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                  <text>14- The IJBily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,
Jan. 9, 191ll
,

Food, goods rose 12.5 percent .during 1979

.C arter puts retaliation measures in force
WASHINGTON (AP) - President . Union " suffer ," but he
Carter is formally setting in motion
acknowledged they probably will not
a series cl. measures against the
force the Kremlin to withdraw its
Soviet Union in retaliation for what
forces from Afghanistan.
he calls "the greatest threat to
Speaking to about 100 members of
peace since the Second World War."
the House and Senate invited to·the
Carter ·said Tuesday night that
White House for a report on the
these measures will make the Soviet situation in Southwest A,'!ia, Carter

said there was nothing the United
States could have done militarily to
block the Sov iet action.
Carter admitted that the
retaliatory measures were aimed
rrincipally at influencing future and not present - Soviet behavior
but said that Moocow's intervention

nonetheless pooed a threat to
American security interests.
H the Soviets suffered no adverse
consequences, they would have been
tempted 'to move again and again
until they reached the warm-water
ports" or gained control of world oil
supplies, Carter said.

WIC program
offered to Meigs
residents
.
.
The Ohio WIC Program which
stresses that good nutrition is im- ·
portent to health at all ages,
especially during pregnancy and
early cbddhood, is being adlllinilltered in Meigs County by the
Meigs County Department of
Health.
· WIC Is a nutrition education
Pl"lllram that provides nutritious
foods to women, infants and children
under five years of age to improve
and maintain good health.
WIC benefits are available in
Meigs County through Meigs County
Health Department.
The program provides milk, eggs,

InterViews
scheduled

,.

I
I

The Tri-state Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America, announces that
interviews for camp staff for the,
19«1 Camp Arrowhead season wiD he
held as follows:
January 10 -7-llpm., Pt. Pleasant
National Guard Armory .
January 17 -7-llp.m., Ohio Valley
Wholesale, Ashland.
January 24 - 7~ p.m., Scout Service Center, 733 Seventh Ave., Hun tington.
Positions available include the
following areas: cooks, main tenance, swinuning instructors, riDe
range, archery range, boating, kitchen staff, trading post staff, etc.
If interested, please contact Camp
Director Archie Hayes at (304) 5233408 for an application. Applications
will be available on the interview
nigh18.

cheese, juice, and iron-fortified
cereals for women and children and
iron-fortified formula, cereal ~nd
juice for infants.
Women who are pregn"!'t, postpartum (up to six months after
delivery ) or breastfeeding (up to one
year after delivery) and children
who are less than five years old may
be eligible for the program.
Participants must be a resident of
Meigs County and-or be receiving
health care through a WI C clinic,

Commission
(Continued from page I )
Jones congratnlated Blakeslee
and Margaret Parker as well as the
entire Historical Society for the fine
job that was done on the Meigs County History Book. Jones said, '1t is
one cl. ' the finest things ever
published for Meigs County."
Blakeslee thanked the commissioners for the 1980 appropriations for the County Planning
Corrunission as well as for the
Historical Society.
A letter was read from the sheriff
concerning the minimum standards
for jails in Ohio asking that the
board review them.
Henry Wells moved and Chester
Wells seconded to set the starting
salary of county employees at $5,700
with a 00 day probationary period
and with no raise in pay until after
six months of service.
The corrunissioners will meet at 6
p.m. on Monday, Jan. 14 for the annual organizational meeting.
Attending were Jones , Henry
Wells and Chester Wells, commissioners and Mary Hobstetter,
clerk.

CONTINUES
CLEARANCE
AT

HARTLEY SHOES

FOR lHE LADIES

FOR lHE MEN

Brand names such as:
Joyce, Hush Puppies,
Easy St., Meyers and
Lover Girl.

Brand names such as:
Jarman, Hush Puppies,
Florsheim .

Values to $32.00

Values to $65.00

-

Now
Sale_
10 To'l5
Prrced

Reduced
To

SHOES DISPLAYED FOR
EASY SELECTION
ALL SALES FINAL

MAYOR'SCOURT
Four defendants forfeited bonds
and a fifth was fined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were David
Venov, Huntington, W. Va., $66,
posted on charges of speeding and
pasSing in a no passing.zone; Ernest
Triplett, Racine, $25, improper starting and hacking ; Floyd Kingery,
Bidwell, failure to maintain control
of vehiclE, $25; Mark Tanner,
Nelsonville, $25, foUowing to closely.
Fined $100 and costs on an assault
charge was Alfred Evans, Middleport.
Four defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night. They
are Edward Ramsburg, Long Bottom, $25, po.sted on a speeding
charge; Sherry Bliskirk, Syracuse,
$31, assured clear distance; Dennis
Butcher, P&lt;meroy, $25, speeding,
and Michael Pierce, Rutland, $25, no
operator's license, and $50, failure to
appear in court.
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to North Second
Ave., at 7:48 a.m. Wednesday for
Mrs. Helen Boyd who had fallen.
She was taken to Holzer Medical
Center

HARTLEY SHOES, JNC.
Open M-Sat.
9:30 TiiS
Fri. Til 8

must be determined to be in
nutritional need by a WIC health
professional and must meet income
guidelines.
For l!lffi, a family of four may
have an annual income cl. up to approximately $12,500 and still be
economically eligible. The focus of
the program is improved nutritional
status and thus nutritional need
must be present in order to receive
benefits.
Interested individuals must apply
for the program at the WIC clinic,
located at the Meigs County Health
Dept. at 2.16 W. 2nd St. , Pomeroy.
Height, weight and a blood test will
be performed as well as infonnation
about food eaten in the past 24 hours.
If eligible , participants will
receive monthly_food coupons that
can be redeemed for specified foods
at participating grocers throughout
Meigs County.
Each individual certif;,d for the
program receives a food package
designed for his-her special needs.
Each participant's food package wiU
vary in amount and type of food
prescribed.
The WIC Program gives participants opportunities through
nutrition education to learn more
abrut feeding their families wisely
111 limited food budgets. Nutrition
education is provided by WIC health
professionals to participants and includes infonnatioo about each individual's nutritional risk reason
and ways to improve their hoolth
stain.&lt; hv using WIC and other

SHOP EARLY &amp; SAVEt .
Middle of Upper

Block , Pomeroy

ANGEL TREADS
WASHABLE
SLIPPERS
Reg. '5.00
SALE

-Devon -Aileen
- Redeye -Wrangler

299

20%

TO

50%

OFF

SALE

ENTIRE STOCK

WINTER
ROBES

SIMPLICITY
PATTERNS
lf2 PRICE

!hOFF
Ladies &amp; Children's
FLANNEL·&amp;
BRUSH NYLON

GOWNS AND
PAJAMAS .
· Rejlucel;llor Clea_g/lce

TO END MARRIAGES
Filing for dissolution of rna rriage
were James Alley, Rt. 2, Racine,
and Pamela Jo Alley, Rt. I, Racine;
Harry Yarbrough, Rt. I, Langsville,
and Kathy Yarbrough, Rt. I, Middleport.

~---Area-r&gt;;;;.-ih~-1

I

UP TO

I

.MRS. SHERMAN BUTLER

Mrs. Sherman Butler, formerly of
Rutland, died at the home of a son,
Tuesday in Findlay, Ohio. The body
wiD be brought to Rutland Friday.
Funeral services will be announced
later.

The Speech Hearing oepa rtment has !hese
services available for the hearing impaired individual.
'
Hearing Evaluation
Hearing Aid Check-for damaged·hearing
aids
Hearing Aid Selection to find best aid for
the client's hearing
Hearing Aid Fitting ·
Hearing Aid Sales starting at $215.00
Hearing .Aid Orientation and Lip Reading
Complete Follow-up Services
For more information, call 446·5500 in Gallia,
286-1626 in Jackson, in Meigs 992-2192.

r-

AMERICA'S FIRST

CLASSIFIED BY UNDERWR-IT-E-RSLABORATORIES INC. ·

WoodBurni~

-A cld-A -furnqce ®
byMQNARCHG
eSaves on monthly fuel
bill and energy.
· eEasy to operate.
eAdapts easily to heating

systems In most homes.

• Smoke and Odor free

heated air Is circulated to
rooms you wish heated.
• Can be moved to basement or relocated easily
because of compact size.
e -Only warm air is clr ·
· c.ulated because of ther mostatically controlled
blower.
eOnef ire lasts for hours.
eCan be used without Installing to neat ducts, (i.e.,
garages, hunting lodges,
cabins I .
eHeat loss to chimney is
only fraction lost by
fireplaces and most supplemental
heating
systems. No flues to close
to avoid heat loss.

Reg. $9.95

ePractically

599

malntenan ~e

{)I&lt;J

...

.. I ,.

=-:&gt;

TO
PRIM AR't'
f

required .

ll" a 16" RE CT
DUCT OR 10" DiA
PIP E WIT H OPT IONAL ADAPTOR

RETURN

URN ACE

g

PLENUM

••

A·

v

v

E

E

UPFl.DW

MODEL
&amp;1324&amp;

~Apro~NSEM~~;~,

, \
-Pot Holder -Dish Cloth
-Mitt
-Blender cover

OFF

RET URN T O PR IMAR Y
UPFL.OW FURNACE

. ~

ELBERFELDS . W~REHOUSE.;
'

,

I

•

MECHANIC STREET IN POMEROY
'

'

I

''

.

'

conununity and institutional mental
health programs;
Improve the quality of community
and institutional mental health
programs;

Provide for the protection.• by the
state, of all employee rights , advantages, priorities, and preferences in the facility;
An agreement by the Commnnily
Mental Health and Retardatioo
Board to utilize the management information system and mental health
service classifications and Ito abide
by the procedures and requirements
developed under Section .237 of this
act;
Provide for general administration services to the Athens
Mental Health and Development
Center by the Department;
- An agreement by the Com·
munity Mental Health and Retar- .
datioo Board, or other management
agency, to assume civil liability that
may arise out of the internal
management or adlllinilltration of
Athens Mental Health and Develop·
mental Center;
institutional
-Improve
management;
-Expand conununity - based
alternatives to institutional mental
health care; and
-Probide for the availabillty of
mental health services in the least
restridive and environment consistent with individual needs.
Mrs . Plununer said these funds
were approved in the state budget
under the purview of Amended Sub·
stitute House Bill204.

Weather

Pomeroy native Carter appointee

I

no

•

George_D. Massar, Colwnbus, a
native of Pomeroy, has been ap_pointed by President Carter as the
Colwnbua metro chalnnan of the
· National Alliance of Business for
1980.
~
'
Massar, who will &amp;Illume the
chalnnanshlp at a Jan. :II luncheon
of Franklin County buslnesa 8JXI
commUJII!y leaders in the Neil
House, succeed~ John F. Wolfe,
publiBher of the Columbus Dispatch
who served as 19'19chalrman,
The N&amp;t!ooal Alliafice of Buslne!8
is an Independent, non-profit cor. poratlon · working in partnership
with business, labor', ~ovenunent
and education to ·reduce unemployment ·of the disadvantaged,
Vietnam veterans and exGI!enders;
as well as securing jobs foc needy
youths .'
·
·
Tbe organization was established
.in 1988
the niquest of the late .
PreSideqt JOOI)silr\ IIJid . nb:w · has
more than t20offlces lnmajcr dtll!ll
throughout the coumry.
•· TheOolunmuiorganlzal!onlsstaffed prlmarl)y by people oo loan frcm
}larticlpetlhg members. Robert
Hadderi. , Ill the Columbus' metro
. ·director.. .
.
·
· ~ attorney, M-.r ls.prestdeht

't

BLOWER CONN_ ECT~
WITH COL D AIR •

'.

50%

P~IMARY

FORCED AIR
,FURNAC!!

·lh OFF

A.

featuring sound from the "Annex" from lOp. m. to 12:1l a . m. Admission
is $2 foc singles and $3.50a couple. The queen will be crowned during halftime ceremonies. Normally, a homecoming queen would have been
chosen auring the football season. However, due to the long teachers'
Strike, the event will be held now .

Winter hike set

WHY OWN AN ADD·A-FURNAC E' BY MONARCH?

REDUCED

s

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JANUARY I0, 1980

'648' board receives project funding

COATS

s

enttne

at

POMEROY -MIODLEPORT, OH 10

NO. 188

•

•

country skiers stranded for two days
By The Associated Press
in a cabin were rescued by helicopPacilic storms have whipped up
wind and rain in Hawali and ter late Wednesday.
In the PorUand area, the storm
Southern California and stu!Uied the
knoCked out electrical service to at
Northwest with enough snow and
least 85,000 homes. At Ventura in
freezing rain to sink more than 100
Southern California, at least 2,000
boats.
customers were without power due
At least 12 persons were killed and
· to the heavy rains.
two others missing in weatherIn Southern California, more than
related accidenta over two days.
3 inches of rain were blamed for
Tens of thousands were without
rnudslidt!B and creek flooding that
power as Ice am snow dawned Unes .
closed several roads and highways
Some 125 boats sank and
and caused some drowning deatha.
IUIJlerous nxis collapsed un(jer the
Hurricane force winds and nearly
weight of the snow In Oregon and
6 irx:IEs of rain lashed the Hawaiian
Washington smte, where many
Islands on Tuesday am Wednesday
schools, businesses and highways
In what one resident described as the
were clo.sed Wednesday.
worst storm since World War II.
Slranded motorists jammed hotells
Trees were uprooted, electrical
and motels throughout the Norand telephone service was inthwest. In Boardman, Ore., the
terrupted and damage from winds of
HOMEOOMING CANDIDATES - Four girls are vying for
Dodge City Inn was full but cl.fered
up to -75 mph was expected to reach
homecoming honors at Meigs High School. Candidates are, left to right,
adults sleeping~ _lodging .for the
into
the
millions
of
dollars.
Terri
Yeaguer, Tonia Ash, Cherie Lightfoot, and Sonia Ash. Not shown is
nightf&lt;r $Ia head.
Portland Mayor CO!Inie McCready
Dee
Simms.
A dance wiU be held after Saturay 's game with Wahama
Deputies in a four-wheel-drive
declared a limited state r:l. emergenvehicle said it took them 4t hours to
cy as schools were closed and 9 intravel from Portland to Multnomah
ches
of snow forced the closing of
·Falls,about 2&amp;mlles away.
most of Portland lnternatlooill Air- ·
Up to a foot of snow also· fell in
port,leaving mly one runway open.
western Montana, where two crossMore than 4 feet of snow was
reported at Hood River, Ore., 60
'!'he Gallia- Jackson -Meigs Com- mittee will receive $50,000 for the
miles east of Portland, with acperiod of March I, 1980 through
cumulations of up to 2feetat nearby munity Mental Health and Mental
Fej&gt;ruary 28, 1981."
Retardstion "648" Board has been
towns .
The participating agencies
Along the Oregon-Washington bor- notified that a proposal for the plan(Federation
), institutions and
der, blizzard con~tions with drifts ning of a regional unified mental
steering corrunittee members are :
health system for conversion of
up to 14 feet brought travel to a halt
(A)Gallia -Jackson -Meigs "648"
facilities
and
management
of
the
in the Columbia River Gorge . Three
Board; (B) Athens Mental Health
Athens
Mental
Health
and
Developpersons stranded in snowbourxl
Development Center (state Convehicles in the gorge were rescued ment Center (AthenS) to the com- trol); (C) Muskingum Joint County
mitlees
had
been
approved
by
the
by an Amtrak train crew. Another 15
Board; (D) Washington County
Ohio Department of Mental Health
were rescued by deputies.
''648" Board and (E) Tri-Olunty
Drifts cJ. up to 4 feet were reported and Mental Retardation.
"648"
Board
According to Maxine Plummer,
at Stevenson, Waah., where officials
d. the plan is to :
Purpose
Executive Director of the Gallia said it was the worst storm since 34
any duplication of
-Eliminate.
Jackson -Meigs Community Mental
LAURELVIlLE, Ohio (AP)inches fell in 1969.
costs
and
effort
between community
Health and Mental Rltardation
The 15th annual winter hike at
In Seattle, 7 inches of snow
and institutlooal mental health
"648" Board, 'The planning comHocking Hills State Park is
covered downtown streets and few
programs;
scheduled for Jan. 19, the Ohio
businesses were open.
Improve coordinatloo between
Department of Natural Resources said Wednesday.
Hikers will follow six mlles of
EXTENDED WEATHER
an old Indian path through the
Saturday through Monday,
valleys and gorges of Hocking
..J' A chance of flurries In the norNEED A JOB?
Hills.
theast Saturday. A chance of rain
Rain llkely later tonight. Lows in
Dwight Goins, administrative
As many as 5,000 persons may
Sunday and Monday. Hlg1u from the assistant of the Meigs illcal School
the low 308, then steady or slowly
take part in this year's hike, the
mid 3011 to the mid 40s Saturday, District, announclll that a full-time
rising temperatures the remainder
departmEnt said.
rising to the 4GB by Monday. Lows custodian position as well as subcJ. tonight. Windy and wanner with
In the event of heavy snow or
from the mid ZOs to the mid 3011 stitute bus driver jobs are open in
rain Friday. Higbl in the mid to up· hazardous driving condltlOM, the ·
Saturday, rising to the :1111 by Mon- the district.
per 40s. The chance cJ. precipitatioo
hike will be held Jan. 26.
day.
is 60 percent tonight and 90 percent
Residents interested in applying
Friday.
should stop by the Meigs Junioc High
School in Middleport where they can
secure applications and undergo in terviewing.

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, lNG.
The Gifts of Speech &amp; Hearing
Unlock the Doors to Communication

Ladies &amp; Children's

99¢skein

VOL XXVIII

Although gasoline prices rose 3.4
percent in December, the same as
November, prices for home ·heating
oil were virtually unchanged for the
second consecutive month, the
report said.
Capital equipment prices rose 0.9
percent in December, can pared
with 0.5 percent in the previous month, and ended the year 8.7 percent
ahead of the December 1978level.
TIE Producer Pri~ Index stood at
:127.8 in December. This means that
goods that coot $100 in the 1967 base
period co.st $227.80 last month.
The index meao;ures price changes
at three levels. Fi~Jished goods are
those one step short of retail outlets.
Intermediate materials have hal

•

He added, however, that there was
some evidence in December that
non~nergy crude prices were
moderating, a situation that often
occurs when the economy is heading
into a recession.
The Producer Price Index is watched clOBely because price increases
at the wholesale level often show up
in a month or two in higher prices at
groceries, drug stores and other
retail outlets.
Consumer prices have been rising .
slighUy faster than wholesale prices
aud could show a 1979 increase in excess of 13 percent, or the worst inflation rate since World War II price
controls were lifted in 1946.
(C(Jitinued 111 page 10)

some processing . Crude ·goods have
had no processi11g.
The 12.5 percent incroose in
finished goods prices from Decemher !918 to December 1979 was outpaced by a 15.9 percent rise at the intermediate level and 17.5 percent increase in crude prices at whplesale.
Intennedlste prices in December
mse 1.2 percent, compared with 0.9
percent in the previous month;
crude goods were up 1.1 percent,
against 2percent in November.
"!'here have been very high rates
of increase in the intermediate and
crude indexes· in recent months,"
Early said, suggesting that these
would put pressure on prices in
cornir!g months.

Pacific storm
sinks 100 boats

Pomeroy, 0 .

Main St.

Met~s

lh OFF_

WINTUK
YARN

(USPS 145·960)

9.2 per~ent in 1918.
Food prices fell 0.1 percent at
wholesale last month following' a
sharp 2.6 percent rise in November
and ended 7.5 percent higl!er than in
December 19'18.
·
The chief inflation culprits in
December were metals, including
gold, and energy, the !!!bor Department report.said.
·
Non.food prices at wholesale went
up 1.2 percent in ~mber, 'compared with an increase cl. 0.8 percent
in November. Sharply higher prices
were noted for such items as jewelry
and household implements in the
wake of rapid advances in the price
of precious and non-precious metals
in world markets.

•

e

.•

Jaellson

THERMALS

Coats &amp; Clarks

30%

lWO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Eric Ci'ump, Racine;
Roy Jones, Pomeroy; Tracy
Whaley, Pomeroy; Ancil Prunty, ·
Bidwell ; HazeiRoy,Racine.
Discharged-Mickey Goode, Dana
Covert.

~ALE

percenl
·· "There's no doubt that energy
12.5 percent in 1979, the highest inmade an important cootributioo in
flation at the wholesale level in five
both cases," said Labor Department
years, the Labor Department reporeconomist John Early.
tedtoclay.
He noted that energy prices rose
There- was some moderatioo in
62.7 per'tent In 19'19 as 'a result of
food and fuel price increases at
higtler prices charged by the
year's end, with the government's
Organization rf. Petroleum ExProducer Price Index rising 0.8 perporting Countries and added that
cent In December, its most
OPEC's indecision about a new ,
moderafl! rise since June. Prices in
joint base price made the future
November had gone up 1.3 percent.
hard to predict.
Still, the Increase from December
"We would be pleased and sur1978 to December 1979 was the worst
prised " if the index goes up only 0.8
at the wholt!Bale ievel since 1974, . percent each month in the corning
when increases in crude oil prices
year, to produce a 10 percent incaused ~ the Middle East on emcrease for 1980, Early said.
bargo helped push the index up 18.3
Prices at the wholesale level rose

Gallia ·

~OL D

'12 ...........
Ladies ' Warm

FORECLOSURE ACTION
A foreclosure on a land contract
was filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Albert and Marie
VanCooney, Pomeroy, against
Charles Whittington, Middleport,
Deb!ll J. Snyder, Rt. I, Middleport,
Farmers Bank and Savings and
George Collins, treasurer.

,.;:;.;.;:;:;:;::::::::·:::::::::::·:::::::::::::=:·:::::::·:=:=:=:::::;:;:·:·::::::::::::::::::·

Ladies &amp; Children's

-Zippers
~-eig Yarn
-Thread
-crochet Cotton
-Sewing Books
- Tatting Cotton
- Buttons
- Double Knit
- Cotton Fabric
-Sport Fabrics
- Decorator Materials

REG. 17.95

Six defendants were fined and 13
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Jerry Wade, Gallipolis,"$15and
co.sts, speed ; Edward Sigler, Rt. I,
Rutland , and Lester R. Richards,
Long Bottom, $150 and costs each,
three days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, DWI; Laury W.
McGrath, Coolville, $150 and coots,
five days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, DWI; Hazilee
Riebel, Rt. I, Long Bottom, $15 aud
costs, excessive speed; Robert E.
Sanders, Rt. I, Reedsville, $15 and
costs, expired operators license ;
Paul Spencer,Racine,costs,IOdays
confinement, six months probation,
assault.
Forfeiting bonds ivere John E.
Fry, Elsmere, . Ky ., $35.00, illegal
backing; Russell R. Burns, Long
Bottom, $35.50, stop sign violation ;
Jeffrey K. Stone, Vienna, W. Va.,
Don M. Ra;e, Rt. 3, Racine, John W.
Rinck, Hurricane, W. Va., and
William J. Darby, Syracuse, $35.00
each, speeding; Jerry D. Edwards,
Lorain, $35.50, no operators license;
John W. Joseph, Letart, $60.50, no
operators license; Lerry R. Harman ,,Shade, $60.50, hit skip; Roger
E. Brauer, Jr., Racine, $62.55,
reckless opera ton ; Raymond
McHooe, Proctorville, $362.55, DWI;
Richard McPherson, Coolville,
$37.55, illegal backing; Jeffrey Ohlinger, P\1ffieroy, $37.55, speeding.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Wholesale

pri&lt;* for food and other goods rose

JANUARY
SALES
CONTINUES
SAVINGS

JEANS

SALE

FABRIC &amp; SEWING NOTION SAlE

BOYS' SWEATERS

County Court

.z

SPORTSWEAR

$
.

nutritious loads.
All participants are encouraged to
obtain regular and comprehensive
medical care. Those participants
who do not have regular physicians
or clinic care will be referred to one,
although the WJC Program does not
pay medical fees.
For more information on the WIC
Program, cmtact Mary Cleek, WIC
Oerk at the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626.

The day after the Dec. 'll Soviet- · his rutbacks in Soviet-American
sponsored coup in Afghanistan, Car- cummercial and diplomatic ties this
way :
ter had compared the Soviet action
· "We hope that wehavelaiddowna
to the Kremlin 's use of armed force
marker
1111d let them (the Soviets)
to put down uprisings ii1 Hungary in .
know
that
they wiD indeed suffer oii.
l!litl and in Clechoslovakia in 1968.
now
and
in
the
future."
!tit Tuesday, he said the inTuesday's
measures
irx:ludlll:
·
tervention in Afghanistan was cause
-Formal notification to the ""
for greater coo cern because the
target was a non-aligned state Soviets that they will not be allowed ~
to open a planned consulate in New
rather than nations ,that had long
been in the Soviet sphere of in-· York and a directive that the 17 officials assigned to staff the consulate .,.
fluence.
are to be sent home expeditiously . ~
Olrter explained the rationale fo~
The Soviets also were infonned that .~
the United States wiD not open a con. "'
;·:::::::·:::::::::::::::•:::::::::::;:::::·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::·:::::·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:-·
sulate in Kiev and that the seven
"
ORGANIZATIONAL SESSION
ficials
assigned
there
will
be
with-.
A meeting wUI be held at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the Bradbury Elemen- · Jrawn_
. tary School to form a boosters club ..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.
for the Meigs Local School District
elementary basketball program.
Parents of fourth, !Uth and sixth
graders of the district are urged to
attend.

J.J

surance Group. He serves as a direcMutual Insurance Co., Southern · tor of Columbus. Mutual Life InDRIVER INJURED
!lome Insurance Co., and Columbus surance Co,, another State Auto afThe Middleport Emergency Squad
Security Life Insurance Co., all !Diate.
was called to Route 1 at 6:57 p.m.
He is also prt!Bident and trustee of
members of the state Auto InWednesday for Betty Reed who was
"1
Grant Hospital, a trustee of the
Injured In an auto accident, She was
Columbus Automobile Club,
taken to Veterans Memorial
treasurer of the Ohio Automobile
Hospital wbere abe wiP admitted.
Club and director of the American
AI 1:16 p.m. Wednesday the unit
Automobile Association. He served
went to Route 1, Rutland, for Ida
as vice president of the Columbus
Wblte, who was also taken to
Automobile Club in 1968, was its
V~terans Memorial Hospital 8Dd
president from 1972-74 and chairman
was also admitted.
·
of the board, 1974-1976.
A graduate cJ. the Ohio State
University College of Commerce
and College cJ. Law, Massar is a
Bridlt'e rep&amp;ir started
. member of t!Je Columrus Bar
Association, Ohio Bar Association,
A bridge located on county road
one (between Salem Center and SR
Columbus Area Chamber of Com•
merce, Columbus Club, Athletic
143) ir\ Columbia Township, over
Ogden Run is being repaired Wesley
Club cJ. Columbtis, and the Scioto
Country Club. He is a director of the . Biehl, counly engineer-, announced
today .
Retail Merchant's Industries and a
This is the fi~t bridge on county .
trustee of the Insurance Federation
rood ooe, aJ?Proxima tely 1,0~ feet
for Ohio and Griffith Foundation for
north of county road six (mine numInsurance Education.
ber two road).
Massar was honored in 1979 as
Blll!hi said traffic should 111e counMeigs County's Man of Distinction
ty
road .I-A (mine road) and county
at a dinner staged ~ \he Pomeroy
road
27 (Point Rock) as a detour
Chamber ;,f Commerce. -H~ is the
route.
·
·
, son ·Of Mrs. C.larence A. Massar of ·
The
bridge
reBuehl
reported.
Pomeroy and the late Ml·. M~ssar.
GEORGE D.,:... MASSAR'
and a director of State AutomobDe

'

HEADS OOUNTY BOARD Harold Roush of Racine bas been
re-elected pfestdent of the Meigs
Coonty Board of Education for
19*1.

Patrol cites two

&lt;lrl.vers Wednesd.ay
Two drivers were cited following
two accidents investigated Wed nesday by the Gallla-Meigs Post,
!Dghway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene r:l.
a two-vehicle accident in Meigs
Counly on SR 7, at milepost 1.
According to an incomplete report
filed by the patrol, a south bound
vehicle qierated by Paul E. Reese,
38, Gallipolis, and a north bound
auto driven by Edward H. Ramsburg, 26, Rutland, collidlll.
Reese was cited oo a charge of
DWI. There was severe damage to
the Ramsburg auto, moderate
damage to the Reese vehicle.
One drlyer claimed Injury
following a two"'ehicle mishap on
U.S. 35, just west of SR 100, at 11:25
a.m.
. The patrol reports a -.est bwnd
' auto OJMtrated by Wlniam Tawney,
31, Galllpolls, hadsto~d In traffic.
• A vehicle itriven by Cecil Weston, 19,
· Marietta, failed to stop and struck
the Tawney auto in the rear.
Weston claimed injury, but was
not illlll1ectlately treated. Both
vehicles Incurred moderate
damage.

'

'l

' ,.J

Improvements
bill shelved

I

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mem·
bers of the joint conference committee deadlocked over the &lt;Bpital
improvemeniB bill are taking a Illday breather.
Rep. Myrl H. Sbot:maker, DBourneville, baited the dell be rations
Wednesday after the panel - to the
distaste d. the Senate - continued
putting back mmey that the q&gt;per
chamber had taken rut of the bill.
Rmtorations over the past two
&amp;ys now have made up most of the
$191 million cut by the Senate In
what arrived there as n record high,
$775milllon spending pa&lt;hge.
Most of tile retnslated projecla
were proposed by Gov. Jwnes A.
Rhodes and Included in the original
House version of the bill.
. The p8nel haS been voting on the
Senate deletloM, offered u amendments to the original bill~ The three
House conferees, by voting ''no" to
these proposed wnendmenta, have
managed to defeat thern on 3-3 ties.
I

'

�-·

•

•

2- The Daily pentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. Jan. 10, 1980

3- The Dally Sentinel, Ml

,.---Do You REALIZE

IN WASHINGTON

Today's

TI-lE .. ME DECADE" IC&gt; OVER--

COMMENTARY

AND WE DIDN'T GET

ANY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

OF IT?

Teddy who??? •

•

he conferred with Hampton.
Seamons says he asked Hampton :
• 'What are you supposed to do when
you're managing a large government program and you've got a guy,
like ... Fitzgerald on the payroll?"
Hampton replied, according to
Seamans : · ~t 's frankly one of the
problems we face in running the
government. ... On the basis of what
you've told me, I don~ believe you
could ever susta in a separation for
cause. So your only alternative is to
abolish his job."
That's exactly what the Air Force
did , reorganizing Fitzgerald's office
under a scheme that eliminated his
position.
The esc itself has since been
eliminated, replaced under President Carter's widely touted
reorganization plan with two new
agencies, the Office of Personnel
Management and the Merit Systems
Protection Board.
The board is supposed to act as the
guardian of employee rights, investigating allegations of prohibited
persoMel practices. In addition, a
quasi~ndepenuent special counsel to
the board is slll)cifically charged
with protecting the rights of whistle blowers.
But the board has just rejected, on
highly questionable technical
grounds, a claim that three deputy
federal marshals in Atlanta were
tramierred to. unwanted posts in
Florida and Texas in retaliation for
blowing the whistle on their bosses.
The marshals ' offense: They complained to members of Congress
about a office party at a government
pistol rangethat featured barbecued
ribs, drinking and gambling.
Urging the board to rescind the ar-'
bitrary transfers was Special
Counsel H. Patrick Swygert, the
first man to hold the job described
by Carter as the defender of those in
the federal services "who do point
out violations rJ. ethics.''
But Swygert was rebuffed and has
just &lt;pit in disgust -after less than a
year in office. The White House now
is searching for a replacement, who
probably won\ be so conscientious
in the pursuit of his duties.

•

Ohio Perspective
•

BOf'f()M, Ohio (AP) - A
few women in Eastern Ohio have
imbarked on the battle of their lives.
: They'Ve fought the government,
!he White House, the Environmental
Protection Agency ard the utilitiiJl.
: They 've helped score some minor
~ctories in a battle some think is
!lJst - but they"re far from giving
lp.
: They call themselves the United
foiine Workers Union Womens
Auxiliary. Their base of power is in
belmont County, near the headquarlers of UMW llstrict 6. But their
feal base is in their kitchens, on the
telephones, in their communities,
where they're fighting for the jobs of
!heir husbands, sons and fathers.
: They and the eastern Ohio coal inare fighting federal sulfur
ltm:ide emission standards. Those
~tandards, which limit the amount of
~ulfur dioxide coal-blU'ning utilities
r::an release into the air, are thought
lo be sounding the death knell of
~astern Ohio's primarily high-eulfur
foal industry .
• Already, union officials blame the
pn..~

l!ustry

.

layoffs rJ. 4,UOO eastern Ohio miners
in Belmont and Harrison counties on
the sulfur standards, which took effect in October of 1919.
One rJ. those laid rif is Ed Filicky
ci St. Clairsville, whose wife, Nicky,
is one of the leaders of the anti-eulfur
standard fight. She, alll!iliary
president Carol Glass and vicepresident Charlotte Walters have
gotten the ball rolling on a campaign
that's taken them out of the kitchen
and into the limelight.
The auxiliary was started to help
find money, food and clothing for
families of out-&lt;&gt;f-work miners. ''We
had no idea what was going on with
the EPA," said Mrs. Glass . "fhat
was the farthest thing from our minds.''
It was pushed to the forefront,
though, as the date for the sulfur
emission standards approached.
Soon, the women found themselves
holding news cqnferences,
arranging bus trips to Washington
ard testifying with one voice at the
half dozen hearings held by the EPA
on the high sulfur issue.

Berrys World

-----------------~-------------~
I

I

I
I

I
I

By Don Graff
You may have heard itml'&gt;ltioned
here and there of late that the Kennedy campaign is in trouble.
The juggernaut that was supposed
to roll nver everything and everyone
in its path en route to the
Democratic.presidential nomination
has developed li bad case of flat tires
before reaching the first primary.
MeAnwhile, the man in the White
House who so recently was familiarly, even somewhat contemptuously,
referred to as Jimmy is incrmsingly
known to a print- and airwavesattuned public as President Carter.
This is the same individual whO
paddlewheeled down the Mississippi
on a meet-the-people journey that
stands as one rJ. our time's sillier exercises in political irrelevancy. Who
was sacking lis Cabinet almost en
masse and rebuking us for our
malaise, which was somehow supposed to be responsible for the
energy crisis, to prove his leadership.
All that was a few months back -it
only seems like years ago. But crises
come and go, situation!t change ard
people forget. Rapidly. For which
President Carter can be thankful.
He is now not only dominating the
political news wt pulling steadily
farther ahead of his challenger in
the presidential preference polls.
In this, of course, he has had a
great deal of assistance, not only
from the crisis called Iran but from
the challenger himself.
In the weeks since lis formal announcemMt of candidacy, Edward
· Moore Kennedy has had ample op portunity to demonstrate his
peculiarly schizophrenic political
style. He can be a spellbinder with a
prepared speech. But in handling ad
hoc questions and in unrehmrsed
remarks he has a remarkable facility for tripping over his own
thoughts, or lack of same.
He also has a problem with the
KeMedy legend, which worts both ·
ways. Images of Camelot, as recalled mistily by some, may be an asset.
But recollections of the campsigns

i Sentinel
l
i Editorial i
II.

I

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

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - Another
eruption of stock prices rocked Wall
Street this week, forcing analysts
and commentators to go fishing in
their grab-bag of reasons why.
Never be at a loss for words is their
motto.
Among the explanations they
chose were these:
It was a reaction to an almost certain rise rise in defense spending; it
was the new year rally a bit
delayed; it resulted from a Commerce Department report that the
recession had not yet arrived.
The favorite catchall also was
called into service. The rally, it was
explained, was one of those periodic
occurrences .:&gt;fmass insight in which
"the public" somehow decided that
stocks were undervalued.
And why did the public so decide?
Well, said an analyst-promoter, that
old stock martet just couldn 1 be
floored by $600-an-oonce gold or $34a-barrel oil or 13 percent inflation or
15 percent interest rates. And when
the public saw how rugged and
determined it was they just knew
they had a real battler out there and
they threw in their rupport.
That~ what "the public" did ?
Really? Why yru cannot even get
'the public" defined on Wall Street.
It is, you might say, as fuzzy a concept as "Wall Street," which can
stand for s alers or buyers or
speculators or stock exchanges or
bankers or the power structure.
Wall Street likes to think it
represents Main Street. It loves to

refer to the "buying public, " which
in tum suggests a cross -eection of
America, of individuals buyers,
sellers and decision-makers. 'The
public.. is something the public
thinks it understands .
The public that people think they
understanl!, however, may have less
to do with stock prices than ~ny in
the brokerge community like to admit. Individual ownership is down in
the past decade ; institutional ownership is up.
That switch probably explains
more about this week's martel than
the attitudes of middle America, the
war threat or perception of,~tocks as
undervah~d . Institutions must investor get buried in cash.
Cash, of course, isn 1 healthy
today for a very good reason: So
long as inflation persists + and the
· forecasts are that it will + the vahle
of cash authomatically falls. That is,
unless it earns an extrordinary rate
of interest. The temptation is always
there to invest in stocks.
It is especially true for pension
funds , which have the enormous burden of wisely investing the millions
and billions of dollars that pour in on
them. Pension funds are huge and
constantly growing.
All institutions - pension funds,
mutual funds , bank..,drninistered
trusts, and insurance companies are set up to invest big blocks of
stocks, and they do so aln,lost as a
matter rJ. course. The big decision is
not so much whether to invest as
when to invest. It is a decision of
timing.

