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12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1980

Meigs Local
(Continued from page I )
dex that was to be used in figuring the salaries of principals. He questioned
as to why that index was not used .
"Why the deviation? Are we trying to alienate the principals?" Snowden
asked.
Snowden questioned the five percent difference in salary between the
junior high principal and the senior high principal when the latter has more
students and more lime involved in a year.
Supt. Gleason said that John Mora, the junior high principal, has accepted
more duties and had put in endless hours serving on the negotiating team
during the teachers strike.
Snowden asked if Mora had been offered more money because of his role
on the negotiating team.
Supt. Gleason replied that Mora had been named to the team before he
(Gleason) came here and he could not answer that question.
Snowden also questioned the listing of the administrators for indexing and
was told that the administrators were put into those steps not necessarily
having had the experience listed but for the sake of equalization.
In conclusion, Snowden advised Supt. Gleason to make no reJll!lrks to him
in the future unless they were made in the presence of the board.
Dick Vaughan, a new board member, also expressed concern on the increases and salary changes made but the former board in December.
Vaughan stated that both he and Snowden should have been invited to sit in
on the meeting when the changes were made since "we are going to have to
live with it''.

Supt. Gleason said that both men had been invited to that earlier meeting.
He said he had talked to the wives of both men extending the invitation.
However, Snowden said that had the invitation been extended he was sure
his wile would have advised him of it.
CONTRACT TABLED
Also tabled last night was a contract with the legal firm of McDowall and
Whalen of Cuyahoga Falls. The firm has served the board in at least two of
the teacher strikes over the years.
Snowden said he was aware of the capability of the limn but asked if it was
the intention of the board to provide inunediate legal advice for the superintendent at a moment's notice. He suggested that local attorneys be used
more, such as the prosecuting attorney.
Supt. Gleason said there is no charge for the contract unless services of the
limn are used then the charge is $70 and hour. He said the limn might not be
needed for a long period of time but then again, might be needed at anytime.
He pointed out that Prosecuting Attorney Frederick W. Crow lll is being
con\ilcted frequently on matters pertaining to schools but added that Crow
might not possibly be as well versed in school law as the McDowall limn.
Snowden said that he believed that if the prosecutor had a problem with
school law then he should be the one to contact attorneys specializing in
school law.
The matter was tabled.
SPLIT VOTE
The board voted :1-2 to hire Peggy Fisher as a title I teacher in Middleport
and as junior high girls basketball coach. Aproblem developed in the hiring
because Supt. Gleason did not have the written recommendations of Meigs
County Supt. Robert E. Bowen.
However,he reported that three persons had been recommended for the
position. Gleason said he had interviewed two of them and recommended
Miss Fisher.
Board members Powell, Riggs and Carol Pierce voted in favor of the
hiring with Snowden and Vaughan casting the dissenting votes. The board
hired Beth Vaughan as a paraprofessional to work with Miss Fisher in
coaching the junior high girls.
The board voted 4-1 in favor of sending Band Director Randy Hunt to a
band clinic in Cincinnati in February but again voted 3-2 against sending
Alan Hunt to the clinic.
Supt. Gleason did not recommend sending either of the band men to the
clinic. There is a $145 registration fee plus mileage involved.
It was pointed out by Mrs.Dorothy Oliver that a professional leave fund
was to have been established following the teachers' strike. Pierce, Riggs
and Powell voted against sending Alan Hunt to the clinic.
The resignations of Elaine Boucher as high school cbeerleading advisor;
Bonnie Fisher as high school girls' track coach, and James Brewington, a
teacher retiring June 30, this year, were accepted. No~rtilied
resignations accepted were those of Donna Cobb and Joan Kaldor.
Professional leave meeting, approved earlier but postponed, was approved for Joy Bentley. Sharon Marlin and Mlldred Hites were added to the
substitute teacher list and non-certified substitutes hired include Joan
Kaldor, cook; Gary King, mechanic; James Ritchie, custodian, and Charles
Williamson, bus driver.
Mrs. Patricia Holter was reappointed to the Ubrary Board and John
Lehew was employed as assistant wrestling coach.
Charles Chancey was granted permission to hold the Ohio High School
I Athletic Assn. boys' Class A sectional basketballtourndy at the Meigs High
School March 25, '!I and 29.
It was agreed to seek bids for interior improvement work at Meigs High
School.
The board agreed transfers of employment to Helen Hood, Russ
Eshehnan, Robert Moore, and Donna Nease and David Chase was hired for
a bus route.
Supt. Gleason reported that a high school guidance proposal on incomplete
work and a do's and don't's booklet for teachers and substitute teachers will
be prepared for the next meeting. Mrs: Jane Wagner, treasurer, presented
financial reports.
QUESnONSRAmED
Near the close of the meeting, Snowden raised a number of questions pertaining to principals being a part of the interviewing for new teachers, a
proposed conununity communication committee, a committee on the sale of
unused buildings, buses, meetings between the board and principals, expulsion of students, an overhaul of the athletic department, progress in
reading, writing and arithmetic, programs for gilts and slow learners and •
other matters.
The board then moved into executive session to discuss possible litigation
on the high school architect's insurance proposal.

Khomeini
(Continued from page I )
stating Waldheim was now acceptable to the 79-year-()ld religious
leader of the Iranian revolutionary
regime.
Neither Waldheim nor Farhang
was inunediatdy available for confirmation of the report. In
Washington, a spokesman for the
U.S. State Department said: ''We
are unawaare of any such communication."
The U.N. Security Council sent
Waldheim to Tehran two weeks ago
to try to secure the release of the 50
or so Americans beld hostage by
militant students in the U.S. Embassy since Nov. 4. He cut short his
visit after Khomeini and the students refused to see him but his proposal
fora U.N. conunlssion to investigate
the allegations of the revolutionary
regime against Shah· Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi did find favor with
Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh.
Ghotbzadeh earlier this week said
creation of this conunisslon offered
the only prospect for release. of the
hostages. But he added they would
not be freed until the shah '!'WI retur·
ned to Iran for trial.
Meanwhile, "the Iranian govern·
ment opened a counter-offensive t,o
combat the U.S. govenunent's efforts to get its aWes to joi'.l in
economic reprisalsagainllt Iran.

HAZEL C. BOARD
Hazel Crites Board, 82, Sycamore
Street, Middleport, died this morning at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Board was born Dec. 5, 1897
atGr'andCamp,W. Va., the daughter
of the late Thorton Berry and Sarah
Keener Crites. In 1962 she was
p~th by her husband,
William S. Crites. She was also
preceded in death by two daughters,
two brothers and one sister.
Sbe ivas a member of Middleport
Nazarene Church, the Wcru, and
an active worker for senior citizens.
She is survived by two daughters,
Mrs. Robert (Marie) Caruthers and
Mrs. Ronald (Carolyn) Young, both
of Middleport; two brothers,
Raymond Crites, Adrian, W. Va.,
and Rush Crites, Weston, W. Va.;
one sister, Mrs. Jack (Virginia)
Cobb, Adrian; six grandchildren,
Linda Laudermilt, Janet Brown,
Robert Caruthers, Jr. , Robert
Michael Haley, Kathy Haley, and
Barbara Haley; foilr great grandchildren, Heidi and Steven
Caruthers, and Jeff and Greg
Laudermilt.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home with the Rev.
James Broome officiating. Burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Thursday !run 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
and Friday until lime of services.

WINNING~

CLEVELAND (AP) - The num·
ber picked Tuesday night in the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 040.
The lottery reported earnings of
$318,335.50 on sales Tuesday in the
dally number game. The lottery's
computer tabulations show that
sales for the day came to $374,867.50.
Holder of winning tickets are entitled to $56,532.

Priority areas of work were
determined to be the promotion
of: n&lt;&gt;-till grain and pasture
seedings, reforestation of
woodland, better wildlife habitat,
tax relief for riverbank landowners who are losing ground to
the Ohio River, a Meigs County
comprehensive soil survey,
pollution abatement, abandoned
mine reclamation, and public
conservation awareness.
To encourage n&lt;&gt;-lill planting
the district purchased a Moore
Uni-Drill which is available for
rent to Meigs County landowners.
To use the drill an agreement
must be signed with the District
and an initial fee of $30 paid,
which will cover planting the first
five acres, with an additional $6
per acre for all over five acres.
To reserve the seeder contact
the district office at 992~7 and
·then ihe agreement form may be
signed any lime prior to its use.
The Gallia - Meigs - Jackson
Production Credit Association
has a two-row no-till corn planter
available on a rental basis by
contacting Rick Altizer at 446To encourage reforestation the
ASCS Forestry Incentive
Program (FIP) will pay 75 percent of the cost of tree seediings
from the Division of Forestry and
the cost of planting them. Order
blanks are available in the ASCS
and SCS offices.
Cost for seedlings is $32 per
thousand delivered by UPS. They
may not be used for ornamental
or Christmas tree plantings.

Westvaco, (West Virginia Pulp · County. Through House Bill 5i3
county COIIIJIIiBsioners now have
and Paper Co.) will match an or- .
the power to set up an ordinance
der of at least 500 seedlings paid
to control urban pollution (lands
for by a landowner with the same
other than agricflltural) and the
number of pine trees. For
District can handle complaints on
detailed woodland planning conagricultural pollution.
.
tact Armand Jackson, service
The SoU Conservation Service
forester, at 360 E. State St.,
is sll1l taking applications for the
Athens ((&gt;93.3341 ).
Rural Abandoned Mine Program
To enhance wildlife habitat the
(RAMP) for the reclamation of
District will sell small quantities
nonfederal land that has been
of tree seedlings called "Wildlife
mined for coal and left
Packets" with orders to be
unreclaimed or inadequately
placed in February.
reclaimed and abandoned before
There are no planting restricAugust 3, 1977. The govenunent's
tions on these seedlings.
share of reclamation costs will
For ordering information call
range from 25 percent to 100 peror stop in at the District office on
cent, depending on acreage to be
the sernnd floor of the Farmers
reclaimed, the proposed use, and
Bank. For information on
whether benefits are mosUy ondeveloping a wildlife consite (private) or offsite (public).
servation plan on your land,
For more information call Boyd .
come into the District office
Riith, district conservationist at
where request forms are
992-66-f7.
available for the assistance of
The District will continue to
Michael Budzik, Private Lands
create public awareness of conWildlife Biologist, who is also
servation through educational
headquartered at 360 E. State St.
programs such as field days,
For other wildlife informatin
tours, school film programs,
and how to order "Backyard"
poster contest, hay show, conwildlife planting stock contact
servation and forestry camp
Andrew Lyles, Game Protector,
sponsorships, news articles,
at 45422 Pomeroy Pike, Minerradio programs, soil stewardship
sville Rt. I or 9115-3947.
Howard Frank, County Auditor
observance, fair dispaly and anwho attended the planning
nual report.
Attending the planning meeting
meeting, stated that tax relief for
riverbank landowners can be obwere Dave Fox, Howard Frank,
tained by submitting a survey
George Collins, Andy Lyles,
James Rush, Boyd Ruth, Reid
report verifying the amount of
and Leota Young, Roy Miller,
land lost to erosion. There can be
Rex Shenefield, Thomas Theiss
no acreage reduction on this land,
and Thereon Johnson.
but it can be reclassified as
wasteland instead of fannland
Shen~field chaired the meeting
and Ruth showed slides of SCS
thereby reducing the taxation
assisted conserVation practices
rate.
installed throughout the county
District supervisors Win make
an effort to start .procedures for
and some of the Distfict acgetting a badly needed comtivities.
prehensive soil survey of Mei~s

mlles during the month and parking
meter collections totaled $457.55.
Metets were covered from Dec. 10 to
Dec. 25 and Middleport merchants
will make a contribution to the
village for the free memters during
the holiday season.

Forty-nine arrests - 37 of them on
speeding charges - were made by
the Middleport Police Department
during December.
According to the report of Pollee
Chief J . J . Cremeans, 37 ol the
arrests were on speeding charges,
three each on assault and disorderly
manner charges; two on trespassing
charges and one each for failing to
stop at a stop sign; allowing a dog to
run loose; disturbing the peace, and
parking on the sidewalk.
,The police cruiser was driven 3,411

VISIT OUR
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City Limits

Hells Canyon fonns part of the
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could hold six Empire State
Buildings stacked one on top of the
other with room to spare.

DRIVE THRU
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0 .

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0.

BYKATIECROW
ty, and Municipal Employees, AFLFor a thli-d time, a salary request CIO, union labor coptract calls for,
for the county highways superinten- for all bargaining unit and ~ther
dent, assistant superintendent and employees of the County Highway
office manager was presented to Department this year.
Meigs County Commissioners dur- . · "The superintendent, assistant
ing their weekly meeting Tuesday superintendent, and office manager
night.
salaries are based on a regular two
Wesley Buehl, county engineer, week, 80 hour pay period, with no expresented commissioners with the tra compensation for over-time.
following letter:
"They · have served the county
''I have authorized an increase in , faithfully and merit this increase in
salary, as in the legal authority and salary. Any criticism of this expenresponsibility of the County diture at this lime is entirely unEngineer, of $24 per two week pay justified.
perios (80 Hours ) for the highway
"The state (under the Federal
superintendent,
assistant Transportation Act of 1978) provide
superintendent and office manager, extra money for county bridge in·
and a $.30 (30c) hourly increase for speclion. I could have hired outside
the Office Clerk.
consultants to do this work, but our
"This is in line with the $520 across · own office force completed this work
the board raise, approved by the
and saved the county the $17,275.00,
County Conunissioners for all court- which was funded lor this project.
house employees.
"Our office force also ad"This is also in line with the 30 ministered a safety narrow bridge
cents hourly raise, which the Meigs sign program, which benefited the
County Employees Local 1080, County by generating a $42,075.37
American Federation of State, Coun-

.(USPS 145-960)

VOL. XXVIII NO. 193

t.AA GNET

KccJ?sake guarant eed pe rfe ct diamo nd e ngage_ment nngs and 14 Karat gold wedding rings come
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21&lt; E . MAIN · POMEROY

at y

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1980

.ca r'l,a l"'tt
BROWN DUCK

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SAVE 15cy..
OFF REGULAR PRICE
Insulated coveralls - blanket Unecl and
quill lined jackets and coats - lined
dungarees - lined and unlined bib overa Us·
hoods, Not every sl&lt;a In every style but a
good selection for this sale.

ELBERFELD$ ,IN POMEROY
.
.

Bomb explosion
LONDON (AP) - A bomb explosion ripped through six rooms
of a popular London hotel this
morning, killing a man of "Arab
origin," injuring a West German
and sending terrified guests,
many in nightclothes, fleeing into
· the chilly streets, police said.
Nearly five hours tater, a
second bomb exploded, apparently in the rubble. It injured
no one, police said, but it created
a second· emrgency aml-~t:s
which had been reopened after
the first blast were closed again.

Woman indicted
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - An
elderly woman, whose work with
handicapped children prompted .
entrepreneur Glenn Turner to
finance ber facility, has been indicted for allegedly abusing the
chlldren in her care.
Two fonner employees of the
home were also named in the indictments handed down Wednesday by a Warren County
grand jury.
James Flannery, assistant
Warren County prosecutor, said
Mrs. Jones, who began operating
the home in 1971, was charged
with two counts of felonious
assault and one ol endangering
children. No arraignment date
has been set.
. LONDON (AP) - Gold prices
plummeted by as much as $34.50
an ounce today in a bout of profittaking. The dollar remained
fairly steady.
In London, where gold hit a
record $765 an ounce Wednesday,
the mid-morning price was down
to$730.50.
In Zurich, gold sold for $728.50,
down from $760 Wednesday.
The dip was seen as a natural
reaction to Wednesday's giant 10
percent price leap, with some investors gathering profits while
they could.

JACKSON, Ohio (AP)- A man
accused of aggravated murder in
the shooting death of an Oak Hill
pollee officer was being held in
Jackson County jail in lieu of
$100,000 bond today.
A preliminary hearing on the
charge against 31-year old Uoyd
Brafford of Oak Hill was scheduled
for Friday.
The charge against Brofford was
filed in connection with Tuesday
night's slaying of officer David
Alcox, 26, who was found in the front
seat of his cruiser with three gunshot
wounddt&gt;the face.
The 4~• year veteran had been
taking college courses at nearby Rio
Gr~nde College and was planning to
qwt the police force next year to
become a teacher, according to
Jacltson County Sheriff · Charles
Hunter.
Aspokesman at the sheriff's office
said Alcox stopped a car on a

speedlng,violationabout8p.rnAfter
radioing mwith license infonnation,
Alcox was instructed to detain the
driver, who was wanted for a parole
violation.
Dwight Filli,nger, who lives on a
xtreet parallel' to Ohio 93 where the
officer was slain, said he heard shots
while he was outside feeding his
dogs. After spotting a car speeding
away, Fillinger ran to ~e cruiser
and discovered AI cox lying outside ;
the right front door was open with
the radio microphone dangling out of
the car.
He radioed police who· responded
along with the Oak Hill unit of the
Southeastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Service. The officer,
however, was already dead.
Brafford was captured about llf.
hours later in Lawrence County,
where he attempted to run a threevehicle roadblock after a chase by
the state patrol, pollee said.

HARRY CLARK

Record fuel charges expected
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
eight electric utility companles
recovered $1.7 billion in fuel costs

Major fire hits
Salem Twp. home
Damages were heavy to the two
story frame Bennie Rose residence
Wednesday.
The Salem Township Fire Department and the Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment, along with a tanker from the
RuUand Fire Department, were
called to the scene at 11 a.m. Wednesday.
The amount of damage had not
been set this morning nor had it been
determined If there is insurance
coveJ:Bge.
At 4 p.m. Wednesday, fire broke
out for the second lime at the Route I
Salem Center residence with the
Salem Township Fire Department
again responsing to the call.
Cause of the fire is undetermined.
Investigation by the State Fire Marshal's office lwis been requested.

J. Willard (Bill) Potter Jr., fonner
managing editor of the Gallipolis
Tribune and editor of The Dally Sentinel and now public relations
representative f6r the Colwnbla GI!S
. System Service Corporation, wiU
retire Feb. I after more than 25
. years of Columbia service.
Potter joined Columbia in 1954 as a
· .public relations staffman at the
ht,adquarterli . of the company's
distribution compBnies ill Co\umbus.
In 1970, he wu transferred to the
Service Corpoi'aUon and.assigned to
ollaiuze and operate Colwnbia's first.(H!blic relationa office-at the com. pany's Marble Cliff cdmplex, 1600
: Dublin ~d. Columbus. The Ser' vice Corporation provides

from conswners during the first 10
months of 1979.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel William
A. Spratley said today he expects the
utilities' 1979 fuel cost recoveries to
exceed previous record levels set in
1978. At the same time, however,
Spratley said fuel costs for those
utilities are expected to reach
record high amounts.
"The fuel adjustment charge
represents 33 percent of customers'
total monthly electric bill, based on
1978 figures," said Spratley. The
counsel said the evidence points out
the need for legislation pending in
the General Assembly.
Substitute House Bill 21 , now
before a Senate committee, would
limit fuel charge fluctuations on consumer bills to semi-annual charges,
rather than monthly changes now
allowed under present law. The bill
would also eliminate the
"automatic" fuel adjustment cost
pass-through and place the costs into
each electric company's base rates.
Spratley said the most important
advantage of the bill is that it would
(Continued on page 10)

professional and teclmica1 ••rvices
to the other affiliated companles of
1/le Colwnbla Gas System.
.
In 1973, he was given additional
responsibility of overseeirig pubUc
relations ·fo Columbia's synthetic
gas plant at Green Springs, Ohio,
\ then 1111der construction. He bas con·
tinued bOth Marble Cliff and Green
Springs duties since.
Born 1n Jackson, Potter is 63. A
long-time · Southeastern . Ohio
news(laperman, he studied .jOUI'nallsm at Ohio State University
before becoming an editor for
newspapers of the . Jackson
Publishing Co. After Anny Air Force service as a pilot during .World
War II, he became managing editor
for the Daily Tribune at Gallipolis in
the late ·. 1940s, and was general

e ,

JOHN FISHER

DONALD BELL

Three promoted at OVEC's
Kyger Creek power plant

·I
L .,

PRlCE FIFTEEN CENTS

Hearing set
for Brofford

'

SINCE 1889

amount of $77,336.09 was submitted Deputy clerks of county court for
taking recognilllnce bonds are
to the board.
Dorotha McKe~ie, Edith Sisson,
BOOK PRESENTED
Also meeting with the commis- Marjorie ~uter, Elizabeth Hohstetsioners was Charles Blakeslee. ter and Donna Koehler.
The following were appointed to
Blakeslee presented the board with
the
TB board of trustees for one
a copy of the Meigs County History
year:
Howard Birchfield, Marie BirBook which was inscribed as
chfield,
Thelma Dill, Elizabeth
follows : "presented this 15th day of
'
Cutler,
B&amp;&amp;bara
Knight, Charles RifJanuary, 1980, to the board of comfle,
Mrs.
Dwight
Wallace, Mrs.
missioners, Meigs County, Richard
Bruce
May
and
Mrs.
Mildred Betz·
Jones, Henry Wells , and Chester
Wells in recognition of their support ing.
· Named to the public assistance exand county leadership by the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical Socie- amining committee were Richard E.
Jones, Robert Buck and Howard E.
ty, Inc. , to become a part of the perFrank.
manent archives in the county."
On a motion made by Jones the
Jack Crisp regulated that the
commissioners will meet each Tuesboard take over the operation of
day beginning at 2 p.m. The board
Forest Acres Park in RuUand. The
will continue to hold evening hours
board will make a decision on the
to
serve the public from 6:30 p.m.
matter within two weeks.
until
such lime as all business is conThe following appointments were
cluded
for thedsy.
made to the county court upon
Attending
were Jones, Henry
recommendation ol Judge Charles
Wells,
and
Chester
Wells, coll1InisR. Knight: Elizabeth Hobstetter,
sioners, and Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
clerk and Donna Boyd, deputy clerk.

I

reside at Rt. 2, Racine.
Fisher joined OVEC in 1955 as a
guard. In 1969 he transferred to the
stores department and in 1975 was
promoted to storeroom supervisor.
Fisher is a graduate of Racine
High School and has served two
years in the U.S. Army. For a
number of years Fisher was an active basketball official and is well
known to basketball fans in
southeastern Ohio: Fisher and his
wile, Sarah, reside at Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.
Clark's first assignment with
OVEC was as guard in 1954. In 1957
he trans!erred to the Stores Department as a Stores Attendant and has
clear if this included non-Americans
served in that capacity until his
By The Aasoclated Press
most recent promotion to Storeroom
Afgahanistan's pr&lt;&gt;-Soviet govern- working for U.S. organizations.·
The
Afghan
order
came
three
days
Supervisor.
ment today ordered the expulsion of
Clark is a graduate of Middleport
all American journalists, accusing after Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini's
regime
in
neighboring'
·
High
School and has served in the
them ol biased reporting and inU.S.
Army
twice, once from 1945-47
Iran
ordered
all
American
jourterference in Afghan internal afand
again
from
1950-53. Clark and
fairs, said a Western diplomat in nalists out of that country.
Diplomats in New Delhi estimated his wife, Frances, reside at
New Delhi, India.
"The U.S. correspondents were 50 to 60 Americans are in the Afghan Minersville.
detained by Afghan authorities at capital. Much of their news reports
the Kabul Intercontinental Hotel and and film have been handcarried to
other countries since om·
told this morning to leave on the first
munications have not worked noravailable flight," said the source,
mally since the Soviet intervention
who declined to be identified.
in Afghanistan on Chrixtmas Day.
The U.S. Embassy in the Indian
On Wednesday, Britain's Foreign
capital said the American Embassy
Secretary
predicted that the Soviet
in Kabul was informed of the exUnion
will
not advance beyond
plosion order. Initial reports said
The Southern Local Board of
Afghanistan
for
the lime being but
only American citizens were to be
Education
Tuesday night discussed
warned
the
Western
allies
to
give
top
deported, the source said. It was not
the
Title
IX
program (equal oppriority to bolstering J&gt;akistan's
portunity
sports
program) with
(Continued on page 10)
Nora King, a Columbus attorney.
King represented a district parent'
regarding Title IX funding. She ·
presented the parent's viewpoint to
the board. Apparently, the parent
felt the program was handled
wrong .
No action was laken, however, AtTwo youtha held in the Meigs
manager and editor of the DaUy Sen- County Jail's JuveQile Section for
ty. King will meet with the board
tinel at Pomeroy before joining . the Ohio Youth Commission on
again next month.
Columbia. While in Gallipolis, he Parole Violation, were re-c0111mited
In other business, the board emwas nominated for a Pulitzer Prize Monday by Meigs County Juvenlle
Ployed Mildred Hites as a substitute
in Journalism in 1950.
teacher for the 1979-80 Sc:hool year;
Judgl} Robert E. Buck. Additional
He Is past president of the Central chapges of escape from custody and
Mae Durst as substitute cook for
Ohio Chapter, Society of destruction to the jail were flled
1980; Kim Grueser as assistant girls'
Professional Journalists - Sigma following an escape incident last
basketball coach' and approved an
Delta Chi, and a member of the Saturday.
extended service raise for Connie
Press Club of Ohio, Coliunbus MaenA 17-yeaNid Rutland youth was Enslen, girls' head basketball
norchor, Worthington- Pr~byterian taken to Indi'an River School for coach.
Church and the Masonic Lodge. At Boys near Massllon, Tuesday by
All the coaches were present and
Ohio State, he was a member of Pi Juvenlle Officer Carl R. HyseU and discussed the cost of operating the
Kappa Alpha Fraternity. ·
Deputy Don Eynon shortly after a programs this year and what It
Potter and his ~wile, the fonner second escape attempt by the youths woUld cost next year.
~ Pete~ of Jackson, live at 391
Attending were Shirley J~,
was foiled by officers.
Park Boulevard, Worthington. They
A 11&gt;-year-old Rt. 2 Pomeroy youth Sue Grueser, Don Smith, Charles
ha\•e two daughters, M1"s. Wi)llam will be taken to Riverview School for Pyles, and DeMy Evans, board
E. (Betsey.) Chapll\80 of Plantation, Boys m,(;olumllus tOday. Both in- members, Bobby Ord, · superinFlorida, . and Mrs. Paul J. (Mary ) stitutions are maximum security for tendent, and Nancy Carnahan,
Gornulinski of Miami. ·
youths.
clerk.

A number of changes in the stores
department of Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek Station
were announced today by Louis R.
Ford, Jr., plant manager.
Effective Jan. I, Donald R. Bell
was promoted to stores supervisor.
Replacing Bell as purchasing assistant is John Fisher, Jr. Harry K.
Clark has assumed the duties t:i

Storeroom Supervisor.
Bell began his OVEC employment
as guard in 1955. In 1956 he transferred to the stores department as a
stores attendant. He was promoted
to siOf!lmaR supervisor in 1970 and to
purchasing assistant in 1975.
Bell is a graduate of Racine High
School and served two years in the
U.S. Anriy. Bell and his wife, Lois,

American journalists
leaving Afghanistan

Girls sports
major topic

_ Bill Pouer, former .area news~an, to
reti~e from Columbia Gas post Feb. 1

JANUARY SALE!

'

other kind of work to be paid from a
different saU.ry code.
Jones S!Jid he regretted that Buehl
bad taken this action because it will
continue to drive a wedge between
the board and the engineer's office.
The board gave Baebl DoUce that
DO more money wt11 be appropriated
Into the salary account for office
penoDDel. They fnrther stated that
U tbe prosecutor determined that
tbey were acting lllegaDy tben tbey
would do :whatever has to be done.
Buehl also said he has requested
an opinion from the prosecuting attorney concerning the matter of payment of one-third of the office expenses by the board and that he
would present this request when the
opinion is rendered.
Buehl further commented that the
state mileage man had inspected the
county roads and documented a total
of 247.06 miles of county roads in
Meigs County.
The annual report of Meigs County
Court showing receipts in the

additional revenue, which accrued
to the County Hig"hway Department
and developed estimate assessment
damage report and application, due
to flood damage, requesting over
$500,000 Disaster Aid fw1&lt;ls.
"Unfortunately, no benefit from
this effort ever materialized.·
" In addition to regular routine
duties, the office force is constantly
making every effort to obtain
federal progranis from 1he off
system and on system federal funding for improving highways and
bridges in the county."
FUND QUESTIONED
After Buehl presented the letter
Richard Jones, commission pesident, asked Buehl where the extra
money is going to come·from for the
raises.
Buehl replied that he would request a transfer of funds into the
salary account later. He also said
that If the board would not approve
the transfer he would give the men
lime off, or would ldve them some

•

e

Gold declines .
BERNADETTE

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Wide Range of Fabrics

Buehl authorizes employe salary increase

49 persons arrested by Middlf!port police

ELBERFELDS

CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

115 w. 2nd
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-2284

inn.

MARY B. KING
Mary Burson King, 68, Shade, died
Tuesday at Holzer Medical Center
following an extended illness.
Mrs. King was born in Shade, the
daughter of the late Arthur C. and
Ubbie Martin Burson. She was also
preceded in death by her husband,
Holley an infant son, Claire, two
sisters, Caryl Burson, Audena
O'Brien, .two brothers, Ted and
Roscoe Burson.
She was a member of Shade
United Methodist Church, Eastern
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Star, Minear Chapter, 274, Guysville
Admitted-Hugh Rousey, Midand l.OOi Grange, 2430, Shade and
.dleport; Georgia Smith, Reedsville;
Modern Woodmen of America.
Sbe is survived by four sons, Charles Estep, Pomeroy; James
Pickens, Racine; Earl Clark, ReedRobert at home, Dan of Pratts Fork,
sville; Albert Frank, Pomeroy ; Van
Uoyd of Pomeroy and Dewey &lt;i
Shade; three sisters, Catharine , . Evans, Racine.
Discharged-Charles Harris, Ida
Slusher, Shade; Inez Sunkel, Akrop
White,
Bonnie Fisher, Dorothy
and Dorothy Mathews, Tiffin; two
Greathouse,
Keith Musser, Harold
brothers, Albert Burson,
Uttle,
Carolyn
Lawrence, Sharlene
Youngstown, and Paul Burson,
Wears,
Ernest
Powell,
Susie Holley,
Athens; 10 grandchildren, and one
Clarence Dugan.
great grandson.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Hughes
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
F'wleral Home, Athens, with the
DISCHARGES - Donna Glenn,
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating. Burial Pl. Pleasant; George Love, Pt. Pleawill be in Burson Cemetery, Shade.
sant; Larry Gillenwater, Crown CiEastern Star services will be held ty; Rhonda Click, Leon; Edith Mar·
Thursday at 7 p.m. by Minear Chap- cum, Pt. Pleasant; William Raike,
ter 274. Friends may call at the
Crown City; Gladys Racer, Scot
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Depot; Esther King, Letart, W.Va.;
Thursday.
Brian Morgan, Ravenswood; Eber
Roush, Mason; Roy Hayes, Robertsburg; Roy Hoffman, West ColumGUYS. KENNEDY
bua; and Basil Cruise, Thurman.
Guy S. Kennedy, 79, Rt. I, MidBIRTH ~ A daughtefto Mr. and
dleport,. died at the Voiers ConMrs. James Blain, Gallipolis.
valescent Home, South Shore, Ky.,
early Tuesday morning following a
long illness.
Mr. Kennedy was born Sept. 22, County court receipts
1900 in Red House, W.Va., the son of
the late Francis M. and Quindora
Receipts in Meigs County Court
Older Kennedy. He was married for 1979 totaled $72,336.09 Elizabeth,
March 24, 1923 to the former Neva Hobstetter, clerk, reported today.
Nelson who preceded him in death
Receipts were disbursed as
November 1979. He was also follows: Fines to state, $26,237.58;
preceded in death by one son and one fees to sheriff, $2,210.40; fines 'and
sister.
costs to county, general fund,
He is survived by two sons, Wayne $23,883.54; law library fund,
Kennedy, Rt. I, Middleport, · and $10,574.41; auto, license and gas
Carl Kennedy, Rutland; two fund, $9,706,20; small claim collecdaughters, Mrs. Robert (Beulah)
tion, $4,723.96.
Smith, Cincinnati, and Mrs. Uoyd
According to Mrs. Hobstetter 1,425
(Beatrice) Dugan, Rutland; nine criminal cases were filed, 76 civil
grandchildren and one great grand- cases and 189 smaU claim cases.
daughter; two sisters, Mrs. Robert
(Ruby) Pardi, Cincinnati, and Mrs.
Frank (Sadie) Frazier, Sissonville,
W.Va., and several nieces, nephews
COUSIN DIE'!
and cousins.
Leona
Kohl,
Middleport, received
Funeral services will be held
word
of
the
death
of a cousin, Mrs.
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Walker
Wilhemina
Kohl
Marlin,
Pittsburgh.
Funeral Home in Rutland with the
Funeral services and burial were in
Rev. Uoyd Grinun Jr., officiating.
Pittsburgh.
Burial will be in Standish Cemetery.
Friends may , call at the funeral
home after 7 p.m. this evening and
until lime of services on Thursday.

WINTER AWAY

FABRIC
SHOP

Meigs County's conservation
needs were discussed at a recent
work planning meeting of the
Meigs Soil and Water Con·
servatior. District held at Meigs

3391.

SEW THE

1/3

Outline conservation needs·.

Relationship gap widened

'

Youths transferred
to begin sentences

�2-'-The Daily Sentinel,.MidQieport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 17, 1900

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Sentinel
Editorial

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. 0Tf-t£R WOM(N ARE
CoNTENT WITt~ DIAMOND§,
BVT YOU ~AVE To HAVE
A §IMPLE GOLD BAND!
WI-I AT Do Yo'J 11-llN K I AM,
A MILLIONAIRE? .

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Serious, successful forum
bassador George Bush emerged as a
distinguished, capable and professional manager. He is both likeable
and believable, but doesn't inspire
intense emotional reactions among .
most voters.
Former Texas Gov. John Co1U18lly
continues to be the most eloquent
orator in the field, but the forum's
time limitations prevented him from
taking full advantage of his renowned rhetorical ability.
Rep. Philip Crane of lliinois was
the only member of the panel who
never once displayed any sense of
humor. His rapid-fire, mechanical
delivery of unshakeable views on
every imaginsble issue suggests
thllt, if elected, he would be the country's first bionic president.
Sen. Robert. Dole of Kansas pr~
'vided a dazzling display of the
rapier-sharp, sardonic and
sometimes self-deprecating wit that
is legendary among political insiders. His causticone-liners are a
delight to those who appreciate that
specialized art form, but that asset
isn't sufficient to propel a man into
the White House.
Former California Gov. Ronald
IWlf!an, who steadfastly has refused
to participate in joint appearances
with other contenders, clearly suffered by his absence. Connally was
both deft and devastating in
capitalizing on Reagan's absence.
Describing the Des Moines forum
as "unique in the annals of politics "
Crane predicted: "I doubt if we'~e
going to see this happen again in the
campaign."
Let's hope he's wrong. The country would be well served by similar
presentations in other states during ·
. the coming months of the presidential campaign:

DEVOTED TOniE
INTERFSrOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFLit11

CllyEdlklr
P'llbliabcd daUy except Sabu'day by Tbc Ohle
ValleJ PubU.hJDC CGmpall1· MaiUmedill law:
111 coun St, Pomeroy, ObJo UJtt. suime.l
Offlc!e PbODt 1ft. ZUI. EdtiOI"laa Pbeae
IIWIS7.

Setoacl clan poitace paid at Pomeroy Ohio
NaUooaladverdllu repreaeataUve Laud.;.

Auociatn, 3101 Euclid Ave. One~ Ohio

'

SUblertpUOD ntet: DeUvered by earrter
where a\18111ble M cea.. per week. By Motor
Roa&amp;ewhere canter aervtce DOt available, One

moath, A.to.

1'br DaD)' SeaUDel, by m.D Ia Oldo aOO We~t
ODe yur 13S.M; SIJ: moadll $17.51;

YlrgiDII,

tllrH moatbl $JUl. EIHwbere PUll;

&amp;o tbt ue lor pu.blkiiUoa of all oew1 dlt~kbel
rnd.IWd to the Dr'WI,-per aDd at.o the Jon)
Df!WI pubUabed herelD.

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Berry's World

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moolhiiiUO; Uu-eem-111 .•.
1'be Anociatcd Prcu II txd111lvely eaUiled

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"I say we try nuclear warfare. And if that
doesn't work, THEN go all the way and boyco•
the Olympic Games in Moscow.'·

Donald F. Graff

l

By Don Graff
Freedom in the balance
What are you going to believe?
According to one school of predicHow and where does Afghanistan
tion, cancellation of a scheduled 17
weigh
in a balance that has Cammillion ton U.S. grain sale to the
bodia,
Uganda and Nigeria on one
Soviets in retaliation for the invasion&gt;·
Pakistan,
Iran and China on
side,
of Afghanistan is likely to prove
the
other?
more painful for the erstwhile
We'll have to walt out the year for
sellers than the would-be buyers, an
the
answer, sin~;&lt; prediction doesn't
excellent example of the perils of usfigure
in the annual report by
ing food as a weapon.
Freedom
House on the state of
It represents $'1 billion doDars that
will not be showing up as assets in freedom around the world.
But the current focus of internathe badly imbalanced U.S. balance
tional
tension aside for the moment ,
of payments in world trade and not
the
report,
surveying developinen~ ·
going into the bank accounts of
in
161
nations
for the year up to
American growers.
November
1979
and released this
. But according to another view the month, sounds an encouraging note. ·
unpact actually may be minimal to
Freedom is considered to have adnil down -on the U.S. farm. Much of
vanced,
in 21 countries while declinthe grain may be shifted to other
ing
in
nine. Notable bright spots In~omestic purpo~s, 1specifically
livestock consumption, which was to clude Nigeria and Ecuador, singled ·
have been its destination in the out as having made the most
Soviet Union. The increased supply dramatic shifts to free government,
should reduce production costs ef- and the removal of "four of the
fecting an internal transfer
in· worst governments of our time" in
come from grain growers· to meat Cambodia, Uganda, Central Africa
producers who, some agricultural and Equatorial Guinea.
Pakistan's deepening repression
economists are pointing out, 'lire to a
rates
as the most striking decline in
great extent the same individuals.
freedom.
Also on the negative side is
Also, promised government purIran,
considered
to have gained earchases to support market prices and
ly
in
the
year
following
the shah's
fuel a massive gasohol production
only
to
relapse
into anardeparture,
program should largely cushion
chic
terror.
Chins
experimented
what shock may be felt. And the latter effort could have a modest im- with greater freedom of expression,
mediate foreign payments effect but then backtracked to remain
plus, by speeding alternative fuel finnly in the ''notfree" category.
Freedom House, a New York·
development, provide a boost
based
non-partisan organization, antoward the long-term goal of energy ·
nually
rates the )Vorld's nations acindependence.
cording
to criteria emphasizing
On the other hand, while the shift
•
political
rights,
civil liberties and
of grain to livestock may result in
Of
expression.
freedom
more plentiful meat supplies and a
By these standards, it now finds
consequent slight break in food
some
1.6 billion people Uving in 51
prices, the balance of payments effree
countries.
This is an estimated
fect of the lost sales is likely to be a
further cheapening of the doDar on 37 percent of the world's population
world markets. Which translates in- and the most yet recordejl in eight
to higher prices at home for the years of the survey. The population
foreign-made autos, television sets ol 55 partly free countries totals 921
and other consumer items we con- million, while there are 1.8 billion
tinue to Import in greater and people in 55 countries considered not
free.
.
greater quantities.
As
for
Afghanistan. unless the
In short, the pros, cons and
Soviet
contagion
spreads it would
tradeoUs of the grain embargo are .
appear
unlikely
to change the
not gomg to result in any significant
Even
before
the takeover
balance.
break for the U.S. consumer.
repressive
regime rated
its
puppet,
Now there's somethint; ·you can
asnotfree.
always believe.

