in
clear of accepting favors from
welt-meaning Co-workers history:
today . Instead · of help'ing to
On this date In 1942, the last
ease your problems, they Allied bastion in the · Dutch
could create an eXpensive ·
East Indies, the island of
mess .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) AI· Java, was invaded by Japan.
though you may be juslified in
On this date:
reacting harshly to a sticky
In 1483, the Italian painter,
social situation today, it will do Raphael, was born in Urbino,
yo u more harm than qood. Turn
Italy.
the other cheek .
c
In 1'llM, American colonists
LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Something you've left unallended at ~erfield, Mass., were
may catch up with you today to attacked by Indians.
put you in a tight spot. Don't
In 11100, French focces cap· shift the blame to innocent
tured
Barcelona, Spain.
bystanders.
In 1844, U.S. Secretary of
SCORPIO ~Oct. 24-Nov. 22)11 is
. very Important to keep your State Abel Upshur, Secretary
priorities in order today. If r.ou of the Navy Thomas Gilmer
ignore your responsibilit es, and three others were killed
you'll only create future probWhen a gun exploded (II a I
lems.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. navy ship during an
21) Subdue Inclinations to ta~e excursion down the Pawmac
gambles today where your ca- River.
reer or tlnances are conIn 1933, a Nazi decree in
cerned. Appealing long-shots
Germany
suppressed the
could prove to be tizzlers .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2'1-Jan . 19) nation's civil liberties.
In 1966, U.S. astronauts
Be very caretul today in challenging views that associates Elliot See and Charles
feel strongly about. Picking Bassett were kDled when
apart their beliefs could create
their jet lrainer crashed Into
a nasty incident.
an
aerospace plant in St.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. 19)
Conduqtlng business with Louis.
friends today is likely Ia require
'ntrt years ago: President
all the diplomacy you can Richard NIJ:on met in Paris
muster. Handle matters with
with French President
kid gloves or someone might
0!81'les
de Gaulle and said it
. leel short-changed .
was time for the U.S. and
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
France to lay old quarrels
aside.
WARNING ISSUED
Five years ago: Egypt and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) the United States reThe · Ohio attorney general's
established diplomatic
office is W&amp;ming Ohioans to
relations afte•- a seven-year
·be . careful when choosing a lreak.
tax service.
One year ago: President
Attorney General William Carter asked Congress fer a
J . Brown said consumers 24 percent Increase in federal
have .a right to receive funds for education;
estimates for tax services.
Today's birthdays: Fonner
Under a new rule first Treasury Secretary John
·proposed
by
Brown, Connally Is 62. Chemist Un.u s
businesses must offer con· Pauling Is .78. Film director
sunlers their choice of a Vincente Minnelli is 66.
written estimate, .an oral
Thought fer today: When
estimate, or.no estimate at ali you fully understand the
when 't he anticipated cost of situation it Is worse than you
the service will be higher think - Barry Commoner,
than ·$25.
·
biologist, born 1917.
Make

&gt;.oo

6day!l

given fr ee rein for your imBgi·
natio n.

IS Words or Under
Cash ·
Charge
1.00
1.2S
1.50
1.10
uo
2.2$

l day
2day•
3days

.!'~ts_ft!r_Si!_le___ _

. __

:THURSDAY, MtoRCH 1,1979
Large 11; 5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50PTLCiub 13; 5;55-SunriM Semester 10.
6:1)1)-Fred Flintstone 4; 7110 Club 6,8; PTLCiub 15;
6: 10--News 17.
6:25-For You .. . Biack Woman 10: 6:3()-Rompft' ·
Room 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3; ' 6 : ~
Morning, West VIrginia 13; 6:5s-&lt;:huck While
Repi&gt;rts 10; News 13.
7:110-Today 3,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13;
Thursday Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three Stooges
17; 7:15-Weather 33.
7:30--Famlly AHalr 10; 8:110-{:apt. Kangaroo 8,10:
Leave II To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33:
8:30--Hazel 17; '9 :oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Oonahuo
13,15; Emergency One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match
Game 10: Lucy Show 17.
9:30-Brady Bunch 8; H09an's Heroes 10; Green Acres
~:~World at

TELEVISION
VIEWING

No . U ,$82

Me igs Co unty Probate Co ur t,
Case No. 22,582. Earnest Lee

involvement

9- the_paUy Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb . 28, 1979

DICK TRACY

,

On Februl!lry 6, 1979, Jn th e

. March 1, 1979

' "'"

WIF

FL\/11\1' COLORS,
LOWEEZV

DON'T FERGIT
HIS LOLL1/ POP,

DOC

.."'
....;..=~ .:·.

