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Hl- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 24, 198()

ELBERFELD$ IN POM-EROY
I

-~

A..

11.

a.«

(USPS 145-960)

SWEATERS - SHIRTS - BLOUSES - TOPS
FOR MEN AND BOYS - WOMEN AND CHILDREN
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

--·------·-·----·------··
GIRLS'

BOYS'
SWEATERS
Regular prices $10.95
to $14.95. Slipover
styles - solids and

patterns.

TOPS
BLOUSES
SWEATERS
Quality at big savings!
Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to

NEW HAYEN DONATES TO CEP - Mrs. Sandy Capehart presents Robert Brewster, Mason County
superintendent of schools, with a $200 check on behalf of the New Haven Parent Teacher Organization to help cover
advertising costs for the upcoming Comprehensive Education Plan bond issue. The PTO voted unanimously to
endorse the. bond issue following a presentation by Brewster, William Capehart,Mason County assistant superintendent of schools, and Albert Stevens of the Central Office. School board members Donna Thompson, Don Waldie,
Howard Miller and Harry Siders, board pr~sident, also entertained questions at the meeting.

lh PRICE

lh PRICE

MEN'S
SHIRTS

BLOUSES
Long

sleeved

solid and print
styles

First fatality recorded
MASON -- Mason County recorded its first highway fatality of 1980 with the death in Pleasant
Valley Hospital Tuesday of Diane Lee Hissom Randolph, 38, HeQderson.
Mrs. Randolph had been hospitalized since Jan. 5 with injuries received in an accident on
Charleston Road (Route 62) . She was a passenger in a truck driven by William Rallins 33 Henderson, which went over an embankment, landing on its top, after colliding with another ;ehi,cle on
the icy highway.

14.

WOMEN'S

Mason County happenings

in sizes

30 thru 46.

Sizes S (14· 14'121, M 115· 15'12 ).
L 116-16'h ). XL il7·17'h ) .
Entire stock of men's sport
and dress shirts
Polyester knits · western
flannels . velours . corduroy r
knits - gingham plaids - sport
flannels - Van Heusen dress
shirts. Regular price $7.95 to
$25.00.

1

/z PRICE

1/2

LlffiE BOYS'

Diagonal parking vetoed
MASON -- Adelegation of property owners on Center Street in Mason attended the Mason Town
Council meeting Monday evening to discuss the possibility of having diagonal parking on that street.
Members of the Christian Brethren Church had requested that the town begin using diagonal
parking during a pr~yious meeting. No action was taken at the earlier meeting, so the council could
obtain the views of the Center Street residents.
·
Attending the meeting from the delegation were Mr. and Mrs. Cevil Devrick, Mrs. Brad Johnson,
Carl Cline and OliruWolf. Following a lengthy discussion, the council agreed the idea is not feasible at
this lime due to the cost involved to prepare the street.
Floyd Maye~ of the Region II Planning Council in Huntington also attended the meeting to
establish a working relationship between his council and the Mason Town CounciL Mayes answered
questions put forth by the council members.
It was noted that the siren on the city building had been repaired and is now in use.
In other action, the council made plans for a parade in April, paid all outstanding bills, and
agreed to send a counctl member to the CETA meeting in Parkersburg Feb. 5.

JUNIOR

SHIRTS
AND
TOPS

SWEATERS
QUALITY FASHIONABLE

Sweatshirts, flannel
shirts, knit tops and
sweaters. Sizes 2 to 7

SWEATERS IN
. JUNIOR SIZES

1

/2 1h PRICE
PRICE

Program grant announced
A federal award of $5,100 to Mason County for the operation of a county-wide program aimed at
the speeding driver has been announced by Mason County Sheriff James C. Hall.
Labeled "Operation 55-55," the program has been praised as a highly innovative traffic enforcement measure, Hall said. He stated the program will be operated state wide as a grass-roots approach to gaining compliance with the 55 MPH speed limit.
Federal funds: channeled through the Governor's Highway Safety Program, will be used to pay
overtime to deputies for patrolling areas within the county which are posted 55 MPH and have been
determined as high accident areas. The patrols will operate chiefly on W. Va. Route 2, north and
south, US Route 33 and US Route 35.
Sheriff Hall pointed out that fatality rates were SZI in 1979, an increase of 60 deaths or 11 percent
from the 1978 totaL
"This is intolerable," Hall said. " With the 'Operation 55-55' grani, my department deputies will
be able to beef up law enforcement and warn motorists of an all out effort to crack down on offenders ."

FHA loans total $1,446,350

.,

Tops, pants, dresses,
jump suits, bubbles
and sets.
Infant sizes, Newborn
to 24 mos.

X~VII I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

NO. 199

MEN'S
SWEATERS

1978. Loans under this program were
used primarily for consolidation and
restructuring of • debts and
reorganizing the farming operation
so that they could continue their farming operation. This loan authority
is presently due to expire on May 15,
1980.
Three loans totaling $216,700 were
made under the Farm Ownership
program. These loans were made
primarily to assist eligible farmers
to purchase and improve farms.
Fifty-one percent of FArm Ownership loan funds were used to assist
fanners with limited resources. The
purpose of this program is to assist

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE
OF
RILEY
PIGOTT, DECEASED
Case No. 22940
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF Fl OUCIARY
On J anuary 17, 1980, i_f'l
rne M~IGS County Probate
Courl, Case No. 22940,
Donald Pigott, Route 1
Long. Bottom, Ohio 4574J
was appointed Executor of
the esta te of Riley Pigoft ,
deceased, late of Route 1,
Long Bottom , Ohio45743 .
Rober! E . Buck
Probate Judge
Clerk --....
(l/ 24, 31(2)7 , Jtc

eligible applicants to become owneroperators of family farms, to make
efficient use of land, labor and other
resources, to carry on sound and
successful operations on the farm.
He also said that eight operating
loans totaling $1295,150 were made
to farmers for operating purposes
such as livestock, machinery, and
annual operating expenses. Thirtynine percent of these funds were wr
ed to assist farmers with limited
resources.
Information about each of these
programs can be obtained from
Stegall at the FmHA office, 221 West
Second St., Pomeroy, OH 45769.

1h PRICE

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Consumer prices climbed 1.2 percent in December, pushing inflation for all of last year to 13.3 percent, the worst annual increase in33 years, the Labor Department reported today.
What cost consumers $1 in the 1967 base year cost them nearly $2.30 as 1979
ended.
Over the year, workers' real spendable earnings were down 5.3 percent as
a result of higher taxes and other rising costs. While average wages before
taxes rose 8 percent, they were offset by a slight decrease in hours worked
and a very high inflation rate.
The acceleration last year was caused primarily by housing and energyfueled transportation costs, which rose relentlessly and accounted for about
three-fourths of the entire increase in the Consumer Price Index in 1979.
Through the inflation-ravaged year, the price of a gallon of gasoline rose
an average of 35.7 cents, while home heating oil jumped an average of 33.8
cents a gallon, the department said.
All energy costs rose 34.7 percent.
Last year also saw:
-Home financing costs skyrocket 34.7 percent;
-House prices shoot up 15.8 percent;
-Food and beverages rise 10 percent;
-All transportation costs, including automobile prices, jump 18.2 percent;
-Medical care climb 10.1 percent.
December's 1.2 percent rise offered little prospect of relief to inflation-

The Orange Township Volunteer
Fire Department; only 10 years old,
is becoming one of the most active
and progressive groups in Meigs

County.
Thirty-~me

members ·strong - including four women who receive all
of the training taken by male mem-

eviction order today
Gallia County's board of commission, in emergency session this
morning, took action to evict the 648
Board from county-owned facilities
off State Rt. 160.
Cornmillsioner Lonnie Burger
made the motion to give Sheriff
.- James Montgomery authority to "go
' to the real estate owned by the county to reclaim those facilities on
behaH of the Gallia County Commission.''
A letter Is to be sent by the county
cornmissloners directing 648 Board
personnel, located in the center and
children's facility, to remove themselves from the premises immediately.
According to commission, 648
Board personnel will not be forced to
leave the facilities today, but will not
be allowed to return after today.
Gliards Will _be posted by the

sheriff's department barl-ing entry
by 648 Board personnel afte.r today.
Today' s . action stems from a
motion made Tuesday night by Commission President Paul Niday
authorizing Gallia County
Prosecuting Attorney Joe Cain to
take whatever steps necessary to
evict the Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Mental Health and Mental Retardation
648 Board from the two countyowned buildings currently housing
mental health services as a result of
a squabble between 648 Board and
Center Board officials.
Commissioner Jim Saunders was
out of town this morning and unable
to attend the emergency session.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Achance of snow flurries In the
northeast Sunday and Tuesday.
Snow possible Monday. Highs
through lbe period from lbe upper 208 to the low 3011. Low. from
between 10 and 20 Sunday to lbe
teens to low 208 Monday and
Tuesday.

long sleeve shirts
in this sale. Sizes 8
to 20. Includes

knits,

TOPS
AND

BLOUSES
-

westerns

and sport · fla·nels,
cotton
blends.

to

Wrcingler tops and
blouses in many
styles and colors .
Sizes S·M -L .

1/2 PRICE

lh PRICE

$4.9~

WOMEN'S

COATS

SWEATERS

il l

24,

Robert E. Buh
Probate Judge
Clerk
Jl 121 7, 3tc

VESTS
Sites S-M-L
and
Extra Sizes

AND

Men's and boys iackets
and coats. Women's and
Junior size coats and
jackets .
Children's

President Carter has proposed a J percent increase in fiscal 1981 defense
spending, af,ler discounting fqr inflation. And several members of Congress
indicate they will push to increase that amount in light of the Russian occupation of Afghanistan.
Kahn also said recent rises in mortgage interest rates and oil prices "will
continue to give u.s a high rate of increase in the CPI for months to come."
Housing and energy costs were the primary propellants of inflation
throughout !979. That's particularly troublesome because -- along with food
--they comprise the bulk of an average family's budget.
In the 12 months ending last November, housing coots rose 14.3 percent,
the Labor Department reported. From September through November, the
increase was 16.7 percent, reflecting skyrocketing mortgage rates caused by
the Federal Reserve Board's tight money policies.
In other economic news Thursday, the Commerce Department reported
that orders received by U.S. factories for durable goods rose a modest 0.6
percent in December, but auto orders continued to skid.
The small overall increase last month followed a 1.6 percent decline in
November.

bers of the department - the group

by Kevin Dailey, active Middleport
Fire Department member.
Recently, the Orange Department
purchased a pumper truck which is
now ready to be put into action. The
new vehicle was purchased from
McClinton Chevrolet in Parkersburg, the firm which submitted the
lowest bid to meet speCifications.
The truck was purchased at a cost
of S7,314.33. Although the Department of Natural Resources furnished $3,000, the department which
equipped the vehicle still owes
$4,000.
Department members report the
new pumper is invaluable in that it
can get to fires much quicker than
their larger vehicle.
The department also now hasdeveloped an emergency service for
lhe area it serves and residents
having need for 'the service are to
(Continued on page 10)

ACTIVE MEMBERS - These active members of
the Orange Township Volunteer~("' Department were
on hand for Wednesday night's meeting. The group includes: front, I tor, Charles Weber, Gary McDonald,
Karen Miyashiro, Lois Deem, Nina J. Ritchie, Terry

iackets, coats and snow

The Meigs County budget recently
adopted by the Meigs County Commissioners' totaled $5,0J0,039.27.
Big categories budgeted include
Public Assistance, $669,445.90; M
and R (Road and maintenance),
$984,681.51 and Mental Health,
$1,640,774.
A breakdown of the budget is as
follows:
Board of county commissioners,
salaries, officials, $35,200; salaries,
employees, $22,789; supplies, $3,000,
equipment, $5,000; contracts-repair,
$500; travel and expenses of commissioners, $1,000; advertising and
printing, $500; other expenses,
$8,000; microfilming, xerox and
photostats, supplies, $3,500; equipment, $500; total county com:
missioners, $79,989.
County auditor, salary, official,
$18,000; salaries, employes, $40,000;
supplies, S7,QO!J; equipment, $500;
contracts-repairs, $500; travel,~;
advertising and printing, $300; other
expenses, $500; assessing personal
property, salaries, , employees,
$1,520; professional services, $2,000;
total, f70,720.
. County treasurer, salary, official,
$12,000; salaries, employes, $21,500;
supplies, S7,000; equipment, $1,000;
contracts--services, $300; travel,
$500; advertising and printing, $700:

-

. Junior.Soldiers' Day of Renewal
will be observed Sunday at the

lf2 PRICE
r .

'

ElBERFElDS ·1N-POMEROY

Deem; second row, I tor, Mike Yoke, Joe Lantz, Bruce
Hager, Roger WIUford, Lawrence Ba\8er, Larry
Mlllhone, Norman Weber; back, I to r, Keith Miller,
Jeff Householder, Lamar Lyons, Tim Spencer, -Charles
Savoy, Gordon Caldwell, and Clifford Longenette, Jr.

Commissioners release county budget
other expenses, $500; total, $43,500.
Prosecuting attorney, salary, official, $20,000; salaries, employes,
$25,384.56; sujpplies, $500; equipment, $200; travel, $300; allowances,
$10,000; total, $56;364.56.
County planning commission,
salaries, employes, $1,750; contracts-repairs, $1,250; other expenses, $150; total, $3,150.
Common pleas couri, salaries, official, $3,563.82; salaries, employes,
$8,764.45; supplies, $250; equipment,
$1,000; attorney fees, $10,000; jurors
fees, $1,500; witness fees, $1,500;
transcripts, $1,500; .travel, $300; expenses, foreign judge, $600; other
expenses, $300; jury commission,
salaries, emJ?loyes, $1,600; supplies,
$300; equipment, $200; advertising
and printing, $100; other expenses,
adult ·probation, $1,000. Bureau of
support, salaries, employes, f7 ,500;
supplies, $1,000; equipment, $500;
travel, $300, other expenses, $200;
total, $41,978.27.
Juvenile court, salaries, employes, $7,844.72; jurors fees, $500;
witness fees, $500; expenses, foreign
judge, $150; other expenses, $1,000;
probation department, salaries, employes, $10,092; supplies, $500; guardian, $300; per diem support, $300;
travel, $4,200; other expenses,
$1,000; total, $26,386.72.