It bis brothers, when the excitement
they stirred is compared with his
own currently stalled effort, tend to
have the opposite effect.
~ a result, the juggernaut is
beginning to look to some close
obersears, as quoted in a current
Wall Street Journal analysis, more · .
like "the closest thing to a political
Skylab."
Well, !his too may pas&lt;~. In fact, It
is very likely to since one of the
lessons of the events of the last few
months is how rapidily and to what
an extreme degree political situa-,
tions cha~e. Ncthing Is to be taken
as a certainty until the actual votiJl
are couirted.
There 'salsoa leBI!on, writ large by
Iran, of particular relevance to
President ard candidate Carter:
When it comes to making an issue
of leadership, there 's no substitute
for the real thing.

Change that to
the bitten Apple
It mil)' be all too painfully true
what they say about New Yorkers that they are hard-bitten.
In research disclosed by the U.S.
Public Health Service, it was found
that there were 892 reports of bites
during the year under study, 1911.
These were bites people took out m
other people. and the incidence was
'four times that of rats biting

humans.

·•

There is a sexual tilt to the
statistics, with · more men than
women being bitten by other people,
an imbalance explained as a consequence of the annual upsurge of
weekend fights in spring and summ~r . New Yorkers will be New
Yorkers.
People vs. people did not lead the
biting statistics, however. There
were 25 times as many cases of dog
bites recorded.
The study did not indicate whether
that was supposed to be considered
the good news .

By Will Grimsley
NEW YffiK (&lt;AI') -The odyssey
of the old Brooklyn Dodgers, around
Wh&lt;nl authOr Roger Kahn spun a
romantic web in the "Boys cJ. Summer,," took a poignant twiat when
another of the magical clan, Duke
Snider, strode that yellow brick road
into baseball 'sHall of Fame.
The ,.Duke, " now a snow-haired,
distingulshed~ooking figure of · 53,
was voted the honor Wednesday
along with another hard -!lilting outfielder, AI Kaline, 45, the onetime
boy wonder of the Detroit Tigers .
For Kaline, a batting marvel who
collected more than 3,000 hits ard
just one short of 400 hiXlle runs, it
was the rare privilege of gaining entrance to the museum in his first
year of eligibility. For Snider, it was
the end dan agonizing 11-rear wait.
"I was reaching the leveling off
period," Snider said at the announcement ceremonies. "I was
concerned that if I didn't make it
this year I might never make it at
aU.''
Then, in the course of his
reminiscences of ' 'those good old
days" in the 194lls and 1950s, the
Duke suddenly became sentimental
and gave the impressloo that he
hated to make this most important
ci all his baseball journeys without
some m his Dodgers buddies, Jrincipally shortstop Pee Wee Reese.
''Without Pee Wee, I wouldn't be
' here," he said. "When I came to the
~Aldgers , I was moody and tern-

Although Carter hasn't been campaigning in Iowa, where presidential
selection caucuses come up Jan. 21,
he made certain that he gave a big
11llile and a wave to a choir visiting
his church from Clinton, Iowa.

I.
l.

1'L-,----.--·--'---·. --'

·•: .

" WOW! Where have you been all my life ?"

~

'

.

TRS-80@
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. ·-·

Thunnmt is not ocdinarily very
exciting the rest of the yesr. Carter
guards his privacy and seldom
makes news during his weekend and
holiday stays on the mountain. For
the most part, the repu-ters who
follow him there find themselves
with little to do between Carter's
aiTival ard his departure. Dinner is
ordinarily the highlight of the day.
On wann days, it Is common to
wash ard wax one's automobile on
the parking lot It the Cooy Mete!,
headjuartersfor the press.
There is a story, probably fanciful
but told and retold nonetheless, that
a photographer came to Thunnont
wiOhout his own car and was so
bored that, just fu- something to do,
he waxed his rmted auto.

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LEBANON RE8ULTS
lEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Brei's
Beau won the $1,000 featured pace
mile at Lebanon by half a length
Wednesday night and paid $6, $4.40
and $2.60.
Jon LaBelle placed, paying $4.20
and $2.20, and Cocky James was
third tD pay $2.80.
.
Didn't Graduate ccmblned 4-3
with lnde for $48 in the double. The
crowd of 1,475 bet $138,872.

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. 1978 AMC

GREMLIN
LoW miles, local, one owner. We
sold It new. Sl• cylinder engine,
standard trans. Rally strpe .
;

Consumer debt increased. ·in November
•
report Indicated . ·
Debt for autos rose $5.'13 miplon In
November, compared with $t87
mlDlon,_l)l &lt;ktober. Debt oo retall,
g11s and: bilnk credit c:Brds rO!Ie $7tl9
mllllon, cunpared with $864 mlllloo
In the precedlng,month.
·
MlbUe home bor lowing fell.to $103 . .
million In Ncwember frun $150
mlWon; mlacellar)eo111 de~ waa In·
creased·by $11'12 mnllon, cluJ pared
With $885 milllqit In Oct~r. . . .
'lbe figures -are watcJiedt.c~ly .
bec'llle they ·lrdlcal8 COIIIUnier
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a

Sacramento, Calif., to head the
group whim will discuss the upcoming baseball season while
visiting six cities during a four-ilay
trip. '
Also scheduled to participate are
third baseman Ray Knight, rookie
infielder Rm Oester and pitcher
Tom Hume, Dwg Bair 11nd Frank
Pastore .
1
The group will be in Indianapolis
Jan. 22 and then in Louisville and
Lexington the next day.
The tour ends Jan. Zl with stops in
HunliJl!lon, W.Va. ard Columbus.

Air Jet stainless

Day that reporters had to drive 17
miles to the larger town of Frederick
to find an open restaurant and a
place to buy a newspaper.

Also unstimulatiJl! was the task
faced by the four news agency reporters antl photographers who
doggedly followed the president to
Camp ~vid during the hollday
period. Thunnont, Md., the nearest
town to the president's retreat, was
so thu-oughly closed ·on Cln'lstmas

WASHINGTON (AP) - The cent in the final three nklnths of i979.
stallment debt + the amount outnation's conslUDers increased their
'This positive rate of growth
standing 'on bank and retail store
d~bt by $2.4 billim in November, up
would be contrary to the forecasts of
credit cards and for auto, mobile
slightly from October but well below
many &lt;lbservers, whO had expected
h&lt;me and other purchases + by $2.2
the borrowing pace of earlier mon- the. onset ria recession in the fourth
billion In October.
th&lt;!, the Federal Reserve Board quarter," said a Commerce .Depart•'TIMi ann11al r11te of lll'OWth was
reported Tuesdll)'.
ment statement that accompanied
just
under 10 percent In NCJVember
Meanwhile , the Coounerce Depar- Ms. Slater's remarks.
following
9 percent galil in Octment's chief economist predicted
The Federal Reserve Board report
tober,
"!he
report
said. '111itallmelit
that the United States ''must expect •
showed that the value of new In- · credit h&amp;d grown by 19 percent for
to experience a recession" in l98l, stallment loans fell U perce!lt to
all of 1918."
mainly because of the rapid rise in $26.5 billion In . November. . But
Consumer delt had increued at
world oil prices .
'repayments aiso dropped, with the
an
annul.! rate of 18 paoeent as ·
In .remarks for a Richmond, Va.,
$24.1 bil~on Iota I for November stanrecently
sa September~ . ·.
inarketing meeting, economist ding 5.7 percent below thli October
Debt
outstanding
in ·Nwember
Courtenay M. Slater also said the
level.
was $307.6 'billion, up 14.2 percent
nation's ecovomy trobably grew at
Americims had increased their in- JroiJL!l.!e_ sal])e. mimth in 1978, the
an annual rail&gt; of 2 percent to 3 per-

made the Hall of Fame. "
Some critics ·have said that the
SVAC STANDINGS
Hall of Fame, whose members are
ALL GAMES
chosen by a vote of baseball writers,
TEAM
W L
P DP
is overladen with home nm sluggers
Southern
6 1 524 388
North Gall Ia
4 4 553 590
while ''glove men" are repeatedly
Southwestern
J 4 449 472
overlodted. Examples cited include,
Eastern
3 5 ~ -480
besides Reese and Rizzuto, such
Kvoer creek
3 6 olll3 560 ·
Hannan Trace
0 8 341 468
standout fielders as Eddie Miller,
SVACONLY
Marty Marion and Luis Aparido.
Southern
4 0 295 193
"Pee Wee was the guts of our ball
North Gallia
2 1 194 196
Southwestern
2 1 191 198
c1 uh, " Sn iler insisted .
2 2 261 220
He cited, along with Reese's · Eastern
Kyger Creek
o 3 1-49 249
fielding and leadership con- Hannan Trace
0 3 162 200
triwtions, the team captain's value
SVAC RESERVES
Southern
4 0 229 152
in cooling the racial tension after
North
Gallla
3 0 1-45 101
Branch Rickey brought ~ Jadtie
Eastern
2 2 136 140
Robinson in 1947 to break baseball's
Kyger creek
1 2 128 135
Hannan Trace
0 3 109 152
color barrier.
0 3 116 173
"Jackie was getting. all the Ink Southwestern
Friday's games: Hannan Trace at
then," Snider said. "All the other
Kvger Creek; North Gallla at
clubs were trying to break him. Southern and Eastern at
Everywhere we went, the crowds Southwestern.
Saturday night: Southwestern at
were on him . Jackie was frustrated
Hannan Trace and North Gallia at
Miller.
mentally.
''So Pee Wee would take Robinson
out in the middle of the diamond, put n==....,......-----=~d
his arm around Jackie's shoulders
and talk to him intimately.' •
Since Pee Wee was a native rJ.
Louisville, Ky., In the Jim Crow
South, thl8 gesture todt a way considerable heat.
Jackie frequently said, !'Without
Pee Wee, I couldn l have made it.'.'._
Robinson, who was almost blind
when he died of a .heart disease in
the fall of 1972, and catcher Roy
Campanella, who slifered a brohen
neck and paralysis in an autm~obile
accidert In 19M, are the only other
''Boys It Swruner" who have been
named to the Hall of Fame.
They were a swashwckllng, colorful band -those denizens d old EbbetsField.
"I was actually born in Los
Angeles ·but I always felt I was born
in Brooklyn," Snider related.
'1 remember, when I started, we
got a dollar ard a half a dliy for meal
mmey. Once when we had bus
· trouble and worted onlY half a day
'
they gave us 75 cents. •'
S&lt;meone askoo him what was the
highest salary he ever made.
"Forty-eix thousand dollars," the
Duke replied. "We didn't think much
about money then. Pee Wee didn l
care what Jackie made. Jackie
didn t care what Carl Furlllo made.
Nobody cared.
"Man, If I made $1 million, I would
come in at 6 in the morri.~, sweep
Complete~
the stan~, wash the uniforms, clean
out the mflces, manage the team and
play the games."
Snider spoke It ancient Ellbets
Field with reverence.
''The closenes&lt;~ of it," he said with
a nostalgic sigh. ''The fans were so
close you could hear them whisper.
When we moved to Los Angeles, the
CollselUD was so big·we got lost. "
Available At:
The ''Duke" said he would never
forget watching those big black Iron
balla - ,,ooking like oversized
baseballa" - knock down the right
field wall at Ebbets Field.
''When they tcre down Ebbebi
Field, they tore down part of us, "he
said. ''We wept."

Miller.

Reds manager John McNamara
will fly in !rem his home in

woOd and coal burners.

selves during the president's stay
there over the holidays. Scmeone
left a walkie-talkie radio transmitter
on, broadcasting everything that
"!as said in the shelter near the main
gate.
About all that could be heard was
rock music. Sentry duty on a mountaintop apparently dol!ln l stimulate
much in the wayofconv!!rsation.

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Clncirmatl Reds' annual good will
c:Bravan gets undl'rw&amp;Y Jan. 21 with
stops In Cincinnati ard Dayton.

escape the cellar as the winless Hannan Trace Wildcats of Coach Donnie
Saunders battle Coach Keith Carter's Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Kyger Creek has a 3-6 recocd with
all three wins coming against West
Virginia schools. Hannan Trace has
an 0-8 record.
' Air Patriot, Coach Wayne
Berg!loll 's Southwestern Highlan ders seek their second straight vic-

tory and fourth wm thl8 sea... .~
against Eastern .
· Co&amp;ch John Boston's Eagles wW
attempt to snap a two game losing
streak. Eastern after losing Its first
three games, won three straight
before losing to Southern and Point
Pleasant.
Saturday night, Southwestern
plays at Hannan Trace in a ~
postponed because of snow last
weekend and North Gallia visits

'been asking for!

Camp

currently in the president's antiinflation )I'Ogram was established in
1978, when a 6 percent inflation rate
was forecast, and gererally allows a
7percent pay increase.
ConslUDer prices rose by more
than 13 percent in 1979, however.
Before formally voting on the new
standard, the advi§ory coounittee
must develop ways to determine
which worters fall into which part of
the proposed range.
The committee also agreed
'1\Iesday, pending a final vote, that
escalator clauses in wage contracts
be based on an assumed 7.5 percent
inflation rate, rather than the
current 6 percept figure.

Reds ,caravan begins Jan. 21

ped arch iival Eastern, 68-li2.
AI Cheshire, it will be the battle to

everyone has

H-iaher
wage ceiling approved Md.,Marine
Guards at
David,
-e
madvertently ''bugged" themWASHINGTON (AP)- President
Carter's Pay Advisory Committee
has agreed to a. higher voluntary
wage ceiling ranging from 7.5 percent to 9.5 percent, but several poin ~
ts must be resolved before the panel
recommends the new standard to
the president.
Meanwhile, the Ccmmerce Department 's chief economist says the
nation 'must expect to experience a
recession " this year due mainly to
fast-rising oil prices. And the
Federal Reserve Board reports
American consumers increased
their -debt by $2.4 billion in November.
The v.oluntary pay standard

per~m~mtal. He did a lot to change
me. I can\ understand why Pee Wee
and Phil Rizzuto (of the Yankees),
two great shor\stqls, have never

Racine with a 2-11eague recu-d ard
4~ mark overall. A Tornado victory
would put Southern in a. good
position to take its third straight
league cllampionshlp.
Coach Carl Wolfe's defending
champs own a 6-1 overall record, a 40 slate againIt league opponents.
Last Friday night, Southern drop-

in stock what

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASffii'.GTON (AP) - Jinuny
Carter appears weary of turning the
other cheek.
Maybe it was all those weeks of
watching militant Iranians shout
"Death to the U.S." on the evening
news. Or perhaps it was caused by
years of anti-U.S. fulmination
arrund the world.
Sitting in his Sunday school class
at Washington's First Baptist Church, the president heard his teacher,
Fred Gregg, ask the class whom the
Israelites had bla~d for their
troubles in the days of the prophet
Jeremiah.
Carter answered unhesitatingly :
'1f it was today, they'd blame us.
Everybody else does." ·

North Gallia-Southern match big game
Weather pennlttlng a full slate of
games are on tap thl8 weekend in the
Southern Valley Athletic Conference.
AcUm begins Friday Rlght with
leaguc~eading Southern hOsting
North Gallla, Hannan Trace visiting
Kyger Creek and Eastern plays at
Southwestern.
Second place North GaD!a goes tD

Sports
World

Donald F. Graff

No help for whistle-blowers
By Robert Wallers
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Government agencies established
~JPeCifically to protect the rights of
''whistle-blowers " have instead
l)ecome instrwnents for punishing
the few brave federal employees
who dare engage in boat-i'ocking activities.
' Disturl:ing new evidence indicates
that the pUll)Ose of those agencies
bas been corr..,ted in at least two
maju- cases, me involving A.
Ernest Fitzgerald, the Air Force
civilian employee who has become
the country's best known' whistle lllower.
~ Fitzgerald was fired in early 1970,
after he revealed to a congressional
conunittee that cost ovemms on the
C5-A, the Air Force's mammoth jet
):argo plane, could total as much $2
jlillion. After a lengthy appeal to
Civil Service Conunission (e&lt;;c ), he
was returned to the payroll -but in a
job devoid of most of his former
responsibilities.
: Pre-trial preparation in a civil suit
Subsequently filed by Fitl'8erald
tecently produced evidence that his
b!l!Ssecretly cmsulted in 1009 with
CSc Olllinnan Robert E. Hampton
t.o obtain advice on how to strip Fit~gerald It his job.
· Hampton's involvement is significant because the conunission chairman was the senior government of.
ficial in charge of protecting the
federal merit system against
precisely the type of political abuse
t1Jatdominated Fitzgerald's case .
• In addition, Hampton headed the
oonmission thrrughout Fitzgerald's
appeal to the esc. without ever in 4lcating that he had any involvement in the.whistle-blower's
dimtissal.
: Hampton's untoward action is
(evealed in a verbatum transcript of
an interview with Robert C.
~amans Jr., Air Force secretary at
the lime Fitzgerald was fired.
' In the interview, conducted under
the auspices rJ. an Air Force oral .
liistory project, Seamans says that
i)l May 1009, when be became ''quite
~rtaiP that Fitzgerald should leave
lhe A! -•rceforhis good and ours,':

'
"port..PCJI!leroY, 0., Thllr8dliy,
Jan. 10,1!81

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2- The Daily pentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. Jan. 10, 1980

3- The Dally Sentinel, Ml

,.---Do You REALIZE

IN WASHINGTON

Today's

TI-lE .. ME DECADE" IC&gt; OVER--

COMMENTARY

AND WE DIDN'T GET

ANY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

OF IT?

Teddy who??? •

•

he conferred with Hampton.
Seamons says he asked Hampton :
• 'What are you supposed to do when
you're managing a large government program and you've got a guy,
like ... Fitzgerald on the payroll?"
Hampton replied, according to
Seamans : · ~t 's frankly one of the
problems we face in running the
government. ... On the basis of what
you've told me, I don~ believe you
could ever susta in a separation for
cause. So your only alternative is to
abolish his job."
That's exactly what the Air Force
did , reorganizing Fitzgerald's office
under a scheme that eliminated his
position.
The esc itself has since been
eliminated, replaced under President Carter's widely touted
reorganization plan with two new
agencies, the Office of Personnel
Management and the Merit Systems
Protection Board.
The board is supposed to act as the
guardian of employee rights, investigating allegations of prohibited
persoMel practices. In addition, a
quasi~ndepenuent special counsel to
the board is slll)cifically charged
with protecting the rights of whistle blowers.
But the board has just rejected, on
highly questionable technical
grounds, a claim that three deputy
federal marshals in Atlanta were
tramierred to. unwanted posts in
Florida and Texas in retaliation for
blowing the whistle on their bosses.
The marshals ' offense: They complained to members of Congress
about a office party at a government
pistol rangethat featured barbecued
ribs, drinking and gambling.
Urging the board to rescind the ar-'
bitrary transfers was Special
Counsel H. Patrick Swygert, the
first man to hold the job described
by Carter as the defender of those in
the federal services "who do point
out violations rJ. ethics.''
But Swygert was rebuffed and has
just &lt;pit in disgust -after less than a
year in office. The White House now
is searching for a replacement, who
probably won\ be so conscientious
in the pursuit of his duties.

•

Ohio Perspective
•

BOf'f()M, Ohio (AP) - A
few women in Eastern Ohio have
imbarked on the battle of their lives.
: They'Ve fought the government,
!he White House, the Environmental
Protection Agency ard the utilitiiJl.
: They 've helped score some minor
~ctories in a battle some think is
!lJst - but they"re far from giving
lp.
: They call themselves the United
foiine Workers Union Womens
Auxiliary. Their base of power is in
belmont County, near the headquarlers of UMW llstrict 6. But their
feal base is in their kitchens, on the
telephones, in their communities,
where they're fighting for the jobs of
!heir husbands, sons and fathers.
: They and the eastern Ohio coal inare fighting federal sulfur
ltm:ide emission standards. Those
~tandards, which limit the amount of
~ulfur dioxide coal-blU'ning utilities
r::an release into the air, are thought
lo be sounding the death knell of
~astern Ohio's primarily high-eulfur
foal industry .
• Already, union officials blame the
pn..~

l!ustry

.

layoffs rJ. 4,UOO eastern Ohio miners
in Belmont and Harrison counties on
the sulfur standards, which took effect in October of 1919.
One rJ. those laid rif is Ed Filicky
ci St. Clairsville, whose wife, Nicky,
is one of the leaders of the anti-eulfur
standard fight. She, alll!iliary
president Carol Glass and vicepresident Charlotte Walters have
gotten the ball rolling on a campaign
that's taken them out of the kitchen
and into the limelight.
The auxiliary was started to help
find money, food and clothing for
families of out-&lt;&gt;f-work miners. ''We
had no idea what was going on with
the EPA," said Mrs. Glass . "fhat
was the farthest thing from our minds.''
It was pushed to the forefront,
though, as the date for the sulfur
emission standards approached.
Soon, the women found themselves
holding news cqnferences,
arranging bus trips to Washington
ard testifying with one voice at the
half dozen hearings held by the EPA
on the high sulfur issue.

Berrys World

-----------------~-------------~
I

I

I
I

I
I

By Don Graff
You may have heard itml'&gt;ltioned
here and there of late that the Kennedy campaign is in trouble.
The juggernaut that was supposed
to roll nver everything and everyone
in its path en route to the
Democratic.presidential nomination
has developed li bad case of flat tires
before reaching the first primary.
MeAnwhile, the man in the White
House who so recently was familiarly, even somewhat contemptuously,
referred to as Jimmy is incrmsingly
known to a print- and airwavesattuned public as President Carter.
This is the same individual whO
paddlewheeled down the Mississippi
on a meet-the-people journey that
stands as one rJ. our time's sillier exercises in political irrelevancy. Who
was sacking lis Cabinet almost en
masse and rebuking us for our
malaise, which was somehow supposed to be responsible for the
energy crisis, to prove his leadership.
All that was a few months back -it
only seems like years ago. But crises
come and go, situation!t change ard
people forget. Rapidly. For which
President Carter can be thankful.
He is now not only dominating the
political news wt pulling steadily
farther ahead of his challenger in
the presidential preference polls.
In this, of course, he has had a
great deal of assistance, not only
from the crisis called Iran but from
the challenger himself.
In the weeks since lis formal announcemMt of candidacy, Edward
· Moore Kennedy has had ample op portunity to demonstrate his
peculiarly schizophrenic political
style. He can be a spellbinder with a
prepared speech. But in handling ad
hoc questions and in unrehmrsed
remarks he has a remarkable facility for tripping over his own
thoughts, or lack of same.
He also has a problem with the
KeMedy legend, which worts both ·
ways. Images of Camelot, as recalled mistily by some, may be an asset.
But recollections of the campsigns

i Sentinel
l
i Editorial i
II.

I

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

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - Another
eruption of stock prices rocked Wall
Street this week, forcing analysts
and commentators to go fishing in
their grab-bag of reasons why.
Never be at a loss for words is their
motto.
Among the explanations they
chose were these:
It was a reaction to an almost certain rise rise in defense spending; it
was the new year rally a bit
delayed; it resulted from a Commerce Department report that the
recession had not yet arrived.
The favorite catchall also was
called into service. The rally, it was
explained, was one of those periodic
occurrences .:&gt;fmass insight in which
"the public" somehow decided that
stocks were undervalued.
And why did the public so decide?
Well, said an analyst-promoter, that
old stock martet just couldn 1 be
floored by $600-an-oonce gold or $34a-barrel oil or 13 percent inflation or
15 percent interest rates. And when
the public saw how rugged and
determined it was they just knew
they had a real battler out there and
they threw in their rupport.
That~ what "the public" did ?
Really? Why yru cannot even get
'the public" defined on Wall Street.
It is, you might say, as fuzzy a concept as "Wall Street," which can
stand for s alers or buyers or
speculators or stock exchanges or
bankers or the power structure.
Wall Street likes to think it
represents Main Street. It loves to

refer to the "buying public, " which
in tum suggests a cross -eection of
America, of individuals buyers,
sellers and decision-makers. 'The
public.. is something the public
thinks it understands .
The public that people think they
understanl!, however, may have less
to do with stock prices than ~ny in
the brokerge community like to admit. Individual ownership is down in
the past decade ; institutional ownership is up.
That switch probably explains
more about this week's martel than
the attitudes of middle America, the
war threat or perception of,~tocks as
undervah~d . Institutions must investor get buried in cash.
Cash, of course, isn 1 healthy
today for a very good reason: So
long as inflation persists + and the
· forecasts are that it will + the vahle
of cash authomatically falls. That is,
unless it earns an extrordinary rate
of interest. The temptation is always
there to invest in stocks.
It is especially true for pension
funds , which have the enormous burden of wisely investing the millions
and billions of dollars that pour in on
them. Pension funds are huge and
constantly growing.
All institutions - pension funds,
mutual funds , bank..,drninistered
trusts, and insurance companies are set up to invest big blocks of
stocks, and they do so aln,lost as a
matter rJ. course. The big decision is
not so much whether to invest as
when to invest. It is a decision of
timing.

It bis brothers, when the excitement
they stirred is compared with his
own currently stalled effort, tend to
have the opposite effect.
~ a result, the juggernaut is
beginning to look to some close
obersears, as quoted in a current
Wall Street Journal analysis, more · .
like "the closest thing to a political
Skylab."
Well, !his too may pas&lt;~. In fact, It
is very likely to since one of the
lessons of the events of the last few
months is how rapidily and to what
an extreme degree political situa-,
tions cha~e. Ncthing Is to be taken
as a certainty until the actual votiJl
are couirted.
There 'salsoa leBI!on, writ large by
Iran, of particular relevance to
President ard candidate Carter:
When it comes to making an issue
of leadership, there 's no substitute
for the real thing.

Change that to
the bitten Apple
It mil)' be all too painfully true
what they say about New Yorkers that they are hard-bitten.
In research disclosed by the U.S.
Public Health Service, it was found
that there were 892 reports of bites
during the year under study, 1911.
These were bites people took out m
other people. and the incidence was
'four times that of rats biting

humans.

·•

There is a sexual tilt to the
statistics, with · more men than
women being bitten by other people,
an imbalance explained as a consequence of the annual upsurge of
weekend fights in spring and summ~r . New Yorkers will be New
Yorkers.
People vs. people did not lead the
biting statistics, however. There
were 25 times as many cases of dog
bites recorded.
The study did not indicate whether
that was supposed to be considered
the good news .

By Will Grimsley
NEW YffiK (&lt;AI') -The odyssey
of the old Brooklyn Dodgers, around
Wh&lt;nl authOr Roger Kahn spun a
romantic web in the "Boys cJ. Summer,," took a poignant twiat when
another of the magical clan, Duke
Snider, strode that yellow brick road
into baseball 'sHall of Fame.
The ,.Duke, " now a snow-haired,
distingulshed~ooking figure of · 53,
was voted the honor Wednesday
along with another hard -!lilting outfielder, AI Kaline, 45, the onetime
boy wonder of the Detroit Tigers .
For Kaline, a batting marvel who
collected more than 3,000 hits ard
just one short of 400 hiXlle runs, it
was the rare privilege of gaining entrance to the museum in his first
year of eligibility. For Snider, it was
the end dan agonizing 11-rear wait.
"I was reaching the leveling off
period," Snider said at the announcement ceremonies. "I was
concerned that if I didn't make it
this year I might never make it at
aU.''
Then, in the course of his
reminiscences of ' 'those good old
days" in the 194lls and 1950s, the
Duke suddenly became sentimental
and gave the impressloo that he
hated to make this most important
ci all his baseball journeys without
some m his Dodgers buddies, Jrincipally shortstop Pee Wee Reese.
''Without Pee Wee, I wouldn't be
' here," he said. "When I came to the
~Aldgers , I was moody and tern-

Although Carter hasn't been campaigning in Iowa, where presidential
selection caucuses come up Jan. 21,
he made certain that he gave a big
11llile and a wave to a choir visiting
his church from Clinton, Iowa.

I.
l.

1'L-,----.--·--'---·. --'

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Thunnmt is not ocdinarily very
exciting the rest of the yesr. Carter
guards his privacy and seldom
makes news during his weekend and
holiday stays on the mountain. For
the most part, the repu-ters who
follow him there find themselves
with little to do between Carter's
aiTival ard his departure. Dinner is
ordinarily the highlight of the day.
On wann days, it Is common to
wash ard wax one's automobile on
the parking lot It the Cooy Mete!,
headjuartersfor the press.
There is a story, probably fanciful
but told and retold nonetheless, that
a photographer came to Thunnont
wiOhout his own car and was so
bored that, just fu- something to do,
he waxed his rmted auto.

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lEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Brei's
Beau won the $1,000 featured pace
mile at Lebanon by half a length
Wednesday night and paid $6, $4.40
and $2.60.
Jon LaBelle placed, paying $4.20
and $2.20, and Cocky James was
third tD pay $2.80.
.
Didn't Graduate ccmblned 4-3
with lnde for $48 in the double. The
crowd of 1,475 bet $138,872.

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Debt for autos rose $5.'13 miplon In
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mlDlon,_l)l &lt;ktober. Debt oo retall,
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million In Ncwember frun $150
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bec'llle they ·lrdlcal8 COIIIUnier
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speridlng, whk:h Ia criUcal to the
natloo 'a'overall economic lttenlth.

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Sacramento, Calif., to head the
group whim will discuss the upcoming baseball season while
visiting six cities during a four-ilay
trip. '
Also scheduled to participate are
third baseman Ray Knight, rookie
infielder Rm Oester and pitcher
Tom Hume, Dwg Bair 11nd Frank
Pastore .
1
The group will be in Indianapolis
Jan. 22 and then in Louisville and
Lexington the next day.
The tour ends Jan. Zl with stops in
HunliJl!lon, W.Va. ard Columbus.

Air Jet stainless

Day that reporters had to drive 17
miles to the larger town of Frederick
to find an open restaurant and a
place to buy a newspaper.

Also unstimulatiJl! was the task
faced by the four news agency reporters antl photographers who
doggedly followed the president to
Camp ~vid during the hollday
period. Thunnont, Md., the nearest
town to the president's retreat, was
so thu-oughly closed ·on Cln'lstmas

WASHINGTON (AP) - The cent in the final three nklnths of i979.
stallment debt + the amount outnation's conslUDers increased their
'This positive rate of growth
standing 'on bank and retail store
d~bt by $2.4 billim in November, up
would be contrary to the forecasts of
credit cards and for auto, mobile
slightly from October but well below
many &lt;lbservers, whO had expected
h&lt;me and other purchases + by $2.2
the borrowing pace of earlier mon- the. onset ria recession in the fourth
billion In October.
th&lt;!, the Federal Reserve Board quarter," said a Commerce .Depart•'TIMi ann11al r11te of lll'OWth was
reported Tuesdll)'.
ment statement that accompanied
just
under 10 percent In NCJVember
Meanwhile , the Coounerce Depar- Ms. Slater's remarks.
following
9 percent galil in Octment's chief economist predicted
The Federal Reserve Board report
tober,
"!he
report
said. '111itallmelit
that the United States ''must expect •
showed that the value of new In- · credit h&amp;d grown by 19 percent for
to experience a recession" in l98l, stallment loans fell U perce!lt to
all of 1918."
mainly because of the rapid rise in $26.5 billion In . November. . But
Consumer delt had increued at
world oil prices .
'repayments aiso dropped, with the
an
annul.! rate of 18 paoeent as ·
In .remarks for a Richmond, Va.,
$24.1 bil~on Iota I for November stanrecently
sa September~ . ·.
inarketing meeting, economist ding 5.7 percent below thli October
Debt
outstanding
in ·Nwember
Courtenay M. Slater also said the
level.
was $307.6 'billion, up 14.2 percent
nation's ecovomy trobably grew at
Americims had increased their in- JroiJL!l.!e_ sal])e. mimth in 1978, the
an annual rail&gt; of 2 percent to 3 per-

made the Hall of Fame. "
Some critics ·have said that the
SVAC STANDINGS
Hall of Fame, whose members are
ALL GAMES
chosen by a vote of baseball writers,
TEAM
W L
P DP
is overladen with home nm sluggers
Southern
6 1 524 388
North Gall Ia
4 4 553 590
while ''glove men" are repeatedly
Southwestern
J 4 449 472
overlodted. Examples cited include,
Eastern
3 5 ~ -480
besides Reese and Rizzuto, such
Kvoer creek
3 6 olll3 560 ·
Hannan Trace
0 8 341 468
standout fielders as Eddie Miller,
SVACONLY
Marty Marion and Luis Aparido.
Southern
4 0 295 193
"Pee Wee was the guts of our ball
North Gallia
2 1 194 196
Southwestern
2 1 191 198
c1 uh, " Sn iler insisted .
2 2 261 220
He cited, along with Reese's · Eastern
Kyger Creek
o 3 1-49 249
fielding and leadership con- Hannan Trace
0 3 162 200
triwtions, the team captain's value
SVAC RESERVES
Southern
4 0 229 152
in cooling the racial tension after
North
Gallla
3 0 1-45 101
Branch Rickey brought ~ Jadtie
Eastern
2 2 136 140
Robinson in 1947 to break baseball's
Kyger creek
1 2 128 135
Hannan Trace
0 3 109 152
color barrier.
0 3 116 173
"Jackie was getting. all the Ink Southwestern
Friday's games: Hannan Trace at
then," Snider said. "All the other
Kvger Creek; North Gallla at
clubs were trying to break him. Southern and Eastern at
Everywhere we went, the crowds Southwestern.
Saturday night: Southwestern at
were on him . Jackie was frustrated
Hannan Trace and North Gallia at
Miller.
mentally.
''So Pee Wee would take Robinson
out in the middle of the diamond, put n==....,......-----=~d
his arm around Jackie's shoulders
and talk to him intimately.' •
Since Pee Wee was a native rJ.
Louisville, Ky., In the Jim Crow
South, thl8 gesture todt a way considerable heat.
Jackie frequently said, !'Without
Pee Wee, I couldn l have made it.'.'._
Robinson, who was almost blind
when he died of a .heart disease in
the fall of 1972, and catcher Roy
Campanella, who slifered a brohen
neck and paralysis in an autm~obile
accidert In 19M, are the only other
''Boys It Swruner" who have been
named to the Hall of Fame.
They were a swashwckllng, colorful band -those denizens d old EbbetsField.
"I was actually born in Los
Angeles ·but I always felt I was born
in Brooklyn," Snider related.
'1 remember, when I started, we
got a dollar ard a half a dliy for meal
mmey. Once when we had bus
· trouble and worted onlY half a day
'
they gave us 75 cents. •'
S&lt;meone askoo him what was the
highest salary he ever made.
"Forty-eix thousand dollars," the
Duke replied. "We didn't think much
about money then. Pee Wee didn l
care what Jackie made. Jackie
didn t care what Carl Furlllo made.
Nobody cared.
"Man, If I made $1 million, I would
come in at 6 in the morri.~, sweep
Complete~
the stan~, wash the uniforms, clean
out the mflces, manage the team and
play the games."
Snider spoke It ancient Ellbets
Field with reverence.
''The closenes&lt;~ of it," he said with
a nostalgic sigh. ''The fans were so
close you could hear them whisper.
When we moved to Los Angeles, the
CollselUD was so big·we got lost. "
Available At:
The ''Duke" said he would never
forget watching those big black Iron
balla - ,,ooking like oversized
baseballa" - knock down the right
field wall at Ebbets Field.
''When they tcre down Ebbebi
Field, they tore down part of us, "he
said. ''We wept."

Miller.