ARE ~OU PA~IN' CASH
OR CHARGIN' IT?

·

~

....

.....
....•••• .
.... .
n

,.,,., •

...- .

.

~~~: ....··...
~

,..
'

'

.,

.. .
.. . . ; . ·; .
'

\ .

�\

10-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Wednesday. Feb. 28,1979

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

.G asoline ·shortage may i Area Deaths
cause 10 cent increase
-in•price this· year
.

.

i Crime spree suspect

AMBER R. FRANK
JOHN MIGHT
Graveside services for · ·John Might, 76 of Bre!Tllln,
Amber Rene Frank, daughter a fonner Rutland resident,
of ~Y and Denise. Lesley , died recently at the LanFrank, Rac'ine, who dled at caster Memorial Hospital
birth Tuesday at Camden- following a lingering illness:
Clark Hospital In ParkersMr. Might moved from
burg were held · 11 a.m. this Rutland to Dayton severa I
morning at the Letart Falls years ago and then after
Cemetery.
retiring from the Wright PatBesides her parents, terson Air Force Base, he
Amber is survived by moved to Breman.
He is survived by his wife,
paternal grandpar~ts, Mr.
and Mrs. Howarcf' Frank, . Emily, three sons, three
Racine; maternal grand- daughters, two step children,
mother and step-grandfather, a brother, Clarence Might of
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Batten, Rutland, and two sisters,
Parkersburg, and maternal Mrs. · Viola Rumfield and
;gfan dfather, Richard Mary Buck, Pomeroy.
Funeral services were held
:Lesley,
Wapakoneta.
Several great - grandparents atl0:30a. m. on Feb.l7 at the
including Mr,. and Mrs. A. C. Morris Sons Flineral Home,
Bradford, R~ also Fairborn. The Rev. Rodney
Thacker officiated. Burial
survive.
The Rev. Steve Wilson was in the Glen Haven
officiated at the graveside Memorial Park.
rites.

-S us p e,n d
some measures, the president said
envirorunental requirements he had no intention of
ordering the retail gasoline
to save fuel;
-Allocate crude oil to refi- rationing, weekend gasstation closings or other
neries.
These are among proposals contingency plans disclosed
Carter hopes will help him earlier this week. But he said
"deal with the temporary he will ask Congress
Iranian disruption," which · Thursday to give him such
began late 1881 year, and the power.
Energy Secretary James
impending shortages caused
R. Schlesinger told a meeting
by that curtailment.
His proposals, he told a of the nation's governors
news conference Tuesday, Tuesday that "there may be
will be going to Congress spOt shortages of gasoline
early in March.
this summer."
·Referring to mandatory
As a result of the shortages
and recent price hikes by half
a dozen
oil-producing
countries, Schlesinger said,
the administration now
predicts gasoline prices will
increase "at least 10 cents" a
gallon this year, instead of Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mrs. Jon Collier and son,
the seven-cent increase- Admitted - Harold Smllh, Harry Garnes, Jr., Darlene
Reedsville; Fannie West, Gilmore, Trilba Greenlee,
previously forecast.
suggested
price- Pomeroy; Debora Lawson, Dorothy Griffis, Mable
He
increases
would
help Racine; Clarence Price, Halley, Mrs. Eddie Hupp and
discourage gasoline Portland; John James, son, Charles Johnson, Ray·
Pomeroy; James Barton, mond Johnson, Patricia Lanconsumption.
Carter Racine; Jeffrey Darnell, drum, Janey Matthews,
But
the
buying with their tax douars. . administration is preparing Pomeroy; Bobby Rathburn, Marie McCully, Peggy
WASHINGTON r (AP) Mercer, Wilson · Moore,
Social
"Security I'm a coosumer advocate." further measures to slow Rutland.
The
Discharged Donald Catherine Mynes, Mary NotRoss also revealed that he energy conswnption and the
Administration is looking Into
the possibility of sending and the secrelary of health, nation's need for imported Dailey, Douglas Barnett, Don tingham, Sherman Parsons;
Betzlng, Debora Lawson.
Brian Ross, T!Jomas Rue,
every taxpayer a notice each educa lion and welfare, oil.
MRs. Kenneth Theis and son,
Administration spokesmen
year of his projected Joseph A. Califano Jr., are
MArk Vallance, Lou
retirement benefits and what planning a series of town have said the loss of Iran's oil
WilJiams.
be would draw if he became meetings around the nation to means a 2.5 percent reduction
Holzet Medical Center
Births, Feb. 27
canvass public opinion oo of U.S. oU supplies. But that
disabled.
Discharges, Feb. 27
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dale Adkins,