.· Washington today
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jerry
Brown has a problem: He wants to
debate Jinuny Carter and the
president won't do it.
And that, says the governor of
California, is making his campaign
for the White House far more difficult.
Now it would seem that Carter
should make it as difficult as
possible for Brown and Sen. Edward
M. Kermedy to challenge him for the
Democratic
presidential
nomination. They'd do the same for
him.
Brown concedes as much, !wt says
Carter is cynically exploiting the
plight of the hostages in Tehran to
avoid debating his rivals.
Ever since Ca~r pulled out of
what was to have been a three-man
debate in Des Moines on Jan. 7,
Brown has been demanding in virtually every campaign speech that
the president come and face them.
Kermedy J;Dentions the debate that
didn't happen, too, but he hasn't
been as vehement as Brown. "The
people. or Iowa should have an opporturuty to hear the president of the
United States," he said the other
night in Waterloo, Iowa.
Brown was _there, too, insisting
that one of the real questions o( the
campaign is how to get Carter out of
the White House and into a debate.
The president says foreign crises
- the American hostages in Iran
and the Soviet troops in Afghanistan
- preclude partisan political appearances and demand that he be in
Washington.

That covers his refusal to go to
Des Moines, and also his refusal to
meet Kermedy and Brown in
Washington.
He has been telephoning
Democrats in Iowa and other key
campaign states, but Vice President
Waiter F. Mondale says that can be
done without distracting him from
world trouble spots.
"What's he going to do instead of
coming to Iowa?" Brown asked at
one point. "Is he going to do
something that will get the hostages
home? No, he's probably going to be
calling the precinct captains."
And that was before the president
agreed to a solo, nationally televised
appearance on Sunday, the eve of
the Iowa Democratic precinct
caucuses that will be the first real
competition of the campaign.
Carter will be the second president
to appear on NBC's "Meet the ,.
Press." Gerald R. Ford was the first, on Nov. 9, 1975.
Carter was the first president to
agree that he would debate rival
candidates in a campaign for
renomination. He did so two days after the hostages were taken in
Tehran, and before his standing in
the public opinion polls vaulted past
Kennedy's.
Then he said he couldn't make it.
. J:le sai~ that if he were to partiCipate m a well-publicized event
like a debate, Iranian militants
might be tempted to create an incident coinciding with his appearance.

SOUTHERN RESERVE BASKETBAlL SQUAD
- Left to right, Alan Pape, Richard Wolfe, Scott

Jimmy's Whitehouse

WASHINGTON (AP)- Here's an
item from the "little white lie"
department, White House branch.
President Carter's daily schedule
this week has faithfully reported a
morning appointment with Frank
Moore, his assistant for
and other natural !'e50urces + the
congressional
liaison.
real thing rather than substitutes.
There's
only
one problem with
Many collectors of natural resourthat:
Moore
hasn't
been around the
ces do not even consider themselves
White
House
all
week.
investors so much as escapees.
Moore, a fellow Georgian charged
They do not view holdings as
with
mending Carter's fences with
soaring in value but instead view
money as losing value. The value of . Congress, has been in Oklahoma
campaigning for his boss. QICiahoma
natural resources, they say, aren't
Democrats will be holding Iowa·like
rising in value as swiftly as currency
caucuses
in March.
is declining. The mirage arises, they
Because
Carter aides are barred
say, from denominating values in
by
law
from
campaiglling on governterms of currency.
ment
time,
Moore had to use
When the stampede will end can"vacation"
time
for Ills Oklahoma
not be foreseen, but some analysts
sojourn.
claim they see a slowdown a correcThe regular inclusion of Moore's
tion, a retreat that might,' however,
name
on Carter's schedule bas
be only temporary.
always been something less than the
The reason, they say, is that an
whole truth + even when Moore bas
initial quest for security by some
been in town. It's an "umbreDa"
wealthy individuals, hanks and
heading
symbollzlng a regular
governments, has attracted inpresidimtial
meeting with key
vestors, then speculators, then gamassistants.
.
blers, and now, most likely, the uninMoore's
name
is
used
because
formed.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock
boom of the 1960s was often spurred
by the slogan, "it's smart to own a
piece or America." Ownership of
stock, it was said, meant you were
sharing in the economy's bounty.
That was hack then when people
had more trust in surrogate money,
when they had faith that paper
always would be acceptable as a
medium of exchange when they
believed that economi~ institutions
were permanent.
Faith hasn't vanished but it has
diminished. When you ;peak today
of owning a piece of America you
may be talking of the real thing
about real estate, oil, metals, trees:
These seem to he the new collectibles, just as diamonds, art and
stamps were earlier.
It might all pass. Stampedes make
a great roar coming but they leave
in a cloud of dust. This stampede
could also, especially if detente bet·
ween the great powers is resumed.
Butfor now, it's here.
Each day the newspapers
document it. Gold, silver, platinum
and copper are hoarded by those
who hold or trade them. The active
stocks are often those of natural
resource companies.
Such buyers carmot consume their
purchases. Because their gold is
locked in a vault they carmot, for instance, admire it. They cannot make
other produc\s from it because they
have no facility to do lt.
For them, metal is money.
And so are other natural resources. When people suspect paper
money, created . as a substitute
because desirable (limited) natural
resources are too cumbersome to
handle, -the)' ten~ to return to the
real thing.
And what c~uses today's
suspicions? )'Hethreat of war the '
instability of govenunents,lnf!a'tion\·
·and a fear that the old economic order is ~g upset before anyone has
a notion;~~f what~ replace it.
And so the re~t to basics. Gold
which was :•cteniC!hetlzed" or, as w~
thought, set adrift from cutrencies
so that 'it could operate as just
. another, commO!Ilty, is reasserting ·
itself as money. So are real estate

OhioO~o P ~~s£til!~!~!lems:
·

OOLUMBUS,
(AP)lql ~I administrator ~ys the
state s schools will hiwe to unprove
~c~g, discipline,_currlculum and
fmancmg m the commg decade.
Franklin B. Walter, Ohio superin·tendent of pubUc instruction, said attainlng th~ goals will depend on
the public s commitment to schools,
a task Walter says will be the most
difficult of the '80s. ·
Walter said new standards for
~crers go into effect this . year.
These standards should provide a
firm foundation for
that
Ohio youngste~ have the services of
good teac.hers, ' Walter said.
Begmrung in 1980, be liBid all new
Ohio teachers will be preps~ to
teach reading as il pertains to their
field, deal with behavior problema in
the curoom, work ln urban,-subu!b~n a~d rural schools', use
diagnostlc ~hnlCjUes to identify
student needS .and analyze the
results of their te•ching. , . .
Walter refered to a study by a
state task force, lieaded by Dr,
Everett L. Jung, a member and past
president of the state board of

ass~

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someone decided months ago it
would help boost Moore's standing
with the Congress members he lobbies on Carter's behalf.

+++
carter's press secretary, Jody
Powell, astonished a caller last
weekend by personally answering a
telephone call to the White House
press office.
"We
a low-budge"f)]leration,''
Powell told the caller, then joked
that all those who might otherwise
have answered the phone were "out .
in Iowa" electioneering.

run

+++
?owell interrupted a recent
spirited sparring match with a
reporter to observe: "We all have
our crosses to bear. You have me
and I have you."

+++
Powell, who had advance word of
Carter's decision to curb grain sales
to the Soviet Union, confessed that
for the first time he understood the
temptations t!lat face govenunenl
officials possessing inside in.fonnation.
Powell said he could have made a
killing in the commodity markets.

+++

'.

Obviously enjoying himself, the
press secretary last week regilled
reporters with reminders that his
boss' chief political rival, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, now wants a
larger U.S. presence ln South Asia
and the Middle E!ast + although
Kermedy had led a futile Senate flght
against U.S. IJI]lllary facilities on
Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. ,
What Powell neglected to mention
was that one of Keruiedy's principal
supporters lri the Diego Garcia rtgbt
was then-Sen. Walter F. Mondale.

the schools. He said teachers and administrators will have to be bettet
trained to handle discipline
problema.
· ·
Walter also said curriculum will
have to be altered to meet changbig
requ,trementa ln the job market. -He
said new state curriculum standards
will "become a r:eallty in the llelt
decade.
·
·
During the nell decade Walter
said a college diploma 'will . be
required for only two of ev
10
jobl. He said currently 40
Ohio high school juniors and ·seniors
provides nearly 44 percent of the
are entolled ln job ~tion courses and ·91 percent of those PeoPle
cost or educating each child.
get jobl after llraduaUoo
•
Walter Aid obtaining pubUc ~Up­
Walter also said a ~ evaluaUon
port
needed chanlleeln edidtian
Wllll't be easy. ·AW!qugb· the vut ·
ot.pub)lc auport to education will be
needed if the state's llclloola are • 11l11Jority or panm~~ with . IICbool ·
going to,be placed on a sound flnanchildren believe IIChooll are d!llll8 a
cia! footing. · . . ·
•. ,
. . good job, Walter allo ilald · moat
~though Ohio ranks sixth in total
lldul~ without children; who are 1n
personal income among the states · the majority, rate i~Cboo1f, "muC!J ·
lower. , ·
· .
.
and as"has the fourth latgeet publl~
enrol\ffienl, the state ranks liBtb ln
To improve public awareness he
pupil expenditure and ' 24th ln
said .la.l bas been declared
teacher pay. Today, the elate , YearortheSc~la"lnOhlo.

~tor

ror

"The

v

'

. ~ -.

Frederick, Robert Brown. Jay Rees, Tom Roseberry,
and.Joe Bob Hemsley.

National Basketball Association

At AGlance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference

Sports
World

Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel.

too.
He is an awesome creature with
powerful shoulders, arms like
wagon tongues, hands as big as catcher's mitts, a face covered by
mustache and sinister beard.
For most of his 11 years in the

Bengals
employ
Bullough
CINCINNATI (AP) ·- New
Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg has
decided to install the 3-4 defense and
hired the linebacker coach he
believes can make it work - Hank
Bullough.
Former Coach Bill "Tiger" Johnson installed the system in 1978
before he resigned in mid-season.
Coach Homer Rice, who was
dismissed with all his assistants after the 19'19 season, scrapped the formation and returned to the pro set
' with four defensive linemen and
three linebackers. The 3-4 or "34"
defense uses three defensive
linemen and four linebackers.
linebacker Glenn Cameron had
asked to be traded when he was benched because of the return to the pro
set under Rice. Defensive end Ross
Browner was elated at news of the
return to the 34. He said he wants to
be·a linebacker.
·
The Bengals had successive 4-12
National· Football League seasons
before hiring Gregg awa:r from the
Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian
Football League.
On Wednesday, Gregg announced
he hired Bullough, a former teammate of his from the Green Bay
- Packers.

National Football League he has
epitomized bone-crushing defense
fof a team that has won three of the
last five Super Bowls and is going for
an unprecedented fourth against the
Los Angeles Rams Sunday.
Now \hat Oakland's Jack Tatum
has hit the stands with his Controversial autobiography, "They
Call Me Assassin,'' and TV's "60
Minutes" has put a national
spotlight on escalating football injuries, Mean Joe has emerged as one
of the most interviewed personalities of Super Bowl Week.
I haven't read the book," Greene
said of Tatum's opus, "but I don't
like the expression 'assassin.' We're
sportsmen, we're athletes.
"All players belong to the same
fraternity. We try to help our teams
win. It's not a personal war. We
don't purposely try to maim and
destroy. We meet force with force."
Tatum, whose crashing tackle of
Darryl Stingley in a 1978 exhibition
game left the New England player
paralyzed from the neck down, has
written that to pro defensive players
it is not enough just to stop a man.
"My idea of a good hit,'' Tatum
said, "is when the victim wakes up
on the sidelines with train whistles
blowing in his head." He said he personally strives for "knockouts" and
"limPoffs."
Mean Joe insists he never gets
that mean.
Mean Joe, off the field, is a bear of
a man with the soul of a pussycat.
Sometimes he talks like a Rhodes
Scholar.
He said his true character is depicted in the TV commercial in which
he is leaving a stadium, batUe weary
and aching, and brushes off a kid offering him a bottle of pop. When he
sees the boy's disappointment, he
takes the bottle, gulping it down, and
then tosses the kid his jersey.
"The commercial took two days,
18 hours, and I drank 18 botUes of
pop," Mean Joe recalled. "I never
got so many letters, mostly from
women - housewives. They see me
AS a kind man."

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
8 1 672 501
Kyger Creel&lt;
5 6 602 652
North Gall Ia
4 6 690 762
Eastern
3 7 597 606
Hannan Trace
0 10 489 697
SVAC Only
Southern
5 0 .379 258
North Gall Ia
2 2 263 279
Southwestern
2 2 2&lt;46 248
Eastern
2 3 311 275
Kyger Creek
1 3 205 290
Hanna'"\ Trace
0 4 201 256
, SVAC RESERVES
southern·
5 o 282 202
Nort!J Galli a
3 1 207, 178
Eastern
3 2 182 165
Kyger Creek
2 2 166 161
Hannan Trace
0 4 153 194
Southwestern
0 4 126 211
Friday's games:
Southwestern at Kyger Creek;
Eastern at North Gall Ia and Hannan
Trace at Southern.
, saturday ·- North Gallia at
Wahama.
;._

33 11
33 11
20 22
22 26
19 28

Atlanta
San Antonio
Houston
Indiana
Cleveland
Detroit

28
24
22
21
20
11

GB
.750
.750
.476 12
.458 13

.404 15'12

Central Division

By Will Grimsley
lA'i ANGELES, Calif. (AP) - Is
Mean Joe Greene really mean?
·
If so, how mean is he?
Not mean at all, Mean Joe insists.
Even his unnerving nickname bears
a false connotation.
"I got it when I was playing at
North Texas State,'' he said. "Not
because I was rough on the field. The
guys tacked it on me because it was
a rhyme.
'"Mean Greene,' get it? They
couldn't call me 'Lean Greene' not
when I weighed 280 pounds.' '
Mean Joe's massive body shook
with the depth of the guffaw that
erupted from his own private joke.
He doesn't weigh 280 now. The
guide lists him as 6-foot-4 and ri6o
pounds. In his pads he looks 8-3 and

Boston
Philodelphia
washington
New York
New Jersey

19
23
23
25
27
35

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
-Ohio State's second-ranked
Buckeyes hope to turn back one of
several threats they will encounter
this season in their quest for the Big
Ten title when they take on surprising Minnesota tonight,
Undefeated in Big Ten play after a
pair of road victories last week at
Iowa and Northwestern, the
Buckeyes place a 4-0 record against
the Gophers who are tied for second
place with PurduewithaS.1 mark.
Senior guard Kelvin Ransey, center Herb Willisms and freshman
Clark Kellogg lead the Ohio State
brigade, but Coach Eldon Miller also
realized a lot of bench strength in a
7:&gt;-63 victory Saturday over Northwestern when Kellogg and Carter
Scott 'at into foul trouble.
"I'm beginning to realize we have
bench players who can be outstanding in individual roles,'' said
Miller following the Northwestern
game.
The guts of the bench consists of
Marquis Miller, Jim Ellinghausen,
Larry Huggins and Todd Perm and
one of several reasons that Miller insists his Buckeyes have ''potential of
growth" and "a very good team,
definitely."
While Ohio State takes on Minnesota,
11th-ranked Purdue
entertains Northwestern.
Led by Joe

.511 4
.4119 5

6'12
.426 8
.239 16'12

.151

Western Conference

Midwest Division

Kansas City
Milwaukee
Chicago
Denver
Utah

30
26
15
16
13

Seattle
L!&gt;S Angeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Portland
Golden Slate

34 13 .723
33 15 .688 1'12
30 17 .638 4
27 23 .54Q 8'12
24 25 .490 11
14 32 .304 19'12

Marauder gals
defeat Belpre
'

Dodie Chapman poured in 21
points Tuesday night as the
Meigs High girls dumped . holt
Belpre, 7C).38. Teri Wilson added
16 points, and Sonia Ash hit for 12.
Meigs built up a ~12lead after
one quarter and had the game in
the bag by halftime, 4G-24. The
Marauder lass&amp; hit 33 of 86 shots
from the field for 38
and canned four of seven free
throws. The winners ga~red 47
rebounds, led by Wilson and
Cheri Ligi!Zfoot with 10 each.
Each~ had eleven turnovers.
Belpre was led by Backus who
tossed in eleven Points. The bosts
hit on 17 of 56 shots for 30
and sank 4 of 5 free throws. The
team had a total of just 24 reboun-

.600

' Pacific Division

.542 3
.333 12'12
.32i 13'12
.271 16

Wednesday's Games

Boston 114, Chicago 104
Philadelphia 121, Portland 110
lndiana117, Denver 99
Kansas City 112, Milwaukee 108
New Jersey 122, Houston 112
Phoenix 115, Utah 108
Los Angeles 97, Golden State 96
San Diego 111, Atlanta 108
Thursday's Games
San Antonio at Cleveland
washington at Detroit
Atlanta at Phoenix
Friday's Games

Portland al Boston
seattle at New York
Philadelphia at New Jersey
Utah at Chicago
Denver e1 Milwaukee
Washington at Houston

San Diego at Golden State
Atlanta at Los Angeles
National Hockey League

AlA Glance
By The Associated Press
Campbell conference

Patrick Division
w ·L T PIS GF

Philadelphia 28 3
NY Rangers 21 17
NY Islanders 18 17
17 20
Atlanta
Washington 11 26
Chicago
St. Louis

Vancouver

Winnipeg

Edmonton

Colorado

.18
15
13
11
12

20
23
28
22
26

123
7 43 141
7 37 142
5 31 119
9 31 1&lt;14
5 29 139

131
150
156
178
181
170

Wales Conference
Adams Division

Buffalo·
Boston
Minnesota

Toronto
Quebec

GA
11 67 179 129
8 50 177 163'
6 42 143 134
5 39 141 150
6 28 133 168

smvthe Division
17 15 12 46

29 12 3
24 112 6
2211 8
18 20 4
17 20 6

Jack Duffy
6-0,Sr. G

Bucks face Gophers
in Big 10 contest

.596

20
22
30
23
35

Dave Foreman
6-4, Sr. C

Dale Teaford
._Z,Jr.C

STANDINGS

Today's

oi

Business mirror

~,~~·~~·-

•.

COMMENTARY

.

TilE DAll.Y SENTINEL

(USPS I.....,)

'

~'j

IN.WASHINGTON

&amp;nu.

.

Paying is believing

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

By Robert Walters
DES MOINES (NEAl- After monthll of unsuccessful experiments
with joint appearances of presidential candidates, a format has emerged that affords voters a Wlique op-·
portunity to compare both the style
ljlld substance of the contenders.
At the Republican Candidates
Forum conducted here recently, all
of the participating politicians were
able to present a fairly complete, accurate and undistorted picture of
their character and personality as
well as their positions on a wide
range of issues.
As a result, those who followed the
proceedings - in person or on radio
or television - could accomplish in
two hours what otherwise would re:.
quire weeks of travel costing
tbou.sands of dollars.
Republican
organizations
throughout the country especially
those in states where early
primaries or precinct caucuses are
to be held this year, sought to pr~
ylde asimilar opportunity last year
by inducing most of the candidates
lo make joint appearances at dinhers, cocktail parties and other
!lOCi&amp;! events.
: Those unsatisfying forums,
derisively but accurately labled
:•catUe shows," were conducted in
cago; Indianapolis; Ames, Iowa;
rtland, Maine; Kissimee, Fla.;
cord, N.H. and other disparate
locations.
: The typical fonnat allowed each
eandidate five or 10 minutes to recite
Ills basic campaign speech, but
there were few q,portunlties for
questions or side-by-side com~n. In most cases, the social
letting and party atmosphere
!Jiitigate against any serious assessment of those seeking the country's
highest office.
•. But the more serious forum spon· IOred here by the Des Moines
I
.
, Register and Tribune Company was
~a strildng.ly successful venture,
~allowing each candidate to be his
fquin~ntial sell. A capsule review
~of tltetr
performances, in
i alphabetical order:
r Rep. John Anderson of lliinolB· ofr
.
r fered himself as a man who marches
~ to a different ~er, rejecting
: both conservative dogma and
: politically popular rhetoric. Even
, aupporters ol other candidates
; acknowledged that his fiery perora~ Uon at the end of the session was the
; emotional highlight of the forum.
r Sen. Howard Baker of Termessee
~ bas a folksy, easy-going style that~unfortunately for him - is not
~especially memorable. Baker may
f well be the 1980 presidential camrpaign's veMJion of the proverbial
rChinese meal that leaves the diner
~hungry only a few hours later.
~ · Former United Nations Am-

Southern varsit pla

61 168 120
54 158 121
52 m 124
40 154 164
40 133 148

Norris Division
23 16 6 52 170 148
Montreal
Los Angeles 20 15 8 48 183 165

Pittsburgh 18 14 11 47 152 148
15 20 7 37 140 142
Detroit
10 20 10 30 128 152
Hartford
Wednesday's Games
New York Rangers 4, Winnipeg 1
Edmonton 5, washington 2
Detroit 5, Colorado 1
Pittsburgh 6, Toronto 4
Boston 3, Quebec 1
Minnesota 7, sr. Louis 3
Montreal 6, Chicago 1
Atlanta 5, Vancouver 3
"
Bulfalo 4, Los Angeles 2
Thursda.y 's Games
Edmonton at Boston
Pittsburgh vs. Hartford at Spr·
ingfleld, Mass.
Toronto at Ne York Islanders
Chicago at Philadelph&gt;a
'Atlantaat Colorado
Friday's Games
Detroit at Winnipeg
Buffalo at Vancouver

Barry Carroll, the Big Ten's leading
scorer, the Boilermakers picked up
conference victories at the expense

of Illinois and Michigan last week
before dropping a ~I nonconference decision Sunday to third·
ranked and undefeated Syracuse.
Purdue, obviously weary by
playing tl¥"ee games in less than 72
hours, let the Syracuse game slip
away after leading by a dozen points.
Other Big Ten games tonight find
Iowa at Indiana, Michigan at llllnois
and Wisconsin at Michigan State.
Iowa is ranked 13th nationally and ·
Indiana is 19th despite four losses t-*o in Big Ten play. Iowa soon hopes
to regain the services of guard Ronnie Lester and when he returns, the
Hawkeyes figure to make their
move.
Iowa, Indiana, Wisconsin and
Michigan all are tied with 2-2 records in the Big Ten, followed by llllnois
and Northwestern at 1-3 and
Michigan State at o-4.
Coach Jud Heathcote, who guided
the Spartans to the NCAA title last
year, said, "I think we're better than
a last-place team, but who knows?"
And who does know? Although the
Big Ten has four teams ranked
among the nation's top 20, there
could be a bigger battle among some
of the teams to stay out of the cellar
than there might be for the top rung
if somebody doesn't halt Ohio State

soon.

As Ransey, the Buckeye "quar-

terback" said, "I think we have the.
best talent overall. Our starters are
capable, we have scoring balance,
and I never had any doubts aboul&gt;
our bench strength."

CaseyKasem
WMPO

SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.L._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;
1

SIGNS PITCHER
Michael
Ferguson, a 21-year-old righthand
)litcber from Covina, Calif., has
signed a contract with the Cincinnati
Reds farm system.
Ferguson w.as the second young
player selected by the Reds in the
recent major league draft. The Reds
picked five pitchers, four catchers,
two Infielders and one outfielder.
CINCINNATI (AP) -

J

~\l. lJI~

MODULAR
HOMES

,()I~ '1,111~ )I()N'l,ll
Master

. By
ALL AMER !CAN
Meets

MECHANIC·

While
Supplies
Last

eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

Hillb Khoolacores

By The Associated Pre55
Wednesday's Results
Cln. Glen Esle87 Cin. Madeira 39
Cln. Indian Hlll67 Milford 61
Cln. Marlemont67 Cin. Deer Park 51
Cln. Sycamore 69 Loveland 38
Cleve. Adams 78 Cleve. South 64
Cleve. E. Tech81 Cleve. Marshall76
Cleve. Glenville 52 Cleve. Collin·
wood43
Cleve. Hay71 Cleve. Hayes 51
Cleve. Kennedy 68 Cleve. Rhodes 55
Cleve. Llnfoln·Wesl 64 Cleve . W.
Tech 49

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1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034·

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Quantities limited

'

ds.
In a close reserve contest,
Meigs came out on top, 39-35.
Pam Crooks paced the Meigs
scoring with 1~ points while Angi41 •
Wigal had 14 fo~ Belpre.
Other . scorers for Meigs were
T. ASh, eight; Anderson, four1
Lightfoot, sene, and I&gt;rehel, two,
· tlther Belpre point-getters:
were NeuelrOad, eight; Qriffin,
two; Shutts, seven; Bniner, two;
DeVore; folir; Muscari, two and
Wigal, two.
.
~ .

,,

VALLEY LUMBER .&amp;
SUPPLY
.CORPORATION

923 S. 3rd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

992·2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:0iito.s:oo Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 "'"~'"'"au

"'

�2-'-The Daily Sentinel,.MidQieport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 17, 1900

~-----------------·
I
I
I
I

I

I
I
I
I

!

:.l

......

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

Sentinel
Editorial

. -----.,_

.

. 0Tf-t£R WOM(N ARE
CoNTENT WITt~ DIAMOND§,
BVT YOU ~AVE To HAVE
A §IMPLE GOLD BAND!
WI-I AT Do Yo'J 11-llN K I AM,
A MILLIONAIRE? .

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Serious, successful forum
bassador George Bush emerged as a
distinguished, capable and professional manager. He is both likeable
and believable, but doesn't inspire
intense emotional reactions among .
most voters.
Former Texas Gov. John Co1U18lly
continues to be the most eloquent
orator in the field, but the forum's
time limitations prevented him from
taking full advantage of his renowned rhetorical ability.
Rep. Philip Crane of lliinois was
the only member of the panel who
never once displayed any sense of
humor. His rapid-fire, mechanical
delivery of unshakeable views on
every imaginsble issue suggests
thllt, if elected, he would be the country's first bionic president.
Sen. Robert. Dole of Kansas pr~
'vided a dazzling display of the
rapier-sharp, sardonic and
sometimes self-deprecating wit that
is legendary among political insiders. His causticone-liners are a
delight to those who appreciate that
specialized art form, but that asset
isn't sufficient to propel a man into
the White House.
Former California Gov. Ronald
IWlf!an, who steadfastly has refused
to participate in joint appearances
with other contenders, clearly suffered by his absence. Connally was
both deft and devastating in
capitalizing on Reagan's absence.
Describing the Des Moines forum
as "unique in the annals of politics "
Crane predicted: "I doubt if we'~e
going to see this happen again in the
campaign."
Let's hope he's wrong. The country would be well served by similar
presentations in other states during ·
. the coming months of the presidential campaign:

DEVOTED TOniE
INTERFSrOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFLit11

CllyEdlklr
P'llbliabcd daUy except Sabu'day by Tbc Ohle
ValleJ PubU.hJDC CGmpall1· MaiUmedill law:
111 coun St, Pomeroy, ObJo UJtt. suime.l
Offlc!e PbODt 1ft. ZUI. EdtiOI"laa Pbeae
IIWIS7.

Setoacl clan poitace paid at Pomeroy Ohio
NaUooaladverdllu repreaeataUve Laud.;.

Auociatn, 3101 Euclid Ave. One~ Ohio

'

SUblertpUOD ntet: DeUvered by earrter
where a\18111ble M cea.. per week. By Motor
Roa&amp;ewhere canter aervtce DOt available, One

moath, A.to.

1'br DaD)' SeaUDel, by m.D Ia Oldo aOO We~t
ODe yur 13S.M; SIJ: moadll $17.51;

YlrgiDII,

tllrH moatbl $JUl. EIHwbere PUll;

&amp;o tbt ue lor pu.blkiiUoa of all oew1 dlt~kbel
rnd.IWd to the Dr'WI,-per aDd at.o the Jon)
Df!WI pubUabed herelD.

r

f

Berry's World

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moolhiiiUO; Uu-eem-111 .•.
1'be Anociatcd Prcu II txd111lvely eaUiled

t

"I say we try nuclear warfare. And if that
doesn't work, THEN go all the way and boyco•
the Olympic Games in Moscow.'·

Donald F. Graff

l

By Don Graff
Freedom in the balance
What are you going to believe?
According to one school of predicHow and where does Afghanistan
tion, cancellation of a scheduled 17
weigh
in a balance that has Cammillion ton U.S. grain sale to the
bodia,
Uganda and Nigeria on one
Soviets in retaliation for the invasion&gt;·
Pakistan,
Iran and China on
side,
of Afghanistan is likely to prove
the
other?
more painful for the erstwhile
We'll have to walt out the year for
sellers than the would-be buyers, an
the
answer, sin~;&lt; prediction doesn't
excellent example of the perils of usfigure
in the annual report by
ing food as a weapon.
Freedom
House on the state of
It represents $'1 billion doDars that
will not be showing up as assets in freedom around the world.
But the current focus of internathe badly imbalanced U.S. balance
tional
tension aside for the moment ,
of payments in world trade and not
the
report,
surveying developinen~ ·
going into the bank accounts of
in
161
nations
for the year up to
American growers.
November
1979
and released this
. But according to another view the month, sounds an encouraging note. ·
unpact actually may be minimal to
Freedom is considered to have adnil down -on the U.S. farm. Much of
vanced,
in 21 countries while declinthe grain may be shifted to other
ing
in
nine. Notable bright spots In~omestic purpo~s, 1specifically
livestock consumption, which was to clude Nigeria and Ecuador, singled ·
have been its destination in the out as having made the most
Soviet Union. The increased supply dramatic shifts to free government,
should reduce production costs ef- and the removal of "four of the
fecting an internal transfer
in· worst governments of our time" in
come from grain growers· to meat Cambodia, Uganda, Central Africa
producers who, some agricultural and Equatorial Guinea.
Pakistan's deepening repression
economists are pointing out, 'lire to a
rates
as the most striking decline in
great extent the same individuals.
freedom.
Also on the negative side is
Also, promised government purIran,
considered
to have gained earchases to support market prices and
ly
in
the
year
following
the shah's
fuel a massive gasohol production
only
to
relapse
into anardeparture,
program should largely cushion
chic
terror.
Chins
experimented
what shock may be felt. And the latter effort could have a modest im- with greater freedom of expression,
mediate foreign payments effect but then backtracked to remain
plus, by speeding alternative fuel finnly in the ''notfree" category.
Freedom House, a New York·
development, provide a boost
based
non-partisan organization, antoward the long-term goal of energy ·
nually
rates the )Vorld's nations acindependence.
cording
to criteria emphasizing
On the other hand, while the shift
•
political
rights,
civil liberties and
of grain to livestock may result in
Of
expression.
freedom
more plentiful meat supplies and a
By these standards, it now finds
consequent slight break in food
some
1.6 billion people Uving in 51
prices, the balance of payments effree
countries.
This is an estimated
fect of the lost sales is likely to be a
further cheapening of the doDar on 37 percent of the world's population
world markets. Which translates in- and the most yet recordejl in eight
to higher prices at home for the years of the survey. The population
foreign-made autos, television sets ol 55 partly free countries totals 921
and other consumer items we con- million, while there are 1.8 billion
tinue to Import in greater and people in 55 countries considered not
free.
.
greater quantities.
As
for
Afghanistan. unless the
In short, the pros, cons and
Soviet
contagion
spreads it would
tradeoUs of the grain embargo are .
appear
unlikely
to change the
not gomg to result in any significant
Even
before
the takeover
balance.
break for the U.S. consumer.
repressive
regime rated
its
puppet,
Now there's somethint; ·you can
asnotfree.
always believe.

.· Washington today
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jerry
Brown has a problem: He wants to
debate Jinuny Carter and the
president won't do it.
And that, says the governor of
California, is making his campaign
for the White House far more difficult.
Now it would seem that Carter
should make it as difficult as
possible for Brown and Sen. Edward
M. Kermedy to challenge him for the
Democratic
presidential
nomination. They'd do the same for
him.
Brown concedes as much, !wt says
Carter is cynically exploiting the
plight of the hostages in Tehran to
avoid debating his rivals.
Ever since Ca~r pulled out of
what was to have been a three-man
debate in Des Moines on Jan. 7,
Brown has been demanding in virtually every campaign speech that
the president come and face them.
Kermedy J;Dentions the debate that
didn't happen, too, but he hasn't
been as vehement as Brown. "The
people. or Iowa should have an opporturuty to hear the president of the
United States," he said the other
night in Waterloo, Iowa.
Brown was _there, too, insisting
that one of the real questions o( the
campaign is how to get Carter out of
the White House and into a debate.
The president says foreign crises
- the American hostages in Iran
and the Soviet troops in Afghanistan
- preclude partisan political appearances and demand that he be in
Washington.

That covers his refusal to go to
Des Moines, and also his refusal to
meet Kermedy and Brown in
Washington.
He has been telephoning
Democrats in Iowa and other key
campaign states, but Vice President
Waiter F. Mondale says that can be
done without distracting him from
world trouble spots.
"What's he going to do instead of
coming to Iowa?" Brown asked at
one point. "Is he going to do
something that will get the hostages
home? No, he's probably going to be
calling the precinct captains."
And that was before the president
agreed to a solo, nationally televised
appearance on Sunday, the eve of
the Iowa Democratic precinct
caucuses that will be the first real
competition of the campaign.
Carter will be the second president
to appear on NBC's "Meet the ,.
Press." Gerald R. Ford was the first, on Nov. 9, 1975.
Carter was the first president to
agree that he would debate rival
candidates in a campaign for
renomination. He did so two days after the hostages were taken in
Tehran, and before his standing in
the public opinion polls vaulted past
Kennedy's.
Then he said he couldn't make it.
. J:le sai~ that if he were to partiCipate m a well-publicized event
like a debate, Iranian militants
might be tempted to create an incident coinciding with his appearance.

SOUTHERN RESERVE BASKETBAlL SQUAD
- Left to right, Alan Pape, Richard Wolfe, Scott

Jimmy's Whitehouse

WASHINGTON (AP)- Here's an
item from the "little white lie"
department, White House branch.
President Carter's daily schedule
this week has faithfully reported a
morning appointment with Frank
Moore, his assistant for
and other natural !'e50urces + the
congressional
liaison.
real thing rather than substitutes.
There's
only
one problem with
Many collectors of natural resourthat:
Moore
hasn't
been around the
ces do not even consider themselves
White
House
all
week.
investors so much as escapees.
Moore, a fellow Georgian charged
They do not view holdings as
with
mending Carter's fences with
soaring in value but instead view
money as losing value. The value of . Congress, has been in Oklahoma
campaigning for his boss. QICiahoma
natural resources, they say, aren't
Democrats will be holding Iowa·like
rising in value as swiftly as currency
caucuses
in March.
is declining. The mirage arises, they
Because
Carter aides are barred
say, from denominating values in
by
law
from
campaiglling on governterms of currency.
ment
time,
Moore had to use
When the stampede will end can"vacation"
time
for Ills Oklahoma
not be foreseen, but some analysts
sojourn.
claim they see a slowdown a correcThe regular inclusion of Moore's
tion, a retreat that might,' however,
name
on Carter's schedule bas
be only temporary.
always been something less than the
The reason, they say, is that an
whole truth + even when Moore bas
initial quest for security by some
been in town. It's an "umbreDa"
wealthy individuals, hanks and
heading
symbollzlng a regular
governments, has attracted inpresidimtial
meeting with key
vestors, then speculators, then gamassistants.
.
blers, and now, most likely, the uninMoore's
name
is
used
because
formed.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock
boom of the 1960s was often spurred
by the slogan, "it's smart to own a
piece or America." Ownership of
stock, it was said, meant you were
sharing in the economy's bounty.
That was hack then when people
had more trust in surrogate money,
when they had faith that paper
always would be acceptable as a
medium of exchange when they
believed that economi~ institutions
were permanent.
Faith hasn't vanished but it has
diminished. When you ;peak today
of owning a piece of America you
may be talking of the real thing
about real estate, oil, metals, trees:
These seem to he the new collectibles, just as diamonds, art and
stamps were earlier.
It might all pass. Stampedes make
a great roar coming but they leave
in a cloud of dust. This stampede
could also, especially if detente bet·
ween the great powers is resumed.
Butfor now, it's here.
Each day the newspapers
document it. Gold, silver, platinum
and copper are hoarded by those
who hold or trade them. The active
stocks are often those of natural
resource companies.
Such buyers carmot consume their
purchases. Because their gold is
locked in a vault they carmot, for instance, admire it. They cannot make
other produc\s from it because they
have no facility to do lt.
For them, metal is money.
And so are other natural resources. When people suspect paper
money, created . as a substitute
because desirable (limited) natural
resources are too cumbersome to
handle, -the)' ten~ to return to the
real thing.
And what c~uses today's
suspicions? )'Hethreat of war the '
instability of govenunents,lnf!a'tion\·
·and a fear that the old economic order is ~g upset before anyone has
a notion;~~f what~ replace it.
And so the re~t to basics. Gold
which was :•cteniC!hetlzed" or, as w~
thought, set adrift from cutrencies
so that 'it could operate as just
. another, commO!Ilty, is reasserting ·
itself as money. So are real estate

OhioO~o P ~~s£til!~!~!lems:
·

OOLUMBUS,
(AP)lql ~I administrator ~ys the
state s schools will hiwe to unprove
~c~g, discipline,_currlculum and
fmancmg m the commg decade.
Franklin B. Walter, Ohio superin·tendent of pubUc instruction, said attainlng th~ goals will depend on
the public s commitment to schools,
a task Walter says will be the most
difficult of the '80s. ·
Walter said new standards for
~crers go into effect this . year.
These standards should provide a
firm foundation for
that
Ohio youngste~ have the services of
good teac.hers, ' Walter said.
Begmrung in 1980, be liBid all new
Ohio teachers will be preps~ to
teach reading as il pertains to their
field, deal with behavior problema in
the curoom, work ln urban,-subu!b~n a~d rural schools', use
diagnostlc ~hnlCjUes to identify
student needS .and analyze the
results of their te•ching. , . .
Walter refered to a study by a
state task force, lieaded by Dr,
Everett L. Jung, a member and past
president of the state board of

ass~

'

someone decided months ago it
would help boost Moore's standing
with the Congress members he lobbies on Carter's behalf.

+++
carter's press secretary, Jody
Powell, astonished a caller last
weekend by personally answering a
telephone call to the White House
press office.
"We
a low-budge"f)]leration,''
Powell told the caller, then joked
that all those who might otherwise
have answered the phone were "out .
in Iowa" electioneering.

run

+++
?owell interrupted a recent
spirited sparring match with a
reporter to observe: "We all have
our crosses to bear. You have me
and I have you."