Probate court, salary, official,
$3,563.82; salaries, employes,
$7,396.ZI; supplies, $3,000; jurors
fees, $300; witness fees, $300; t_ranscripts, $200; expenses, foreign
judge, $150; other expenses, $750;
total, $15,660.09.
Clerk of courts, salary, 'official,
$12,000; salaries, employes, $27,681 ;
supplies, $5,500; equipment, $700;
contracts--repair, $550; travel, $300;
advertising and printing, $66; other
expenses, $200; total, $46,996.
Coroner, salary, official, $6,000;
salaries, employes, $500; supplies,
$50, contracts, services, $1,500;
other expenses, $650; total, $8,700.
County court, salary, official,
$10,500;
salaries, employes,
$19,764.72; supplies, $2,500; contracts-repair, $400; witness fees,
$200; other fees, $1,500; other expenses, $3,000; total, $37,864.72.
Board of elections, salary, official,
f7,200; salaries, employes, $3,600;
supplies, $5,800; equipment, $1,000;
contract services, $12,000; travel,
$584; other expenses, $950; total,
$63,534. .
Building and grounds, maintenance and operation, contracts-repair, $2,500; contracts--services,
$35,000!_ total, $37,500.
Sheri!!, salary, official, $13,000;
salaries, employes, f75,7JO; over-

to be foUowed by the Carleton ' Syracuse, between the Carleton ·
CoUege Board of Trustees.
College Board of Trustees and the
The principal sum of $25,000
Meigs County Commissioners shall
received as the ptirehase price from
be invested in such a manner as
the slae of real estate located in
d~med appropiate by the existing
trustees of Carleton College
prususnt to any and all laws which
govern educational trusts in Ohio at
this time.
.
·
The sum sail be deemed to be
retired, at 10 a.m. and the Sunday called the Carleton Memorial Trust.
evening osel"{ance by YPSM Eloise
• The trustees have the right to ex·
Adamsat7:30p.m
pend all income from this principal
Participants will be Jackie J u.stis, sum at any time for any purpose
Rhonda Barnhart, LeSley Artrip, which they deem approplate which
Christine anjl Loretta Laudermilt, follows the specific intent of the
Jeannie Arms and Mary Morton.
original grantor and lies within
Singing, drums and timbriles will _boundaries of' the law which applies
be a feature. The public is invited to to eucational trust at the time of exthe observance.
penditure.

ObServance SCheduled SUTIda-y_

suits.

••

' 'aggravate' ' inflation.

will start an advanced fire fighting
course on March I.
l'he 30-hour course will be taught

According to an entry filed with
Common Pleas Court, Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge John C.
Bacon has made the following determination in establishing procedures

JACKETS

OPEN. .SATURDAY
9:30 AM
TO '5 PM
.
.

sday that no relief ts in sight.
In fact, Alfred Kahn, chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability,
said increased defense spending to counter Soviet actions could

Carleton College trustees
-g iven procedur~s to follow

CONTINUING OUR SALE

AND
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VASHTI
GRIMM, DECEASED
Case No. 22947
NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
..On January 17, 1980, In
the Meigs County Probate
Court, case No. 22947, Bar·
bara J . Brut"an, 11239
I ron wood
Court.
Cin ·
c;nnatl 1 Ohio 45242 was ap·
pointeo Executrix of the
estate of Vash1J Grimm,
deceased, late of Route 2,
Racine, Ohio.

Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight between 15 and 20.
Highs Saturday from the upper 20s
50-Cent Pyramid: 96; 284; 5701.
• to the low 30s. The chance of
$1 Bo08DZ8: 09; 384; 2680; 54139; precipitation is 20 percent tonight
595M6.
and Saturday.

JUNIOR

BOYS'
SHIRTS
All of our boys

Weather

PRICE

' monthly in- ,
weary Americans, for it was somewhat higher than the average
crease through November.
·
The final CPI for 1979 is especially important because it affects the wages
and benefits of more than 90 million Americans and the spending of billions
offederal dollars.
·
That's because the index is used to calculate cost of living raises for more
than 9 million union and non-union workers; benefit increases for more than
34 million Social Security recipients, and adjustments for 16 million food
stamp recipients, 28 million children and elderly persons receiving meal
subsidies and millions of other welfare recipients.
Economists estimate the government spends $1 billion to$2 billion for each
percentage point rise in the . CPl. Tbe index is a survey of the average
changes in retail prices for a fixed list of goods and services ranging from
food, housing and energy to shoes, tobacco and vacation travel.
All a result of risin!l' consumer prices throughout the year, the average
gross weekly earnings of Americans fell5.3 percent, the Labor Department
reported.
An 8 percent increase in average hourly earnings + slightly above the
figure prescribed by President Carter's voluntary wage guidelines + was offset by a slight decrease in hours worked and the high inflation rate.
-the CPI's rise has been reientless, increasing at least I percent a month
since last January. And President Carter's chief inffution fighter said Thur-

Orange Township volunteers
becoming most active group

Vests, cardigans
and slipovers. s,
M, L and XL sizes.
Reg. price $11.95 to
$27.95.

1/2

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1980

December consumer prices continue climb

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

Quoting Richard Carvell, the Governor's Representative for Highway Safety and Director of the
Highway Safety Office, Hall said a significant decrease is expected in highway fatalities and injuries
due to "Operation 55-li5" which is designed to reinforce the present State Police 55 MPH program on
the mterstates and the West Virginia Turnpike.

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
.
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF HERTHA J .
COMPTON, DECEASED
Case No. Z2871
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On January 11. 1900. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No . 22871.
Ramona Kay Compton, 210
W. Main Slreet, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769 was appointed
E)(eclJtrix of the estate of
Hertha
H.
Compton,
deceased, late of 210 w.
Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio45769.
Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge ·
Clerk
Ill 17, 24, 31 , Jtc ·

INFANTS'
SPORTSWEAR

VOL.

County proceeds with

PRICE

-

Farmers Home Administration
(FmHA) provided $1,446,350 in loans
to farmers in Athens and Meigs
counties during the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 1979 according to Archie Stegall, County Supervisor at
the Pomeroy FmHA Office. These
loans were made to farmers who
were \mabie to obtain credit from
commercial lending institutions in
the area.
Archie Stegall stated further than
10 of the loans totaling $1,034,500
were made under the Economic
Emergency Loan authorization
created by the Agricultural Act of
1978 which was passed in August of

en tine

•

.

.

PAPERS DEIJVERED- Neither rain, nor hail, nt;~r sleet, nor snow
will
the delivery boy from his duties. All the mall goe~. so does the
.paper. J;Yindy Lee, .a carrier for tf!e DallY. Sentin.el, is shown here braving.
~cold and snowy weather on Thursday aftern'?On, to rteliver his papers.
.

~

stoP

~

Salvation Arn:!Y,l15 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy; · •·
,
"God's Love' Makes the World Go
'Round'! is· the prllcl8Jll8tion in observance of the 100 years Of '"rv!ce
of the Al'my in the United States.
The Sunday mQmlng service will
be lead by Ms.-jor Glenna R~ell,

~

•

time; · $2,500; supplies, $24,000; /
equipment, $6,750; contracts-repair/
$3,500; contracts--services, $2,200;
training school, $500; fees, $200;
allowances, $6,500; travel, $250; advertising and printing, $400; other
expenses, $1,000; total, $.136,530.
Recorder, salary, official, $11,500;
salaries, employes; $7,1144.72; supplies, $7,500; other expenses, $500;
total, $27,344.72.
Disaster services, other expenses,
$1,400; total, $1,400.
Agriculture, grants, $24,562; fair
board grant, $7,500; apiary inspection, $900; cattle disease
prevention, $500; total,.$33,462.
Health and weHare, general
hospital and care, ·contractsservices, speech and hearing,
$4,100; total, $4,100.
Tuberculosis hospital clinics and
care, salaries, $25,820; supplies,
$5,000; equipment, $4,000; contracts-repair, $400; contracts--services,
$15,000; 1ees and costs, $100; transportation, $250; travel, $2,500;
other expenses, $5,027 .64; total
$58,097.64.
Registration of vital ststistics,
fees, $100, total, $100. Other health,
crippled children aid, $10,897, total,
$10,897.
County board of mental retardation, salary, lfficial, $16,050;
salaries, employes, $10,500; supplies, $9,000; equipment, $600; contracts--services, $16,000; expenses,
$600; travel, $1,800; other expenses,
$8,500; total, $63,050.
County home, salary, official,
$10,491.60; salaries, employes,
$27,437.98; supplies, $18,500; equipment, $500; contracts-repair, $300;
contracts-services, $6,500; contingency fund, $300; expenses,
$1,500; other expenses, $400; total,
$65,979.58.
Children services board, salaries,
employes, $2,425.15; supplies,
$4,000; contracts-services, $14,000;
other child care services, $4,001);
travel, S700; other expenses, $3,000;
total, $28,125:15.
Soldiers relief, salary, official, .
$3,000; supplies, $800; contractsrepair, $350; relief allowances,
$10,000; expenses, $300; travel, $600;
other expenses, $3,000; total, $18,050.
Veteran's services, salary, of·
ftcial, $9,983.76; salaries, employes,
$4,000; burials, $300; grave
markers, $1,800; Memorial day expense, $700; other expenses, :
lContinued on page 10) .

.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 25, 1980

In Washington :
Iowa: Only the beginning
By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA l - The
much-touted Iowa caucuses mark
the start of that long process toward
the election of someone to run the
country for the next four years.
They also mark the start of a long,
almOilt confusing process whereby
Iowans of both prties choose who
they want to nominate at their
respective national conventions.
That choice, contrary to popular
belief, is not made at the Jan. 21
caucuses (although the winner that
night definitely has the inside track
when the final choice is made ).
What actually takes place is a far
cry from the winner-take-all
preference vote newspaper stories
seem to suggest. All that happens at
each party's 2,531 caucuses is the
choosing of delegates to its 99 county
conventions that will be held in the
spring.
At those 99 county conventions,
delegates will be selected for their
party's state convention to be held in
late spring or early summer. Finally, at the state convention, delegates
will be chosen for their party's national convention to be held this
summer (in Detroit for the
Republicans and New York City for
the Democrats).
Despite the not-so-important
nature of this media Big Event, it is
interesting to see how the caucuses
work.
·
In larger towns and cities, the
night's voting takes place in schools
and churches. In smaller communities, most are held at private
homes or fanns.
Any voter who is willing to state a
party preference is eleigible to attend and vote in a caucus in his or
her precinct. Priot party registration is not required, so crossovers

are possible, although unlikely this
year because both parties have hotly
contested races.
The precinct-level caucuses differ
slightly in the two parties. In the
Republican Party, each person at·
tending a caucus gets to vote for
whoever he or whe wants. Some
caucuses have secret ballots, while
others simply use a show of hands.
The delegates to the county conven·
lions from each precinct are then a(&gt;portioned according to the percentage vote the presidential candidates get at each caucus. Candidste organizations then select who
will iJe the delegates to the colinty
conventions.
The Democrats do it differently.
Once it is determined by a show of
hands how many of those attending
at each precinct are for a given candidate (for the Democrats, uncommitted is a possibility), the total
delegation to the county convention
is divided proportionately among
the contenders. The supjlorters of
each then separate into subcaucuses to select their delegates to
the county conventions.
At the same time, the ell8ct
number of votes for each candidate,
Republican or Democrat, is totaled
statewide and is reported as a straw
vote.
Historically, only a small percentage of the state's voters turn out for
the caucuses.
All that candidate wins, of course,
is some great publicity. But that is
what counts as far as presidential
hopefuls are concerned. Because, by
the time Iowa does select its convention delegates, ech hopeful hopes to
be the far-and-away front-runner in
his party, meaning that nothing that
happens at the Iowa state conventions will matter much anymore.

Today's. Commentary:

I HOPf. · W[ Doi'J'T
BoYCoTT T~f: OLYMPtC~.

Tt-JEY

&amp;~oULDI'J'T

6E:

By Doll Graff
It's their own tough luck that

Ml&amp;~

A C~ANc.E: To BEAT THE
RU~~K1£.€&gt; IN TH£1R

,..,.

.

.OWN BACK YARD.