Social
Security's
treatment
of
could
become
a
7
percent
Social Security
. Bonnie Adkins, MAxine Ar·
Oak
Hill.
son,
womim
and
other
issues.
The
shortage
if
the
United
States
Commissioner Stanford G.
nold, Ralph Asliley, WilHam
Ross said the ,notices would dates and times have not must share · its oil with Bowman, Shannon Brown, 1 Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Cox,
needier nations under an
son, Wellston.
be patterned after yearly been set.
The commissioner said he existing pact and if world
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jones,
repocts sent to policy holders
daughter, Culloden, W.Va.
· by some private 'insurance does not expect the adminis- supplies suffer further
Mr. and Mrs. John Beckett,
!ration's propose.d ".$800 reduction .
pla 0s.
Schlesinger said the
son, Chatmansville, W.Va.·
Ross said in an interview million cuts in a few Social
· be propo sed measures to d ea 1 . Cloudy tonight and Thurshis staff is still working on the Security programs to
· oil shorta ge day. Intermittent
rain late
.
idea, ·and he isn 'I sure yet approved by Congress this WI"th the 1raman
·
1
de
·
·
tonight
and
Thilrsday.
Low 35 .
uld
mc u
encouragmg
how much it would cost or if it year in time for Uie fiscal1980 wo
to
40.
High
Thursday
near
50.
budget.
industrial
plants
to
switch
is feasible.
But
he
expressed
from
oil
to
natural
gas
or
Chance
of
precipitation
50
the
47-year-old
But
confidence
Congress
will
coal.
·
percent
tonight,
90
percent
·
commissioner, who took
areas of Athens, Hocking,
consider
cuts
next
year
as
He
asked
the
Federal
Thursday,
office . four months ago,
Perry, Meigs, Morgan ,
part of . a major Social Energy
Regulatory
declared, "!really would like
Washington, · Noble, and
every taxpayer in the country Security bill that also will · Commis.sion Tuesday to aUo.w
BILL APPROVED
Monroe counties.
who's a potential beneficiary address the big payroll tax mdustr1es and . electric
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The project was submitted
to understand what they're increase scheduled for 1981. utilities to purchase natural Rep. Thomas J. Carney, D- for approval by the Depart··
gas directly from producers Boardman, has won 81·6
so they could substitute it for House approval of a bill ment of Economic and
Community Development's
oil.
allowing townships to lower Appalachian Development
the state speed limit from 55 Office, which administers the
to 25 mPh within their bor· ARC program in Ohio.
ENTER CHINA
ders.
Ohio's 1979 Appalachian
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)
He told his
House Development Plan and
- Peking reported small
colleagues Tuesday the
Vietnamese units penetrated legislation Is needed to Project Investment Package
contains approximately $8.4
six to 10 mUes into China at
protect pedestrians and to million In funding proposals
three points but said aU were
control traffic In u~banized for Ohio's 28 Appalachian
repulsed. Both armies In the
townships.
counties In areas of health,
Vietnam border war were
Ca1"11ey also said the state child development, energy,
reported regrouping in the
Transportation Department education
and natqral
Umg Song area and a major
has·at times turned a deaf ear resources.
battle was stlll expected
to requests for slower
ARC is a state - federal
there.
moving traffic.
partnership
which promotes
China's Hsinhua news
the
economic
and social
agency said the Vietnamese
development
11f
the ApOPENS FRIDAY
shelled a commune northeast
palachian
region
of the
of Lang Son and 10 miles
Judge John C. Bacon anUnited
states.
inside China on Friday, then
nounced today that the court·
sent about 60 troops across house will be open Friday and
Big. acreage .. _heavy load~ . .: rough going- Power King
the border Saturday, but
aU cases will be heard as
carries through without m1ssmg a beat. The rea~on_? 12,
border guards drove them
scheduled.
14 and 18 hp engines applied through Power K1~g s ~~~­
back.
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter's standby
lor
mandatory
plans
restraints
on
fuel
consumption during a fuel
shortage that may never
come have overshadowed the
· impact of a milder, but still
unpleasant, shortage already
on the way .
That imminent shOrtage
could lead the government
to:
- Push industries to substitute natural gas or coal lor
oil·
'

Benefit prediction
still

•

ln