+++
Powell, who had advance word of
Carter's decision to curb grain sales
to the Soviet Union, confessed that
for the first time he understood the
temptations t!lat face govenunenl
officials possessing inside in.fonnation.
Powell said he could have made a
killing in the commodity markets.

+++

'.

Obviously enjoying himself, the
press secretary last week regilled
reporters with reminders that his
boss' chief political rival, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, now wants a
larger U.S. presence ln South Asia
and the Middle E!ast + although
Kermedy had led a futile Senate flght
against U.S. IJI]lllary facilities on
Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. ,
What Powell neglected to mention
was that one of Keruiedy's principal
supporters lri the Diego Garcia rtgbt
was then-Sen. Walter F. Mondale.

the schools. He said teachers and administrators will have to be bettet
trained to handle discipline
problema.
· ·
Walter also said curriculum will
have to be altered to meet changbig
requ,trementa ln the job market. -He
said new state curriculum standards
will "become a r:eallty in the llelt
decade.
·
·
During the nell decade Walter
said a college diploma 'will . be
required for only two of ev
10
jobl. He said currently 40
Ohio high school juniors and ·seniors
provides nearly 44 percent of the
are entolled ln job ~tion courses and ·91 percent of those PeoPle
cost or educating each child.
get jobl after llraduaUoo
•
Walter Aid obtaining pubUc ~Up­
Walter also said a ~ evaluaUon
port
needed chanlleeln edidtian
Wllll't be easy. ·AW!qugb· the vut ·
ot.pub)lc auport to education will be
needed if the state's llclloola are • 11l11Jority or panm~~ with . IICbool ·
going to,be placed on a sound flnanchildren believe IIChooll are d!llll8 a
cia! footing. · . . ·
•. ,
. . good job, Walter allo ilald · moat
~though Ohio ranks sixth in total
lldul~ without children; who are 1n
personal income among the states · the majority, rate i~Cboo1f, "muC!J ·
lower. , ·
· .
.
and as"has the fourth latgeet publl~
enrol\ffienl, the state ranks liBtb ln
To improve public awareness he
pupil expenditure and ' 24th ln
said .la.l bas been declared
teacher pay. Today, the elate , YearortheSc~la"lnOhlo.

~tor

ror

"The

v

'

. ~ -.

Frederick, Robert Brown. Jay Rees, Tom Roseberry,
and.Joe Bob Hemsley.

National Basketball Association

At AGlance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference

Sports
World

Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel.

too.
He is an awesome creature with
powerful shoulders, arms like
wagon tongues, hands as big as catcher's mitts, a face covered by
mustache and sinister beard.
For most of his 11 years in the

Bengals
employ
Bullough
CINCINNATI (AP) ·- New
Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg has
decided to install the 3-4 defense and
hired the linebacker coach he
believes can make it work - Hank
Bullough.
Former Coach Bill "Tiger" Johnson installed the system in 1978
before he resigned in mid-season.
Coach Homer Rice, who was
dismissed with all his assistants after the 19'19 season, scrapped the formation and returned to the pro set
' with four defensive linemen and
three linebackers. The 3-4 or "34"
defense uses three defensive
linemen and four linebackers.
linebacker Glenn Cameron had
asked to be traded when he was benched because of the return to the pro
set under Rice. Defensive end Ross
Browner was elated at news of the
return to the 34. He said he wants to
be·a linebacker.
·
The Bengals had successive 4-12
National· Football League seasons
before hiring Gregg awa:r from the
Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian
Football League.
On Wednesday, Gregg announced
he hired Bullough, a former teammate of his from the Green Bay
- Packers.

National Football League he has
epitomized bone-crushing defense
fof a team that has won three of the
last five Super Bowls and is going for
an unprecedented fourth against the
Los Angeles Rams Sunday.
Now \hat Oakland's Jack Tatum
has hit the stands with his Controversial autobiography, "They
Call Me Assassin,'' and TV's "60
Minutes" has put a national
spotlight on escalating football injuries, Mean Joe has emerged as one
of the most interviewed personalities of Super Bowl Week.
I haven't read the book," Greene
said of Tatum's opus, "but I don't
like the expression 'assassin.' We're
sportsmen, we're athletes.
"All players belong to the same
fraternity. We try to help our teams
win. It's not a personal war. We
don't purposely try to maim and
destroy. We meet force with force."
Tatum, whose crashing tackle of
Darryl Stingley in a 1978 exhibition
game left the New England player
paralyzed from the neck down, has
written that to pro defensive players
it is not enough just to stop a man.
"My idea of a good hit,'' Tatum
said, "is when the victim wakes up
on the sidelines with train whistles
blowing in his head." He said he personally strives for "knockouts" and
"limPoffs."
Mean Joe insists he never gets
that mean.
Mean Joe, off the field, is a bear of
a man with the soul of a pussycat.
Sometimes he talks like a Rhodes
Scholar.
He said his true character is depicted in the TV commercial in which
he is leaving a stadium, batUe weary
and aching, and brushes off a kid offering him a bottle of pop. When he
sees the boy's disappointment, he
takes the bottle, gulping it down, and
then tosses the kid his jersey.
"The commercial took two days,
18 hours, and I drank 18 botUes of
pop," Mean Joe recalled. "I never
got so many letters, mostly from
women - housewives. They see me
AS a kind man."

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
8 1 672 501
Kyger Creel&lt;
5 6 602 652
North Gall Ia
4 6 690 762
Eastern
3 7 597 606
Hannan Trace
0 10 489 697
SVAC Only
Southern
5 0 .379 258
North Gall Ia
2 2 263 279
Southwestern
2 2 2&lt;46 248
Eastern
2 3 311 275
Kyger Creek
1 3 205 290
Hanna'"\ Trace
0 4 201 256
, SVAC RESERVES
southern·
5 o 282 202
Nort!J Galli a
3 1 207, 178
Eastern
3 2 182 165
Kyger Creek
2 2 166 161
Hannan Trace
0 4 153 194
Southwestern
0 4 126 211
Friday's games:
Southwestern at Kyger Creek;
Eastern at North Gall Ia and Hannan
Trace at Southern.
, saturday ·- North Gallia at
Wahama.
;._

33 11
33 11
20 22
22 26
19 28

Atlanta
San Antonio
Houston
Indiana
Cleveland
Detroit

28
24
22
21
20
11

GB
.750
.750
.476 12
.458 13

.404 15'12

Central Division

By Will Grimsley
lA'i ANGELES, Calif. (AP) - Is
Mean Joe Greene really mean?
·
If so, how mean is he?
Not mean at all, Mean Joe insists.
Even his unnerving nickname bears
a false connotation.
"I got it when I was playing at
North Texas State,'' he said. "Not
because I was rough on the field. The
guys tacked it on me because it was
a rhyme.
'"Mean Greene,' get it? They
couldn't call me 'Lean Greene' not
when I weighed 280 pounds.' '
Mean Joe's massive body shook
with the depth of the guffaw that
erupted from his own private joke.
He doesn't weigh 280 now. The
guide lists him as 6-foot-4 and ri6o
pounds. In his pads he looks 8-3 and

Boston
Philodelphia
washington
New York
New Jersey

19
23
23
25
27
35

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
-Ohio State's second-ranked
Buckeyes hope to turn back one of
several threats they will encounter
this season in their quest for the Big
Ten title when they take on surprising Minnesota tonight,
Undefeated in Big Ten play after a
pair of road victories last week at
Iowa and Northwestern, the
Buckeyes place a 4-0 record against
the Gophers who are tied for second
place with PurduewithaS.1 mark.
Senior guard Kelvin Ransey, center Herb Willisms and freshman
Clark Kellogg lead the Ohio State
brigade, but Coach Eldon Miller also
realized a lot of bench strength in a
7:&gt;-63 victory Saturday over Northwestern when Kellogg and Carter
Scott 'at into foul trouble.
"I'm beginning to realize we have
bench players who can be outstanding in individual roles,'' said
Miller following the Northwestern
game.
The guts of the bench consists of
Marquis Miller, Jim Ellinghausen,
Larry Huggins and Todd Perm and
one of several reasons that Miller insists his Buckeyes have ''potential of
growth" and "a very good team,
definitely."
While Ohio State takes on Minnesota,
11th-ranked Purdue
entertains Northwestern.
Led by Joe

.511 4
.4119 5

6'12
.426 8
.239 16'12

.151

Western Conference

Midwest Division

Kansas City
Milwaukee
Chicago
Denver
Utah

30
26
15
16
13

Seattle
L!&gt;S Angeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Portland
Golden Slate

34 13 .723
33 15 .688 1'12
30 17 .638 4
27 23 .54Q 8'12
24 25 .490 11
14 32 .304 19'12

Marauder gals
defeat Belpre
'

Dodie Chapman poured in 21
points Tuesday night as the
Meigs High girls dumped . holt
Belpre, 7C).38. Teri Wilson added
16 points, and Sonia Ash hit for 12.
Meigs built up a ~12lead after
one quarter and had the game in
the bag by halftime, 4G-24. The
Marauder lass&amp; hit 33 of 86 shots
from the field for 38
and canned four of seven free
throws. The winners ga~red 47
rebounds, led by Wilson and
Cheri Ligi!Zfoot with 10 each.
Each~ had eleven turnovers.
Belpre was led by Backus who
tossed in eleven Points. The bosts
hit on 17 of 56 shots for 30
and sank 4 of 5 free throws. The
team had a total of just 24 reboun-

.600

' Pacific Division

.542 3
.333 12'12
.32i 13'12
.271 16

Wednesday's Games

Boston 114, Chicago 104
Philadelphia 121, Portland 110
lndiana117, Denver 99
Kansas City 112, Milwaukee 108
New Jersey 122, Houston 112
Phoenix 115, Utah 108
Los Angeles 97, Golden State 96
San Diego 111, Atlanta 108
Thursday's Games
San Antonio at Cleveland
washington at Detroit
Atlanta at Phoenix
Friday's Games

Portland al Boston
seattle at New York
Philadelphia at New Jersey
Utah at Chicago
Denver e1 Milwaukee
Washington at Houston

San Diego at Golden State
Atlanta at Los Angeles
National Hockey League

AlA Glance
By The Associated Press
Campbell conference

Patrick Division
w ·L T PIS GF

Philadelphia 28 3
NY Rangers 21 17
NY Islanders 18 17
17 20
Atlanta
Washington 11 26
Chicago
St. Louis

Vancouver

Winnipeg

Edmonton

Colorado

.18
15
13
11
12

20
23
28
22
26

123
7 43 141
7 37 142
5 31 119
9 31 1&lt;14
5 29 139

131
150
156
178
181
170

Wales Conference
Adams Division

Buffalo·
Boston
Minnesota

Toronto
Quebec

GA
11 67 179 129
8 50 177 163'
6 42 143 134
5 39 141 150
6 28 133 168

smvthe Division
17 15 12 46

29 12 3
24 112 6
2211 8
18 20 4
17 20 6

Jack Duffy
6-0,Sr. G

Bucks face Gophers
in Big 10 contest

.596

20
22
30
23
35

Dave Foreman
6-4, Sr. C

Dale Teaford
._Z,Jr.C

STANDINGS

Today's

oi

Business mirror

~,~~·~~·-

•.

COMMENTARY

.

TilE DAll.Y SENTINEL

(USPS I.....,)

'

~'j

IN.WASHINGTON

&amp;nu.

.

Paying is believing

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

By Robert Walters
DES MOINES (NEAl- After monthll of unsuccessful experiments
with joint appearances of presidential candidates, a format has emerged that affords voters a Wlique op-·
portunity to compare both the style
ljlld substance of the contenders.
At the Republican Candidates
Forum conducted here recently, all
of the participating politicians were
able to present a fairly complete, accurate and undistorted picture of
their character and personality as
well as their positions on a wide
range of issues.
As a result, those who followed the
proceedings - in person or on radio
or television - could accomplish in
two hours what otherwise would re:.
quire weeks of travel costing
tbou.sands of dollars.
Republican
organizations
throughout the country especially
those in states where early
primaries or precinct caucuses are
to be held this year, sought to pr~
ylde asimilar opportunity last year
by inducing most of the candidates
lo make joint appearances at dinhers, cocktail parties and other
!lOCi&amp;! events.
: Those unsatisfying forums,
derisively but accurately labled
:•catUe shows," were conducted in
cago; Indianapolis; Ames, Iowa;
rtland, Maine; Kissimee, Fla.;
cord, N.H. and other disparate
locations.
: The typical fonnat allowed each
eandidate five or 10 minutes to recite
Ills basic campaign speech, but
there were few q,portunlties for
questions or side-by-side com~n. In most cases, the social
letting and party atmosphere
!Jiitigate against any serious assessment of those seeking the country's
highest office.
•. But the more serious forum spon· IOred here by the Des Moines
I
.
, Register and Tribune Company was
~a strildng.ly successful venture,
~allowing each candidate to be his
fquin~ntial sell. A capsule review
~of tltetr
performances, in
i alphabetical order:
r Rep. John Anderson of lliinolB· ofr
.
r fered himself as a man who marches
~ to a different ~er, rejecting
: both conservative dogma and
: politically popular rhetoric. Even
, aupporters ol other candidates
; acknowledged that his fiery perora~ Uon at the end of the session was the
; emotional highlight of the forum.
r Sen. Howard Baker of Termessee
~ bas a folksy, easy-going style that~unfortunately for him - is not
~especially memorable. Baker may
f well be the 1980 presidential camrpaign's veMJion of the proverbial
rChinese meal that leaves the diner
~hungry only a few hours later.
~ · Former United Nations Am-

Southern varsit pla

61 168 120
54 158 121
52 m 124
40 154 164
40 133 148

Norris Division
23 16 6 52 170 148
Montreal
Los Angeles 20 15 8 48 183 165

Pittsburgh 18 14 11 47 152 148
15 20 7 37 140 142
Detroit
10 20 10 30 128 152
Hartford
Wednesday's Games
New York Rangers 4, Winnipeg 1
Edmonton 5, washington 2
Detroit 5, Colorado 1
Pittsburgh 6, Toronto 4
Boston 3, Quebec 1
Minnesota 7, sr. Louis 3
Montreal 6, Chicago 1
Atlanta 5, Vancouver 3
"
Bulfalo 4, Los Angeles 2
Thursda.y 's Games
Edmonton at Boston
Pittsburgh vs. Hartford at Spr·
ingfleld, Mass.
Toronto at Ne York Islanders
Chicago at Philadelph&gt;a
'Atlantaat Colorado
Friday's Games
Detroit at Winnipeg
Buffalo at Vancouver

Barry Carroll, the Big Ten's leading
scorer, the Boilermakers picked up
conference victories at the expense

of Illinois and Michigan last week
before dropping a ~I nonconference decision Sunday to third·
ranked and undefeated Syracuse.
Purdue, obviously weary by
playing tl¥"ee games in less than 72
hours, let the Syracuse game slip
away after leading by a dozen points.
Other Big Ten games tonight find
Iowa at Indiana, Michigan at llllnois
and Wisconsin at Michigan State.
Iowa is ranked 13th nationally and ·
Indiana is 19th despite four losses t-*o in Big Ten play. Iowa soon hopes
to regain the services of guard Ronnie Lester and when he returns, the
Hawkeyes figure to make their
move.
Iowa, Indiana, Wisconsin and
Michigan all are tied with 2-2 records in the Big Ten, followed by llllnois
and Northwestern at 1-3 and
Michigan State at o-4.
Coach Jud Heathcote, who guided
the Spartans to the NCAA title last
year, said, "I think we're better than
a last-place team, but who knows?"
And who does know? Although the
Big Ten has four teams ranked
among the nation's top 20, there
could be a bigger battle among some
of the teams to stay out of the cellar
than there might be for the top rung
if somebody doesn't halt Ohio State

soon.

As Ransey, the Buckeye "quar-

terback" said, "I think we have the.
best talent overall. Our starters are
capable, we have scoring balance,
and I never had any doubts aboul&gt;
our bench strength."

CaseyKasem
WMPO

SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.L._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;
1

SIGNS PITCHER
Michael
Ferguson, a 21-year-old righthand
)litcber from Covina, Calif., has
signed a contract with the Cincinnati
Reds farm system.
Ferguson w.as the second young
player selected by the Reds in the
recent major league draft. The Reds
picked five pitchers, four catchers,
two Infielders and one outfielder.
CINCINNATI (AP) -

J

~\l. lJI~

MODULAR
HOMES

,()I~ '1,111~ )I()N'l,ll
Master

. By
ALL AMER !CAN
Meets

MECHANIC·

While
Supplies
Last

eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

Hillb Khoolacores

By The Associated Pre55
Wednesday's Results
Cln. Glen Esle87 Cin. Madeira 39
Cln. Indian Hlll67 Milford 61
Cln. Marlemont67 Cin. Deer Park 51
Cln. Sycamore 69 Loveland 38
Cleve. Adams 78 Cleve. South 64
Cleve. E. Tech81 Cleve. Marshall76
Cleve. Glenville 52 Cleve. Collin·
wood43
Cleve. Hay71 Cleve. Hayes 51
Cleve. Kennedy 68 Cleve. Rhodes 55
Cleve. Llnfoln·Wesl 64 Cleve . W.
Tech 49

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'

ds.
In a close reserve contest,
Meigs came out on top, 39-35.
Pam Crooks paced the Meigs
scoring with 1~ points while Angi41 •
Wigal had 14 fo~ Belpre.
Other . scorers for Meigs were
T. ASh, eight; Anderson, four1
Lightfoot, sene, and I&gt;rehel, two,
· tlther Belpre point-getters:
were NeuelrOad, eight; Qriffin,
two; Shutts, seven; Bniner, two;
DeVore; folir; Muscari, two and
Wigal, two.
.
~ .

,,

VALLEY LUMBER .&amp;
SUPPLY
.CORPORATION

923 S. 3rd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

992·2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:0iito.s:oo Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 "'"~'"'"au

"'

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&amp;-'lbeDailySent!nei,Middleport·Pomeroy,O., Thunday,Jan. 17 1960

.

4-The Daily Sentinel, Mld411eport-Pomerov. 0 .. Thundav. Jan. 17. 1980

'

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A C.S says breast cancer threat can be reduced

Rams :r:nust stop, Bradshaw's passing game
LOS ANGELES (AP) - " How do
you defend against Lynn SwaM and

a John Stallworth• Slmple," says
Dave Elmendorf. "You do it with a
Pat 1bomas and a Rod Perry.''

That may well be the most critical
matchup in Sunday's Super Bowl
game, with Thomas and Perry, the
Loll Angeles Rams' cornerbacks,
trying to mii2Zie the Pittsburgh
Sleelers' terrifying tandem of deep
thnats.
No other team has really been able
to stifle both wide receivers. Doublecovering one meant handing Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw an erun'llved invitation to ez-

ploit the other.
"But no other team has two cor·
nerbacks that are as capable as
ours," Elmendorf, the Rams' strong
safety, said Wednesday before the
team began what Coach Ray
Malavasi described as its two bar·
dest days of workouts.
"When you've got guys who are as
capable as Rod and Pat and you're
matching them up against Stallworth and Swann, you've got two
natural battles there + and I think
that in the .past we've won the battles," said Elmendorf, reflecting on
the Rams' 1().7 victory over the
Steelers during the 19'18 season. In

Ohio Sportlight
By
George Strode

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - If he
maintains his current pace, Bill
Szabo of Oberlin Firetands will
become Ohio's thin! all-time boys
highachool basketballacorer.
the &amp;-foot~ senior needs to match
his career average of 29.2 points.
That would give him a total of 2,394
points, even if F'lrelands would lose
Its first tournament game.
Only Mike Philllps of Manchester,
with 2,573 points, and Middletown's
Jerry Lucas, who scored 2,463 points, would rank ahead of Szabo.
If Flrelands, already lW this
season, could reach the Class AA
state finals, Szabo bas an ~
portunity topass Lucas and Philllps.
However, be would have to acore at
a slightly higher pace to accomplish
it.
Around Ohio: It doesn't seem to
matter to Delphos St. John's girls
that they lost four starters from the
powerhouse that went 74-1 and won
two state titles in !hi, last . three

seasons.
Coach Fran Voll had Class AA St.
John's off to a 8-1 record this season
with the only loss coming to Class
AAA Findlay.
Lorain King's 1...0 start represents
its best beginning since 1~7. Mit·
ch Gillam, King's coach, now has a
career record of 201·100 in 14
seasons. He's 138-46 at the Lorain
school.
It was a rough week physically for
Akron-Canton area basketball
players.
Doug White, a junior at Cuyahoga
Falls Walsh, suffered a broken neck

------------1

4 Door, dark red, color with mat ching red vinyl trim, radio, air

cond ., automatic trans ., 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
tires , landau model. sol id white

S.

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1974 DODGE VAN

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sink, refrigerator, V -8, auto .,

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perfect.

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CHEVROLET

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in a swimming accident. So did
junior Kevin Fenwick of Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary in an auto accident.
Rick Spradling ol Canton South
needed 32 stitches to close cuts in his
wrist after be ran his hand through a
plste glass window. Spradling stlll
plsyed against Massillon Perry and
acored ·six points in his team's vic- ·
tory.
Kettering Alter is riding a 61-game
home court winning streak, dating
back to 19'12. Jim Pollard of Dayton
Nortluidge now has his state leading
point average up to 38.2 after hitting
49 against Tipp City.
Greg Stokes, a 6-9 junior, had 19
rebounds and 17 points in Hamilton
Garfield's 54-50 decision of Dayton
Jefferson. Warren Kennedy hasn't
lost in either football or basketball
this school year, going 11~ in both
sports to this point.
For the second straight year,
Austintown Fitch started 7~ and loot
its eighlli game to Warren Western
ReserVe. Beaver Eastern, 11-1, has
no starters over 6 feet, yet whacked
West Union ~18. Eastern's margin
in the third quarter was :l...o.
Napoleon's No. 1 statewide
ranking is the first in its history under veteran Coach Fred Church. In
24 seasons at Edon and Napoleon,
Church has turned out 382 victors.
Tim Reiser, Napoleon's star guard,
already is conunitted to the University of Toledo.
Football - One of Ohio's best
coaching jobs is open at Canton
McKinley after John Brideweser
quit after a !().year record of 77-'l:J,.3.
Contact Superintendent James Hyer
at the Canton city achools
His alma mater didn't show Mike
Joseph any sympathy. Zanesville.
Rosecrans, where Joseph played
basketball, pasted his Fairfield
Union team 66-41. It is the first head
coaching try for Joseph, who has
Fairfield Union 1}.2 after its 6--32
record the last two seasons.
Coshocton, once 1-3 this season,
has peeled off six straight victories
for Coach Gary McElfresh. Tony
Lee of Fostoria St. Wendelin and
Doug Elmer of Gibsonburg matched
35-point totals in a head-~head
meeting last week, but Lee had more
support; St. Wendelinwon59-57.
Dickie Brown of Madison Plains
carries a 31.3 point average. His
high of 45 points against Hillsboro
was a school record. He's a 6-3
senior.
Pam Wills of Licking Valley
poured in 41 points against Newark
Catholic, jumping the :i-10 senior's
!().game average to 27.2 points.

New Haven

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4 door, small V-8, automatic,
power steering, power brakes,
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1977 DODGE

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Immediate Delivery '
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that game, Pittsburgh's two wide
receivers were limited to just 69 yards on five receptions.
'We'll be up in their faces just
about all day," said Thomas, who
missed baH the season with a knee
injury and returned as a starter in
the Rams' !).0 shutout of Tampa Bay .
in the National Conference championship game.
SwaM's biggest asset, Thomas
said, is his c,oncentration. "The guy

ro.to.

Leading scorers were guards
Lee Ayres with sven points and
Mike WoHe with six points. }'orward Jlm Hicks led a fine defensive effort turned in by the
Lakers.
Other Lakers hitting for points
were: JIUDie Estegard, two;
Lane Gandee, two; Mike Allensworth, two and Jeff Hoffman
with one.
Both teams now sport 1-1 records.

II

Toledo tightens
hold on top spot
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Toledo lightened Its grip on first
place in the Mid·American Con·
ference with a strong defensive ef·
fort that carried the Rockets to a '7260 college basketball victory over
Ball State Wednesday night.
"In the second half, our defense
was just super," Toledo Coach Bob
Nichols said after the game. "We got
the big rebounds and we cut them
(Ball State) off on the baseline."
The Rockets are S.O in the conference and 11-3 overall.
In other MAC games Wednesday,
Bowling Green took sole possession
of second place with a 69-02.victory
over Central Michigan, Eastern
Michigan edged Ohio University 67·
65, Northern Illinois whipped
Western Michigan_91-76 and Kent
State topped'Miaini of Ohio SUI.
Nichols said the Rockets displayed
better offensive rebounding in the
second half following a "dlsa~
pointing" performance on the boards in the opening 20 minutes.
Toledo found itseH in a tight game
until the final minutes, when Jim
Swaney, Tim Selgo, Harvey
Knuckles and Dick Miller fired in
four straight baskets to stretch the
Rockets' lead to 68-56 with 2:46
remaining in the contest. Swaney
was the Rockets' top scorer with 24
points.
Ball State is now 1~ in the MAC
and 7-8 overall.
. 8owling Green's victory gave the
Falcons a mark of 4-1 in league play
and 11J.3 overall. Forward Joe Faine
led Bowling Green with 25 points.
After taking big leads in the first
half, Bowling Green bad to beat
back a rally led by the Chippewas'
Melvin McLaughlin before clinching
the victory. The freshman guard
scored 24 points for Central
Michigan, 2-3 and ~.
Eastern Michigan, 4-2 and 10-5,
overcame a 3S.J3 halftime deficit to
edge Ohio. Greg Floyd~s free throw
with four seconds left cDnched the
game for the Hurons. Ohio, 0-5 and 311, was led by Kirk Lehman's gamehigh 20 points.
Allen Rayborn led Northern
Illinois, 3-2 and &amp;-7, in its thrashing
of Western Michigan with 30 points,
tying his career high. The Broncos,
2-3 and 7-8, were led by KeMy Cunningham with 23 points and Mike
Kabat with 14.
Senior ~nter Trent Grooms had 20
points to pace Kent State, ~ and 311, over Miami, 3-2 and :i-10. Red·
skins Coach Darrell Hedric said his
team had not been mentally ready
for the game. "We just didn't come

BASEBALL

American League

KANSAS CITY ROYALS- Signed
'-_V•IIIe Wilson and Luis Silverio, out ·
f•el.ders.. ~- L . Washington, Jamie
Qutrk, Onl)c: Concepcion, and Rance
Mulliniks, infielders; and Steve
Busby, Kent Cvejklik, Mike Jones,

and Mike Morley, pitchers.
National League

NEW YORK METS -

Signed

Roger Frash, outfielder, and assign·
ed him to Lvnchburg of the Carolina
League.

American 67, Catholic 58

Connecticut 66, Fordham 53
DrexeiBJ Lehigh 77
George Washington 81, St. Bonaven·
lure 76

Georgetown, D.C. 64, St. Peter's,

N.J. 49
Hofstra 82, W. CHester67
Holy Cross 76, Vermont 71
Navy 73, William&amp;Mary 48

Penn St. 75, W. Virginia 71
Pittsburgh Sa\, Duquesne 53
Providence 74, Rhode lsl8nd 59

St. Francis, N.Y. 80, Pace 53
St. John's, N.Y. 66, Boston Col. 63
Temple 49, Bucknell«
Wagner76,C.W. Posl756
Williams 58, Dartmouth 54
SOUTH
Alcorn St. 86, MiSSiSSippi Vly St. 61
Citadel77, Davidson n

oe1eware St. 83, Samford 75

Duke 67, Wake Forest 60

Furman86, E. Tennessee84

Georgia 68, Alabama 65
Jacksonville 73, Virginia

OREGON STATE - Named Bob·
by Roper assistant head football
coach and defensive coordinator.

SYRACUSE- Extended the con·
tact of Frank Maoney, head.football

coach, for an undisclosed periOd of
t ime.
·

UCLA - Named Jim Colletto to its
football coaching staff.

N. Alabama 72. Tenn·Martln 64
N. Carolina 67, N. Carolina St. 64
Old Dominion 60, Norfolk St. !U
s. Alabama 70, Georgia St. 59
s . Florida 70, New Orleans 67
Virginia 69, Penn 39

Education wiD bold a public
meetlag for all peraoulnterested
In lbe football program 00
Tuesday, Jan. ZZ, al7: 3e p.m.

MOR-FLO
I

Delroil92, Canislus 78
E. Michigan 67, Ohio U. 65
Kansas St. 71, Colorado65
Kent Sf. 68, Miami, Ohio 61

Moorhead St. 79, SW Mlnhesota 66
Nebraska 64, Kansas 57
Oklahoma 91, Oklahoma St. 82
St. Louis M, Ala·Birmlngham 76
sw Kansas 76, St. Mary's, Kan. 71
Toledo 72. Ball St. 60
Valparaiso 74, Butler67
SOUTHWEST
Ark. ·Little Rock 80, S. Carolina St.
FAR WEST
California 73, Santa Clara 70

Ohio College Basketball
By The Associated Press
Wednesday's Results

program.

Jacket dl11meter 2011:1" , fl&amp;lgr'lf trom tloor Includes nipples
32", betwHn nlppiM 8" , height ol e lectric outlet t• 1/ 8,
Immersion type 4500 wan lower and upPer twin

••

• ll!ments. C•paclty 5'2 ;al., well insutat@d Whit~ enameltel outer lacl~t~t . 5· YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY .

40 GAU.ON

$12495 $13450

ELBERSBACH
HARDWARE

30 Gal. Elec. $131.95
52 Gal. Elec. $145.95

Phone 992·2811
110 W. Main Pomeroy, o.,

Mld·Amerlcan
Bowling Green 69, Cent. Michigan 62
E. Michigan 67, Ohio U. 65
Kent St. 68, Miami, Ohlo61
N. llllnol591, W. Michigan 76
Toledo72, Ball 51.60
' Metro
Cincinnati 59, Tulane 58 DT
Ohio
Marlena 66, Capital liS
MI.. Union 73, Denison 68
Ohio Northern 77, Wooster 67

Otterbein 73, BaldwlnWal(ace 56
Wittenberg 99, Heidelberg 74

WE ALL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING "FOR THE. FOLLOWING:

,ANNUAL INSPECTION of
Han11ooville Lodge 411, F and AM,
7;~ p.m. Frllil9' _
_wi~ all IIIIIBler.
masons Invited; Duane Will,

FRIDAY

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Mason, W.Va. ·

Pharmacy
,,
KtMeth McC::IIIJCIUift, lit.......
CMrlnlltlm,. llt.;h.
lltONkl H•nlq,lt. ~~~.
.

Mtn. thrv let. I:M1.m. totJt.m.
SuiMIIy 10:H .. 12:101nd S·ID' ·"'·
,,_.SCIUPTIONS
PH.tti-HJS

E. Mllln

Prlet:tdlr Jervlo
0Pift Nlthfa tltl t

PorntNy, o .

1...\MUE CLASSES

TO BE OFFERED
ATHENS, Ohio - A series of
Lamaze Childbirth Preparation
The Rev. Richard Thomas
Classes, sponsored by O'Bleness
distributed copies of-the
direcMemorial Hospital, will begin on
tory containing lists of all pastors
Wednesday, January 30. This class ·
churches of the county, when the
Church members meet and
is
for couples whose expected date of
Meigs County Ministerial Assn. met
delivery
Is prior to March 24.
The call to prayer and seH.U.nial for Its January meeting at the MidClass participants will learn
meeting rl. the Asbury United .. dleport Church of the Nazarene.
breathing and'reluatlon techniques
Any organization wishing to obtain
Methodist Church was held recently
for
first stage labor, effective ez.
at the home of Mrs. Anna Hilldore a copy of the new publication may
pulsion
technique for second stage
with Mrs. Linda Ferrell as assisting send a seH-addressed stamped enlabor,
physical
and emotional aspechostess. Twelve members attended velope and 50 cents to the Meigs
ts
of
the
bkth
process, and body·
Ministry. Boz 'IJ!l, Ml!ldleport, Ohio
the meeting.
conditioning exerciBes to promote
Mrs. Mary Cundiff, president, 45760.
·
comfort during pregnancy and postDuring the meeting. hosted ,bY the
gave devotions on prayer to open the
partum.
meeting. A total of 58 sick visits Rev. James Broome, the Rev.
The fee for the series Ia t35. To
were reported and the officers' Robert McGee reported · that 11
pre'register
for this series, or to
reports were given. -Blessing.boxes teams are involved in the basketball
request
a
schedule
of future classes,
are to be ·taken to the February league which has played for two
contact
Pamela
Collier,
20 Woodside ·
meeting. The birthday of Mrs. Fer- weeks. He also reported on an a~
Drive,
Athens,
OH
4:1701,
or call 593preclalion dinner to be held at the
rell was observed.
51H9.
Mrs. Helen Teaford read letters Holzer Medical Center on Feb. 14 for
from mlasionaries from Korea and ' all area clergy.
Rector Robert Graves, director of
Argentina to whom she had sent
the
chaplaincy program at Veterans
birthday cards. Mrs. Rose ArUl
Memorial
Hospital, reported that
Jenkins will send a package to the
the
schedule
is fairly well completed
missionary in Argentina.
through
May
and he again invited all
Mrs. Opal Kloes bad the program
area
clergy
to
the Hwnan Re8ources
for the call to prayer and seH~enial
Council
meeting
held on the third
service which was ·entitled "Life
Tuesday
of
each
month
at the Meigs
Divine." She w~s a••lsted by Mrs.
Irene Parker, ~u·s. Margaret Inn.
The Rev. William Middleswarth
Eichinger, Mrs. Rose ArUl Jenkins,
Mrs. Dorothy · Winebrenner, and reported that the radio program
Mrs. Cundiff. A special offering was being aired on WMPO on Mondays
taken for the projecU of the call to and Wednesdays has been scheduled
····
prayer and seH~enlal program o[ through March.
The nen association meeting will
UilltedMethodlsl Women.
be
held at 9:30 a. m. on Feb. llal the
Refreshments were served.
Heath United Methodist Church,
Salad Bar
Third Ave., Middleport, with David
Krasner, newly appointed to the
8 oz. New York
Mental Health Center staff, as
speaker. All area clergy are
Baked Potato
welcome.
DUCKWOR111MOVES
Vegetable
Harold Duckworth, Syracuse, has
Fl'OTOMEET
been moved from Wellston Nursing
The Chester PTO will meet Jan. 28
Roll.
Home to the Pomeroy Health Care
at7:30 p.m. Instead of Jan. 21, due to
Center, J'oom 109.
Tea,
Maritn Luther King Day.

new

life.