Washington today

WASHINGTON (AP) - Check as Reagan, but adds that he isn't
their records and you'll find that
going to help anyone put an
ideological label on him.
George Bush is just as conservative
"I am going to stay with my
as the next candidste - even if that
· position of speaking as straighthappens to be Ronald Reagan.
But Bush, the man on the move forwardly as I can on the issues," he
among Republican presidential con- sajd.
tenders, bas skillfully avoided the
When he does, on most matters the
mesSage is not much different from·
label, and it is one of the keys to his
Reagan's.
·
early success.
At this point in a crowded
Indeed, in the Des Moines debate
presidential campaign, perceptions which Reagan shwmed, Bush talked
are as important as poaltions, and about experience, not policy, when
Bush has established himself as a asked to ~II out his differences
with his absent rival.
candidate likely to be acceptable to
all wings of the party.
"Look at the experience I've had
He has clabned the center without
In foreign affairs: being your
altering policies which, on most
representative in China, your amissues, are almost identical to
bassador in the United Nations, running the Central Intelligence AgenReagan's. He has avoided
cy, being the head of this party on a
ideological labelB, and that is a big
plus.
full-time basis," he said. "Arid so I
There's no doubt Bush's superior would emphasize in answer to the
organization was the key to his upset question ... the breadth of exvictory over Reagan In the Iowa 1 perlence I've had .... ·
"We may be together, closer
precinct caucus hallotlng Monday
night.
Reagan
and
his
managers
emtogether,
as Republican candidates
NEW YORK (AP ) - Gulf 011
1978. Revenues jumpd to $26.1 billion
on issues, but that's good, not ba~;t,
phasized that in arguing that the for:Corp., the nation's fifth. largest oil from $211.1 billion.
mer California governor still is the
because we need to beat Democrats
&lt;company, said Thursday that last
Mobil said profits in the final quar·
in the fall."
)'ear's jump in world petroleum ter rose 72 percent to $541 million, or candidate most Republicans prefer.
Reagan said he stayed away from
He may be. But political
·prices spurred a 54.4 percent gain 1n $2.55 a share, from $315 million, or
is
not
an
abstraction
the
Iowa debate because he didn't
organization
.fourth-quarter net income and a 68.4 $1.49 a share, for the same period a
apart
from
the
appeal
ci
a
canwant
to ~ divisive 8Dd ·argue with
·'percent Increase in profits !or 1979.
year earlier. Sales rose to $14.7
didate.
Organizations
are
made
up
other
Republicans.
: Gulf's report followed earnings billion from $10.7 billion.
But now he says he may be willing
gains announced Wednesday by
Earnings for the full year climbed of people, and candidates have to
Mobil Corp. - ranked No. 2 after 78 percent to $2.01 billion, or $9.48 a convinae those people to enlist them. to debate next time. "I can't be the
only one concerned with unity if no
EDon Corp. - 13tlrranked Union share , from $1.13 billion, or $5.34 a . Nobody volunteers to ring doorbells
one else will," he said Tuesday.
Oil Company of California and J9tlr
share, in 19'78. Sales ·came to $47.9 for a candidate without first
"I'm going to have to think of selfranked Getty Oil Co. The other com- billion, against $37.3 billion a year deciding to support him.
survival.''
Bush says he doesn't resist the
Panies also attributed the gains to
before.
1vorld oil price hikes.
Union's fourth-quarter net income suggestion that he is as conservative
•. Gulf said fourth-quarter earnings
was $152.3 million, or $1.76 a share, ·
eame to $366 million, or $1.88 a
up 23 percent from $123.8 million, or
ihare, against $237 million, or $1.22 a $1.40 a share, a year before. The 19'78
!ihare, for the same period a year quarter included a one-time tax
!lefore. Revenues climbed to f/ .7 benefit of $15 million.
·
billion from $5.4 billion.
Fourth-quarter revenues rose to
NEW YORK (AP) - Taking its
collective rights. "Some law will
: For 19'79, Gulf's earnings were $2.31 billion from $1.78 billion, and
cue
from
the
automobile,
the
singledevelop In the area," says Halperin,
$1.32 billion, or 16.78 a share, up
19'79 revenues came to f/ .7 billion, up
family
house
might
soon
grow
who holds a doctorate frcm Harfrom $785 million, or $4.03 a share, in
from 16.1 billion. Earnings for the
smaller,
reversing
a
trend
to
bigness
vard.
"The legal profession is going
year gained 31 percent to $500.6
that
had
graduaUy
asserted
itself
to
find
it mast make specific rules."
million, or $5.76 a share, from $382.3
over
the
past
two
decades.
Is
a
person's home likely . to
million, or $4.32 a share.
an
opinion,
but
it
That's
merely
remain
a
good buy? Halperin thinks
Final-quarter income at Getty
.·
comell,fQIQJ.-~financ~tside
of
the
so.
And
he
believes that investment
jumped 80 percent to $162.6 million,
building
industry,
and
financial
estate,
for renting or leasing to
real
or $2.22 a share, from $101.6 million,
expected
to
overrule
restraints
are
others,
snould
also continue to pay,
or $1.23 a share. Revenues rose to
in
aesthetic
and
other
considerations
high costs notwithstanding.
: WASHINGTON (AP) - The Car- $1.55 billion in the quarter from $1.03
the
1980s.
He does not believe, however, that
-ter administration is prepared to sell billion.
It's
the
opinion
of
Jerome
Y.
small
Investors should attempt to
Getty's 1979 net income was $604.4
:C.rtain military support equipment
Halperin,
lawyer,
accountant
and
compete
head-on with large in:to China, but has no plans to seU ar- million, or f/.34 a share, up 83 per- partner in Coopers x Lybrand, one
vestors,
who
these days tend to be
cent from 1978's $330.1 million, or $4
ms or weapons systems to that counof
the
largest
accounting
firms,
who
caslrrich
domestic
institutions and
iry, Pentagon officials said Thur- a share. Sa)es rose to $5.12 billion
works
closely
with
builders,
foreigners
seeking
a
haven for funfrom $3.76 billion.
ilday.
and
operators.
borrowers,
lenders
ds.
World petroleum prices nearly
: "There are no plans to sell arms to
Costs will dictate, he says, and
"The best areas for investment
doubled in 1979, with the average
~. " Nicholas Platt, a deputy
that
means
smaller
living
quartel'll,
will
be In the smaller cities," he
48Sistant secretary of defense, told cost of a 42-gallon barrel of oil rising
smaller
lots
and
more
attached
states,
his reason being that the big
from about $14 to about $'ZI by the
)"eporters at the Pentagon.
housing.
N
othlng,
he
believes,
we
money
concentrates in larger cites.
: Officials noted that during his end of the year.
can't
adjust
to.
People
in
other
counBesides, he feels, smaller cities are
Domestic oil prices did not rise as
recent trip to China, Defense
tries
have
lived
that
way
for
years.
more stable. .. .
·
rapidly,
because
some
oil
is
still
unSecretary Harold Brown indicated
In
fact,
as
Halperin
judges
the
"As a small Investor, I would look
der price controls. The controls
jo Chinese officials that the United
future,
there
should
be
no
reduction
in
Grand Rapids or Hartford helped to moderate last year's rise
!Statea ''was prepared to consider, on
in
quality.
In
his
view,
homebuilding
places
like that that an investor
a case-by-case basis, the sale of cer- in U.S. gasoline prices - which also
will
remain
highly
competitive;
from
'
G
ermany might never have
lain carefully selected items of SU(&gt;- are under federal controls - to
styling
might
play
an
even
larger
heard
of.
Also, the rate of return is
about 60 percent.
)lort equipment also suitable for
does
now.
role
than
it
better.
If
you go into areas of great
A congressional conference commilitary use .... "
will,
however,
lle
adThere
demand
the
seller expects a much
: Pentagon spokesman Thomas B. mittee has reached agreement on
justments
to
make.
Because
of
a
higher
price."
major parts ol a tax on oil company
Ross said such equipment could in·
trend to row housing and apartAll in all, not a bad picture from
revenues resulting from the lifting of
_elude trucks, communications gear
ments,
exemplified
by
the
conthe
money side. "I feel fairly
controls on U.S. petroleum prices.
411ld "certain types of early-warning
dominium
and
cooperative
style
of
positive,"
said Halperin.
The "windfall" tax would take $227.3
. i'adar." He said no decision has been
ownership,
social
and
legal
billion during the next decade.
)nade on what specific equipment
problems might grow.
·
Mobil said earnings from overseas
plight be sold nor what specifically
"People will realize that they canpetroleum operations were up by 132
,the Chinese have requested.
not
call the shots in such housing;
percent last year, accounting for
: A Defense Depatment official,
they
cannot always have their own
_....,,..,.__,,_
much of its overall profit gains,
~ho dectined to be identified by
way,
and
they
may
feel
they've
lost
while domestic earnings rose 39 perft8Jile, called the change in U.S.
a bit of their freedom," says
cent.
·
policy " a small incremental
Halperin.
All three companies said they
l!hange" and another step toward
Th~ new living style might require
boosted expenditures on exploration
-closer relations with China since
further
delineation of Individual and
and on other major projects. Mobil
normalization of relations.
: "You caMot, however, take it out· spending rose 38 percent to $3
billion, excluding the $800 million it
Jlf the context of the world situation.
spent
to acquire General Crude's Oil
'!'he Invasion of Afghanistan (by the
Coi
s
oil
and gas operations.
&amp;viet Union) sped up or catalyzed
establiahed a reputation In the earlY
the decision."
J98ls ... with a tate a'tmract ex; Rep. Lester L. Wolff, D-N.Y.,
WILEY
TERRITORY
pressioniSt
manner. But In 1967, afchalnnan of the Asian and Pacific
MINNESPOI.JS,
Minn.
(AP)
ter
·
severa.
l years of - ex·
Affairs subconunittee of the House
"Wllt:Y
TerritOry,"
a
showing
·of
.
perilnentation,
he arrived at a
·Foreign Affairs COmmittee, gave
over
125
worka
by
San
Franclsco
l)ighly
llfi"OOal
style, combining
·first word .of the military silles
based
artist
William
T.
Wiley,
Is
m
·
realism,
·
a
bstraction
and written
'earlier Thursday lti a brief ~h on
view
at
the
Walker
Art
Center
commentary. Walker's exhibition
the House floor.
through
Jan.
27.
takes the year 1967 as its starting
: Wolff said he personally opj)lllleS.
The
center
says,
"
Wiley
point."
pchamov~ .
'

~Oil

firms report
profit increase

Business mirror

.

(:.hina buying U. S.

.military equipment

~

•

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) -lllinois
was pesky, but Ohio State's 6-foot-10
center Herb WUliams was too much
in a 79-76 victory Thursday night
that kept the Buckeyes atop the Big
Ten baakethall race.
Wl.lllams scored 24 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds as fourthranked Ohio State held off a late
rally and a pressing Illinois defense.
Ohio State leads the Big Ten with a
&amp;-I record and is 13-2 overall. IIJinois
drops to 3-4 and 1~ .
Two IIJinois centers - 6-foot-10
James Griffin and &amp;-foot-11 Derek
Holcomb - saw action against
Willlams, but neither could contain

press for the home folks to see.
That concem says more about
the real relationship betweed the
leaders and the led In Iran's
revolution than all It· the Ayatolah
Khomeini's exhortationa to date.
But no more than bali aireadJ
been said by Abraham Uncoln.

Iran's revolutionary authorities
aren't better students of
American history .
If so, they might have beell
forewarnedc by one Abfll))am Uncoln who, you'll recall, delive~
a trenchant observation of foollng
people.
Afghanistan 'slesson
Instead, the Iranians have had
on the press
to learn that basic truth on their
own and, In the process, seen their
And let's not forget about
attempt at media manipulation · Afghanistan.
backfire. It bas fooled none of the
For a time there It appeared that
American people who, as the
any shorage of Tebran datellnea
WashingtOn Post recently observwould be more than made up by
ed editorially, haven't been wat- those from Kabul and polnlll north,
ching TV all these years fur
east, south and est of the Afgban
nothing. They can tell white ha's
from black bats In the reports capital.
The initial period of the Soviet
flowing rut of Tehran, ineptly
takeover must rank u the 11101t
managed as some may have beeil.
thoroughly covered Invasion aiDce
As a consequence, there are gothe ~es landed In Normandy.
Ing to be no more American
American corrsJiondenlll apreports out of Tehran.
peared to be everywhere from ocThe expulsion of corcupied citie8 and byp881!ed villages
respondents
not only
to rebel camp11 hidden away In the
Americans but any affiliated with
Hindu Kush. And, with the notable
American news organizaitons exception of the ubiquitous but
comes a bit late for iranian purpublicity-shy Soviets, Interviewing
poses, however. The story is
everyone.
There was beginning to be
already out, and there is nothing
some
question whether there would
that even total silence can now do
to change the negative image the soon be a camel driver, shopkeeper
or musket-armed · guerrilla whose
revolution has acquired abroad.
story had not been relayed to the outAholghassem Sadegh, as direcside
world.
tor general of foreign press in the
was something unreal about
There
Ministry of National Guidance the
the
oppenness
to public scrutiny point man in this assult upon
and the opposition, Western, publlc
freedom of information, nevertheless believes there could be a at that - of one of the III08t potenpositive effect. He suggests that tially explosive East-West crises ci
with the U.S. embassy no longer the last 30 years. It wasn't this way
the focus of Intense journalistic at- in CZechoslovakia, or Hungary after
the first heady days.
tention - attention, it should be
As It turned out, of course, It was
remembered, initislly Invited by
unreal. In Afghanistan as in Iran tbe
the Iranians - a "more relaxed"
consequences
were too uncomforsituation may result that .will
tably revealing. The correspondents
facilitate a resolution of the
who poured into and all over the
hostage stan!Hlff.
country have been sent packing.
There could be someting In thal
A step that may diminish the flow
But there is probably more 1n a
of
on-the-scene .reportage from
remark by another revolutionary
Afghanistan,
but only confirms that
insider, Ayatollah Mohammed
was
being
reported
while strenuousBeheshti, secretary of the Revolutionary Council. He has, observed ly denied by \he Soviets and their
that the problem is not limited to Afghan puppets - that it is the
the American press and former, not the later, l'1llllling
American
people .
Some Afghanistan.
It just goes to show again the ptounwelcomely reveallng reports on
blem
authoritarian regimes have
what is occurring In Iran have
with
a
free press. It gets them combeen pickedup from U.S.. paperll
Ing
or
going.
and republished in the Iranian

Ohio

him.
"We tried both of the big players,"
said IIJinois Coach Lou Henson " but
we jast had trouble covering him.''
"We jast want to keep punching inside until they shut it down. Then
we'll take it outside. We just played
our game," said Williams, who
noted that IIJinois "got to the boards
really well."
Ohio State was outrebounded 4238, but the statistics from the game
give a strange picture. Henson cited
Ohio State's 56 percent shooting
figure- 18 percentage points better
than IIJinois' - and said anyone
looking at that "would think Ohio
State won by 20."
In fact, both teams scored 28 field
goala and Ohio State's margin came
on its 23-20 free throw edge.
It was a free throw with six seconds left by Kelvin Ransey that put the
win on ice for Ohio State.
Ohio State jumped off to a 13-4lead
and, shooting 62 percent from the
field, led 33-J:I at the half. But IIJinois
continued to challenge.
Two free throws by Mark Smith
brought lllinois to within a point, at

Transactions

lllinois closed to within three poin6~, on a free throw by Reno
Gray, and later to within two with

ts,

An·

nounced the resignation of John

chief operating otticer.
FOOTBALL
Nalional Football League
CINCINNATI BENGALS
Named Jim McNally line coach.
Signed Danny Bass, guard .
MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Signed
_E:ddie Paylon. back.
COLLEGE
BOSTON STATE - Announced
the resignaTion ot Paul FitzpaTrick,
head \Jasketball coach .