HOSPITAL NEWS

works -by

Socilil Security

Weather

Grant

PowER
KINa
sets a fast pace
on tough jobs

'

facing more ch-a rges
Ronald (Rusty) Woomer,
charged In a crime spree In
South Carolina thai Jell five
persons dead, Is a former
resident of Point Pleasant.
Tbe latest Associated Press
account of the Incident
follows.)
.,

adjacent Georgetown County.
The 24-year-old Hun·
tlngton , W. Va., man was
charged with two counts of
murder, one count of assault
and battery, two counts of
kidnapping and lour counts of
armed robbery by lileorgetown County authorities.
Earlier, Horry County
authorities charged him with
murder, kidnapping, assault ·
and battery with intent to kill
and cri!plnal sexual assault.
Georgetown Sheriff
Woodrow Carter declined to

(USPS 145-960)

disclose where Woomer was
being held.
"I 'm not going to advertise
where he's going to be at,"
Carter said. "He's In custody.

That's all I'll say."

•

Also charged in Horry
County is Fred Thomas
Whitehead, 30, operator of the
Myrtle Beach Coin Shop. He
GEORGETOWN, S. C.
was arrested Friday night
(AP) - Ronald R. Woomer,
and charged with conspiracy
already charged In Horry
to commit murder and anned
County in connection with
robbery and accessory to
last week's violent rampage
receiving stolen goods, acthrough
coastal
South
cording to Hotry County
Carolina that left five dead,
Pollee Chief Herman Enzor.
faces additional charges in
A third suspect, Eugene E.
Skaar,
40, also of Huntington,
EXPLAINS COVERAGE
shot
and
kWed himself when
At 7 p.m. Tbunday al
police
closed
in on him and
Pomeroy VU!age HaD a
Two defendants were fined
at a Myrtle Beach
Woomer
representative from lbe
and six others forfeited-bonds
motel Friday morning.
Federal Insurance AdIn the court of Middleport
Four people were shot to
mlnistraUon of F1ood 111Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
death
in less than 12 hours ·
surance will present
Tuesday night.
before
police zeroed In on the
aspects of flood Insurance
Tommy Walters, · 20,
motel
where Woomer and
such as types of coverage,
Middleport, was fined $25 and
Skaar
were
staying Friday
how to prepare claims,
costs on a littering charge
morning.
· types of damages, etc.
and $100 and costs on a
The crime spree began In .
The geoeral public aod
criinlnal mischief of property
Colleton County about 4 p.m.
iosuraace ageols are In·
.
charge.
Th!1111day wllb the slaying of
vited to atteod the meeUog
Don Hood of Middleport
Jolm Tuner. The body of the
caUed . due to the recent
was fined the same amounts
67-year..,ld coin collector was
flood.
on the same charges.
found in his home in CottageForfeiting bonds were .;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ville. _ P.a(t of his coin
James W. Casey, Middleport,
collection was found In the
$28, posted bn a· charge of
motel room where Woomer
SQUAD RUNS
speeding, 41 miles in a 25 mUe
and Skaar were staying,
Due
to flood waters the- police said.
zone; Keith T. Herdman, 18,
Pomeroy emergency squad
Pomeroy, $350; driving whUe
Arnie Lee Richardson, 27,
to travel partially by boat and his sister-in-Jaw, Earl
had
·intoxicated;
Buddy
McKinney, Middleport, $50, - to 1519 Nye Ave. at 10:03 a.m. Dean Wright, 35, were fatally
Tuesday where John James shot near Georgetown, about
disorderly manner; Joseph
ill.
E. Ush, 26, Mason, $100, petty
two hours alter Turner we:s
He
was taken to Veterans killed, autborities said.
theft; Clarence B. Rider, 59,
Cheshire, $25, ·running a stop Memorial Hospital. Tuesday
A short time later two
sign, and Carlos E. Stepp, 36, afternoon the unit answered a women were abducted from a
Ceredo, W. Va., $400 total caD to 144 Mulberry Ave. for Pawl«iys Island convenience
posted on charges disorderly Ronnie Dailey who was taken story where they worked. The
manner, disturbing the peace to Pleasant Valley Hospital. women, Louise B. Sellers, 33,
ahd discharging firearms in
and Wanda SIIIIDDers, 25,
the village.
were shot, authorities said.
Ms. Sellers died of the
Five defendants forfeited
wounds and Ms. Swruners
TO END MARRIAGE
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
remained In stable condition
Filing
for dissolution of today at the. Grand Stra.nd
Mayor Clarence Andrews
marriage In Gallia County hospital in Myrtle Beach.
Tuesday night.
They include Joseph. Common Pleas Court Mon·
Charges · against Woomer
day were Jeffrey A. Neal and . are still pending in Colleton