Reds manager John McNamara
will fly in !rem his home in

woOd and coal burners.

selves during the president's stay
there over the holidays. Scmeone
left a walkie-talkie radio transmitter
on, broadcasting everything that
"!as said in the shelter near the main
gate.
About all that could be heard was
rock music. Sentry duty on a mountaintop apparently dol!ln l stimulate
much in the wayofconv!!rsation.

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Clncirmatl Reds' annual good will
c:Bravan gets undl'rw&amp;Y Jan. 21 with
stops In Cincinnati ard Dayton.

escape the cellar as the winless Hannan Trace Wildcats of Coach Donnie
Saunders battle Coach Keith Carter's Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Kyger Creek has a 3-6 recocd with
all three wins coming against West
Virginia schools. Hannan Trace has
an 0-8 record.
' Air Patriot, Coach Wayne
Berg!loll 's Southwestern Highlan ders seek their second straight vic-

tory and fourth wm thl8 sea... .~
against Eastern .
· Co&amp;ch John Boston's Eagles wW
attempt to snap a two game losing
streak. Eastern after losing Its first
three games, won three straight
before losing to Southern and Point
Pleasant.
Saturday night, Southwestern
plays at Hannan Trace in a ~
postponed because of snow last
weekend and North Gallia visits

'been asking for!

Camp

currently in the president's antiinflation )I'Ogram was established in
1978, when a 6 percent inflation rate
was forecast, and gererally allows a
7percent pay increase.
ConslUDer prices rose by more
than 13 percent in 1979, however.
Before formally voting on the new
standard, the advi§ory coounittee
must develop ways to determine
which worters fall into which part of
the proposed range.
The committee also agreed
'1\Iesday, pending a final vote, that
escalator clauses in wage contracts
be based on an assumed 7.5 percent
inflation rate, rather than the
current 6 percept figure.

Reds ,caravan begins Jan. 21

ped arch iival Eastern, 68-li2.
AI Cheshire, it will be the battle to

everyone has

H-iaher
wage ceiling approved Md.,Marine
Guards at
David,
-e
madvertently ''bugged" themWASHINGTON (AP)- President
Carter's Pay Advisory Committee
has agreed to a. higher voluntary
wage ceiling ranging from 7.5 percent to 9.5 percent, but several poin ~
ts must be resolved before the panel
recommends the new standard to
the president.
Meanwhile, the Ccmmerce Department 's chief economist says the
nation 'must expect to experience a
recession " this year due mainly to
fast-rising oil prices. And the
Federal Reserve Board reports
American consumers increased
their -debt by $2.4 billion in November.
The v.oluntary pay standard

per~m~mtal. He did a lot to change
me. I can\ understand why Pee Wee
and Phil Rizzuto (of the Yankees),
two great shor\stqls, have never

Racine with a 2-11eague recu-d ard
4~ mark overall. A Tornado victory
would put Southern in a. good
position to take its third straight
league cllampionshlp.
Coach Carl Wolfe's defending
champs own a 6-1 overall record, a 40 slate againIt league opponents.
Last Friday night, Southern drop-

in stock what

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASffii'.GTON (AP) - Jinuny
Carter appears weary of turning the
other cheek.
Maybe it was all those weeks of
watching militant Iranians shout
"Death to the U.S." on the evening
news. Or perhaps it was caused by
years of anti-U.S. fulmination
arrund the world.
Sitting in his Sunday school class
at Washington's First Baptist Church, the president heard his teacher,
Fred Gregg, ask the class whom the
Israelites had bla~d for their
troubles in the days of the prophet
Jeremiah.
Carter answered unhesitatingly :
'1f it was today, they'd blame us.
Everybody else does." ·

North Gallia-Southern match big game
Weather pennlttlng a full slate of
games are on tap thl8 weekend in the
Southern Valley Athletic Conference.
AcUm begins Friday Rlght with
leaguc~eading Southern hOsting
North Gallla, Hannan Trace visiting
Kyger Creek and Eastern plays at
Southwestern.
Second place North GaD!a goes tD

Sports
World

Donald F. Graff

No help for whistle-blowers
By Robert Wallers
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Government agencies established
~JPeCifically to protect the rights of
''whistle-blowers " have instead
l)ecome instrwnents for punishing
the few brave federal employees
who dare engage in boat-i'ocking activities.
' Disturl:ing new evidence indicates
that the pUll)Ose of those agencies
bas been corr..,ted in at least two
maju- cases, me involving A.
Ernest Fitzgerald, the Air Force
civilian employee who has become
the country's best known' whistle lllower.
~ Fitzgerald was fired in early 1970,
after he revealed to a congressional
conunittee that cost ovemms on the
C5-A, the Air Force's mammoth jet
):argo plane, could total as much $2
jlillion. After a lengthy appeal to
Civil Service Conunission (e&lt;;c ), he
was returned to the payroll -but in a
job devoid of most of his former
responsibilities.
: Pre-trial preparation in a civil suit
Subsequently filed by Fitl'8erald
tecently produced evidence that his
b!l!Ssecretly cmsulted in 1009 with
CSc Olllinnan Robert E. Hampton
t.o obtain advice on how to strip Fit~gerald It his job.
· Hampton's involvement is significant because the conunission chairman was the senior government of.
ficial in charge of protecting the
federal merit system against
precisely the type of political abuse
t1Jatdominated Fitzgerald's case .
• In addition, Hampton headed the
oonmission thrrughout Fitzgerald's
appeal to the esc. without ever in 4lcating that he had any involvement in the.whistle-blower's
dimtissal.
: Hampton's untoward action is
(evealed in a verbatum transcript of
an interview with Robert C.
~amans Jr., Air Force secretary at
the lime Fitzgerald was fired.
' In the interview, conducted under
the auspices rJ. an Air Force oral .
liistory project, Seamans says that
i)l May 1009, when be became ''quite
~rtaiP that Fitzgerald should leave
lhe A! -•rceforhis good and ours,':

'
"port..PCJI!leroY, 0., Thllr8dliy,
Jan. 10,1!81

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�4 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport .Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 10, 1980

Ohio Sportllght
By
George Strode

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
owners of In Rem and Execution's
Reason hope that their Ohio
11uroughbred Horses c1. the YeB r
have retwned to peak physical condition for 1980.
The two standouts shared the
state's top horse tiUe last seBSon
desjllte aUments. It was the first
deadlock in the 16 yeBrs of the
award.
In Rem suffered from a minor
blood disorder that cost him two
straight lo:sses. Still, the 4-year-old
gelding \IUsvi:toriousinfiveofnine
starts for winnings of $59,005.
Execution's Reason under.vent
surgery to remove a bone chip fr001
his right front ankle last fall, thus
cutting short a brilliant 2~ar-old
campaign in which he won all four
starts for $116,460.
The complete recovery of
Execution's Reason will determine
if he is to race in the 1980 Kentucky
Derby.
' ~~ everything goes right, " said
his trainer, Bert Sonnier, "I'm
99percentsure we 11 be in Louisville.
I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
We're hopeful he 11 be just! in~. "
Sonnier has begun working with
Execution's Reason for the 191!0
seBSon, but warned, '1 think the
Flamingo is out and I'm not sure we
can make the Florida Derby either."

owner, Howard Noonan of
Springfield, and Sonnier hqle to
have Execution's Reason ready for
the Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn
P..-kinMarch.
In ·Rem's owner and trainer,
Olarles Million Jr. of Versailles,
Ky., is confident that his gelding will
be ready for a big :&gt;-year-old campaign.
In Rem needs less than $8,000 in
1900 to move into second place on the
all-time money winning list for
Buckeye-bred horses. He already
has earnings of $291,061 in three
racing seasons.
'1 had the vet look him over and
he says In Rem has the legs of a 2year-old who bas never been
breezed," said Million. ''He's really
His

a soond horse. "

In the annual poll of Ohio turl
writers, sports editors and racing
secretaries, In Rem also won honors
as champion handicap horse while
Execution's R · ason wao; the 2-¥earold colt winner.
Other winners who will be honored
at a banquet Friday in Columbis
were : 2-¥ear-old filly - Sweet
Audrey; 3-¥ear-old colt- R. Barney
Google; 3-year-old filly - La Croix;
Champion handicap mare - Royal
North; stallion ri the year - Grand
Central an!l Brent's Prince ; brood marc of the year - Apache Queen.

: Manning still has potential
:
:
•

CLEVELAND (AP)- Rick Manning has yet to live up to the patential which he displayed in his rookie
season in 1975. But at age 25, the
aevelandlndians center fielder still
believes he can achieve stardom in
baseball's American League.
•·· Ever since the personable player
first appeared in a major league
game, he has been touted, especially
by the Indians' front office, as a
cant miss All .Star performer.
"I know I disappointed some
peqlle with my hitting and my
leadership. But I still gave it my
all," said Manning. '1 feel like I'm
ready to have a good year. My frame
cl. nind is good.
''I know I can hit about .2ro and
steal around 30 bases. Last year,
(Indians · Manager) Dave Garcia
used to chew me out all the time to
get me to push myself more. That is
good. Maybelneedit."
Manning was Cleveland's No. 1
draft choice in 1972. TI!at year, he
batted .616 in his senior year in high
school in Niagara Falls, N.Y. Forty
percent of his hits were for extra
bases .
After three years in the Indians '
farm system, he joined the bigleague team in 1975 and hit a solid

.285. In 1976 he hit .296 and won a
Gold Glove Award for his defensive
play.
.
'1 've never seen a player work
harder or hustle more than Rick did
his first two years," Garcia said .
''He was so exciting that I'd buy a
ticket to see him. Most of all, he
seemed to love everything about the
game.
''Now he doesn't seem to enjoy it
as much, and I think that hurt him."
"Rick has so much ability and he
can do so much," said Indians
President Gabe Paul. 'He can and
should be a super player. But he
isnt, and I'm worried that Manning
may be in danger of settling for
mediocrity."

In 1977, ~ng suffered a back
injury and missed most ri the
season. But when a front office error
voided his contract, enabling him to
become a free agent, he held out for
a five-¥ear, $1.4 million pact prior to
the 19'18 seasoo.
'
In the next two years, his batting
average fell to .263 and .259. There
were no Gold Glove Awards.
"I don 'I thonk I've been
overrated," he S&amp;id. ''I think I
should hit .200 or .300, and I make no
excuses for not doing it.

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5- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-P(IIleroy , 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 10, 19M

OSU must ·win on road too.
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The creed in college basketball is
to win at home and hOpe for the best
on the road, and that's the situation
this week which confronts Ohio
Sta ~, Michigan liJ'lQ Msconsin.
Led by third-ranked Ohio State, all
three teams pQ!!ted a pair cl. homecourt victori es last week and are
tied for the lead in the powerful Big
Ten Conference.
Ohio State, a preseason favorite,
figured but now must go on to play at
12th-ranked Iowa to.night and Saturday at Northwestern. Michigan and
Wisconsin did not figure and will
have to prove themselves this
weekend.
Michil!8ll is at Indiana toni11ht and
then invades loth-ranked Purdue on
Saturday while Wisconsin is at Minnesota and then moves in on Iowa .
In other games tonight, Michigan
State is at Northwestern and Illinois
is at Purdue where the Boilermakers launch an ambitious
weekend schedule. After facing
illinois and Michigan, Purdue takes
oo undefeated and fifth-ranked .
Syracuse on Sunday in a nationally
televised contest .
Purdue Coach Lee Rose, who is
well aware that you must win at
home, wouldnt be as concerned this
week if he knew the exact condition
of Arnette Hallman. Hallman did not
play against Michigan State last
week and saw limited service in a
loss to Ohio State .
"I'm concerned about Arnette,"
said Rose. 'He lllsnt practiced and
I hope he 's mended sufficiently to be
able to play three games in four
days."
Joe Barry Carroll still is the key to
Purdue's hopes. The .7·1 Carroll is

Eagle jwri.or high
girls lose, 17-10
In a recent junior high girls game,
a tough Eastern team faltered in the
last quarter and fell to host Miller 1710.
Eastern trailed 9-6 after three
quarters but then the h&lt;l!ts caught
fire in the last period to pull away. •
Angie Spencer and Lee Ann Gaul
each had four poinlli for Eastern
while Kelly Whitlatch added two.
Beretta Deeter was the leading
rebounder with three caroms. Spencer and Jody Baninger each had
two reuwnds.
Eastern's next game is tonight
against Southwestern.
Eastern
4 0 2 4-10
Miller
4 0 S 8-17

averaging Zi .S points a game this
season and has 26 blocked shots . In
the TV game against Syracuse, he 11
be pitted against 6·11 Roosevelt
Bouie who !,locked 256 shots in Ills
first three years and has earned the

I
.

reputation of being one of the
nation's top defensive piviltmen.
The key game in the Big Ten this
week Is Ohio State at Iowa. The
Hawkeyes are still without the services of All-Conference . RQnnie

·Pro standings
National Basketball Association
At A Glance

By The Associated Press

wales Conterence
Adams Division

Buffalo

27
21
21
17
17

11 3
9 8
11 6
17 6
19 4

57 155 109

162
140
127
144

113
108
133
154

Montrea I
20 16 6 46 157
Los Angeles 19 13 8 46 172
Pittsburgh 17 13 11 45 l.U
l;&gt;etrolt
14 18 7 35129
Central Division
' Hartford
9 20 10 28 122
Atlanta
26 17 .605
Wednesday 's Games
San Antonio
22 21 .512 4
Houston
20 22 .476 5'1&gt; Detroll4, New York Rangers 0
Cleveland
19 25 .432 7'h Pittsburgh .c, vancou~Jer 2
Bullalo 3, New York Islanders 2
Indiana
18 25 .419 8
Montreal 5, Toronto J
Detroit
10 33 .233 16
Quebec 3, Edmonton 2
Western Conference
Minnesota 6, Hartford 2
Midwest Division
Los Angeles 6, Chicago 1
Kansas City
26 19 .578
Thursday's Games
Milwaukee
25 20 .556 1
51. Louis at Boston
Denver
16 29 356 10
Chicago
14 26 .350 9'h Winnipeg at Philadelphia
Friday's Games
Utah
13 30 .302 12
Quebec at Atlanta
Pacific Division
Vancouver at Washington
Seat! le
30 13 .698
Los Angeles
29 15 .1&gt;59 p;, Buffalo at Colorado
New York Rangers at Edmolilon
Phoenix
27 16 .628 3
s·an Diego
24 23 .511 8
Portland
23 23 .500 B'h
Golden State
13 29 .310 16 1h

1-42
151
141
132
148

M innesota

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division
• W. L. Pet.
31 10 .756.

Boston
Philadelphia
New Yor k
Washington
New Jersey

30
22
19
IB

11
23
20
25.

.732
.48'1
.487
.419

GB

Boston
Quebec

Toronto

Norris Division

1
11
11
14

Wednesav 's Games

Boston 112, Ne York 95
Atlanta 111 , Cleveland 107
Philadelphia 108, New Jersey 105
Washington 103, Los Angeles 101
San Diego 111. Milwaukee 107
Houston 114, Denver 112
Phoeni x 113, Goldi&gt;n State 100
Seattle 120,lndiana 111
Thursday's Game
Chicago at Kansas City
Friday's Games
Atlanta at Boston
Los Angeles at Detroit
Portland at New Jersey
Washington at Phi !adelphia

50
48
40
38

Lester but still m111t win at home to
entertain title hopes.
"They're a great team," said
Michigan Cooch Johnny Orr after
his Wolverines had upset the
J:fawkeyes ~-&amp;; _ ~st --~t111'9_ay .
''They could be one of the best in the
whole Ulited States· when Ronnie ,
Lester is playing."
Indiana lost two games Qn the road ·
by a total of three points and the ·
Hoo!iiers figure to ~ back at
home._Indiana is still a quality team '
even without Mike Woodson who was
lost for the season with a hack in· ;
jury .
The saddest start rl. the season involves Michigan State's NCAA ·
champidns who lost their first two :
games at home without departed '
Magic Jolmsoo and Greg Kel.ser. It ;
cruld be a long season for the Spartans who now hit the road .

By The Associated Press

BASEBALL

The Southern Junior High Basketball Team won its fifth game in a ,
row by defeating Eastern 23-41 last
~
~.
week. ·
Laren Wolfe led the winners with )
17 p!linta. Others scoring were Deb ~
bie Mlcheals with 3, Tere911 Hill with.:
2, and Becky Mlcheals with 1.
Leading reool!llders for Southern
were Wolfe and D. Mlcheals.
For Eastern, Angie Spencer had 5':
pctnts and Lea Am Gaul had 4 p&lt;ints. Southern 'srecord is now IHI.

NL - Named AI Bar lick and Tom

the 1980season.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NBA - Suspended Gene Shue,
head coach, san Diego Clippers, for
referee Di ck Bavetta during a game

Utah at Seattle

FOOTBALL
National Football League
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS- Signed
HQCKEY

NEW YORK RANGERS - Named

At AGlance

Ed Giacomin goalie consultant .

WINNIPEG JETS -

Campbell Conference

smythe Division

Chica go
Vancouver
St . Louis
Winnipeg
Colorado
Edmonton

15
15
15
12
12
9

14
20
19
24
23
21

GA
116
154
130
136
147

12 42 116 121
7 37 131 138
6 36 120 135
5 29 107 158
4 28 127 149
9 27 131 168

Released

By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER- We are
writing to you because we are so
upi!etabout w_hat happened to Dad.
About a month ago he took: an
overdose of pills and barely pulled
through ""te of us could lllders·
tand why "" wanted to kill himself.
We still can't.
The strange thing was that it happened jUllt when we thought things
were getting better....
All ~ us bad been fighting with
Im! fOr years. Finally we got
together and decided we were never
going to -change him and therefore
might as well stop the baWes.
It was a dramatic move and we all
felt good. AA rl. us, it seems, except

____ .....

Wavne Dillon, center.

COLLEGE
COLUMBIA - Named Chrlle
Bank defensive football coordinator,

~.~-'.

and O'Neal Tureln administrative

'

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.KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

assistant and coordinator of football
"recruiting.
GEORGIA TECH - Named Bill
Curry head football coach .
RICHMOND - Named Don Wig ginsollensive backfield coach .
SOUTHERN CALIFOR:NIA Named Ron Rl\odes golf coach.
U.S. COAST GUARD ACADEMY
- Named Hallie Gregory head track

. 11.90 E. ~~In ,
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034

Dad.
He became withdrawn and then

coach.

one night took the pills.
What happened?
DEAR READER ..,. Posing that
questloo to me instead of to your
father sUggests that your family
may have s001e cmununi~ation dif.
ficulties that had something to do
with the suicidal crisis.
For example, did you tell your
father about your decision n~ to
• fight anymore, thus warning him of
.•; thechange?Iassumen~t )
''
Neither do I get the unpression
that you have sPOken w!Ut him about
:. his feelings since his suicide at·
.'
"tempt
·
Many people are afraid to talk
about suicide. It is a taboo topic.
The reluctance results in part
fr001 fear of saying s001ethlng
wrong adn causing !he sujc;idal person to go ahead with lis or her plan.

Tornado gals defeat Eastern
By Greg BaUey
Melanie Weese's 26 points led the
Southern girls' varsity to a 49-37
hard fought win over visiting
. Eastern last week. Southern cashed
in en 13 of 28 free throws w!)ile
Eastern made just 3 of 12.
Southern was up 11~ at the end of
the first quarter bit the tough
Ea,stern team was on toi&gt; 211-17 at the
half.
Southern got back on top 32-28 after three periods and then broke
away in the fourthquarteLSouthern's Della Johnson was high
rebounder with 11 caroms while andy Evans had 8. Other Southern
scorers were: Tammy Smith, three;
Della Johnson, five; Jocty Grueser,
six; Tonja Salser and Elaine Smith,
four eBch; and Alicia Evans, two.
Hannum paced the Eastern attack
with 10 points while Laura Eichinger
had eiglt. Other Eastern scorers

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were: McClure, Milhoan and Young,
four each; Sheets, three, and Hudson and Goebel, two each.
The Southern junior high girls
raised their record to a perfect iHI
last week with a convincing39-16win
over Gallipolis. Laren Wolfe and
Debbie Michael each tossed in 13
points to pace Southern's scoring.
After a slow first quarter that ended 6~ the Southern girls cJ Coach
lJirry Wolfe ripped the nets to take a
16-6 halftime lead. The third quarter
ended 24·10 and the-game was never
in doubt. Wolfe and Michael also led
all rebounders.
Other scorers were Reeky
Michaels, sill; '1\'acy Hill, five; .
Becky Johnson and Tracy Mearns,
one each.
Scoring for Gallipolis were Renee
Halley, eight ; Kris Cook, four, and
Paul~! Russell, four.

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heritage house

HElEN AND SUE:
Several months before my
girlfriend's baby was born, she and
her. hmband asked me to be the
child's godmother. I was happy they
chose me, but I didn't give a stork
shower because I cwldn 't afford it.
Now people are telling me it was
my obligation. Was the shower my
responsibility as godmother? ARLENE
DEAR ARLENE:
A gift showet should never be con!idered an "obligation." H you
couldnt afford one, I'm sure your
girlfriend understands.
Godparents' real responsibility is

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We're only human and once in a while we make
a mistake, but if we should make an error that
costs you additional tax. you pay only the tax .
Block pays any penalty and interest. We stand
behind our work.

about putting the idea of suicide the person's mind when he or she may haev
''forgotten all aboutit ."
The fact is that talking about
suicide can prevent it. Few penple
kill themselves if they feel truly connected with at least one other person.
I am sending you my newsletter
titled ''When a Loved One Threatens
Suicide." It is a useful guide for
handling suicidal crises.
Other readers may order this
newsletter by sending 50 cents and a
self-addressed, stamped envelope to
me in care of this newspaper , P. 0.
Box 475, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
I don't want to frighten you. But
you should know that peqlle who
malre a serious suicide attempt
usually try again unless there Is a
change in the situation that made
them feel so-hopeless and-helpless.
And each time they attempt
suicide, their cry for help tends to be
more desperate.
Approach the subject with your
father by asking him what he was
feeling and thinking the night he
took the pills.
Explain that the family had just
radically changed the way it related
to him. Ponder with him the
possibility that the sudden absence
rl. fighting left him feeling isolated
from everyone.
He may. b... e ..• terpreted the
change .as ywr giving up on him.
You wil never know - unless you
ask.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care of this
newspaper, P. O.!Jox 475, Radio Ci·
ty Station, New York,, NY 11019.
Volume cJ maU prohibilli personal
replies, but questions of general in·
teres! will be discussed in future col-

It

FamBy's Suicide Crisis

• Ohio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
·See our lot ~T~Odel today .

Na1ional Hockey League

By The Associated Press

'

By
.ALL A¥ERICAN
Meets

last week.

Hartmut Strecker, kicker, and An ·
thooy Young , defensive back .
National Hockey League

I

HOMES

intentionally striking

pressed her desire that all officers
Foundation, and it was Mrs. Bartley
be
present. A dinner will be served
who appointed Mrs. Pauley.
and
reservations are to be sent to
Janice DeBord, worthy matron,
Mrs.
William
King. A thank you note
and Datlas [)eBord, worthy patron,
was
read
from
Mrs. 'Etta Cullums
presided at ihe meeting . All of the
thanking
the
chapter
for the yellow
new officers were in their stations
mums.
A
letter
was
read
from Mrs.
with the exception of sentinel and
Quper
stating
that
her
mother,
Mrs.
the pro tern officer there was Doug
Waddell,
a
member
of
HarFay
Bishop.
risonville chapter, Is a resident of a
Following a welcome by the wornursing home at Newark. There was
thy matron, the opening ode "In the
also
a note from Mrs. Bessie King,
Garden" was sung with Jane Wise at
deputy grand matron, thanking the
the piano. The flag was presented
Generation Rap and the patriotic oong, "You're a chapter for courtesies extended at
the installation.
Grand Old Flag"was sung.
~ By Ht·lt•n ami ~ut• Botl~l
Get-well cards were · sent to the
Two petitions were presented. A
sck
andsllltins cl. the chapter. Jane
billot 'was taken on one candidate,
ACALLING CARD SAVED
Wise
announced the birth cl. a son to
and plans were rna de to exemplify
THIS TEEN-AGERS LIFE
Allen
and Sabra Gibson , named
the work for two candidates at the
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Grant
Allen.
February meeting.
RAP:
A social hour was enjoyed in the
Aschool of instruction to be held at
I was in deep trouble and didn t
dining
room with Janice and Dallas
WMPO
know where to turn. Drugs and the Middleport Masonic Temple by
DeBord,
Lois Wyant , Jean Wood ,
booze were part of it, but mainly I the Grand officers of the Grand
SATURDAYS
and May Gilliam serving
couldn' talk to my parents - or Chapter of Ohio on Feb. 6 was anrefreshments
.
8 til Noon
anyone unless I was strung out. 1· nounced. The worthy matron exwas aboot ready tokiO myself.
One night I was at the public
library (buying dope -it's a safe
place to deliver) when I found some to oversee the child's spiritual
cards in a 'Take One" bm in the education and see that he or she is
restroom. They had the addresses confirmed at the proper time. They
and phone numbers cl. two free youth usually give special 'gifts at birth,
help centers, and also the number of birthdays and Christmas, but
nowhere Is it written that a goda teen hotline.
mother must plan a shower for the
It was like someone had tappe4
ENTIRE STOCK WOMEN-'S
baby's mother. - HELEN AND
my shoulder and said, ''Hey, here's SUE
your last chance, don't blow it'!" I
GOT A PROBLEM : Or a subject
sneaked a card into my purse, but by
for discussion, two1leneration sytle?
the next morning I'd chickened out.
Direct your questions to either Sue
How could I talk to strangers when I
or Helen Bot;tel - or both, if you
couldn't even face friends?
want a combination mother That card kept showing up
daughter answer - in care of this
everytime I opened my purse ! It
nagged me so much I tried throwing newspaper . )
it away, bit fished it out cl. the trash.
And finally I called! Now I'm getting cwnseling ·from people who
have been the drug route and come
COST.OF·LIVING
ALL OTiiER MERCHANDISE
hack. I'm trying to understand that
WHITE
PLAINS,
N.
Y.
(AP)
everybody doesn't hate me,
When an executive turns down a
especially my folks. For the first
transfer
one of the major reasons Is
time in months my head Is almost
the high cost of living in the new
straight. You see, I've leBrned that
area, according to a recent survey
people care!
I hate to think where I'd have sponsored by Merrill Lynch
Relocation Management Inc. ~
drifted if that card hadn t ''made "
The executive relocation service
me pick it up. Many times troubled
firm
says 43 percent cJ 600 finns surkids just don't know where to turn
veyed reported employet!l twned
and they're afraid to ask because
"'
down transfer opportunities because
they don \knowmuchabouttrust.
OF
SHOES
of high living costs.
Middleport, o.
This letter is to suggest that other
Open Friday Til 8
help centers aU over the cOWltry
start distributing cards or leaflets in
·schools, libraries, public restrooms,
etc., for those who -need an address
or phone number in a hurry. Anotice
on a bUlletin board is next best, but
often peqlle overlook something
they must copy down, while they'll
keep a card - even if they don't intend to use it. And then it's there
when decision-time comes . Thank
God it was there for me! - GET.
TING TOGETHER WITH MYSELF
DEARGTWM.
Thanks for a good suggestioo, and
special thanks for sharing.your hapPY ending with us. May it be only the
beginning of a great future. HELEN AND SUE
Appointment of Mrs. Lois A.
Pauley as a committee member cJ
the Heart Fund Foundalioo for the
next three years was noted at the
Tuesday night meeting of Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of the
East.emStar.
~
The most worthy grand matron
appointed Helen Bartley, a past
grand matroo ri the Grand Chapter
of OHio, chairman of the Heart Fund

33~%0FF

'

MODU~R

one week without pay and fined him

Golden State at San Diego

Philadelphia
NY Rangers
NY Islanders
Atlanta
Washington

inging bits while they are wet - a
nylon scrubbel'would be good to use
- as they will stick tight when dry
again.
Good luck. The worst part is the
mess so be pcepered for it. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My daughter-inlaw says she always bas such trouble finding something tp give my
husband and me for gifts since we
really do not need anything. I suggested that she make us members ol
a "Pie of the Month Club" as we both
work and she does not . It is so nice to
get a dessert ready to eat and with
no effort. -MRS. W. A.
DEAR POLLY -To restore ''sizing" to thin curtains, even organdy
ones, add one cup rl. Epsom salts to a
gallon of water. Dip the curtains in
this solution and they can be dried in
the dryer and need no ironing. This
certainly helps me with my ruffled
curtains. -WUISE
Polly will send you one of her signed . thank .y·ou newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write
POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

"

Gorman umpiring consultants for

$3,500 tor

GF
163
158
133
127
118

-

WALlPAPER MUST GO
By Polly O'amer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY' - 'lbere are two
layers rl. wallpaper over the original
stucco en our bedroom walls. We
would like to get this paper off and
paint the walls. Ill there a WHY. we
can do this . witho.- renting a
steamer? If It Involves too much
work or spense we could add
anotherlaye,rofpaper. - MRS. M.
DEAR MRS. M. -Adding another
layer cl. wallpaper Is just putting cl.f
90mething that will Juive to be done
eventually. I do not think you wn
find it too hard to remove the old
paper. The job can doubUess be done
with just a bucket of warm water
and a 90ft scrub brush.
Cover the Door with plastic drop
cloths so the wood or carpet will not
be damaged. Start wetting the walls
at the top and be sure the paper 1s
. saturated all the way down a wide
strip, pemaps about a yard wide. It
may need wetting a secood time to
go through both lii,Yers. When it
seems loose use a putty knife to start
loosen!~ each strip and often they ·
will fall cJf in big pieces.
Be careful n~ to gouge the wall.
Be sure to remove all the small cl-

National league

New York at Milwaukee

Pis
62
43
38
35
26

_,

Polly Cramer

posts fifth victory

Wednesav's Sports Transactions

Denver vs. Kansas City at St . Louis

WL T
26 2 10
18 17 7
16 17 6
15 18 5
10 23 6

________- --- - ·POLLY·s POINTERS
..:.__

Southern junior high

Sports transactions

Indiana at Chicago
•
Cleveland at San Antonio

Patrick Division

______

Lois Pauley appointed to Heart Fund committee

.rJo.'4' g~ ew.t.•
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The annual I!Chool of instructien
for Dlstrict 25 was announced for
Feb. il at the Middleport Temple
'when Pcmeroy Chapter 1116, Order r1.
the Eastern Star, met Tuesday night
at tbe Pomeroy l'tllsonlc Temple.
Mrs. Pauline Hysell, worthy
matron, and Torn Edwards, worthy
patren, presided at the meeting, and
announced a m&amp;ting for Jan. rT, at 2
pm, for. Mrii. Bessie King, deputy
grand inatron, at the Marietta Tempie. The wOPtby matron asked that
allllne ~leers plan to attend'
The ways and Di~ committee
noted that a homemade bake sale
wBl be held 11t ~ next meeting.
Each inember Is to lake 90mething
they have baked
·
Pa~ Marlsle, alsocla te conductl'llllll, gave her lecture In open
session. Mrytle SIB8cm and Sylvia
Mldldff r1. the lnlltnlction cOOlDilttee
fw1cU~. It
noted that dues
are nOll'· paytble. Refrellunents
were
by Judy M~, Mabel
Goeglein, Mabel Moen, Marlene
Wilson, and PllyUis Clark.·

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�4 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport .Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 10, 1980

Ohio Sportllght
By
George Strode

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
owners of In Rem and Execution's
Reason hope that their Ohio
11uroughbred Horses c1. the YeB r
have retwned to peak physical condition for 1980.
The two standouts shared the
state's top horse tiUe last seBSon
desjllte aUments. It was the first
deadlock in the 16 yeBrs of the
award.
In Rem suffered from a minor
blood disorder that cost him two
straight lo:sses. Still, the 4-year-old
gelding \IUsvi:toriousinfiveofnine
starts for winnings of $59,005.
Execution's Reason under.vent
surgery to remove a bone chip fr001
his right front ankle last fall, thus
cutting short a brilliant 2~ar-old
campaign in which he won all four
starts for $116,460.
The complete recovery of
Execution's Reason will determine
if he is to race in the 1980 Kentucky
Derby.
' ~~ everything goes right, " said
his trainer, Bert Sonnier, "I'm
99percentsure we 11 be in Louisville.
I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
We're hopeful he 11 be just! in~. "
Sonnier has begun working with
Execution's Reason for the 191!0
seBSon, but warned, '1 think the
Flamingo is out and I'm not sure we
can make the Florida Derby either."

owner, Howard Noonan of
Springfield, and Sonnier hqle to
have Execution's Reason ready for
the Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn
P..-kinMarch.
In ·Rem's owner and trainer,
Olarles Million Jr. of Versailles,
Ky., is confident that his gelding will
be ready for a big :&gt;-year-old campaign.
In Rem needs less than $8,000 in
1900 to move into second place on the
all-time money winning list for
Buckeye-bred horses. He already
has earnings of $291,061 in three
racing seasons.
'1 had the vet look him over and
he says In Rem has the legs of a 2year-old who bas never been
breezed," said Million. ''He's really
His

a soond horse. "

In the annual poll of Ohio turl
writers, sports editors and racing
secretaries, In Rem also won honors
as champion handicap horse while
Execution's R · ason wao; the 2-¥earold colt winner.
Other winners who will be honored
at a banquet Friday in Columbis
were : 2-¥ear-old filly - Sweet
Audrey; 3-¥ear-old colt- R. Barney
Google; 3-year-old filly - La Croix;
Champion handicap mare - Royal
North; stallion ri the year - Grand
Central an!l Brent's Prince ; brood marc of the year - Apache Queen.

: Manning still has potential
:
:
•

CLEVELAND (AP)- Rick Manning has yet to live up to the patential which he displayed in his rookie
season in 1975. But at age 25, the
aevelandlndians center fielder still
believes he can achieve stardom in
baseball's American League.
•·· Ever since the personable player
first appeared in a major league
game, he has been touted, especially
by the Indians' front office, as a
cant miss All .Star performer.
"I know I disappointed some
peqlle with my hitting and my
leadership. But I still gave it my
all," said Manning. '1 feel like I'm
ready to have a good year. My frame
cl. nind is good.
''I know I can hit about .2ro and
steal around 30 bases. Last year,
(Indians · Manager) Dave Garcia
used to chew me out all the time to
get me to push myself more. That is
good. Maybelneedit."
Manning was Cleveland's No. 1
draft choice in 1972. TI!at year, he
batted .616 in his senior year in high
school in Niagara Falls, N.Y. Forty
percent of his hits were for extra
bases .
After three years in the Indians '
farm system, he joined the bigleague team in 1975 and hit a solid

.285. In 1976 he hit .296 and won a
Gold Glove Award for his defensive
play.
.
'1 've never seen a player work
harder or hustle more than Rick did
his first two years," Garcia said .
''He was so exciting that I'd buy a
ticket to see him. Most of all, he
seemed to love everything about the
game.
''Now he doesn't seem to enjoy it
as much, and I think that hurt him."
"Rick has so much ability and he
can do so much," said Indians
President Gabe Paul. 'He can and
should be a super player. But he
isnt, and I'm worried that Manning
may be in danger of settling for
mediocrity."

In 1977, ~ng suffered a back
injury and missed most ri the
season. But when a front office error
voided his contract, enabling him to
become a free agent, he held out for
a five-¥ear, $1.4 million pact prior to
the 19'18 seasoo.
'
In the next two years, his batting
average fell to .263 and .259. There
were no Gold Glove Awards.
"I don 'I thonk I've been
overrated," he S&amp;id. ''I think I
should hit .200 or .300, and I make no
excuses for not doing it.