~erspective

eight seconds left as Gray hit a Jt;.
foot shot from the side of the key to
make the score 76-76. But then Gray
fouled Ransey, who .sank the first
shot In a one-and-one situation.
It was · Ransey's 15th point. He
scored the other 14 In the first half.
Kellogg had 14 points and ScoU 12.
For IIJinois, Eddie Johnson had 19
points, Mark Smith 16andGray9.
"'Most of the night offensively we
were doing what we wanted to do,"
said Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller.
But during the Illinois rally, he said,
the Buckeyes were too eager. "We
wanted to exchange the ball in the"
backcourt a couple of times, then
work a play and work it inside," he
said "But we were breaking
through for 3-on-2 breaks and it's'
hard for the players to hold up."

Request rejected
LATONIA, Ky. (AP) - Latonia
Race Course's request for additions!
racing dates bas been rejected by
the Kentucky Racing Commission.
The track sought to begin its
spring season ahead of the regular
,
Feb. 11 opening date.
Pat Lang, a track spokesman, said

the cOilllllisslon voted 3-1 Thursday
against expanding the session to include Jan. 31-Feb. 10.
"Ten days can make a lot of difference In terms of a track's
profits," Lang said. "'It also hurts
the horseman because there are no
other places to race locally. They
are spending a lot of money just
stabllng their horses, instead of
racing them."
Lang said commission members

southern a! SouThwesTern
Gallipolis at Meigs
Athens at Jackson
Wellston at Waverly
Hilliard at ChillicoThe
Wheelersburg at Porlsmoulh Wesl
WilmingTon aT CourT House
Greenup al Porlsmoulh
Salurday'• games:
Wheelersburg al Porlsmoulh
Waverly at court House
Gallipolis al Pl. Pleasanl
Jackson al Vlnlon Counly
Nelsonville· York at Logan
Notre Dame al Kyger Creek
Southwestern al Hannan Trace
WaTerford at Soulhern ·

felt Latonia had enough racing dates
for this year.

nursday's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press
EAST
Boston Unlv. 74, Rhode lsland63
Geo. WashingTon 70, Catholic 66, or
Latayette 83, Rider 71
Rober! Morris 71 , Alliance 69
Sl. John's 67, Davidson 48
Seton Hall66, Columbia 58
Siena 82, Southampton 70
Syracuse69. Rutgers66
Temple 56, William and Mary 55
SOUTH
Ala .·Birmingham 70, S. Alabama

Morehead St 85, E. KenTucky 74
Murray 62, Austin Peay 51
Navy 8-ol, Bluefield 57
NC·WIImington 71, Baptist 52
NE Louisiana 77, Nicholls St. 64
Old Dominion 65, Duquesne 60
51 . Joseph's 101 , Bellarmlne94
Va . Commonwealth 83, New
Orleans 71
va. MiliTary 95, George Mason 81
MIDWEST
Akron 85, Tennessee Tech 74
Indiana 51. 68, Tulsa 63, ot
Iowa 86, Northwestern 64
Minnesota 55, I ndiarfa 47
Ohio ST . 79, Ill inois 76
Purdue 73, Wisconsin 60, o1
S. Dakola Sl. 74, Morningside65

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Mike Scearce should know better
than to listen to the Wisconsin
Badger basketball fans.
But he did Thursday night - and it
abnost cost the Purdue Boller·
makers a game.
With the score of their ·Big Ten
contest tied 00.00 and 20 Be!!Onds left,
Purdue had possession of the ball
and a chance to win. But Wisconsin
fans began a 11).second chant at this
point, duping Scearce into rushing
up a premature desperation shot
that missed.
There was still time for the
Badgers to take a shot of their own.
Luckily for the embarrassed Scearce, it missed, and the Boilermakers
went on to win in overtime, 73-60.
"That sure was great crowd su(&gt;port," Purdue Coach Ia Rose said
of the deceitful Badger crowd.
Rose did have some time to soothe
Scearce when the Badgers, planning
their last shot in regulation, called
time out with nine seconds
remaining.

"I told him to forget it because he
was going to be in there and I don 'I
want him thinking about it," Rose
related.
Badger Coach Bill Cofield was
reluctant to respond when asked
whether the game reflected rumol'll
of selfishness on his team. ·•
"We executed out game plan very
well," Cofield told sports writers.
"The only statement I am going to
make is my original one: we
executed very well.''
The 14tb-ranked Boilermakers
were one of six ranked teams in action Thursday night. Elsewhere,
No.4 Ohio State stopped Illinois 7976; No.6 Syracuse held off Rutgers
~; No.9 St. John's routed Davidson 67-48; Minnesota upset No.16 Indiana ~7 and No.20 Brigham
Young crushed San Diego State 12391.
Brian Walker and Joe Barry
Carroll took over for Purdue in the
overtime period, combining for 10
points. Carroll finished with 21 points and Kelt Edmonson added 17 for
Purdue.
Herb Williams scored 24 points to
lead Ohio State past Illinois. The
Buckeyes took an early lead and
were never headed, although they
were constanUy troubled by IIJinois
rallies and a press in the final
minutes.
Roosevelt Bouie and Louis Orr
combined for 28 of Syracuse's 37
second-baH points to lead the
Orangemen past a surprlslngly
tough Rutgel'll team. The Scarlet
Knights, struggling through a so-so
season, had numerous chances to
win down the homestretch, but
finally fell short as Orr made a kev

steal in the finallO seconds.
" Whenever we play them," said
Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim, "it
doesn 't matter which team is good
or bad, it's always a close game."
Syracuse trailed 35-32 at halftime
and Boeheim said the first half
problems resulted from the
Orangemen's inability to get the ball ,
to Bouie.
"'Everybody says that something
must have been wrong when a
ranked team has a tough time,"
Boeheim said. "But I think that we
should give Rutgers some credit,
they played well."
Rutgers Coach Tom Young was
pleased with his team's effort
despite the loss.
"It's amazing we even had a chance to win it at the end," he said. "I
admire the heck out of o!Jr kids."
Reggie Carter led a balanced attack with 11 points, and also contributed four steals, five assists and
six rebounds to lead St. John's over
Davidson. Darryl Mitchell sank four
clutch free throws in the final
minute to spark Minnesota over Indiana. Danny Ainge scored 30 points
to pace BYU's victory over San
Diego State.
Elsewhere, Seton Hall beat
Columbia 66-58 behind Dan Callandrillo's 22 points; Kevin. Boyle's 24
points powered Iowa past Northwestern 86-&amp;1; Ronnie Valentine
and Ronnie McAdoo teamed for 45

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points to pace Old Dominion past
Duquesne 65-60; Indiana State beat
Tulsa ~ as Brad Miley scored 19
points; Jay VIncent's free throw
with three seconds left In overtime
led Michigan State over Michigan.
59-68; Jack Washington and Bill
Bryant scored 12 each as Western
Kentucky defeated Middle Tennessee 62-58; Rod Foster's 19 points.
helped UCLA beat Washington 7~9
and Don Collins had 36 points to lead·
Washington State over Southern Cal .
77-57.

Announclnllthe Revised
Ottlce Schedule of
Or . Maleo P. Oayo, Jr.
306 N. 2nd Ave. ,
Middleport, Ohio
Ellec!lve january 1980
Monday
10:00·1 : 00

2:00·S:OOP.M.
Tuesday, No Ollice
Wednesday
9:00·11 : 30
2;00· 7:30 P.M.

Thursday

9: 00 ·11 : 30
2:00· 7:30 P.M.

Friday

10:00·1 :00
2:00·5 :00

Salurday
9:00·5:00

Except the last Salurday of the monlb.

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42-41, but Ohio State got two free
throws each from Jim Smith and
Carter Scott and a 12-foot jump shot
from Clark Kellogg to go ahead 48-41
with 14: 37 left.
Ohio State's biggest lead came
witp 7:32 to go when two Todd Penn
free throws made the score 62-51.
With five minutes left, Hensm
called for a press and brollflht on
reserves Perry Range, Kevin Bontemps and Neil Breshnahan.
"I felt the five startel'll we had In
the game thought the ball game was
over," Henson said. "We on the bench didn't feel that way. We felt there
was a mental letdown, but our bench
scrapped and abnost pulled out the

Tonight's games

By The JI5Socia!ed Press
BASKETBALL

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - I.oca1 Jan. 1• stating that "the economic
governments, businesses and stability and growth of the city is
business leaders are following the heavily dependent upon an efficient
road Gov. James . ~ paved and safe .trucking industry." It
when he endorsed continued urged Congress "not to take steps .
regulation of the trucking indastry.
that will destroy a system of
Since Rhodes offered Republican regulated truck service that has sergovernors a truck regulation ved our city well in times of war and
resolution at Austin, Texas, last
peace .... "
November:
A few weeks before the Cleveland
- The cities of Cleveland and
resolution, Brook Park, which has 14
Brook Park adopted resolutions op- truck terminals, passed a similar
posing deregulation;
resolution. Brook Park Mayor ·
-The president of Generalfdotol'll
Angelo Wedo says deregulation
Corp. werit to Toledo to endorse con- · ltould hurt the lndastry and not sertinued truck regulation, and ;
ve the public good.
-Rep. William H. Harsha, R" When the government
Ohio, spoke up for continued governderegulated the airlines they had a
ment control of the Industry.
fantastic cost increase to the Ullei'S ·
Deregulation of the trucking inand there was reduced service," he •
dustry is one area where President
said "I don't want to see that hap- ;
Carter and Sen. Edwiu-d M. Kenpen to the trucking industry."
:
nedy, D-Mass., agree. They both
General Motors President Elliott :
support the Trucking Competition
M. Estes told the Toledo Chamber of ;
Reform and Safety Improvement
Commerce recenUy that the need for :
Act of 1979, which means they waiit
rules In trucking "are as legitimate '
to take government controls off the
today as they were In 1935."
;
industry.
That was the year Congress :
Cleveland provided the latest oppaased the origlnal Highway Tran- ;
position to the Carter-Kennedy stansportatlon Act, the first regulation It :
the trucking industry.
•
ce. Its council adopted a resolution

•__

.

,! Juckeyes edge lllini

Lincoln's lesson for Iran

PoLITiCAL.

Yr;:AI-t. AND Wt'D

3:-The Daily ::Ientine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 25, 1980

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�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 25, 1980

In Washington :
Iowa: Only the beginning
By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA l - The
much-touted Iowa caucuses mark
the start of that long process toward
the election of someone to run the
country for the next four years.
They also mark the start of a long,
almOilt confusing process whereby
Iowans of both prties choose who
they want to nominate at their
respective national conventions.
That choice, contrary to popular
belief, is not made at the Jan. 21
caucuses (although the winner that
night definitely has the inside track
when the final choice is made ).
What actually takes place is a far
cry from the winner-take-all
preference vote newspaper stories
seem to suggest. All that happens at
each party's 2,531 caucuses is the
choosing of delegates to its 99 county
conventions that will be held in the
spring.
At those 99 county conventions,
delegates will be selected for their
party's state convention to be held in
late spring or early summer. Finally, at the state convention, delegates
will be chosen for their party's national convention to be held this
summer (in Detroit for the
Republicans and New York City for
the Democrats).
Despite the not-so-important
nature of this media Big Event, it is
interesting to see how the caucuses
work.
·
In larger towns and cities, the
night's voting takes place in schools
and churches. In smaller communities, most are held at private
homes or fanns.
Any voter who is willing to state a
party preference is eleigible to attend and vote in a caucus in his or
her precinct. Priot party registration is not required, so crossovers

are possible, although unlikely this
year because both parties have hotly
contested races.
The precinct-level caucuses differ
slightly in the two parties. In the
Republican Party, each person at·
tending a caucus gets to vote for
whoever he or whe wants. Some
caucuses have secret ballots, while
others simply use a show of hands.
The delegates to the county conven·
lions from each precinct are then a(&gt;portioned according to the percentage vote the presidential candidates get at each caucus. Candidste organizations then select who
will iJe the delegates to the colinty
conventions.
The Democrats do it differently.
Once it is determined by a show of
hands how many of those attending
at each precinct are for a given candidate (for the Democrats, uncommitted is a possibility), the total
delegation to the county convention
is divided proportionately among
the contenders. The supjlorters of
each then separate into subcaucuses to select their delegates to
the county conventions.
At the same time, the ell8ct
number of votes for each candidate,
Republican or Democrat, is totaled
statewide and is reported as a straw
vote.
Historically, only a small percentage of the state's voters turn out for
the caucuses.
All that candidate wins, of course,
is some great publicity. But that is
what counts as far as presidential
hopefuls are concerned. Because, by
the time Iowa does select its convention delegates, ech hopeful hopes to
be the far-and-away front-runner in
his party, meaning that nothing that
happens at the Iowa state conventions will matter much anymore.

Today's. Commentary:

I HOPf. · W[ Doi'J'T
BoYCoTT T~f: OLYMPtC~.

Tt-JEY

&amp;~oULDI'J'T

6E:

By Doll Graff
It's their own tough luck that

Ml&amp;~

A C~ANc.E: To BEAT THE
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,..,.

.

.OWN BACK YARD.