Brown, Minersville, $27,
posted on a speeding charge; Melanie A. ·Neal.
County:
Rory Fields, Middleport, $30,
disobeying a traffic control
device; Ricky Barringer,
Reedsville, $27, speeding;
Gary Pickens, Amarillo,
Tex., $30, speeding, and Joel
Wisecup, $43, speeding. ,

Mayor's Court

was

BAKER'S
BUDGn

SHOP

MARKET REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct hogs (Fed.State):
Barrows and gilts not well
. established few early sales
steady to .25 lower demand
moderate U. S. 1-2, 200-230
lbs . country points,
54.oo-54.25, few 54.50, plants,
54.50-54.75. u. 8N-3, 200-230
lbs. country points,
53.21Hi4.00, plants 53.75-M.SO.
Receipts Friday: Actuals
8000, today's estimates 2500.

•

e

I

VOL NO. XXIX

enttne
NO. 223

MIDDLEPORT-P{)MEROY, .OHIO

THURSDAY., MARCH 1, 1979

By The Associated Press
Water had · receded this
morning from downtown
Pomeroy and the mayor
lifted the emergency law he
had imposed to keep out
sightseers interfering with
clean-up operations.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
had ordered arrests of any
persons who got in the way of
· officials .combatting the
flooding Ohio River which put
city streets under water and
forced merchants to move
lilercl\andise to higher
ground.
This morning Aridrews said
the riyer bad receded and

streets were clear. He. said a Transportation to close 55
lew people were arrested for miles of U.S. 52 from
interfering with emergency Cincinnati eastward to
efforts bat no one was held in Ripley, possibly until Sunday
jaiL
afternoon.
He said local officials and
Meanwhile, acting on a tip
National Guard had worked that some men launched a
through th_e night, but the · boat Wednesday and entered
Guard was leaving the town a home In eastern Cincinnati,
this morning as conditions three police officers and
were beginning . to return to three firemen borrowed an
normal.
.
amphibioUs World War 11
Rain was forecast for the "duck" ' from Lunken Airport
southern sections of the state to. investigate. ·
today, but weather officials
Police Officer James Spursaid it would have little effect geon said he had an "eerie
on the flooding. ·
feeling" as he patrolled along
High waters forced the familiar streets in the hoat.
Ohio
Department
of Since there was some lootin~

in last December's flood , 1!0 disa ster authorities . pre- emergency evacuation . The
Guard was stationed in
said he hoped a " flood dicted . .
patrol " can ·be organized
In Newtown ; where some Adams, Clermont, Meig s,
residents decided to stay .in Scioto . and Washington
befoce the weekend.
·
In New Richmond in Cler- their partially nooded homes , counties.
mont County, village police "about 35 persons were housed
The National Weather
set up roadblocks Wednesday in an emergency shelter.
Service. at Charleston, W.Va .
to stop· sightseers from
Upriver· from Cincinnati in · sai&lt;l the river was expected to
entering the flooded Ohio Augusta, Ky ., a shelter fall below the ·46-foot flood
River town, P.olice Chief opened, but people were not stage at Pomeroy and below
Harold Kennedy said.
leaving their homes yet. Food the 5().foot flood stage at
·&gt;'We're liaving an awful lot ·was being dispensed there, Gallipolis by this morning .
of difficulty controlling sight- however.
The flooding at Pomeroy
was
described by local
seers," he said.
About 100 National Guard
Some 100 persons were troops wer e on duty through officials as the worst since
housed at a Red Cross shelter the night, a.ss isting local 1964.
And the influx of sightseers
New ·
Richmond county disaster services
in
Wednesday,
with
that directors and civil authorities became so heavy that Mayor
number expected to double, with traffi c control and local
(Continued on pa ge 81

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
Reedsville, 0.

Games to be played In the
Meigs
Elementary
Basketball Tournament that
had to be cancelled have aU
been rescheduled John Mora,
principaf at Meigs Junior

lligh announced today. AU
games will be played at
Meigs Junior high.
Games scheduled Feb. 26
will be played on Thursday,
March I.
At 6 p.m. Pomeroy Blue
will play Pomeroy Gray; at 7
p.m. Bradbury-Childs versus
Pomeroy Cyclones; at 8 p.m.,
HarrisonvlJle
versus
Pomeroy DevUs.
Games scheduled for Feb.
27 will be played Friday,
March 2. At 6 p.m. Bradbury ..
Kitchen verstis Rutland; at 7
p.m. Pomeroy Green versus