When breast cancers are found in
a localir.ed stage, about 85 percent ol
the women lifve five years or longer.
And recent studies show that when
cancers are found before they are
palpable - and mammograms often
can find them - the 1().year survival
can be as high as 9'1 percent.
The American Cancer Society
·spokesman ezplaina that advances
in chemotherapy have minimized
the chances of breast cancer recurring. Cancer drugs often are administered routinely following
surgery. Radiation therapy also is
helping to make less radical surgery
more effective than in the past.
A pamphlet en breast cancer Is
now available, free of charge, at the
Meigs ACS office, E. Main St.
(Senior Citizens Building), on thesecond floor.

adndsslon fl for adults and chllclrG
eilrnilted tree when with their paren11; musiCby!heSlrtngdusters.
·-

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SVNDAY

COUNTY-WIDE prayer rneet!J)g,
' 2 p.m. Sunday at Pomeroj Wesleyan
: HoiinesB Church with Glen Bl.ssell,
: class leader.
: _

MONDAY

: :'PR()GRAM BY fotll.ldallon com: lblttee when

the

Mlddlepbrt

! J!l,alinB and Professional W!Dleii'B
• dub meeta at 7:30 p.m. Monday In

~~~~'!""~-"!"'!""'1-lf

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fLORIST
~H. _ 'i92~~o44

JS2 E . Main, Pomer·o~

Your FTD Florist

! Middleport.·

.

roESDA.Y

: :,.HARRISONVILLE Senior Cltlzena
: ClUb meets Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
' town bouse. All memberl are asked
'' to·•llend and pay yearly duell. Cof·
.

.: let, tea and cooldee will be served.

DREW WEBSTER Unit 39,
: AiDerlcin lAigion Au:llllary Tuell: day, 7:30 p;m. Fl'IIJ!Ide Hunnel will
: tlave leglalatlve ~ain.

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'' . - ---- -· - . ·- ·- .. .........., : ~r. Columbus cllscovereil
In lf88.
'' Jfrildllad
·, ....

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ATTENTION:

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY
AND
.
.MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL
CALL 992-2156

,.

BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp; 5 PM .

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL $ TIL 10

MENU

Strip ·

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• I

Coffee or Milk

I

.,.I\

SALE
CONTINUES
STOP IN AND CHECK

'''

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAlURDAY
NIGHT

\\) ~\\ 'l.

OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK
OF DISCOUNTED VALUES

ALL LEGAL

''

:I

WHISKEY
RIVER
5 PIECE GROUP

MA~GUERITE
,_

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I

:'
-.
.I

BEVEMGES SOlD
!

You must be 21 ot ac~omP.nltd ~parents or IIIIa I guardian.

,I

..

:I

SHOES
POMEROY, OHIO

102 E.· MAIN

~I

FROM lANCASTER

:

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' ..

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Weekend At Meigs Inn

: the rl.flcea ol Colwnbia Gas of Oblo,

.; ~

.

·f,."., Your
"Extra Touch'·
Flc•rlst Since 1957

.

ter 1n POIIIeroy; open to publlc with

VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
MEDIMET
UNITED MINE WORKERS

SWISHER LOHSE

•

RECEIVF3 AWARD
June Wickersham of Racine has
been awarded the Producer Award
of theW. T. Rawlelgh Company for
outstanding sales development.
Mrs. Wickersham, as an lndependent Rawleigh Distributor, is part of
an international organization which
has been serving family needs since
1889. A!J a Rawlelgh Distributor.
Mrs. Wickersham supplies home
medicines, spices, enracts, food
supplements and cleaning aids to
homes throughout this area.

thorough physical examination and
instr uction in brea st selfezaminatlon.
All this means that by finding
breast cancers earlier, we're giving
women a better clhance for a longer

· P:m. Fri~ at Senior Citizens Ceo-'

-

.

master.

Ministerial Ass'n.
distributes directory

board was cut to the desired size and
then covered with wallpaper left
from papering the kltchen. This was
covered with clear adhesive - back·
ed paper and while we particularly
like them matching the wallpaper
any pretty paper or picture could be
done the same way.
My Pet Peeve Is with those people
who will not let the phone ring more
than three or four times before they
hand up.- MARCIE
DEAR POlLY - To make all my
cookies the same size I use my ilanl-'
burger press. I put a piece of wued
paper on the bottom of the press and
one on top,of the rolled cookie dough
and press. The same wued paper
can be used throughout the job.
When one wants crisp tltin cookies
press hard. Otherwise press lightly
to get the size you want. I find this
much faster than using a fork to
press them down - in fact, it takes
less than half the time.- CAROL
Polly will send you one of her sign·
ed newspaper • coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her colwnn.
Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care
of this newspaper.

f1·nd-raising crusade of the
American Cancer Society. During
April, ACS volunteers make personal home visits to collect contributions and teach individuals how to
protect themselves against cancer.
The ACS and the National Cancer
Institute are concluding a five-year
effort in which 27 breast cancer
detection demonstration projects
have shown that mass screening for
breast cancer realty does work.
Nearly . 300,000 asymptomatic
women aged 35 to 74 have been examined for five years. Those found
to have breast cancer are being
followed for another five years.
Four out of five cancers
discovered throagh this program
have been in a localized stage, when
chances Of cure are best. Outside the
projects, less than baH the cancers
are found that early.
The demonstration projects rely
heavily on mammograms - low
dose x-rays - together with a

ROUND ancfaqwuare dance 8 to 11 ·

OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION

!

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINtMENT
. ONLY:

guests.

NOTICE

PHARMACEUTICAL CARD -SYSTEM

Mon., 'Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursaay'tlll12 Noon

MIDDLEPORT Chlld Conserva- 1
tion League, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
the Athens County Saving&amp; and Loan
CQ. Riverboat Room. Devotions to
be given by Tanda Seidenabel. B6wl, lng at 8:30 will be held at the Mason
Lanes.
· POMEROY·Middleport Lions .
, Club, diMer with Ladles Ni8ht to be
obllerved, 7 p. m. Thursday at the
Meigs Inn. Entertalnmen_t will .
follow. All Uons are urged to take.

LADIES NIGHT and anniversary
observance when PomeroyMj.ddleport Uons Club meets at 7
p.m. for a dinner Thursday at the
M~ Inn. Uons, their ladies and
guests invited to the special event
which will feature entertainment.

Conference

Herman Grate

MAGNOUA CLUB Thursday 7:30
p.m: at home of Doris Grueser.
Margaret Ill¥ assistant hostess.
Ema Jesse in charge of devotions
and Kathryn Miller in charge of

'14595

ONLY

TeKas Lutheran 67, Southwestern U.
65

FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THI;' .
TRISTATE AREA

'lHllRSDAY

.

77

MASON FURNITURE

-:

I'

A new cookbook is now available
for sale from the Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish. Con·
sistlng rl. recipes from United
Methodists from all over Meigs
County, the new cookbooks feature a
yellow cover containing the names
of all27 United Methodist Churches
In the county In the shape of a crosS.
" The cost of these cookbooks is $3,
and copies may be secured by contacting any of Ule following persons:
Rev. Robert McGee, Pomeroy, .
m-2507; Rev. Robert Robinson,
Middleport, 992-3039; Vernon Nease,
Syracuse Cluster, 941}.2588; Mrs.
GeOrge WoH, Chester, 9115-3523; Mrs.
James Corbitt, Enterprise ·• Rock
Springs , Charge, 992-3317; . Rev.
Richatd Thomas, Northeast Cluster,
667-3960; Rev. Florence Smith,
Southern Cluster, 247-3444 ; or Mrs.
Guy Spencer, Tuppers Plains, 667. 3703.

r--Social Calendar

.

ELECTRIC
.WATER HEATER

FIVE
McFarland, being held here by his
father, SP 4 Charles (Rick) McFarland, Is the first great-grandchild in
the Ohlinger family. Pictured left to right withSP McFarland and son are
Mrs. Icy Bland, great-great-grandmother; Mrs. Opal Ohlinger, greatgrandmother, and Donna McFarland, the grandmotller of Naaman. The
Charles McFarland family came home from Germany for the holidays.
He Is now stationed at Fort Benning, Ga.

January 20 Is when the aMual
Mothers March againat birth tlefects
takes place. Sponsored by tileMarch
of Dimes, the march Is a neighborto-neighbor fund raising campaign.
"The March ol Dimes chaMels
money into numerous programs
thoughout the county," says Linda
King, Mothers March chairwoman.
Some provide Intensive care for
critically ill newborns or special
medical attention for pregnant
women who have compllcatlons.
"Other March of Dimes funds su~
port coU"e scholanbips that the
Meigs &lt;
' chapter gives to
students in the health care fields.
They will also go towards educating
mothers-lo-be and to medical
research at the national level.
NoooelslnHmmetobkthddects;
they can strike anyone - a relative,
frteNI, or neighbor.
"Welcome the marching mother
who comes to YOIII' d~~Qr In Pomeroy.
Middleport, Bradbury, Tuppers
Plflns, Chester. Rutland and
Racine. Help the March rl. Dimes.
You may be helping someone you
know, "says King.

BUY
52 GAL GLASS LINED

By Polly Cramer
POlLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - The large
stainless steel refrigerator where I
work looks terrible. We C&amp;Mot find a
way to clean the outside that does
not leave streaks.- MRS. D.G.
DEAR MRS. D.G. - Usually soap
and water will clean such stainless
steel but if more Is needed use a mild
scouring powder and a soft damp
cloth. Rub with a soft dry clqth to bring up the luster and remove . the
streaks.- POLLY
DEAR POlLY - The sides and
back of my Naugahyde sofa and
chair used to get sticky -I was told
this was from gas heat. I tried all
sorts of things to remove it but
nothing worked until I finally tried
com starch that I rubbed In with a
cloth. It was like magic as all the
stickiness disappeared and it was
smooth as new. -MAE
DEAR POlLY- When my grandchildren come to visit I use my "tie
around the waist" aprons as bibs
and they are great crumb catchers.
-M.M.B.
DEAR POLLY - We have made
such nice place mats for our kitchen
table. For each mat a piece of card-

March of ICookbook available I
Dimes to
begin soon

BEST

30 GAU.ON

Cincinnati 59, Tulane 58

SHOP

..773·5592
,

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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

GAS MODElS

VMI102, Baptist 82
MIDWEST

MASON FURNITURE
PUBIJC MEETING
The Soutllem Local Board of

Streaked Staiuless Steel

THE

Com-

monwealth 61
Kentucky St.73, Pikeville 11
Louisviana St. 93, Auburn 82
Mississippi 67, Vanderbilt 66
Morris Brown 109, Morehouse 89

BALTIMORE BENGALS- NamBill

Polly Cramer

•TOBACCO

...~-.

for the Meigs County Branch of the
American Cancer Society.
Nationwide, more than 106 000
new caseS of · breaat cancer 'are
diagnosed annually, and over 34,000
deaths occ\il'. In Ohio alone, the
figures are 5,600 new cases and 1,900
deaths.
Mary O'Brien Is crusade chair·
man of the Meigs educational and

POLLY·s POINTERS

Wednesday's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press
EAST

Jimmy RAye receiver coach and
Jim Stanley defensive line coach.

COLLEGE
COLUMBIA - Named

---------=--

diana68.

FOOTBALL
--National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS - Named
ed Hank Bullough defensive coordinator and linebacker coach.

Melg1 Cancer Unit
Breaat cancer Is the number one
disese concern of American women,
but today there are effective steps
that both women and their physicians can take to help control the
disease, says S. Michael, spokesman

did well agaliist the Steelets iut
froin Oalclartd's Jack Tatum and
year (1878).
'·
George Atkinson and Dallas' Cliff
"We were ableJo put J)leAQI'e on . ,
-Harris a few years back, when
Swann suffered a concuss!~ in the' JTerry' and cause 'him to chlnge hll
rhytlm. And whenever you cbange
American Cooference championship
anybody's r!Jythm on a pau paUern
game against the Raiders, then
or whatever It throws that liming iift
kllled the Cowboys in the Super Bowl
a tittle bll and It'll burt; I don't care
with one magnificent catch after
what the quarterback says. When
another.
you change his rhytlm it abakee him
"Mating a sure, solid tackle;
a llttle."
that's basically what Pat was
talking about," said Perry. "If you ....
hit him hard enough, maybe you can
make him lose his concentration.
We're not talking about going in
trying to dellberately hurt a person. ·
But when you get a person thinking,
'Where's Pal Thomas?' or 'Where's
Dave Elemndorf?' get him thinking
about something other than the ball
for one split second, you've got an
edge oo him."
One edge the Rams had in their
upset of the Cowboys two playoff
games ago was knowing when
Dallas quarterback Roger Staubach
was likely to throw. In third-andlong situations the Cowboys shifted
to the shotgun formation, an almost ·
certain throwing formation.
Knowing that, the Rams flooded
their secondary with seven defensive backs, effectively shutting
down Tooy Hill, Drew Pearson and
· the rest of the Cowboys• receivers.
The Steelers, though, aren't so
predictable, throwing on first down,
ruMing on third down. "We'll have
to think twice before we throw seven
defensive ba~ Into the game,"
NEW COLOR
Malavasi said.
And how does Los Angeles ezpect
to compensate for that? "That's why
we're playing the game," the coach
sald. "We'llfindoutSunday."
Nolan Cromwell, the Rams' free
safety, suggested one way to COJDo
pensate for the loss of the sevenback defense. "A strong pass rush,"
he said. "That's a prime reason we

to play in the first half, and we got It
taken to us in every way,'' he said.
In the only other game played by a
major Ohio college Wednesday
·night, senior guard Eddie Lee
acored the tying basket to force
overtime and hit the wiMing shot to
lead cincinnati to a 59-4i8 Metro Conference triumpb over Tulane. Cincinnati boosted its overall record to
9-5 with its second triwnph in the
conference against no losses, while
Tulane fell to 1-t in league play and
&amp;-9 overall.
In Ohio Conference action, it was
Marietta 66, Capitsi 65; Mount
Union 73, Denison 68; Ohio Northern
77, Wooster 67; Otterbein-73, Baldwin-Wallace 56; and Wittenberg 99,
Heidelberg 74.
In the Hoosier-Buckeye Conference, Bluffton slammed Earlham
82-$, Findlay edged Taylor 54-52
and Hanover topped Wilmington ~
75.
Case Western Reserve edged John
Carroll 72-70 in the Presidents' Conference, while in non-conference
games involvmg Ohio teams, it was
La Roche 76, Steubenville 74; PeM
1
State-Behrend 89, Dyke 69, and
Wright State 72, Sl Joseph's of In-

Missouri 85, Iowa St. 70

Wednesay•s Sports Transac:tions
By The Associated Press

Kuharich s;tefensive backfield coach .

In Mason County Grade School
Basketball, the New Haven
Lakers downed the Mason Celtlcs

can catch a needle in the dark + he
Can catch anything," he said. "If the
ball hits his bands, he's got it. That
doesn 'I intimidate me at all + but I
think we can do a few things to inlimidate him .. .I think it's my job to
destroy the will of the receiver.
Swann is a man: he's hwnan. And
you can destroy his will to catch the
ball,
That BOUDded strangely like talk

By Sharon Michael
Publta lnformalloo Officer

•

Phone 992·3629

Pomeroy, 0.

•

�_.,

('

~

&amp;-'lbeDailySent!nei,Middleport·Pomeroy,O., Thunday,Jan. 17 1960

.

4-The Daily Sentinel, Mld411eport-Pomerov. 0 .. Thundav. Jan. 17. 1980

'

-

.

A C.S says breast cancer threat can be reduced

Rams :r:nust stop, Bradshaw's passing game
LOS ANGELES (AP) - " How do
you defend against Lynn SwaM and

a John Stallworth• Slmple," says
Dave Elmendorf. "You do it with a
Pat 1bomas and a Rod Perry.''

That may well be the most critical
matchup in Sunday's Super Bowl
game, with Thomas and Perry, the
Loll Angeles Rams' cornerbacks,
trying to mii2Zie the Pittsburgh
Sleelers' terrifying tandem of deep
thnats.
No other team has really been able
to stifle both wide receivers. Doublecovering one meant handing Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw an erun'llved invitation to ez-

ploit the other.
"But no other team has two cor·
nerbacks that are as capable as
ours," Elmendorf, the Rams' strong
safety, said Wednesday before the
team began what Coach Ray
Malavasi described as its two bar·
dest days of workouts.
"When you've got guys who are as
capable as Rod and Pat and you're
matching them up against Stallworth and Swann, you've got two
natural battles there + and I think
that in the .past we've won the battles," said Elmendorf, reflecting on
the Rams' 1().7 victory over the
Steelers during the 19'18 season. In

Ohio Sportlight
By
George Strode

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - If he
maintains his current pace, Bill
Szabo of Oberlin Firetands will
become Ohio's thin! all-time boys
highachool basketballacorer.
the &amp;-foot~ senior needs to match
his career average of 29.2 points.
That would give him a total of 2,394
points, even if F'lrelands would lose
Its first tournament game.
Only Mike Philllps of Manchester,
with 2,573 points, and Middletown's
Jerry Lucas, who scored 2,463 points, would rank ahead of Szabo.
If Flrelands, already lW this
season, could reach the Class AA
state finals, Szabo bas an ~
portunity topass Lucas and Philllps.
However, be would have to acore at
a slightly higher pace to accomplish
it.
Around Ohio: It doesn't seem to
matter to Delphos St. John's girls
that they lost four starters from the
powerhouse that went 74-1 and won
two state titles in !hi, last . three

seasons.
Coach Fran Voll had Class AA St.
John's off to a 8-1 record this season
with the only loss coming to Class
AAA Findlay.
Lorain King's 1...0 start represents
its best beginning since 1~7. Mit·
ch Gillam, King's coach, now has a
career record of 201·100 in 14
seasons. He's 138-46 at the Lorain
school.
It was a rough week physically for
Akron-Canton area basketball
players.
Doug White, a junior at Cuyahoga
Falls Walsh, suffered a broken neck

------------1

4 Door, dark red, color with mat ching red vinyl trim, radio, air

cond ., automatic trans ., 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
tires , landau model. sol id white

S.

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1974 DODGE VAN

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CHEVROLET

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in a swimming accident. So did
junior Kevin Fenwick of Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary in an auto accident.
Rick Spradling ol Canton South
needed 32 stitches to close cuts in his
wrist after be ran his hand through a
plste glass window. Spradling stlll
plsyed against Massillon Perry and
acored ·six points in his team's vic- ·
tory.
Kettering Alter is riding a 61-game
home court winning streak, dating
back to 19'12. Jim Pollard of Dayton
Nortluidge now has his state leading
point average up to 38.2 after hitting
49 against Tipp City.
Greg Stokes, a 6-9 junior, had 19
rebounds and 17 points in Hamilton
Garfield's 54-50 decision of Dayton
Jefferson. Warren Kennedy hasn't
lost in either football or basketball
this school year, going 11~ in both
sports to this point.
For the second straight year,
Austintown Fitch started 7~ and loot
its eighlli game to Warren Western
ReserVe. Beaver Eastern, 11-1, has
no starters over 6 feet, yet whacked
West Union ~18. Eastern's margin
in the third quarter was :l...o.
Napoleon's No. 1 statewide
ranking is the first in its history under veteran Coach Fred Church. In
24 seasons at Edon and Napoleon,
Church has turned out 382 victors.
Tim Reiser, Napoleon's star guard,
already is conunitted to the University of Toledo.
Football - One of Ohio's best
coaching jobs is open at Canton
McKinley after John Brideweser
quit after a !().year record of 77-'l:J,.3.
Contact Superintendent James Hyer
at the Canton city achools
His alma mater didn't show Mike
Joseph any sympathy. Zanesville.
Rosecrans, where Joseph played
basketball, pasted his Fairfield
Union team 66-41. It is the first head
coaching try for Joseph, who has
Fairfield Union 1}.2 after its 6--32
record the last two seasons.
Coshocton, once 1-3 this season,
has peeled off six straight victories
for Coach Gary McElfresh. Tony
Lee of Fostoria St. Wendelin and
Doug Elmer of Gibsonburg matched
35-point totals in a head-~head
meeting last week, but Lee had more
support; St. Wendelinwon59-57.
Dickie Brown of Madison Plains
carries a 31.3 point average. His
high of 45 points against Hillsboro
was a school record. He's a 6-3
senior.
Pam Wills of Licking Valley
poured in 41 points against Newark
Catholic, jumping the :i-10 senior's
!().game average to 27.2 points.

New Haven

whip

4 door, small V-8, automatic,
power steering, power brakes,
locking differential, air condi -

Mason Celtics, 20-10 ,

tioning, clean interior , green .

1977 DODGE

MONAC0'~2695

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Optlt (Wfl i• l~ !tl II! !!·"'

that game, Pittsburgh's two wide
receivers were limited to just 69 yards on five receptions.
'We'll be up in their faces just
about all day," said Thomas, who
missed baH the season with a knee
injury and returned as a starter in
the Rams' !).0 shutout of Tampa Bay .
in the National Conference championship game.
SwaM's biggest asset, Thomas
said, is his c,oncentration. "The guy

ro.to.

Leading scorers were guards
Lee Ayres with sven points and
Mike WoHe with six points. }'orward Jlm Hicks led a fine defensive effort turned in by the
Lakers.
Other Lakers hitting for points
were: JIUDie Estegard, two;
Lane Gandee, two; Mike Allensworth, two and Jeff Hoffman
with one.
Both teams now sport 1-1 records.

II

Toledo tightens
hold on top spot
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Toledo lightened Its grip on first
place in the Mid·American Con·
ference with a strong defensive ef·
fort that carried the Rockets to a '7260 college basketball victory over
Ball State Wednesday night.
"In the second half, our defense
was just super," Toledo Coach Bob
Nichols said after the game. "We got
the big rebounds and we cut them
(Ball State) off on the baseline."
The Rockets are S.O in the conference and 11-3 overall.
In other MAC games Wednesday,
Bowling Green took sole possession
of second place with a 69-02.victory
over Central Michigan, Eastern
Michigan edged Ohio University 67·
65, Northern Illinois whipped
Western Michigan_91-76 and Kent
State topped'Miaini of Ohio SUI.
Nichols said the Rockets displayed
better offensive rebounding in the
second half following a "dlsa~
pointing" performance on the boards in the opening 20 minutes.
Toledo found itseH in a tight game
until the final minutes, when Jim
Swaney, Tim Selgo, Harvey
Knuckles and Dick Miller fired in
four straight baskets to stretch the
Rockets' lead to 68-56 with 2:46
remaining in the contest. Swaney
was the Rockets' top scorer with 24
points.
Ball State is now 1~ in the MAC
and 7-8 overall.
. 8owling Green's victory gave the
Falcons a mark of 4-1 in league play
and 11J.3 overall. Forward Joe Faine
led Bowling Green with 25 points.
After taking big leads in the first
half, Bowling Green bad to beat
back a rally led by the Chippewas'
Melvin McLaughlin before clinching
the victory. The freshman guard
scored 24 points for Central
Michigan, 2-3 and ~.
Eastern Michigan, 4-2 and 10-5,
overcame a 3S.J3 halftime deficit to
edge Ohio. Greg Floyd~s free throw
with four seconds left cDnched the
game for the Hurons. Ohio, 0-5 and 311, was led by Kirk Lehman's gamehigh 20 points.
Allen Rayborn led Northern
Illinois, 3-2 and &amp;-7, in its thrashing
of Western Michigan with 30 points,
tying his career high. The Broncos,
2-3 and 7-8, were led by KeMy Cunningham with 23 points and Mike
Kabat with 14.
Senior ~nter Trent Grooms had 20
points to pace Kent State, ~ and 311, over Miami, 3-2 and :i-10. Red·
skins Coach Darrell Hedric said his
team had not been mentally ready
for the game. "We just didn't come

BASEBALL

American League

KANSAS CITY ROYALS- Signed
'-_V•IIIe Wilson and Luis Silverio, out ·
f•el.ders.. ~- L . Washington, Jamie
Qutrk, Onl)c: Concepcion, and Rance
Mulliniks, infielders; and Steve
Busby, Kent Cvejklik, Mike Jones,

and Mike Morley, pitchers.
National League

NEW YORK METS -

Signed

Roger Frash, outfielder, and assign·
ed him to Lvnchburg of the Carolina
League.

American 67, Catholic 58

Connecticut 66, Fordham 53
DrexeiBJ Lehigh 77
George Washington 81, St. Bonaven·
lure 76

Georgetown, D.C. 64, St. Peter's,

N.J. 49
Hofstra 82, W. CHester67
Holy Cross 76, Vermont 71
Navy 73, William&amp;Mary 48

Penn St. 75, W. Virginia 71
Pittsburgh Sa\, Duquesne 53
Providence 74, Rhode lsl8nd 59

St. Francis, N.Y. 80, Pace 53
St. John's, N.Y. 66, Boston Col. 63
Temple 49, Bucknell«
Wagner76,C.W. Posl756
Williams 58, Dartmouth 54
SOUTH
Alcorn St. 86, MiSSiSSippi Vly St. 61
Citadel77, Davidson n

oe1eware St. 83, Samford 75

Duke 67, Wake Forest 60

Furman86, E. Tennessee84

Georgia 68, Alabama 65
Jacksonville 73, Virginia

OREGON STATE - Named Bob·
by Roper assistant head football
coach and defensive coordinator.

SYRACUSE- Extended the con·
tact of Frank Maoney, head.football

coach, for an undisclosed periOd of
t ime.
·

UCLA - Named Jim Colletto to its
football coaching staff.

N. Alabama 72. Tenn·Martln 64
N. Carolina 67, N. Carolina St. 64
Old Dominion 60, Norfolk St. !U
s. Alabama 70, Georgia St. 59
s . Florida 70, New Orleans 67
Virginia 69, Penn 39

Education wiD bold a public
meetlag for all peraoulnterested
In lbe football program 00
Tuesday, Jan. ZZ, al7: 3e p.m.

MOR-FLO
I

Delroil92, Canislus 78
E. Michigan 67, Ohio U. 65
Kansas St. 71, Colorado65
Kent Sf. 68, Miami, Ohio 61

Moorhead St. 79, SW Mlnhesota 66
Nebraska 64, Kansas 57
Oklahoma 91, Oklahoma St. 82
St. Louis M, Ala·Birmlngham 76
sw Kansas 76, St. Mary's, Kan. 71
Toledo 72. Ball St. 60
Valparaiso 74, Butler67
SOUTHWEST
Ark. ·Little Rock 80, S. Carolina St.
FAR WEST
California 73, Santa Clara 70

Ohio College Basketball
By The Associated Press
Wednesday's Results

program.

Jacket dl11meter 2011:1" , fl&amp;lgr'lf trom tloor Includes nipples
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$12495 $13450

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HARDWARE

30 Gal. Elec. $131.95
52 Gal. Elec. $145.95

Phone 992·2811
110 W. Main Pomeroy, o.,

Mld·Amerlcan
Bowling Green 69, Cent. Michigan 62
E. Michigan 67, Ohio U. 65
Kent St. 68, Miami, Ohlo61
N. llllnol591, W. Michigan 76
Toledo72, Ball 51.60
' Metro
Cincinnati 59, Tulane 58 DT
Ohio
Marlena 66, Capital liS
MI.. Union 73, Denison 68
Ohio Northern 77, Wooster 67

Otterbein 73, BaldwlnWal(ace 56
Wittenberg 99, Heidelberg 74

WE ALL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING "FOR THE. FOLLOWING:

,ANNUAL INSPECTION of
Han11ooville Lodge 411, F and AM,
7;~ p.m. Frllil9' _
_wi~ all IIIIIBler.
masons Invited; Duane Will,

FRIDAY

..

.

Mason, W.Va. ·

Pharmacy
,,
KtMeth McC::IIIJCIUift, lit.......
CMrlnlltlm,. llt.;h.
lltONkl H•nlq,lt. ~~~.
.

Mtn. thrv let. I:M1.m. totJt.m.
SuiMIIy 10:H .. 12:101nd S·ID' ·"'·
,,_.SCIUPTIONS
PH.tti-HJS

E. Mllln

Prlet:tdlr Jervlo
0Pift Nlthfa tltl t

PorntNy, o .

1...\MUE CLASSES

TO BE OFFERED
ATHENS, Ohio - A series of
Lamaze Childbirth Preparation
The Rev. Richard Thomas
Classes, sponsored by O'Bleness
distributed copies of-the
direcMemorial Hospital, will begin on
tory containing lists of all pastors
Wednesday, January 30. This class ·
churches of the county, when the
Church members meet and
is
for couples whose expected date of
Meigs County Ministerial Assn. met
delivery
Is prior to March 24.
The call to prayer and seH.U.nial for Its January meeting at the MidClass participants will learn
meeting rl. the Asbury United .. dleport Church of the Nazarene.
breathing and'reluatlon techniques
Any organization wishing to obtain
Methodist Church was held recently
for
first stage labor, effective ez.
at the home of Mrs. Anna Hilldore a copy of the new publication may
pulsion
technique for second stage
with Mrs. Linda Ferrell as assisting send a seH-addressed stamped enlabor,
physical
and emotional aspechostess. Twelve members attended velope and 50 cents to the Meigs
ts
of
the
bkth
process, and body·
Ministry. Boz 'IJ!l, Ml!ldleport, Ohio
the meeting.
conditioning exerciBes to promote
Mrs. Mary Cundiff, president, 45760.
·
comfort during pregnancy and postDuring the meeting. hosted ,bY the
gave devotions on prayer to open the
partum.
meeting. A total of 58 sick visits Rev. James Broome, the Rev.
The fee for the series Ia t35. To
were reported and the officers' Robert McGee reported · that 11
pre'register
for this series, or to
reports were given. -Blessing.boxes teams are involved in the basketball
request
a
schedule
of future classes,
are to be ·taken to the February league which has played for two
contact
Pamela
Collier,
20 Woodside ·
meeting. The birthday of Mrs. Fer- weeks. He also reported on an a~
Drive,
Athens,
OH
4:1701,
or call 593preclalion dinner to be held at the
rell was observed.
51H9.
Mrs. Helen Teaford read letters Holzer Medical Center on Feb. 14 for
from mlasionaries from Korea and ' all area clergy.
Rector Robert Graves, director of
Argentina to whom she had sent
the
chaplaincy program at Veterans
birthday cards. Mrs. Rose ArUl
Memorial
Hospital, reported that
Jenkins will send a package to the
the
schedule
is fairly well completed
missionary in Argentina.
through
May
and he again invited all
Mrs. Opal Kloes bad the program
area
clergy
to
the Hwnan Re8ources
for the call to prayer and seH~enial
Council
meeting
held on the third
service which was ·entitled "Life
Tuesday
of
each
month
at the Meigs
Divine." She w~s a••lsted by Mrs.
Irene Parker, ~u·s. Margaret Inn.
The Rev. William Middleswarth
Eichinger, Mrs. Rose ArUl Jenkins,
Mrs. Dorothy · Winebrenner, and reported that the radio program
Mrs. Cundiff. A special offering was being aired on WMPO on Mondays
taken for the projecU of the call to and Wednesdays has been scheduled
····
prayer and seH~enlal program o[ through March.
The nen association meeting will
UilltedMethodlsl Women.
be
held at 9:30 a. m. on Feb. llal the
Refreshments were served.
Heath United Methodist Church,
Salad Bar
Third Ave., Middleport, with David
Krasner, newly appointed to the
8 oz. New York
Mental Health Center staff, as
speaker. All area clergy are
Baked Potato
welcome.
DUCKWOR111MOVES
Vegetable
Harold Duckworth, Syracuse, has
Fl'OTOMEET
been moved from Wellston Nursing
The Chester PTO will meet Jan. 28
Roll.
Home to the Pomeroy Health Care
at7:30 p.m. Instead of Jan. 21, due to
Center, J'oom 109.
Tea,
Maritn Luther King Day.

new

life.

When breast cancers are found in
a localir.ed stage, about 85 percent ol
the women lifve five years or longer.
And recent studies show that when
cancers are found before they are
palpable - and mammograms often
can find them - the 1().year survival
can be as high as 9'1 percent.
The American Cancer Society
·spokesman ezplaina that advances
in chemotherapy have minimized
the chances of breast cancer recurring. Cancer drugs often are administered routinely following
surgery. Radiation therapy also is
helping to make less radical surgery
more effective than in the past.
A pamphlet en breast cancer Is
now available, free of charge, at the
Meigs ACS office, E. Main St.
(Senior Citizens Building), on thesecond floor.

adndsslon fl for adults and chllclrG
eilrnilted tree when with their paren11; musiCby!heSlrtngdusters.
·-

.•.

SVNDAY

COUNTY-WIDE prayer rneet!J)g,
' 2 p.m. Sunday at Pomeroj Wesleyan
: HoiinesB Church with Glen Bl.ssell,
: class leader.
: _

MONDAY

: :'PR()GRAM BY fotll.ldallon com: lblttee when

the

Mlddlepbrt

! J!l,alinB and Professional W!Dleii'B
• dub meeta at 7:30 p.m. Monday In

~~~~'!""~-"!"'!""'1-lf

I

I

fLORIST
~H. _ 'i92~~o44

JS2 E . Main, Pomer·o~

Your FTD Florist

! Middleport.·

.

roESDA.Y

: :,.HARRISONVILLE Senior Cltlzena
: ClUb meets Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
' town bouse. All memberl are asked
'' to·•llend and pay yearly duell. Cof·
.

.: let, tea and cooldee will be served.

DREW WEBSTER Unit 39,
: AiDerlcin lAigion Au:llllary Tuell: day, 7:30 p;m. Fl'IIJ!Ide Hunnel will
: tlave leglalatlve ~ain.

....

'' . - ---- -· - . ·- ·- .. .........., : ~r. Columbus cllscovereil
In lf88.
'' Jfrildllad
·, ....

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J·

ATTENTION:

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY
AND
.
.MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL
CALL 992-2156

,.

BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp; 5 PM .

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL $ TIL 10

MENU

Strip ·

''

l
I'

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• I

• I

Coffee or Milk

I

.,.I\

SALE
CONTINUES
STOP IN AND CHECK

'''

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAlURDAY
NIGHT

\\) ~\\ 'l.

OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK
OF DISCOUNTED VALUES

ALL LEGAL

''

:I

WHISKEY
RIVER
5 PIECE GROUP

MA~GUERITE
,_

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I

:'
-.
.I

BEVEMGES SOlD
!

You must be 21 ot ac~omP.nltd ~parents or IIIIa I guardian.

,I

..

:I

SHOES
POMEROY, OHIO

102 E.· MAIN

~I

FROM lANCASTER

:

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' ..

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Weekend At Meigs Inn

: the rl.flcea ol Colwnbia Gas of Oblo,

.; ~

.

·f,."., Your
"Extra Touch'·
Flc•rlst Since 1957

.

ter 1n POIIIeroy; open to publlc with

VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
MEDIMET
UNITED MINE WORKERS

SWISHER LOHSE

•

RECEIVF3 AWARD
June Wickersham of Racine has
been awarded the Producer Award
of theW. T. Rawlelgh Company for
outstanding sales development.
Mrs. Wickersham, as an lndependent Rawleigh Distributor, is part of
an international organization which
has been serving family needs since
1889. A!J a Rawlelgh Distributor.
Mrs. Wickersham supplies home
medicines, spices, enracts, food
supplements and cleaning aids to
homes throughout this area.

thorough physical examination and
instr uction in brea st selfezaminatlon.
All this means that by finding
breast cancers earlier, we're giving
women a better clhance for a longer

· P:m. Fri~ at Senior Citizens Ceo-'

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master.

Ministerial Ass'n.
distributes directory

board was cut to the desired size and
then covered with wallpaper left
from papering the kltchen. This was
covered with clear adhesive - back·
ed paper and while we particularly
like them matching the wallpaper
any pretty paper or picture could be
done the same way.
My Pet Peeve Is with those people
who will not let the phone ring more
than three or four times before they
hand up.- MARCIE
DEAR POlLY - To make all my
cookies the same size I use my ilanl-'
burger press. I put a piece of wued
paper on the bottom of the press and
one on top,of the rolled cookie dough
and press. The same wued paper
can be used throughout the job.
When one wants crisp tltin cookies
press hard. Otherwise press lightly
to get the size you want. I find this
much faster than using a fork to
press them down - in fact, it takes
less than half the time.- CAROL
Polly will send you one of her sign·
ed newspaper • coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her colwnn.
Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care
of this newspaper.

f1·nd-raising crusade of the
American Cancer Society. During
April, ACS volunteers make personal home visits to collect contributions and teach individuals how to
protect themselves against cancer.
The ACS and the National Cancer
Institute are concluding a five-year
effort in which 27 breast cancer
detection demonstration projects
have shown that mass screening for
breast cancer realty does work.
Nearly . 300,000 asymptomatic
women aged 35 to 74 have been examined for five years. Those found
to have breast cancer are being
followed for another five years.
Four out of five cancers
discovered throagh this program
have been in a localized stage, when
chances Of cure are best. Outside the
projects, less than baH the cancers
are found that early.
The demonstration projects rely
heavily on mammograms - low
dose x-rays - together with a

ROUND ancfaqwuare dance 8 to 11 ·

OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION

!

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINtMENT
. ONLY:

guests.

NOTICE

PHARMACEUTICAL CARD -SYSTEM

Mon., 'Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursaay'tlll12 Noon

MIDDLEPORT Chlld Conserva- 1
tion League, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
the Athens County Saving&amp; and Loan
CQ. Riverboat Room. Devotions to
be given by Tanda Seidenabel. B6wl, lng at 8:30 will be held at the Mason
Lanes.
· POMEROY·Middleport Lions .
, Club, diMer with Ladles Ni8ht to be
obllerved, 7 p. m. Thursday at the
Meigs Inn. Entertalnmen_t will .
follow. All Uons are urged to take.

LADIES NIGHT and anniversary
observance when PomeroyMj.ddleport Uons Club meets at 7
p.m. for a dinner Thursday at the
M~ Inn. Uons, their ladies and
guests invited to the special event
which will feature entertainment.

Conference

Herman Grate

MAGNOUA CLUB Thursday 7:30
p.m: at home of Doris Grueser.
Margaret Ill¥ assistant hostess.
Ema Jesse in charge of devotions
and Kathryn Miller in charge of

'14595

ONLY

TeKas Lutheran 67, Southwestern U.
65

FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THI;' .
TRISTATE AREA

'lHllRSDAY

.

77

MASON FURNITURE

-:

I'

A new cookbook is now available
for sale from the Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish. Con·
sistlng rl. recipes from United
Methodists from all over Meigs
County, the new cookbooks feature a
yellow cover containing the names
of all27 United Methodist Churches
In the county In the shape of a crosS.
" The cost of these cookbooks is $3,
and copies may be secured by contacting any of Ule following persons:
Rev. Robert McGee, Pomeroy, .
m-2507; Rev. Robert Robinson,
Middleport, 992-3039; Vernon Nease,
Syracuse Cluster, 941}.2588; Mrs.
GeOrge WoH, Chester, 9115-3523; Mrs.
James Corbitt, Enterprise ·• Rock
Springs , Charge, 992-3317; . Rev.
Richatd Thomas, Northeast Cluster,
667-3960; Rev. Florence Smith,
Southern Cluster, 247-3444 ; or Mrs.
Guy Spencer, Tuppers Plains, 667. 3703.

r--Social Calendar

.

ELECTRIC
.WATER HEATER

FIVE
McFarland, being held here by his
father, SP 4 Charles (Rick) McFarland, Is the first great-grandchild in
the Ohlinger family. Pictured left to right withSP McFarland and son are
Mrs. Icy Bland, great-great-grandmother; Mrs. Opal Ohlinger, greatgrandmother, and Donna McFarland, the grandmotller of Naaman. The
Charles McFarland family came home from Germany for the holidays.
He Is now stationed at Fort Benning, Ga.

January 20 Is when the aMual
Mothers March againat birth tlefects
takes place. Sponsored by tileMarch
of Dimes, the march Is a neighborto-neighbor fund raising campaign.
"The March ol Dimes chaMels
money into numerous programs
thoughout the county," says Linda
King, Mothers March chairwoman.
Some provide Intensive care for
critically ill newborns or special
medical attention for pregnant
women who have compllcatlons.
"Other March of Dimes funds su~
port coU"e scholanbips that the
Meigs &lt;
' chapter gives to
students in the health care fields.
They will also go towards educating
mothers-lo-be and to medical
research at the national level.
NoooelslnHmmetobkthddects;
they can strike anyone - a relative,
frteNI, or neighbor.
"Welcome the marching mother
who comes to YOIII' d~~Qr In Pomeroy.
Middleport, Bradbury, Tuppers
Plflns, Chester. Rutland and
Racine. Help the March rl. Dimes.
You may be helping someone you
know, "says King.

BUY
52 GAL GLASS LINED

By Polly Cramer
POlLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - The large
stainless steel refrigerator where I
work looks terrible. We C&amp;Mot find a
way to clean the outside that does
not leave streaks.- MRS. D.G.
DEAR MRS. D.G. - Usually soap
and water will clean such stainless
steel but if more Is needed use a mild
scouring powder and a soft damp
cloth. Rub with a soft dry clqth to bring up the luster and remove . the
streaks.- POLLY
DEAR POlLY - The sides and
back of my Naugahyde sofa and
chair used to get sticky -I was told
this was from gas heat. I tried all
sorts of things to remove it but
nothing worked until I finally tried
com starch that I rubbed In with a
cloth. It was like magic as all the
stickiness disappeared and it was
smooth as new. -MAE
DEAR POlLY- When my grandchildren come to visit I use my "tie
around the waist" aprons as bibs
and they are great crumb catchers.
-M.M.B.
DEAR POLLY - We have made
such nice place mats for our kitchen
table. For each mat a piece of card-

March of ICookbook available I
Dimes to
begin soon

BEST

30 GAU.ON

Cincinnati 59, Tulane 58

SHOP

..773·5592
,

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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

GAS MODElS

VMI102, Baptist 82
MIDWEST

MASON FURNITURE
PUBIJC MEETING
The Soutllem Local Board of

Streaked Staiuless Steel

THE

Com-

monwealth 61
Kentucky St.73, Pikeville 11
Louisviana St. 93, Auburn 82
Mississippi 67, Vanderbilt 66
Morris Brown 109, Morehouse 89

BALTIMORE BENGALS- NamBill

Polly Cramer

•TOBACCO

...~-.

for the Meigs County Branch of the
American Cancer Society.
Nationwide, more than 106 000
new caseS of · breaat cancer 'are
diagnosed annually, and over 34,000
deaths occ\il'. In Ohio alone, the
figures are 5,600 new cases and 1,900
deaths.
Mary O'Brien Is crusade chair·
man of the Meigs educational and

POLLY·s POINTERS

Wednesday's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press
EAST

Jimmy RAye receiver coach and
Jim Stanley defensive line coach.

COLLEGE
COLUMBIA - Named

---------=--

diana68.

FOOTBALL
--National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS - Named
ed Hank Bullough defensive coordinator and linebacker coach.