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5- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-P(IIleroy , 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 10, 19M

OSU must ·win on road too.
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The creed in college basketball is
to win at home and hOpe for the best
on the road, and that's the situation
this week which confronts Ohio
Sta ~, Michigan liJ'lQ Msconsin.
Led by third-ranked Ohio State, all
three teams pQ!!ted a pair cl. homecourt victori es last week and are
tied for the lead in the powerful Big
Ten Conference.
Ohio State, a preseason favorite,
figured but now must go on to play at
12th-ranked Iowa to.night and Saturday at Northwestern. Michigan and
Wisconsin did not figure and will
have to prove themselves this
weekend.
Michil!8ll is at Indiana toni11ht and
then invades loth-ranked Purdue on
Saturday while Wisconsin is at Minnesota and then moves in on Iowa .
In other games tonight, Michigan
State is at Northwestern and Illinois
is at Purdue where the Boilermakers launch an ambitious
weekend schedule. After facing
illinois and Michigan, Purdue takes
oo undefeated and fifth-ranked .
Syracuse on Sunday in a nationally
televised contest .
Purdue Coach Lee Rose, who is
well aware that you must win at
home, wouldnt be as concerned this
week if he knew the exact condition
of Arnette Hallman. Hallman did not
play against Michigan State last
week and saw limited service in a
loss to Ohio State .
"I'm concerned about Arnette,"
said Rose. 'He lllsnt practiced and
I hope he 's mended sufficiently to be
able to play three games in four
days."
Joe Barry Carroll still is the key to
Purdue's hopes. The .7·1 Carroll is

Eagle jwri.or high
girls lose, 17-10
In a recent junior high girls game,
a tough Eastern team faltered in the
last quarter and fell to host Miller 1710.
Eastern trailed 9-6 after three
quarters but then the h&lt;l!ts caught
fire in the last period to pull away. •
Angie Spencer and Lee Ann Gaul
each had four poinlli for Eastern
while Kelly Whitlatch added two.
Beretta Deeter was the leading
rebounder with three caroms. Spencer and Jody Baninger each had
two reuwnds.
Eastern's next game is tonight
against Southwestern.
Eastern
4 0 2 4-10
Miller
4 0 S 8-17

averaging Zi .S points a game this
season and has 26 blocked shots . In
the TV game against Syracuse, he 11
be pitted against 6·11 Roosevelt
Bouie who !,locked 256 shots in Ills
first three years and has earned the

I
.

reputation of being one of the
nation's top defensive piviltmen.
The key game in the Big Ten this
week Is Ohio State at Iowa. The
Hawkeyes are still without the services of All-Conference . RQnnie

·Pro standings
National Basketball Association
At A Glance

By The Associated Press

wales Conterence
Adams Division

Buffalo

27
21
21
17
17

11 3
9 8
11 6
17 6
19 4

57 155 109

162
140
127
144

113
108
133
154

Montrea I
20 16 6 46 157
Los Angeles 19 13 8 46 172
Pittsburgh 17 13 11 45 l.U
l;&gt;etrolt
14 18 7 35129
Central Division
' Hartford
9 20 10 28 122
Atlanta
26 17 .605
Wednesday 's Games
San Antonio
22 21 .512 4
Houston
20 22 .476 5'1&gt; Detroll4, New York Rangers 0
Cleveland
19 25 .432 7'h Pittsburgh .c, vancou~Jer 2
Bullalo 3, New York Islanders 2
Indiana
18 25 .419 8
Montreal 5, Toronto J
Detroit
10 33 .233 16
Quebec 3, Edmonton 2
Western Conference
Minnesota 6, Hartford 2
Midwest Division
Los Angeles 6, Chicago 1
Kansas City
26 19 .578
Thursday's Games
Milwaukee
25 20 .556 1
51. Louis at Boston
Denver
16 29 356 10
Chicago
14 26 .350 9'h Winnipeg at Philadelphia
Friday's Games
Utah
13 30 .302 12
Quebec at Atlanta
Pacific Division
Vancouver at Washington
Seat! le
30 13 .698
Los Angeles
29 15 .1&gt;59 p;, Buffalo at Colorado
New York Rangers at Edmolilon
Phoenix
27 16 .628 3
s·an Diego
24 23 .511 8
Portland
23 23 .500 B'h
Golden State
13 29 .310 16 1h

1-42
151
141
132
148

M innesota

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division
• W. L. Pet.
31 10 .756.

Boston
Philadelphia
New Yor k
Washington
New Jersey

30
22
19
IB

11
23
20
25.

.732
.48'1
.487
.419

GB

Boston
Quebec

Toronto

Norris Division

1
11
11
14

Wednesav 's Games

Boston 112, Ne York 95
Atlanta 111 , Cleveland 107
Philadelphia 108, New Jersey 105
Washington 103, Los Angeles 101
San Diego 111. Milwaukee 107
Houston 114, Denver 112
Phoeni x 113, Goldi&gt;n State 100
Seattle 120,lndiana 111
Thursday's Game
Chicago at Kansas City
Friday's Games
Atlanta at Boston
Los Angeles at Detroit
Portland at New Jersey
Washington at Phi !adelphia

50
48
40
38

Lester but still m111t win at home to
entertain title hopes.
"They're a great team," said
Michigan Cooch Johnny Orr after
his Wolverines had upset the
J:fawkeyes ~-&amp;; _ ~st --~t111'9_ay .
''They could be one of the best in the
whole Ulited States· when Ronnie ,
Lester is playing."
Indiana lost two games Qn the road ·
by a total of three points and the ·
Hoo!iiers figure to ~ back at
home._Indiana is still a quality team '
even without Mike Woodson who was
lost for the season with a hack in· ;
jury .
The saddest start rl. the season involves Michigan State's NCAA ·
champidns who lost their first two :
games at home without departed '
Magic Jolmsoo and Greg Kel.ser. It ;
cruld be a long season for the Spartans who now hit the road .

By The Associated Press

BASEBALL

The Southern Junior High Basketball Team won its fifth game in a ,
row by defeating Eastern 23-41 last
~
~.
week. ·
Laren Wolfe led the winners with )
17 p!linta. Others scoring were Deb ~
bie Mlcheals with 3, Tere911 Hill with.:
2, and Becky Mlcheals with 1.
Leading reool!llders for Southern
were Wolfe and D. Mlcheals.
For Eastern, Angie Spencer had 5':
pctnts and Lea Am Gaul had 4 p&lt;ints. Southern 'srecord is now IHI.

NL - Named AI Bar lick and Tom

the 1980season.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NBA - Suspended Gene Shue,
head coach, san Diego Clippers, for
referee Di ck Bavetta during a game

Utah at Seattle

FOOTBALL
National Football League
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS- Signed
HQCKEY

NEW YORK RANGERS - Named

At AGlance

Ed Giacomin goalie consultant .

WINNIPEG JETS -

Campbell Conference

smythe Division

Chica go
Vancouver
St . Louis
Winnipeg
Colorado
Edmonton

15
15
15
12
12
9

14
20
19
24
23
21

GA
116
154
130
136
147

12 42 116 121
7 37 131 138
6 36 120 135
5 29 107 158
4 28 127 149
9 27 131 168

Released

By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER- We are
writing to you because we are so
upi!etabout w_hat happened to Dad.
About a month ago he took: an
overdose of pills and barely pulled
through ""te of us could lllders·
tand why "" wanted to kill himself.
We still can't.
The strange thing was that it happened jUllt when we thought things
were getting better....
All ~ us bad been fighting with
Im! fOr years. Finally we got
together and decided we were never
going to -change him and therefore
might as well stop the baWes.
It was a dramatic move and we all
felt good. AA rl. us, it seems, except

____ .....

Wavne Dillon, center.

COLLEGE
COLUMBIA - Named Chrlle
Bank defensive football coordinator,

~.~-'.

and O'Neal Tureln administrative

'

"

.KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

assistant and coordinator of football
"recruiting.
GEORGIA TECH - Named Bill
Curry head football coach .
RICHMOND - Named Don Wig ginsollensive backfield coach .
SOUTHERN CALIFOR:NIA Named Ron Rl\odes golf coach.
U.S. COAST GUARD ACADEMY
- Named Hallie Gregory head track

. 11.90 E. ~~In ,
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034

Dad.
He became withdrawn and then

coach.

one night took the pills.
What happened?
DEAR READER ..,. Posing that
questloo to me instead of to your
father sUggests that your family
may have s001e cmununi~ation dif.
ficulties that had something to do
with the suicidal crisis.
For example, did you tell your
father about your decision n~ to
• fight anymore, thus warning him of
.•; thechange?Iassumen~t )
''
Neither do I get the unpression
that you have sPOken w!Ut him about
:. his feelings since his suicide at·
.'
"tempt
·
Many people are afraid to talk
about suicide. It is a taboo topic.
The reluctance results in part
fr001 fear of saying s001ethlng
wrong adn causing !he sujc;idal person to go ahead with lis or her plan.

Tornado gals defeat Eastern
By Greg BaUey
Melanie Weese's 26 points led the
Southern girls' varsity to a 49-37
hard fought win over visiting
. Eastern last week. Southern cashed
in en 13 of 28 free throws w!)ile
Eastern made just 3 of 12.
Southern was up 11~ at the end of
the first quarter bit the tough
Ea,stern team was on toi&gt; 211-17 at the
half.
Southern got back on top 32-28 after three periods and then broke
away in the fourthquarteLSouthern's Della Johnson was high
rebounder with 11 caroms while andy Evans had 8. Other Southern
scorers were: Tammy Smith, three;
Della Johnson, five; Jocty Grueser,
six; Tonja Salser and Elaine Smith,
four eBch; and Alicia Evans, two.
Hannum paced the Eastern attack
with 10 points while Laura Eichinger
had eiglt. Other Eastern scorers

SAVE $40000 ON ADVENTS
6-FOOT VIDEOBEAM T.V. ,
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were: McClure, Milhoan and Young,
four each; Sheets, three, and Hudson and Goebel, two each.
The Southern junior high girls
raised their record to a perfect iHI
last week with a convincing39-16win
over Gallipolis. Laren Wolfe and
Debbie Michael each tossed in 13
points to pace Southern's scoring.
After a slow first quarter that ended 6~ the Southern girls cJ Coach
lJirry Wolfe ripped the nets to take a
16-6 halftime lead. The third quarter
ended 24·10 and the-game was never
in doubt. Wolfe and Michael also led
all rebounders.
Other scorers were Reeky
Michaels, sill; '1\'acy Hill, five; .
Becky Johnson and Tracy Mearns,
one each.
Scoring for Gallipolis were Renee
Halley, eight ; Kris Cook, four, and
Paul~! Russell, four.

SUPER BOWL

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But Advent's Video Beam~
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'
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heritage house

HElEN AND SUE:
Several months before my
girlfriend's baby was born, she and
her. hmband asked me to be the
child's godmother. I was happy they
chose me, but I didn't give a stork
shower because I cwldn 't afford it.
Now people are telling me it was
my obligation. Was the shower my
responsibility as godmother? ARLENE
DEAR ARLENE:
A gift showet should never be con!idered an "obligation." H you
couldnt afford one, I'm sure your
girlfriend understands.
Godparents' real responsibility is

I·
I
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pay any _
-l llterest

We're only human and once in a while we make
a mistake, but if we should make an error that
costs you additional tax. you pay only the tax .
Block pays any penalty and interest. We stand
behind our work.

about putting the idea of suicide the person's mind when he or she may haev
''forgotten all aboutit ."
The fact is that talking about
suicide can prevent it. Few penple
kill themselves if they feel truly connected with at least one other person.
I am sending you my newsletter
titled ''When a Loved One Threatens
Suicide." It is a useful guide for
handling suicidal crises.
Other readers may order this
newsletter by sending 50 cents and a
self-addressed, stamped envelope to
me in care of this newspaper , P. 0.
Box 475, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
I don't want to frighten you. But
you should know that peqlle who
malre a serious suicide attempt
usually try again unless there Is a
change in the situation that made
them feel so-hopeless and-helpless.
And each time they attempt
suicide, their cry for help tends to be
more desperate.
Approach the subject with your
father by asking him what he was
feeling and thinking the night he
took the pills.
Explain that the family had just
radically changed the way it related
to him. Ponder with him the
possibility that the sudden absence
rl. fighting left him feeling isolated
from everyone.
He may. b... e ..• terpreted the
change .as ywr giving up on him.
You wil never know - unless you
ask.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care of this
newspaper, P. O.!Jox 475, Radio Ci·
ty Station, New York,, NY 11019.
Volume cJ maU prohibilli personal
replies, but questions of general in·
teres! will be discussed in future col-

It

FamBy's Suicide Crisis

• Ohio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
·See our lot ~T~Odel today .

Na1ional Hockey League

By The Associated Press

'

By
.ALL A¥ERICAN
Meets

last week.

Hartmut Strecker, kicker, and An ·
thooy Young , defensive back .
National Hockey League

I

HOMES

intentionally striking

pressed her desire that all officers
Foundation, and it was Mrs. Bartley
be
present. A dinner will be served
who appointed Mrs. Pauley.
and
reservations are to be sent to
Janice DeBord, worthy matron,
Mrs.
William
King. A thank you note
and Datlas [)eBord, worthy patron,
was
read
from
Mrs. 'Etta Cullums
presided at ihe meeting . All of the
thanking
the
chapter
for the yellow
new officers were in their stations
mums.
A
letter
was
read
from Mrs.
with the exception of sentinel and
Quper
stating
that
her
mother,
Mrs.
the pro tern officer there was Doug
Waddell,
a
member
of
HarFay
Bishop.
risonville chapter, Is a resident of a
Following a welcome by the wornursing home at Newark. There was
thy matron, the opening ode "In the
also
a note from Mrs. Bessie King,
Garden" was sung with Jane Wise at
deputy grand matron, thanking the
the piano. The flag was presented
Generation Rap and the patriotic oong, "You're a chapter for courtesies extended at
the installation.
Grand Old Flag"was sung.
~ By Ht·lt•n ami ~ut• Botl~l
Get-well cards were · sent to the
Two petitions were presented. A
sck
andsllltins cl. the chapter. Jane
billot 'was taken on one candidate,
ACALLING CARD SAVED
Wise
announced the birth cl. a son to
and plans were rna de to exemplify
THIS TEEN-AGERS LIFE
Allen
and Sabra Gibson , named
the work for two candidates at the
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Grant
Allen.
February meeting.
RAP:
A social hour was enjoyed in the
Aschool of instruction to be held at
I was in deep trouble and didn t
dining
room with Janice and Dallas
WMPO
know where to turn. Drugs and the Middleport Masonic Temple by
DeBord,
Lois Wyant , Jean Wood ,
booze were part of it, but mainly I the Grand officers of the Grand
SATURDAYS
and May Gilliam serving
couldn' talk to my parents - or Chapter of Ohio on Feb. 6 was anrefreshments
.
8 til Noon
anyone unless I was strung out. 1· nounced. The worthy matron exwas aboot ready tokiO myself.
One night I was at the public
library (buying dope -it's a safe
place to deliver) when I found some to oversee the child's spiritual
cards in a 'Take One" bm in the education and see that he or she is
restroom. They had the addresses confirmed at the proper time. They
and phone numbers cl. two free youth usually give special 'gifts at birth,
help centers, and also the number of birthdays and Christmas, but
nowhere Is it written that a goda teen hotline.
mother must plan a shower for the
It was like someone had tappe4
ENTIRE STOCK WOMEN-'S
baby's mother. - HELEN AND
my shoulder and said, ''Hey, here's SUE
your last chance, don't blow it'!" I
GOT A PROBLEM : Or a subject
sneaked a card into my purse, but by
for discussion, two1leneration sytle?
the next morning I'd chickened out.
Direct your questions to either Sue
How could I talk to strangers when I
or Helen Bot;tel - or both, if you
couldn't even face friends?
want a combination mother That card kept showing up
daughter answer - in care of this
everytime I opened my purse ! It
nagged me so much I tried throwing newspaper . )
it away, bit fished it out cl. the trash.
And finally I called! Now I'm getting cwnseling ·from people who
have been the drug route and come
COST.OF·LIVING
ALL OTiiER MERCHANDISE
hack. I'm trying to understand that
WHITE
PLAINS,
N.
Y.
(AP)
everybody doesn't hate me,
When an executive turns down a
especially my folks. For the first
transfer
one of the major reasons Is
time in months my head Is almost
the high cost of living in the new
straight. You see, I've leBrned that
area, according to a recent survey
people care!
I hate to think where I'd have sponsored by Merrill Lynch
Relocation Management Inc. ~
drifted if that card hadn t ''made "
The executive relocation service
me pick it up. Many times troubled
firm
says 43 percent cJ 600 finns surkids just don't know where to turn
veyed reported employet!l twned
and they're afraid to ask because
"'
down transfer opportunities because
they don \knowmuchabouttrust.
OF
SHOES
of high living costs.
Middleport, o.
This letter is to suggest that other
Open Friday Til 8
help centers aU over the cOWltry
start distributing cards or leaflets in
·schools, libraries, public restrooms,
etc., for those who -need an address
or phone number in a hurry. Anotice
on a bUlletin board is next best, but
often peqlle overlook something
they must copy down, while they'll
keep a card - even if they don't intend to use it. And then it's there
when decision-time comes . Thank
God it was there for me! - GET.
TING TOGETHER WITH MYSELF
DEARGTWM.
Thanks for a good suggestioo, and
special thanks for sharing.your hapPY ending with us. May it be only the
beginning of a great future. HELEN AND SUE
Appointment of Mrs. Lois A.
Pauley as a committee member cJ
the Heart Fund Foundalioo for the
next three years was noted at the
Tuesday night meeting of Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of the
East.emStar.
~
The most worthy grand matron
appointed Helen Bartley, a past
grand matroo ri the Grand Chapter
of OHio, chairman of the Heart Fund

33~%0FF

'

MODU~R

one week without pay and fined him

Golden State at San Diego

Philadelphia
NY Rangers
NY Islanders
Atlanta
Washington

inging bits while they are wet - a
nylon scrubbel'would be good to use
- as they will stick tight when dry
again.
Good luck. The worst part is the
mess so be pcepered for it. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My daughter-inlaw says she always bas such trouble finding something tp give my
husband and me for gifts since we
really do not need anything. I suggested that she make us members ol
a "Pie of the Month Club" as we both
work and she does not . It is so nice to
get a dessert ready to eat and with
no effort. -MRS. W. A.
DEAR POLLY -To restore ''sizing" to thin curtains, even organdy
ones, add one cup rl. Epsom salts to a
gallon of water. Dip the curtains in
this solution and they can be dried in
the dryer and need no ironing. This
certainly helps me with my ruffled
curtains. -WUISE
Polly will send you one of her signed . thank .y·ou newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write
POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

"

Gorman umpiring consultants for

$3,500 tor

GF
163
158
133
127
118

-

WALlPAPER MUST GO
By Polly O'amer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY' - 'lbere are two
layers rl. wallpaper over the original
stucco en our bedroom walls. We
would like to get this paper off and
paint the walls. Ill there a WHY. we
can do this . witho.- renting a
steamer? If It Involves too much
work or spense we could add
anotherlaye,rofpaper. - MRS. M.
DEAR MRS. M. -Adding another
layer cl. wallpaper Is just putting cl.f
90mething that will Juive to be done
eventually. I do not think you wn
find it too hard to remove the old
paper. The job can doubUess be done
with just a bucket of warm water
and a 90ft scrub brush.
Cover the Door with plastic drop
cloths so the wood or carpet will not
be damaged. Start wetting the walls
at the top and be sure the paper 1s
. saturated all the way down a wide
strip, pemaps about a yard wide. It
may need wetting a secood time to
go through both lii,Yers. When it
seems loose use a putty knife to start
loosen!~ each strip and often they ·
will fall cJf in big pieces.
Be careful n~ to gouge the wall.
Be sure to remove all the small cl-

National league

New York at Milwaukee

Pis
62
43
38
35
26

_,

Polly Cramer

posts fifth victory

Wednesav's Sports Transactions

Denver vs. Kansas City at St . Louis

WL T
26 2 10
18 17 7
16 17 6
15 18 5
10 23 6

________- --- - ·POLLY·s POINTERS
..:.__

Southern junior high

Sports transactions

Indiana at Chicago
•
Cleveland at San Antonio

Patrick Division

______

Lois Pauley appointed to Heart Fund committee

.rJo.'4' g~ ew.t.•
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The annual I!Chool of instructien
for Dlstrict 25 was announced for
Feb. il at the Middleport Temple
'when Pcmeroy Chapter 1116, Order r1.
the Eastern Star, met Tuesday night
at tbe Pomeroy l'tllsonlc Temple.
Mrs. Pauline Hysell, worthy
matron, and Torn Edwards, worthy
patren, presided at the meeting, and
announced a m&amp;ting for Jan. rT, at 2
pm, for. Mrii. Bessie King, deputy
grand inatron, at the Marietta Tempie. The wOPtby matron asked that
allllne ~leers plan to attend'
The ways and Di~ committee
noted that a homemade bake sale
wBl be held 11t ~ next meeting.
Each inember Is to lake 90mething
they have baked
·
Pa~ Marlsle, alsocla te conductl'llllll, gave her lecture In open
session. Mrytle SIB8cm and Sylvia
Mldldff r1. the lnlltnlction cOOlDilttee
fw1cU~. It
noted that dues
are nOll'· paytble. Refrellunents
were
by Judy M~, Mabel
Goeglein, Mabel Moen, Marlene
Wilson, and PllyUis Clark.·

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•

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 10, 1980

March of Dimes jan. 20-31 here
The annual Meigs County March
of Dimes Drive is Jaruary 20and the
week followin g until the 31st of
January. Funds raised from it will
be used to continue the battle
against ·birth defects and to support
college scholarships to Meigs County students that choose a health care
field of study .

Letters

. RICESHOSTGATHERfNGS
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice and
son, BiU , hosted several family
gatherings over the holidays. Their
guests for the holidays were Mr. and
Mrs . Chester fuce, Ginger James,
College Park, Ga., Bob Merrill, Joppa, Md. On Olristmas Eve they were
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris
and Durward and Nins Cummings.
Christmas Day dinner gueslll were
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rice, Ginger
James and Bob Merrill, along with
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris and Mrs .
Eula Rice .

1978 PLY. HORIZON

4395

1

4 Door, dark red, co lor with mat c hi ng red vinyl tri m , radio, air
cond ., automati c t ra ns ., power
steering &amp; brakes . Rally wheels .

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
Local 1 owner , 350 V-8 engine,
auto ., P .S., P .B., air cond ., good
tire s, l andau model , sol id white

color .

SJ695
1975 FORD BRONCO 4X4
V-8 Auto
'2995
1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR
Auto. trans ., good tir es. Lots of
serv ice in this one

895
1
3895
1

1977 CHEVROLET

.:t door , smalf V·8, automatic,
power steer ing, power brakes,
locking differential, air condi ·
fioni ng , clean interior , green .

1977 DODGE MONACO 12695
·.:tOr . Bro ugham , V·B, auto., P .S.,
P .B ., air , l oca l 1 owner car &amp; real
sharp.

1974 CHEV. lJz T. PICKUP
'1495
1969 CHEVROLET lfz T.
PICKUP
sg49

NEW '80 CHEVIES
AVAILABLE

Immediate Delivery
Chevette 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr.
Monza Cpe 2+2
Citation 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr. V-6

.

992·2111

'"Your C~fiiJ' Oealef'"

o,..,

POMEROY

lion thered.. The two professors
seemed like wsy, nonthreatening
people who would appeal to aU ages.
They have a long-term grant from
HEW to collect and disseminate
materials as part of an outreach pro·
gram through the college.
I talked with Dr. Schanzenback
after the program and mentioned
that I was sure there might be other
ti traries in the area that would be interested in what his department was
doing. Of course I had you in mind .
Also, of course, you might never
want ot think of the word 'program'
ever again, but I really don t think
so.
Sincerely.
Mari Herman,
NEH Project Director
The State Li trary of Ohio
65S. Front street
Columbus, Cfl 43215

r---Social Calendar

r

THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Chapte,r
Beta Sigma P'li Sorority, 7:45 p.m.
Thursday in mine room at Meigs
Inn. Hostesses are Velma Rue and
June Freed .
EXECUTIVE Board of Meigs
Unit, American Cancer Society,
meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday in eastwest dining room, Veterans
Memorial HOSPital.
ELEANOR CIRClE, Thui-sday,
7:30 p.m. at the Heath United
Methodist Church, with Donna Byer,
Helen Byer and Grace Johnson as
hostesses. There will be a white
elephant sale.
MEIGS County Humane Society
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Riverboat Room , Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and Loan
Co .. w : M•in St.,
Pomeroy. ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
pm. Thursday at the hall, weather
pennitting.

NEEDS HOME -

five
German

This

month old, half
' Shepherd dog needs a good home
IUid is available free of charge.
The female weighs tll pounds.
Anyone interested In provldlng a
good home for the animal, who Is
reported to be a good watch dog,
may call 7t2-2000.

Athletic Boosters
elect '80 officers
. Officers for the new year were
elected when the Eastern Athletic
Boosters met Monday night at the
high school.
The new officers include Henry
Hensley, president; Bill Jewett, vice
president; Jackie Gaddis,
secretary; George Collins,
treasurer; Judy Eichinger, news
reporter,.and Homer Cole, committee chairman.
Members of the ''200 Club" were
reminded that their last payment is
now due; it was agreed to have the
football helmets reconditioned for
the coming season. Anyone wishing
an old helmet free of charge may
contact Coach Mitchem at the high
school.
The group made plans to sponsor a
men's adult recreation progrwn at
the high school beginning at I :30
p.m. Sundsy and for women at the
Tuppers Plains School beginning
7 :30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 15. The
boosters agreed to buy materials for
the county and township employees
for reconditioning the football field
and track.
It was also agreed that all coaches
must submit in person by the first
meeting in April any requests they
may have from the boosters for the
coming year.
High School Principal Jim Page
advised the boosters that beginning
in the I!JOO.al school year, all concessions at athletic events will he
reserved for the athletic boosters
with lie exception of the popcorn
sales at all 'games, which will be
reserv ed for the, band boosters
organization.

BOOSTER ORGANIZATION will
be formed at a meeting to be held at
7:30p.m. this evening at the Brad·
bury Elementary School. The group
will back the Meigs Local School .
"
District elementary basketban program. Parents of fa urth, fifth and
ENTERTAIN wmi DINNER
· sixth graders of the district are ask·
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Whaley,
ed to attend.
Middleport entertained with a
Christmas dinner at their home on
FRIDAY
Dec. 2t Attending were Gene,
RETURN Jonathan Meigs ChapSheila,
Carla; Brian, Sandra, Pam·
ter, Daughters of American
mi
and
Brent Whaley , Route I,
Revolution, 2 pro. Friday at RiverShade;
Jo
Ann, Leonard and Billy
boat Room, Meigs Branch, Athens
Scarbrough,
Pomeroy; Eddie, ColCounty Savings and Loan with Mrs .
leen and Melissa Whaley, Route I,
Robert Ashley as hostess. "Grandmother's Keepsakes" is program , Shade; Bob, Shiela, Aaron and Amy
Whaley, Route 1, Shade; Brenda,
topic with members to take one
Rick and Angela Cogar, and Terry
and Chris Neece, P&lt;meroy .
WORKSHOP ANNOUNCED
A training workshop for girl scout
leaders and mdette scouts has been
announced for Sunday, 2 to 4 pm. at
the Grace Episcopal Church parish
house.
Noby Sauvage of Athens aloog
with several students from Ohio
University will be here to teach new
songs and games to the ..:outieade rs
and cadettes.

MRS. WARNER IMPROVING
Mrs. AI wilda Werner is improving
fr(Jll her recent heart attack and is
now in Room 410 at the Holzer
Medical Center.

A T·TENTION:

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL
CALL 992-2156
BETWEEN ·8:30AM &amp; 5 PM

CBS finishes first this week, cuts NBC's lead

.

Library

DearEUen :
•
You probably know that the la&gt;t of
the Children's Literature programs
in that nice OVAL cooperative ven·
llre took place on December 6 and
featured Dr. Richard McGinn and
his Indonesian lore and artifacts.
His colleague Dr. Gordon Schanzenback was also there, and both of
them spoke about their efforts to
s hare the wealth of O.U . and
Athens 's resources through schools,
libraries and the like.
It occurred to me that you are
such a go-getter that you might be
interested in trying to set up a program for children and/or adults with
speakers, the puppets, student talent
from the coUege or some combina-

7 ··The Daily Sentinei ,Middlepcrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 10,1!111)

"Each year thousands of
American infanlll are born too soon,
too small, or critically Ill, " says the
March of Dimes.
Many d. these infants do not survive. &amp;me do but it is a struggle .
Very often they have problems «&lt;lth
breathing, heart action, and control
of temperatllre and blood sugar. In
order to make it, they need prolonged hospital care from specially
trained medical teams using
sophisticated equipment.
"Everyone is pulling · for these
babies - parents, relatives , and
friends; the March of Dimes is pull·
ing lor them, too," say volunteers. ·
The voluntary health agency aims
to protect the unborn and the

Local classes ojjered
Adult Education at Buckeye Hills
Career Center will be offering the
following
secretarial-clerical
programs during the fall sen\ester:
Accounting Bookkeeping I: The
class is designed to give the student
who has had no prevlous knowledge
of bookkeeping a basic un·
derstanding of the principles to the
procedures foUowing on analyzing,
classifying , recording, and summarizing financia l data. The class
. will meet each Monday and Wednesday from 6 p.m. until 9:30 p.m.
starting January 14.
Shorthand I : In the program complete shorthand theory is covered.
Concentration will be on speed
develoiJllent. The class will be of.
fered each Monday and Wednesday
from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m., starting
January 14 .
Typing I : For the beginner who
wishes to learn the correct typing
procedures and as a refresher course for the student with the objective
of increasing speed and accuracy.
The class will be off..-ed each
Tuesdsy from 6:30 until 9:30 pro.
starting January 22. For more information call the Aduh Education
Office at Buckeye Hills Career Center at 245-5334ext. 252.

newborn.
11 supports nwnerous medk:al ser·
vices, research, public health education, and community service pro·
grams throughout the nation. To
sponsor these programs, it needs
help.

FLORIST
·PH. 992·2644

!

STOP IN AND CHECK

OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK

-SNOW SHOVELS

-ICE SCRAPERS
-INSTANT START

-SNOW TIRES

-STARnNG FLUID

-BAITERIES

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1

JANUARY CLEARANCE
''

ONLY

210 SUITS ....................................... '168.00
s285 SUITS ...................................... '228.00

FINE FURNISHINGS &amp;SPORTSWEAR
ENnRE SlOCK

..,.....

-

Reg. $2.79

ONLY $ 3

PORTABLE RADI0............. ~~~... ~?~:~.5.~!'!~.Y.. $14.95

•

Outerwear (leather Coats included) Reduced.25% • 25 ~

.

Ulti-Mates

SLIPPER SOCKS .....................~~...~~~-~~~-~.
Tussy Cream

sr

GROUP OF MEN'S

FACIAL TISSUE .......................... ~~~.'~~~~.~... 5r ·

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High Potency Vitamin Formula with Minerals

For Stuffed &amp; Runny Noses

BIC LIGHTERS ................................ ~~~.~... 4r
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IN

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All Men's Jogging Suits Reduced (Large Size Only).............................. .'.... 50%

•

f. . Ma "'

..

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,.,...

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EN IERfAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAtURDAY
NIGHT

SUPER VALUES
. Samsonite Luggage Reduced :.................................... ~ .................. .' •• 20% ·

••

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Sport Shirts Reduced ......................... 20~•. 50%

••••

..

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PRICE

Levi's Casual SlackS - Polyester or Corduroy Reduced ............... : ...... ; ........ 25%

M

Kt&lt;nnl'lh McCullOugh, R. Ph .
Ch;~rles Riffll! . R. Pb .
Ron~ld Hanning. R. ,Ph
Monlhru Sat . 8 :00 a.m . lo 9 p._m .
~und.wlO : JOto 12 :30and5,to9' P m .
. ..
9
PR nc R 1PTIOI'IS
·
PH .
"5
Friendly -S ervice

'

•

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~

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Coffee or Milk

Dress ·Hats ••••.••••••.••••.••..••.-•••.••••.••.••..••.•·.•• 25% ·

•"•

•.·'

Roll,_
Tea,

Ladies' Wear Reduced
(At Thomas Clothiers Only), ....... : .... 25% . 50%

SPORT COATS

Pulls

lliERAGRAN M............. ~?.~.~~~:~!~~.~~~.~.~.~~. $4.97

Sweaters Reduced ... ...... ·....... ... .·;•..• ............. .25%

SUITS &amp;

DEODORANT.. ...................~-~~:~~:~.~~~~;~~ .. 5r

THE
SHO,
E
·aox
- MIDDLEPORT, 0 10 .

Salad Bar
White Fish
Baked Potato
Vegetable

Dress Slacks Reduced ....................... 20 ~. - 25%

PAMPERS ...... ~~~~.~.~~~~~-~~?.'.~~.'~........?.~~."!. '2.29

•BROWN . .. ..:

MENU

Topcoats - All Weather Coats Reduced ..............25%

AM/FM, AC/BaHery Operation

At Meigs Inn

FRIDAY .NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Dress Shirts Reduced .................................. 25%

Daytime 30's or

.•.

--.SPORT COATS REDUCED 25%

~-'S!!:.;;}

Oral or Rectal

Wee~end

Entire Stock of Men •s

•

6oz. Reg. 53.95

Brushed
Pigskin
Color: Hickory

FOR MEN AND WOMEN

1

SYRUP................ -~~~:.~~:~~............. ~~~.Y. .. $1.49

SMOOTH
lEATHER
Colors:
•BLACK

ON FINE WEARING APPAREL

195 SUITS .............. : ....... :............. t ••• '156.00

B-D FEVER THERMOMETER

Triaminic:

50%

1

44-D

Grand Prix

ofr:=::~:;!:or

TO

BAHR CLOTHIERS

ONLY
$}79

MAKES YOU FEEL
WARM INSIDE!

SAVINGS FROM

20%

&amp; MARX· JOHNNY CARSON
PALM BEACH· SEWELL SUITS

SYLVANIA
FlASHBAR
10'
FLASHES

VICKS
FORMULA

WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE

r ~!!w~2~N~D~O~R~w~.~M~A~IN~~~~P~O~M~E~R~o~v~·~o~.

PRICES GOOD lHRU MON., JAN. 14

STAR SUPPLY

.MARGUERITE SHOES

MOORE'S

Decongestant
Cough Mixture

BRUSHED
Pigskin
Flat Heel
Color: ..
•Taupewood

Property
Transfers

OF -DISCOUNTED VALUES

WARM Ll NED BOOTS

THE "CHRIS"

On the Light 5'ide.

SALE
CONTINUES

tbet~···

~nt.

When the
temperature
drops and the
weather turns
nasty, there's
nothing like the
extra comfort of
Hush Puppies'
warm lined boots .