Washington today

WASHINGTON (AP) - Check as Reagan, but adds that he isn't
their records and you'll find that
going to help anyone put an
ideological label on him.
George Bush is just as conservative
"I am going to stay with my
as the next candidste - even if that
· position of speaking as straighthappens to be Ronald Reagan.
But Bush, the man on the move forwardly as I can on the issues," he
among Republican presidential con- sajd.
tenders, bas skillfully avoided the
When he does, on most matters the
mesSage is not much different from·
label, and it is one of the keys to his
Reagan's.
·
early success.
At this point in a crowded
Indeed, in the Des Moines debate
presidential campaign, perceptions which Reagan shwmed, Bush talked
are as important as poaltions, and about experience, not policy, when
Bush has established himself as a asked to ~II out his differences
with his absent rival.
candidate likely to be acceptable to
all wings of the party.
"Look at the experience I've had
He has clabned the center without
In foreign affairs: being your
altering policies which, on most
representative in China, your amissues, are almost identical to
bassador in the United Nations, running the Central Intelligence AgenReagan's. He has avoided
cy, being the head of this party on a
ideological labelB, and that is a big
plus.
full-time basis," he said. "Arid so I
There's no doubt Bush's superior would emphasize in answer to the
organization was the key to his upset question ... the breadth of exvictory over Reagan In the Iowa 1 perlence I've had .... ·
"We may be together, closer
precinct caucus hallotlng Monday
night.
Reagan
and
his
managers
emtogether,
as Republican candidates
NEW YORK (AP ) - Gulf 011
1978. Revenues jumpd to $26.1 billion
on issues, but that's good, not ba~;t,
phasized that in arguing that the for:Corp., the nation's fifth. largest oil from $211.1 billion.
mer California governor still is the
because we need to beat Democrats
&lt;company, said Thursday that last
Mobil said profits in the final quar·
in the fall."
)'ear's jump in world petroleum ter rose 72 percent to $541 million, or candidate most Republicans prefer.
Reagan said he stayed away from
He may be. But political
·prices spurred a 54.4 percent gain 1n $2.55 a share, from $315 million, or
is
not
an
abstraction
the
Iowa debate because he didn't
organization
.fourth-quarter net income and a 68.4 $1.49 a share, for the same period a
apart
from
the
appeal
ci
a
canwant
to ~ divisive 8Dd ·argue with
·'percent Increase in profits !or 1979.
year earlier. Sales rose to $14.7
didate.
Organizations
are
made
up
other
Republicans.
: Gulf's report followed earnings billion from $10.7 billion.
But now he says he may be willing
gains announced Wednesday by
Earnings for the full year climbed of people, and candidates have to
Mobil Corp. - ranked No. 2 after 78 percent to $2.01 billion, or $9.48 a convinae those people to enlist them. to debate next time. "I can't be the
only one concerned with unity if no
EDon Corp. - 13tlrranked Union share , from $1.13 billion, or $5.34 a . Nobody volunteers to ring doorbells
one else will," he said Tuesday.
Oil Company of California and J9tlr
share, in 19'78. Sales ·came to $47.9 for a candidate without first
"I'm going to have to think of selfranked Getty Oil Co. The other com- billion, against $37.3 billion a year deciding to support him.
survival.''
Bush says he doesn't resist the
Panies also attributed the gains to
before.
1vorld oil price hikes.
Union's fourth-quarter net income suggestion that he is as conservative
•. Gulf said fourth-quarter earnings
was $152.3 million, or $1.76 a share, ·
eame to $366 million, or $1.88 a
up 23 percent from $123.8 million, or
ihare, against $237 million, or $1.22 a $1.40 a share, a year before. The 19'78
!ihare, for the same period a year quarter included a one-time tax
!lefore. Revenues climbed to f/ .7 benefit of $15 million.
·
billion from $5.4 billion.
Fourth-quarter revenues rose to
NEW YORK (AP) - Taking its
collective rights. "Some law will
: For 19'79, Gulf's earnings were $2.31 billion from $1.78 billion, and
cue
from
the
automobile,
the
singledevelop In the area," says Halperin,
$1.32 billion, or 16.78 a share, up
19'79 revenues came to f/ .7 billion, up
family
house
might
soon
grow
who holds a doctorate frcm Harfrom $785 million, or $4.03 a share, in
from 16.1 billion. Earnings for the
smaller,
reversing
a
trend
to
bigness
vard.
"The legal profession is going
year gained 31 percent to $500.6
that
had
graduaUy
asserted
itself
to
find
it mast make specific rules."
million, or $5.76 a share, from $382.3
over
the
past
two
decades.
Is
a
person's home likely . to
million, or $4.32 a share.
an
opinion,
but
it
That's
merely
remain
a
good buy? Halperin thinks
Final-quarter income at Getty
.·
comell,fQIQJ.-~financ~tside
of
the
so.
And
he
believes that investment
jumped 80 percent to $162.6 million,
building
industry,
and
financial
estate,
for renting or leasing to
real
or $2.22 a share, from $101.6 million,
expected
to
overrule
restraints
are
others,
snould
also continue to pay,
or $1.23 a share. Revenues rose to
in
aesthetic
and
other
considerations
high costs notwithstanding.
: WASHINGTON (AP) - The Car- $1.55 billion in the quarter from $1.03
the
1980s.
He does not believe, however, that
-ter administration is prepared to sell billion.
It's
the
opinion
of
Jerome
Y.
small
Investors should attempt to
Getty's 1979 net income was $604.4
:C.rtain military support equipment
Halperin,
lawyer,
accountant
and
compete
head-on with large in:to China, but has no plans to seU ar- million, or f/.34 a share, up 83 per- partner in Coopers x Lybrand, one
vestors,
who
these days tend to be
cent from 1978's $330.1 million, or $4
ms or weapons systems to that counof
the
largest
accounting
firms,
who
caslrrich
domestic
institutions and
iry, Pentagon officials said Thur- a share. Sa)es rose to $5.12 billion
works
closely
with
builders,
foreigners
seeking
a
haven for funfrom $3.76 billion.
ilday.
and
operators.
borrowers,
lenders
ds.
World petroleum prices nearly
: "There are no plans to sell arms to
Costs will dictate, he says, and
"The best areas for investment
doubled in 1979, with the average
~. " Nicholas Platt, a deputy
that
means
smaller
living
quartel'll,
will
be In the smaller cities," he
48Sistant secretary of defense, told cost of a 42-gallon barrel of oil rising
smaller
lots
and
more
attached
states,
his reason being that the big
from about $14 to about $'ZI by the
)"eporters at the Pentagon.
housing.
N
othlng,
he
believes,
we
money
concentrates in larger cites.
: Officials noted that during his end of the year.
can't
adjust
to.
People
in
other
counBesides, he feels, smaller cities are
Domestic oil prices did not rise as
recent trip to China, Defense
tries
have
lived
that
way
for
years.
more stable. .. .
·
rapidly,
because
some
oil
is
still
unSecretary Harold Brown indicated
In
fact,
as
Halperin
judges
the
"As a small Investor, I would look
der price controls. The controls
jo Chinese officials that the United
future,
there
should
be
no
reduction
in
Grand Rapids or Hartford helped to moderate last year's rise
!Statea ''was prepared to consider, on
in
quality.
In
his
view,
homebuilding
places
like that that an investor
a case-by-case basis, the sale of cer- in U.S. gasoline prices - which also
will
remain
highly
competitive;
from
'
G
ermany might never have
lain carefully selected items of SU(&gt;- are under federal controls - to
styling
might
play
an
even
larger
heard
of.
Also, the rate of return is
about 60 percent.
)lort equipment also suitable for
does
now.
role
than
it
better.
If
you go into areas of great
A congressional conference commilitary use .... "
will,
however,
lle
adThere
demand
the
seller expects a much
: Pentagon spokesman Thomas B. mittee has reached agreement on
justments
to
make.
Because
of
a
higher
price."
major parts ol a tax on oil company
Ross said such equipment could in·
trend to row housing and apartAll in all, not a bad picture from
revenues resulting from the lifting of
_elude trucks, communications gear
ments,
exemplified
by
the
conthe
money side. "I feel fairly
controls on U.S. petroleum prices.
411ld "certain types of early-warning
dominium
and
cooperative
style
of
positive,"
said Halperin.
The "windfall" tax would take $227.3
. i'adar." He said no decision has been
ownership,
social
and
legal
billion during the next decade.
)nade on what specific equipment
problems might grow.
·
Mobil said earnings from overseas
plight be sold nor what specifically
"People will realize that they canpetroleum operations were up by 132
,the Chinese have requested.
not
call the shots in such housing;
percent last year, accounting for
: A Defense Depatment official,
they
cannot always have their own
_....,,..,.__,,_
much of its overall profit gains,
~ho dectined to be identified by
way,
and
they
may
feel
they've
lost
while domestic earnings rose 39 perft8Jile, called the change in U.S.
a bit of their freedom," says
cent.
·
policy " a small incremental
Halperin.
All three companies said they
l!hange" and another step toward
Th~ new living style might require
boosted expenditures on exploration
-closer relations with China since
further
delineation of Individual and
and on other major projects. Mobil
normalization of relations.
: "You caMot, however, take it out· spending rose 38 percent to $3
billion, excluding the $800 million it
Jlf the context of the world situation.
spent
to acquire General Crude's Oil
'!'he Invasion of Afghanistan (by the
Coi
s
oil
and gas operations.
&amp;viet Union) sped up or catalyzed
establiahed a reputation In the earlY
the decision."
J98ls ... with a tate a'tmract ex; Rep. Lester L. Wolff, D-N.Y.,
WILEY
TERRITORY
pressioniSt
manner. But In 1967, afchalnnan of the Asian and Pacific
MINNESPOI.JS,
Minn.
(AP)
ter
·
severa.
l years of - ex·
Affairs subconunittee of the House
"Wllt:Y
TerritOry,"
a
showing
·of
.
perilnentation,
he arrived at a
·Foreign Affairs COmmittee, gave
over
125
worka
by
San
Franclsco
l)ighly
llfi"OOal
style, combining
·first word .of the military silles
based
artist
William
T.
Wiley,
Is
m
·
realism,
·
a
bstraction
and written
'earlier Thursday lti a brief ~h on
view
at
the
Walker
Art
Center
commentary. Walker's exhibition
the House floor.
through
Jan.
27.
takes the year 1967 as its starting
: Wolff said he personally opj)lllleS.
The
center
says,
"
Wiley
point."
pchamov~ .
'

~Oil

firms report
profit increase

Business mirror

.

(:.hina buying U. S.

.military equipment

~

•

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) -lllinois
was pesky, but Ohio State's 6-foot-10
center Herb WUliams was too much
in a 79-76 victory Thursday night
that kept the Buckeyes atop the Big
Ten baakethall race.
Wl.lllams scored 24 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds as fourthranked Ohio State held off a late
rally and a pressing Illinois defense.
Ohio State leads the Big Ten with a
&amp;-I record and is 13-2 overall. IIJinois
drops to 3-4 and 1~ .
Two IIJinois centers - 6-foot-10
James Griffin and &amp;-foot-11 Derek
Holcomb - saw action against
Willlams, but neither could contain

press for the home folks to see.
That concem says more about
the real relationship betweed the
leaders and the led In Iran's
revolution than all It· the Ayatolah
Khomeini's exhortationa to date.
But no more than bali aireadJ
been said by Abraham Uncoln.

Iran's revolutionary authorities
aren't better students of
American history .
If so, they might have beell
forewarnedc by one Abfll))am Uncoln who, you'll recall, delive~
a trenchant observation of foollng
people.
Afghanistan 'slesson
Instead, the Iranians have had
on the press
to learn that basic truth on their
own and, In the process, seen their
And let's not forget about
attempt at media manipulation · Afghanistan.
backfire. It bas fooled none of the
For a time there It appeared that
American people who, as the
any shorage of Tebran datellnea
WashingtOn Post recently observwould be more than made up by
ed editorially, haven't been wat- those from Kabul and polnlll north,
ching TV all these years fur
east, south and est of the Afgban
nothing. They can tell white ha's
from black bats In the reports capital.
The initial period of the Soviet
flowing rut of Tehran, ineptly
takeover must rank u the 11101t
managed as some may have beeil.
thoroughly covered Invasion aiDce
As a consequence, there are gothe ~es landed In Normandy.
Ing to be no more American
American corrsJiondenlll apreports out of Tehran.
peared to be everywhere from ocThe expulsion of corcupied citie8 and byp881!ed villages
respondents
not only
to rebel camp11 hidden away In the
Americans but any affiliated with
Hindu Kush. And, with the notable
American news organizaitons exception of the ubiquitous but
comes a bit late for iranian purpublicity-shy Soviets, Interviewing
poses, however. The story is
everyone.
There was beginning to be
already out, and there is nothing
some
question whether there would
that even total silence can now do
to change the negative image the soon be a camel driver, shopkeeper
or musket-armed · guerrilla whose
revolution has acquired abroad.
story had not been relayed to the outAholghassem Sadegh, as direcside
world.
tor general of foreign press in the
was something unreal about
There
Ministry of National Guidance the
the
oppenness
to public scrutiny point man in this assult upon
and the opposition, Western, publlc
freedom of information, nevertheless believes there could be a at that - of one of the III08t potenpositive effect. He suggests that tially explosive East-West crises ci
with the U.S. embassy no longer the last 30 years. It wasn't this way
the focus of Intense journalistic at- in CZechoslovakia, or Hungary after
the first heady days.
tention - attention, it should be
As It turned out, of course, It was
remembered, initislly Invited by
unreal. In Afghanistan as in Iran tbe
the Iranians - a "more relaxed"
consequences
were too uncomforsituation may result that .will
tably revealing. The correspondents
facilitate a resolution of the
who poured into and all over the
hostage stan!Hlff.
country have been sent packing.
There could be someting In thal
A step that may diminish the flow
But there is probably more 1n a
of
on-the-scene .reportage from
remark by another revolutionary
Afghanistan,
but only confirms that
insider, Ayatollah Mohammed
was
being
reported
while strenuousBeheshti, secretary of the Revolutionary Council. He has, observed ly denied by \he Soviets and their
that the problem is not limited to Afghan puppets - that it is the
the American press and former, not the later, l'1llllling
American
people .
Some Afghanistan.
It just goes to show again the ptounwelcomely reveallng reports on
blem
authoritarian regimes have
what is occurring In Iran have
with
a
free press. It gets them combeen pickedup from U.S.. paperll
Ing
or
going.
and republished in the Iranian

Ohio

him.
"We tried both of the big players,"
said IIJinois Coach Lou Henson " but
we jast had trouble covering him.''
"We jast want to keep punching inside until they shut it down. Then
we'll take it outside. We just played
our game," said Williams, who
noted that IIJinois "got to the boards
really well."
Ohio State was outrebounded 4238, but the statistics from the game
give a strange picture. Henson cited
Ohio State's 56 percent shooting
figure- 18 percentage points better
than IIJinois' - and said anyone
looking at that "would think Ohio
State won by 20."
In fact, both teams scored 28 field
goala and Ohio State's margin came
on its 23-20 free throw edge.
It was a free throw with six seconds left by Kelvin Ransey that put the
win on ice for Ohio State.
Ohio State jumped off to a 13-4lead
and, shooting 62 percent from the
field, led 33-J:I at the half. But IIJinois
continued to challenge.
Two free throws by Mark Smith
brought lllinois to within a point, at

Transactions

lllinois closed to within three poin6~, on a free throw by Reno
Gray, and later to within two with

ts,

An·

nounced the resignation of John

chief operating otticer.
FOOTBALL
Nalional Football League
CINCINNATI BENGALS
Named Jim McNally line coach.
Signed Danny Bass, guard .
MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Signed
_E:ddie Paylon. back.
COLLEGE
BOSTON STATE - Announced
the resignaTion ot Paul FitzpaTrick,
head \Jasketball coach .