Melg1 Cancer Unit
Breaat cancer Is the number one
disese concern of American women,
but today there are effective steps
that both women and their physicians can take to help control the
disease, says S. Michael, spokesman

did well agaliist the Steelets iut
froin Oalclartd's Jack Tatum and
year (1878).
'·
George Atkinson and Dallas' Cliff
"We were ableJo put J)leAQI'e on . ,
-Harris a few years back, when
Swann suffered a concuss!~ in the' JTerry' and cause 'him to chlnge hll
rhytlm. And whenever you cbange
American Cooference championship
anybody's r!Jythm on a pau paUern
game against the Raiders, then
or whatever It throws that liming iift
kllled the Cowboys in the Super Bowl
a tittle bll and It'll burt; I don't care
with one magnificent catch after
what the quarterback says. When
another.
you change his rhytlm it abakee him
"Mating a sure, solid tackle;
a llttle."
that's basically what Pat was
talking about," said Perry. "If you ....
hit him hard enough, maybe you can
make him lose his concentration.
We're not talking about going in
trying to dellberately hurt a person. ·
But when you get a person thinking,
'Where's Pal Thomas?' or 'Where's
Dave Elemndorf?' get him thinking
about something other than the ball
for one split second, you've got an
edge oo him."
One edge the Rams had in their
upset of the Cowboys two playoff
games ago was knowing when
Dallas quarterback Roger Staubach
was likely to throw. In third-andlong situations the Cowboys shifted
to the shotgun formation, an almost ·
certain throwing formation.
Knowing that, the Rams flooded
their secondary with seven defensive backs, effectively shutting
down Tooy Hill, Drew Pearson and
· the rest of the Cowboys• receivers.
The Steelers, though, aren't so
predictable, throwing on first down,
ruMing on third down. "We'll have
to think twice before we throw seven
defensive ba~ Into the game,"
NEW COLOR
Malavasi said.
And how does Los Angeles ezpect
to compensate for that? "That's why
we're playing the game," the coach
sald. "We'llfindoutSunday."
Nolan Cromwell, the Rams' free
safety, suggested one way to COJDo
pensate for the loss of the sevenback defense. "A strong pass rush,"
he said. "That's a prime reason we

to play in the first half, and we got It
taken to us in every way,'' he said.
In the only other game played by a
major Ohio college Wednesday
·night, senior guard Eddie Lee
acored the tying basket to force
overtime and hit the wiMing shot to
lead cincinnati to a 59-4i8 Metro Conference triumpb over Tulane. Cincinnati boosted its overall record to
9-5 with its second triwnph in the
conference against no losses, while
Tulane fell to 1-t in league play and
&amp;-9 overall.
In Ohio Conference action, it was
Marietta 66, Capitsi 65; Mount
Union 73, Denison 68; Ohio Northern
77, Wooster 67; Otterbein-73, Baldwin-Wallace 56; and Wittenberg 99,
Heidelberg 74.
In the Hoosier-Buckeye Conference, Bluffton slammed Earlham
82-$, Findlay edged Taylor 54-52
and Hanover topped Wilmington ~
75.
Case Western Reserve edged John
Carroll 72-70 in the Presidents' Conference, while in non-conference
games involvmg Ohio teams, it was
La Roche 76, Steubenville 74; PeM
1
State-Behrend 89, Dyke 69, and
Wright State 72, Sl Joseph's of In-

Missouri 85, Iowa St. 70

Wednesay•s Sports Transac:tions
By The Associated Press

Kuharich s;tefensive backfield coach .

In Mason County Grade School
Basketball, the New Haven
Lakers downed the Mason Celtlcs

can catch a needle in the dark + he
Can catch anything," he said. "If the
ball hits his bands, he's got it. That
doesn 'I intimidate me at all + but I
think we can do a few things to inlimidate him .. .I think it's my job to
destroy the will of the receiver.
Swann is a man: he's hwnan. And
you can destroy his will to catch the
ball,
That BOUDded strangely like talk

By Sharon Michael
Publta lnformalloo Officer

•

Phone 992·3629

Pomeroy, 0.

•

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 17, 1980

Missionary

•

~'ociety

Projects for February were planned at the Tuesday night meetings of
the three circles of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society of the Middleport First Baptis,t Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs. June Kloes, the Dorcas Circle planned a
Visit to the Meigs CoWlty Infinnary on Valentine's Day. Cupcakes and ice
cream will he laken to the residents there. Three who have birthdays this
month will he remembered by the circle.
Mrs. Sarah Fowler, circle chainnan, will check with the Pomeroy
Health Center about a visiting program there. Get-well cards were signed
for Mrs. Alwilda Werner, Mrs. Ada Root, and Harold Hubbard.
Prayer to open the meeting was given by Mrs. Katie Anthony. Mrs.
K.loes had devotions entitied "RJiiny Day Problems." A card from Mrs.
Elizabeth Gardner was read. The hostess served a dessert course and coffee.
Mrs. Clarabelle Riley, chairman of the Love Joy Circle, hosted the
Tuesday night meeting at her home. Reporta were given on recent visits
with Mrs. Vivian Titus and Mrs. Ada Root at the Pinecrest Nursing Home
in Gallipolis. A thank you note from the Baptist scholarship girl was read,
and plans were ma~e to remember a shutin this month on his birthday.

'

plans projects

and to send Va Ientine remembrances.
Mrs. Riley had the devotions. Mrs. Marilyn Fultz was a guest and the
hostess served refl'elllunents.
Elects Circle members Rhoda Hall and Freda Hood reported on 'their
visit with Mrs. Ada Root, ·101 Tuesday, at the Pinecrest Nursing Center,
Gallipolis, at the circle meeting held at the home of Mrs. Eva Hartiey. A
gift was taken to Mrs. Root who is a member of the church.
During the meeting plans were made to remember the shutins on
Valentine's Day and to send a gift of money to the scholarship girl.
Members worked on the bandages which is a part of the white cross work.
A report was given on the trays of fruit delivered to the shutins at
Christmas. A thank you note was read from Maude Betz in appreciation
for a Christmas remembrance.
Mrs. Sara Dawn Owen had devotions using "Live Today" as her topic ·
with scripture from Matt. 6 She concluded with a poem.
Mrs. Lillian Demoskey had the program using an article from
Guideposts, "Some Keys to Success", by Art Linkletter. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Hariley and her daughter, Nancy Cooper, to those
named and Mrs. Bernice Baker, chairman.

'

Birthdays

Generation Rap
By llt•lt•n and~ .... Bnttt·l

Should Separated Wife Be
Martyr' saint or Sensible?
By Helen Bottel

Tamra Vance
Tamra Vance recently celebrated
ber lOth birthday at the Chester
Skate-a-Way with a skating party.
Cake, Kool-Aid, potato cips,
pretzels, cookies and pop were served to the guests. The birthday cake
was provided by Sharon Stewart.
Attending were Joyce Hlad,
Michael Hlad, Eddie Hlad, Juanlta
Bolen, Harold Bolen, Don Harrison,
Diane Harrison, Danyan Magers,
Diana Magers, Marge Schoonover,
Jerry Schoonover, Mike Brothers,
Candy Brothers, Bill Brothers, Amy
Brothers, Becky Thomas, Angie
Slaon, Shannon Slavin, Rhonda
Zirkle, Rush Reece, Reatha Clonch,
John Clonch, Krista Clonch, Ted
Smith, Rodney Harrison, Ulri
Tucker, Otis Norris, Deanna Norris,
Tim Jeffers, Liaa Frymeyer, Danny
Hall, Kevin Victor King, T. T. Simmons, Beth Blaine, Audra
Houdaahelt, Tanuny Eblin, Dusne
Howell, Bill Howell, Artie Hunnel,
I)arrin Warth, Sherrie Might, Larry
Tucker, Paul Doug Michaels, Jody
Harrison.
Sending gilts were Mrs. Daisy
Vance, Ronald Vance, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Workman, Mr. and Mrs.
David Scarpelli, Angie and Mindy
McDonald.

DEAR HELEN:
After a lot of indignities, my friend
finally separated from her mostiy
no-good husband. In a year, she and
the children have blossomed into
happy, going-places people. She admits the separation was best for
everyone, and was about to file for
divorce when she leamed he had
cancer_ The doctor privately told her
there was no hope: it would he a
long, lingering death.
Her husband doesn't yet know his
diBease is fatal.
Now my friend is consumed with
pity. She feels it's her duty to bring
him back home and nurse him Wltil
the end. Says if she doesn't, she'll
feel guilty the rest of her life, though
love died long ago.
l:Jnless he changes radically, and I
doubt be can, he'll be a miserable,
demanding patient. She and the girls
will lose all they've gained, and
more, in this year of freedom.
I tell her if she can't think straight
for herself, at least consider her
tee!Higers. They shouldn't be put
through such misery for a man who
was never much of a father to them.
What is your opinion? And could
you ask your readers, as she won't
he making a final decision Wltil he
returns from a twD-months trip. FRIEND.
DEAR FRIEND:
Only your friend know sher
capacity for gullt, so the decision
must ultimately be hers. But if she'd
stop leading with her emotions and
think rationally she might find a
solution that wouldn't turn her and
the children into martyrs.
Here are some starter questions:
Has she considered thht her h~
band might not want to return home
as an object of pity?
Have the teen-agers been consulted? It's their lives too.
Sometimes young people's honesty
can bring a problem into focus.
Might a therapist help her
understnad that whlle circumstances have changed, her will
to end the marriage hasn't; and it
isn't "selfish" to go ahead with the
divorce?
Is there another way? Your friend
could stay in touch, provide moral
support, arrange for care at the last,
without becoming a full-time nurse.
I'v~ an idea her former mate may
prefer this option...and it would certainly relieve her guilt.
Now, I've had my say. Readers:
how about yours?- H.
DEAR HELEN :
I was engaged to a man who "stepped out for breakfast" year ago
and has just now come back. He left
me with his killer dog, Wlpaid bills
and his bad memory for tile $350 I
loaned him once. I was also stuck for

a

Selfdenitll meet held

Rochelle Jenkins
Mary Rochelle Jenkins was
honored by her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Jenkins, with a birthday
dinner and party on her 2nd birthday.

Dinner guests were her greatgrandmother, Mrs. Florence Potts,
and ber grandparents, Mrs. Carl
Jenkins, Vienna, W. Va., and Mr.
and Mrs. Don Lisle, Syracuse, and
her sister, Kimberly Dawn Jenkins.
Guests at the party besides those
mentilllled above were Mr. and Mrs.
Jolm Liale, Todd, Scott and Travis;
Mrs. Judy King, Kevin and Kristin.
Rochelle received gifts from Renee,
Troy and Brian Willis, Charles and
Irene Hoback, Helen Baer, Mr. and
Mrs. Al Harmon, Wendi and Crystal,
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Liale, Jason anct
( Nickolas.
Rochelle's stand-up doll cake,
~ by her grandmother, Mrs.
Mary Lisle, waa served along with
homemade Ice cream.

"Life Divine" was the theme of
the call to prayer and selfdenial program held by the United Methodist
. Women at the home of Mrs. Mary K.
Roush with Mrs. Kathleen Scott as
the assisting hostess.
Scripture fnm Matthew 5 was
read by Leah Nease, and a meditation was given by Mrs. Ann Watson.
She also read the 1980 offering objectives of women in the United States.
The international projects of Argentina, Peru, Tanzania, Angola, and
India were given by Mrs. Betty
Koch, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs. Scott,
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, and Mrs. Mary
Nease. Each of the other members
attending read a short prayer.
Mrs. Mary Nease bad charge of
the business meeling with thank you
notes for Christmas fruit baskets being read from Mrs. Helen Nease,
Mrs. Grace Fisher, and Mrs. Mae
Holter.
Adonatiqn of S6 each was received
from Mrs. Fisher and Mrs. Helen
. Nease. The call to prayer and selfdenial envelope were collected.
Forty-two sick calls were reported,
and a white elephant sale was planned for the February meeting.
Refreslunents were served by the
hostesses.

RECEIVES PRIZE

Women warned
against marijuana use
WASHINGTON (AP)- Smoking
marijuana may cause temporary lnfertlllty 1111101111 women of childbearing age and could Increase the
danger · that they will have
miscarriages, medical researchers
told a congressional panel Wednesday.
Dr. Harris Roaenkrantz, director
of the Mason Research Institute in
Worcester, Mass., said women who
smoke marijuana "play Rusaian
Roulette" with the lives of their wtbom bablell.
"I think there Ia a potential
hazard, especlaJ)y In the early days
of gestation" said Rosenkrantz. "If
you smoke marijuana you're not
going to have a defonned baby but you may l011e the baby you actually want.''
But the researchers testifying
before the Senate Judiciary subconunittee oo C1'imiJIII) justice
agreed for the most part that In-

Pennie Powell
honored
by shower
Congregational meeting ends
with election of officers
Mrs. Oretha Snider was awarded
the door prize at the recent meeting
of the Racine Firemen's Auxiliary.

Mrs. Eugene Powell, the former
Pennie Wolfe, was honored recentiy
with a layette shower given by her
sisters, Eileen Tripp of Beaver
Falls, Pa. and Ruth Ann Graham,
Rutiand, at the Graham home.
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners. Refreshments
of cake, decorated with the names of
boys and girls in blue, punch; coffee,
potato chips, nuts and a variety d.
sandwiches were served.
Attending were Mrs. Ann Wolfe,
Mrs. Delores Powell, Middleport;
Mrs. Benny Wolfe, Crlsty and Misty,
Rutiand; Brenda Wolfe and son,
Jimmy, Bradbury; Georgene Grate,
Fanny Miller, Elsie Sutherland,
Rutiand; Charlotte Wolfe and grandson, Reedsville.
Sending gifts were Debbie Gilkey,
Sharon Barrr Gertrude Fork, Martha Wolfe, Mrs. Evelyn McCaskey,
Mrs. BettY Oliver, and Mrs. Lee
Williams.

Covered dish fare held
A covered dish dinner attended by
12 members preceded the January
meeting of Friendly Circle at :rrinity
Church. Miss Elizabeth Fick, president, had charge of arrangements
for the dinner and gave the table
grsce.
. The program was opened by Miss
Mary V_Reibel with a prayer for the
New Year. Members participated
with poems, inspirational readings
and resolutions for the coming year.
,Mrs. Leonard Jewell and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore gave the secretary
and tre8surer's reports and Miss
Fick noted that the next meeting will
be on Feb. 12. A monetary gift was
made to the church council. Plans
were discussed for the Lenten
breakfast and quiet hour on Feb. 20
at 7:45a.m. which is being organized
by the women of the church. A
Wlison prayer closed the meeting.

Officers were elected at the congregational meeting of the Middleport Church of Christ held SWlday evening at the church.
Lawrence Stewart conducted the
meeting. Elected were Ed Evans
Wilbur Theobald, Bud Wilson and
Denver Rice, elders; Bob McElhin-

Concept of Sunday
school has 200th
anniversary jan. 20

a wedding dress I couldn't return,
and big long-distance phone charges
he'd made.
He did leave his car with me,
mainly because it wasn't I'Wllling
when he took off. I bad it fixed to the
lWle of another $250.
Would you helleve: be wants to ·
sell me the car. I say be owes it to
me for boarding his dog and au those
debts. It isn't worth much so I'd still
come out the loser.
What do you say? -MAD
DEAR MAD:
I say, hand this man an Itemized
bill for debts owed, including a year
of dog-sitting (which alone could add
up to over $1,000!); then threaten
court action If be doesn't settle.
It's a partial bluff, since you have
no animal care contract or formal
loan papers, but he may decide that
giving up an old car is better than
fighting. - H.

CLEARA~NCE

CONTINUES

-

Founded in Gloucester, England,
in 1780 by Robert Raikes, the SWlday
School has provided two centuries of
Bible training for people of all ages
and bas been a significant ministry
of the Church of God since its beginning.
MICHAEL BORING
PROMOTED
The United States Air Force has
informed Mr. and Mrs. Grant Boring
of their son's promotion to Captain.
The Reedsville native, Michael
Boring, 8SIIumed hla present rank
and accepted Indefinite reserve
status on December 4,1979.
Captain Boring Is a Tactical Air
Conunand Instructor Pilot !llatloned
at Tyndall Air Force Base in
Florida. He is an academic Instructor and T-33 instructor pllot in
the 95th Fighter Interceptor
Training Squadron.
Captain Boring and his wife,
Robyn, will reside on Howard Road
in Callaway, Fla. Their present address is PSC Box 3171, Tyndall AFB,
Florida 32401. Mrs. Boring is the
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Bob Mills
ofBaumAddition Road in Chester.

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sufficient data has been gathered to
detennine the rilk of physical or
mental damage to Infants hom to
women who smoke marijuana.
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias, R-Md., cbalnnan of the Senate panel,
said the subcommittee should reevaluate legislation drafted last
year that would soften the federal
penalties for possessloo of small
amounts of marijuana.
Mathias said the measure must be
reconsidered "in the llght of current
assessment of the dangers to pliblic
health.'' The bill is pending before
the Senate.
Rosenkrantz said he drew hla conclusions on the effects of marijuana
fmn laboratory experiments on
mice, rats and rabbits. He said there
was a higher incidence of fetal death
when the mother was exposed to
marijuana smoke.
"Dr. Ethel N. Sassenrath of the
University of Callfornia, said that in
her research on monkeys, 40 percent
of the pregnant animals inhaling
marijuana bad rniscarrlilges, compared to 10 percent of those that
were not exposed to the smoke.
She said the evidence is not final.
on what effect the marijuana had on
monkeys exposed before birth tO
marijuana smoke.

The Sunday School is 200 years old
this year and The Rutland Church of
God will begin its year-long
celebration of the bicentennial on
January 20 with Commencement
to loosen , dissolve
and extract
SWlday.
deep-seated dirt and
Under the theme "I Believe In
residues.
RECEIVE AWARD
SWlday School", the church will parLeroy and Joyce Sauters of
Gets carpets
ticipate in a denominational emcleaner. Faster! And
Pomeroy have been awarded the
phasis on the contribution of the Swtit's easy to operate
Producer Award of The W. T.
too.
day School to American life and an
·Ralelgil Company for outstanding
affirmative of support for the future
NO LIFTING!
sales development. Leroy and Joyce
Cl£ANING WAND
of the SWlday SchooL On ComEQUIPPED WITH
WHEELS
mencement SWlday, members of the 1 as independent Rawlelgh
HANDLES UKE
Dlatri¥ors, are part of 811 InRutiand church will be given an opA VACUUM
ternational organizational which has'
SWEEPER .
portunity to pledge their allegiance
been
serving
family needs since
to the SWlday School and to become
11189. Aa Rawleigh Dlatributors, they
involved in the bicentennial acsupply
home medicines, spices, extivities. Workers in the local SWlday
tracts, food supplements and
School will be recognized as part of
cleaning aids to homes throughout
the conunencelnent events, and a
Racine, 0.
the year.
banquet will be held in their honor.
A conununity awareness program
will also be launched this Sunday
which will include a six-week campaign scheduled for March 2through
April 6. Each Sunday of the spring
campaign will focus on a specific
theme relating to the Sunday School
-I WILL: "Proclaim Its Purpose,"
"Pledge My Allegiance", "Promote
STILl AN EXCELLENT SELfCTION OF
Its Growth," and "Celebrate Its Life
(Christ)".

There are more than 400 million
telephones in q&gt;eration around the
world. More than one billion are
predicted by the year 2&lt;m.

ny, Richard Gilkey, and Danny
Thomas, deacons; Danny 1bomas,
Trustee; Mike Gerlach, SWlday
school superintendent; and Dorothy
Roach, primary superintendent.
Reporta were made from Frances
Roush, the cradle roll; Mrs. Roach,
the prbnary, Homebuilders and
Pbllatliea Women, Ten-y Yankee,
jnnior high, high school and youth
groups; Mike Gerlach, fellowship
and SWlday school; Lena McKinley,
Loyal Bereans; Margaret Lallance,
Loyal Men and Women; Martha
Cbllda, cburcb treasurer's report;
Bob Melton, miniater's report; and
Nora Rice, missions.
A special selection was presented
by Glen Evans and Maryln Wilcox.

ONE

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-

Ma. Beverly 1bompson, daughter
"

evaluations of administrators as a
means of detennining whether to
renew their contracts. That measure
went to the Senate.
In other action, the Senate Finance Conunittee neared a final vote on
a msjor bill, also backed by the
governor, which would allow the
state to use a portion of its liquor
profits to make and guarantee loans
to Ohio businesses.
:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;::::::;::;:;:;:;:;:·:::::;:·

:[:
=.
·=·

Pomeroy
\
Personal Notes \\
-~

Relno Lind spent the weekend in
Columbus visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Hoeflich and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Manning of
Syracuse have returned from a holiday vacation in Phoenix, 'Arizona
with their son and daughter and
their families, Mr. and Mrs. Jlmmle
Manning and son, and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Price.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow of
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Crow and Meredith of Route 3,
Pomeroy, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Crow, Lori
1\Jld Robbie at Zanesville.
Mrs. Jesse Lake will return to her ·
home at West Jefferson Wednesday.
She has been here for the past week
assisting in the care of her daughter,
Mrs. William J. Roush, and infant
son.

H&amp;ABLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
'II E. MAIN ST. '
POMEROY,O.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9-5SATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795 '

2nd'&amp; BROWN ST.
MASON, W.VA.
OPENTUI!S.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 A.M.·S P.M.
PHONE 773-9121

following equipment :
Various items of

bid .
Delivery must be made
within 120 days after ac·
ceptance of the bid by
VIllage Council.
The Villa~e reserves the

fire

right to re1ect any or all
bids .
Village of
Middleport

hose, nozzles and fittings to

eQuip new fire engine . A

l is t
of
items
specifications

and
are

available at the Middleport
Mayor's Office Monday
through Friday between B

Jon Buck

(I)

Clerk -Treasurer

10, 17, 2tc

•
--

{_}

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•

LOCALGOV'T

1978-79

$60,000.00
45.000.00
45,000.00
$154,000.00
Total
Month
8. IS
$3,608.10 $ 300.68
12.17
5,476.58
456.38
7.18
3,231.00
269.25
9.98
4,491.00
374.25
4.79
2,228.-40
185.67
9.78 · 4,-401.00
366.75
7.78
3,501.00
291.75
9.18
4,131.00
344.25
I 0.19
4,585.50
382.13
5.99
2,695.50
224.63
7.99
3,595.50 . 299.63
6.79
3,055.50
254.63
I 00% $45,000.00 $3,750.00
. 38.80 17,460.00 1;455.00
39.01 17,5.54.50 1,062.86
5.79
2,605.50
217.13 .
7.93
3,568.50
:297.38
317.63
8.47 - ~J811.50
I 00'111 ..,,000.00 $3,750.00
Howard E. Frank
Meigs County-Auditor

Pet. County
30 Pet. TownshiP
30 Pet. Corporations
40

Bedford
Chester
Columbia
Lebanon
Letart
Olive
Orange
Rutland
Salem
Salisbury ,
Scipio
Sutton
Pomeroy
Middleport
Racine
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All bids are to include
complete description ot
equipment contained in the

the Villa9e of Middleport,
Ohio, Me1gs County at th e
Mayor's Office of lhe
VIllage Hall( 237 Race
Street, unt I 4 P.M.,
January 25, 1980 for the

10

(I) "· ltp

•
Before March 1st

A.M. and 4 P.M.

PUBL!C'NOTICE
8 ids wi II be received by

·£

~-

*

MASON COUNTY BANK executive vice president Dick Ord presents
a check for $300 from the bank to Elearlor "Sissy" RoliSh, treasurer for
the Wahama Athletic Boosters. The money wlll help with school athletic
needs.

_.-

;

0.

f!lompaon

rigged drawings and other
problems. He said he probably will
ask the Senate to go along with the
House version of the bill.
Although It saps the powers of the
Lottery Commission, the bill Increases ita membership from five to
nine and requires·that each member
represent a geographic area of the
state.
Rep. Francine Panebal, 1}Cleveland, who beaded a subconunittee which did substantial
work on the bill earller, said the
panel's new makeup will tend to give
it more lof a statewide Image. "Too
many people think of it as a
Cleveland lottery instead of a state
lottery," she said.
Along the. same line, . the
legislation requires that the Lottery
Commission conduct its meetings in
Colwnbus, Instead of Cleveland.
However, its headquarters would
remain in Cleveland ..
Gov. James A. Rhodes backs the
bill and has said he would sign it.
.In Door action Wednesday, the
House defeated by a 52-42 margin a
bill relieving city law directors 11
the responsibility of providing legal
counsel for school boards. It was
rejected after complaints that it
would force schoolll to spend needed
funds to hire their own lawyers.
The House by a 71-25 vote approved a bill by House Education
Conunittee Chainnan Robert J.
Boggs,D..iefferson, requiring school
districts to make periodic

~

.

Open 6 Days

Of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene

of Rutiand, has been accepted into
the Pennsylvania and the New Jersey Bar Association, after having
•· successfully completed two bar
examlnationsinJuly,1979.
Beverly, 1970 valedictorian of
Meigs IDgb School, is now admitted
to practice before the supreme court
of Pennsylvania and all lower courts; the supreme court of New Jersey
_ . and all lower courts; the United
t States District Court for the Eastern
~
District of Pennsylvania; the United
t States District Court for the Dlatrict
of New Jersey; the United States
••• Court
of Appeals for the Third Cir; cuit; and the United States Court of
• Claims.
~- Ms. Thompson grsduated with 11
~ · Bachelor of Arts Degree in the
!: ho!iors program frcm Ohio State
OHIO VALLEY
LIVESTOCK CO.
: University in March, 1974, and
MARKET REPORT
• received her Juris Doctor Degree
All prices taken from the auction
: from the Delaware Law School of of Saturday, January 12, 1980. Tren~
Widener University, Wilmington, ds : Feeder cattle steady to $2
higher, cows steady, veal calves $1
~. Delaware, in May, 1979.
to 5-j_50 higher.
.
~
She also attended the graduate
Total Head 533
Feeder Steers: Good and Choice
: school of Business Administration at
250 to 300 lbs. 80-92.50; 300 to 400 lbs.
:. Michigan State University· where 74.50·87.50;
ADO to 500 lbs. 72-84.75;
:: she completed their course of study 500 to 600 !bs. 68-75.50; 600 to 700 !bs.
62.50-76; 700 to 800 lbs. 58-68.75; 800
• In property taxation.
over 55-66.
~
Having served her intemsblp with andFeeder
Heifers: Good and Choice
;; the District Attorney's Office in 250 to 300 lbs. 78-82.50: 300 to ADO lbs.
400 to 500 lbs. 62.50-71.50; 500
E Delaware County, Pa. (a 70-80;
to
600
lbs. 60-68.50; 600 to 700 lbs.
r
Philadelphia suburb), Ms. 1bom- 57 .50·65.50;
700 to 800 lbs. 55-62.50;
~
pson has opened her private practice BOO and over 50·61 .50.
~
in Pblladelpbia.
Feeder Bulls: Good ~nd Choice 250:
: _ She Ia also an Adjunct Professor of to 300 !bs. 78.50-90; 300 to ADO lbs.
ADO to 500 !bs. 68-77.50;
• Law at Camden College, Blackwood, 68.75-81.50;
500 to 600 lbs. 61.50·74; 600 to 700 !bs.
,. New Jersey and will asswne respon- , 58-67.75; 700. to 800 lbs. 55-6-4.75; 800'
~ . slbilltles as a visiting professor of and over 51 .50·60.
Holstein Steers and Bulls (300-800
::; law at the Delaware Institute of tbs.)
52.50·62.
~ Labor Studies of the University of
Bulls (1,000 tbs. and over) 52.50-.
58.50.
! Delawarelaterthismonth.
Slaughter Cows (utilities) 47.75•
Beverly received numerous 5-1.50;
Canners and Cullers -40.50~ citations throughout her school 06.25.
· · career for her scholastic acSpringer Cows tby the headl -40.50•· compllslunents and having passed -16.25.
Cows·Calves (by the head) 06.5·700.
:; the New Jersey Bar Examination,
Veal Calves 90· 110.
'
· Baby Calves 30-85.
:
she is reported to have been one of
HOGS
.:
696 persons who passed, out of 1490
Top Hogs (210-230) 38-41 .
•
persons who sat for the ewn. The
Boars25.25-27.50. ·
New Jersey test is said to be the
Pigs (by the head) 12.50-21.
Sows
"' most dlffltl¥'t bar exam in the 36.50. t-150 lbs. and over) 34.50:
United States.

•
"';

BAHR CLOTHIERS

The bill by Sen. John K. Mahoney,
D-Sprlngfield, gives greater responsibilities to the lottery director and
transforms the five-member Lottery
Conunission, which has been
making most of the lottery's
management decisions, into an advisory bQdy,
It also puts 270 of the agency's approximately 380 employees Into
positions protected by state civll service laws. However, the director is
empowered to hire and fire key officialB, including three deputies,
seven regional managers and 80
field representatives.
Riffe said he expects the measure
to be approved by the House and
returned to the Senate with amendments.
Among the amendments is a "swtset" provision under which the lottery would sell-destruct on Jan. 1,
1983, unless the Legislature votes to
keep it going.
Mahoney said Wednesday night
that he thinks the three-year period
in which the lottery !D~ prove itself
"ia a reasonable test" in view of
recent publicitY given allegatiorui of

Meigs gt.ad
:· passes two
bar exams

.:

RENT YOUR FORMAL WEAR HERE
BY DUCCILLI

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Senate-approved bill designed to
reorganize management of the state
lottery bas been recouunended for
passage by a 12-0 vote of the House
State Govemment.Commlttee.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr.,I}-New Boston, said the proposal
coulll come to a House floor vote
today barring procedural problems.
It came out of coDUnlttee Wednesday night following approval of a
series of amendments and over the
mutterings of reluctant committee
members who wanted to go further
and abolish the five-year-&lt;Jid agen-

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P~ICES• MAY VARY AT INDIVIOUAL,STORES

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 17, 1980

Missionary

•

~'ociety

Projects for February were planned at the Tuesday night meetings of
the three circles of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society of the Middleport First Baptis,t Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs. June Kloes, the Dorcas Circle planned a
Visit to the Meigs CoWlty Infinnary on Valentine's Day. Cupcakes and ice
cream will he laken to the residents there. Three who have birthdays this
month will he remembered by the circle.
Mrs. Sarah Fowler, circle chainnan, will check with the Pomeroy
Health Center about a visiting program there. Get-well cards were signed
for Mrs. Alwilda Werner, Mrs. Ada Root, and Harold Hubbard.
Prayer to open the meeting was given by Mrs. Katie Anthony. Mrs.
K.loes had devotions entitied "RJiiny Day Problems." A card from Mrs.
Elizabeth Gardner was read. The hostess served a dessert course and coffee.
Mrs. Clarabelle Riley, chairman of the Love Joy Circle, hosted the
Tuesday night meeting at her home. Reporta were given on recent visits
with Mrs. Vivian Titus and Mrs. Ada Root at the Pinecrest Nursing Home
in Gallipolis. A thank you note from the Baptist scholarship girl was read,
and plans were ma~e to remember a shutin this month on his birthday.

'

plans projects

and to send Va Ientine remembrances.
Mrs. Riley had the devotions. Mrs. Marilyn Fultz was a guest and the
hostess served refl'elllunents.
Elects Circle members Rhoda Hall and Freda Hood reported on 'their
visit with Mrs. Ada Root, ·101 Tuesday, at the Pinecrest Nursing Center,
Gallipolis, at the circle meeting held at the home of Mrs. Eva Hartiey. A
gift was taken to Mrs. Root who is a member of the church.
During the meeting plans were made to remember the shutins on
Valentine's Day and to send a gift of money to the scholarship girl.
Members worked on the bandages which is a part of the white cross work.
A report was given on the trays of fruit delivered to the shutins at
Christmas. A thank you note was read from Maude Betz in appreciation
for a Christmas remembrance.
Mrs. Sara Dawn Owen had devotions using "Live Today" as her topic ·
with scripture from Matt. 6 She concluded with a poem.
Mrs. Lillian Demoskey had the program using an article from
Guideposts, "Some Keys to Success", by Art Linkletter. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Hariley and her daughter, Nancy Cooper, to those
named and Mrs. Bernice Baker, chairman.

'

Birthdays

Generation Rap
By llt•lt•n and~ .... Bnttt·l

Should Separated Wife Be
Martyr' saint or Sensible?
By Helen Bottel

Tamra Vance
Tamra Vance recently celebrated
ber lOth birthday at the Chester
Skate-a-Way with a skating party.
Cake, Kool-Aid, potato cips,
pretzels, cookies and pop were served to the guests. The birthday cake
was provided by Sharon Stewart.
Attending were Joyce Hlad,
Michael Hlad, Eddie Hlad, Juanlta
Bolen, Harold Bolen, Don Harrison,
Diane Harrison, Danyan Magers,
Diana Magers, Marge Schoonover,
Jerry Schoonover, Mike Brothers,
Candy Brothers, Bill Brothers, Amy
Brothers, Becky Thomas, Angie
Slaon, Shannon Slavin, Rhonda
Zirkle, Rush Reece, Reatha Clonch,
John Clonch, Krista Clonch, Ted
Smith, Rodney Harrison, Ulri
Tucker, Otis Norris, Deanna Norris,
Tim Jeffers, Liaa Frymeyer, Danny
Hall, Kevin Victor King, T. T. Simmons, Beth Blaine, Audra
Houdaahelt, Tanuny Eblin, Dusne
Howell, Bill Howell, Artie Hunnel,
I)arrin Warth, Sherrie Might, Larry
Tucker, Paul Doug Michaels, Jody
Harrison.
Sending gilts were Mrs. Daisy
Vance, Ronald Vance, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Workman, Mr. and Mrs.
David Scarpelli, Angie and Mindy
McDonald.

DEAR HELEN:
After a lot of indignities, my friend
finally separated from her mostiy
no-good husband. In a year, she and
the children have blossomed into
happy, going-places people. She admits the separation was best for
everyone, and was about to file for
divorce when she leamed he had
cancer_ The doctor privately told her
there was no hope: it would he a
long, lingering death.
Her husband doesn't yet know his
diBease is fatal.
Now my friend is consumed with
pity. She feels it's her duty to bring
him back home and nurse him Wltil
the end. Says if she doesn't, she'll
feel guilty the rest of her life, though
love died long ago.
l:Jnless he changes radically, and I
doubt be can, he'll be a miserable,
demanding patient. She and the girls
will lose all they've gained, and
more, in this year of freedom.
I tell her if she can't think straight
for herself, at least consider her
tee!Higers. They shouldn't be put
through such misery for a man who
was never much of a father to them.
What is your opinion? And could
you ask your readers, as she won't
he making a final decision Wltil he
returns from a twD-months trip. FRIEND.
DEAR FRIEND:
Only your friend know sher
capacity for gullt, so the decision
must ultimately be hers. But if she'd
stop leading with her emotions and
think rationally she might find a
solution that wouldn't turn her and
the children into martyrs.
Here are some starter questions:
Has she considered thht her h~
band might not want to return home
as an object of pity?
Have the teen-agers been consulted? It's their lives too.
Sometimes young people's honesty
can bring a problem into focus.
Might a therapist help her
understnad that whlle circumstances have changed, her will
to end the marriage hasn't; and it
isn't "selfish" to go ahead with the
divorce?
Is there another way? Your friend
could stay in touch, provide moral
support, arrange for care at the last,
without becoming a full-time nurse.
I'v~ an idea her former mate may
prefer this option...and it would certainly relieve her guilt.
Now, I've had my say. Readers:
how about yours?- H.
DEAR HELEN :
I was engaged to a man who "stepped out for breakfast" year ago
and has just now come back. He left
me with his killer dog, Wlpaid bills
and his bad memory for tile $350 I
loaned him once. I was also stuck for

a

Selfdenitll meet held

Rochelle Jenkins
Mary Rochelle Jenkins was
honored by her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Jenkins, with a birthday
dinner and party on her 2nd birthday.

Dinner guests were her greatgrandmother, Mrs. Florence Potts,
and ber grandparents, Mrs. Carl
Jenkins, Vienna, W. Va., and Mr.
and Mrs. Don Lisle, Syracuse, and
her sister, Kimberly Dawn Jenkins.
Guests at the party besides those
mentilllled above were Mr. and Mrs.
Jolm Liale, Todd, Scott and Travis;
Mrs. Judy King, Kevin and Kristin.
Rochelle received gifts from Renee,
Troy and Brian Willis, Charles and
Irene Hoback, Helen Baer, Mr. and
Mrs. Al Harmon, Wendi and Crystal,
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Liale, Jason anct
( Nickolas.
Rochelle's stand-up doll cake,
~ by her grandmother, Mrs.
Mary Lisle, waa served along with
homemade Ice cream.

"Life Divine" was the theme of
the call to prayer and selfdenial program held by the United Methodist
. Women at the home of Mrs. Mary K.
Roush with Mrs. Kathleen Scott as
the assisting hostess.
Scripture fnm Matthew 5 was
read by Leah Nease, and a meditation was given by Mrs. Ann Watson.
She also read the 1980 offering objectives of women in the United States.
The international projects of Argentina, Peru, Tanzania, Angola, and
India were given by Mrs. Betty
Koch, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs. Scott,
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, and Mrs. Mary
Nease. Each of the other members
attending read a short prayer.
Mrs. Mary Nease bad charge of
the business meeling with thank you
notes for Christmas fruit baskets being read from Mrs. Helen Nease,
Mrs. Grace Fisher, and Mrs. Mae
Holter.
Adonatiqn of S6 each was received
from Mrs. Fisher and Mrs. Helen
. Nease. The call to prayer and selfdenial envelope were collected.
Forty-two sick calls were reported,
and a white elephant sale was planned for the February meeting.
Refreslunents were served by the
hostesses.

RECEIVES PRIZE

Women warned
against marijuana use
WASHINGTON (AP)- Smoking
marijuana may cause temporary lnfertlllty 1111101111 women of childbearing age and could Increase the
danger · that they will have
miscarriages, medical researchers
told a congressional panel Wednesday.
Dr. Harris Roaenkrantz, director
of the Mason Research Institute in
Worcester, Mass., said women who
smoke marijuana "play Rusaian
Roulette" with the lives of their wtbom bablell.
"I think there Ia a potential
hazard, especlaJ)y In the early days
of gestation" said Rosenkrantz. "If
you smoke marijuana you're not
going to have a defonned baby but you may l011e the baby you actually want.''
But the researchers testifying
before the Senate Judiciary subconunittee oo C1'imiJIII) justice
agreed for the most part that In-

Pennie Powell
honored
by shower
Congregational meeting ends
with election of officers
Mrs. Oretha Snider was awarded
the door prize at the recent meeting
of the Racine Firemen's Auxiliary.

Mrs. Eugene Powell, the former
Pennie Wolfe, was honored recentiy
with a layette shower given by her
sisters, Eileen Tripp of Beaver
Falls, Pa. and Ruth Ann Graham,
Rutiand, at the Graham home.
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners. Refreshments
of cake, decorated with the names of
boys and girls in blue, punch; coffee,
potato chips, nuts and a variety d.
sandwiches were served.
Attending were Mrs. Ann Wolfe,
Mrs. Delores Powell, Middleport;
Mrs. Benny Wolfe, Crlsty and Misty,
Rutiand; Brenda Wolfe and son,
Jimmy, Bradbury; Georgene Grate,
Fanny Miller, Elsie Sutherland,
Rutiand; Charlotte Wolfe and grandson, Reedsville.
Sending gifts were Debbie Gilkey,
Sharon Barrr Gertrude Fork, Martha Wolfe, Mrs. Evelyn McCaskey,
Mrs. BettY Oliver, and Mrs. Lee
Williams.

Covered dish fare held
A covered dish dinner attended by
12 members preceded the January
meeting of Friendly Circle at :rrinity
Church. Miss Elizabeth Fick, president, had charge of arrangements
for the dinner and gave the table
grsce.
. The program was opened by Miss
Mary V_Reibel with a prayer for the
New Year. Members participated
with poems, inspirational readings
and resolutions for the coming year.
,Mrs. Leonard Jewell and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore gave the secretary
and tre8surer's reports and Miss
Fick noted that the next meeting will
be on Feb. 12. A monetary gift was
made to the church council. Plans
were discussed for the Lenten
breakfast and quiet hour on Feb. 20
at 7:45a.m. which is being organized
by the women of the church. A
Wlison prayer closed the meeting.