ABC's.
The networks say that means In an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 20.2 pen:ent of the homes
in the country with television were
tuned to CBS.
.
The 111t1ng for the footbaU postgame show, No. 1 for the week with
the runover portion of game between
Loll Angeles and Tanipa Bay second',
was 35.5, with ''81 Minutes" third at

pionshlp Game, 33.3 or 25.4 million,
32.$. Nielsen says that means d all
Both CBS and NBC maintain
"60 Minutes," 32.5 or 24.8 millioo,
the homes in the country with ABC 's lead for the seasro so far is
' 'DaDas," 27 or :lll.6 million, and
teievisjpn, 35.5 percent sawthe spor- two-tenths of a llltlngs point - 19.3
"Alice," 26 or 19.8 million, aU CBS;
ts program, and 32.5 percent wat- to 19.1. ABC says the margin Is
"Eight is Enough," 25.8 or 19.7
ched at least part of the greater, 19.4to 18.9.
mlllloo, ABC; "Dukes of Hazzard,"
newsmagazine.
In any case, CBS has steadily chip25.7 or 19.6 million, CBS; Orange
CBS' now has won the weekly com- . ped away at the lead built by ABC in
Bowl, 25.1 or 19.2 million, NBC, and
petition six times in the last eight the early part of the seasoo.
' 'l:hree· ~ C(Jllpany," 24.7 or 1as
weeks. NBC's secood place finish
NBC scored ill the most recent
million,
and ''Morkand Mindy," 2U
was, by the way, its highest ranking Nielsen survey with the Orange
or
18.5
million,
both ABC.
since the week ending Nov. 25.
Bowl football game between
Oklahoma and Florida state, No. 8.
The three -hour premiere of its
newest dramatic series, "Skag,"
' '
finished 19th.
CBS scored, meanwhile, wlth a
I
new series of ita own, ''Knol8 Lanthat a pair of roller skates would be
A Tipsy Toot Is OK On Sbte1
ding. " The premiere episode in the
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Don\ embraced In the word 'vehicle,"' he
series, a loose spinoff from CBS' sucwrote.
drive if you drink, but skating is
cessful "Dallas," was 14th in the
another matter, says a New Orleans
ratings.
.
A Road By Ally Other Name...
judge.
UNION CITY, Tenn. (AP)
Here ,are the week's 10 highestTraffic Judge Louis Trent said
rated shows:
Anybody got a new name for U.s.
Wednesday he wiD have to throw out Highway 51-North?
Combines
- NFL ChampiMBhip Post-Game,
cha~Jes of drunk driving filed againVIBRATING
BRUSH
with a rating of 35.5 representing
The Obion County Highway
st tipsy ,rtiler skaters in the French
AGITATION
and .
Department is offering to fix the
27.1 miiUon homes, NFL Cham- ·
powe rfu l
Quarter.
pothole of your choice in this west
STEAM EXTRACTION
A legal opinion by the state atTennessee county in return for a new
CLEANING
torney general's office said drunken name · for the road. The U.S. 51
to loosen, di ssolve
roller skating may be hazardOWI to
and extract
health but cannot be equated to designation is about to be trandeep-seated dirt and
sferred to a new four-lane highway
drunk driving beca1111e roller skates
residues.
stretching frOOl Union City to
are not a vehicle.
Gets
carpe ts
Fulton, Ky.
cleaner . Faster! And
The state law bans operating a
The Tennessee Transportation
it's easy to operate
D!ltmar G. Baum, Kathryn I.
velicle while lntoxiooted. It defines
IOO
Dep&amp;rtment
wants
the
wunty
to
reBawn
to
Donald
V.
Moore,
Betty
a vehicle as "any motor vehicle, airname the old highway so it can inLue Moore, Lot 18, Baum's Sub.,
NO LIFTING'
craft, vessel or other means rJ. con- stall new highway markers.
CLE ANIN G WAND
Chester.
EQUIPPED WITH
veyance."
Each member of the highway
'NHE ELS
Charles G. Sheets, Jr., Dorothy E.
'Other means of conveyance" is department rejected efforts to name
HANDLE S liKE
A VACUU M
Sheets
to
J8,1Jles
R.
Sheelll,
Jennifer
such a vague term that Trent the road In his honor, and SuperinSWEEPER ~¢¥''-&lt;/j
Sheets,
37.4acres,
4.7
acres,
Scipio.
decided to seek a formal opinion on
tendent Billy Blackley observed that
Naomi R. Reed to Leonard Lee
whatlt means.
the county had run out of prominent
Reed, David F . Reed, Parcels, Bed·
Assistant Attorney General Harry citizens for wh~m to name a road.
ford .
Howard said tile tenn is not further
Richard C. Duckworth to Carl J.
defined in the law, but the law
CbrbJtmas A IJttle Late lD
Duckworth,
Lot 9, Crook's 2nd Add.,
Racine, 0.
plainly applies to ''operating" a
Mi.ISiaalppl
Syracuse.
vehicle and "a person does not drive
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - Christ·
a pair of roller skates."
POMEROY, OHIO
102 E. MAIN
mas may be over. but the holiday r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
"!'he legislature did not Intend
spirit lingers on In the Magnolia
+-~----------------------------------L-----------------~maw .
Gav. Cliff Finch's staff worked
Wednesday to complete a Christmas
card mailing ordered by the governor after the New Year~holiday.
Sources In the governor's office
said Finch had called secretaries in
for an emergency meeting oo
Tuesday and directed them to get
the cards maUed at once.
•
Finch did n~ nplain why he had
A sale of quality men's apparel that you cannot
waited until almost two weeks after
Cbrlsmas to mail the cards, which
afford to miss. Come in early while our selection
have a drawing of the Governor's
is at its best. Listed here, are just a few of the
Mansioo on the outside and a picture
fantastic: savings awaiting you.
Entire Stocks
said
the cards did not arrive from the
printer until a week before Christ·
mas al)d tlBt holiday activities had
prevented the staff from ccmpleting
the mailing.
s-105 SUITS .... : .•.....•..................•..•..••... '84.,_00
"We just dido 't have time to get
them
an done," the spokesman said.
'135 SUITS ........................................ '108.00
"Everybody kind of pitched in to
N. 2nd Ave.
OPENM·S9:JOti15
complete the work."
'175 SUITS ........................................'140.0o ·
Middl
0.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

'Hl~"t\'\lt\
\\tl"lt\

CORA PUlLEN ADMriTED
Mrs. Cora Pullen was admitted
Wednesday to the Holzer Medical
Center for observation and treat-

Hush PUPI?,l~.$.'J

!

r------------ -----------

SQUREDANCE
.
JANUARY19
There will be a western square
dance on Jan. 19 at the Royal Oak
Park Recreation building, 8 to 11
p.m. Caller for the evening will be
.Eddie Powell, Reynoldsburg.
Refreshments will be served and aU
western square dancers are invited
to attend.

Thi~ Speedy Borscht recipe
prorruses to glamorize any party
table. ~irl one carton d. plain
.yogurt m the blender with one smaU
can diced beets, l cup beet juice,
grated lemon peel, I \2 waspoons
Lawry's Seasoned Salt and onefourth teaspoon Lawry's Seasooed
Pepper. Serves 6.

,I

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

. -JUMPER CABLES

ROBERTLEWISArnoME .
Robert Lewis is recuperating at
home following minor surgery at the
Holzer Medical Center.

Your "Extra· Touch"
Florist Since 1957

NEW YORK (AP) - With. or
is the week's No. 1 program,
without a boost from the pro football
followed by "Dallas" and "Allee."
playoffs, CBS fillished first in the
The A.C. Nielsen Co. provides the
networks' prime-time ratings race
ratings on prime-time shows, and
lor the, third week in a row, and cut
the networks themselves calculate
ABC's lead for the season so far to
the weekly averages. CBS and NBC
half a point or less.
included the sporlll programming,
CBS had the five highest-rated which began before the 'start d.
shows for the week ending Jan. 6 if - prime-time at 7 p.m. Sunday, while
you count tl,e National Football ConABC chose to Ignore the foolbau.
ference playoff and the post-game
In each case, CBS -finiShed the
show,-and the top three if you dont.
week with a 111ting of 20.2 to 19.7 for
H the
and the post-game show
runnerup NBC. ABC's rating ranged
lncl~_d, CBS' ''60 Minutes"
from 18.8 - ellS' figure -to 19.1 -

..

HEATH.ER

I.

A 4 PIECE
GROUP

All Florsheim Shoes Reduced ••.~ ....................................... :.........;,,,. 20%

.......

E

''' i'

..........

AU. MERCHANDISE FROM. OUR REGULAR STOCK

ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOlD.·

· You ~ult be 21.or •ccomi»&gt;nllclliy

,."*-ts or l...II\Nirdl•n. ·

.THE MEIGS INN
'

. !Ill.

Pomeroy, Q;

.,

.

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 10, 1980

March of Dimes jan. 20-31 here
The annual Meigs County March
of Dimes Drive is Jaruary 20and the
week followin g until the 31st of
January. Funds raised from it will
be used to continue the battle
against ·birth defects and to support
college scholarships to Meigs County students that choose a health care
field of study .

Letters

. RICESHOSTGATHERfNGS
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice and
son, BiU , hosted several family
gatherings over the holidays. Their
guests for the holidays were Mr. and
Mrs . Chester fuce, Ginger James,
College Park, Ga., Bob Merrill, Joppa, Md. On Olristmas Eve they were
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris
and Durward and Nins Cummings.
Christmas Day dinner gueslll were
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rice, Ginger
James and Bob Merrill, along with
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harris and Mrs .
Eula Rice .

1978 PLY. HORIZON

4395

1

4 Door, dark red, co lor with mat c hi ng red vinyl tri m , radio, air
cond ., automati c t ra ns ., power
steering &amp; brakes . Rally wheels .

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
Local 1 owner , 350 V-8 engine,
auto ., P .S., P .B., air cond ., good
tire s, l andau model , sol id white

color .

SJ695
1975 FORD BRONCO 4X4
V-8 Auto
'2995
1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR
Auto. trans ., good tir es. Lots of
serv ice in this one

895
1
3895
1

1977 CHEVROLET

.:t door , smalf V·8, automatic,
power steer ing, power brakes,
locking differential, air condi ·
fioni ng , clean interior , green .

1977 DODGE MONACO 12695
·.:tOr . Bro ugham , V·B, auto., P .S.,
P .B ., air , l oca l 1 owner car &amp; real
sharp.

1974 CHEV. lJz T. PICKUP
'1495
1969 CHEVROLET lfz T.
PICKUP
sg49

NEW '80 CHEVIES
AVAILABLE

Immediate Delivery
Chevette 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr.
Monza Cpe 2+2
Citation 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr. V-6

.

992·2111

'"Your C~fiiJ' Oealef'"

o,..,

POMEROY

lion thered.. The two professors
seemed like wsy, nonthreatening
people who would appeal to aU ages.
They have a long-term grant from
HEW to collect and disseminate
materials as part of an outreach pro·
gram through the college.
I talked with Dr. Schanzenback
after the program and mentioned
that I was sure there might be other
ti traries in the area that would be interested in what his department was
doing. Of course I had you in mind .
Also, of course, you might never
want ot think of the word 'program'
ever again, but I really don t think
so.
Sincerely.
Mari Herman,
NEH Project Director
The State Li trary of Ohio
65S. Front street
Columbus, Cfl 43215

r---Social Calendar

r

THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Chapte,r
Beta Sigma P'li Sorority, 7:45 p.m.
Thursday in mine room at Meigs
Inn. Hostesses are Velma Rue and
June Freed .
EXECUTIVE Board of Meigs
Unit, American Cancer Society,
meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday in eastwest dining room, Veterans
Memorial HOSPital.
ELEANOR CIRClE, Thui-sday,
7:30 p.m. at the Heath United
Methodist Church, with Donna Byer,
Helen Byer and Grace Johnson as
hostesses. There will be a white
elephant sale.
MEIGS County Humane Society
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Riverboat Room , Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and Loan
Co .. w : M•in St.,
Pomeroy. ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
pm. Thursday at the hall, weather
pennitting.

NEEDS HOME -

five
German

This

month old, half
' Shepherd dog needs a good home
IUid is available free of charge.
The female weighs tll pounds.
Anyone interested In provldlng a
good home for the animal, who Is
reported to be a good watch dog,
may call 7t2-2000.

Athletic Boosters
elect '80 officers
. Officers for the new year were
elected when the Eastern Athletic
Boosters met Monday night at the
high school.
The new officers include Henry
Hensley, president; Bill Jewett, vice
president; Jackie Gaddis,
secretary; George Collins,
treasurer; Judy Eichinger, news
reporter,.and Homer Cole, committee chairman.
Members of the ''200 Club" were
reminded that their last payment is
now due; it was agreed to have the
football helmets reconditioned for
the coming season. Anyone wishing
an old helmet free of charge may
contact Coach Mitchem at the high
school.
The group made plans to sponsor a
men's adult recreation progrwn at
the high school beginning at I :30
p.m. Sundsy and for women at the
Tuppers Plains School beginning
7 :30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 15. The
boosters agreed to buy materials for
the county and township employees
for reconditioning the football field
and track.
It was also agreed that all coaches
must submit in person by the first
meeting in April any requests they
may have from the boosters for the
coming year.
High School Principal Jim Page
advised the boosters that beginning
in the I!JOO.al school year, all concessions at athletic events will he
reserved for the athletic boosters
with lie exception of the popcorn
sales at all 'games, which will be
reserv ed for the, band boosters
organization.

BOOSTER ORGANIZATION will
be formed at a meeting to be held at
7:30p.m. this evening at the Brad·
bury Elementary School. The group
will back the Meigs Local School .
"
District elementary basketban program. Parents of fa urth, fifth and
ENTERTAIN wmi DINNER
· sixth graders of the district are ask·
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Whaley,
ed to attend.
Middleport entertained with a
Christmas dinner at their home on
FRIDAY
Dec. 2t Attending were Gene,
RETURN Jonathan Meigs ChapSheila,
Carla; Brian, Sandra, Pam·
ter, Daughters of American
mi
and
Brent Whaley , Route I,
Revolution, 2 pro. Friday at RiverShade;
Jo
Ann, Leonard and Billy
boat Room, Meigs Branch, Athens
Scarbrough,
Pomeroy; Eddie, ColCounty Savings and Loan with Mrs .
leen and Melissa Whaley, Route I,
Robert Ashley as hostess. "Grandmother's Keepsakes" is program , Shade; Bob, Shiela, Aaron and Amy
Whaley, Route 1, Shade; Brenda,
topic with members to take one
Rick and Angela Cogar, and Terry
and Chris Neece, P&lt;meroy .
WORKSHOP ANNOUNCED
A training workshop for girl scout
leaders and mdette scouts has been
announced for Sunday, 2 to 4 pm. at
the Grace Episcopal Church parish
house.
Noby Sauvage of Athens aloog
with several students from Ohio
University will be here to teach new
songs and games to the ..:outieade rs
and cadettes.

MRS. WARNER IMPROVING
Mrs. AI wilda Werner is improving
fr(Jll her recent heart attack and is
now in Room 410 at the Holzer
Medical Center.

A T·TENTION:

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL
CALL 992-2156
BETWEEN ·8:30AM &amp; 5 PM

CBS finishes first this week, cuts NBC's lead

.

Library

DearEUen :
•
You probably know that the la&gt;t of
the Children's Literature programs
in that nice OVAL cooperative ven·
llre took place on December 6 and
featured Dr. Richard McGinn and
his Indonesian lore and artifacts.
His colleague Dr. Gordon Schanzenback was also there, and both of
them spoke about their efforts to
s hare the wealth of O.U . and
Athens 's resources through schools,
libraries and the like.
It occurred to me that you are
such a go-getter that you might be
interested in trying to set up a program for children and/or adults with
speakers, the puppets, student talent
from the coUege or some combina-

7 ··The Daily Sentinei ,Middlepcrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 10,1!111)

"Each year thousands of
American infanlll are born too soon,
too small, or critically Ill, " says the
March of Dimes.
Many d. these infants do not survive. &amp;me do but it is a struggle .
Very often they have problems «&lt;lth
breathing, heart action, and control
of temperatllre and blood sugar. In
order to make it, they need prolonged hospital care from specially
trained medical teams using
sophisticated equipment.
"Everyone is pulling · for these
babies - parents, relatives , and
friends; the March of Dimes is pull·
ing lor them, too," say volunteers. ·
The voluntary health agency aims
to protect the unborn and the

Local classes ojjered
Adult Education at Buckeye Hills
Career Center will be offering the
following
secretarial-clerical
programs during the fall sen\ester:
Accounting Bookkeeping I: The
class is designed to give the student
who has had no prevlous knowledge
of bookkeeping a basic un·
derstanding of the principles to the
procedures foUowing on analyzing,
classifying , recording, and summarizing financia l data. The class
. will meet each Monday and Wednesday from 6 p.m. until 9:30 p.m.
starting January 14.
Shorthand I : In the program complete shorthand theory is covered.
Concentration will be on speed
develoiJllent. The class will be of.
fered each Monday and Wednesday
from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m., starting
January 14 .
Typing I : For the beginner who
wishes to learn the correct typing
procedures and as a refresher course for the student with the objective
of increasing speed and accuracy.
The class will be off..-ed each
Tuesdsy from 6:30 until 9:30 pro.
starting January 22. For more information call the Aduh Education
Office at Buckeye Hills Career Center at 245-5334ext. 252.

newborn.
11 supports nwnerous medk:al ser·
vices, research, public health education, and community service pro·
grams throughout the nation. To
sponsor these programs, it needs
help.

FLORIST
·PH. 992·2644

!

STOP IN AND CHECK

OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK

-SNOW SHOVELS

-ICE SCRAPERS
-INSTANT START

-SNOW TIRES

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-BAITERIES

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1

JANUARY CLEARANCE
''

ONLY

210 SUITS ....................................... '168.00
s285 SUITS ...................................... '228.00

FINE FURNISHINGS &amp;SPORTSWEAR
ENnRE SlOCK

..,.....

-

Reg. $2.79

ONLY $ 3

PORTABLE RADI0............. ~~~... ~?~:~.5.~!'!~.Y.. $14.95

•

Outerwear (leather Coats included) Reduced.25% • 25 ~

.

Ulti-Mates

SLIPPER SOCKS .....................~~...~~~-~~~-~.
Tussy Cream

sr

GROUP OF MEN'S

FACIAL TISSUE .......................... ~~~.'~~~~.~... 5r ·

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High Potency Vitamin Formula with Minerals

For Stuffed &amp; Runny Noses

BIC LIGHTERS ................................ ~~~.~... 4r
AlSO

IN

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~

•

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All Men's Jogging Suits Reduced (Large Size Only).............................. .'.... 50%

•

f. . Ma "'

..

~
,.,...

..

•1i •

*

EN IERfAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAtURDAY
NIGHT

SUPER VALUES
. Samsonite Luggage Reduced :.................................... ~ .................. .' •• 20% ·

••

\

Sport Shirts Reduced ......................... 20~•. 50%

••••

..

.'••

'''2-2

PRICE

Levi's Casual SlackS - Polyester or Corduroy Reduced ............... : ...... ; ........ 25%

M

Kt&lt;nnl'lh McCullOugh, R. Ph .
Ch;~rles Riffll! . R. Pb .
Ron~ld Hanning. R. ,Ph
Monlhru Sat . 8 :00 a.m . lo 9 p._m .
~und.wlO : JOto 12 :30and5,to9' P m .
. ..
9
PR nc R 1PTIOI'IS
·
PH .
"5
Friendly -S ervice

'

•

••

~

.' .

Coffee or Milk

Dress ·Hats ••••.••••••.••••.••..••.-•••.••••.••.••..••.•·.•• 25% ·

•"•

•.·'

Roll,_
Tea,

Ladies' Wear Reduced
(At Thomas Clothiers Only), ....... : .... 25% . 50%

SPORT COATS

Pulls

lliERAGRAN M............. ~?.~.~~~:~!~~.~~~.~.~.~~. $4.97

Sweaters Reduced ... ...... ·....... ... .·;•..• ............. .25%

SUITS &amp;

DEODORANT.. ...................~-~~:~~:~.~~~~;~~ .. 5r

THE
SHO,
E
·aox
- MIDDLEPORT, 0 10 .

Salad Bar
White Fish
Baked Potato
Vegetable

Dress Slacks Reduced ....................... 20 ~. - 25%

PAMPERS ...... ~~~~.~.~~~~~-~~?.'.~~.'~........?.~~."!. '2.29

•BROWN . .. ..:

MENU

Topcoats - All Weather Coats Reduced ..............25%

AM/FM, AC/BaHery Operation

At Meigs Inn

FRIDAY .NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Dress Shirts Reduced .................................. 25%

Daytime 30's or

.•.

--.SPORT COATS REDUCED 25%

~-'S!!:.;;}

Oral or Rectal

Wee~end

Entire Stock of Men •s

•

6oz. Reg. 53.95

Brushed
Pigskin
Color: Hickory

FOR MEN AND WOMEN

1

SYRUP................ -~~~:.~~:~~............. ~~~.Y. .. $1.49

SMOOTH
lEATHER
Colors:
•BLACK

ON FINE WEARING APPAREL

195 SUITS .............. : ....... :............. t ••• '156.00

B-D FEVER THERMOMETER

Triaminic:

50%

1

44-D

Grand Prix

ofr:=::~:;!:or

TO

BAHR CLOTHIERS

ONLY
$}79

MAKES YOU FEEL
WARM INSIDE!

SAVINGS FROM

20%

&amp; MARX· JOHNNY CARSON
PALM BEACH· SEWELL SUITS

SYLVANIA
FlASHBAR
10'
FLASHES

VICKS
FORMULA

WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE

r ~!!w~2~N~D~O~R~w~.~M~A~IN~~~~P~O~M~E~R~o~v~·~o~.

PRICES GOOD lHRU MON., JAN. 14

STAR SUPPLY

.MARGUERITE SHOES

MOORE'S

Decongestant
Cough Mixture

BRUSHED
Pigskin
Flat Heel
Color: ..
•Taupewood

Property
Transfers

OF -DISCOUNTED VALUES

WARM Ll NED BOOTS

THE "CHRIS"

On the Light 5'ide.

SALE
CONTINUES

tbet~···

~nt.

When the
temperature
drops and the
weather turns
nasty, there's
nothing like the
extra comfort of
Hush Puppies'
warm lined boots .

ABC's.
The networks say that means In an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 20.2 pen:ent of the homes
in the country with television were
tuned to CBS.
.
The 111t1ng for the footbaU postgame show, No. 1 for the week with
the runover portion of game between
Loll Angeles and Tanipa Bay second',
was 35.5, with ''81 Minutes" third at

pionshlp Game, 33.3 or 25.4 million,
32.$. Nielsen says that means d all
Both CBS and NBC maintain
"60 Minutes," 32.5 or 24.8 millioo,
the homes in the country with ABC 's lead for the seasro so far is
' 'DaDas," 27 or :lll.6 million, and
teievisjpn, 35.5 percent sawthe spor- two-tenths of a llltlngs point - 19.3
"Alice," 26 or 19.8 million, aU CBS;
ts program, and 32.5 percent wat- to 19.1. ABC says the margin Is
"Eight is Enough," 25.8 or 19.7
ched at least part of the greater, 19.4to 18.9.
mlllloo, ABC; "Dukes of Hazzard,"
newsmagazine.
In any case, CBS has steadily chip25.7 or 19.6 million, CBS; Orange
CBS' now has won the weekly com- . ped away at the lead built by ABC in
Bowl, 25.1 or 19.2 million, NBC, and
petition six times in the last eight the early part of the seasoo.
' 'l:hree· ~ C(Jllpany," 24.7 or 1as
weeks. NBC's secood place finish
NBC scored ill the most recent
million,
and ''Morkand Mindy," 2U
was, by the way, its highest ranking Nielsen survey with the Orange
or
18.5
million,
both ABC.
since the week ending Nov. 25.
Bowl football game between
Oklahoma and Florida state, No. 8.
The three -hour premiere of its
newest dramatic series, "Skag,"
' '
finished 19th.
CBS scored, meanwhile, wlth a
I
new series of ita own, ''Knol8 Lanthat a pair of roller skates would be
A Tipsy Toot Is OK On Sbte1
ding. " The premiere episode in the
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Don\ embraced In the word 'vehicle,"' he
series, a loose spinoff from CBS' sucwrote.
drive if you drink, but skating is
cessful "Dallas," was 14th in the
another matter, says a New Orleans
ratings.
.
A Road By Ally Other Name...
judge.
UNION CITY, Tenn. (AP)
Here ,are the week's 10 highestTraffic Judge Louis Trent said
rated shows:
Anybody got a new name for U.s.
Wednesday he wiD have to throw out Highway 51-North?
Combines
- NFL ChampiMBhip Post-Game,
cha~Jes of drunk driving filed againVIBRATING
BRUSH
with a rating of 35.5 representing
The Obion County Highway
st tipsy ,rtiler skaters in the French
AGITATION
and .
Department is offering to fix the
27.1 miiUon homes, NFL Cham- ·
powe rfu l
Quarter.
pothole of your choice in this west
STEAM EXTRACTION
A legal opinion by the state atTennessee county in return for a new
CLEANING
torney general's office said drunken name · for the road. The U.S. 51
to loosen, di ssolve
roller skating may be hazardOWI to
and extract
health but cannot be equated to designation is about to be trandeep-seated dirt and
sferred to a new four-lane highway
drunk driving beca1111e roller skates
residues.
stretching frOOl Union City to
are not a vehicle.
Gets
carpe ts
Fulton, Ky.
cleaner . Faster! And
The state law bans operating a
The Tennessee Transportation
it's easy to operate
D!ltmar G. Baum, Kathryn I.
velicle while lntoxiooted. It defines
IOO
Dep&amp;rtment
wants
the
wunty
to
reBawn
to
Donald
V.
Moore,
Betty
a vehicle as "any motor vehicle, airname the old highway so it can inLue Moore, Lot 18, Baum's Sub.,
NO LIFTING'
craft, vessel or other means rJ. con- stall new highway markers.
CLE ANIN G WAND
Chester.
EQUIPPED WITH
veyance."
Each member of the highway
'NHE ELS
Charles G. Sheets, Jr., Dorothy E.
'Other means of conveyance" is department rejected efforts to name
HANDLE S liKE
A VACUU M
Sheets
to
J8,1Jles
R.
Sheelll,
Jennifer
such a vague term that Trent the road In his honor, and SuperinSWEEPER ~¢¥''-&lt;/j
Sheets,
37.4acres,
4.7
acres,
Scipio.
decided to seek a formal opinion on
tendent Billy Blackley observed that
Naomi R. Reed to Leonard Lee
whatlt means.
the county had run out of prominent
Reed, David F . Reed, Parcels, Bed·
Assistant Attorney General Harry citizens for wh~m to name a road.
ford .
Howard said tile tenn is not further
Richard C. Duckworth to Carl J.
defined in the law, but the law
CbrbJtmas A IJttle Late lD
Duckworth,
Lot 9, Crook's 2nd Add.,
Racine, 0.
plainly applies to ''operating" a
Mi.ISiaalppl
Syracuse.
vehicle and "a person does not drive
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - Christ·
a pair of roller skates."
POMEROY, OHIO
102 E. MAIN
mas may be over. but the holiday r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
"!'he legislature did not Intend
spirit lingers on In the Magnolia
+-~----------------------------------L-----------------~maw .
Gav. Cliff Finch's staff worked
Wednesday to complete a Christmas
card mailing ordered by the governor after the New Year~holiday.
Sources In the governor's office
said Finch had called secretaries in
for an emergency meeting oo
Tuesday and directed them to get
the cards maUed at once.
•
Finch did n~ nplain why he had
A sale of quality men's apparel that you cannot
waited until almost two weeks after
Cbrlsmas to mail the cards, which
afford to miss. Come in early while our selection
have a drawing of the Governor's
is at its best. Listed here, are just a few of the
Mansioo on the outside and a picture
fantastic: savings awaiting you.
Entire Stocks
said
the cards did not arrive from the
printer until a week before Christ·
mas al)d tlBt holiday activities had
prevented the staff from ccmpleting
the mailing.
s-105 SUITS .... : .•.....•..................•..•..••... '84.,_00
"We just dido 't have time to get
them
an done," the spokesman said.
'135 SUITS ........................................ '108.00
"Everybody kind of pitched in to
N. 2nd Ave.
OPENM·S9:JOti15
complete the work."
'175 SUITS ........................................'140.0o ·
Middl
0.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

'Hl~"t\'\lt\
\\tl"lt\

CORA PUlLEN ADMriTED
Mrs. Cora Pullen was admitted
Wednesday to the Holzer Medical
Center for observation and treat-

Hush PUPI?,l~.$.'J

!

r------------ -----------

SQUREDANCE
.
JANUARY19
There will be a western square
dance on Jan. 19 at the Royal Oak
Park Recreation building, 8 to 11
p.m. Caller for the evening will be
.Eddie Powell, Reynoldsburg.
Refreshments will be served and aU
western square dancers are invited
to attend.

Thi~ Speedy Borscht recipe
prorruses to glamorize any party
table. ~irl one carton d. plain
.yogurt m the blender with one smaU
can diced beets, l cup beet juice,
grated lemon peel, I \2 waspoons
Lawry's Seasoned Salt and onefourth teaspoon Lawry's Seasooed
Pepper. Serves 6.

,I

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

. -JUMPER CABLES

ROBERTLEWISArnoME .
Robert Lewis is recuperating at
home following minor surgery at the
Holzer Medical Center.

Your "Extra· Touch"
Florist Since 1957

NEW YORK (AP) - With. or
is the week's No. 1 program,
without a boost from the pro football
followed by "Dallas" and "Allee."
playoffs, CBS fillished first in the
The A.C. Nielsen Co. provides the
networks' prime-time ratings race
ratings on prime-time shows, and
lor the, third week in a row, and cut
the networks themselves calculate
ABC's lead for the season so far to
the weekly averages. CBS and NBC
half a point or less.
included the sporlll programming,
CBS had the five highest-rated which began before the 'start d.
shows for the week ending Jan. 6 if - prime-time at 7 p.m. Sunday, while
you count tl,e National Football ConABC chose to Ignore the foolbau.
ference playoff and the post-game
In each case, CBS -finiShed the
show,-and the top three if you dont.
week with a 111ting of 20.2 to 19.7 for
H the
and the post-game show
runnerup NBC. ABC's rating ranged
lncl~_d, CBS' ''60 Minutes"
from 18.8 - ellS' figure -to 19.1 -

..

HEATH.ER

I.

A 4 PIECE
GROUP

All Florsheim Shoes Reduced ••.~ ....................................... :.........;,,,. 20%

.......

E

''' i'

..........

AU. MERCHANDISE FROM. OUR REGULAR STOCK

ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOlD.·

· You ~ult be 21.or •ccomi»&gt;nllclliy

,."*-ts or l...II\Nirdl•n. ·

.THE MEIGS INN
'

. !Ill.

Pomeroy, Q;

.,

.

�•
l} fl~~ \j)~

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P cmeroy , 0 ., Thursday: Jan. 10, 19M
DICK
.
.
9-

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport .Pomer oy, 0 ., Thursday , Jan. 10, 198!

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,

Your Best Buys Are Fo_u nd in the Sentinel Cla-ssifieds
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PlEAS
COURT , MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Ad ·
min jslralrlx of the Estate
of
Ida M.
Christie ,

WANT AD

CHARGES

De,eased

I day

Pl~lnflff
vs .
EDNA N. WOOD,
2080 Greenwich Road
Wadsworth, Ohio 44%81

1.00

1.10

1.25
1.110'
1.21

3.00

3.71

uo

2daya
Jdays
6days

Each word Dver tht minimwn
,15 wOI"''b U &lt;t eenl5 per word per
day . Ads running other_than consecuti ve days will be charged at
the 1day rate.

Et al.,

Defendants .

No . 22704
NOTICE .
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYlOR ,
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43l SIBBERT,
WEST VIRG NIA ; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD MINISTRATORS, EXEC·
UTORS AND ASSIGN~ IF

~~IL8~~~~~H

Hi Worda or Under
Cuh
Cbara'

In memory, Card of Thanb
l:llX.I ObltWiry : 6 cen t_, per word,
$3.00 minimum. cash In ad-

Mobile H001e sa.l et~ and Yard
are accepted only with
cuh with order. 25 cent charge
sal~

for ads r arrying Box Nwnber In
care of The Sentinel .
The Publiaher reserves lhe

lh"A I ':.f.

right to edit or relect ony ads

deemed objectional. Tile
Publliihrr will not be respooslbl.e
for more than one incorTecl In•
serUon.
Phone 992-2156

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

'

• Monday
Noon on Saturday

lhruFnday

tP.M.
Friday afternoon

Card of Thanks
MY SiNCERE thanks to

Dept .

Eve ry Saturday . 6 :30p .m .
At their buildingin Bashan .

LOST : Scofi eld reference
Bible in Pomeroy area .
Black cover . m --7697 .

G UN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .
c orn Hollow Gun Club ,
Rutland . Proceeds dona ted

for antiQues and collec ·
tibtes or entire estates .
lar~e .

Also,

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
( ANY
· EARLIER
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPlY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 511 3 ,
BROWN'S.

PAY

highest

prices

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport.

Davis, Dr . I. C . Walker, the

Fridey, Jen. 11

chestnut about 3 feet in
diameter; thence South
70 1!:~ degrees West 6.9.4 rods
to a stake 1 foot South 6f
white
oak 4 feet in
diameter; thence SOuth
59'1• Deg. West 8.33'13 rods
to a stake 3 feet East of a

as follows :
Beginn ing at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
desc ribed

the sOUlneast quarter of
Section No . Seven, Town

No . Three and Range No.
Thirteen of the Ohio Com ·

chestnut tree ; thence South

~9'12 Deg. West 6.212 rods to
a stake 2112 feet South of an

thence

North far enough so that by

ash 61n : in diameter; then -

running due West to the

ce south 49'1• Deg. West
8.272 rods to a stake 3 feet

center o1 the State Road;

thence a ono the center of
said road to the section
line ; thence East to the

West of white oak tree 3
feet in diameter ; thence
SOuth 69 Deg . West 14.S1S
rOds to center of road;

place of beginning so that II

:ihall contain th irty acres,

thence 1n.11n easterly direc lior following said road to a

but subject to all legal high aforesaid

stone corner on South side
of road 31 feet East of

described rea l estate being
the same real estate con ·

veyed by William Smith,
Jr . to Lucetta Smith by
deed bearing dale of the
15th. day of September
187~ and recorded in Vol .
45, .-ages IIJ7 and 608 of the
records of deeds in the

Sugar tree 61n . lndlameter

County, Ohio.
And being

ln. In diameter; thence in

about 51.97 rods; thence
North to place of beginning
62.483 rods containing 7
acres 25 SQuare rods.
Also, beginning at a stone
at the Southeast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
teet from said sugar tree 6

Recorder's Office of Meigs

same

an

property conveyed by Guy
A . Smith, Executor of the
Estate of Lucetta Smith ,
Deceased, to Samuel J .

El!lsteriY

direction

following said road about

24.84 rods to Ida Young's 2
acre lot; thence West 20.84
rods; thence North to

households.

the

Miller . Rt . .ti , Pomeroy or

Middleport

and

Pomeroy areas. Call the
Daily Sentinel between 8: 30
and 5·oop.m ., 992·2156 .
PART TIME 1) p.m . to 7
a .m ., RN or LPN . Cali the
Pomeroy Health Care Cen .

ter , 992 ~ 6606 · ask tor Mr .

Christie and Ida
M.
CHristie . by deed dated
June 1, 1925, and recorded
in Book 127, at Page 448 of
the Deed Records of Meigs
county Ohio .
EXCEPTING one ~ sixlh
of an acre more or less con·

aforesaid sugar tree or to
place of beginning, con taining 1112acre .
Reference Deed: Vol .

13S, Page 241 Deed Recor dstMeigs count{, Ohio.
he object o the Com plaint Is to sell the interest
of Ida M . Ch r istie in each
parcel of real estate in or ·

v eyed by Ida M . Chr i st i e to
Cec il C. Hei lman and Allen
C. Heilman by deed recor ·

der to pay the debts of the

ded in Vol. 247, Page 483
Deed Records, Meigs Coun ~

estate and

costs of ad ministering the estate.

ty , Ohio.

Plaintiff

In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Christie was seized 'of
the undivided one -fourt h
part of the fol1owing
described real estate :
The following described

demands

the

real estate described in the

F l RST COUNT be sold;
that the ent ire interest in

tne real estate described in -

SECOND COUNT be sold ;

that the rights, Interests
and liens of all parties may

real estate situated in ·the

Stale of Ohio, in the County
of Meigs and In Salisbury
TownshiP: It being near
the middle of the South half
of the North half of Section

be fully determined, ad ·usted and protected, and
hat Plaintiff be authorized

l

and ordered to !.ell rhe en ·

tire Interest in the real
estate
described
In

No. 18, Town No. 2 in Range

13 Ohio Company's Pur ·
chase and on the south Iine
of said ·South half of the
North half and beginning at
t he Northwest corner of
James A . Young's 36 acre
lot ; thence north 2'h Deg .
East 7 chains and 7S links

SECOND COUNT ac cording to the statutes in

to the County road; thence

s outh 40 Deg . East 5 chains
said

road ; thence south 68 Deg .
East 1 chain and 141inks to
Fjnnan Smith's west line;
thence South 2'12 Deg . West
3 chains and 40 links to his
Southwest corner; tfhence
West to the place of begin·
nlng, containing two acres
more or less.

. Also, the following real
estate S&gt;lualed in 5ectlon
No. 18f T.own 2 and Ranoe
13 of he Ohio Company's
Purchase and described as

follows, to-wit : Beginning
a t the southwest corner of
George Young's lot in said
Se c flon ; thence south 8

r ods a nd 7 feet ; thence

East 19 rods; thence North
8 rods and 7 feet ; thence
West 19. rods to !he place of

beginning, con fa in1ng one

such case made and
provided, and for such
other relief as to which she
may be entitled to.
You are required to an swer the Complaint within ·
twenty-eight days after the
last publication of this
noti ce which w i ll be
published once each week
for six successive weeks
and the last publication will
be made on the 7th . day of
February, 1980.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as permitted bY.
the Ohio Rules Of CiVIl
Procedure within the time
slated,
ludgmenl
by
default wl I be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded In the com plaint.
Robert E . Buck
Judge and Ex -Officio Clerk
Common Pleas Court
Meigs county, Ohio
Probate Division
(12) 271 (1 ) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31,
121 7, 7 &lt;
1

M. D.

cali992·7711J.
ANTIQUES ,
FUR ·
NITURE , glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney , antiQues, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992 ·
3161 .

Zidian .

AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb, 19)

Knowing what's right and not
fearing to be guided by your convictions will be instrumental In
your success today. You won' t
yield to outside pressure.
20) You

have the ability today to take
small bits and pieces ol information, enlarge upon them and then
utilize them in ways beneficial to
you and others
ARIES {Mereh 21·April 11il) Your
course of action should be clear
to you today. Get moving on it. II
wil l greally enhan ce and
strengthen your pos1t1on
TAURUS (April 20-M•y 20) Thi s
is not the day 10 be silen t. II you
have strong feeling s. have the
courage of your convic11ons and
speak up. Somethmg good wil l
come ol1t.
GEMINI (Mey 21-June 20) Tack le that job which involves work Ing With others today. Collectively , all of you become a preci sion
instrument to cut through the
task easily and smoothly
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Aii
your bright ideas today will
become a reality because you 'll
lake the necessary steps to bring
them to trui11on. This will prove
to be quite fortunate .
LEO (July 23-Aug. ill!) il there ''
a way to make a dollar today,
you are just the ooe who'll find 11 .
Analyze anything that looks like
it might have possibilities.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-8opt. 221
There'll be no bones about who
lnhents the leadership role
among those with whom you are
associating today. Once you lay
down the ground rules, every.
body will lottow.
LIIIIIA (&amp;.pt. 23-0cl 23) You
know how to save your strongest
points for the proper opening. to
bring Into being sometl'ling V6f)l
valuable to you. Your Instincts
guide you today.
SCORPIO (0!:1. liA-Hov. 22)
Friends and contacts could be
rnponalble for netplng you fulfHI
a pertonal goal tOday. Listen to
what otMrs heve to aay. Conald·
er following their dlrfiCtlvn.

IAOin~AIUI (Nov. 23-0.C. 21)

An offerlr\g could be presented
to you .tod•y that everything
Inside of you Is telling you to act
on Immediately Your lnattncta
aren 't leading you aatray.
(NEWSPAPER E Nt E R~FIISE "58N I

WORK while children are
in school . Educatial sales
work . Send resumes, Box
486, Racine, OH .

HOME
ADDRESSERS
wanted . 5500 per week
possible .

No

experience

required . A.S.D.,
PO
Drawer 140069, Dallas, TX
75214.

plete

SILVER DOLLARS AND
SilVER
CHANGE
BEFORE
1964
AT
RECORD HIGH PRICES .
AlSO, GOLD COINS ,
RINGS, JEWELRY AND
MISC . ITEMS AT HONEST
UP -TO · DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT,
BARBER SHOP, MID ·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CAlL
m -3476.
LIMITED TIME ONlY .
Yellow brass, JOe lb ., junk
batteries S3 ea ., No. 1 and
NO. 2 coper, 60&lt;: and 70&lt;: lb .
Radiators, 40c lb . Clean
aluminum 20c lb . 2 ff . short
iron, 51 .75 hd. Stove cast $2
hd . Motors cast $3.2S hd .
Long iron 51.25 hd. Rider's
Salvage, SR 124, Pomeroy .
992·5468.

Services Offered

household.

silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors, pocket
knives and other old items.

WilL DO odds and .ends,

Hill was beautifUlly decorated for
the sill: o'clock Christmas dinner of
· tile Apple Grove United Methodist
Women. Mrs. Darrell Norris had the
program using as her topic the
' 'Nativity. " She also accornpaqied
the group for cat ol singing. Each
one a~tending was given wreaths
inade by Mrs. ~dlth Manuel and
_))Otnsettias from Mrs. Hill. At·

PLUMBING REPAIR
Let Us
wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold Weatller

and silver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old

SIS.SO.

for

the

Herman l . Koby

Secretary ·Treas.
Rio Grande

(1)

Community College
10, lie

PUBliC 'NOTICE
Bids will be received by
the Villa~e of Middleport.

Ohio, Me1gs county at the
Mayor's Office of the

Village Hall/ 237 Race
StreeL until 4 P .M.,
January 25, 1980 for the
following equipment:
Various items Of fire
hose, noZZles and tmings to
equip new fire engine. A
of
items
specifications

and
are

list

REG I STEREO Pekinese
puppies, 1 male, I female.
Ready to go. 7 weeks old .
9~9·2646.

HUMANE Society pets for
adoption, 992·6260. Healthy,
shots, and wormed. Border
collie types, Irish Setter,
English Setter with puppies, shepherd type_ Put a
cold nose in your life . Kit tens, kittens, kitte~s. ail
sha~es, all sizes .

available at the Middleport
Mayor 's Office Monday
through Friday between 8 ·
Auto Sales
A.M . and4P.M .
STOCK
CAR .
All bids are to Include
complete description of
chassis , 350 ~ bolt
~uipmenf contained in the · Chevy ,
Franklin
bid.
change rear end,

.De.livery must be made
w1thm 120 days after ac ·
c~ptance of the bid by
VIllage Council .
The Villa9e reserves the
ri.ght to retect any or all

b&gt;dS .

VIllage of
Middleport
·

Jon Buck

Clerk -Treasurer
11) 10; 17, 21&lt;

Frankincense was
poPular with the ancient
R(IIlans. They used it in
religious ceremonies and
burned it in funeral pyres.
The Roman writer Pliny
the Elder reported that a
whole year's production c:J
Arabian frankincense was
used at the cremation ci
Poppaea, wife d. the Emperor Nero.

Hells Canyon forms part
of the Oregoo-ldaho border. According to National
Geograplic, Hells Canym
could )lold six Empire State
Buildings stacked one m
top d. the other 'with room
to spare.

Howe
main
quick
motor

builf to maximum, all new
parts. New and extra tires.
Extra parts and rims.
SS,OOO. Can be seen on a

Saturday, Twp.

Rd . 27,

Dexter, at Slater's residen ·

Manuel, Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs.
June Harris, · Mrs. ~rley Ables,
Mrs. Allee. Balser, ·Mrs. Mary
RoWih, Mr~. Bess Par5ons, Mrs. Jan
Ncrrls,I'!frs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Edith
Manuel, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill and
son, Deanle, Trscy N~rriJJ, Herbert
:~
Roush, Mrs: EHeen BuCk and Mrs. • 1
Julie Norris.

~
•

1 •

...

COAl,

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

c:atclum

chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, inc .,
E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891 .

Business Services

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot. can be par tially financed . Call Guido
Girolami. 992 ·5186, 10-6. No

Will HAUl limestone and
gravel . .Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7-42-2455.

1974

Plymouth

Scamp,
6 cyl. ,
auto ., $1800 or trade. 742·
2&gt;151.

custom

'!&gt;,~~

m.J:ns
mE. Se~d Street
MOBilE HOME -

3

bedrooms, 2 baths, fore ·

ed
NICE PIGS for sale . Wor ·
med, castrated. 9-19 ·2857.

air

heat.

stove,

refrigerator, and other

furniture. 7/8 of an acre
near Harrisonville.

reasonably

4 ACRES - Near Mid·
dleport on hard road.
Two trailer hookups, a

firewood,
priced . 71(1 ·

2544.

one bedroom trailer and

large utili tv bldg.
$925.00 DOWN - Bal.
about like rent, 3

UTiliTY TOOL chest for
pickup, 575. inQuire at 400
Lasley St ., Pomeroy,OH.

bedrooms, natural gas
furnace, basement and

nice lot .
RANCH -

BLA&lt;;K
DIAMOND
linemen!, Shaklee organic
products,
Rawlelgh
products . 992·7825.

Woodburn ·

ing fireplace, large win·

dows, view of the river,
full basement and front
porch. $1,000.00 DOWN .
BUS . . BLDG. - Or a
cheap, 2 bedroom home
wlth .,bath, and nat. gas
for only $11,000.00. Six
Hundred down.
WHERE CAN YOU
GET MORE
FOR
YOUR MONEY THAN
AN INVESTMENT IN
PROPERTY.
992-3325 OR 992-3176

DRY .
HARDWOOD
firewood , $30 truckload. 12
ga. double shotgun In good
condition, $90 . Phone 742·
2359.
ZENITH CONSOlE stereo.
S years old . Very good con·

dillon . After SWARD'S
energy saver, electric
dryer. Excellent condition.
Sl ~- 667 ·3958.
26" 1O·speed
Stereo . 992·5621.

Housing "
Headquarters

bicycle.

interior ,

1977 CHEVROLET Blazer,
P .S., P.!'\ ·• A.C., 2-wheei
drive . 13,000 actual miles.
992 ·6192.
1975 AMC Pacer . Good con ·
dition . No rust . $1700. 7~2 ·
2951 .
1977 FIAT X19. Very low
mileage . Call Gary, 9-19 ·
2210 before 3 p .m .
19788 FORD 'h tor pickup
super cab with topper.
Good
condition.
low
mileage . $45110. 949·2042.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . large iols.Cail
992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished a p Is. Phone 992· 543~.

12&gt;&lt;60 TWO BEDROOM
mobile home. Racine area.
992·5858:
THREE bedroom mobile
home near ' Pomeroy . and·
Miqdleporl. 992·5858. ·
.

EMERGENCY

power

alternators - own the best

- buy Wlnpower . Call 513 ·
788·2589.

GENERA·.
,ELECTRIC

i

HHdquarterl
AI'J)Iia~ces

n"liS.·&amp;1irvrc8

POMIROY
' . t.ANDMA'II(

FINANCING ·VA ·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN;
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRElAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS.
614·592 ·3051.
FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolle Pen Store. Phone
992·7559,
COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond lor swimming
or fishing, ·9 . ro6ms, bath,·
carpeted. · 3 to 17 acres
available . .located approx ,
7 miles from Pomeroy off
~I . lor ll . 446·2359afler 6.

For Sale
'1'7 • CUBIC FOOT GE
retrlgltrator, good ·con ·
dillOn, S100. C•II99:U7~9.

,.

TWO ' STORY house; 9
rooms, 1'11 baths, garage:
COllege Rd., Syracuse ..Call
992 ·5133or 992·3981 .

' -:--~-...:..,~­
''

nJ!...im

608 E.
MA I Ill.. .
. POME~OY,
992·2259
WO\JlD
YOU
BELIEVE - A beautiful
kitchen with a bar and
dining
area, , .3
bedrooms, a family
room, are&lt;:. room, a TV
rooma nd a new swlmm 1ng pool for only
$39,500.00.
STOP PAYING RENT
let someone else
make your house pay·
ment for you. Large
brick
duplex
In ·
syracuse. Live lri part
and rent part. $28,000.00.
HANDYMAN'S
SPECIAl - 2 apart·
ment frame In Mid ·
dleport. Always has
renters. on a corner lot.
$10,900.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITE$ Ap·
prox. 25 acres, some lots
surveyed, water and
electric available, road
developed to property ;
1:17,500.00.
.
lOVELY ' 2 story
!Tome overlooking the
river. Has 3 bedrooms,
i"ec. room, lull base·
ment, and equipped kit·
chen. $35,1100.00. ·
WE ' HAVE READY
BUYI!R'S FOR YOUR
PROPERTY.
LIST
WITH IJ$.
.
REALTOR
'·.Henry E. ~loland, Jr.
992-6191 .
ASSOCIATES
Jun TrU!IIIIi94~::~~
Roger
;.;

0
'1

Answer

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~!

8: oo-Buck Rogers In the 25th
Century 3, 15; Mork &amp; M indy
6, 13; ; Waltons 8, 10; Milwaukee
Symphony Orchestra In Concert
20 ; Ci vi lisat ion 17 ; C am e ra
Th ree 33.
8:30-Benson 6,1 3; Sports : Close Up
33.
9 :00--Quincy ' 3, 1 ~; . Barn~y Miller
6.13; Barnaby Jones 10; Energy : .
8; Sneak Previews 20,33 ; College
Basketball 17 .
9: 30-Soap 6, 13; Camerll. Three 20;
• DAncing Disco 33.
10 :DO-Rockford Files 3, 15; 20-20 13;
Energy : 6; Knots Landing 8, 10;
News 20; Soundstage 33 .
10 :3Q-Over Easy 20.
11 :QO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, IS; Last of
the Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20 ; Fall
&amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin 33 ..
11 :30-Tonight 3, 15; Police Woman
6,13; ABC News 33; Movie "Mr .
Skeff ington " 10 ; Movie " No
Time for Comedy" 17.
12 : 4D-Tomorrow 3; News 1S; !.3DNews 17.
1: 3s-Movle " Thief of Damascus"
17 ; 1:45-Biack Sheep Squadron
8.
I :5&lt;&gt;-News 13; 3: to-Movie "Tokyo
Joe" 17 ; 5:oo-Untouchables 17.

FRIDAY,JANUARY 11,1980
5 :4s-Farm Report 13; 5 :5&lt;&gt;-PTL
Club 13; 6 :0D-700-Ciub 6,8; PTL
Club 15; Worlcl at Large 17.
6 :3o-Kidsworld 10; News 17 ; 6 :4s- ·
Morning Report 3; 6 :5D-Good
his four ol hearts .
Morning West Virginia 13; 6 :5sSouth won with dummy's
News 13 .
jack and counted tricks. He
7:0D-Today
3,15; Good Morning
could
come
to
six
in
h1gh
1-10
NORTH
America
6,
13;
Friday Morning 8;
cards and could make his sev • ·s s 5
Batman
10;
Three
Stooges-Lillie
• J 10 3
enth by leading successfully
Rascals 17; 7 : Is-A.M. We•ther .
+A7U
to his queen of clubs or king of
33.
+Bt3
spades.
7
:30-Family
Affair 10; Studio See
There was no hurry about
WEST
EAST
33; 7: 55-Chuck While Reports
choosing
which
suit
to
attack.
+A97
+QJIOZ
10.
He could take four diamond
.• AK912
&gt;
B :oo-capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Family
t86
• 10 53
tricks first so he did just that.
Affair 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
+K 7 5
• J 10 9 2
Maybe his opponents would
8
:30-Romper
Room 17.
.
make some helpful discards,
SOUTH
9
:QO-Bob
Braup
3;
Big
Valley
6;
but no one helped him. East
+K 4 3
•Porky Pig a; One Day AI A Time chucked the deuce of spades;
.Q8 .7
10. Phil Donahue 13, 15 ; Lucy ·
West the seven of spades and
t KQJ 9
Show 17.
five of clubs.
+AQ6
9:30-Bob Newhart 8; Love of Life
South studied a while and
10; Green Acres 11.
Vulnerable: Eas t-West
finally came to the right deciro :oo-card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Dealer East
sion . He didn't lead either suit.
Night 6 ; Beat the Clock 8. 10;
Instead he returned a heart.
Wesc
Nortb Easl
South
Morning Magazine 13;' Movie
West cashed four heart
Pass
I NT
"Bundle ot Joy" 17.
Pass
tricks while South ChljCked a
Pass Pass
10
:3
0- Hollywood Squares 3, 15; .
club and a spade .
$20,000
Pyramid 1 3; Andy .
Now West had lo lead a
Griffith
6
;
Whew! 8, 10.
Opening lead :., 4
black card and gave South his
10: 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
seventh trick. Simple, but like
11: oo-High RolleJS 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
most simple things tQtally
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
effective.
Eiec . Co. 20 .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS N)
11 : 30- W!Jeel of Fortune 3.15 ;
'By Oswald Jacoby
Family Feud .6, 13; Sesame St.
(For a copy of JACOBY
and Alan Sontag
20,33;
n : ss-News 17.
MODERN. send $1 to: " Win at
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News ·
Bridge,
"
care
of
!his
newspaWest would have made two
6,8,
10,
13;
Mindreaders
15;
Love,
hearts, but it was too danger- per, P. 0. Box 489, Radio ·City
American
Style
17
.
ous for him to act over South's Stat ion, New York . N. Y.
12 :3D-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search for
100 19.)
notrump so he passed and led
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field IS;
Movie "Sorry, Wrong Number" .
17; Elec. Co. 33 .
1 :QO-Days of Our Lives 3. 15; All My :
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the ·
Restless 8, 10.
ACROSS
40 Breakwater
1
:3D-As
The World Turns 8, 10;
1 U.S. missile 41 Visionary
2:0D-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to
5 stylish
4% Artist
Llve6,13 ; 2:2s-News 17.
9 Ladd's
Warhol
2:3D-Anolher World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8,10; Gigg lesnort Hotel 17 .
"This Gun
DOWN
3:QO-General
Hospllal 6, 13; I Love ·
for -"
1 Big Beverly
Lucy 17; Upstairs, Downsfalrs ·
10 Keep secret
Sills role
20.
13 Indigo plant
India's
3 :3Q-One Day I A Time 8; Joker' s
14 Chant
official
Wild 10; Flintstones 17; Oller
Ynt•rday's Anilwer
Easy 33.
15 Chemical
language
~ : QO-Misler Cartoon 3; Password
11
Not
cricket
28
Payoff
for
suffix
3 Christie
Pius15;· Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
12 Caressed
Tonuny·
t&amp; Initials
murder
Hillbillies 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
16 She: Fr.
'l'Ucker
for Werner
setting
Gomer Pyle USMC 10; Real
19 Rita 30 Bea Arthur's
McCoys 13; Speclreman 17.
Erhard
4 Elec. unit
TV role
4 :31&gt;-Lone Ranger 3; Peflicoat ·
Z3 Have you
17 Frequently : 5 Engrave
Junction 8; Brady Bunch 10;
31
Pronged
seen
1 Fox-seeking
poet .
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
32
Fit
to
. , this judge?
18 What IQOSt
Gilligan's Is. 17.
,
1 events
he tied
24
Get rid of
S:oo-Caroi Burnett 3; Sanlord' &amp;
. basehits are 7 Follower
37 Fraulein's
Son 9; Mister Rogers' Neigh 25 Fingers
of an ism
20 Manx
borhood
20,33; Mary Tyler
8 Tyke's
or Siamese
Moore 10; My Three Sons 11.
plaything
21 Uke
5 :3o-Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle 8; Elec . Co. 20; Mash 10; Happy :
Bill Walton
1
Days Again 13; I Dream of
2% Hasten
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33. ·
Z3 White sauce
6:CM&gt;-News 3,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20,33;
25 ScandiCarol Burnett 17.
navian bay
6:30:..NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Brunell 6; CBS News 8, 10;
%1 King : Lat.
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20; .
28 Fann
Wild Wild Wor.ld of Animals 33 .
structure
7 :oo-Cross-W1ts 3: Tic Tac Dough
29 Elec. unit
9; A Friend In Deed 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13; Love . ·
30 liLa
American Style JS; Sanford &amp;
Boheme"
Son 17; Dick Cavell 20 .
role
7 :30-Prlce Is Right 3; Newlywed
33 Jutting hill
Game 6; Family Feud 10; Dick
34 Likely
Cavell 33; Pop Goes The Country :
13,15; NBA Basektball 17 ;
35 Tenth of
MacNeil-Lehrer Report· 20 .
a sen
8 :oo=stllrley 3, 15; B.A. D. Cats 6, 13;
36 - the score
Incredible
Hulk
8, 10 ;
(pay old
Washington Week In Review
20,33.
debts)
8:30-Wall
Street Week 20,33; 9:QO.18 Chirped
Movle "Two.Minute Warning"
, 19 Dwell
3,15: Movie "Make Me An Offer" .
1
6, 13; Dukes of Hazzard 9, 10; DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's hll'IV to work It:
Free to Choose 20; Wise Parents AXYDLBAAXll
Know Thier, Children 33. '
9:45-Perspectlve on Greatness 17.
'
'
II L 0 N G F B L L ' 0 W
10:0Q-Dallas 8, 10; News 20; David
One letter simply stands for another. In thil sample A II
Susskind 33.
used for the three L's, .X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
10:30-0ver Easy 20; 10 :45-Love, ·
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
American Style 17.
.
hinll. Each day tbe code !etten are dlfterent.
11 :oo-News. 3,6,8, 10, 13,15; Lost of ··
· the Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20; ~
CRYPTOQUOTES
Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.
0
11 : 3Q-Tonighl 3,15; . Charlie's ..
Q
H
S K AU A
WM
H
QW ZM KWI •
Angels 6; Movie "Color Him
Dead" 8; ABC News :p; Movie
HNN
PASVAAZ
"Terror In the Jungle" 10; Movie ,
YUAALHMEZUR,
EY
"ffielist Hurrah" 13; Movie :
" Frankenstein
Must
Be .
WZSANNWFAZXA,
EY
Destroyed" 17.
HZSHf'EZWMSWX
SK'AWU 12 :4o-FBI 6 ; 1: 00- Midnlght
K-EVACA u
Special 3,15; Movie "Hand of
·
·
.
Power' '' 10; 1':35---News 17.
•
LEUHN ETSNEEQ.- ZEULHZ OETFNHM 1.4o-NBA Basektbell 17; 2:ooYalerdat~ eryptoqllllle: WISDOM IS OFTriMES NI:AJER . lrorslde 13r 2 :30-News 3.
WHEN .
8l'OOP THAN WHEN WE SOAR.-WUlliM 3:oo...:News · 13;
3 : 5s-Movle ;
WORDSWOR11'1
"Swinger's Paradise" 17.
;

Sim.ple but effective way

~
1·/0
..,
.. 1'/HY WOULD THE OTHER OH, i'M NOT o;;OiHG
TO 5ELL IT TO
SHoiK6 BUY TH' "CAZAR'Us
THEM!
I'M GOING
' PROCE65" FROM YOU? THEiR
WELLG ARE ~LREADY PUMP iNG TO 6LAC KMAiL
. Oi L! . ~---.. r"'__ _ , TH EM WITH IT !
;&gt;
.

•s

... MO RE CHAMPAGNE, &lt;:&gt;iRL5?!
MONEY'S NO OOJECT WHE N
YOU'RE WiTH JAC K PHENCE!

~-'6td

992 '572~.

BRADFORD, AUctioneer,
complete ServlcO!. F'hone
11-49·2487 or 9-19·:2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.
ElWOOD

BOWERS
Swee111rs,
toasters, Irons, ali ~ali
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Stale Highway
G"~~rage on Route 7, 98S·
~EPAIR

z

$5.

s

&amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scolchguard. 992·
6309or 7.CZ ·23&gt;11 .

..

and

PIANO TUNING . lane
Daniels. New Phone num ber, 742 ·2951. Service to
schOOls- an«! home since
1965. •

WINNIE
DON'T fEEL f!&gt;AC1,
17EAR . A LOT OF

PAI&lt;ENTS 170N'T...

REYNOlDS! ElECTRIC ,
651 B&lt;!&amp;Ch St. (lewlnd and
repalr'!lectrlc motors. 992·
2356. Will ~ake -vice
calla.

... AND THEY HAVEN'T BEEN i!LJT WHY 171ZE'e&gt;&amp; IN
RAGt&gt; ...AND ~AVE
AWAY AWM ~EIR OfF OOCH OUTLANDISH
5PRIN6 FOR lWENlY
HAIRSTYLES, IF
YEARS LIKE YOU

"YOl/PONT
HAVEro

HAVE .

PAIT Of' IT 15&gt; RE -

13ELLION AT TODAY~

SOCIETY... PART OF IT
I~ AN HONES T DESIRE
TO BE ONE5ELf'-... AN

INPIVIPIJAL /

•

ARNOLD AND DICk'S
Mechanic work . Open 9·5,
992·7768.
•

BORDER COLliE, male,
black, brown, white, rear
old. Fox terrier, female,
housebroken. 2 German
pollee and Norweglah
Elkhound.
Humane
SOCiety, 992-6260.

HOW o·O'IE

LIKE M'l
NEW DRESS,
LOWEEZV?
I MAQeiT

HUMANE
Society beagles, shepherds, husky,
English Seller type I&gt;UP ·
pies. 2 English Seller clogs,
shots, wormed. 992-~.

UH .. LETME
PUT IT

THIS WAY,

AS 'IE SEW,
SEW SHALL
'lE REAP

ME LISSY --

A~UIV . ..-~.....

M~S6LF

EIGHT Wk . old ptJIIS, A
male, 2 female. Part
dachshund, part Man ""
chester. B819f'lt l, 992·7617.
After 1, 992·3367.
$1 X MIXED breed pups,
lust weened. Mainly block
labrador. 742-2692.

I

1-:-:-++-t-

wz

•

RULE~S

Mobllt Homes • Sale
~
,
,

f.!AVE OTHER
USES: i(OU KNOW

.5EE? IF i(OU TAKE '(OUR
. PEN AND 60 ALONG THE

,

EDGE 01= THE RULER, ANO
THEN LIFT IT UP, 't'OU'LL
HAVE A NICE STRAIGHT...

,
•
•
:

f

SALES, PT. l"lEA.SANT, '
WV. 30H75-442~.

SQUALL

lO LI?AIJ~

IN STOCK for lmtnedlate :
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do·ll·yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc .

197:1 L "!'NN HAVEN lolx65 3
bedroom .·
.
.1910 Vlndale t:lltQ with ex ·
~hdo,2btdr.
·
1970~wMoon 12lc4ci3bdt.
1973 , Skyline 12M5$ 2
bedroom · ·
197'2 8!1nenlti12x52, 2beclr,
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME

LEG UME

BRIDGE

AUT•OMOBilE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
your ·
ceMtd?
Lost
operator'S license? Phone
992 -2143.

WAll PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

ABATE

What a person ove rl y mteres ted in money
mat ters oft en thmk s money IS-

.~ (j(J(Z.'{

IJ.E. WWD.A

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makes.
992 ·2284.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Autllorlzed Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
II Gil B. SR.

Jumbles CRAFT

Tbursday , Jan. 10

realtors .

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at 54 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.

CURED

;

Real Estate for Sale

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
3785.

I

Jumble Book No. 13, contalnlng110puulea, la av•llable for Sf 75poatplld
from Jumble,eJothll newip•per, Box 3•. Norwood, N.J. OT&amp;d. lncludeyour
neme, edd""· rip code 1nd m•h ch.cka p•y•ble lo NewspaJMrbooh.

'

1-.4-(Pd.)

10·19·1 mo.

LIMESTONE,
gravel,

Win-

1'\ree Estimate

ce .

TWO BEDROOM furnished
apt., S165 mo. plus utilities.
I child, no f&gt;llts . 949·2377, or
alter 5p .m. 949·2875.

tending were Mr. and Mrs. Hlll, Mrs.
Bertha Roblmon, Mhl. Denise

eReplacement
dows

Xl 1 11 l l )"

ALL TH AT MATTERS

•New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
•Remoldlngs
*Free Estimates

eStorm Windows

For Sale
sand,

GIVE A CUTE liveable PUP
a future . Adopt an orphan
from
your
Humane
SOciety . Shots, wormed .
Oonat·ions appreciated .
992·62/IJ.

gested by the above cartoon

Yesterday 's

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

el nst.alation

CALL 992 -7544

and

Western

boors . Children's
Adults $29.00.

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surpnse answer, as sug·

{Answers tomorrow)

4'30-llc

e Storm Doors

107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy,O.

ponies . Ruth Reeves . 614·
698 ·3290 . Barding and
Riding t:essons and Horse
products .

MAYSE ! AN YHOW ••
WHAT MADE' IT WOJ&lt;:sE
I? rHA T AT THE: TIME'
ALL THI~ HAPPE~E D.
THE SOY WA-!&gt; A

Prlntenswerhere : " [

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 99~·5612

..Aluminum Siding

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
ment.

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor -outdoor faci I ities.
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·-4-46·7795.

scheduled

&amp;

THE ~OFtED
COUL..D ~J:
" CONFUSED. "

PEAl' MVTE!

"' mfle off Rt, 7 bYiNISS '
on st. Rl. 124 toward ·
. Rutland.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlA
nON
VInyl &amp;

Hours 9·1 M., W., F .
Other times by appoint·

been changed to 7: 30 P.M.
January 30, 1980 at Rio
Grande College. All
regular meetings for 1980
ar~

Housing

Federal

Veterans Admin. loans .

Horses

PURPOSE.~

.•'

s.aae

After 5 P.M. 992·5547
12· 13 ·2 mo. pd .

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

glass frames and antique

harness .

ON

l-10

\MYLODEt

IT '~ A~YO ~E '&amp; -v HI~ MOTHER TOI.D ME He WA'7 5 0
15Uf'SS., EA~Y...
!\~ O K!'"'' UP OVER HI~ FATHER.'7
DEATH T HAT He MAif. HAVE: RUN
OFF INTO ·.THE' WOOD~!·

AII:E .'tell SAYi'-1~
CHRi~ 60T LO!l-T
ACCIDENTMLY- 01&lt;:

0

I

';...._R0&amp;1!r_....Hysel:--::-"""""ij

Free Estimates

furniture . Will buy ore
piece or household. Call
992-6370.

Pets for Sale

• ' • •t

[J

RACINE, D.
:i
t4t-27410r
m -7114
"
12-ll'f'd.
L...-_ _ _
__.. •,

Guaranteed work

WILl PAY TOP dollar for

POODlE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

second Wednesday of the
month at 7:00 p .m . in the
Rio Grande College Board
Room.

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call 992 -2852
or 992-7235

gold

HOOF HOLLOW, english
and Western . Saddles and

F ROM :
FINE ARTS
MUS EUNI DUSS EL.OORF,
W. GERMANY .
DATE :
FEB. 9 , 1972

V. C. YOUNG Ill

QualitY construction at
reasonable ra1es.

12·13-pd .

OFFICIAL NOTICE
The Rio Grande Com ·
munity College Board

Apple Grove News Notes
The home c:J Mr. and Mrs. Dallas

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Caii992 -6J7().

Care

paneling, floor tile, ceiling

Gold,

I ABOOT

STO LEN

•

niture . One piece or com -

wanted to Buy

downspouts~
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free estimates
Reasonablj! Prices
Call Howard
949·2162
11 -14-mo.

12·7·1 mo.

bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver . Call J . A . Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . S92·
6462 .
MARTIN'S APPRAISAL
Stop, 'think, are you abput
to lose money? Over 25
years experience In buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur -

All types roof work, new

I

DUI:IE

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY ,JANUARY \ o,1t80

Gutter work, tiiWII
spouts , somt CCifttreft
work,
waiU
tnd
driveways.
·
(FREE ESTIMATISI
Reduceol Winter Rlltk

or repair gutters and

four ord inary words

"

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Roofinfi, gutters, •nd
downspouts.
Free
Estimates . All work
guaranteed. 20 yean ex·
perlence. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Cla.rk
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins •
797·2745.

ches, class rings, wedding

1....-------------------------------l Adults
TWO only
BEDROOM
992·3324.trailer .

estate
In Section
No. 181 situated
Town 2 and
Range r
No. 1l of the Ohio Company's Purchase and bOun ded and described · as
follows, to-wit : Beginning
at George Young ' s
Southeast corner In said
section; thence East 21
rods to the road ; thence In
a ·westerly direction along
said rclad 15 rods and 10
teet ; thence west 20 rods;
mj!llce 15 rods and 10feet to
the place of beginning, con taining 2 acres.
·
Also , the following
de lk:r ibed real estate In
Salisbury Township, Meigs
CotJnly, Ohio. Beginning" at
a stone corner East 70.5-15
rodS olwhe Northwest· cor"'-' o1 . s. Wills 69'1• acre
kit near a willow trH abOut
:10 tnchri In diameter
tttence Soutlf 8.85 rods to a
s take- East of a double .

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOFINt

OLD COl NS, pocket wat-

Meeting for January has

11, 1980

Keep an eye peeled for opportunities that m1ght come !rom
remote sources or distant
places. Somelhmg With long+
term benefits Is extremely likely
in the months ahead
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 1i)
You are good at coming up with
e)(cellenl solutions today and
you prove you're right by loUowing Your own advice, thus selllnQ
an example lor others Tra~Jel ,
resources , romance. tuck, possible pitfalls and career for the
months ahead are all discussed
in your new Astro-Graph Leiter
which beQins with your birthday
Mall $1 lor each to Astro-Graph.
Box 489, Radio C1ty .8-iation. N Y
10019 Be sure to ~pacify birth
date.

~Merch

Write

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call 367.0292 .

W'Birthday

PISCES (Feb.

ice

brass

tile . Fred Miller, m -6338 .

~'four
J•nu~ry

FURNITURE ,

CARRIERS NEEDED in

ASTRO·GRAPH
B'ernice Bede Osol

largest

beds, Iron
beds, desks, etc ., complete

Center , the Rev . W. H.
Perrin, Mrs . Linda Mayer
and the Ewing Funeral
Home.

on

end . s 12 p-er tor . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
OLD

to Boy Scout Troop 249.

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

10"

one letter to each square . to form

THOUGHT
NEVER

Business Services

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x .
diameter

MAo.JOR ART T HEFT

WAY NOW -

Wanted to Buy

boxes,

Help Wanted

Factory chok e guns only .

friends and neighbors for
tOed, flowers and other acts
of kindnesses extended
during the illness and death
of my wife, Maxine Lind. A
spec ial thanks to Dr. J . J .
staff at the Holzer Medical

Situate In the County of
Mei9s, in the State of Ohio
and m the Township of Bed
ford , and bounded and

'·

Ra c ine

Fir e

Volunteer

1

follows :

v

SHOOT .

will be prepared by appointment. 992 ·2272 or see
wanda Eblin , Laurel Cliff
Rd ., Pomeroy .

SUnday

FIRST COUNT of the Com ·
plaint. which said real
estate is described
as

r

GUN

Quarterly , Federal and all
state income tax reports

4P.M .

the day before publication

the time of her death Ida

ac r e .
Also, the following real

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONlY . RAC INE
GUN CLUB .

INCOME TAX SERVICE .

1\Jeoday

M . Christie was seized of
the enti re Interest of the
real estate described in the

and _.0 links along

Agent .

767 ·3167or 557 · 3~11 .

WANT-AD

13th. 1979. The Complaint
recites that each of you is
possibly an heir -at-law and
next of kin of Ida M.
Christie, Deceased ; that at

.
the

6260 . Pets ava ilab le for
adopt ion and information
se rv i c e .
In ves tig a tive

Nothing roo

NOTICE

naming you
as
defendants in the above ·
named court by filing her
complaint on November

The

MEI GS
CO UNT 'f
HUMANE SOC IE TY . 992·

guns, pocket watches and
coin collect ions . Cal! 614·

action

ways .

Lost and Found
INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wj&gt; llace
Ru ~ li ,
Bradbury , 9927228)

vance .

CHRISTIE , DECEASED ·
DOUGlAS
YOU
,
DECEASED : RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE ·
0; GlADYS GOEGlEI~
DECEASED ; DElLA RIFFl.E ,
DECEASED ;
FLORENCE
HENRY ,
DECEASED ;
DAVID
KING, DECEASED ; BER ·
NARD
KING ,
DECEASED; HAROlD
KING , DECEASED ;
LENA
DOERFER,
DECEASED A. K.A. lANA
DORFER , DECEASED :
OTHO
YOUNG,
DECEASED ; LAURA
KNAPP,
DECEASED ;
HENRY DOERFER ,
DECEASED ;
OlEN
DOERFEl!, DECEASED ;
D'A YTON
YOUNG,
.DECEASED;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIElS ,
DECEASED; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED ;
FRED
Kl NG,
DECEASED ; SAMUEl J .
CHRISTIE, DECEASED ;
AND
THOMAS
F.
TAYlOR DECEASED .
Plaintiff has brought this

pany's Purt::hase ;

Notices

A

INVESTIGATION' S

'1

I

~ TIIAT SCRAMBLED WORD QAME
byHenri Amold ondBobLoe n

~ ~ ~~ ~

;

,,'

..

'.

\

•

-

�•
l} fl~~ \j)~

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P cmeroy , 0 ., Thursday: Jan. 10, 19M
DICK
.
.
9-

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport .Pomer oy, 0 ., Thursday , Jan. 10, 198!

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,

Your Best Buys Are Fo_u nd in the Sentinel Cla-ssifieds
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PlEAS
COURT , MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Ad ·
min jslralrlx of the Estate
of
Ida M.
Christie ,

WANT AD

CHARGES

De,eased

I day

Pl~lnflff
vs .
EDNA N. WOOD,
2080 Greenwich Road
Wadsworth, Ohio 44%81

1.00

1.10

1.25
1.110'
1.21

3.00

3.71

uo

2daya
Jdays
6days

Each word Dver tht minimwn
,15 wOI"''b U &lt;t eenl5 per word per
day . Ads running other_than consecuti ve days will be charged at
the 1day rate.

Et al.,

Defendants .