~erspective

eight seconds left as Gray hit a Jt;.
foot shot from the side of the key to
make the score 76-76. But then Gray
fouled Ransey, who .sank the first
shot In a one-and-one situation.
It was · Ransey's 15th point. He
scored the other 14 In the first half.
Kellogg had 14 points and ScoU 12.
For IIJinois, Eddie Johnson had 19
points, Mark Smith 16andGray9.
"'Most of the night offensively we
were doing what we wanted to do,"
said Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller.
But during the Illinois rally, he said,
the Buckeyes were too eager. "We
wanted to exchange the ball in the"
backcourt a couple of times, then
work a play and work it inside," he
said "But we were breaking
through for 3-on-2 breaks and it's'
hard for the players to hold up."

Request rejected
LATONIA, Ky. (AP) - Latonia
Race Course's request for additions!
racing dates bas been rejected by
the Kentucky Racing Commission.
The track sought to begin its
spring season ahead of the regular
,
Feb. 11 opening date.
Pat Lang, a track spokesman, said

the cOilllllisslon voted 3-1 Thursday
against expanding the session to include Jan. 31-Feb. 10.
"Ten days can make a lot of difference In terms of a track's
profits," Lang said. "'It also hurts
the horseman because there are no
other places to race locally. They
are spending a lot of money just
stabllng their horses, instead of
racing them."
Lang said commission members

southern a! SouThwesTern
Gallipolis at Meigs
Athens at Jackson
Wellston at Waverly
Hilliard at ChillicoThe
Wheelersburg at Porlsmoulh Wesl
WilmingTon aT CourT House
Greenup al Porlsmoulh
Salurday'• games:
Wheelersburg al Porlsmoulh
Waverly at court House
Gallipolis al Pl. Pleasanl
Jackson al Vlnlon Counly
Nelsonville· York at Logan
Notre Dame al Kyger Creek
Southwestern al Hannan Trace
WaTerford at Soulhern ·

felt Latonia had enough racing dates
for this year.

nursday's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press
EAST
Boston Unlv. 74, Rhode lsland63
Geo. WashingTon 70, Catholic 66, or
Latayette 83, Rider 71
Rober! Morris 71 , Alliance 69
Sl. John's 67, Davidson 48
Seton Hall66, Columbia 58
Siena 82, Southampton 70
Syracuse69. Rutgers66
Temple 56, William and Mary 55
SOUTH
Ala .·Birmingham 70, S. Alabama

Morehead St 85, E. KenTucky 74
Murray 62, Austin Peay 51
Navy 8-ol, Bluefield 57
NC·WIImington 71, Baptist 52
NE Louisiana 77, Nicholls St. 64
Old Dominion 65, Duquesne 60
51 . Joseph's 101 , Bellarmlne94
Va . Commonwealth 83, New
Orleans 71
va. MiliTary 95, George Mason 81
MIDWEST
Akron 85, Tennessee Tech 74
Indiana 51. 68, Tulsa 63, ot
Iowa 86, Northwestern 64
Minnesota 55, I ndiarfa 47
Ohio ST . 79, Ill inois 76
Purdue 73, Wisconsin 60, o1
S. Dakola Sl. 74, Morningside65

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Mike Scearce should know better
than to listen to the Wisconsin
Badger basketball fans.
But he did Thursday night - and it
abnost cost the Purdue Boller·
makers a game.
With the score of their ·Big Ten
contest tied 00.00 and 20 Be!!Onds left,
Purdue had possession of the ball
and a chance to win. But Wisconsin
fans began a 11).second chant at this
point, duping Scearce into rushing
up a premature desperation shot
that missed.
There was still time for the
Badgers to take a shot of their own.
Luckily for the embarrassed Scearce, it missed, and the Boilermakers
went on to win in overtime, 73-60.
"That sure was great crowd su(&gt;port," Purdue Coach Ia Rose said
of the deceitful Badger crowd.
Rose did have some time to soothe
Scearce when the Badgers, planning
their last shot in regulation, called
time out with nine seconds
remaining.

"I told him to forget it because he
was going to be in there and I don 'I
want him thinking about it," Rose
related.
Badger Coach Bill Cofield was
reluctant to respond when asked
whether the game reflected rumol'll
of selfishness on his team. ·•
"We executed out game plan very
well," Cofield told sports writers.
"The only statement I am going to
make is my original one: we
executed very well.''
The 14tb-ranked Boilermakers
were one of six ranked teams in action Thursday night. Elsewhere,
No.4 Ohio State stopped Illinois 7976; No.6 Syracuse held off Rutgers
~; No.9 St. John's routed Davidson 67-48; Minnesota upset No.16 Indiana ~7 and No.20 Brigham
Young crushed San Diego State 12391.
Brian Walker and Joe Barry
Carroll took over for Purdue in the
overtime period, combining for 10
points. Carroll finished with 21 points and Kelt Edmonson added 17 for
Purdue.
Herb Williams scored 24 points to
lead Ohio State past Illinois. The
Buckeyes took an early lead and
were never headed, although they
were constanUy troubled by IIJinois
rallies and a press in the final
minutes.
Roosevelt Bouie and Louis Orr
combined for 28 of Syracuse's 37
second-baH points to lead the
Orangemen past a surprlslngly
tough Rutgel'll team. The Scarlet
Knights, struggling through a so-so
season, had numerous chances to
win down the homestretch, but
finally fell short as Orr made a kev

steal in the finallO seconds.
" Whenever we play them," said
Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim, "it
doesn 't matter which team is good
or bad, it's always a close game."
Syracuse trailed 35-32 at halftime
and Boeheim said the first half
problems resulted from the
Orangemen's inability to get the ball ,
to Bouie.
"'Everybody says that something
must have been wrong when a
ranked team has a tough time,"
Boeheim said. "But I think that we
should give Rutgers some credit,
they played well."
Rutgers Coach Tom Young was
pleased with his team's effort
despite the loss.
"It's amazing we even had a chance to win it at the end," he said. "I
admire the heck out of o!Jr kids."
Reggie Carter led a balanced attack with 11 points, and also contributed four steals, five assists and
six rebounds to lead St. John's over
Davidson. Darryl Mitchell sank four
clutch free throws in the final
minute to spark Minnesota over Indiana. Danny Ainge scored 30 points
to pace BYU's victory over San
Diego State.
Elsewhere, Seton Hall beat
Columbia 66-58 behind Dan Callandrillo's 22 points; Kevin. Boyle's 24
points powered Iowa past Northwestern 86-&amp;1; Ronnie Valentine
and Ronnie McAdoo teamed for 45

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points to pace Old Dominion past
Duquesne 65-60; Indiana State beat
Tulsa ~ as Brad Miley scored 19
points; Jay VIncent's free throw
with three seconds left In overtime
led Michigan State over Michigan.
59-68; Jack Washington and Bill
Bryant scored 12 each as Western
Kentucky defeated Middle Tennessee 62-58; Rod Foster's 19 points.
helped UCLA beat Washington 7~9
and Don Collins had 36 points to lead·
Washington State over Southern Cal .
77-57.

Announclnllthe Revised
Ottlce Schedule of
Or . Maleo P. Oayo, Jr.
306 N. 2nd Ave. ,
Middleport, Ohio
Ellec!lve january 1980
Monday
10:00·1 : 00

2:00·S:OOP.M.
Tuesday, No Ollice
Wednesday
9:00·11 : 30
2;00· 7:30 P.M.

Thursday

9: 00 ·11 : 30
2:00· 7:30 P.M.

Friday

10:00·1 :00
2:00·5 :00

Salurday
9:00·5:00

Except the last Salurday of the monlb.

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Kevin Smith

Purdue posts overtime win ,

62

350

Marauder varsity players

Tony Scott
11-5, Jr.

North Galli a at Hennan Trace

Mattei, executive vice president and

Berry's World

game."

Kyger Creek a! Easiern

National

Basketball AssociaTion
NEW JERSEY NETS -

42-41, but Ohio State got two free
throws each from Jim Smith and
Carter Scott and a 12-foot jump shot
from Clark Kellogg to go ahead 48-41
with 14: 37 left.
Ohio State's biggest lead came
witp 7:32 to go when two Todd Penn
free throws made the score 62-51.
With five minutes left, Hensm
called for a press and brollflht on
reserves Perry Range, Kevin Bontemps and Neil Breshnahan.
"I felt the five startel'll we had In
the game thought the ball game was
over," Henson said. "We on the bench didn't feel that way. We felt there
was a mental letdown, but our bench
scrapped and abnost pulled out the

Tonight's games

By The JI5Socia!ed Press
BASKETBALL

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - I.oca1 Jan. 1• stating that "the economic
governments, businesses and stability and growth of the city is
business leaders are following the heavily dependent upon an efficient
road Gov. James . ~ paved and safe .trucking industry." It
when he endorsed continued urged Congress "not to take steps .
regulation of the trucking indastry.
that will destroy a system of
Since Rhodes offered Republican regulated truck service that has sergovernors a truck regulation ved our city well in times of war and
resolution at Austin, Texas, last
peace .... "
November:
A few weeks before the Cleveland
- The cities of Cleveland and
resolution, Brook Park, which has 14
Brook Park adopted resolutions op- truck terminals, passed a similar
posing deregulation;
resolution. Brook Park Mayor ·
-The president of Generalfdotol'll
Angelo Wedo says deregulation
Corp. werit to Toledo to endorse con- · ltould hurt the lndastry and not sertinued truck regulation, and ;
ve the public good.
-Rep. William H. Harsha, R" When the government
Ohio, spoke up for continued governderegulated the airlines they had a
ment control of the Industry.
fantastic cost increase to the Ullei'S ·
Deregulation of the trucking inand there was reduced service," he •
dustry is one area where President
said "I don't want to see that hap- ;
Carter and Sen. Edwiu-d M. Kenpen to the trucking industry."
:
nedy, D-Mass., agree. They both
General Motors President Elliott :
support the Trucking Competition
M. Estes told the Toledo Chamber of ;
Reform and Safety Improvement
Commerce recenUy that the need for :
Act of 1979, which means they waiit
rules In trucking "are as legitimate '
to take government controls off the
today as they were In 1935."
;
industry.
That was the year Congress :
Cleveland provided the latest oppaased the origlnal Highway Tran- ;
position to the Carter-Kennedy stansportatlon Act, the first regulation It :
the trucking industry.
•
ce. Its council adopted a resolution

•__

.

,! Juckeyes edge lllini

Lincoln's lesson for Iran

PoLITiCAL.

Yr;:AI-t. AND Wt'D

3:-The Daily ::Ientine!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 25, 1980

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5-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 25, 1980

.

Western Division champs like farm · system
HUNTINGTON - Stresstng the
importance of a solid farm system
with a major thrust toward youth,
,the Cincinnati Reds, defending
Western Division champion, feel
that because of their young talented
players, the club will remain competitive for a long time.
This was emphas ized Thursday
during the organization's annual
caravan stopover here.
Speaking on behalf oC President
and General Manager Dick Wagner,
Sheldon · ( Chief) Bender, vicepresident for player personnel, said,
" We are turning to our farm system
a.s the answer for the future of the
Reds in the '80s. Even though we are
- going
through a transitiion period,
we
are
impressed with our youth,
'.· ..
because of this, we're going to be on

.... -

top.''

Bender then cited the acof pitchers Tommy
.. complishments
Hume, Frank Pastore, Charles
Lei brandt, Ron Oester, and other
future Reps, Paul HousehoL · ddie Milner, Bruce Beryeni and
others as primary reasons .for the
optmistic feelings.
Despite the lack of trades or
failure to sign any free agent talent,
. ' second year manager John Me. . Namara, the quiet leader of the
Reds, feels his club should be improved." We were plesed with last
year's performance but we are not
satisified. We want to return a World
.,_
championship to Riverfront
Stadium" .
On the trade issue, McNamara
said it is good to make deals when
you strengthen your club but we're
not going to trade a car for a pair of
roller skates.
'
When asked a bout his outfield
situation which hinges on the
healthy return of speedy Ken Griffey, the outstanding season that
Dave Collins had last year as a
" .
.:·.. replacement for Griffey and George
·..-•.. Foster and the additional help SUJ&gt;"
'
plied by newcomer Hector Cruz, Mc'
'
Namara said that all jobs will have
to be decided in spring training.
Mac"
also said Ceasar
Geronimo was still in the outfield
picture although his bat remains
suspect.
Even though Griffey is ending the

.

...

.. .

·

1

"FoD" is playing at the Point Pleasant Inn on Sunday, January 27.
With the group will be Kim Krautter, who will be debuling as their female
vocalist. Showtime is 8 p.m.
Are there any Stephen King fans out there? His new novel, "The
Stand," starts with lyrics from songs by Bruce Springsteen, Blue Oyster
Cult, and Bob Oylari. "The Stand" is soon to be made into a motion picture.
Speaking of Blue Oyster Cult, they bave a new album out titled
"MiiTors." The Cult's members like to play strange jokes, one of these is
on the Mirrors album. If you play Mirrors seven times slower than the
nonnal speed for an lp, you will clearly hear the Lord's Prayer.