Bradbury Nelson; at 8 p.m.
Bradbury Cass~ll versus
Salisbury.
Games scheduled for
March I will be played
Saturday, March 3, at 10 a.m.
Bradbury Wise wlJJ play
Pomeroy Blue and the winner
wiD play Pomeroy Gray.
At U a.m. Harrisonville
wlll play Salisbury.

CS&amp;E granted /
•
rate mcrease
•

· By JAMES . W. HATI'ON 1979, and Commissioner
Associated Press Writer William S. Newcomb Jr .
COLUMBUS; Ohio (APJ worried publicly that the
Coiumbus &amp; Southern Ohio $32.8 million hike .would no!
Electric Co. officials planned be
sufficient.
He
. · to formally file for a $12G "reluctantly" made the
inillion annual rate increase motion to approve the lower
today on the heels of a figure.
Newcomb's motion was
temporary $32.8 million hike
granted Wednesday.
seconded by commission
The emergency rate Chairman
C.
Luther
increase authorized by the Heckman.
state
Public
Utilities
Dennis S. Pines , the
Commission goes into effect coniniission's legal director
today and stands for the rest and the hearing examiner in
of the year.
the case, said the rate hike
The utility notified the was a bare bones increase.
commission last November """'lbereis no cushtoh in there
-a day before it filed for the lor negative contingencies,"
emergency rate hike ~ that it he said.
would seek the permanent
Pines said· it was the
increase to take effect in 1980. smallest increase that could
Utilities first must notify be granted and allow the
the commission they intend to utility to continue to render
seek a rate increase, and then adequate service and meet its
must file a formal application financial needs.
at' a later date.
·Robert Sisinger, Colwnbus
temporary &amp; Southern vice president for
Wednesday's
hike takes the form of a 15 rates, said the hike "allows
percent surcharge on the us t&lt;i do·what we asked to do
base rate the company with only the barest margin
charges for electricity. When . of safety."
added in with other charges,
"If all the asswnptions
it will raise the average bill of work as the (commission's)
the utillty's 444,000 customers staff says, we can Jive with
·in central ~nd southcentral it," Sislnger told reporters
Ohio by about II percent. It following the vote. But he
applies -to both residential said that if som~ of the
and · non..-esidenlial custom- projections miss - the mark,
ers.
Columbl!S &amp; Southern would
The commission approved have to come back for more
the increase by a vote of 2~. money.
Richard Retterer, the
with the board's newest
member, Michael Del Bane, utility's general manager of
not vothig.
corporate affairs, noted that
The utility bad sought a 25 the commission's staff
percent surcharge which assumed lhe utility's energy
would hav~ generaied $53 sales forecast was low.
million during the rest of
(Continued on page 8)

Business area
being _cleaned

CLEANING UP UNDERWAY - Pomeroy Firemen Wednesday afternoon began
·'
·
hosing down Court Street.

Aid_ ~equest
Because of the deplorable
conditions of county, township and village roads partially-~ caused by recent
flooding, Richard Jones,
president of the Meigs County
Commission, has sent a
request to Governor James
Rhodes lor immediate
financial a&amp;sistance.
.In his m~ilgram Jones
state4, "Due to the flooding
and additional traffic, county
roads are In a deplorable
condition. Request you visit
Meigs County at the earliest
date possible to personally
inspect excessive damage to
county, village and township
roads due to flooding. State

BERMUDA STEAK
SERVICES SLATED
The Rev. Roy Deeter of
Coolville wlJJ be the
evangelist at revival services
to be beld at Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church,
County Road 82, Pomeroy,
from March 2 through the 11.
There will be special
singing. Services will be held
at 7:30 p.m. nightly. The
public is invited.

$104
BERMUDA STEAK &amp;
FRIES

ADOLPH'S DAIRY.VALLEY
570 W. MAIN
'

POMEROY, 0.
'

OPALKLOES
Mr• : Opal Kloes i~
rec .. o;erating at her Syracuse
homi• ilf:&lt;T having undergone
surgl'l--·· P.t tht• Hnlzer Medical
f'; ::lh' J /'{'('ently.

EFFECTIVE MARCH 1, .1979
FOOD STAMPS WILL BE ISSUED DURING
THE FOLLOWING HOURS ONLY.
.

FRIDAY:
SATURDAY:

.'

9 AM UNnL 11 AM - 1 PM UNnL 3 PM
9 AM UNnL 11 AM - 1 PM UNnL 3 PM
.

.

.-

.

9 AM UNnL 11 AM - 1 PM UNnL 3 PM
..,

-

9 AM UNm. 12 NOON
9 AM UNnL 11 AM - 1 PM UNnL 3 PM

-

NO STAMPS ISSUED

Athens County_
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