Officers were elected at the congregational meeting of the Middleport Church of Christ held SWlday evening at the church.
Lawrence Stewart conducted the
meeting. Elected were Ed Evans
Wilbur Theobald, Bud Wilson and
Denver Rice, elders; Bob McElhin-

Concept of Sunday
school has 200th
anniversary jan. 20

a wedding dress I couldn't return,
and big long-distance phone charges
he'd made.
He did leave his car with me,
mainly because it wasn't I'Wllling
when he took off. I bad it fixed to the
lWle of another $250.
Would you helleve: be wants to ·
sell me the car. I say be owes it to
me for boarding his dog and au those
debts. It isn't worth much so I'd still
come out the loser.
What do you say? -MAD
DEAR MAD:
I say, hand this man an Itemized
bill for debts owed, including a year
of dog-sitting (which alone could add
up to over $1,000!); then threaten
court action If be doesn't settle.
It's a partial bluff, since you have
no animal care contract or formal
loan papers, but he may decide that
giving up an old car is better than
fighting. - H.

CLEARA~NCE

CONTINUES

-

Founded in Gloucester, England,
in 1780 by Robert Raikes, the SWlday
School has provided two centuries of
Bible training for people of all ages
and bas been a significant ministry
of the Church of God since its beginning.
MICHAEL BORING
PROMOTED
The United States Air Force has
informed Mr. and Mrs. Grant Boring
of their son's promotion to Captain.
The Reedsville native, Michael
Boring, 8SIIumed hla present rank
and accepted Indefinite reserve
status on December 4,1979.
Captain Boring Is a Tactical Air
Conunand Instructor Pilot !llatloned
at Tyndall Air Force Base in
Florida. He is an academic Instructor and T-33 instructor pllot in
the 95th Fighter Interceptor
Training Squadron.
Captain Boring and his wife,
Robyn, will reside on Howard Road
in Callaway, Fla. Their present address is PSC Box 3171, Tyndall AFB,
Florida 32401. Mrs. Boring is the
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Bob Mills
ofBaumAddition Road in Chester.

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sufficient data has been gathered to
detennine the rilk of physical or
mental damage to Infants hom to
women who smoke marijuana.
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias, R-Md., cbalnnan of the Senate panel,
said the subcommittee should reevaluate legislation drafted last
year that would soften the federal
penalties for possessloo of small
amounts of marijuana.
Mathias said the measure must be
reconsidered "in the llght of current
assessment of the dangers to pliblic
health.'' The bill is pending before
the Senate.
Rosenkrantz said he drew hla conclusions on the effects of marijuana
fmn laboratory experiments on
mice, rats and rabbits. He said there
was a higher incidence of fetal death
when the mother was exposed to
marijuana smoke.
"Dr. Ethel N. Sassenrath of the
University of Callfornia, said that in
her research on monkeys, 40 percent
of the pregnant animals inhaling
marijuana bad rniscarrlilges, compared to 10 percent of those that
were not exposed to the smoke.
She said the evidence is not final.
on what effect the marijuana had on
monkeys exposed before birth tO
marijuana smoke.

The Sunday School is 200 years old
this year and The Rutland Church of
God will begin its year-long
celebration of the bicentennial on
January 20 with Commencement
to loosen , dissolve
and extract
SWlday.
deep-seated dirt and
Under the theme "I Believe In
residues.
RECEIVE AWARD
SWlday School", the church will parLeroy and Joyce Sauters of
Gets carpets
ticipate in a denominational emcleaner. Faster! And
Pomeroy have been awarded the
phasis on the contribution of the Swtit's easy to operate
Producer Award of The W. T.
too.
day School to American life and an
·Ralelgil Company for outstanding
affirmative of support for the future
NO LIFTING!
sales development. Leroy and Joyce
Cl£ANING WAND
of the SWlday SchooL On ComEQUIPPED WITH
WHEELS
mencement SWlday, members of the 1 as independent Rawlelgh
HANDLES UKE
Dlatri¥ors, are part of 811 InRutiand church will be given an opA VACUUM
ternational organizational which has'
SWEEPER .
portunity to pledge their allegiance
been
serving
family needs since
to the SWlday School and to become
11189. Aa Rawleigh Dlatributors, they
involved in the bicentennial acsupply
home medicines, spices, extivities. Workers in the local SWlday
tracts, food supplements and
School will be recognized as part of
cleaning aids to homes throughout
the conunencelnent events, and a
Racine, 0.
the year.
banquet will be held in their honor.
A conununity awareness program
will also be launched this Sunday
which will include a six-week campaign scheduled for March 2through
April 6. Each Sunday of the spring
campaign will focus on a specific
theme relating to the Sunday School
-I WILL: "Proclaim Its Purpose,"
"Pledge My Allegiance", "Promote
STILl AN EXCELLENT SELfCTION OF
Its Growth," and "Celebrate Its Life
(Christ)".

There are more than 400 million
telephones in q&gt;eration around the
world. More than one billion are
predicted by the year 2&lt;m.

ny, Richard Gilkey, and Danny
Thomas, deacons; Danny 1bomas,
Trustee; Mike Gerlach, SWlday
school superintendent; and Dorothy
Roach, primary superintendent.
Reporta were made from Frances
Roush, the cradle roll; Mrs. Roach,
the prbnary, Homebuilders and
Pbllatliea Women, Ten-y Yankee,
jnnior high, high school and youth
groups; Mike Gerlach, fellowship
and SWlday school; Lena McKinley,
Loyal Bereans; Margaret Lallance,
Loyal Men and Women; Martha
Cbllda, cburcb treasurer's report;
Bob Melton, miniater's report; and
Nora Rice, missions.
A special selection was presented
by Glen Evans and Maryln Wilcox.

ONE

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cy.
BEVERLYmOMPSON

-

Ma. Beverly 1bompson, daughter
"

evaluations of administrators as a
means of detennining whether to
renew their contracts. That measure
went to the Senate.
In other action, the Senate Finance Conunittee neared a final vote on
a msjor bill, also backed by the
governor, which would allow the
state to use a portion of its liquor
profits to make and guarantee loans
to Ohio businesses.
:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;::::::;::;:;:;:;:;:·:::::;:·

:[:
=.
·=·

Pomeroy
\
Personal Notes \\
-~

Relno Lind spent the weekend in
Columbus visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Hoeflich and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Manning of
Syracuse have returned from a holiday vacation in Phoenix, 'Arizona
with their son and daughter and
their families, Mr. and Mrs. Jlmmle
Manning and son, and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Price.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow of
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Crow and Meredith of Route 3,
Pomeroy, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Crow, Lori
1\Jld Robbie at Zanesville.
Mrs. Jesse Lake will return to her ·
home at West Jefferson Wednesday.
She has been here for the past week
assisting in the care of her daughter,
Mrs. William J. Roush, and infant
son.

H&amp;ABLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
'II E. MAIN ST. '
POMEROY,O.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9-5SATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795 '

2nd'&amp; BROWN ST.
MASON, W.VA.
OPENTUI!S.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 A.M.·S P.M.
PHONE 773-9121

following equipment :
Various items of

bid .
Delivery must be made
within 120 days after ac·
ceptance of the bid by
VIllage Council.
The Villa~e reserves the

fire

right to re1ect any or all
bids .
Village of
Middleport

hose, nozzles and fittings to

eQuip new fire engine . A

l is t
of
items
specifications

and
are

available at the Middleport
Mayor's Office Monday
through Friday between B

Jon Buck

(I)

Clerk -Treasurer

10, 17, 2tc

•
--

{_}

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Genuine walnut veneer case. 3t·2D84

..

:•
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.

..E
•

LOCALGOV'T

1978-79

$60,000.00
45.000.00
45,000.00
$154,000.00
Total
Month
8. IS
$3,608.10 $ 300.68
12.17
5,476.58
456.38
7.18
3,231.00
269.25
9.98
4,491.00
374.25
4.79
2,228.-40
185.67
9.78 · 4,-401.00
366.75
7.78
3,501.00
291.75
9.18
4,131.00
344.25
I 0.19
4,585.50
382.13
5.99
2,695.50
224.63
7.99
3,595.50 . 299.63
6.79
3,055.50
254.63
I 00% $45,000.00 $3,750.00
. 38.80 17,460.00 1;455.00
39.01 17,5.54.50 1,062.86
5.79
2,605.50
217.13 .
7.93
3,568.50
:297.38
317.63
8.47 - ~J811.50
I 00'111 ..,,000.00 $3,750.00
Howard E. Frank
Meigs County-Auditor

Pet. County
30 Pet. TownshiP
30 Pet. Corporations
40

Bedford
Chester
Columbia
Lebanon
Letart
Olive
Orange
Rutland
Salem
Salisbury ,
Scipio
Sutton
Pomeroy
Middleport
Racine
. Rutland
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$7.50~ Any state or local return is extra.
So, beat the rush ... come in before March 1st
and get.yourself a S.h ort and Sweet Deal.

All bids are to include
complete description ot
equipment contained in the

the Villa9e of Middleport,
Ohio, Me1gs County at th e
Mayor's Office of lhe
VIllage Hall( 237 Race
Street, unt I 4 P.M.,
January 25, 1980 for the

10

(I) "· ltp

•
Before March 1st

A.M. and 4 P.M.

PUBL!C'NOTICE
8 ids wi II be received by

·£

~-

*

MASON COUNTY BANK executive vice president Dick Ord presents
a check for $300 from the bank to Elearlor "Sissy" RoliSh, treasurer for
the Wahama Athletic Boosters. The money wlll help with school athletic
needs.

_.-

;

0.

f!lompaon

rigged drawings and other
problems. He said he probably will
ask the Senate to go along with the
House version of the bill.
Although It saps the powers of the
Lottery Commission, the bill Increases ita membership from five to
nine and requires·that each member
represent a geographic area of the
state.
Rep. Francine Panebal, 1}Cleveland, who beaded a subconunittee which did substantial
work on the bill earller, said the
panel's new makeup will tend to give
it more lof a statewide Image. "Too
many people think of it as a
Cleveland lottery instead of a state
lottery," she said.
Along the. same line, . the
legislation requires that the Lottery
Commission conduct its meetings in
Colwnbus, Instead of Cleveland.
However, its headquarters would
remain in Cleveland ..
Gov. James A. Rhodes backs the
bill and has said he would sign it.
.In Door action Wednesday, the
House defeated by a 52-42 margin a
bill relieving city law directors 11
the responsibility of providing legal
counsel for school boards. It was
rejected after complaints that it
would force schoolll to spend needed
funds to hire their own lawyers.
The House by a 71-25 vote approved a bill by House Education
Conunittee Chainnan Robert J.
Boggs,D..iefferson, requiring school
districts to make periodic

~

.

Open 6 Days

Of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene

of Rutiand, has been accepted into
the Pennsylvania and the New Jersey Bar Association, after having
•· successfully completed two bar
examlnationsinJuly,1979.
Beverly, 1970 valedictorian of
Meigs IDgb School, is now admitted
to practice before the supreme court
of Pennsylvania and all lower courts; the supreme court of New Jersey
_ . and all lower courts; the United
t States District Court for the Eastern
~
District of Pennsylvania; the United
t States District Court for the Dlatrict
of New Jersey; the United States
••• Court
of Appeals for the Third Cir; cuit; and the United States Court of
• Claims.
~- Ms. Thompson grsduated with 11
~ · Bachelor of Arts Degree in the
!: ho!iors program frcm Ohio State
OHIO VALLEY
LIVESTOCK CO.
: University in March, 1974, and
MARKET REPORT
• received her Juris Doctor Degree
All prices taken from the auction
: from the Delaware Law School of of Saturday, January 12, 1980. Tren~
Widener University, Wilmington, ds : Feeder cattle steady to $2
higher, cows steady, veal calves $1
~. Delaware, in May, 1979.
to 5-j_50 higher.
.
~
She also attended the graduate
Total Head 533
Feeder Steers: Good and Choice
: school of Business Administration at
250 to 300 lbs. 80-92.50; 300 to 400 lbs.
:. Michigan State University· where 74.50·87.50;
ADO to 500 lbs. 72-84.75;
:: she completed their course of study 500 to 600 !bs. 68-75.50; 600 to 700 !bs.
62.50-76; 700 to 800 lbs. 58-68.75; 800
• In property taxation.
over 55-66.
~
Having served her intemsblp with andFeeder
Heifers: Good and Choice
;; the District Attorney's Office in 250 to 300 lbs. 78-82.50: 300 to ADO lbs.
400 to 500 lbs. 62.50-71.50; 500
E Delaware County, Pa. (a 70-80;
to
600
lbs. 60-68.50; 600 to 700 lbs.
r
Philadelphia suburb), Ms. 1bom- 57 .50·65.50;
700 to 800 lbs. 55-62.50;
~
pson has opened her private practice BOO and over 50·61 .50.
~
in Pblladelpbia.
Feeder Bulls: Good ~nd Choice 250:
: _ She Ia also an Adjunct Professor of to 300 !bs. 78.50-90; 300 to ADO lbs.
ADO to 500 !bs. 68-77.50;
• Law at Camden College, Blackwood, 68.75-81.50;
500 to 600 lbs. 61.50·74; 600 to 700 !bs.
,. New Jersey and will asswne respon- , 58-67.75; 700. to 800 lbs. 55-6-4.75; 800'
~ . slbilltles as a visiting professor of and over 51 .50·60.
Holstein Steers and Bulls (300-800
::; law at the Delaware Institute of tbs.)
52.50·62.
~ Labor Studies of the University of
Bulls (1,000 tbs. and over) 52.50-.
58.50.
! Delawarelaterthismonth.
Slaughter Cows (utilities) 47.75•
Beverly received numerous 5-1.50;
Canners and Cullers -40.50~ citations throughout her school 06.25.
· · career for her scholastic acSpringer Cows tby the headl -40.50•· compllslunents and having passed -16.25.
Cows·Calves (by the head) 06.5·700.
:; the New Jersey Bar Examination,
Veal Calves 90· 110.
'
· Baby Calves 30-85.
:
she is reported to have been one of
HOGS
.:
696 persons who passed, out of 1490
Top Hogs (210-230) 38-41 .
•
persons who sat for the ewn. The
Boars25.25-27.50. ·
New Jersey test is said to be the
Pigs (by the head) 12.50-21.
Sows
"' most dlffltl¥'t bar exam in the 36.50. t-150 lbs. and over) 34.50:
United States.

•
"';

BAHR CLOTHIERS

The bill by Sen. John K. Mahoney,
D-Sprlngfield, gives greater responsibilities to the lottery director and
transforms the five-member Lottery
Conunission, which has been
making most of the lottery's
management decisions, into an advisory bQdy,
It also puts 270 of the agency's approximately 380 employees Into
positions protected by state civll service laws. However, the director is
empowered to hire and fire key officialB, including three deputies,
seven regional managers and 80
field representatives.
Riffe said he expects the measure
to be approved by the House and
returned to the Senate with amendments.
Among the amendments is a "swtset" provision under which the lottery would sell-destruct on Jan. 1,
1983, unless the Legislature votes to
keep it going.
Mahoney said Wednesday night
that he thinks the three-year period
in which the lottery !D~ prove itself
"ia a reasonable test" in view of
recent publicitY given allegatiorui of

Meigs gt.ad
:· passes two
bar exams

.:

RENT YOUR FORMAL WEAR HERE
BY DUCCILLI

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Senate-approved bill designed to
reorganize management of the state
lottery bas been recouunended for
passage by a 12-0 vote of the House
State Govemment.Commlttee.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr.,I}-New Boston, said the proposal
coulll come to a House floor vote
today barring procedural problems.
It came out of coDUnlttee Wednesday night following approval of a
series of amendments and over the
mutterings of reluctant committee
members who wanted to go further
and abolish the five-year-&lt;Jid agen-

"

•....

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P~ICES• MAY VARY AT INDIVIOUAL,STORES

�\

$-The
-- Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan.
- 17,1900

....../

~

otc~~~Da~i~ly Sentinel, Mll1dleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 17, 1900

Your .Best Buys Are }"'ound in the Sentinel Classifieds
"

r-

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uo

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Eacll wtll'd over the minimum
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In memory, Card ol Thanka
and Obituary : fl t.-enb per word,
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Mobile Home Yle! aOO Yard
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For Rent

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB .

BILLFOLD LOST Friday
on street in Pomeroy . Con·
taintng large sum of
money . 843·2472.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
Slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pollet co .• Rl. 2.
Pomeroy 992 -2689.

TWO BEDROOM 12x60 In
Syracuse. Carpeted, fur·
nished. water pa id. I child
accepted. Slli/J a monlh plus
security. Phone 992·2897.

GUN SHOOT . Racine
Voluntee r
Fire Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
At their bu ildingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 : 00. Factory choke on ly.
corn Hollow Gun Club.
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 2A9.
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing toO large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614767·3167 or 557·3411 .
BUYING U .S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT! . DON 'T L O~E
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BRO WN 'S.
I NCOME TAX SERVICE .
Quarterly, Federal and all
state income tax reports
will be prepared by ap·
poinlmenl. 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin . Laurel Cliff
Rd .• Pomeroy.

Tuesday
thru Friday
4P.M.
lhe W.y befon publication

SWlday
4P.M.

. . Frid.Hy afternoon

Carel of Thanks
WE WOULD like to show
our appreciation tor all the
donations, gifts, and help,
shown us when our house
burned.
The Charles Jones Family.
I WANT to thank everyone,
friends, relatives, and all
who ·sent cards, gifts, food,
who called and gave
prayers at the time of my
hospitalization . Especially,
all the kindnesses and con cern shown my husband;
Bob and I. It was greatly
appreciated .
Dorothy Ritchie.

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
" IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Administratrix of the Esta1e
of
Ida
M . Christie,
Deceased
Plainliff
VS.

EDNA N. WOOD,
lOBO Greenwich Road
Wadsworth, Ohio 44281
Et al.,
Defendants.

No . 22704

NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F . TAYLOR
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43i SIBBERT,
WEST VIRG NIA; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES,
DISTRIBUTEE$,
ADMIN' •RATORS, EXEC UTI:'!. , AND ASSIGN~ IF
ANY OF EACH OF tHE
FOLLOWING : IDA M.
CHRISTIE, DECEASED;
DOUGLAS
YOUNG,
DECEASED : RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE D; GLADYS GOEGLEIN,
DECEASED; DELLA R IFFLE,
DECEASED;
FLORENCE
HENRY,
DECEASED;
DAVID
KING, DECEASED; BER ·
NARD
KING
DECEASEDj HAROLD
KING, D"CEASED;
LENA
DOERFER,
DECEASED A.K.A. LANA
DORFER , DECEASED:
OTHO
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
LAURA
KNAPP,
DECEASED;
.HENRY DOERFER. 1
bECEASED;
OLEN
DOERFER . DECEASED;
DAYTON
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIELS,
DECEASED; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
FRED
KING,
DECEASED; SAMUEL J.
CHRISTIE , DECEASED;
AND
THOMAS
F.
TAYLOR DECEASED.
Plainllfl has broughllhis
action naming you as
detendan1s In the above named court by filing Mr
complaint on November
1Jih. 1979. The Complaint
reclfes that each of you is
possibly an heir-al·law and
nexl of kin of Ida M .
Chrlslie, Deceased; that at
the ·time of her death Ida
M. Christie was seized of
the entire Interest of lhe
real eslale des.:ribed In lhe
FIRST COUNT of the Com·
pleinl. which said real
estate Is described as
follows:
Situate In the COunty of
Meigs, In the Stale of Ohio
and in the Township of Bed ·
lord, and bounded and
d~scribed
as follows:
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
"ffie SoutheaST quarTer - of ·
Section No. Seven, Town
No. Three and Range No.
Thirteen of lhe Ohio Com ·
panr •s Purchase; thence
Nor h far enough so that bY
running due West to lhe
center ol . lhe Slate Road ;
thence along the center of
said road to the section
line; !hence Easl lo the
place of belllnning so thalli
Shall contain 1hirty acres ,
butsubjeclto ali legal high ·
ways .
The
aforesaid
· deS&lt;:rlbed real estate being
the same real estate con ·
veyed by William Smith,
Jr . to Lucetta Smith by
deed bea nng date of the
15th. day ol September
187~ and re&lt;;orded in Vol.
4!1, &gt;'ages li/J7 and 608 of the
r~orcfs of deeds in the
RO!Corder's Office of Meigs
county. Ohio.
•And being the same
l!f"ooerfv conveyed by Guy
A . Smith, Executor of the
estate of Lucella Smith,
OKea~. to Samuel J .

I PAY highest prices
possible for· gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport
2ND SEMESTER classes
in ballet, tap and iazz now
open. Classes offered are
pre-school, ballet, tap,
jazz, and adult exercise
jazz classes. Call Shirlev
Carpenter, Carpenter ' s
Dance Studio. 9~9 - 2710
before January 30th.
INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
Russell, Bradbury . 992·
7228.
New 1980 Golf club grips.
Rubber, leather . Standard,
oversized, undersized or
arthritic . $.5.50 installed.
John Teaford , 614-985·3961.
CAKE DECORATING
classes beginning soon .
Call now to register .
Carousel Confectionery,
Middleport . 992-6342.
BAKER'S
BUSY
Bee
Ceramics, Tuppers Plains.
Open Jan . 15 and will be
Tuesday and Thur10pen
sday 10a.m. ·3 p.m., rp.m .·
10 p.m. Reservations not
needed. Call667·32521or in·
formlltion. Pauline Baker .
MOVING SALE. corner of
Broadway and Locust,
Middleport. Jan . 19, 10·5.
Sunday 20th, 1·4.
Christie and Ida M.
CHrislfe . by deed dated
June 1, 1925. and recorded
in Book 127, at Page 448 of
!he Deed Re&lt;:ords of Meigs
county Ohio .
EXCEPTING one·lourlh
of an acre more or less con·
veyed by Ida M. Chrlsfle to
cecil c . Heilman and Allen
C. Hellman by deed recor ·
ded In Vol. 2.0, Page. 483
Deed Records, Meigs Coun ty, Ohio.
In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Chrlslle was seized of
the undivided one-fourth
part of the following
described real estate :
The following described
real estate situated in the
Stale ol Ohio, in the Counly
of Meigs and in Salisbury
Township : II being near
!he middle of the South hall
of the North hall of Section
No. 18, Town No. 2 in Range
13 Ohio company's Pur ·
chase and on the south line
of said South hall of the
North hall and beginning al
the Northwest corner of
James A. Young's 36 acre
lot; thence north 2'1:1 Oeg.
East 7 chains and 75 links
to the county roed; thence
South .() Deg . East s chains
and 40 links along salcl
road; thence South 68 Dea.
East 1 chain and 141inks fo
Finnan Smith's West line;
thence, soulh 2'f• Deg . west
3 chains and 40 links lo his
Southwest corner; thence
West to the place of begin·
ning, containing two acres
more or less .
Also, the following real
es1afe SitUated· In 5ectlon
No. 18/ Town 2 and Range
13 of he Ohio Company's
Purchase and described as
follows"- fo ·wil : Beginning
at the :.outhwest corner Of
George Young's lol In sold
Section; !hence south 8
rods and 7 feel; thence
East 19 rOds; lhenc~ North
8 rods and 7 feet; !hence
West 19 rod~ fn the place of
be91nning, conraming one
·
acre.
Also, the following real
estate situated In Section
No. 18, Town 2 an~ Range
No. 12 of fhe Ohio Com ·
pany•s Purchase and bounded and described as
follows, lo·wll: ·Beginning
at George Young's
southeast corner In said
section; thence East 21 ·
rods Ia the road ; thence In
a Westerly dlretllon along
said road 15 rods and 10
feet ; thence West 20 rods;
thence 15 rOds and lOieelto
the place of beginning, con ·
tal nino 2acres.
the following
Also ,
described real estate In
Salisbury Township, Meigs
County, Ohio. B&lt;!llfnnlng at
a stone corner East 70.545
rods of the Northwest cor·
ner of w . s. Wills 69'1• acre
lot near a willow tree about
30 inches In diameter;
thence South 8.85 rods to .a
slake East of a double
chestnut atxiu!Jreet Indiameter ; thence south
70'1:1 degrees West 6.9~ rods
fo a slake 1 fool South of
while oak 4 feel In
diameter; thence south
59'1• Dea. West 8.33 11&gt; rods
to n stake_3 feel East of a
cheslnultree; thence South

LOST OR STOLEN : Thur·
sday, 1 male Walker coon
hound, Rutland area. White
wlfh small black spots on
right side. Tan head with
spoiled ear . Talfooed SWM
rlgh1 ear, s digit number
left ear. Second time dog
has been taken in 4 months.
All information kept con·
fldenllal. Call 742·221&lt; or
992·3023.
•
REWARD lo person retur·
nino or givjng information
leading to return of purse
lost in vicinity of 2nd St . or
Powell's Super Valu,
Pomeroy . No questions
asked. Purse · cohtained
glasses, keys and personal
papers . Keep money ,
collect additional reward.
Call collect, 992·2588.
LOST : Bluelick female,
Flatwoods area. Oscar
Smith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy . 992·
5594.
FOUND : male beagle. Big
Run area, CR 39 in Bedford
Township. 992·5579.
LOST : Dog, large, mostly
St. Bernard . Collar and
tag . Brown. Answers to
"Tank". Last seen around
Union Ave. 992·5354.

Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in
the
Middleport
and
Pomeroy areas. Call the
Daily Sentinel belween8 :30
and 5:00p.m .• 992·2156.
HOME
ADDRESSERS
wanted. S500 per week
possible. No experience
reQuired.
A.S.D..
PO
Drawer 140069, Dallas. TX
75214 .
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility lisf at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.
WANTED:
Babyslller.
Rulland, one child. $7 a
day . Phone 742·2878 alter
2:30p.m.
WE ARE seeking serious
minded people who need
extra income. Meet today's
r i sing costs . Flexible
hours. Benefits. Apply bel·
ween 9-11, 601 Main, Pt.
Pleasant.
NEEDED RN or LPN lull ·
lime, 11·7(30 and 3·11: 30.
Also per1 time RN or LPN
11 ·7:30. Contact Mr. Zidian
at 992·6606.
EARN GENEROUS com·
missions. Sell World Book,
largest selling en ·
cyclopedia. Send resume
Box 486, Racine, OH.

OLD FURNITURE. Ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks. etc .• complele
households. Write M.D.
Miller. R t . .&amp;, Pomeroy or
ca II 992· 771i/J.
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass. china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
OLD COINS, pocket wal·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462 .

WILL PAY TOP dollar lor
gold and silver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver Items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992·6370.

1977 INTERNATIONAL
cab·over 350 tractor. 1978
International cab·over KT·
450. 247·3051 or 247·2063.
1964 CHEVY PICKUP. $125
or best offer. 992·5270.
REDUCED TO SELL · 1975
Pacer. No-rust. 7i.2-'l9.57.

l

12) 7, 7 c

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290. Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Hor!e
Care products . Western
bools. Children's $15.50.
Adulls $29.00.

TWO BEDROM furnished.
No pels. 1165 mo. plus
uti lilies. 1 child. 9.19·2875.

ROUSH

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220.
HILLCREST KENNJ;LS.
Boarding, all breeds. t'tean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
regiStered
Oobermans. 6U ·.W.·7795.
MALE SABLE and while
full blooded collie. 1 year
old . $35. 992·7102 .

CONSTRUCilON

WILL DO OddS and ends,
paneling, floor llle, ceiling
file . Fred Miller, 992·6338.
WILL CARE lor !he elderly
in our home, trained and
experienced. Phone 992731A.
CARPENTRY
WORK .
Floors, ceilings, paneling,
992·2759.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Heatthv, shots, wormed .
Donations required. 992·
621i/J, noon·7 p.m .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33; north of
Pomeroy. Large lols.Call
992·7479 .

Gutter

work,

RESTER'S assistant lor
Senior Citizens In VIllage
Manor apts. Call 992· 7787.

PING PONG table, pod·
dies, balls, net Included.
New. Tonya Davis, 985··

3501.
PROBATE COURT"
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF HERTHA J.
COMPTON, DECEASED
case No. 22 71
NOTICE OF
A:PPOINTMIINT
OF FIDUCIARY·
on January 11, 198Q, In
the Meigs Countv Probate
Court, Case N"o. 2287i .
HMdquorters
Ramona Kay Compton, 210.
_
,AJ!II.IIInc.. .
W. Main Street, Pomero_y,
. · "JiliiJJervoc»
Ohio 4.5769 was appolntea
Executrix of the estate of
Hertha
H.
compton,
deceased late of 210 w.
Main Slreel, Pomeroy,
Ohio &gt;45769.
·
RObert E. Buck
PrObate JUdi!'!·
Clerk
01 17, 24.31., 31c

GENERAL

"EUnRIC-

POMEROY

. [ANDM"ARI(l_

Giveaway

Aeal Estate for Sale

TWO loveable shepherd
types. Two beagle lypes.
Males and females. 992·
6246.

FINANCING·VA· FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANI=E .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATe, ATHENS.
614-592·3051 .
MOBILE HOME on one:
hall acre In Rutland Town·
ship, both lor $4,000.
O'Brien and Crow Really,
992·2720 or 992·3589.

I

THURSDAY,,ANUARY 17,1980

.,

608 E •
MAI.N. -·
. IIi!
. .. POMERO.Y, 0 • .
9'12-2259
RACINE Recenlly
remodeled 1'12 story
frame wlfh 2 bedrooms,
dining room, living
room. and kitchen. Full
basement. and 2 passl·
ble rooms upstairs.
Really hlce. $25,000.00.
RENTAL PROPERTY
-1 bedroom frame wlfh
lull basement. Make an

offer.

START A FUTURE
NOW - with this nice
home In Syracuse. Has 3
bedrooms, basement,
and a double lot. VA ap·
proved. Excellentcondl ·
lion. $26,800.00.
OVERLOOKS RIVER
Beautiful 2 slory
home. 3 bedrooms, l'h
balhs, central air, and a
lull usu~ble basement
on a level lot. Fully
carpeted. $.10,000.00.
CLOSE TO THE MINES
Huge . living room
with fireplace. new kll·
chen, 3 bedrooms. part
basement and 6 ecres.
$24,500.00.
BUSINESS
OP·
PORTUNITY nice
clean business with ex·
cellenl track record .
"The Kiddie Shop" In·
eludes all equipment
necessary. Come In for
details.
.
MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful home In ex·
cellon! condition, appx.
2,600 sq. If. of living
space, 2 story frame, 4
bedrooms, 111:1 baf~s.
• family room, rec. room,
den, large living room,
dining; break. nook,
modern built-In kll.,
central air &amp; heal, free
house,
s1orage.
$59,500.00.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992·61fl
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742-2474
Jean Trussell 949-2660
OFFICE PHONE

BY OWNER, house In
Pomeroy. Large living
room, dining roOm, built· in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
lots of carpel and paneling. ·
FA gas heal, lull baemenl.
Price up 30's. One·lhlrd
acre lol close to hospital
and schootCall992·5917 tor
appolnlm 1.
HOUSE FOR SALE by
owner: 6 room house plus
bath. 1 acre ground.
Located 2'1:1 miles from
Mine No. 2. 992·21&gt;45 lor In·
formation.
FOR SALE BY OWNER:
8.1i/J acre hillside farm back
of AntiQuity. To highest
bidder. Cash. Dolorous
Smlfh, 38 W. Oakland Ave.,
Columbus, OH .13201 .
.

FARM ON ·sR 143 above
Wolle Pen Store. Phone

992·7559,

'

992-2259

Vinyl &amp;
..Aluminum Siding
elnsllletlon
• Storm Doors
eSiorm Windows
• Replacement Win dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

(Answers tomorrow)

I

Jumbles. CHESS UNWED POPLIN OPIATE
Answer: What King Solomon said his la~t wife was""ONE IN A THOUSAND""

BRIDGE

10 Tl&gt;.l..K 10

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BIJT M'{'5~L-F.
I E'tJD Uf'

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Dummy reversal play wins

!
I

F.A.U...IIJIO

Quality construction at
reesonable rates.

When you bid as Eddie does
you should make it a point to
play the cards as well as
Eddie does.
He studied the hand for a
while and saw that if he could

1-17

NORTH

+AQ2
• A8 32
+AK8

Remodeling
. Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

score five trump tricks, one

+ 10 71

ANNIE

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
A Her 5 P.M. 992-S$47
12·13·2mo. pd .

SHEIK BI&gt;.HO-GiloiEL THE
loiAGHIFICENT HAS DEC~ED(
THAT Al.L WHO EAT """""LI

WORK ! You wii:.Lswn

WELL- I SURE HAVE
BEEN DOWN THIS

WEST

EAST

+J63
.KQJ96
+QJ
+K98

.10 5 t
+ 10 7 8 53

+K8
+AQ5

SOUTH
• 10 9 75 t

ROAD BEFORE!

.7+

WITH THE DISHES!

8 4Z
+J 6 3 2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

Wesl

Nortb
I NT

Pass

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes . 992-2284.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

Eut

Soolb

2.

Pass
2+

contract.
Dummy

Pass

reversal

is

an

procedure

to

remember . Normally one
prefers to rulf in the hand
with fewest trumps, but extra

tricks

can sometimes

be

scored by taking advantage of
a void or singleton in what
would normally be the master
hand . Dummy now becomes
By Oswald Jacoby
master and his short suit is
and Alan Sontag
· used to c.o llect opponents'
;;
The bidding in the box was trumps.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
when Eddie Kantar held the
South cards_ His two-spade
(For a. copy of JACOBY
bid was indicative of his style
which is to bid when there is MODERN. send $1 to: ""Win st
any conceivable reason to do Bridge, ' ' care of this newspaso. This time be held five per. P.0. Box 489. Radio City
spades, a singleton heart and Station. New York. N. Y.
10019.)
the jack and it was his turn.

WELL, NEI:DLES5
l"O SAY, I'M AWFULLY GLAD 1 1
RAN INl"O "lOU·

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been can cell ·ed?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·21.13.

heart and two diamonds he
would be home. Then he took
dummy's ace of hearls, ruffed
a heart, led to dummy·s ace of
diamonds, rulfed another
heart, led to dummy's king of
diamonds and ruffed a third.
This line of play is called a
dummy reversal in that Eddie
had managed lo reduce his
trump length to less than
dummy's. He also had six
tricks in and was going to get
two more to bring home the

important

Opening lead:• K

ll'j STOCK lor Immediate
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do·ll·yoursell or
let us.lnstatl tor you. D .
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.
Bi'lADFDRO, Auctioneer,
Complete service. Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

61~~·r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

'ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers.
toaSters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Slate H lghway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

Some qrease
cauqht
fire
on his

Aver4

and
Emil4
are

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning .
Sleam cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 7.G·2348.

ACROSS
1 Texas city
5 Michaebnas

I think Aven~
wants a word

with

stove~ .

and

WINNIE

zo

NO NEED TO P.JE . EDGAR. WA&amp; A

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors.
2356. Will make service
calls.

'

~TICK-IN~"THE-MUD.

MY, YOU CATCH

m·

NO.\/

rM HAVIN&amp; MORE: FUN
-rnAN I'VE EVER HAD
IN MYLII=E!

ON FA!7T1 Ml&lt;.
WINKLE.

coal

41 The -

thickens
10 Esau's
DOWN
grandson
1 Sported
11 Embarrassed %Freeman
13 Debauchee
Gosden role
14 Citrus fruit
3 Thin ice,
15 One of 26
for example
18 "Flying
4 Miner's
Down to -"
income
17 Offshore
source
sight
5 Have
18 Chris
high hopes
of
6 Pull
tennis
the trigger
Joke
7 Cap
Z1 Purify
8 Police radio
33 Italian
summons

riqht~?~~~~

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 7.G·2951. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

4e Glowing

daisy

40U~

all

Yeoterday's Allawer
9 Trust; hope
%3 Habitation
1% The one in
expense
the window
Z5 Way
and others
%7 Less chea~
1&amp; Philosopher
29 lnveoti·
Descartes
galion
19 Hindu guitar
33 Likewise
21 Lays waste
34 RW&gt; into
Z2 Breeding;
36 Marble
style
37 Vitality

painter
24 Peerless
Z5 Pennies

26 Miles
of films
%7 Social

Real Estate for Sale :

,,

affairs
28 Moslem

ruler
29 Insig-

•
SHUX- - I'M ALLOUTOF

BLAM·Uf"ITION

i

etAM
8LAM

.

POMIIROY - Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom. bath, large·
living room. full bastment~ new furnace. 117,500.
MIDDLEPORT- Two bedroom brick only I block
from center of town. Low utilities. A bargain at

a threat

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

to

work It:

AXY~BA.AXR

'

II · L 0 N,)i F'·E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands (or another. 111 this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formati~n of the words are all
hints.' Each day the code letten are d11ferent.
..

SYRACUSE -6 room house on nice lot. $11.600.

CRYPTCKIUOTES

5 ACR.S 0, LAND on Hylell Run, beautiful
bUilding lot. $7.000.

(I

l{OU'D SETTER USE
M~ AAN17KERCH1Ef, SIR

MIDDLEPGRT- Building lot on S. second, 63'XS3'.
$4,500.

•

CALL 992-2342
Bili Childs, Bianc:h MRJ~ Home 992·2449 '· .

Rodney Downlni. Broiler, Home ,992-3731 .

1111!----------....
MiDDLEPOiT, OHIO

·

•

)

35 Enthrall
37Haggard
38 Writer
39 Word In

SLAM

RUTLAND- One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a lillie paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

)

nificant
Date for
a feila
31 Cheer
32 English
river

30

..-'J\

Sl2,5oo.

' "z-nu

A(lJIIIJ)

wrrn ooooe;

10·19·1 mo.

ROCK SPRINGS-2 bedroom and bath, fully equipped kitchen, neor Meigs High School, fully furnished. $25·0110·

44 Ac.:"

THIS

Now arrange the drded letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

BORN lOSER

$27,000.

on

D~IVE

THe6E DA¥6.

Jumb~ took No. 14, cont.llnlng 110 PUDIH ~ II IYIIII.,._ lor$1.75po~:tpeld
Irom Jurhble,clotttla newlpaJNr, Box 3A. Norwood, N.J. 07&amp;&amp;a.lnclude your
name, addrua. zip code and make checlts pay1ble to Ntwtpa~l"boooll.

MIDDLEPORT- Cement block home on large corner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms. Ph bath, garag~ .

$27,500,

Housmg
Headquatlets

.
Y ester d ay s

3V. YR. OLD RANCH nOMII -Just 4.mlleslrom
Pomeroy. Quiet country living In this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath wllh central heat and air cono:tl·
tlon. over 3 acres of flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just$44,900.00.

OWN A BUSINESS ..,...
Ali stock and fixtures. A
3 bedroom apartnnent
wlfh bath and. extra· lot
State Rl. 124. Only

TO

Print answer h&amp;f9:

. · . . ~~L ...SJAJE_. __

I .

.

IRICK RANCH 3
nice bedrooms, 2 batha.
large living, dining,
covered patio, 2 car
garage, all lhll on the
river .
ACRI.
-•ral
local
,.. ES ;u.
som~ • . SOLD
, ·on
R!. 124.
BUILDING LOTS Country,,· In · town, on
w'e ter line, woods,
cleared and on road
frontage ·
c&amp;llL
or
"2·:1171 FOR A I,OCA·
TION. FRiil! NEW
(ALIINDARS.