HAND IT OVER - Tom Hume, left, best reliever for the Cincinnati
~ in 1979 appears to be ready to hand the ball or something over to
manager John McNanara. Both expressed optimism for another championship season in 1980 at Thursday's noon luncheon at the HoUday Inn in
Huntington. Dale Rothgeb, Jr., photo.

&amp; Co. said : " We believ ein New
York and we believe it is the communications and entertainment center of the world. We also feel this city
deserves the greatest team in the
world. 11
Doubleday and Co. had not been
mentioned recently as a contender
to buy the team but outbid the in~
vestment firm of Allen and Co.,
whose spokesman was Earl E. T.
Smith, former U.S. Ambassador to
Cuba and a close friend of Charles
Payson.

'•

.,

National
Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

National Hockeyi.eague
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
campbell conference

Eastern Conference

Patrick Division

Atlantic Division

W. L. Pel. GB
36 11 .766
36 12 .760 '/2
23 28 .451 15
20 27 .426 16

New Jersey
21 29 .420 161h
Central Division

At lanta

28 23 .549

Sa n Antonio

27

Detro1 t

13

Houston
Indiana
Cleve land

By

''•

The Smith group originally su~
mitted a bid of $14 million and reportedly went as high as $19.1million after •the Payson family set the
minimum price at $17 million.
Smith's group was given a chance to
match the Doubleday offer but droJ&gt;"
ped out of the bidding at that point.
" I'm sorry we didn't get it," Smith
said from his office in Palm Beach,
Fla. " We did not want to go as high
as $21 million. It's a long way from
$14 million to $21 million. Along the
way, we were twice told that we

Pro standings.
Philadel phia
Boston
New York
Washi ngton

24

.529

I

24 25 .490 3
22 26 .458 4'12
22 29 .431 6

37 .260 14 112
Western Conference
_M idwest Division

George Strode

Kansas C1tv
Molwaukee
Ch1 cago
Denver
Ut ah

32 21 .604
28 24 .538 3'12
17 31 .354 12 112
17 35 .327 14'12

16 36 .308 15112
Pacifi c Div is ion

Seattle
LosAngeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Portland
Golden State

37
35
32
27
25
15

13
16
1a
27
27
34

.740
.686 2'12
.640 5
500 12
.481 13
.306 21'12

Phil a.
NY Rangers
NY Isla nders
At lanta
Washington

w. L. T. Pts GF

31
23
22
19
12

3 12
19 a
17 6
21 6
27 7

74
54
50
44
31

13 23 10 36 15a 197
14 28 5 33 150 181
13 31 5 31 125 195

Buffalo

29 13 6 6.:1 180 133

Wales Conference
Adams Division

Boston
Minnesota
Quebec
Toronto

62
52
44
42

178
183
143
170

12a
138
157
187

21 17 8 so
18 18 11 47
17 2t 7 41
13 21 10 36
Thursday's Games
Boston 4 Buffalo 3

194
159
153
149

178
168
151
165

Montreal

Los Ang.
Pitts.
Detroit
Hartford

28
22
19
19

12
14
21
23

6
a
6
4

Norris Division
'
25 17 6 56 185 154

. Fnday s Games
Wash.ngton at Boston

Chicago at Atlanta
Ph iladelphia iii Winnipeg

Sa n D!ego at lndtana
Oetrott at. New Je~sev

Sa1urday 's Games
Quebec at Washington

Los Angeles 5, Toronto 4

Friday's Games

Kansas C1ty at Ch)cago
Sea ttle at Sa n A?fonio

Atlanta at Detroit
Los Angeles at Minnesota

New York at G61den State

Hartford at NY Islanders

Boston at P ittsburgh
Colorado at St . Loui s
Toronto at Edmonton
Sunday 's Games
s t. Louis at Winnipeg

Portland at Denver

Los Angeles at Buffalo

. Sunday's Games

San Otego a t Bosto~

New York at Detroot

Chtc:ago at New J e r~y

Atlanta at San Anton1o

Golden State at Washington
Cleveland at 1ndiana
P hiladelphi a at Phoen ix
Milwaukee a l Los Angeles

Y. Mets

were the high bidder. But y_ou reach
a point where it's not worth it."
After last Friday's deadline fo;
final bids, a money war took place
between the Doubleday and Smith
groups. The latter was believed to be
the front-rwmer because of Smith's
friendship with Payson. The two are
Florida neighbors.
Nelson Doubleday 1 and Pickett
also are neighboi'S in the New York
City suburb of Upper Brookville.
They reportedly \lid not have the
resources to buy the Mets without
corporate help, although Doubleday
has invested in the Islanders as an
individual and not for the publisbing
company.
Pickett, a private investor, has
been identified with Sterling
Equities Inc. He specializes in
buying interests in businesses and
restructuting and improving them.
He turned the Islanders from a
financially troubled franchise into a
profitable one.
. ·
After finishing last in the National
League in five of their first six years
and ninth in 1968, the Mets stunned
the baseball world by winning the
world championship in 1969 and the
National League pennant In 1973.
However, because of money
squabbles they traded away such'
players as Tom Seaver, Dave
Kingman and Rusty Staub and fell
on hard times both on the field and in
the stands. Attendance plwnmeted
from a high of 2,697,479 In 1970 to a
low of 788,000 last SIUIIIIler.
Indications were that the new
ownership would not include Mrs.
Lorinda deRoulet, the Mets' board
chainnan, or her daughters, Bebe
deRoulet, the team's assistant controller, and Mrs. Whitney de Roulet
Bullock, assistant director of public
relations.

"'"- ~,;,

The first birthday of Matthew
Blair Ault, son of Dennis and Carol
Ault was celebrated with a party on
Dec. 28.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Willi!Un Ault, Jason Bush, Kay,
Dluin and Kevin Logan, Sheila and
Jamie Reeves, Connie, Davey and
Chad Dodson. Visiting earlier in the
day were Janice Evans and Celesta
Bush, sons, Greg and Nick.
Sending gifts were Nancy and
Martin Broderick, Mildred Shuster
and Dorothy Douglas, Ryan and
Chelsie Dodson, Merri Ault and Bill
Quickie.
A train cake baked by Mrs. Ault,
and a Kermit, the Frog cake, gift of
his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Sheets,
were served by Mr. and Mrs. Ault
with ice cream and punch.

NY Islanders at Washington

Minnesota at Chicago

m .sm

Toronto at vancouver

Our experts special ize in the repair of
a ll makes and models of watches.

AND LOOK
LIKE NEW
A watc h that run s li ke new

should Iook the part . And

nothing does t he job better
t han a st ylis h watchband fro m
Sped ide I. Speidel - originator
ot famous Twist ·O·Fiex'IPJ wat·
chband construction . Just the
th ing to Qi'v'e new life to an old
watch .

.. thorized

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5~
~In,

-CALL 992-2156
BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5 PM

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,__.a..-----.,----~_;.---·

Giles infant

Birth
announced

'

r

:

Cal~ndar

I·

SAnJRDAY
PUBLIC SPAGHETII supper at
Pomeroy Elementary School, 4:30 to
7:30 p.m. Saturday by PTA; $2,
adults; $1 children, entertainment.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.m.
David Gleason, Meigs Local School
District superintendent, will be lbe
speak,er. Refreshments will be served. Parents urged to support the
school through the PTA with their
attendance at the meeting.

B\" Charlene Hoeflich

'!~
~

1

SAVE YOUR R.C., NEttl, ~.PPER 10;· DIEJ RITE &amp;.

I

DAD'S. ROOT 'BEER BOffiE CAPS FOR CHARITY

l

R.· C. BOTTLI "G CO.

I

Middleport, Ohio

Mill Street

-

992·3342 or 992-3344
/

.

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I

.

• • •

Features • • •

•

I

Next Friday Meigs County girl
scouts will begin taking orders for
girl scout cookies, the way most fwr
ding for scout programs is produced.
While the scouts will be taking
orders, they will not be collecting for
the cookies unW they are delivered
in March. Again this year the kinds
of cookies are samoas, peanut butter
sandwiches, shortbread, peanut butter l!Btties covered in chocolate,
vanilla and chocolate cremes,
granolas, and thin mints. The
cookies are $1.50 a box.
Theme for the cookies sale is ''The
Cookie Olympics are Corning."
Prizes will be awarded to cookie
sellers with posters to color to all
sellers, patches to all, super seller
patches to girls selling 80 or more
boxes, .beach tote hags to girls selling 200 or more boxes, and T-shirts
to girls selling 300 or more boxes.
For each box sold, the troop
treasury receives 20 cents. Council
profit on each box Is 71 cents and
that goes toward camp development
and service to troopil. Mrs. Pat
Thoma and Mrs. Pat Philson are the
cookie chainnen for Meigs County.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 11139
Work orl the. badges for backyard
fun and observer was continued at a
meeting of the Middleport Junior
Troop 1039 beld at the home of Mrs.
Joy Clark, leader.
As a part of their badge work, the
·scouts made sit-upons this week.
The cookie sale was discussed and
reports were given on the recent
candy sale. Mrs. Clark expressed
ber thanka to the parents lor helping
with the candy sale. Winner with top
sales was Crystal Manley with Penny Clark as runner-up.
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP
l2ZO
Meeting TueSday afternoon at the
Meigs High School, the Brownies
worked on a container for their
brownie pins. They made an
envelope put of brown construction
paper, laced the edges with orange
yarn, and wrote "My Brownie Pins"
on the front.
Games were played and
refreshments served by J ody
Taylor, Tracy Casto, and Joan Simpson.

FOUR GENERATIONS of the Smith family gathered recenUy at the..
home of Mrs. Bessie HCI,Idricks, Middleport, for this family picture. The
year-&lt;&gt;ld twins, Randy Scott, left, and Ricky Joe, are pictured with their
great-grandmother, Mrs. Neva Gary, Columbus, their gran!lmother,
Mrs. Hendricks, and their mother, Mrs. Terri Smith.

16th birthday noted
Wendy Elkins of Tuppers Plains
celebrated her 16th birthday recentlY with a party in the social room of
the St. Paul's United Methodist
Church.
The party was hosted by her aunt,
Dorothy Lance, and her mother,
Judy Elkins.
Punch, cake and ice cream were
served to Tina Beaver, Rob Smith,
Greg Cole, Lee Gainer, Mike
Hauber, Melissa Thomas, Scott Hill,
Renee · Trussell, Synthia White,
Pebles Blake, Pam Murphy, April
Parker, Beth Ritchie, Mike Bissell,

Lori Lance, Sheryl Bush, Velvet
Elkins, Robin and Dale WiHong, and
Pete Wilfong.

,f

c:;:__ _

MEIGS

f Po~eroy, 0 .

jt

Ph. 992-2176

Hour.: 8-5 Mon.-Fri.
1·12 Sat.
..
I
Closed Sunday
I International
New Idea '
J Harvester
..,_...Equipment .
1
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JANUARY CLEARANCE

ONE LOT
ACME
&amp;

ALL WINTER

COATS
DINGO
&amp;.
VESTS BOOTS
20% OFF.30% OFF
'

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main

Pomeory, 0 .
THE STORE WITH 'ALL KINOS OF STUFF" - FOR
PETS , STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS~
LAWNS AND GARDENS .
992-2164

'

Revised Code Sections 4503 .06 and 4503.061 as amend ed by
Sub. H.B. No . 330 and Effective August 26, 1969
COMPUTED AND

ASSESSED BY -

•

,

PAYABLE AT-

TAX DUE
AND PAYABLE-

Cou"ty

Trusur~r · s

Office . Court House

When a house trailer has a situs In this state, as provided In tills section, on the
1st day·ot Janu•ry the full•mount of the pro rate t•x Is due and payable on or

before the 31stdoy of January, lfiO.

Wt.en ' hoyst trailer atqwirts a 5i lws in thi t stat e u provide d in this \ect ion , afte r
the f\ut day of Janua ry and on or .prior to the 3ht day of Dtctm b @r , the full
amo~o~nt o' the AfO flfa tax it d~o~e and ptyable immed iately upon the .. p irttlo n of
a 30 do~y period commencing witt! the date the situ" it uquired .

•

PENALTY -

If the pay"'ent of the tax is not made as provided obove a penalty of five dollars
or ten percent of the toxes due, whichever is greater, shall be imposed and

collected in addition to the tax due and owing.

DELINQUENT
TAXES -

RESPONSIBILITY
OF HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER-'- ·

The Co1.1nt! ~reuurer, in Jddition ~o ~ny other re,.,cdy pr~llidcd bv law for
the collection of faxes ~nd pen.alttes, shall enforce' colltctton of such taxes
and penalties by c iYil action in the name of such truuucr •tcainst the owner
for the U!COllery of the unpaid taus .

All ownen o f hous-. trailtrt having a situs in the State of Ohio and 1ubjed to the
tax 11 provided .1 bove MUST reg itltr such tra iler w1th !he County Auditor on ar
prior · to the dale the tu it due and payeble .
No person who it the owner of e tlowse trailer and wtlo is requ ired to regit ter •
house trailer thall hil lo d itplay on !he front of such tfailtf t~e certifiule or " Decal"
iteued by the County Tttuurer.

JIMDINE

CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -"Jim

Dine's. Etching," a retrospective
e:dlibltion rJ. more than 100 prints by
tbe Cincinnati-born artl8t, iii on view
at the Cincinnati Art .Museum

thr01J8b Dec. 31.
~ · 'lbe Qluseum says tbe . exbil!lt
1pa111 a 17"fear period frol'n 1981 to

lf18 and m~amlnes the hlatory of
Dlrie's work In drypolnt, engraving

~etcbktg.

year . Howe ~tor , if the m i, irnum lo x Df thirty. six dalton is applir ablo too kouse traile-r not

c:omm"nting with the dote of oc:quitition or entrtmce into this stat• .