No . 22704
NOTICE .
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYlOR ,
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43l SIBBERT,
WEST VIRG NIA ; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD MINISTRATORS, EXEC·
UTORS AND ASSIGN~ IF

~~IL8~~~~~H

Hi Worda or Under
Cuh
Cbara'

In memory, Card of Thanb
l:llX.I ObltWiry : 6 cen t_, per word,
$3.00 minimum. cash In ad-

Mobile H001e sa.l et~ and Yard
are accepted only with
cuh with order. 25 cent charge
sal~

for ads r arrying Box Nwnber In
care of The Sentinel .
The Publiaher reserves lhe

lh"A I ':.f.

right to edit or relect ony ads

deemed objectional. Tile
Publliihrr will not be respooslbl.e
for more than one incorTecl In•
serUon.
Phone 992-2156

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

'

• Monday
Noon on Saturday

lhruFnday

tP.M.
Friday afternoon

Card of Thanks
MY SiNCERE thanks to

Dept .

Eve ry Saturday . 6 :30p .m .
At their buildingin Bashan .

LOST : Scofi eld reference
Bible in Pomeroy area .
Black cover . m --7697 .

G UN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .
c orn Hollow Gun Club ,
Rutland . Proceeds dona ted

for antiQues and collec ·
tibtes or entire estates .
lar~e .

Also,

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
( ANY
· EARLIER
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPlY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 511 3 ,
BROWN'S.

PAY

highest

prices

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport.

Davis, Dr . I. C . Walker, the

Fridey, Jen. 11

chestnut about 3 feet in
diameter; thence South
70 1!:~ degrees West 6.9.4 rods
to a stake 1 foot South 6f
white
oak 4 feet in
diameter; thence SOuth
59'1• Deg. West 8.33'13 rods
to a stake 3 feet East of a

as follows :
Beginn ing at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
desc ribed

the sOUlneast quarter of
Section No . Seven, Town

No . Three and Range No.
Thirteen of the Ohio Com ·

chestnut tree ; thence South

~9'12 Deg. West 6.212 rods to
a stake 2112 feet South of an

thence

North far enough so that by

ash 61n : in diameter; then -

running due West to the

ce south 49'1• Deg. West
8.272 rods to a stake 3 feet

center o1 the State Road;

thence a ono the center of
said road to the section
line ; thence East to the

West of white oak tree 3
feet in diameter ; thence
SOuth 69 Deg . West 14.S1S
rOds to center of road;

place of beginning so that II

:ihall contain th irty acres,

thence 1n.11n easterly direc lior following said road to a

but subject to all legal high aforesaid

stone corner on South side
of road 31 feet East of

described rea l estate being
the same real estate con ·

veyed by William Smith,
Jr . to Lucetta Smith by
deed bearing dale of the
15th. day of September
187~ and recorded in Vol .
45, .-ages IIJ7 and 608 of the
records of deeds in the

Sugar tree 61n . lndlameter

County, Ohio.
And being

ln. In diameter; thence in

about 51.97 rods; thence
North to place of beginning
62.483 rods containing 7
acres 25 SQuare rods.
Also, beginning at a stone
at the Southeast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
teet from said sugar tree 6

Recorder's Office of Meigs

same

an

property conveyed by Guy
A . Smith, Executor of the
Estate of Lucetta Smith ,
Deceased, to Samuel J .

El!lsteriY

direction

following said road about

24.84 rods to Ida Young's 2
acre lot; thence West 20.84
rods; thence North to

households.

the

Miller . Rt . .ti , Pomeroy or

Middleport

and

Pomeroy areas. Call the
Daily Sentinel between 8: 30
and 5·oop.m ., 992·2156 .
PART TIME 1) p.m . to 7
a .m ., RN or LPN . Cali the
Pomeroy Health Care Cen .

ter , 992 ~ 6606 · ask tor Mr .

Christie and Ida
M.
CHristie . by deed dated
June 1, 1925, and recorded
in Book 127, at Page 448 of
the Deed Records of Meigs
county Ohio .
EXCEPTING one ~ sixlh
of an acre more or less con·

aforesaid sugar tree or to
place of beginning, con taining 1112acre .
Reference Deed: Vol .

13S, Page 241 Deed Recor dstMeigs count{, Ohio.
he object o the Com plaint Is to sell the interest
of Ida M . Ch r istie in each
parcel of real estate in or ·

v eyed by Ida M . Chr i st i e to
Cec il C. Hei lman and Allen
C. Heilman by deed recor ·

der to pay the debts of the

ded in Vol. 247, Page 483
Deed Records, Meigs Coun ~

estate and

costs of ad ministering the estate.

ty , Ohio.

Plaintiff

In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Christie was seized 'of
the undivided one -fourt h
part of the fol1owing
described real estate :
The following described

demands

the

real estate described in the

F l RST COUNT be sold;
that the ent ire interest in

tne real estate described in -

SECOND COUNT be sold ;

that the rights, Interests
and liens of all parties may

real estate situated in ·the

Stale of Ohio, in the County
of Meigs and In Salisbury
TownshiP: It being near
the middle of the South half
of the North half of Section

be fully determined, ad ·usted and protected, and
hat Plaintiff be authorized

l

and ordered to !.ell rhe en ·

tire Interest in the real
estate
described
In

No. 18, Town No. 2 in Range

13 Ohio Company's Pur ·
chase and on the south Iine
of said ·South half of the
North half and beginning at
t he Northwest corner of
James A . Young's 36 acre
lot ; thence north 2'h Deg .
East 7 chains and 7S links

SECOND COUNT ac cording to the statutes in

to the County road; thence

s outh 40 Deg . East 5 chains
said

road ; thence south 68 Deg .
East 1 chain and 141inks to
Fjnnan Smith's west line;
thence South 2'12 Deg . West
3 chains and 40 links to his
Southwest corner; tfhence
West to the place of begin·
nlng, containing two acres
more or less.

. Also, the following real
estate S&gt;lualed in 5ectlon
No. 18f T.own 2 and Ranoe
13 of he Ohio Company's
Purchase and described as

follows, to-wit : Beginning
a t the southwest corner of
George Young's lot in said
Se c flon ; thence south 8

r ods a nd 7 feet ; thence

East 19 rods; thence North
8 rods and 7 feet ; thence
West 19. rods to !he place of

beginning, con fa in1ng one

such case made and
provided, and for such
other relief as to which she
may be entitled to.
You are required to an swer the Complaint within ·
twenty-eight days after the
last publication of this
noti ce which w i ll be
published once each week
for six successive weeks
and the last publication will
be made on the 7th . day of
February, 1980.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as permitted bY.
the Ohio Rules Of CiVIl
Procedure within the time
slated,
ludgmenl
by
default wl I be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded In the com plaint.
Robert E . Buck
Judge and Ex -Officio Clerk
Common Pleas Court
Meigs county, Ohio
Probate Division
(12) 271 (1 ) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31,
121 7, 7 &lt;
1

M. D.

cali992·7711J.
ANTIQUES ,
FUR ·
NITURE , glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney , antiQues, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992 ·
3161 .

Zidian .

AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb, 19)

Knowing what's right and not
fearing to be guided by your convictions will be instrumental In
your success today. You won' t
yield to outside pressure.
20) You

have the ability today to take
small bits and pieces ol information, enlarge upon them and then
utilize them in ways beneficial to
you and others
ARIES {Mereh 21·April 11il) Your
course of action should be clear
to you today. Get moving on it. II
wil l greally enhan ce and
strengthen your pos1t1on
TAURUS (April 20-M•y 20) Thi s
is not the day 10 be silen t. II you
have strong feeling s. have the
courage of your convic11ons and
speak up. Somethmg good wil l
come ol1t.
GEMINI (Mey 21-June 20) Tack le that job which involves work Ing With others today. Collectively , all of you become a preci sion
instrument to cut through the
task easily and smoothly
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Aii
your bright ideas today will
become a reality because you 'll
lake the necessary steps to bring
them to trui11on. This will prove
to be quite fortunate .
LEO (July 23-Aug. ill!) il there ''
a way to make a dollar today,
you are just the ooe who'll find 11 .
Analyze anything that looks like
it might have possibilities.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-8opt. 221
There'll be no bones about who
lnhents the leadership role
among those with whom you are
associating today. Once you lay
down the ground rules, every.
body will lottow.
LIIIIIA (&amp;.pt. 23-0cl 23) You
know how to save your strongest
points for the proper opening. to
bring Into being sometl'ling V6f)l
valuable to you. Your Instincts
guide you today.
SCORPIO (0!:1. liA-Hov. 22)
Friends and contacts could be
rnponalble for netplng you fulfHI
a pertonal goal tOday. Listen to
what otMrs heve to aay. Conald·
er following their dlrfiCtlvn.

IAOin~AIUI (Nov. 23-0.C. 21)

An offerlr\g could be presented
to you .tod•y that everything
Inside of you Is telling you to act
on Immediately Your lnattncta
aren 't leading you aatray.
(NEWSPAPER E Nt E R~FIISE "58N I

WORK while children are
in school . Educatial sales
work . Send resumes, Box
486, Racine, OH .

HOME
ADDRESSERS
wanted . 5500 per week
possible .

No

experience

required . A.S.D.,
PO
Drawer 140069, Dallas, TX
75214.

plete

SILVER DOLLARS AND
SilVER
CHANGE
BEFORE
1964
AT
RECORD HIGH PRICES .
AlSO, GOLD COINS ,
RINGS, JEWELRY AND
MISC . ITEMS AT HONEST
UP -TO · DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT,
BARBER SHOP, MID ·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CAlL
m -3476.
LIMITED TIME ONlY .
Yellow brass, JOe lb ., junk
batteries S3 ea ., No. 1 and
NO. 2 coper, 60&lt;: and 70&lt;: lb .
Radiators, 40c lb . Clean
aluminum 20c lb . 2 ff . short
iron, 51 .75 hd. Stove cast $2
hd . Motors cast $3.2S hd .
Long iron 51.25 hd. Rider's
Salvage, SR 124, Pomeroy .
992·5468.

Services Offered

household.

silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors, pocket
knives and other old items.

WilL DO odds and .ends,

Hill was beautifUlly decorated for
the sill: o'clock Christmas dinner of
· tile Apple Grove United Methodist
Women. Mrs. Darrell Norris had the
program using as her topic the
' 'Nativity. " She also accornpaqied
the group for cat ol singing. Each
one a~tending was given wreaths
inade by Mrs. ~dlth Manuel and
_))Otnsettias from Mrs. Hill. At·

PLUMBING REPAIR
Let Us
wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold Weatller

and silver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old

SIS.SO.

for

the

Herman l . Koby

Secretary ·Treas.
Rio Grande

(1)

Community College
10, lie

PUBliC 'NOTICE
Bids will be received by
the Villa~e of Middleport.

Ohio, Me1gs county at the
Mayor's Office of the

Village Hall/ 237 Race
StreeL until 4 P .M.,
January 25, 1980 for the
following equipment:
Various items Of fire
hose, noZZles and tmings to
equip new fire engine. A
of
items
specifications

and
are

list

REG I STEREO Pekinese
puppies, 1 male, I female.
Ready to go. 7 weeks old .
9~9·2646.

HUMANE Society pets for
adoption, 992·6260. Healthy,
shots, and wormed. Border
collie types, Irish Setter,
English Setter with puppies, shepherd type_ Put a
cold nose in your life . Kit tens, kittens, kitte~s. ail
sha~es, all sizes .

available at the Middleport
Mayor 's Office Monday
through Friday between 8 ·
Auto Sales
A.M . and4P.M .
STOCK
CAR .
All bids are to Include
complete description of
chassis , 350 ~ bolt
~uipmenf contained in the · Chevy ,
Franklin
bid.
change rear end,

.De.livery must be made
w1thm 120 days after ac ·
c~ptance of the bid by
VIllage Council .
The Villa9e reserves the
ri.ght to retect any or all

b&gt;dS .

VIllage of
Middleport
·

Jon Buck

Clerk -Treasurer
11) 10; 17, 21&lt;

Frankincense was
poPular with the ancient
R(IIlans. They used it in
religious ceremonies and
burned it in funeral pyres.
The Roman writer Pliny
the Elder reported that a
whole year's production c:J
Arabian frankincense was
used at the cremation ci
Poppaea, wife d. the Emperor Nero.

Hells Canyon forms part
of the Oregoo-ldaho border. According to National
Geograplic, Hells Canym
could )lold six Empire State
Buildings stacked one m
top d. the other 'with room
to spare.

Howe
main
quick
motor

builf to maximum, all new
parts. New and extra tires.
Extra parts and rims.
SS,OOO. Can be seen on a

Saturday, Twp.

Rd . 27,

Dexter, at Slater's residen ·

Manuel, Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs.
June Harris, · Mrs. ~rley Ables,
Mrs. Allee. Balser, ·Mrs. Mary
RoWih, Mr~. Bess Par5ons, Mrs. Jan
Ncrrls,I'!frs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Edith
Manuel, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill and
son, Deanle, Trscy N~rriJJ, Herbert
:~
Roush, Mrs: EHeen BuCk and Mrs. • 1
Julie Norris.

~
•

1 •

...

COAl,

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

c:atclum

chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, inc .,
E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891 .

Business Services

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot. can be par tially financed . Call Guido
Girolami. 992 ·5186, 10-6. No

Will HAUl limestone and
gravel . .Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7-42-2455.

1974

Plymouth

Scamp,
6 cyl. ,
auto ., $1800 or trade. 742·
2&gt;151.

custom

'!&gt;,~~

m.J:ns
mE. Se~d Street
MOBilE HOME -

3

bedrooms, 2 baths, fore ·

ed
NICE PIGS for sale . Wor ·
med, castrated. 9-19 ·2857.

air

heat.

stove,

refrigerator, and other

furniture. 7/8 of an acre
near Harrisonville.

reasonably

4 ACRES - Near Mid·
dleport on hard road.
Two trailer hookups, a

firewood,
priced . 71(1 ·

2544.

one bedroom trailer and

large utili tv bldg.
$925.00 DOWN - Bal.
about like rent, 3

UTiliTY TOOL chest for
pickup, 575. inQuire at 400
Lasley St ., Pomeroy,OH.

bedrooms, natural gas
furnace, basement and

nice lot .
RANCH -

BLA&lt;;K
DIAMOND
linemen!, Shaklee organic
products,
Rawlelgh
products . 992·7825.

Woodburn ·

ing fireplace, large win·

dows, view of the river,
full basement and front
porch. $1,000.00 DOWN .
BUS . . BLDG. - Or a
cheap, 2 bedroom home
wlth .,bath, and nat. gas
for only $11,000.00. Six
Hundred down.
WHERE CAN YOU
GET MORE
FOR
YOUR MONEY THAN
AN INVESTMENT IN
PROPERTY.
992-3325 OR 992-3176

DRY .
HARDWOOD
firewood , $30 truckload. 12
ga. double shotgun In good
condition, $90 . Phone 742·
2359.
ZENITH CONSOlE stereo.
S years old . Very good con·

dillon . After SWARD'S
energy saver, electric
dryer. Excellent condition.
Sl ~- 667 ·3958.
26" 1O·speed
Stereo . 992·5621.

Housing "
Headquarters

bicycle.

interior ,

1977 CHEVROLET Blazer,
P .S., P.!'\ ·• A.C., 2-wheei
drive . 13,000 actual miles.
992 ·6192.
1975 AMC Pacer . Good con ·
dition . No rust . $1700. 7~2 ·
2951 .
1977 FIAT X19. Very low
mileage . Call Gary, 9-19 ·
2210 before 3 p .m .
19788 FORD 'h tor pickup
super cab with topper.
Good
condition.
low
mileage . $45110. 949·2042.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . large iols.Cail
992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished a p Is. Phone 992· 543~.

12&gt;&lt;60 TWO BEDROOM
mobile home. Racine area.
992·5858:
THREE bedroom mobile
home near ' Pomeroy . and·
Miqdleporl. 992·5858. ·
.

EMERGENCY

power

alternators - own the best

- buy Wlnpower . Call 513 ·
788·2589.

GENERA·.
,ELECTRIC

i

HHdquarterl
AI'J)Iia~ces

n"liS.·&amp;1irvrc8

POMIROY
' . t.ANDMA'II(

FINANCING ·VA ·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN;
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRElAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS.
614·592 ·3051.
FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolle Pen Store. Phone
992·7559,
COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond lor swimming
or fishing, ·9 . ro6ms, bath,·
carpeted. · 3 to 17 acres
available . .located approx ,
7 miles from Pomeroy off
~I . lor ll . 446·2359afler 6.

For Sale
'1'7 • CUBIC FOOT GE
retrlgltrator, good ·con ·
dillOn, S100. C•II99:U7~9.

,.

TWO ' STORY house; 9
rooms, 1'11 baths, garage:
COllege Rd., Syracuse ..Call
992 ·5133or 992·3981 .

' -:--~-...:..,~­
''

nJ!...im

608 E.
MA I Ill.. .
. POME~OY,
992·2259
WO\JlD
YOU
BELIEVE - A beautiful
kitchen with a bar and
dining
area, , .3
bedrooms, a family
room, are&lt;:. room, a TV
rooma nd a new swlmm 1ng pool for only
$39,500.00.
STOP PAYING RENT
let someone else
make your house pay·
ment for you. Large
brick
duplex
In ·
syracuse. Live lri part
and rent part. $28,000.00.
HANDYMAN'S
SPECIAl - 2 apart·
ment frame In Mid ·
dleport. Always has
renters. on a corner lot.
$10,900.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITE$ Ap·
prox. 25 acres, some lots
surveyed, water and
electric available, road
developed to property ;
1:17,500.00.
.
lOVELY ' 2 story
!Tome overlooking the
river. Has 3 bedrooms,
i"ec. room, lull base·
ment, and equipped kit·
chen. $35,1100.00. ·
WE ' HAVE READY
BUYI!R'S FOR YOUR
PROPERTY.
LIST
WITH IJ$.
.
REALTOR
'·.Henry E. ~loland, Jr.
992-6191 .
ASSOCIATES
Jun TrU!IIIIi94~::~~
Roger
;.;

0
'1

Answer

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~!

8: oo-Buck Rogers In the 25th
Century 3, 15; Mork &amp; M indy
6, 13; ; Waltons 8, 10; Milwaukee
Symphony Orchestra In Concert
20 ; Ci vi lisat ion 17 ; C am e ra
Th ree 33.
8:30-Benson 6,1 3; Sports : Close Up
33.
9 :00--Quincy ' 3, 1 ~; . Barn~y Miller
6.13; Barnaby Jones 10; Energy : .
8; Sneak Previews 20,33 ; College
Basketball 17 .
9: 30-Soap 6, 13; Camerll. Three 20;
• DAncing Disco 33.
10 :DO-Rockford Files 3, 15; 20-20 13;
Energy : 6; Knots Landing 8, 10;
News 20; Soundstage 33 .
10 :3Q-Over Easy 20.
11 :QO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, IS; Last of
the Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20 ; Fall
&amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin 33 ..
11 :30-Tonight 3, 15; Police Woman
6,13; ABC News 33; Movie "Mr .
Skeff ington " 10 ; Movie " No
Time for Comedy" 17.
12 : 4D-Tomorrow 3; News 1S; !.3DNews 17.
1: 3s-Movle " Thief of Damascus"
17 ; 1:45-Biack Sheep Squadron
8.
I :5&lt;&gt;-News 13; 3: to-Movie "Tokyo
Joe" 17 ; 5:oo-Untouchables 17.

FRIDAY,JANUARY 11,1980
5 :4s-Farm Report 13; 5 :5&lt;&gt;-PTL
Club 13; 6 :0D-700-Ciub 6,8; PTL
Club 15; Worlcl at Large 17.
6 :3o-Kidsworld 10; News 17 ; 6 :4s- ·
Morning Report 3; 6 :5D-Good
his four ol hearts .
Morning West Virginia 13; 6 :5sSouth won with dummy's
News 13 .
jack and counted tricks. He
7:0D-Today
3,15; Good Morning
could
come
to
six
in
h1gh
1-10
NORTH
America
6,
13;
Friday Morning 8;
cards and could make his sev • ·s s 5
Batman
10;
Three
Stooges-Lillie
• J 10 3
enth by leading successfully
Rascals 17; 7 : Is-A.M. We•ther .
+A7U
to his queen of clubs or king of
33.
+Bt3
spades.
7
:30-Family
Affair 10; Studio See
There was no hurry about
WEST
EAST
33; 7: 55-Chuck While Reports
choosing
which
suit
to
attack.
+A97
+QJIOZ
10.
He could take four diamond
.• AK912
&gt;
B :oo-capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Family
t86
• 10 53
tricks first so he did just that.
Affair 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
+K 7 5
• J 10 9 2
Maybe his opponents would
8
:30-Romper
Room 17.
.
make some helpful discards,
SOUTH
9
:QO-Bob
Braup
3;
Big
Valley
6;
but no one helped him. East
+K 4 3
•Porky Pig a; One Day AI A Time chucked the deuce of spades;
.Q8 .7
10. Phil Donahue 13, 15 ; Lucy ·
West the seven of spades and
t KQJ 9
Show 17.
five of clubs.
+AQ6
9:30-Bob Newhart 8; Love of Life
South studied a while and
10; Green Acres 11.
Vulnerable: Eas t-West
finally came to the right deciro :oo-card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Dealer East
sion . He didn't lead either suit.
Night 6 ; Beat the Clock 8. 10;
Instead he returned a heart.
Wesc
Nortb Easl
South
Morning Magazine 13;' Movie
West cashed four heart
Pass
I NT
"Bundle ot Joy" 17.
Pass
tricks while South ChljCked a
Pass Pass
10
:3
0- Hollywood Squares 3, 15; .
club and a spade .
$20,000
Pyramid 1 3; Andy .
Now West had lo lead a
Griffith
6
;
Whew! 8, 10.
Opening lead :., 4
black card and gave South his
10: 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
seventh trick. Simple, but like
11: oo-High RolleJS 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
most simple things tQtally
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
effective.
Eiec . Co. 20 .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS N)
11 : 30- W!Jeel of Fortune 3.15 ;
'By Oswald Jacoby
Family Feud .6, 13; Sesame St.
(For a copy of JACOBY
and Alan Sontag
20,33;
n : ss-News 17.
MODERN. send $1 to: " Win at
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News ·
Bridge,
"
care
of
!his
newspaWest would have made two
6,8,
10,
13;
Mindreaders
15;
Love,
hearts, but it was too danger- per, P. 0. Box 489, Radio ·City
American
Style
17
.
ous for him to act over South's Stat ion, New York . N. Y.
12 :3D-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search for
100 19.)
notrump so he passed and led
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field IS;
Movie "Sorry, Wrong Number" .
17; Elec. Co. 33 .
1 :QO-Days of Our Lives 3. 15; All My :
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the ·
Restless 8, 10.
ACROSS
40 Breakwater
1
:3D-As
The World Turns 8, 10;
1 U.S. missile 41 Visionary
2:0D-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to
5 stylish
4% Artist
Llve6,13 ; 2:2s-News 17.
9 Ladd's
Warhol
2:3D-Anolher World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8,10; Gigg lesnort Hotel 17 .
"This Gun
DOWN
3:QO-General
Hospllal 6, 13; I Love ·
for -"
1 Big Beverly
Lucy 17; Upstairs, Downsfalrs ·
10 Keep secret
Sills role
20.
13 Indigo plant
India's
3 :3Q-One Day I A Time 8; Joker' s
14 Chant
official
Wild 10; Flintstones 17; Oller
Ynt•rday's Anilwer
Easy 33.
15 Chemical
language
~ : QO-Misler Cartoon 3; Password
11
Not
cricket
28
Payoff
for
suffix
3 Christie
Pius15;· Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
12 Caressed
Tonuny·
t&amp; Initials
murder
Hillbillies 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
16 She: Fr.
'l'Ucker
for Werner
setting
Gomer Pyle USMC 10; Real
19 Rita 30 Bea Arthur's
McCoys 13; Speclreman 17.
Erhard
4 Elec. unit
TV role
4 :31&gt;-Lone Ranger 3; Peflicoat ·
Z3 Have you
17 Frequently : 5 Engrave
Junction 8; Brady Bunch 10;
31
Pronged
seen
1 Fox-seeking
poet .
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
32
Fit
to
. , this judge?
18 What IQOSt
Gilligan's Is. 17.
,
1 events
he tied
24
Get rid of
S:oo-Caroi Burnett 3; Sanlord' &amp;
. basehits are 7 Follower
37 Fraulein's
Son 9; Mister Rogers' Neigh 25 Fingers
of an ism
20 Manx
borhood
20,33; Mary Tyler
8 Tyke's
or Siamese
Moore 10; My Three Sons 11.
plaything
21 Uke
5 :3o-Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle 8; Elec . Co. 20; Mash 10; Happy :
Bill Walton
1
Days Again 13; I Dream of
2% Hasten
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33. ·
Z3 White sauce
6:CM&gt;-News 3,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20,33;
25 ScandiCarol Burnett 17.
navian bay
6:30:..NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Brunell 6; CBS News 8, 10;
%1 King : Lat.
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20; .
28 Fann
Wild Wild Wor.ld of Animals 33 .
structure
7 :oo-Cross-W1ts 3: Tic Tac Dough
29 Elec. unit
9; A Friend In Deed 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13; Love . ·
30 liLa
American Style JS; Sanford &amp;
Boheme"
Son 17; Dick Cavell 20 .
role
7 :30-Prlce Is Right 3; Newlywed
33 Jutting hill
Game 6; Family Feud 10; Dick
34 Likely
Cavell 33; Pop Goes The Country :
13,15; NBA Basektball 17 ;
35 Tenth of
MacNeil-Lehrer Report· 20 .
a sen
8 :oo=stllrley 3, 15; B.A. D. Cats 6, 13;
36 - the score
Incredible
Hulk
8, 10 ;
(pay old
Washington Week In Review
20,33.
debts)
8:30-Wall
Street Week 20,33; 9:QO.18 Chirped
Movle "Two.Minute Warning"
, 19 Dwell
3,15: Movie "Make Me An Offer" .
1
6, 13; Dukes of Hazzard 9, 10; DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's hll'IV to work It:
Free to Choose 20; Wise Parents AXYDLBAAXll
Know Thier, Children 33. '
9:45-Perspectlve on Greatness 17.
'
'
II L 0 N G F B L L ' 0 W
10:0Q-Dallas 8, 10; News 20; David
One letter simply stands for another. In thil sample A II
Susskind 33.
used for the three L's, .X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
10:30-0ver Easy 20; 10 :45-Love, ·
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
American Style 17.
.
hinll. Each day tbe code !etten are dlfterent.
11 :oo-News. 3,6,8, 10, 13,15; Lost of ··
· the Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20; ~
CRYPTOQUOTES
Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.
0
11 : 3Q-Tonighl 3,15; . Charlie's ..
Q
H
S K AU A
WM
H
QW ZM KWI •
Angels 6; Movie "Color Him
Dead" 8; ABC News :p; Movie
HNN
PASVAAZ
"Terror In the Jungle" 10; Movie ,
YUAALHMEZUR,
EY
"ffielist Hurrah" 13; Movie :
" Frankenstein
Must
Be .
WZSANNWFAZXA,
EY
Destroyed" 17.
HZSHf'EZWMSWX
SK'AWU 12 :4o-FBI 6 ; 1: 00- Midnlght
K-EVACA u
Special 3,15; Movie "Hand of
·
·
.
Power' '' 10; 1':35---News 17.
•
LEUHN ETSNEEQ.- ZEULHZ OETFNHM 1.4o-NBA Basektbell 17; 2:ooYalerdat~ eryptoqllllle: WISDOM IS OFTriMES NI:AJER . lrorslde 13r 2 :30-News 3.
WHEN .
8l'OOP THAN WHEN WE SOAR.-WUlliM 3:oo...:News · 13;
3 : 5s-Movle ;
WORDSWOR11'1
"Swinger's Paradise" 17.
;

Sim.ple but effective way

~
1·/0
..,
.. 1'/HY WOULD THE OTHER OH, i'M NOT o;;OiHG
TO 5ELL IT TO
SHoiK6 BUY TH' "CAZAR'Us
THEM!
I'M GOING
' PROCE65" FROM YOU? THEiR
WELLG ARE ~LREADY PUMP iNG TO 6LAC KMAiL
. Oi L! . ~---.. r"'__ _ , TH EM WITH IT !
;&gt;
.

•s

... MO RE CHAMPAGNE, &lt;:&gt;iRL5?!
MONEY'S NO OOJECT WHE N
YOU'RE WiTH JAC K PHENCE!

~-'6td

992 '572~.

BRADFORD, AUctioneer,
complete ServlcO!. F'hone
11-49·2487 or 9-19·:2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.
ElWOOD

BOWERS
Swee111rs,
toasters, Irons, ali ~ali
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Stale Highway
G"~~rage on Route 7, 98S·
~EPAIR

z

$5.

s

&amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scolchguard. 992·
6309or 7.CZ ·23&gt;11 .

..

and

PIANO TUNING . lane
Daniels. New Phone num ber, 742 ·2951. Service to
schOOls- an«! home since
1965. •

WINNIE
DON'T fEEL f!&gt;AC1,
17EAR . A LOT OF

PAI&lt;ENTS 170N'T...

REYNOlDS! ElECTRIC ,
651 B&lt;!&amp;Ch St. (lewlnd and
repalr'!lectrlc motors. 992·
2356. Will ~ake -vice
calla.

... AND THEY HAVEN'T BEEN i!LJT WHY 171ZE'e&gt;&amp; IN
RAGt&gt; ...AND ~AVE
AWAY AWM ~EIR OfF OOCH OUTLANDISH
5PRIN6 FOR lWENlY
HAIRSTYLES, IF
YEARS LIKE YOU

"YOl/PONT
HAVEro

HAVE .

PAIT Of' IT 15&gt; RE -

13ELLION AT TODAY~

SOCIETY... PART OF IT
I~ AN HONES T DESIRE
TO BE ONE5ELf'-... AN

INPIVIPIJAL /

•

ARNOLD AND DICk'S
Mechanic work . Open 9·5,
992·7768.
•

BORDER COLliE, male,
black, brown, white, rear
old. Fox terrier, female,
housebroken. 2 German
pollee and Norweglah
Elkhound.
Humane
SOCiety, 992-6260.

HOW o·O'IE

LIKE M'l
NEW DRESS,
LOWEEZV?
I MAQeiT

HUMANE
Society beagles, shepherds, husky,
English Seller type I&gt;UP ·
pies. 2 English Seller clogs,
shots, wormed. 992-~.

UH .. LETME
PUT IT

THIS WAY,

AS 'IE SEW,
SEW SHALL
'lE REAP

ME LISSY --

A~UIV . ..-~.....

M~S6LF

EIGHT Wk . old ptJIIS, A
male, 2 female. Part
dachshund, part Man ""
chester. B819f'lt l, 992·7617.
After 1, 992·3367.
$1 X MIXED breed pups,
lust weened. Mainly block
labrador. 742-2692.

I

1-:-:-++-t-

wz

•

RULE~S

Mobllt Homes • Sale
~
,
,

f.!AVE OTHER
USES: i(OU KNOW

.5EE? IF i(OU TAKE '(OUR
. PEN AND 60 ALONG THE

,

EDGE 01= THE RULER, ANO
THEN LIFT IT UP, 't'OU'LL
HAVE A NICE STRAIGHT...

,
•
•
:

f

SALES, PT. l"lEA.SANT, '
WV. 30H75-442~.

SQUALL

lO LI?AIJ~

IN STOCK for lmtnedlate :
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do·ll·yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc .

197:1 L "!'NN HAVEN lolx65 3
bedroom .·
.
.1910 Vlndale t:lltQ with ex ·
~hdo,2btdr.
·
1970~wMoon 12lc4ci3bdt.
1973 , Skyline 12M5$ 2
bedroom · ·
197'2 8!1nenlti12x52, 2beclr,
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME

LEG UME

BRIDGE

AUT•OMOBilE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
your ·
ceMtd?
Lost
operator'S license? Phone
992 -2143.

WAll PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

ABATE

What a person ove rl y mteres ted in money
mat ters oft en thmk s money IS-

.~ (j(J(Z.'{

IJ.E. WWD.A

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makes.
992 ·2284.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Autllorlzed Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
II Gil B. SR.

Jumbles CRAFT

Tbursday , Jan. 10

realtors .

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at 54 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.

CURED

;

Real Estate for Sale

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
3785.

I

Jumble Book No. 13, contalnlng110puulea, la av•llable for Sf 75poatplld
from Jumble,eJothll newip•per, Box 3•. Norwood, N.J. OT&amp;d. lncludeyour
neme, edd""· rip code 1nd m•h ch.cka p•y•ble lo NewspaJMrbooh.

'

1-.4-(Pd.)

10·19·1 mo.

LIMESTONE,
gravel,

Win-

1'\ree Estimate

ce .

TWO BEDROOM furnished
apt., S165 mo. plus utilities.
I child, no f&gt;llts . 949·2377, or
alter 5p .m. 949·2875.

tending were Mr. and Mrs. Hlll, Mrs.
Bertha Roblmon, Mhl. Denise

eReplacement
dows

Xl 1 11 l l )"

ALL TH AT MATTERS

•New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
•Remoldlngs
*Free Estimates

eStorm Windows

For Sale
sand,

GIVE A CUTE liveable PUP
a future . Adopt an orphan
from
your
Humane
SOciety . Shots, wormed .
Oonat·ions appreciated .
992·62/IJ.

gested by the above cartoon

Yesterday 's

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

el nst.alation

CALL 992 -7544

and

Western

boors . Children's
Adults $29.00.

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surpnse answer, as sug·

{Answers tomorrow)

4'30-llc

e Storm Doors

107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy,O.

ponies . Ruth Reeves . 614·
698 ·3290 . Barding and
Riding t:essons and Horse
products .

MAYSE ! AN YHOW ••
WHAT MADE' IT WOJ&lt;:sE
I? rHA T AT THE: TIME'
ALL THI~ HAPPE~E D.
THE SOY WA-!&gt; A

Prlntenswerhere : " [

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 99~·5612

..Aluminum Siding

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
ment.

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor -outdoor faci I ities.
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·-4-46·7795.

scheduled

&amp;

THE ~OFtED
COUL..D ~J:
" CONFUSED. "

PEAl' MVTE!

"' mfle off Rt, 7 bYiNISS '
on st. Rl. 124 toward ·
. Rutland.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlA
nON
VInyl &amp;

Hours 9·1 M., W., F .
Other times by appoint·

been changed to 7: 30 P.M.
January 30, 1980 at Rio
Grande College. All
regular meetings for 1980
ar~

Housing

Federal

Veterans Admin. loans .

Horses

PURPOSE.~

.•'

s.aae

After 5 P.M. 992·5547
12· 13 ·2 mo. pd .

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

glass frames and antique

harness .

ON

l-10

\MYLODEt

IT '~ A~YO ~E '&amp; -v HI~ MOTHER TOI.D ME He WA'7 5 0
15Uf'SS., EA~Y...
!\~ O K!'"'' UP OVER HI~ FATHER.'7
DEATH T HAT He MAif. HAVE: RUN
OFF INTO ·.THE' WOOD~!·

AII:E .'tell SAYi'-1~
CHRi~ 60T LO!l-T
ACCIDENTMLY- 01&lt;:

0

I

';...._R0&amp;1!r_....Hysel:--::-"""""ij

Free Estimates

furniture . Will buy ore
piece or household. Call
992-6370.

Pets for Sale

• ' • •t

[J

RACINE, D.
:i
t4t-27410r
m -7114
"
12-ll'f'd.
L...-_ _ _
__.. •,

Guaranteed work

WILl PAY TOP dollar for

POODlE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

second Wednesday of the
month at 7:00 p .m . in the
Rio Grande College Board
Room.

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call 992 -2852
or 992-7235

gold

HOOF HOLLOW, english
and Western . Saddles and

F ROM :
FINE ARTS
MUS EUNI DUSS EL.OORF,
W. GERMANY .
DATE :
FEB. 9 , 1972

V. C. YOUNG Ill

QualitY construction at
reasonable ra1es.

12·13-pd .

OFFICIAL NOTICE
The Rio Grande Com ·
munity College Board

Apple Grove News Notes
The home c:J Mr. and Mrs. Dallas

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Caii992 -6J7().

Care

paneling, floor tile, ceiling

Gold,

I ABOOT

STO LEN

•

niture . One piece or com -

wanted to Buy

downspouts~
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free estimates
Reasonablj! Prices
Call Howard
949·2162
11 -14-mo.