--OR SUFFER
THE l.E!SAL CON·

J&amp;L BLOW"
INSUlATION

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.

WHEN II COV\e5 TO

USED. CA~. rT'~ HA~D

KJ r

Business Services

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot. Can be par·
flally financed. Call Guido
Glrolami . 992·5786, 10·6. No
realtors.

$15,000.

r-,.~ YOU KNOW!

K · t]

IMEEFALj
I I K
IHYGNIDj

VE1R.Y WELL! U~DER LOCAL
ORDINANCE S:S97W-- I l\llJ!&gt;T
ASK YOU TO RE-MOVE: THAT
T16Ef&lt; FFtOM YOU!&lt; PREM1'3ES
WITHI&gt;J 2+ HOURS:

U~RHUMA.I ~ I 'M 5-URE 'IOU
Ko.IOW, J .P., THAT I"VE NO
DEj;IRE TO MAKE: TROUBLE
OVER YOLIF': PET T 15ER:
!!oUT WELl., HMFF -ONE "
DOES HAVE NEIGIH!OR!&gt; ·

-

NICE bUilding lots on CR
32, Eastern School Oislricl,
TP water district, 5 miles
off Rf. 7. Priced on In·
specllon. 949·2763 lor
showing.

216 E.~ Str•t
. -·- ·-COUNTRY SETTIN.:OA real live stocked fish
pond. Has over an acre
and a like new 2
bedroom mobile home
12'x50' . Gas furnace,
patio, shade frees, rural
water and ali furniture
on Slael Rl. Only
$12,000.
DUPLEX POSSIILI;9 rooms. W• baths, 4 or 5
bedrooms, natural gas
heal and room lor a
wood burner In fhe large
family room. 2 car
garage with storage on
good corner lot near
schools., Asking only

)

Phone9'/HOII 1-oi·(Pd.)

OO·Ifc

TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, 1112 baths, garage.
College Rd., Syracuse. Call
992·5133 or 992·3981 .

10 HP Gravely walk
behind, dualS wllh chains,
.tO" mower, riding sulkev,
snow blade, $1200. Gravely
Tractor Sales and Service,
204 Condor, Pomeroy, OH.
992·2975.

261i/J.

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

COUNTRY HOME wllh
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms. bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
a\lailable. Located appro)(.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33 . .W.·2359 alter 6.

EIGHT FOOT pool table
with all accessories. Ex·
eellent condition. $30CJ. 992·
3566.

YOU WON'T find a 1976
Chevrolet Malibu lor $1600
In any Other ad. P.S., P.B .•
auto.. 6 cyl ., good con·
dillon. Ralph Trussell. 949·

; Rutland.

t

Real Estate for Sale

for

TWO BEDROOM house,
unfurnished. 992·3090.

mile alf Rtl 7 by-pass ,

on 51. Rl. 124 toward •

and

NICE FEMALE dog.
Friendly to people. 992·
7275.

LADIES 13·14 maternity
clothes. Frigidaire jet ac·
tion washer, needs timer,
$35. 992·7102.

1972 OLDS. Good condition.
Frank Cleland, RAcine,
OH.

.Genge
lt4

FREE HAY. Not bundled.
Call992-7275.

3061.

"iOU,

DADDY: IT"!&gt;
MAYOR: JENK5

•New Home
*AddOns
• Remolelings
• Free Estimates

'

RACINE,O.
949-2741or
992-7314
12·28·pd.

ONE 8 If. flourescenl light
with 2 lubes. 1 gun rack,
holds 4·5 rilles or shotguns
wllh shelves !hal will hold
300-400 boxes of am ·
munition .
Two
4· 11 .
flourescenl lights with 2
tubes each, like new. 992·

ROOM AND BOARD, laun·
dry . Elderly or working
men. 992··6022 .

Roger 'Hysell

V. C. YOUNG Ill

HAY and corn lor sale.
Robert Dor!l, Tuppers
Pla!ns, OH. 614·667-3966.

I I

!&gt;fQlJENCe~!

down

walks

F O~

~Bathrooms

CALL 992-7544

!FREE ESTIMATES!
RedUCed Winter RIIU

GOOO MIXED hay, $1
bale. Raymond Cotterill,
Harrlsonvlle, 7.G·2082 .

949·2778.

work,

driveways.

60x12 Kirkwood. Total elec· .
tric . 1'12 baths. 3 bedrooms .
12x16 bedroom added on.
Partially
furnished .
Washer and dryer and air
conditioning.
Storage
building. Porches and uil·
derplnnlng. New carpet.
Lot In Letart Falls, OH,
close to river. 241-3895.

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap15. Phone 992-5434.

I [I

CAPTAIN EASY

*New Kitchens

HOIII'$9·1 M., W., F.
Other fimu Dy appoint·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomerey, 0 .

spouts, some concrete

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12xlill3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
WV . 30H7HA24.

1973 FORD L TO Station
Wagon, V ·8, A.C., carrying
rack. Low mileage. Real
good condition. $1495. Call

Television
Viewing

IT

STROLL
HOME-"

VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Mobile Homes· Sale

PURINA FED hogs· ready lp butcher. Consider
Pork for your freezer.
Reedsville, 61078·6311.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriAmoldandBobLee

Unscramble these lour Jumbkts,
one leHer to each square, to form
tour ()l'tjinary words.

CONCEAL.
IT ON HIS
PERSON

C. R. MASH

Fedoref Housing &amp;
veterans Admin. Loons.

1-17-1 mo.

WILL DO housekeeping lor
elderly. Dorothy warlh,

1973 CHEVROLET V&gt; ton,
V·8, 4 speed . Std. trans.
Fair !Ires, low mileage,
needs minor mechanical
work and body repairs.
Phone 992·2826.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

•New homes extensive remodel·
ing
• E lectrica I work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

Services Offered

CONDITIONED .hay
sale. 614·667·3349.

rn'ft

AND

JEWELRY, CHAINS AND
MISC.
ITEMS
AT
RECORD HIGH HONEST
UP TO DATE PRICES.
For Sale ·
CONTACT ED BURKETT, '
LIMESTONE ,
BARBER SHOP, MID· COAL,
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog
992·3-176.
food, and 1!11 types of sail.
Excelsior Sail Works, Inc .•
Auto Sales,
E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
38'11 .
1975 AMC Pacer. Good con·
dillon . No rust. $1700. 742·
APPLES
CIDER
2957.
.HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, Slate Route 689.
1979 OLDS Diesel 98 Regen· Phone Wilkesville, 669·
cy .4 door sedan, A.C ., 3785.
cruise control, all the ex·
tras, looks and runs like
new. 30 mpg. Will lake APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at SA per bu. Besflor
trades . 949·2763.
apple butter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick .Orchard, SR
1974 MUSTANG Ghia, low 689.
mileage. New !Ires. $1650 . 6
cyl. , auto., 949-2042 .
EMERGENCY
power
alternators- own the bes1
1973 CHEVY PICKUP, - buy Wlnpower. Call 513·
auto .
Contact
Eldon 788·2589.
Walburn, 380 S. 3rd 51.,
Middleport. 992·2805.

II"&lt;~'._._

Business Services

992·5556.

MARTIN'S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience In buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur ·
niture. One piece or com·
plele household . Gold,
silver and other old coins,
china. glass, old toys, dolls.
iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors, pocket
knives and other old Items.
Call 992·6370.

Pets for Sale
49 117 Deg . Wesl6.212 rods to
a stake 2•h feet South of an
ash 6 ln. In diameter; then ·
ce South 49'1• Deg. West
8.272 rods to a slake 3 feel
West of while oak tree 3
feet in diameter; thence
South 69 Oeg . West 14.515
rods to center of road; ·
thence In an easterly dlrec ·
lion following said road to a
stone corner on South side
of road 31 feel East 01
Sugar tree 61n. In dlameler
about 51.97 rods; !hence
North to place of beginning
62.-483 rOds containing 7
acres 25square rods.
Also, beginning ala stone
at the :,outheast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
feet from said sugar tree 6
ln. in diameter; thence In
an Easterly' direction
following said road about
24.8-4 rods to Ida Young's 2
acre lot; thence West 20.114
rods ; !hence North 10
aforesaid sugar tree or ·to
place of beginning, con ·
talning 1V2 acre.
Reference Deed : Vol.
135, Page 241 Deed Recor·
ds,_Melgs County, Ohio.
1 he object of the Com ·
plalnlls to selllhe interest ·
of Ida M. Christie In each
parcel of real estate In or·
der to pay the debts of the
estate and costs of administering lheeslale.
Plaintiff demands the
real estate described In the
FIRST COUNT be sold;
!hat !he entire Interest In
the real estate described In
SECOND COUNT be sold ;
!hal the rights, Interests
and liens 011111 parlles may
be fully determined, ad·
usted and protected, and
_hal PlalntJ.ff be .authorized
and ordered to sell rhe i!tF
lire Interest In lhe real
In
.e.sfale described
'SECOND COUNT ac ·
cording to the statutes In
such case made and
provided and lor such
other relfet as to which she
may be entitled to.
You are required to anSW4!r the Complaint within
twenty1!1ghl days alfer lhe
last publication of this
notice which will be
published once each week
for six successive weeks
and the Ia sf publication will
be made on· the 7th . day of
February, 1980.
In case of vour failure to
answer or
otherwl se
resp()!\d as ~milled by
the Ohio RUles of Civil
Procedure within the time
staled,
\udgmenl
by
default .w l I be renijered
against you lor the relief
demanded In the com ·
plaint.
·. Rober! E . Buck .
Judge and Ex·OIIIcio Clerk
Common Pleas Court
Meigs County, Ohio
Probate Division
12) 271 (1) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31,

~;:;;;-r-•

.

Notices

1f\J~N")

~ ~ ~~ 01

i'

i

HZGXJ

i

CUWRO

•i
l

CQRH

IRX

I U WR

TYMR ;

YX

JLRUC

MZL

ZXR

T ZB R

YARUTYER

I y ().
CQYXJ

c z :z

IGPQ . - VRX~ . UIYX
N.ZFRCC
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : TO KNOW ONE'S SELF IS WISDOM,
BUT TO KNOW ONE'S NEIGHBOR IS GENIUS.- MINNA
ANTRIM
n::J

1..0 l(lng F•eturn Srndl(:•t•, Inc.

I

..

8:oo-Buck Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy
6,13 ;
Waltons
8;
Cleveland Orchestra 20; College
BasketballlO; Islam l7; Camera
Three 33.
a 30-Benson 6,13; Sports : Close Up
33.
9:DO-Oulncy 3.15; Barney Miller
6,13 ; Barnaby Jones 8; Sneak
Previews 20,33 .
9:30-Soap 6,13; Camera Three 20;
NBA Basketball 17; Dancing
Disco 33 .
10:oo-Skag 3,15; 20-20 6.13; Kno.ts
Landing 8,10; News 20; Sound.
stage 33 .
10 :JO-Over Easy 20.
11 00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Oick
Cavett 20; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald P~rrln 33.
.
1"30--Toni ghl 3,15; Pollee Woman
6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "The Gentle Rain"' 10.
12 : 40- Baretta
6.13;
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 45- Bia ck Sheep Squadron 8;
News 17; 1:50-News 13; Movie
" Two of a Kind" 17.
3 : ~NBA Basketball 17; 5:35Love, American Stv le 17 .

FRIDAY,JANUARY 18,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; '5:50-PTL
Club 13; 700 Club 6,8 ; Healfh
Field 10; 6:05-World at Large
17.
6:30--Kidsworld 10; News 17; 6 :45Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good
Morning West V irg inia 13; 6 :55News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,15; Good Morning
Amerlca6,13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; Three Stooges-Utile
Rascals 17.
7: 15-A.M. Weather 33; 7:30Famlly Affair 10; Studio See 33.
8:DO--Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Family
Affair 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30--Romper Room 17.
9:oo-Bob Braurl 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8; One Day AI A Time
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
Show 17 .
9:30--Bob Newharl 8; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17 _
10:DO--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Beal the Clock 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"The Naked Prey" 17.
10:3D-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10.
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10. ·
11 :0()-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne 1!.
Shirley 6.13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Ele&lt;: . Co. 20.
11:30- Wheel of Fortune 3.15;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame Sl .
20,33 ; 11 :55-News 17.
12 : 0o-Newscenter . 3;
News '
6,8,10.13; Chain Reacllon 15;
Love, American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Health Field 15;
Movie "Who's Been Sleeping In
My Bed?" 17; Elec. Co. 33 .
1:oo-Oays.of Our Lives 3.15; All My
Children 6,13; Young 1!. the.
Restless 8,10.
1:3D-As The World Turns 8,10;
2:0()-0ocjors 3,15; One Life to ·
Live 6, 13.
'
2:25-News 17; 2:3D-Another World
3,15; Guiding Light 8,10;
Gigglesnort Hotel 17.
3:oo--General Hospital 6,13 ; I Love·
Lucy 17; Upstairs. Downstairs
20.
.
3:3D-One Day at a Time 8; Joker's · Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over •
Easy 33.
4:oo-Misler Cartoon 3; Password ~
Plus 15; Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Real McCoys 13; Speclreman 17.
4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Pelllcoat
Junction 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Tom 1!. Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15; ,
Gilligan's Is. 17 .
.
5: DO--Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp; ~
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers
20,33 .
5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; Elec . Co. 20 ; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of ·
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33 .
•
6:oo-News 3,8;10, 13,15; ABC News '
6; Carol Burnefl17 ; 3·2·1 Contact ~
20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnetl6; CBS News 8,10;_ ·
Bob Newhart 17 ; VIlla Alegre 20;Wifd Wild World. of Animals :!!.
7:DO--Cross-Wit. 3; Tic Tac Dough·
8; Newlywed Game 6,13; News
10; Love. American Slyle 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavell 20.
7:30-Prlce Is Righl3; 3' sA Crowd 6; ·
Family Feud 10; Joker' s Wild 8; :
Dick Cavell 33; All In The
F~mlly 17 ;
Pop Goes The .
Country 13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.
..
8:00-Shlrley 3,15 ; B.A. D. Cafs 6,13;
Incredible
Hulk
8,10; ·
Washlngtiln Week In Review ·:
20,33; Movie "Phantom of the .
Rue Morgue" 17.
·
:
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33; 9:0()Movle "The Late Show" 3,15;· ·
Amerlean Music Awards 6,13;: ,
Dukes of Hazzard 8,10; Caplfol ·
Beat 33; Free to Choo5e 20.
9:30-Theodore Bundy 33.
.
10:00-Dallas 8,10; Perspective on ·,
Greatness 17; News 20 ; David ·
•
Susskind 33.
lO :JO-&lt;&gt;ver Easy 20.
11 : 0D-News 3,6.8,10,13, 15; NBI\ .
Basketball 17; Dick Cavell 201
Monty Python's Flying Clr"tus 33; :
·11 : 3D-Tonight 3,15; Charl ie' s .•
Ahgels 6; Movie "Death In Deep Water" 8; ABC News 33; Movie :
"Hatchel lor a Honeymoon" 10;
Movie " Firecreek" 13 . ·
.•
12: 40.:.FBI 6;
1 :DO-Midnight
· Special 3.15; Mo.vle "Los! :
•,
Women" 10.
1 :1S.:...News17; 1 :20-Movle "The X
·
from Outer Space" 17.
'
2 : 3D-News
3;
3:05-Movle ;
"Summer Holiday" 17; 5:2Q---. 1
Love. American Style 17. ·
•

I

'

•·

�\

$-The
-- Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan.
- 17,1900

....../

~

otc~~~Da~i~ly Sentinel, Mll1dleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 17, 1900

Your .Best Buys Are }"'ound in the Sentinel Classifieds
"

r-

WANT AD

CHARGES
I~ Worda

or Under

Cuh
1.00

Charge
1.25

1.80
3.00

3.75

uo

uo

z. ~

Eacll wtll'd over the minimum
J$ word! Ia 4 cents per word per

d.y. Ada runnlrUI: other than conaecutivt dly1 -.Ill be charged at
the 1 day nile.

In memory, Card ol Thanka
and Obituary : fl t.-enb per word,
1:5.00 minimwn. Cash ln a~
Vllll&lt;e.

Mobile Home Yle! aOO Yard
aa.les are accepted only witb
caah with order. 25 cent charge
for ads cart'Yir¥!. Boa Nwnber In
~of 'lbe Sentinel.

The Publlaher ruenes the
to edit or rejecl any ads
deemed objectional.
The
Publi!ber will not be responsible
far more than one incorTect in-

right

sertion.
Phonem-21:16

NOTICE
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M!Jflday
Noon on Saturday

Lost and Found

wanted to Buy

For Rent

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB .

BILLFOLD LOST Friday
on street in Pomeroy . Con·
taintng large sum of
money . 843·2472.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
Slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pollet co .• Rl. 2.
Pomeroy 992 -2689.

TWO BEDROOM 12x60 In
Syracuse. Carpeted, fur·
nished. water pa id. I child
accepted. Slli/J a monlh plus
security. Phone 992·2897.

GUN SHOOT . Racine
Voluntee r
Fire Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
At their bu ildingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 : 00. Factory choke on ly.
corn Hollow Gun Club.
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 2A9.
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing toO large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614767·3167 or 557·3411 .
BUYING U .S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT! . DON 'T L O~E
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BRO WN 'S.
I NCOME TAX SERVICE .
Quarterly, Federal and all
state income tax reports
will be prepared by ap·
poinlmenl. 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin . Laurel Cliff
Rd .• Pomeroy.

Tuesday
thru Friday
4P.M.
lhe W.y befon publication

SWlday
4P.M.

. . Frid.Hy afternoon

Carel of Thanks
WE WOULD like to show
our appreciation tor all the
donations, gifts, and help,
shown us when our house
burned.
The Charles Jones Family.
I WANT to thank everyone,
friends, relatives, and all
who ·sent cards, gifts, food,
who called and gave
prayers at the time of my
hospitalization . Especially,
all the kindnesses and con cern shown my husband;
Bob and I. It was greatly
appreciated .
Dorothy Ritchie.

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
" IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Administratrix of the Esta1e
of
Ida
M . Christie,
Deceased
Plainliff
VS.

EDNA N. WOOD,
lOBO Greenwich Road
Wadsworth, Ohio 44281
Et al.,
Defendants.

No . 22704

NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F . TAYLOR
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43i SIBBERT,
WEST VIRG NIA; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES,
DISTRIBUTEE$,
ADMIN' •RATORS, EXEC UTI:'!. , AND ASSIGN~ IF
ANY OF EACH OF tHE
FOLLOWING : IDA M.
CHRISTIE, DECEASED;
DOUGLAS
YOUNG,
DECEASED : RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE D; GLADYS GOEGLEIN,
DECEASED; DELLA R IFFLE,
DECEASED;
FLORENCE
HENRY,
DECEASED;
DAVID
KING, DECEASED; BER ·
NARD
KING
DECEASEDj HAROLD
KING, D"CEASED;
LENA
DOERFER,
DECEASED A.K.A. LANA
DORFER , DECEASED:
OTHO
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
LAURA
KNAPP,
DECEASED;
.HENRY DOERFER. 1
bECEASED;
OLEN
DOERFER . DECEASED;
DAYTON
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIELS,
DECEASED; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
FRED
KING,
DECEASED; SAMUEL J.
CHRISTIE , DECEASED;
AND
THOMAS
F.
TAYLOR DECEASED.
Plainllfl has broughllhis
action naming you as
detendan1s In the above named court by filing Mr
complaint on November
1Jih. 1979. The Complaint
reclfes that each of you is
possibly an heir-al·law and
nexl of kin of Ida M .
Chrlslie, Deceased; that at
the ·time of her death Ida
M. Christie was seized of
the entire Interest of lhe
real eslale des.:ribed In lhe
FIRST COUNT of the Com·
pleinl. which said real
estate Is described as
follows:
Situate In the COunty of
Meigs, In the Stale of Ohio
and in the Township of Bed ·
lord, and bounded and
d~scribed
as follows:
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
"ffie SoutheaST quarTer - of ·
Section No. Seven, Town
No. Three and Range No.
Thirteen of lhe Ohio Com ·
panr •s Purchase; thence
Nor h far enough so that bY
running due West to lhe
center ol . lhe Slate Road ;
thence along the center of
said road to the section
line; !hence Easl lo the
place of belllnning so thalli
Shall contain 1hirty acres ,
butsubjeclto ali legal high ·
ways .
The
aforesaid
· deS&lt;:rlbed real estate being
the same real estate con ·
veyed by William Smith,
Jr . to Lucetta Smith by
deed bea nng date of the
15th. day ol September
187~ and re&lt;;orded in Vol.
4!1, &gt;'ages li/J7 and 608 of the
r~orcfs of deeds in the
RO!Corder's Office of Meigs
county. Ohio.
•And being the same
l!f"ooerfv conveyed by Guy
A . Smith, Executor of the
estate of Lucella Smith,
OKea~. to Samuel J .

I PAY highest prices
possible for· gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport
2ND SEMESTER classes
in ballet, tap and iazz now
open. Classes offered are
pre-school, ballet, tap,
jazz, and adult exercise
jazz classes. Call Shirlev
Carpenter, Carpenter ' s
Dance Studio. 9~9 - 2710
before January 30th.
INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
Russell, Bradbury . 992·
7228.
New 1980 Golf club grips.
Rubber, leather . Standard,
oversized, undersized or
arthritic . $.5.50 installed.
John Teaford , 614-985·3961.
CAKE DECORATING
classes beginning soon .
Call now to register .
Carousel Confectionery,
Middleport . 992-6342.
BAKER'S
BUSY
Bee
Ceramics, Tuppers Plains.
Open Jan . 15 and will be
Tuesday and Thur10pen
sday 10a.m. ·3 p.m., rp.m .·
10 p.m. Reservations not
needed. Call667·32521or in·
formlltion. Pauline Baker .
MOVING SALE. corner of
Broadway and Locust,
Middleport. Jan . 19, 10·5.
Sunday 20th, 1·4.
Christie and Ida M.
CHrislfe . by deed dated
June 1, 1925. and recorded
in Book 127, at Page 448 of
!he Deed Re&lt;:ords of Meigs
county Ohio .
EXCEPTING one·lourlh
of an acre more or less con·
veyed by Ida M. Chrlsfle to
cecil c . Heilman and Allen
C. Hellman by deed recor ·
ded In Vol. 2.0, Page. 483
Deed Records, Meigs Coun ty, Ohio.
In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Chrlslle was seized of
the undivided one-fourth
part of the following
described real estate :
The following described
real estate situated in the
Stale ol Ohio, in the Counly
of Meigs and in Salisbury
Township : II being near
!he middle of the South hall
of the North hall of Section
No. 18, Town No. 2 in Range
13 Ohio company's Pur ·
chase and on the south line
of said South hall of the
North hall and beginning al
the Northwest corner of
James A. Young's 36 acre
lot; thence north 2'1:1 Oeg.
East 7 chains and 75 links
to the county roed; thence
South .() Deg . East s chains
and 40 links along salcl
road; thence South 68 Dea.
East 1 chain and 141inks fo
Finnan Smith's West line;
thence, soulh 2'f• Deg . west
3 chains and 40 links lo his
Southwest corner; thence
West to the place of begin·
ning, containing two acres
more or less .
Also, the following real
es1afe SitUated· In 5ectlon
No. 18/ Town 2 and Range
13 of he Ohio Company's
Purchase and described as
follows"- fo ·wil : Beginning
at the :.outhwest corner Of
George Young's lol In sold
Section; !hence south 8
rods and 7 feel; thence
East 19 rOds; lhenc~ North
8 rods and 7 feet; !hence
West 19 rod~ fn the place of
be91nning, conraming one
·
acre.
Also, the following real
estate situated In Section
No. 18, Town 2 an~ Range
No. 12 of fhe Ohio Com ·
pany•s Purchase and bounded and described as
follows, lo·wll: ·Beginning
at George Young's
southeast corner In said
section; thence East 21 ·
rods Ia the road ; thence In
a Westerly dlretllon along
said road 15 rods and 10
feet ; thence West 20 rods;
thence 15 rOds and lOieelto
the place of beginning, con ·
tal nino 2acres.
the following
Also ,
described real estate In
Salisbury Township, Meigs
County, Ohio. B&lt;!llfnnlng at
a stone corner East 70.545
rods of the Northwest cor·
ner of w . s. Wills 69'1• acre
lot near a willow tree about
30 inches In diameter;
thence South 8.85 rods to .a
slake East of a double
chestnut atxiu!Jreet Indiameter ; thence south
70'1:1 degrees West 6.9~ rods
fo a slake 1 fool South of
while oak 4 feel In
diameter; thence south
59'1• Dea. West 8.33 11&gt; rods
to n stake_3 feel East of a
cheslnultree; thence South

LOST OR STOLEN : Thur·
sday, 1 male Walker coon
hound, Rutland area. White
wlfh small black spots on
right side. Tan head with
spoiled ear . Talfooed SWM
rlgh1 ear, s digit number
left ear. Second time dog
has been taken in 4 months.
All information kept con·
fldenllal. Call 742·221&lt; or
992·3023.
•
REWARD lo person retur·
nino or givjng information
leading to return of purse
lost in vicinity of 2nd St . or
Powell's Super Valu,
Pomeroy . No questions
asked. Purse · cohtained
glasses, keys and personal
papers . Keep money ,
collect additional reward.
Call collect, 992·2588.
LOST : Bluelick female,
Flatwoods area. Oscar
Smith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy . 992·
5594.
FOUND : male beagle. Big
Run area, CR 39 in Bedford
Township. 992·5579.
LOST : Dog, large, mostly
St. Bernard . Collar and
tag . Brown. Answers to
"Tank". Last seen around
Union Ave. 992·5354.

Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in
the
Middleport
and
Pomeroy areas. Call the
Daily Sentinel belween8 :30
and 5:00p.m .• 992·2156.
HOME
ADDRESSERS
wanted. S500 per week
possible. No experience
reQuired.
A.S.D..
PO
Drawer 140069, Dallas. TX
75214 .
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility lisf at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.
WANTED:
Babyslller.
Rulland, one child. $7 a
day . Phone 742·2878 alter
2:30p.m.
WE ARE seeking serious
minded people who need
extra income. Meet today's
r i sing costs . Flexible
hours. Benefits. Apply bel·
ween 9-11, 601 Main, Pt.
Pleasant.
NEEDED RN or LPN lull ·
lime, 11·7(30 and 3·11: 30.
Also per1 time RN or LPN
11 ·7:30. Contact Mr. Zidian
at 992·6606.
EARN GENEROUS com·
missions. Sell World Book,
largest selling en ·
cyclopedia. Send resume
Box 486, Racine, OH.

OLD FURNITURE. Ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks. etc .• complele
households. Write M.D.
Miller. R t . .&amp;, Pomeroy or
ca II 992· 771i/J.
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass. china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
OLD COINS, pocket wal·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462 .

WILL PAY TOP dollar lor
gold and silver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver Items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992·6370.

1977 INTERNATIONAL
cab·over 350 tractor. 1978
International cab·over KT·
450. 247·3051 or 247·2063.
1964 CHEVY PICKUP. $125
or best offer. 992·5270.
REDUCED TO SELL · 1975
Pacer. No-rust. 7i.2-'l9.57.

l

12) 7, 7 c

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290. Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Hor!e
Care products . Western
bools. Children's $15.50.
Adulls $29.00.

TWO BEDROM furnished.
No pels. 1165 mo. plus
uti lilies. 1 child. 9.19·2875.

ROUSH

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220.
HILLCREST KENNJ;LS.
Boarding, all breeds. t'tean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
regiStered
Oobermans. 6U ·.W.·7795.
MALE SABLE and while
full blooded collie. 1 year
old . $35. 992·7102 .

CONSTRUCilON

WILL DO OddS and ends,
paneling, floor llle, ceiling
file . Fred Miller, 992·6338.
WILL CARE lor !he elderly
in our home, trained and
experienced. Phone 992731A.
CARPENTRY
WORK .
Floors, ceilings, paneling,
992·2759.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Heatthv, shots, wormed .
Donations required. 992·
621i/J, noon·7 p.m .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33; north of
Pomeroy. Large lols.Call
992·7479 .

Gutter

work,

RESTER'S assistant lor
Senior Citizens In VIllage
Manor apts. Call 992· 7787.

PING PONG table, pod·
dies, balls, net Included.
New. Tonya Davis, 985··

3501.
PROBATE COURT"
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF HERTHA J.
COMPTON, DECEASED
case No. 22 71
NOTICE OF
A:PPOINTMIINT
OF FIDUCIARY·
on January 11, 198Q, In
the Meigs Countv Probate
Court, Case N"o. 2287i .
HMdquorters
Ramona Kay Compton, 210.
_
,AJ!II.IIInc.. .
W. Main Street, Pomero_y,
. · "JiliiJJervoc»
Ohio 4.5769 was appolntea
Executrix of the estate of
Hertha
H.
compton,
deceased late of 210 w.
Main Slreel, Pomeroy,
Ohio &gt;45769.
·
RObert E. Buck
PrObate JUdi!'!·
Clerk
01 17, 24.31., 31c

GENERAL

"EUnRIC-

POMEROY

. [ANDM"ARI(l_

Giveaway

Aeal Estate for Sale

TWO loveable shepherd
types. Two beagle lypes.
Males and females. 992·
6246.

FINANCING·VA· FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANI=E .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATe, ATHENS.
614-592·3051 .
MOBILE HOME on one:
hall acre In Rutland Town·
ship, both lor $4,000.
O'Brien and Crow Really,
992·2720 or 992·3589.

I

THURSDAY,,ANUARY 17,1980

.,

608 E •
MAI.N. -·
. IIi!
. .. POMERO.Y, 0 • .
9'12-2259
RACINE Recenlly
remodeled 1'12 story
frame wlfh 2 bedrooms,
dining room, living
room. and kitchen. Full
basement. and 2 passl·
ble rooms upstairs.
Really hlce. $25,000.00.
RENTAL PROPERTY
-1 bedroom frame wlfh
lull basement. Make an

offer.

START A FUTURE
NOW - with this nice
home In Syracuse. Has 3
bedrooms, basement,
and a double lot. VA ap·
proved. Excellentcondl ·
lion. $26,800.00.
OVERLOOKS RIVER
Beautiful 2 slory
home. 3 bedrooms, l'h
balhs, central air, and a
lull usu~ble basement
on a level lot. Fully
carpeted. $.10,000.00.
CLOSE TO THE MINES
Huge . living room
with fireplace. new kll·
chen, 3 bedrooms. part
basement and 6 ecres.
$24,500.00.
BUSINESS
OP·
PORTUNITY nice
clean business with ex·
cellenl track record .
"The Kiddie Shop" In·
eludes all equipment
necessary. Come In for
details.
.
MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful home In ex·
cellon! condition, appx.
2,600 sq. If. of living
space, 2 story frame, 4
bedrooms, 111:1 baf~s.
• family room, rec. room,
den, large living room,
dining; break. nook,
modern built-In kll.,
central air &amp; heal, free
house,
s1orage.
$59,500.00.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992·61fl
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742-2474
Jean Trussell 949-2660
OFFICE PHONE

BY OWNER, house In
Pomeroy. Large living
room, dining roOm, built· in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
lots of carpel and paneling. ·
FA gas heal, lull baemenl.
Price up 30's. One·lhlrd
acre lol close to hospital
and schootCall992·5917 tor
appolnlm 1.
HOUSE FOR SALE by
owner: 6 room house plus
bath. 1 acre ground.
Located 2'1:1 miles from
Mine No. 2. 992·21&gt;45 lor In·
formation.
FOR SALE BY OWNER:
8.1i/J acre hillside farm back
of AntiQuity. To highest
bidder. Cash. Dolorous
Smlfh, 38 W. Oakland Ave.,
Columbus, OH .13201 .
.

FARM ON ·sR 143 above
Wolle Pen Store. Phone

992·7559,

'

992-2259

Vinyl &amp;
..Aluminum Siding
elnsllletlon
• Storm Doors
eSiorm Windows
• Replacement Win dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

(Answers tomorrow)

I

Jumbles. CHESS UNWED POPLIN OPIATE
Answer: What King Solomon said his la~t wife was""ONE IN A THOUSAND""

BRIDGE

10 Tl&gt;.l..K 10

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BIJT M'{'5~L-F.
I E'tJD Uf'

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Dummy reversal play wins

!
I

F.A.U...IIJIO

Quality construction at
reesonable rates.

When you bid as Eddie does
you should make it a point to
play the cards as well as
Eddie does.
He studied the hand for a
while and saw that if he could

1-17

NORTH

+AQ2
• A8 32
+AK8

Remodeling
. Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

score five trump tricks, one

+ 10 71

ANNIE

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
A Her 5 P.M. 992-S$47
12·13·2mo. pd .

SHEIK BI&gt;.HO-GiloiEL THE
loiAGHIFICENT HAS DEC~ED(
THAT Al.L WHO EAT """""LI

WORK ! You wii:.Lswn

WELL- I SURE HAVE
BEEN DOWN THIS

WEST

EAST

+J63
.KQJ96
+QJ
+K98

.10 5 t
+ 10 7 8 53

+K8
+AQ5

SOUTH
• 10 9 75 t

ROAD BEFORE!

.7+

WITH THE DISHES!

8 4Z
+J 6 3 2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

Wesl

Nortb
I NT

Pass

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes . 992-2284.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

Eut

Soolb

2.

Pass
2+

contract.
Dummy

Pass

reversal

is

an

procedure

to

remember . Normally one
prefers to rulf in the hand
with fewest trumps, but extra

tricks

can sometimes

be

scored by taking advantage of
a void or singleton in what
would normally be the master
hand . Dummy now becomes
By Oswald Jacoby
master and his short suit is
and Alan Sontag
· used to c.o llect opponents'
;;
The bidding in the box was trumps.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
when Eddie Kantar held the
South cards_ His two-spade
(For a. copy of JACOBY
bid was indicative of his style
which is to bid when there is MODERN. send $1 to: ""Win st
any conceivable reason to do Bridge, ' ' care of this newspaso. This time be held five per. P.0. Box 489. Radio City
spades, a singleton heart and Station. New York. N. Y.
10019.)
the jack and it was his turn.

WELL, NEI:DLES5
l"O SAY, I'M AWFULLY GLAD 1 1
RAN INl"O "lOU·

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been can cell ·ed?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·21.13.

heart and two diamonds he
would be home. Then he took
dummy's ace of hearls, ruffed
a heart, led to dummy·s ace of
diamonds, rulfed another
heart, led to dummy's king of
diamonds and ruffed a third.
This line of play is called a
dummy reversal in that Eddie
had managed lo reduce his
trump length to less than
dummy's. He also had six
tricks in and was going to get
two more to bring home the

important

Opening lead:• K

ll'j STOCK lor Immediate
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do·ll·yoursell or
let us.lnstatl tor you. D .
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.
Bi'lADFDRO, Auctioneer,
Complete service. Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

61~~·r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

'ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers.
toaSters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Slate H lghway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

Some qrease
cauqht
fire
on his

Aver4

and
Emil4
are

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning .
Sleam cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 7.G·2348.

ACROSS
1 Texas city
5 Michaebnas

I think Aven~
wants a word

with

stove~ .

and

WINNIE

zo

NO NEED TO P.JE . EDGAR. WA&amp; A

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors.
2356. Will make service
calls.

'

~TICK-IN~"THE-MUD.

MY, YOU CATCH

m·

NO.\/

rM HAVIN&amp; MORE: FUN
-rnAN I'VE EVER HAD
IN MYLII=E!

ON FA!7T1 Ml&lt;.
WINKLE.

coal

41 The -

thickens
10 Esau's
DOWN
grandson
1 Sported
11 Embarrassed %Freeman
13 Debauchee
Gosden role
14 Citrus fruit
3 Thin ice,
15 One of 26
for example
18 "Flying
4 Miner's
Down to -"
income
17 Offshore
source
sight
5 Have
18 Chris
high hopes
of
6 Pull
tennis
the trigger
Joke
7 Cap
Z1 Purify
8 Police radio
33 Italian
summons

riqht~?~~~~

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 7.G·2951. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

4e Glowing

daisy

40U~

all

Yeoterday's Allawer
9 Trust; hope
%3 Habitation
1% The one in
expense
the window
Z5 Way
and others
%7 Less chea~
1&amp; Philosopher
29 lnveoti·
Descartes
galion
19 Hindu guitar
33 Likewise
21 Lays waste
34 RW&gt; into
Z2 Breeding;
36 Marble
style
37 Vitality

painter
24 Peerless
Z5 Pennies

26 Miles
of films
%7 Social

Real Estate for Sale :

,,

affairs
28 Moslem

ruler
29 Insig-

•
SHUX- - I'M ALLOUTOF

BLAM·Uf"ITION

i

etAM
8LAM

.

POMIIROY - Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom. bath, large·
living room. full bastment~ new furnace. 117,500.
MIDDLEPORT- Two bedroom brick only I block
from center of town. Low utilities. A bargain at

a threat

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

to

work It:

AXY~BA.AXR

'

II · L 0 N,)i F'·E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands (or another. 111 this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formati~n of the words are all
hints.' Each day the code letten are d11ferent.
..

SYRACUSE -6 room house on nice lot. $11.600.

CRYPTCKIUOTES

5 ACR.S 0, LAND on Hylell Run, beautiful
bUilding lot. $7.000.

(I

l{OU'D SETTER USE
M~ AAN17KERCH1Ef, SIR

MIDDLEPGRT- Building lot on S. second, 63'XS3'.
$4,500.

•

CALL 992-2342
Bili Childs, Bianc:h MRJ~ Home 992·2449 '· .

Rodney Downlni. Broiler, Home ,992-3731 .

1111!----------....
MiDDLEPOiT, OHIO

·

•

)

35 Enthrall
37Haggard
38 Writer
39 Word In

SLAM

RUTLAND- One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a lillie paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

)

nificant
Date for
a feila
31 Cheer
32 English
river

30

..-'J\

Sl2,5oo.

' "z-nu

A(lJIIIJ)

wrrn ooooe;

10·19·1 mo.

ROCK SPRINGS-2 bedroom and bath, fully equipped kitchen, neor Meigs High School, fully furnished. $25·0110·

44 Ac.:"

THIS

Now arrange the drded letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

BORN lOSER

$27,000.

on

D~IVE

THe6E DA¥6.

Jumb~ took No. 14, cont.llnlng 110 PUDIH ~ II IYIIII.,._ lor$1.75po~:tpeld
Irom Jurhble,clotttla newlpaJNr, Box 3A. Norwood, N.J. 07&amp;&amp;a.lnclude your
name, addrua. zip code and make checlts pay1ble to Ntwtpa~l"boooll.

MIDDLEPORT- Cement block home on large corner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms. Ph bath, garag~ .

$27,500,

Housmg
Headquatlets

.
Y ester d ay s

3V. YR. OLD RANCH nOMII -Just 4.mlleslrom
Pomeroy. Quiet country living In this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath wllh central heat and air cono:tl·
tlon. over 3 acres of flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just$44,900.00.

OWN A BUSINESS ..,...
Ali stock and fixtures. A
3 bedroom apartnnent
wlfh bath and. extra· lot
State Rl. 124. Only

TO

Print answer h&amp;f9:

. · . . ~~L ...SJAJE_. __

I .

.