IT'S NOT EVERY DAY that a hellcopler lands on the lawn of a Pomeroy home so it
waa quite a surprlae for Mulberry Ave. resident Roy Betzing to find one on his lawn
Wednesday. Betzlngis pictured with the chopper which carried some officials here to study
a drainage problem· behind lhe Pomeroy Elementary School.

assistance requested. Reply recent flooding . He said his
anxiously awaited.''
department was doing
Deplorable road conditions everything possi ble to
were wscussed at Tuesday' s maintain roads.
regular commission meeting
other
matters
In
by Wesley Buehl, county Christopher C. Layh, adengineer.
mini strator of the Meigs
Buehl reported that not . County Mental Retardation
only had winter weather Progral)l and Manning_
conditions
caused con- Webster, president of the
siderable damage, but ad- Meigs
County
Mental
ditional damage has resulted Retardation Board discussed
from extra traffic created by minimum requirements for

School project
The Meigs Local School
District has been given
verbal approval for 100
percent
funding . ' for
corrective action on a ground
slip behind the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
This was the word from
Boyd Ruth, Meigs Soil
Conservationist, following a
conference held in Pomeroy
Wednesday with State and ·
Federal representatives of
the New Rural Abandoned
Mine Program of the . S. Soil
Conservation Service.
Meeting
with
the
representatives were Ruth
and administrators of the
Meigs Local School Distrk1,
Charles Dowler , Dwight
Goins, ·Dan Morris and
Robert Morris, Principal of
the school involved.
Two representatives of the
Office of Surface Mining at
Indianapolis, Ind., and four
representatives of the Ohio
Division of Reclamation were
on hand for the meeting.
Some of the represen·
tatlves traveled to the school
by car while others came in a
helicopter which landed- on
the lawn of the Roy Betzing
home, next door to the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Boyd said the slip, located
behind the school, 's being
caused bY water from old
mine shafts. He described it
as dangerous In that the hill
could slide Into the rear of the
building.
The mlne.s were sealed
years ago; but the tile used is
now broken and filled with
roots.
The underground water has
apparently reached a stage
"Where it is running through
the hiJJside.
Th e representatives visited
I

'.

··
By Bob Hoelllch
Pomeroy's Main St. business sesion this morning was
beginning its " comeback" following several days of flooding .
The Ohio River crested in Pomeroy Wednesday afternoon at
51.4 feet- flood stage is 46.5. The flood , the worst in several
years, created many problems lor the business section as
stores were forced to move and close down.
Thursday morning the )Vater had cleared from Main St.
and Pomeroy firemen had worked through the night flushing
and cleaning the streets.
.
..
Most business people were still cleaning the interior of
cleaning up process by
iheir estabfishments, but it looked like it would be a day or two
before they could get it all together and get back into regular
business routines.
In excellent shape this morning was Swisher and Lohse
Drug Store, which had 32 inches of water, The New York
Glothing House and the Riverfront Diner which were all open
for business.
A number of East Main St. businesses had three to four
proposed mental retardation
and
one.!Jalffeet of water in them at the time of the crest.
training center and· workshop
Other
businesses had been affected in that their heating
at Tuesday's meeting of the
in water, therefore, buildings were not heated .
systems
were
Meigs County Commission.
·
Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews reported that
The center wiJJ be con"emergency
law"
rather than martial law had been put into
structed in the near future .
effect
in
Pomeroy
during the flood period.
·
Commissioners approved
Officers
had
been
stationed
at
town
entrances
to keep
the design concept .for both
flood
period:
sightseers
out
during
the
buildings.
The National Guard which left at 9 a. m . this morning
Bob Bailey, administrator
assisted
officers in those routines.
of the Meigs Emergency
At
10
a.m. today water was still on the parking lots along
Medical Service, discussed ·
the Ohio River and village workers were trying to clean them
the one bid received lor a new
as much as possible.
emergency medical vehicle.