12·7·1 mo.

bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver . Call J . A . Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . S92·
6462 .
MARTIN'S APPRAISAL
Stop, 'think, are you abput
to lose money? Over 25
years experience In buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur -

All types roof work, new

I

DUI:IE

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY ,JANUARY \ o,1t80

Gutter work, tiiWII
spouts , somt CCifttreft
work,
waiU
tnd
driveways.
·
(FREE ESTIMATISI
Reduceol Winter Rlltk

or repair gutters and

four ord inary words

"

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Roofinfi, gutters, •nd
downspouts.
Free
Estimates . All work
guaranteed. 20 yean ex·
perlence. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Cla.rk
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins •
797·2745.

ches, class rings, wedding

1....-------------------------------l Adults
TWO only
BEDROOM
992·3324.trailer .

estate
In Section
No. 181 situated
Town 2 and
Range r
No. 1l of the Ohio Company's Purchase and bOun ded and described · as
follows, to-wit : Beginning
at George Young ' s
Southeast corner In said
section; thence East 21
rods to the road ; thence In
a ·westerly direction along
said rclad 15 rods and 10
teet ; thence west 20 rods;
mj!llce 15 rods and 10feet to
the place of beginning, con taining 2 acres.
·
Also , the following
de lk:r ibed real estate In
Salisbury Township, Meigs
CotJnly, Ohio. Beginning" at
a stone corner East 70.5-15
rodS olwhe Northwest· cor"'-' o1 . s. Wills 69'1• acre
kit near a willow trH abOut
:10 tnchri In diameter
tttence Soutlf 8.85 rods to a
s take- East of a double .

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOFINt

OLD COl NS, pocket wat-

Meeting for January has

11, 1980

Keep an eye peeled for opportunities that m1ght come !rom
remote sources or distant
places. Somelhmg With long+
term benefits Is extremely likely
in the months ahead
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 1i)
You are good at coming up with
e)(cellenl solutions today and
you prove you're right by loUowing Your own advice, thus selllnQ
an example lor others Tra~Jel ,
resources , romance. tuck, possible pitfalls and career for the
months ahead are all discussed
in your new Astro-Graph Leiter
which beQins with your birthday
Mall $1 lor each to Astro-Graph.
Box 489, Radio C1ty .8-iation. N Y
10019 Be sure to ~pacify birth
date.

~Merch

Write

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call 367.0292 .

W'Birthday

PISCES (Feb.

ice

brass

tile . Fred Miller, m -6338 .

~'four
J•nu~ry

FURNITURE ,

CARRIERS NEEDED in

ASTRO·GRAPH
B'ernice Bede Osol

largest

beds, Iron
beds, desks, etc ., complete

Center , the Rev . W. H.
Perrin, Mrs . Linda Mayer
and the Ewing Funeral
Home.

on

end . s 12 p-er tor . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
OLD

to Boy Scout Troop 249.

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

10"

one letter to each square . to form

THOUGHT
NEVER

Business Services

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x .
diameter

MAo.JOR ART T HEFT

WAY NOW -

Wanted to Buy

boxes,

Help Wanted

Factory chok e guns only .

friends and neighbors for
tOed, flowers and other acts
of kindnesses extended
during the illness and death
of my wife, Maxine Lind. A
spec ial thanks to Dr. J . J .
staff at the Holzer Medical

Situate In the County of
Mei9s, in the State of Ohio
and m the Township of Bed
ford , and bounded and

'·

Ra c ine

Fir e

Volunteer

1

follows :

v

SHOOT .

will be prepared by appointment. 992 ·2272 or see
wanda Eblin , Laurel Cliff
Rd ., Pomeroy .

SUnday

FIRST COUNT of the Com ·
plaint. which said real
estate is described
as

r

GUN

Quarterly , Federal and all
state income tax reports

4P.M .

the day before publication

the time of her death Ida

ac r e .
Also, the following real

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONlY . RAC INE
GUN CLUB .

INCOME TAX SERVICE .

1\Jeoday

M . Christie was seized of
the enti re Interest of the
real estate described in the

and _.0 links along

Agent .

767 ·3167or 557 · 3~11 .

WANT-AD

13th. 1979. The Complaint
recites that each of you is
possibly an heir -at-law and
next of kin of Ida M.
Christie, Deceased ; that at

.
the

6260 . Pets ava ilab le for
adopt ion and information
se rv i c e .
In ves tig a tive

Nothing roo

NOTICE

naming you
as
defendants in the above ·
named court by filing her
complaint on November

The

MEI GS
CO UNT 'f
HUMANE SOC IE TY . 992·

guns, pocket watches and
coin collect ions . Cal! 614·

action

ways .

Lost and Found
INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wj&gt; llace
Ru ~ li ,
Bradbury , 9927228)

vance .

CHRISTIE , DECEASED ·
DOUGlAS
YOU
,
DECEASED : RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE ·
0; GlADYS GOEGlEI~
DECEASED ; DElLA RIFFl.E ,
DECEASED ;
FLORENCE
HENRY ,
DECEASED ;
DAVID
KING, DECEASED ; BER ·
NARD
KING ,
DECEASED; HAROlD
KING , DECEASED ;
LENA
DOERFER,
DECEASED A. K.A. lANA
DORFER , DECEASED :
OTHO
YOUNG,
DECEASED ; LAURA
KNAPP,
DECEASED ;
HENRY DOERFER ,
DECEASED ;
OlEN
DOERFEl!, DECEASED ;
D'A YTON
YOUNG,
.DECEASED;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIElS ,
DECEASED; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED ;
FRED
Kl NG,
DECEASED ; SAMUEl J .
CHRISTIE, DECEASED ;
AND
THOMAS
F.
TAYlOR DECEASED .
Plaintiff has brought this

pany's Purt::hase ;

Notices

A

INVESTIGATION' S

'1

I

~ TIIAT SCRAMBLED WORD QAME
byHenri Amold ondBobLoe n

~ ~ ~~ ~

;

,,'

..

'.

\

•

-

�,,

j

TEHRAN (AP) - A delegation of
the students holding American
hostages at the US. Embassy
traveled to Qan today for a meeting
with Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ,
and there was speculation they
rpight dis:uss their demand that
U.S. Charge d'Affaires L. Bruce
)Aingen be turned over to t~em for
questioning.
Fcreign Minister Sadegh Ghotb&amp;adeh has asked Khomeini to rule on
the students ' demand to get their
~dsonLaingen and two US. aides
who have been held under virtual
house arrest at the Foreign Ministry
since Nov. 4, the day the emhassy
.and the estimated iiO hostages were
seized.
The students have said they will
accept Khomeini 's ruling , but Iran 's
revolutionary and Shiite Moslem

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Clarence Spurrier,
Pcmeroy ; Darlene Johnson, Mason;
Elisha Dickens, Pomeroy ; Ida
White, Rutland ; Michael Mitchell,
Rutland · Della Proffitt, Portland;
Middleport; Clarence
Betty
Dugan, Racine ; Lewis Harper,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Jonathan Dickens.

Reed,

I

l
')

leader has not yet announced :
decision and has declared he will n•.-t
receive visitors for 15 days beginning Saturday.
An American Indian activist.
visiting Tehran says he hoped to
visit the embassy hostages in tiE
next few days.
John Th&lt;IDas, 35, vice president of
the International Indian Treaty
Coun ci I, was inv ited to Tehran by
the militants who seized the embassy and ever since have been
demanding the return of the shah.
"This will probably make me the
most hated man in

America~"

Thomas told a news conference
Wednesday as he denoonced U.S.
policy at home and abroad and
blamed the American goverriment
for precipitating the taking of the
hostages.
If Thomas does see the
Americans, he will be the first outsider to do so since a group of
· clergymen paid them a Christmas
visit.
Meanwhile, gunfire r attled
through the streets of Tabriz as
revolutionary guardsmen fired on
Khomeini's opponents, Western
reporters returning from the northwest Iranian city reported. Reports of the casualties varied from 3 to
10 killed and from GO to lOOwounded.

Area deaths
Zanesville, formerly of Pomeroy,
died Wednesday aftel'lloon at the
Good Samaritan Medical Center.
Mr. Waters was born Feb. l4, !905
in Kamore, W.Va., a son of the late
Danny and Kathryn Zwilling
W~ters . He was a retired custodian
rJ. the Maysville High School and for merly had been a coal miner employed with Misco Mines.
Surviving are his wife, Frances
Stiles Waters, a son, James, Columbus; a daughter, Mrs. Clarence
(Joann) Huff, Mansfield ; a lrother,
Earl Waters, Fort Myers, Fla ., five
grandchildren and live greatgrandchildren.
FUneral services will be held at
the DeLong and Baker Funeral
Home in South Zanesville at 2 p.m.
Saturday. Friends may call at the
funeral home !rem 7 to 9this evening
and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday. The Rev. Mark Falkerson
will dficiate at services and burial
will be in Memorial Park Cemetery
in Zanesville.

CHARLES W. COHEN

Charles W. (Ike) Cohen, 85, Rt. I,
Middleport, died Wednesday at the
home of his grandson, Jim Sisson,
with whOm he resided.
Mr. Cohen was the son of the late
William Pearl and Dica Ellen
Frazer Cohen. He was also preceded
in death by his wife, U&gt;ttie B. Cohen
and a daughter, Alice Sisson.
Mr. Cohen was a retired employe
of the New YcrkCentral Ftailroad.
He is survived by three grandsons,
Frank Sisson, Pomeroy; John
Sisson, Mason, and Jim Sisson, Rt. I,
Middleport, and 10 great grandaughters.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Lester VanMeter of·
ficiating . Burial will he in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home at anytime.
PETF"H. WATERS
Peter H. (hte) Waters, 74, South

CURRENT
SAVING
RATES

PASSBOOK

Compounded Daily

5 Y4%

90 DAY CERTIFICATE.. .... -~i~-i~~~ ~-·:~~~--~-- . S1/2%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .... ,..':".;~:~~~~::~~~-~?....... &amp;%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~:~~~-~~.~::~~0-~

... .

.1114%

6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... ~~~i-~-"-~-~~--0•0•0:~ _7%%
.. ..

The street battie Wednesday was
one of a series of clashes between
Khomeini supporters and followers
of Ayatollah Mohammad Kazem
Shariat-Madari, the religious leader
of the 10 million Azerbaijanis in nor·thwest Iran and the coontry 's No. 2
ayatollah.
Tabriz hospitals reported siJ&lt; dead
and 4! wounded, the natiooal news
agency Pars said the toll was three
dead and 100 wounded, and two in·
dependent Tehran newspapers said

10 people were killed and 60 wounded .
There also were conflicting repor •
tsof the lighting.
An American TV crew that wat·ched from a nearby rooftop reported
about 20,000 anti-Khcrneini demonstrators marched toward Tabriz
University, where a similar number
of Khomeini supporters were
holding a rally. Revolutionary guardsmen arrested the first few mar·
chers, who appeared to he unarmed,

1979 news highlights
AUGUST 1979 HIGHLIGJITS
Aug. I - The Meigs Local Board
of Education passed a resolution to
set oown a pattern to he followed in
getting inunediate repairs lor the
high school.
Aug. 2 - A forage no-till demonstration was conducted by the Meigs
County Soil ,Conservation Service
and the Cooperative Extension Service at the Joe Bailey Farm located
west rJ Rutland on SR 124. Willie
Guinther was sworn in as a member'
ri Syracuse Vlllage Council by
Mayor Eber Pickens .
Aug. 3 - Bill Childs, president of
the Meigs Investment Co., which
operates the Meigs Inn, ann01D1Ced
that Ralph Werry, an employe for
seven years and assistant manager
for four years, was named new
manager of the Meigs Inn. John
Musser, who served as Inn manager
for the past eight years and is vice
president of the Meigs Investment
Co., joined the staff of the DowningChilds Insurance • Real Estate
Agency, Inc., Middleport.
Aug. 5 - Power was knocked out
on Lincoln Hill, P&lt;meroy, for about
an hour and ooe-haH when a secti&lt;Jl
of a large tree fell acroos power lines
during a heavy rain and windstorm.
Aug. 6 - A $432,000 grant lor the
exten'Sion of the sewage system in
the village of Pcmeroy was approved.
Aug. 7 - Cindy Pitzer , daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Clinton Pitzer and
Ralph Jordon, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Dorsey Jordan were chosen as the
1979 Meigs County Junior Fair king
and queen. Mr. and Mrs. James
Souls by won $5,000 in Ohio lottery.
Aug. ~ - The Pomeroy National
Bank agreed to an affiliation with
First Bane Group of Ohio, Inc., a
multi-bank holding company
headquartered in Columbus.
Aug . 10 - Eighty names were
drawn for possible grand and petit
jury duty .
Aug. 13- The Meigs County Fair
opened with services by the Meigs
County Ministerial Associatim. Forty ..six pints of blood were received at
the August visit of the bloodmobile
with 49 persons attending. Middleport Village Council approved tbe
HUD application of Arthur H. Wmer,
Marietta, for the construction of a
36-unit non-elderly apartment complex on Middleport \s Page st. at a
coot of more than one miltion
dollars .
Aug. 14 -two bids were received
from out of county firms on correctional action to be taken on structural defects detected at the nineyear-old Meigs High School. Hun·
dreds attended the·demolitim derby
at the Meigs County Fair.
Aug. 15 - David Gloeckner, Rt. 2,
Racine, exhibited the grand cham·
pion and reserve champion bull in
the judging of Hereford cattie at the
Meigs County Fair. Rodney Tripp,
14, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Tripp,
RD, Pomeroy, had the grand cham·
pion in the 4-H division of market
steers at the Meigs County Fair.
Amber Cumings, daughter of Rex
and Kathy Cumings, Syracuse, and
Jacob Shane Hall, son of Jack and

Mary Hall, Rutland, were named
Little Miss and Mister Meigs County
at the Meigs County Fait .
Aug . 16 - El Townson, owned by
Paul Sayre, formerly of Meigs County, was wimer rJ. the Sidney Spencer
Memcrial Trophy Blanket at the
Meigs County Fair.
·
•Aug. 18 - The 1979 Meigs County
Fair grand champon steer, owned
by Rodney Tripp, Pomeroy, was
sold for $2.30a pound to the Pomeroy
National Bank at the 4-H • FFA
Junior Fair Livestock sale at the
Meigs County Fair . The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., for the second
consecutive year, was the largest
single buyer. The grand champion
lamb, owned by Tim Dorst, Tuppers
Plains, was purchased by Rawlings·
Coats FUneral Herne, Middleport.
The reserve champion steer was
purchased by Ohio University Inn,
Athens, from its owner, Todd Tripp,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Mrs. F1ossie Allensworth of Mldlleport,and her horse,
Bachelor· Boy, were honored at the
Meigs County Fair.
Aug. 19 - Aviolent summer storm
dumped four inches of rain and
cauSed extensive property damage
to tri -county residents. Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counties were hardest hit
by the thunderstorm.
Aug. 20 - A contract to repair
structural defects at Meigs High
"School was awarded to the Greenlee
Construction Co., Marietta .
Pomeroy Village Council voted to
place a 1.1 percent income tax
before voters in the November
general election. ·
Aug. 21 - Keys to the new Middleport heavy rescue vehicle were
received by memliers of the Middleport Emergency Squad ri the lire
department.
Aug. 26 - Pomeroy Pollee
arrested Ronnie M. Pickens, 23,
Racine, who allegedly ftllt on a win·
dow breaking spree at scme 19
Pomeroy business houses.
Aug. 'EI - Nancy Roush, Tuppers
Plains, was grand chaJ!lllion and
took best of show honors in cake
decorating at the auo State Fair.
Aug. .29 - The proposed annel!Btion to the village of Racine was
approved with few exceptions by the
Meigs County Commissioners .
Rmald E. Zidian, a native rJ
Youngstown,_named administrator
of the new 100-bed Pomeroy Health
Care Center.
Ang . 30 - Helene Zidian named
director of social services of the new
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
. Aug. 31 - The football season got
underway in Meigs County.

MARION - Melanie K. Simmons
of Village Green Apartments,
Pomeroy, a General Telephone Co.
of Ohio employee, has completed a
course at the company's Robert !If.
Wopat Employee Development Center here.
The course covered the dfice
procedures associated with a ntw
computeriZed system for processing
customer service requests .
Sinunons is a service representative in the company's Athens
district.
Hundreds of General Telephone
employees attend the development..
center aMually. The curriculum
consists of more than I 00
management and technical courseS.

Food, goods
(Continued from page I)
Conditions in 1974 and 1979 were
not dissimilar. An m~bargo by members of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries,
followed by price increases, greatly
affected the price of energy products
in the United States in 1974. lAst
year, OPEC members doobled their
charges for crude oil, again sending
price shocks through the U.S.
economy. ·
The full impact was not passed on
to consumers in the mid -19709
because of then-President Richard
M. Nixon's price control system.
Consumer prices in 1974 rose 12.2
percent.
The Carter administration had
hoped to slow the rise in both
wholesale and consumer ll'ices with
a !!fries of measures that included
monetary and budget restraints and
voluntary wage and price
· guidelines.
The guidelines, however, do not
cover the coiq&gt;ments that have
pushed prices up the most : food, fuel
and housing costs .
Meantime, the housing market
began to show the effects of the
Federal Reserve's decision Oct. 6 to
fight inflation by tightening credit.
Sales of newly CIIIStructed singlefamily homes plunged 13.5 percent
in November to an annual rate of
604,000 units, according to a report
released Wednesday by the Commerce Department.
It was the sharpest one-month
drop since February 1970, when the
economy was in a recession, and
pushed sales to 25 percent below the
level of November 1978, the report
showed.
The report alSo indicated that
sales prices were falling.
The median price of new houses
was $63,800 in November, up slightly
from October but down from September's $66,100, the report said.

SERVICE ADDRESS GIVEN
P .F .c. Wendell A. Lucas, formerly of Gallipolis, is now stationed in
Germany and would Uke to hear
from friends. His address is
l!II.Q4.!1376, ACRC-ASG-K, Box 585,
APO New York 09054.
REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
There will be a revival at the
Church of God of Holiness, Lecta,
begiMing Monday, Jan. 14 and
lasting through the week. There will
be special singing and the speaker
will be the Rev. Glenn Seymour. Services begin at 7 p.ni. each evening.
All are welcome.
SPECIAL SESSION
A special meeting of the Bedford
Township Trustees has been set for
IOa.m. on Jan. l9atthe home ofthe
clerk to prepare the !dlbudget.

S11:pport our team
Dear Editor,
As members of the Meigs Band
and Athletic Boosters, we woold personally Uke to encourage --everyme
to ccme to the gymnasiwn Satunlay
night and root the boys' basketbaD
team to a win over our arch rivals Wahama.
Come on you ex-band and athletic .
members, parmts and business
people,let'ljsee ihat gym filled wall·
to-wall giving them our en·
couragemeilt and support. Come on
rut to the game Saturday night!
Ed and ~at Kitchen
SQUAD CAJJ,ED
The Syracuse ER Squad was
called Wednesday at 5:45pm. to the
Clarence Proffitt residence in Portland for Myrtle Proffitt. Mrs. Prd •
fitt, a medical patient, was lllken to
Veterans Memorial Hosptal.

Party reported

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
SlO 000 minimum. 1rlterest rate equa l to the rate of 182 day treasury
bill' rate. As determined at weekly auction .

Current rate 11 .858% effective January 10·16, 1980.
Substantial penalty required for early withdrawal.

~~~~fiiffiffifW A Home Bank
For

Meigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
''

1 Racine, OhiO '•

Fifty-&amp;x attended the Advocacy
Christmas party held at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church. This was a
potluck dinner held at six.
Several carols were sung before
eating. Prayer was offered by the
group :.md an individual player by
Fannie Lewis, one of the friends in
the program.
After the dinner hour, there was a
short program portraying the ·
·manger scene . Charles Richard ·
Grues'e r Was Joseph, Josephine
Mallory was Mary, David Might,
Hugh Roush and David Diddle were
shepherds and Maurice Smith, Ben· ·
ny Skinner and Conley Cole were
wise men. Linda Watsm, Maggie
Hoys, linda·Sommers were angels.
This scene was closed with group
singing of Silent Night. A beautiful
decorated tree in red lights w'as
provided by the Lutheran Church.
After the program gifts were
opened. After the opening of gifts all
the· special friends and advocates
reb,ln!ed to.their homes.
·

ON MEN'S - WOMEN'S - CHILDREN'S

WINTER CLOTHING
QUANTITIES ARE UMITED.AND
\

'

.....,

ALL SALES ARE

FI~AL

OPEN· FRIDAY TIL 8 PM
·AND SAnJRDAY FROM .· 9:30 TIL 5 PM

Elberfe'lds ·In Pom
'

'

(

•

managers, front row. Back row, left to right, Jonathan Rees, Terry McNickle, Dwayne Curfman, John Davis, Steve Fitch, Dale Teaford, Dave
Foreman, Mark Wolfe, Jack Duffy, Bryan Wolfe, Paul Cardone, and Kent
Wolfe.

•

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 189

FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Nation's unemployment .rate ris_es
,.

k"

Sextuplets born
. rLOBENCE, .. Italy . (APJ Rosanna Cavlgll gave birth to
sextupleta today in a Florence
!Qpltal and doctnrs said the four
boys and two girLs had a good
chance of surviving.
.The lnfallta were In good health
and weighed between 2.2 and U
J10111111s each at-birth, the hospital
811110U11ced.
Mrs. Cavlgll gave birth In the
3&amp;th week of pregnancy, doctors
said. It was not immediately
known If she had taken fertility
dnlgs.

. Pblnt ~losing
DETROIT (AP) -Ford Motor
Co. will cl1111e Its Los Angeles
IIB8elllbl.Y plant pennanently next
month because of slwnplng
demand for big cars, Ford said
Thursday.
It will be the second recent
ckislng of an assembly plant.
Chrysler Corp. produced Its last
car at Hamtramck, Mich., last
Friday.
Word of the closure from Ford
foDowed announcements by all
U.S. automakers putting layoffs
next week at more than 200,000
for the first time in the current
·
sales alwnp.

Contract okayed
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati Fede'ation of Teachers
President Tom Mooney says the
union has overwhelmingly approved the ter11111 ol a 2'&gt;'year
wage pact that will gtve them a
37~percent wage increase.
The teachers won a 10 percent
Increase imllledlately, In .addition to salary boosts of22.5 percent In 19111 and 7 percent In 111112.
The base salary for teachers
was S9,51G, but the average
salary was about $15,000 In the
56,QOO.pupil systeln.
Teachers had threatened a
walkout later this month.

Bond approved

Betty Wills read the Olrtstmas
story from a Braille Bible.
1

(USPS 145-960)

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INa • •M'dli loa&amp; tiM' tubj.t&lt;'l to reduclloally tilt Mlltorl
uc1 mutt br 1iplf'd '"'lh 1M lill!ft''ladd.rni.Nimu IUY
br wllllheld upoa !l'lblktlivu . Ho"n"r , • ~~l.
•mn .. m br cli•dontd. Letkn s!Muld bt UIMII 1a1t.,
!ldclrrssl~ lpllft,llol pon.ulilles

...~:£

DEFENDING CHAMPS - Southern, defending, champ of the
Southern Valley Athletic Conference, hosts North Galltli ~ evening in
an important encounter. Coach Carl Wolfe's Tornadoes lead the SVAC
with a~ record. Overall, Southern Is 6-1 and has the area's top offensive
team. Team members are, left to right, Earl Pickens, and Bob Lee,

e

r-------------------------

SAVE

"ro

TORNADO COACHES - Southern HHigh School continues to
produce winning cage teams behind the coaching efforts of Howie Caldwell, left, and Carl Wolfe, right. At the present time, Southern holds down
first place in the svAC with a ~ record. A win tonight against North
Gallla would give the Tornadoes a strong lead toward thetr third straight
conference title. Wolfe, a fanner Racine cage star, Is in his sixth year as
head basketball coach.

JURY IN SESSION
The January term of the Meigs
County Grand Jury was called into
session this morning to consider
several cases.

JANUARY

]lfi. 01

8 YEAR CERTIFICATE ... .. .. .. .. .. .. ... ....... .. .

Course completed 1

•
and others firing straight ahead, the
Americans said.
A French photographer· who said
he was In the crowd r:4 ShartatMadarl supporters re(lorted hearlna
machlnei!un fire coming from the
direction rJ the guardsmen. But a
spokesman for the guar&lt;h said
members ·of the anti-IC!umeini
Moslem People's Republican Party
started the fighting ·by firing on
unarmed passersby, Radio Tehran .
said the anU-Khomeini demon.
strators set fire to shops and
vehicles and smashed windows after
the guards broke up the crowd.

ELBERFELDS

'

Minimum Sl,OOO.OC

then fired tear gas into the crowd,
the Americans said
''The air was thick with tear gas,
but the wind blew it back into the
guards," said a camerannan.
When the crowd began shooting
anti-Khomeini slogans, the guards
opened fire with semi-automatic
weapons, scme firing into the air

. BATAVIA, Ohio (AP)- Oer·
mont County comml118ioners
bave voted to gtve Frisch's
~uranta Inc. S9 nnilllon in
tax-free Industrial revenue bonds
to construct a Quallty Inn 'In

UniO!I Townajllp. ·
'llhe company said tt had not
decided when to start con-

struction of the motel-restaurant
CGmpln: at Ohio 32 and Interstate
2'15.

flEW

YORK . (AP) - The
depoled shah ollrld would like to
leave pinama IUld Will make
ov~ to.the U.S. government
to h8lp him find • new home, ilc.corciing to ABC Neu.
The lhab baa ttecldid that'

beci;UR lU departure from the .
United States has not helped tQ.
pill the reluM rt the Ainilrlcan

·~ be)cl by militants at the

'U.S. ~lnT~,Itmak~
·no difference -.rhere he Hves, ABC ·

sild,

WASiflNGTON (AP) - The
nation's unemployment rate edged
up slightly in December to 5.9 percent, as a still-6trong economy continued to produce job opportunities
for American. workers, the govern. '"ent reported today.
Last month's rate, up from
NavembetT 5.8 · percent figure,
stayed within the range of 5. 7 percent to '&gt;4i-9 percent unemployment
that has prevailed since August 1978,
the lAbor Department said.
At the same time, the number of
persons with jobs l'OIIe by 300,000 in
Decemller to 97.9 m)lllon. Over the
course
some 2.1 mwron new
jobs were created, the report said.

-onm,

The strength of the job market has
surprised Carter administration of.
ficials, :who had expected a slowing
eeonomy to boost unemployment to
6.6 percent by the end of last year.
"I think the administration, Uke
everyone else, lias been paying a lot
of Qttentlon to what the economic
mooel builders have been saying
about the possibility of a recessiqn, "
said Jack Bregger, chief of the
lAbor Department's employment
analysts division. "Clearly, the
economy hasn't taken a nosedive, at
least as yet."
Bregger added that the "figures
for !JeCefuber are lifniiZiiigly strong,
particularly on the employment

side" but said that recent layoffs in
the automobile industry could be
"reflective of things in the future."
Analysts say that sluggish car
sales will have resulted in the temporary or permanent layoff of some
2ro,OOO autoworkers by next week .
The figure Includes employees on
strike at Volkswagen operations in
Pennsylvania.
Statistics In the December report
incorporate revisions through 1975
that reflect new seasonal adjustment data, Bregger pointed out.
The most noticable elements were
downward re_ylslons. oJ unemployroent rntes lor August and October from 6 percent to 5.9 percent.

The report said that ju.st over 6
million persons were unemployed in
December, about the same number
as had been jobless a year earlier.
The civilian workforce totaled just
under 104 million persons last month, compared with about 103.7
million a year earller.
Total employment last month was
97.9 million, compared with 97.6
million in December 1978.
Unemployment raies by various
population categories were little
changed in December from the
previous month. They Included:
- Adult men: u ~rcent. down from
4.3 percent IJINovei!lller. "~ • '"'·
-Adult women: 5.7 percent, up

CHEAO names new executive director
The Coll80rllwn for Health Education In Appalachia Ohio ( CHEAO)
held Its quarterly board meeting in
Gallipolis on Jan. 9 at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Highlighting the business meeting
was the appointment of Dr. Carl D.•
Chambers as the executive director

of CHEAO. The board heard a report
from Enos L. Singer, chainnan of
the Selecllon Committee, in which
he outlined the search process,
which began in september, and its
conclusion with the selecllon of Dr.
Chambers in December. The new
director will assume his dulles on

Cold front coming
to Buckeye State
A stonn center in northern Minnesota was expected to move across
the 11Qrthem Great Lakes today and
bring a strong cold front into Ohio by
evening.
The National Weather Service
says much colder air following the
front will cause tempernl!Jres to
drop sharply this evening, then continue to fall Into the teens by Satur·
daymomlng.
The showers will end when the.
cold ftont begins passing through,
bringing with It scattered snow
flurries In northern and eastern Ohio ·
tootght.
.
The rapidly falling temperatures
&lt;J. tonight will reverse themselves
ind begin a rapid rtse Saturday
night, with warmer readings ex·
peeled by Swtday morning and rain
in the forecast for Sunday.
An intense winter storm In the northern Plains brought strong
southerly winds of 30 to 45 mph
across Ohio during the night. The
wann moist atr produced showers
and thunderstorms, with oc·
caslonally heavy showers in western
Ohio dll!'lng the.early morning.
TeDIJII!1'8turea were very mild
. during the night and continued
.rising wthe mid 401 and lower 50s by
early morning. At Chesapeake, the
temperatures rose to 57 degrees by 5

a.m.

~;
. ROTARY PRDIDENT lfaDII: t:lelaad, Pomeroy realtar,
baa been elected new ptelldent rl
tbe Middleport-Pomeroy Rotaf&gt;:
Club. Tbe new president wiD
be!fD his duties oa July 1, t!ds
year.
.

future.
In other action by the Board, Dr.
Harold Brown, president of the
board, aJIPC!inted Dr. M. Sue Foster
CLEVELAND (AP) -

IIIIIDben pleted Tbanday

BIJlUJ!:Y PRICillS DECLINE
~.~(AP) - Toba~

pr:tcea c:GMIJMied to . allp for the
second daytn a row 'niunday as the
Ohio burley ~ ll!ded Its sixth

Tbe
Dlgbt

In tile Oblo Lottery's dally
oiUIIher pme aod Ill two weekly
pme~are:
.
Tbe Namber-7!11 ·

.....

Pyralilld ~ a; 730; 1541

Bcmenu- 88; 0'70; 71M3; lJ%'72;

weekrli8Jell.
Tbe !Gttery reporW t!ariiiDgs
Sales 'I'bunaa7 were m,81Q pounal _,I,INII 011 Illes TbW-sdily In '
dil for .-;'111.92, for a hundred • 111 UtJy Qll!llber pme.
· .
pound average rt $1U.7l. The
, 'l1le lottery's eomputer tabula:
average was down $1.71 from
U. allow IIIII for tbe clay Of
'l'llesday'a prices.
.
·
••1,111, tile ~~ aiDgle sales
Totll aalea for the m neb
day ltt.e !lie dally pide began.
6,088,012 pounda for M,OC»,7~~. 15, a
Halden al wiiiDIIc tictell are enaeasonaverageol,!47.11.
lltll!d to $Ui,887·.

were

Jan. 21.
Formerly the director of the Personal Development Institute of
Geneva, Fla., Dr. Chambers is · a
medical .sociologist with an extensive background in health planning,
education, program development,
service delivery, evaluation and
research. He holds a B.A. in
philosophy from Oklahoma state
University, an M.S. In social
psychology from Kansas State
University, and a Ph.D. In sociology
from the University of Colorado. His
experience ·includes service as a
research director in a community
mental health consortium; research
director for a narcotic addiction con·
trol commission; associate professor and director r:4 addiction
sciences at the University of Miami;
executive vice president of a
resource planning consortium in
Washington, Miami and New York
City; and as the director of the Personal Development Institute.
Dr. Chambers is the author of
numerous
books, readers,
monographs and articles. He also ·
has served on many federal advisory committees as well as acting
llf1 a sllfCial consultant to the Special
Actlm Office fer Drug Abuse
Prevention, the U.S. Senate Office of
Teclmological Assessment, the U.s.
.Federal Trade Conuntsston and the
U.S. Department of Justice.
Dr. Chambers and his wife,
Kathryn, and their ·1G-year-old ·
daughter, Christi, are horse enthusiasts and raise and show
hunters. Ka'thryn and Christl will
Join Dr. Chambers In the near

to serve' the unexpired tenn of
treasurer and George Puchovich to
the Executive Cmunittee. Dr.
Foster ts the superlptendent of the
Athens Mental Health Center and
Mr. Puchovich Ia the executive
director r:4 the Paint Valley Mental
~th lind _Mental Retardatlm
Board 'of Chillicothe.

.

·. Weather

The program for the evening was
a presentation -over the Medical
Microwave television system.
CHEAO board members observed
.the operation of the microwave
system from the Holzer site.
David Forenshell, executive director of the Ohio Educational T elevi·
sion Network, and Dr. Jack
Lukemeyer, vice chancellor for
health affairs of· the Ohio Board of
Regents, addressed the board from
the Ohio State University site. They
outlined the history of the medical
microwave system and discus8ed Its
potential for the region.
David Burke, CHEAO coordinator
for media and communications
demonstrated CHEAO usage of the
system through excerpts of past programs, and he utilized the Athens
Mental Health Center site.
A question and answer session was
held between the three sites following the presentations.
The next quarterly meeting will be
CHEAO's annual meeting which, will
be held on the second Wednesday in
April in Athens..

Four indictments
returned b~ jury
Four true bills r:4 indictment were
returned Thursday by the January
term of the Meigs County Grand
Jury.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Fred w. crow, n presented
lour cases for considerstion by the
grand jury and an indictment was
retui-ned in each.
Ray Edward Jarrell, Gallipj!lis,
already in custody, was Indicted for
receiving stolm property. The
charge stems from an incident last
November.

SALARY CORRECI'ED

In a listing of new salaries for personnel of the Meigs Local School

District published in the Wednesday
editlQII of The Dally Sentinel, the
Ltngermg ·sho:Rera this evening,
salary of the Metp Junior High
then lu\'nl!lg colder with a ~e of
School Principal wasllated at ~1,825
Bilow flUrrtes tc)ntgtit. Lows near 20. and should ' have """ Usted at
Mosl\y . silnny and cold Slitur)iay. . $?.3,621i. Supt. Da:eleason said
lltghlltn the upper 20s. The chance rf that the error was
·In typing al
precipitation. 441 percent tonight
tiMi ilsts for the ·release · of new
8l)d 10 pe~nt ~turday.
• salaries In the district.
·
·

w

from 5.6 percent.
- Teen-agers: 16 percent, up from
15.9 percent.
- Whites : 5.1 percent, uncharged.
- Blacks and other minorities:
11.3 percent, up from !0.9 percent.
--Minority teen-agers: 34.3 percent, up from 32.8 percent.
The report said white workers and ·
minorities shared employment
gains last year "proportionate to
their share r:4 the population."
.
It added that women a~unted for
most of the increase In the overall
workforce.
And it said
of job fomMti•Mi"'i
pace of the previous three years," It
was "still high by historical standards:"
'
Bregger said the only dark spot
was the fact that the n11111ber of
workers on involuntary part-time
schedules had Increased from 3.2
million in September to 3.5 million In
December. Thts statistic-is reported
every three months .
"That may suggest that some are
seeing their hours cut back," he
said. "That may be indicative of
some economic weakness."
Most economists agree that unemployment did not rise much this year
because the economy continued to '
be strong.
In recent weeks, conditions have ·
been changing. Sluggish auto and
home sates have resulted in a number of layoffs in those industries and
in closely related businesses, such
as steel.
Many economists had expected
the nation's economy to fall Into a
recession in 1979. But a decline In
output in the second quarter mainly the result of strikes and a
sharp increase in Middle East C111de
oil prices - was followed by
relatively strong growth in the third
(Continued on page 10)

The maximum . penalty for
receiving stolen property could be
two to five years in jail and a fine ~
$2,li00.
•
The three other indictments were
secret in nature and no lnformatiorf
will be available unW the persoril '
charged haye . been taken Into
custody. '
As required. by law, during theJr •
session, the grand jury members ·
visited the county jail to eUmtne the
facility and found It to be propewrl,y
maintained.
.

Rutblnd couple
seeking $110,000
A siJlt In tlie amount of $110,~ baa
been flled in Melp County~
Pleas Court by Elvin and Mary
Thompaon, Rutland, ag~ Edwin
K. Cleland, Rt. 1, ·Middleport.
The Sllit 1a for .allececl tnllll'ltll
81liJtalned aa the I'MUlt ~an aCcident
on Jl'eb. 4,19'18, on SR )J&amp; In Me~~M
County.
·
.

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