IRICK RANCH 3
nice bedrooms, 2 batha.
large living, dining,
covered patio, 2 car
garage, all lhll on the
river .
ACRI.
-•ral
local
,.. ES ;u.
som~ • . SOLD
, ·on
R!. 124.
BUILDING LOTS Country,,· In · town, on
w'e ter line, woods,
cleared and on road
frontage ·
c&amp;llL
or
"2·:1171 FOR A I,OCA·
TION. FRiil! NEW
(ALIINDARS.

--OR SUFFER
THE l.E!SAL CON·

J&amp;L BLOW"
INSUlATION

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.

WHEN II COV\e5 TO

USED. CA~. rT'~ HA~D

KJ r

Business Services

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot. Can be par·
flally financed. Call Guido
Glrolami . 992·5786, 10·6. No
realtors.

$15,000.

r-,.~ YOU KNOW!

K · t]

IMEEFALj
I I K
IHYGNIDj

VE1R.Y WELL! U~DER LOCAL
ORDINANCE S:S97W-- I l\llJ!&gt;T
ASK YOU TO RE-MOVE: THAT
T16Ef&lt; FFtOM YOU!&lt; PREM1'3ES
WITHI&gt;J 2+ HOURS:

U~RHUMA.I ~ I 'M 5-URE 'IOU
Ko.IOW, J .P., THAT I"VE NO
DEj;IRE TO MAKE: TROUBLE
OVER YOLIF': PET T 15ER:
!!oUT WELl., HMFF -ONE "
DOES HAVE NEIGIH!OR!&gt; ·

-

NICE bUilding lots on CR
32, Eastern School Oislricl,
TP water district, 5 miles
off Rf. 7. Priced on In·
specllon. 949·2763 lor
showing.

216 E.~ Str•t
. -·- ·-COUNTRY SETTIN.:OA real live stocked fish
pond. Has over an acre
and a like new 2
bedroom mobile home
12'x50' . Gas furnace,
patio, shade frees, rural
water and ali furniture
on Slael Rl. Only
$12,000.
DUPLEX POSSIILI;9 rooms. W• baths, 4 or 5
bedrooms, natural gas
heal and room lor a
wood burner In fhe large
family room. 2 car
garage with storage on
good corner lot near
schools., Asking only

)

Phone9'/HOII 1-oi·(Pd.)

OO·Ifc

TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, 1112 baths, garage.
College Rd., Syracuse. Call
992·5133 or 992·3981 .

10 HP Gravely walk
behind, dualS wllh chains,
.tO" mower, riding sulkev,
snow blade, $1200. Gravely
Tractor Sales and Service,
204 Condor, Pomeroy, OH.
992·2975.

261i/J.

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

COUNTRY HOME wllh
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms. bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
a\lailable. Located appro)(.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33 . .W.·2359 alter 6.

EIGHT FOOT pool table
with all accessories. Ex·
eellent condition. $30CJ. 992·
3566.

YOU WON'T find a 1976
Chevrolet Malibu lor $1600
In any Other ad. P.S., P.B .•
auto.. 6 cyl ., good con·
dillon. Ralph Trussell. 949·

; Rutland.

t

Real Estate for Sale

for

TWO BEDROOM house,
unfurnished. 992·3090.

mile alf Rtl 7 by-pass ,

on 51. Rl. 124 toward •

and

NICE FEMALE dog.
Friendly to people. 992·
7275.

LADIES 13·14 maternity
clothes. Frigidaire jet ac·
tion washer, needs timer,
$35. 992·7102.

1972 OLDS. Good condition.
Frank Cleland, RAcine,
OH.

.Genge
lt4

FREE HAY. Not bundled.
Call992-7275.

3061.

"iOU,

DADDY: IT"!&gt;
MAYOR: JENK5

•New Home
*AddOns
• Remolelings
• Free Estimates

'

RACINE,O.
949-2741or
992-7314
12·28·pd.

ONE 8 If. flourescenl light
with 2 lubes. 1 gun rack,
holds 4·5 rilles or shotguns
wllh shelves !hal will hold
300-400 boxes of am ·
munition .
Two
4· 11 .
flourescenl lights with 2
tubes each, like new. 992·

ROOM AND BOARD, laun·
dry . Elderly or working
men. 992··6022 .

Roger 'Hysell

V. C. YOUNG Ill

HAY and corn lor sale.
Robert Dor!l, Tuppers
Pla!ns, OH. 614·667-3966.

I I

!&gt;fQlJENCe~!

down

walks

F O~

~Bathrooms

CALL 992-7544

!FREE ESTIMATES!
RedUCed Winter RIIU

GOOO MIXED hay, $1
bale. Raymond Cotterill,
Harrlsonvlle, 7.G·2082 .

949·2778.

work,

driveways.

60x12 Kirkwood. Total elec· .
tric . 1'12 baths. 3 bedrooms .
12x16 bedroom added on.
Partially
furnished .
Washer and dryer and air
conditioning.
Storage
building. Porches and uil·
derplnnlng. New carpet.
Lot In Letart Falls, OH,
close to river. 241-3895.

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap15. Phone 992-5434.

I [I

CAPTAIN EASY

*New Kitchens

HOIII'$9·1 M., W., F.
Other fimu Dy appoint·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomerey, 0 .

spouts, some concrete

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12xlill3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
WV . 30H7HA24.

1973 FORD L TO Station
Wagon, V ·8, A.C., carrying
rack. Low mileage. Real
good condition. $1495. Call

Television
Viewing

IT

STROLL
HOME-"

VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Mobile Homes· Sale

PURINA FED hogs· ready lp butcher. Consider
Pork for your freezer.
Reedsville, 61078·6311.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriAmoldandBobLee

Unscramble these lour Jumbkts,
one leHer to each square, to form
tour ()l'tjinary words.

CONCEAL.
IT ON HIS
PERSON

C. R. MASH

Fedoref Housing &amp;
veterans Admin. Loons.

1-17-1 mo.

WILL DO housekeeping lor
elderly. Dorothy warlh,

1973 CHEVROLET V&gt; ton,
V·8, 4 speed . Std. trans.
Fair !Ires, low mileage,
needs minor mechanical
work and body repairs.
Phone 992·2826.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

•New homes extensive remodel·
ing
• E lectrica I work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

Services Offered

CONDITIONED .hay
sale. 614·667·3349.

rn'ft

AND

JEWELRY, CHAINS AND
MISC.
ITEMS
AT
RECORD HIGH HONEST
UP TO DATE PRICES.
For Sale ·
CONTACT ED BURKETT, '
LIMESTONE ,
BARBER SHOP, MID· COAL,
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog
992·3-176.
food, and 1!11 types of sail.
Excelsior Sail Works, Inc .•
Auto Sales,
E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
38'11 .
1975 AMC Pacer. Good con·
dillon . No rust. $1700. 742·
APPLES
CIDER
2957.
.HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, Slate Route 689.
1979 OLDS Diesel 98 Regen· Phone Wilkesville, 669·
cy .4 door sedan, A.C ., 3785.
cruise control, all the ex·
tras, looks and runs like
new. 30 mpg. Will lake APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at SA per bu. Besflor
trades . 949·2763.
apple butter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick .Orchard, SR
1974 MUSTANG Ghia, low 689.
mileage. New !Ires. $1650 . 6
cyl. , auto., 949-2042 .
EMERGENCY
power
alternators- own the bes1
1973 CHEVY PICKUP, - buy Wlnpower. Call 513·
auto .
Contact
Eldon 788·2589.
Walburn, 380 S. 3rd 51.,
Middleport. 992·2805.

II"&lt;~'._._

Business Services

992·5556.

MARTIN'S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience In buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur ·
niture. One piece or com·
plele household . Gold,
silver and other old coins,
china. glass, old toys, dolls.
iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors, pocket
knives and other old Items.
Call 992·6370.

Pets for Sale
49 117 Deg . Wesl6.212 rods to
a stake 2•h feet South of an
ash 6 ln. In diameter; then ·
ce South 49'1• Deg. West
8.272 rods to a slake 3 feel
West of while oak tree 3
feet in diameter; thence
South 69 Oeg . West 14.515
rods to center of road; ·
thence In an easterly dlrec ·
lion following said road to a
stone corner on South side
of road 31 feel East 01
Sugar tree 61n. In dlameler
about 51.97 rods; !hence
North to place of beginning
62.-483 rOds containing 7
acres 25square rods.
Also, beginning ala stone
at the :,outheast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
feet from said sugar tree 6
ln. in diameter; thence In
an Easterly' direction
following said road about
24.8-4 rods to Ida Young's 2
acre lot; thence West 20.114
rods ; !hence North 10
aforesaid sugar tree or ·to
place of beginning, con ·
talning 1V2 acre.
Reference Deed : Vol.
135, Page 241 Deed Recor·
ds,_Melgs County, Ohio.
1 he object of the Com ·
plalnlls to selllhe interest ·
of Ida M. Christie In each
parcel of real estate In or·
der to pay the debts of the
estate and costs of administering lheeslale.
Plaintiff demands the
real estate described In the
FIRST COUNT be sold;
!hat !he entire Interest In
the real estate described In
SECOND COUNT be sold ;
!hal the rights, Interests
and liens 011111 parlles may
be fully determined, ad·
usted and protected, and
_hal PlalntJ.ff be .authorized
and ordered to sell rhe i!tF
lire Interest In lhe real
In
.e.sfale described
'SECOND COUNT ac ·
cording to the statutes In
such case made and
provided and lor such
other relfet as to which she
may be entitled to.
You are required to anSW4!r the Complaint within
twenty1!1ghl days alfer lhe
last publication of this
notice which will be
published once each week
for six successive weeks
and the Ia sf publication will
be made on· the 7th . day of
February, 1980.
In case of vour failure to
answer or
otherwl se
resp()!\d as ~milled by
the Ohio RUles of Civil
Procedure within the time
staled,
\udgmenl
by
default .w l I be renijered
against you lor the relief
demanded In the com ·
plaint.
·. Rober! E . Buck .
Judge and Ex·OIIIcio Clerk
Common Pleas Court
Meigs County, Ohio
Probate Division
12) 271 (1) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31,

~;:;;;-r-•

.

Notices

1f\J~N")

~ ~ ~~ 01

i'

i

HZGXJ

i

CUWRO

•i
l

CQRH

IRX

I U WR

TYMR ;

YX

JLRUC

MZL

ZXR

T ZB R

YARUTYER

I y ().
CQYXJ

c z :z

IGPQ . - VRX~ . UIYX
N.ZFRCC
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : TO KNOW ONE'S SELF IS WISDOM,
BUT TO KNOW ONE'S NEIGHBOR IS GENIUS.- MINNA
ANTRIM
n::J

1..0 l(lng F•eturn Srndl(:•t•, Inc.

I

..

8:oo-Buck Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy
6,13 ;
Waltons
8;
Cleveland Orchestra 20; College
BasketballlO; Islam l7; Camera
Three 33.
a 30-Benson 6,13; Sports : Close Up
33.
9:DO-Oulncy 3.15; Barney Miller
6,13 ; Barnaby Jones 8; Sneak
Previews 20,33 .
9:30-Soap 6,13; Camera Three 20;
NBA Basketball 17; Dancing
Disco 33 .
10:oo-Skag 3,15; 20-20 6.13; Kno.ts
Landing 8,10; News 20; Sound.
stage 33 .
10 :JO-Over Easy 20.
11 00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Oick
Cavett 20; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald P~rrln 33.
.
1"30--Toni ghl 3,15; Pollee Woman
6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "The Gentle Rain"' 10.
12 : 40- Baretta
6.13;
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 45- Bia ck Sheep Squadron 8;
News 17; 1:50-News 13; Movie
" Two of a Kind" 17.
3 : ~NBA Basketball 17; 5:35Love, American Stv le 17 .

FRIDAY,JANUARY 18,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; '5:50-PTL
Club 13; 700 Club 6,8 ; Healfh
Field 10; 6:05-World at Large
17.
6:30--Kidsworld 10; News 17; 6 :45Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good
Morning West V irg inia 13; 6 :55News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,15; Good Morning
Amerlca6,13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; Three Stooges-Utile
Rascals 17.
7: 15-A.M. Weather 33; 7:30Famlly Affair 10; Studio See 33.
8:DO--Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Family
Affair 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30--Romper Room 17.
9:oo-Bob Braurl 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8; One Day AI A Time
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
Show 17 .
9:30--Bob Newharl 8; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17 _
10:DO--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Beal the Clock 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"The Naked Prey" 17.
10:3D-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10.
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10. ·
11 :0()-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne 1!.
Shirley 6.13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Ele&lt;: . Co. 20.
11:30- Wheel of Fortune 3.15;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame Sl .
20,33 ; 11 :55-News 17.
12 : 0o-Newscenter . 3;
News '
6,8,10.13; Chain Reacllon 15;
Love, American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Health Field 15;
Movie "Who's Been Sleeping In
My Bed?" 17; Elec. Co. 33 .
1:oo-Oays.of Our Lives 3.15; All My
Children 6,13; Young 1!. the.
Restless 8,10.
1:3D-As The World Turns 8,10;
2:0()-0ocjors 3,15; One Life to ·
Live 6, 13.
'
2:25-News 17; 2:3D-Another World
3,15; Guiding Light 8,10;
Gigglesnort Hotel 17.
3:oo--General Hospital 6,13 ; I Love·
Lucy 17; Upstairs. Downstairs
20.
.
3:3D-One Day at a Time 8; Joker's · Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over •
Easy 33.
4:oo-Misler Cartoon 3; Password ~
Plus 15; Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Real McCoys 13; Speclreman 17.
4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Pelllcoat
Junction 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Tom 1!. Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15; ,
Gilligan's Is. 17 .
.
5: DO--Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp; ~
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers
20,33 .
5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; Elec . Co. 20 ; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of ·
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33 .
•
6:oo-News 3,8;10, 13,15; ABC News '
6; Carol Burnefl17 ; 3·2·1 Contact ~
20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnetl6; CBS News 8,10;_ ·
Bob Newhart 17 ; VIlla Alegre 20;Wifd Wild World. of Animals :!!.
7:DO--Cross-Wit. 3; Tic Tac Dough·
8; Newlywed Game 6,13; News
10; Love. American Slyle 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavell 20.
7:30-Prlce Is Righl3; 3' sA Crowd 6; ·
Family Feud 10; Joker' s Wild 8; :
Dick Cavell 33; All In The
F~mlly 17 ;
Pop Goes The .
Country 13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.
..
8:00-Shlrley 3,15 ; B.A. D. Cafs 6,13;
Incredible
Hulk
8,10; ·
Washlngtiln Week In Review ·:
20,33; Movie "Phantom of the .
Rue Morgue" 17.
·
:
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33; 9:0()Movle "The Late Show" 3,15;· ·
Amerlean Music Awards 6,13;: ,
Dukes of Hazzard 8,10; Caplfol ·
Beat 33; Free to Choo5e 20.
9:30-Theodore Bundy 33.
.
10:00-Dallas 8,10; Perspective on ·,
Greatness 17; News 20 ; David ·
•
Susskind 33.
lO :JO-&lt;&gt;ver Easy 20.
11 : 0D-News 3,6.8,10,13, 15; NBI\ .
Basketball 17; Dick Cavell 201
Monty Python's Flying Clr"tus 33; :
·11 : 3D-Tonight 3,15; Charl ie' s .•
Ahgels 6; Movie "Death In Deep Water" 8; ABC News 33; Movie :
"Hatchel lor a Honeymoon" 10;
Movie " Firecreek" 13 . ·
.•
12: 40.:.FBI 6;
1 :DO-Midnight
· Special 3.15; Mo.vle "Los! :
•,
Women" 10.
1 :1S.:...News17; 1 :20-Movle "The X
·
from Outer Space" 17.
'
2 : 3D-News
3;
3:05-Movle ;
"Summer Holiday" 17; 5:2Q---. 1
Love. American Style 17. ·
•

I

'

•·

�Tests reveal no toxic chemicals foundCOLUMBUS, Uhio (AP) - State
chemists found no trace of a toxic

PACKET PRESENTED - Linda King, left, general chainnan of the
annual mother's march held in conjunction with the march of dimes on
Jan. 20 and extending over a several day period, presents a mother's
packet to one of the workers , Debbie Finlaw. Mrs. Finlaw represents Xi
Gamma Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority which will he working In
Middleport, Bradbury and part of Syracuse in the fund drive. The packets
contain information which workers will leave at each home on the ·
significance of the march of dimes program.

Area deaths
DA RUBEN BECK
Da Ruben Beck, 59, died recently
in Corpus Christi, Texas, where he
had resided for the past seven years.
He was born July 26, 1920, son of
Ruben S. and Maud Day Beck. He is
survived by four children, Karl In
the Peace Corps in Mrica, Kirk of
Fort Myers, Fla., Kim and KeUen in
school in Massachusetts. There are
several cousins in Gallla County.
He was a 1938 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School.
He had resided in Middleport and
was founder and owner of D. L. Beck
Manufactarlng Co. where they made
Jeep tops, four which he held the patent before moving to Florida, later
moving to Texas.
Burial was in Corpus Christi,
Texas.
FRANK B. REEDER

Frank B. Reeder, 64, ·Denver,
Colo., formerly of Coolville, died
Wednesday morning following a
long illness.
Mr. Reeder was born in Sweetwater, TelJIS, the son of the late Arthur and Mary Bocock Reeder. He
was also preceded in death by one
daughter, Elaine, and one son,
Russell, and brothers and sisters.
He was a member of the Church Of
The Ooen Bible, a member of the In-

American
(Continued from page I)
defenses.
"Anybody who does not take the
Soviet threat to the region seriously
is certainly deceiving himseH," said
Lord Carrington after a visit to a
refugee camp in northwest Pakistan
40 miles from the Mghan border and
180 miles from Kabul, the Afghan
capital. ·

ternational Union of Operating
Engineers having retired in 1973.
He is survived by his wife, Hilma
Smith Reeder, two daughters,
Jacqueline Baldridge and Unda
Poole, and one son, Danny Reeder
all of Denver; two brothers, E&lt;lward
of Seattle, Wash., and Marcellus of
Socorro, N. M.; one sister, Ann
Stevinson, Manchester, Ohio, and
five grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held Monday at I p.m. at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial will be in
Rockland Cemetery, Belpre. Friends may call at the funeral home after I p.m. Sunday
ARTHUR SHANKS
Arthur (Todd) Shanks, 79,
Coolville, died Wednesday at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital
following an extended illness.
Mr. Shanks was born in Coolville
the son of the late Franklin and Alice
Chevalier Shanks. He was also

AMC-JEEP
VW-RENAULT
SUPER ECONOMY
1979 Mercury Capri Turbo
1979 Ford Mustang Turbo
1978 AMC Gremlin
1978 Mercury Zephy Z7
1977 AMC Hornet
1n4'"!=ord Pinto Wagon

j

precededlndeathbythreesisters.
He was a 50 year member of
Modern Woodmen fi America,
worked on the B&amp;O Railroad,
Parkersburg Steel Corp., Belpre
Lumber Co., and various construction jobs In the community.
He is survived by one brother,
John Shanks, Coolville; two sisters,
Mrs. Sara Baker, Little Hocking,
and Helen Shanks, .Coolville, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with tbe
Rev . Walter A. Frost officiating.
Burial will be In Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after noon on F'riday.

tested before residents can use the
water.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said today tests on lliJ:
samples of tap 1111d well water
showed no traces of toulene
diisocyanate a chemical W!ed in
making plastics. It was being transported In liquid fonn when a train
tank car it was in ruptured and

Vinton man arrested I
Dennis C. Butcher, 'n, Vinton,
recently secretly Indicted by the
Meigs County Grand Jury for drug
trafficking, was arrested Tuesday
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department reported.
Butcher appeared In Meigs County
Court and bond was setatsa:;,ooo. He
was released later Tuesday after
posting 10 percent of the bond.
The department reported that
sometime Tuesday night or early
Wednesday morning a padlock on
the filler of a gasoline tank located
at the bus garage In Tuppers Plains,
Eastern School District, was cut.
It is believed that approximately
40 gallon of gasoline was taken.
·

assessed.

Meantime, workers cleaning up
the chemical said a bulldozer cut a
water main, interrupting water service to six houses in the .area. The
break is to he repaired by Friday but
new samples from the line will be

Record

ELBERFELDS. IN P·OMEROY
'

~ANUAAY .

CLEARANCE
COATS and JACKETS
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

h PRICE

1

51f4%

1 YEAR CERTIFICATE -- ---- -~-i~~~~:':~_~:~~~·.o~- ---- .. 6%

Jll. (1J

TRUCKS
1977 Dodge D-200 lfo Ton
1977 Ford,Courier
1976 Chev. C-10 112 Ton
1975 Ford F-100
1974 Chev.-Z-10 112 Ton

BE SOLD
·BELOW COST

182

Current rate 11.783% effec;tive January 17-23, 1980.
Substantial penalty required for early withdrawal.
New 30 month certificate (21f2 vrs. )
$1,000 minimum 10.15%

'""'''O'Q County
People

.RACINE
HOME NATIONJI.
.
.

BANK
I

·/

- .

{

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1980

WASHINGTON
(AP) - The
tecesslon that was predicted for 1979
never materialized as the economy
grew by 2.3 percent daring the year,
the Commerce Department reported

today. '
The economy grew at an annual
rate of 1.4 percent in tbe fourth quar-

ter last year_
While a recession was avoided, the
Increase In the nation's gross
national product -;- tbe total value of
all goods and services produced was lower In the Ialit three montha of
1979 than had been Clpecled. This Indicates a recession may actually be
coming in 1980.

JUNIOR
WJNTER
JACKETS
&amp;COATS

12 PRICE

1

SIZES 5/6
THRU '15

1/2

PRICE

JANUARY EARANCE SALE CONTIN
WITH. SAVINGS
OF 25·% -TO 50%
.
On womed's and children's ·-men's and boys' winter clothing Sweaters- Shirts- Tops- Sportswear, etc., etc.

,SHOP SATIJRDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM
J

. '

. Eiberfelds In Pome

Another strong pertonnance by
consumers, who Increased their purchases in the fourth quarter, kept
the economy on the plus side in the
October-December period.
"Obviously, consumers are
carrying a big part of it here," said
one analyst.
However, to maintain purchasing
power in the face of rising inflation,
Americana saved only 3.3 percent &lt;i
their income in the fourth quarter at
an annual rate. It was the lowest
savings rate for any three-month
period since the Korean War In 1950.
A recession is said to occur when
there is negative GNP groWth for

Three paper routes open
RETIREMENT GIFTS - A. R. Knight, owner of
the Pomeroy Motor Co.; is presenting a diamond pendant to Mrs. William T. Grueser and matched luggage
toGrueser, on the right. On the left is Mrs. A. R. Knight

Pomeroy youngsters can ~elve
invaluable business experitmce,
earn good money and receive a wide
variety of prizes just by becoming
carriers for The Daily Sentinel.
At the present Ume, three paper
routes are open are will be open In
the next few days.
One of these is on Uncoln Hill with
about 45 customers and that will
make an Income of $12 weekly for
the carrier. A second route In on
Mulberry Ave., and has about 58
customers which will produce an Income of ll6 a week for the carrier.

who with her husband hosted a dinner Wednesday
night honoring the Gruesers. Mr. Grueser has retired
as general manager of the Pomeroy Motor Co.

Started work in 1930
'

Grueser retires from
automotive business
\·

William T. (Bill) Grueser, Middleport, well known in the business
world of Meigs County, is retiring after 50 years in the automotive

business.
As retiring general manager of the
Pomerqy Motor t:;o., Grueser began
his work In the business In 1930,
while still a student, as a car wash
and "cleaner upper." In 1934, while
still a student, GJ:111!,1!er began work
~Jhe; ....-~ of the
PCineroy CIJe\lrolet.
-Grueae~. wbo has "dabbled" in
real estate rentals over the years,
graduated from Pomeroy High
School in 1935 and continued working
In the parts d~nt until 1939
when be Wll8 named used car sales
manager by A. R Knight, owner of
the Pomeroy Motor Co.
In 1941, when Knight purchased
the Mason County Motor Co.,
Grueser was named general

.

h PRIC~E~~

A good selection
ol styles In sizes 8
to 20. Many are
hooded .
While
they last.

We will not be open Jan .
21, 1980 to observe Marlin Luther King Day.

1977 Chevy Monte Carlo
1975 Dodge Coronet Wagon
1975 Pontiac Le Mans
1975 Datsun B-210
1974 Ford Galaxie 500
1974 AMC Javelin ·
1974 Ford Pinto Wagon
1976 Ford Elite ·
19.74 F'o rd F100 Truck

enttne
PRICE•FIFTEEN CENTS

Nation's economy up,
Americans save less

1

BOYS'
WINTER
JACKETS

day treasury

~~~~~~~fA Home
Bank
For

thru 24112.

Y2 PRICE

14 to

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
bill rate. As determined at weekly auction.

Missy sizes 6 thru
20 . Extra sizes 14112

SIZES FOR INFANTS,
2-4, 4-GX &amp; 7-14

6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ... _.. ~:~:':'.".':'.~~·.o_o_•:~ .... )lf2%

SlO,OOO minimum . Interest rate 'qual to the rate of

WOMEN'S
WINTER
COATS

AND SNOWSUITS.

4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .... __ -~~~:~-~~~~:~~~·~--_ ,7114%

MODELS
1979 Ford T-Bird
19'79 Chevy Camaro
1978 Chevy Monte Carlo
1977 Pontiac Trans Am

VOL. XXVIII NO. 194

ILOREN'S
WINTER COATS,
JACKETS

90 DAY CERTIFICATE.. .....~i~!~~:':~-~:~~·.0•0... Slh%

8 Y'EAR CERTIFICATE.. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .... .... .

(USPS 145-960)

at

COURT AcnONS
A suit in the amount of $1,857.80:
was flled In Meigs County Conunon,
Pleas Court by Kingsbury Homes·
Sales and Service against David.
Chase and Carolyn Chase, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy.
.
A suit to quiet title was filed by
Harold and Carol Dewhurst ~
Rutland, agalnat Wilford C. Hill,
dba, Hill Gas and OU Co., Rutland.
Bonnie Ebersbach, Middleport, ·
fUed suit for divorce agalnat Ell J .:
Ebersbach, Middleport.

Ir;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Si:zes 36 to 48 . Denims,
down filled jackets,
polyester cotton blends.
A good selection. Men's
vests included . Regular
prices $39 .95 to $89.95.

Minimum $1,000.00

e

TO BEITER SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS

MEN'S
WINTER
JACKETS

CompoundedDaily

began leaking alter the derailment.
An EPA spokesman said more
testa will be made for othet
chemicals, Including propolelll!'
glycol, an anti-¥eeze, and urea,
which Is part of. the chemical'
makeup of toulene dllsocyanate. ·.
An EPA sJdesman said results of
those tests are expected by Friday.

(Continued from page I)
TAXBOOKBOPEN
require the Ohio Public Utilities
GeGrge
Collhu, Melgl County
Commission to approve each elecTreasurer an!!IIO\Jiced today tllat totric company's fuel charges before
•
"
boob wOl be opeD UDUI Feb. It for
those charges could be reflected on
payment ol lbe flnt balf 1979 real
customers' bills.
luell.
""tate
As a special investigation, the conswners counsel staff compared ac- rr~~~~~;;;;::;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;:~
tual charges passed through by the I
state's electric companies with fuel
charges proposed under the
legislation. According to Spratley,
We have extended our hoors: 7 A.M . until 9 P.M. For
the findings Indicate more stable
Free Estimates Call the Problem Solver.
fuel charges lasting for much longer
periods under the proposed
TOLL FREE 1-800.- 354-8919
legislation than with the current
law.
Spratley said he's convinced of the
urgency fl. having a workable
mechanism that will result In more
predictable electric bills for Ohio's
consumers.

CURRENT
SAVING
RATES

PASSBOOK
RIVERSIDE

MAYOR'S COURT
Thirteen defendants forfeited bonds, one was fined and another was
assessed cosls only In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Henry
Doerfer, Pomeroy, passing on a
double yellow line, $50; Steven D.
Hauber, Parkersburg, $Zl; Steven
Williams, Pomeroy, $28 ; Michael
Gard, Reedsville, $20; John A.
Salser, Racine, $30; Robert Isaacs,
Shade, $Zl; Ben G. Clay, Amesville,
~ ; Lawrence Stewart, Rutland,
S35; Richard D. Macomber, Dexter,
$25; Terry Barrett, Rutland, ~;
Debra Grady, Middleport, $29; Carl
Handley, Point Pleasant, $29, all
charged with speeding; Terry S. McCune, Rutland, $350, driving while
Intoxicated.
David A. Burt, Pomeroy, was
fined $20 and costS on a speeding
charge, and David Reed, Pomeroy,
was assessed costs only, also on a
speeding charge.
,
I Four defendants forfeited bondS
and two others were fined Tuesday
night in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Forfeiting bonds posted on
speeding charges were Anthony J .
Territo, Hollywood, Fla., $Zl; John
M. TaylQr, Gallipolis,~; Dennis E.
Saelens;Middleport, $30. Forfeiting
a $25 bond posted on a stop sign
violation charge was Steven A.
Smith, New Haven.
Fined in the court were Lorino
Seth, Pomeroy, $22 and costs,
speeding, and Bob Dugan, Rutland,
$25 and costs, disorderly manner.

chemical in water samples taken
near the scene of an Athens County
train derailment where the substance was spilled last weekend.
More water samples are to be
tested for other chemicals that were
being transported by the Conrail
freight when nine of its 36 cars jumped tracks at Millfield.
About 750 residents were
evacuated from the derailment
scene 10 miles north of Athen.s but all
were allowed back in their homes af:
ter the spill was contained and

•

•

10-The Daily Sentin~l. Mi!jdleport-Pomeroy, 0-, Thursday, Jan. 17, 1980

IDNDON (AP) - Gold opened
In Europe above $*)0 an ounce for
the flrat Ume In history today after spectacular new rises In New
Yorll: and Hong Kong.
Trading opel)ed In• Zurich at
1810 an ounce, and the price
quickly moved up to 1820.58, a $90
advance on Thursday's closing
price.
Tile opening price in London
was 1815, and by midmorning the
price had risen to 1825, a record
for Europe arid $65 above Thursday's high.

manager of the Pomeroy firm which
was located on West Main St., ans
was moved to new quarters on E.
Main St.; on Jan. 1, 1967Grueser has remained ·geperal
manager of the Pomeroy Motor Co.,
and has worked over the years with
Mr. Knight who remains active in
the business.
Grueser is' married to the fonner
Flora Dell Russell of Middleport.
Mr. andoMrs. Dan GriJe.ser have two
children, Mrs. Debra ~rlach of
Middleport, and William Don
Grueser, a buyer for the O'Neil Co.
of Akron. The Gruesers have two
granddaughters, Tara and Allison
Gerlach.
A member of the PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club for 31 years,
Grueser has been a member of both
the Pomeroy and Middleport Cham-

hers of Commerce and has served as
president of both organizations as
well as the Lions Club. He is an active member of the Middleport Church of Christ.
Thursday was Grueser's last day
on the job, although he admits he
might be a frequent visitor to the
company quarters. .
Wednesday evening, Mr. and Mrs.
Knight~ a dinner honoring Mr.
and Mrs. Grueser at the Holiday Inn,
Gallipolis. Atteridlng were 50 coworkers and their spouses as well as
other guests.
During the dinner, Knight presented Mrs. Grueser with a diamond
pendant and the couple with a set of
matched luggage and on behaH of
the Pomeroy Motor Co. employes,
Tom Bowen presented Grueser with
a camera.

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
numbers picked Thunday olght .
ID the Oblo Lottery's dafty Dumber game and 1111 two weekly
games are:
TbeNIUilber-884.
Pynmld - 87; 250; 3\N
BoiiiiiiZII-75; 588; iZ18; 281M;
132389
The lottery reported earologs
of $334,384 OD lilies Thunday ID

It&amp; daUy Dumber game. The lo~
tery's computer labalaUona sbow
sales for the day came to
$3911,88UO. Belden ol wiDDIDg
Ucll:ets are eaUtled to _.,520.58.

The third route is down town In
Pomeroy and · has about 32
customers which will provide an $11
weekly Income for the carrier.
In addition to the Income and
training received by the young
people, carriers are awarded coupon
certificates each week for prompt
payment of their paper bills and
these can be accumulated so that the
Cl\rrier can select prizes from a neat
variety of offerings.
Parents interested in having their
youngsters receive the training plus
other benefits-money and prizesshould contsct The Dally Sentinel, Ul
Court St., Pomeroy, 992-2156 or 9922157, or should stop at the office for a
complete explanatioiHir they can
have their children make the contact
as a first step In their business
training.

Columbia Gas of Ohio has filed a
gas cost adjustment with the Public
UUlities Commission of Ohio reflecting increased rates paid to the company's gas suppliers beginning
January!.
Effective with bills rendered
February 8, residential customers in
56 communities served by the utility
will pay 22.08 cents more for each

Defendant seeks help ·from other firm
And .both companies have been
cited by the Occupational Safety and
Health , Administration
with
violations of civil sections of federal
safety laws in the disaster. Those
citstions are being appealed. A
federal grand jury that examined
evidence In the case could find no
basis for criminal prosecution.
The companies generally have
been silent about the case and
papers filed In the civil suits provide
some of the first clues as to their
thinking on the causes of the accident.
UQited Engineers, headquartered
In Philadelphia, made its request of
Researcb-Cottrell In documents
filed as part of pre-trial
maneqvering in the suit in Pleasants
County Circuit Court.
Research-Cottrell, based in Bound

Brook, N.J., did not respond to a
request by The Associated Press on
Thursday to answer questions about
the suit. However, Researcb-Cottrell
bas blamed the accident on mistskes
made by other companies In mixing
the concrete.
The govenunent contends that
green, or improperly cured, concrete was the most probable cause of
the collapse. But, so far, no one has

Weather
Partly cloudy !Qnight. Lows in the
upper 208. Mostly sunny Saturday.
Highs from the mid 40s to near 58.
The chance of rain is 20 percent
tonight and ten percent Saturday.

\

The Commerce Department said
con.sumers Increased the!&amp; purchases of goods and services by I
percent in the fourth quarter to an
annual rate of $935.2 billion. Consumer spending rose 1.6 percent for
the year.

Poineroy, Middleport
•
gas rates gomg
up

,,

ST. MARYS, W.Va. (APJ ...:. A contractor that is being sued in the
Willow Island disaster is asking a
feUow contractor and defendant,
Research-Cottrell Inc., to admit that
it did not follow its own procedures
In buildlng the ill-fated cooling
tower.
United Engineers and Constructors wants Research-Cottrell to
acknowledge that it accelerated the
nonnal scheduldor pouring rings of
' concrete on the tower, part of the
Pleasants Power Station. Scaffolding that held 51 construction
workers pulled away from the top of
the tower In Aprll\978, plunging the
men 168 feet to their deatha.
Both cOmpanies are defendants in
lll!IIUmllllon dollar suits brought by
~tives of the victims. Trials in
those sul\41 have not been scheduled.

two consecutive quarters. 'Ibe
average 2.3 percent growth for the
year compared with 4.4 percent
growth In 1978 and 5.3 percent In
1977.
The only negative quarter in 1979
was the second, when the GNP
declined at an annual rate of 2.3 percent. The GNP grew at annual rate
of 1.1 percent in the first quarter and
3.1 percent In the third.
The Commerce Department also
reported that inflation, as 'measured
by its broadly based implicit price
deflator, was at an annual rate of 8.6
percent In the fourth quarter and
was 8.8 percent for the enUre year.
That compares with inflation of 7.3
percent In 1978.
The GNP price deflator, which
measures inflation throughout the
economy, is said to provide the best
measurement of underlying Inflation in the economy.
The consumer price index, by contrast, has been showing an inflation
rate of 13 percent at the consumer
level.
The total GNP for 1979 was $2,368.5
billion, or nearly $2.5 trillion. After
adjusting for the effect of inflation,
the GNP was $1,431.1 billion. The
percentsge figures on changes In the
GNP are based on the inflationadjusted total.

explained wby the concrete was that
way.
Were there missing Ingredients?
Not enough lime to set? The wrong
type of concrete? And just what
triggered the collapse?
The answers to those questions undoubtedly will be the subject of
strenuous debate when the cases
filed by the survivors go to trial,
which could be many more months.
United says it believes ResearchCottrell, the tower contractor,
"modified and-or deviated from the
inv'¥Jior's scaffolding configuration
or method."
Although it does not spell out the
exact reasons for its suspicions, its
questions to Researcb-Cottrell - so
far unanswered in the Pleasants
court documents suggest that haste
played a role.

I ,000 cubic feet of gas W!ed.
CommualUe11 affected ID tbe Immediate ,area are Pomeroy, Middleport, Cbesblre and Coolvtlle.
The increase for the typical
Columbia Gas of Ohio customer,
who uses an average of 13,000 cubic
feet a month over a one-year period,
will be $2.87 a month.
Company officials said the Increase applies to only the small portion of communities served by
Columbia which are still affected by
the purchased gas 'adjustment
(PGA).
Gas cost changes In all other communities served by the utility are '
reflected through. the state's new
Gas Cost Recovery provision. This
lncrea.'!e In those communities will
be seen In bills rendered March 11.
The PGA change reflects Increased rates the gas company paid .
resulting from higher prices
charged by producers in accordance
with the federal Natural Gas Polley
Act of 1978.
Increases and decreases In gas
costs are passed to customel'!l
through gas cost adjustment
provisions in the communities' contracts with the company_Gas costs,
or the price Columbia pays for gas,
account for about three-fourths fl.
each revenue dollar.
The company emphasized the Increase will not result in added earnings for Columbia of Ohio.

Appeals order
- SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
(AP) - Striking pollee prepared
an appeal Thursday cl a judge's
back-to-work order; and sheriff's
deputies moved Into the seaside
city In the face cl rising crime.
The Santa Barbara County
·sheriff stepped up patrols to try
to compensate tor the 2-week-old
llti'llie by 140 Offlcenf in 8 wage
· dispute. But he would not say bow
many offleers were on the job In
the Southern California city of
75.000.

-

::$::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

EXTENDED FORECAST

: llwlday ·t llroqh Tuelday: ·A
- - fl rala ... Suaday.
Fair ud eooler Maaday IIIII
'l'beldlly.Highl fnm lbe till Sua-

day io !be upper!el aDd 3011 Moaday uc1
1.ow1 ,rm.-a·the
. . lllulday to tile upper teeaa aDd
.. Tuellday.

'riiMMr·

•
.

.

''

HEAD BA8lETiiA.U. coacb at
·EUtem Hlgb ' SchOol II Joe
Bolton. Aaslllanl eoach.li l)ennla
Elc~er.
·

• ,"¥

..

\

•

' :·I

&gt;,

· EAs'fl;;lUUII(UfVAbSITY BAS~TBALL SQUAD ...:. EaStern will
. ' lloet' Hannan Trace 'tonight In an SVAC contest. Ccia~h John Bollton's'
. Eagles o~ •.~· 3-7 overall .
and 2-3 slate ·tO the leasue. Vs,rslty
players are front ~"· left to right, Cbarlea Ritchie, Greg Wigal, Steve

'.

reCord

. ...

t

Mike

Chrissman; second row, Brett Matthews, Brian Bissell,
Bl&amp;!ell,
Paul Sprague, Tim DiU, Gene Cole and Rick Long. Absent was Joe ·.
Bowers.
'

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