All three county school districts were in session today.
On
Bailey 's
recomhad been closed Monday through Wednesday due
Southern
mendation the board agreed
to
the
flooding.
Saturday classes will be held in that district to purchase the vehicle from
this week as students begin the chore of making up lost time.
the Horton Co., Colwnbus lor
Schools of the Meigs and Eastern Districts were
$24 ,612 .61.
Buses were not able to make pickups in some
functioning.
Bailey also reported that an
areas. The Pomeroy bus to Lincoln Hill did not run because
effort was being made to street cleaning work was underway. That bus would ha ve bad
form a volunteer emergency
squad in the Tuppers Plains lil travel over hoses being used by the fir e department.
This is the second flood that the business district of Pomeroy
area .
ha~ suffered in less than three months. The Ohio River two
It was decided to undertake
weeks before Christmas crested at 49feet. The residential area
a seeding program at the
- except for the inconvenience - was affected very little by
.sanitary
landfill.
Apthe flood .
proximately two acres that is
Pomeroy Postmaster James Soulsby reported that the
completely filled will be
postal workers have done an excellent job during the nood in
~
seeded.
getting mail distributed. He said that 95 percent of the mail
The Meigs So~ and Water
was delivered in spite of the flood waters and outgoing mail
Conservation Service will
has gone asscheduled.
s~ed and supervise th e
Pomeroy's East Main St. , which had not been in good
project.
condition before the flood, worsened due to the water over that
Attending were Richard
street.
Jones , president ; Henry
Ohio Department of Highway workers were on the street
Well s. and Jim Rou sh ,
early Thursday morning attempting to improve the situation.
commissioners, and Mary Utility workers were out getting phone service and other
Hobstctter, clerk.
services going and checked lor safet y.

sent to Rhodes·--

funds approved

IMPORTANT NOTICE

MONDAY:·
TUESDAY:
WEDNESDAY:
THURSDAY:

·-

"~-~--~
"'·· ·
. ..
. .
LEO JOHNSON, Harrisonville, nearest to camera.
and Don Armentrout, Pomeroy, helped the Ohio niver
take along some. of its flood mud as the river slowly
receded Wednesday .

wheels . Thai's why you move right along w1th a

Tournament games set

15 CENTS

Emergency law lifted at Pomeroy

gear drive deliver almost 100% power to the _biQ dr~~

mower. load fast with a }S ton bucket. b.ul!doze, qlear a
4B" path of snow in a hurry.
American-built Power- Ki~g is a _ machi~e , no~~ toy! Automotive clutch. transmission. d1fferent1aL 1 ~ axles, lor
example.

"'

the Don Anderson and
Gertrude Mitchell homes
near the school y·esterday to
view problems there.
Further tests will be made
at the homes and a consultant
will be hired
under
emergency measures of the
RAMP program to make
recommendations on a
program to be followed in
freeing the water on a con·
sistent basis from the
hillside ..
Ruth said that opening the
mine shalt enough to install
permanent piping and a
constant confined runoff
would probably ·correct the
problem.

·Weather
Partial clearing, considerable fog tonight. Low in
the mid to upper 30s. Considerable sunshine Friday
with a high of 55 to 60. Chance
of precipitation 20 percent
tonight and Friday.

GAME CHANGED
The Class A Dlslrlcl
aame between Southern
ud Portsmouth Clay bas
been rescheduled for 1 p.m.
Monday at ChiUJcothe High
Scbool. Tickets may stU! be
olltained at Southern High
Sdlool. The contest WBI
orf&amp;lnally slated Tueoday,
llipl and later moved to
aexl Tueollay .

•••

.

.

.

CHECKS WATER LEVEL - Herman Loridon, former mayor of Syracuse, now a
member of council and manager.of London Pool !sat summer, s shown checking the water ·
· level at the pool site Tuesday afternoon. Londori, for whom the pool was named, is
constantly working for the ,village in all areas.

.

,

.

. ·---·--···

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="813">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11462">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50388">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50387">
              <text>February 28, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="212">
      <name>frank</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="776">
      <name>might</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