Seed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil (Lynda) Giles,
Albany, are announcing the birth of
a son, Neil Desmond, born on Dec. 12
at O'Bleness Hospitlll, Athens. He 1
weighed 10 pounds, three ounces and I
was 221ncbes long.
Matemai grandparents are Mr, ·
and Mrs. Donald Bockhorst of
McHenry, m. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mnl. Clair
Giles, Pomeroy, and Samuel Hart of · '
Springfield ill a great-grandfather. · ·

County Auditor b y multiplying ttl• on• nobl e- .va lu e of the hou 'e trmi ler by the to• rote of
th !l ltning d inri(l in whilh the houu tr ailer has ill titus . rn. minimum tax is $.36.00 pe r

loc:o led in this state on the fint day of January, the lo ll it determined by mUlt iplying thr••
doltun by the numbrr of full montln remaining to the following thirty·fint of Dec:emb er

jimmy Warner

OPERATOR ·OF

A HOUSE TRAILER

'
.
.
Seeds • Bird $eeds - Oyster Shells and Grit - Fertilizers - Lime - Ce·

..

COURT-

ment &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt -·water Softener • Remedies -;Salt - Liters · :vaccine - Roofing - Paints•- Ract Brand Fenc:lnt - Baler and Binder
Twine . Sprays · Gates.

·' SUGAR RUN _MILLS
Mulberry :Ave.

Pomeroy

___

:...,_

-

t
J'
=J

1 EQUIPMENT CO.

HOUSE TRA.ILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE

I

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Dealer

~&lt;:»"

'Q'Jnel~
212 E.
Pomeroy

PAPER .CARRIER
NEEDED. IN THE
POMEROY AND
"MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY ,SENTINEL

Social

Clubs

: Girl Scout Diary 1

Awards were presented when Boy
Scout Troop 249, Pomeroy, rnet in
regular session Wednesday evening.
Mike stone received his second
class award; Dewey Autherson
received communications and
physical fitness award; Adam Martin, Hiking and skill awards; Ray
Tryall, Bill Weaver and Tim
Ohlinger received scout awards.
Discussions were held on attending Muskingurn Boy Scout
Camp, the Scout-A-Rama in March
and campout at Kiashuta Feb. 1, 2,
and 3. Saturday the scouts will .be
parking cars at Meigs High for the
wrestling match on Saturday night.
The troop is selling toboggans in
high school colors and NFL and AFL
colors.
Attending were John Morris,
Melvin VanMeter, Mike H.atf!eld,
Chad Wjlliams, Matty Demoss, Jack
Braley, Craig Bo!fu, Danny Davis,
Andy H.awk, Jeff Hawk, BUJy
Colmer, Terry Snowden, Greg
Thomas, Adam Martin, Joe Fields,
Timmy Cohner, Larry Parson, Ray
Tryall, Mike Sinun, Mike Stone,
Dewey Autherson, John Bacon and
Allen Terry, scouts.
Adults attending were Ray
Laudermilt, Sheryl Laudermilt, Dan
Thomas, Bob Anns, Chad Ohlinger,
Bill Simrn, Darmy Will, and Bob
Workman, head chemist at Foote
Mineral.

r---

Community .•.

mints, and soft drinks were served
to Ellen WPars, Nina Rupe, Mary
Doerfer, Pat Elliott, Becky Meaige
and Crystal, Jeannette Mas, Jenevie
Jones, Lavina Meaige, Sue Sigman,
Janet Norris, Cindy Casto and
daughters , Wilma Weimann, Gail
Sisson, Starr Spires, Audrey Bradbury, Cora Rupe, Mary Sisson,
Melissa and Sununer Darst, Annabelle Sisson, Beverly Spires, Patsy Spires, and Rita White.
Sending gifts were Muriel Spires
Betty Stewart, Inna Bales Paulin~
Rife, Christine Napier, ' Rhonda
Markin, Ginny Halley, and Bonnie
' Wears.

,-----------------1

Awards presented
to boy scouts

Jimmy Warner, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James D. Warner, Syracuse,
recently celebrated his fourth birthday at the home of his aunt and uncle, Nancy and David Reed,
Pomeroy.
A Spidennan theme was carried
out for the party, with cake and ice
cream being served. Gifts wree
presented to the hOnored gueat. Attending were Nancy, David and Jennifer Reed, Shirley Ash, John Ash,
and Jamey Ash, Pomeroy; Jim,
Jeanne, and Jacey Waggoner and
Mary Lou Waggoner, Sandyville.
Sending gifts were his grandparents,
Pearl Ash, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Bonnie Conde, Ripley, W.Va.

Detroit at Quebec

NY Rangers at Colorado

Matthew Shane Evans, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Evans, Portland,
celebrated his second birthday
Saturday with a party at his home.
Attending were Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Matthew's grandmother, Mr.
and Mrs: Phil Ohlinger and Laura,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sisson
and Nate, Pomeroy; Mrs. Frankie
Hunnel and Artie, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Warth, David,
Darrin, and Amy, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Evans and Megan,
Harrisonville; Mrs. Jean Fitch,
Mrs. · Keith Fitch, Jason and
Nicholas, Portland; Mr. and Mrs.
H.arold Van Meter and grandson
Greg, Columbus; Leota Birch,
Portland; and Matthew's brother
and sister, Ryan and Cindy Evans.
Sending a gift was his grandmother,
Mrs. Bernice Evans, Gallipolis.-

Mrs. Daryl Wears, the former
Diana Spires, was honored with a
layet!P. shower at the Kyger lodge
hallonJan. 17.
Hostesses were Mrs. Beverly
Spires and Mrs. Sue Sigman. THe
gift table and refreshment table
were decorated in the traditional
pink and blue. Games were played
with prizes gong to Audrey Bradbury, Lavina Meaige and Rita
White. The door prize was awarded
to Annabe.lle Sisson.
Mter Mrs. Wears opened her gifts,
refreshment of cake, decorated by
Mrs. Patsy Spires, potato chips,

Life Style

Tumsfour years

Pittsburgh at Boston

. Philadelphia at Edmonton

Matthew Evans

Maithew Ault

ATTENTION:

WE'LL MAKE YOUR WATCH
RUN LIKE NEW

.. . J

Buffalo at Montreal

Phlladelph ta at Los Ange les
.
Saturday's Games
Cht~ago a t Atlan ta
ln dta na at C leve land
Sea1tle at Hou sto~

,

136
179
145
160
179

Edmonton
Colorado
Winnipeg

Montrea'l 7 Hartford 2
Colorado 4; P ittsburgh 1

Utah at Kansas C•tv

195
192
162
154
144

GA '

Smythe Division
~hicago
18 18 12 48 130 146
Sl. Louis
19 21 7 45 145 154
vancouver
15 25 8 38 151 169

Thursday's Games
New Jers~y 98, Wash ington 87
Kansas Col y 110, Utah a8
Port land 1~ 1 , L?sAngeles 103

M i lWaukee at Pfloent x

Two celebrate birthdays

CINCINNATI YOUTH - Three of the youngsters being counted on to
help this year's edition of the Cincinnati Reds were all smiling TueSday
during the club's annual caravan visit to Huntington. Red hopefulll are
left to right, lefty Charlie Leibrandt, Frank Pastore and Ron Oester.

Publishing firm purchases N.

Ohio Sportlight

•

By Mary Belb Obllz
Gary Fife's group, "Rampage," has been busy lately with a!&gt;"
•peanlllces around the county. On Wednesday, Janliary 16, they played the
Point Pleasant Inn, and on Jan. 18 and 19, they entertained the crowds at
the Green Gables T.avem In Kanauga. The band is going to perfonn at a
private party in Spencer this weekend. In the future, I will be posting aU
of their upcoming engagements.
Remember the Meigs County Jam 2 that never was? Well, rumors
have it that a cafe arolJDd the county is going to try to have some local
bands In for a jam. If the rumor is true, remember you beard it here first!

NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Mets, last-place finishers in
the National League East the past
three years, have been sold to a
group headed by the huge New York
publishing firm of Doubleday &amp; Co.
for a reported $21.1 million, a record
price!or a baseball team.
In a five-paragraph a nnouncement Thursday that ended a
two-month bidding war among as
many as 21 bidders, Doubleday said
it had purchased controlling interest
in the Mets. from the family of
Charles Shipman Payson, the
team's principal owner since the
franchise was awarded by the
National League in 1960. The Mets
began play two years later.
The announcement sa id
Doubleday would have two minority
partners - City Investing Co., a
diversified firm which was formed
in 1904, and Fred Wilpon, chainnan
of the board of Sterling Equities
Inc., a Manhasset, N.Y., real estate
firm .
The key men in the deal are
Nelson Doubleday, president of the
publishing company and a greatgrandnephew of 1-bner Doubleday,
credited in some quarters with inventing baseball in 1839, and John 0.
Pickett Jr., chainnan of the board of
the New York Islanders of the
National Hockey League.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ron
school my
season and
The sale must be approved by
Oester certainly hopes . there's a
part of my junior season." .
baseball's National League but that
parallel with his idol, Pete Rose.
The 6-foot-2, 100-pound Oester also • is expected to be a formality.
Rose, out of Cincinnati Western
spent his time last fall re-adapting to
The reported sale price of $21.1
Hills High School, won a starting job
second base in the Florida Inmillion far exceeded the $12 million
with the Cincinnati Reds 17 seasons
structional League.
paid last year in the sales of both the
ago as a 21-year-&lt;&gt;ld. Oester, 23, is
He said, " I played 25 games in the
Baltimore Orioles and Houston
confident he can duplicate the feat
instructional league and only made
Astros. Former New York Mayor
this spring.
one error at second base. On that
John V. Lindsay, spokesman for a
" This is the best opporunity I've
error the ball was hit right at me.
group that included the Twentieth
had. I 'll just have to show them I can
There was a runner on third base. I
Century-Fox Film Corp., said it was
hit major league pitching in the
looked up. I dropped the ball."
"incredible that anyone would pay
spring, " said the Cincinnatian Thurthat much."
This will be Oester's third trip to
sday night.
the Reds' spring training camp at
A Mets spokesman said the purOester, a graduate of Cincinnati
Tampa, but he says there is no comchase price would be announced at a
Withrow High School, isn't conparison with the first two trips.
press conference today, but added
ceding J·unior Kennedy anything as
"I went down in 1978 and 1979, both
that the $21.1 million figure was "not
Joe Morgan's replacement as the
far off."
times as a shortstop. It was just a
Cincinnati Rerls second baseman
good feeling being there. I didn't feel
In its announcement, Doubleday
this season.
I would make the major league club.
Morgan played out his option and" This year I know I'm going to make
American Association farm team in
failed to resign with the Reds. Kenit ~ it's just a question of whether
1979.
I'm going to start," he said.
nedy hit .273 and fielded well as the
"the first month all ijley threw at
oft-injured Morgan's replacement
"They (the Reds ) told me I have
me
was left-banders. I hit .150. It
last season.
as good as shot at second base as any
was
frustrating. So I switched back
Oester seems unconcerned about · body," said Oester, who hit .281 at
to
hitting
both ways. I finished .270
the switch from a minor league shorClass AAA Indianapolis last year. "I
as
a
right-handed
hitter, .290 as a
tstop to a major league second
don't expect them to give anything."
left-bander,"
he
said.
baseman.
One thing Oester does know : He
" It's really my natural position,"
will be hitting both ways in spring
training.
said Oester, part of the Reds' winter
caravan of four midwestern states.
The Reds unsucessfully persuaded
:·I was a second baseman in high
hirn to hit left-handed with their
'

•.

final year of a three year contract,
Chief Bender feels the Reds will
come to terms with the Denora. Pa.
native. When asked if Griffey would
be traded if no agreement was
reached Bender said he did riot think
so.
McNamara , who replaced the
popular Sparky Anderson last year,
must also find the right combination
at second base where Joe Morgan
has anchored the area since 1972.
Veteran infielder Junior Kennedy
who had an outstanding year as
Morgan 's chief replacement and
rookie Ron Oester are expected to
fight it out for the starting berth. Since Oester is a switchhitter he ahd
Kennedy may share the position.
The Cincy skipper who has many
complex problems to solve before
opening day did promise one thing,
to put the best lineup possible on the
field.
No mention was made of the
departed Morgan or last year's
defector Pete Rose.
Hume, Pastore, Oester, and
righthander Doug Bair, the Reds'
top reliver the past two years, all
believe the Reds have the material
to repeat as Western Division champs and to continue to be "The team
of the 80s just as they were the team
of the 70s".
Other issues touched upon during
the noon luncheon at the Holiday Inn
East were the current player
association negotiations and the
future catching situation when Johnny Bench retires.
The Reds are grooming Dave Van
Gorder, a former catcher at the
University of Southern California, as
Bench's replacement. Van Gorder,
in this third years as a professional
has been promoted to Indianapolis
this season after two years of Double
AA ball at Nashville.
Other club personnel making the
trip were publicity director Jim
Ferg uson ; Doug Beurman ,
traveling secretary ; Bill Brown,
television commentator; Marty
Brermarnan and Joe Nuxhall, radio
announcers; Jim Bermett and Eimer
Gray, scouts ; Gordy Coleman,
director of the Reds' speakers'
bureau; and Jim Lett, minor league
manager.

The Grapevine ...· •

Mrs. Wears honored
by layette shower

Enry oper•tor of • house tr•iler court or park or every owntr pf property used
for such purpose when there is no operator shJII keep a register of all house·
trailers which m~ke use of tht court , park , or property.

HOWARD E. FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR
MEIGS CC'UNTY, OHIO
.
~

'

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fr;day, Jan. 25. 1980

5-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 25, 1980

.

Western Division champs like farm · system
HUNTINGTON - Stresstng the
importance of a solid farm system
with a major thrust toward youth,
,the Cincinnati Reds, defending
Western Division champion, feel
that because of their young talented
players, the club will remain competitive for a long time.
This was emphas ized Thursday
during the organization's annual
caravan stopover here.
Speaking on behalf oC President
and General Manager Dick Wagner,
Sheldon · ( Chief) Bender, vicepresident for player personnel, said,
" We are turning to our farm system
a.s the answer for the future of the
Reds in the '80s. Even though we are
- going
through a transitiion period,
we
are
impressed with our youth,
'.· ..
because of this, we're going to be on

.... -

top.''

Bender then cited the acof pitchers Tommy
.. complishments
Hume, Frank Pastore, Charles
Lei brandt, Ron Oester, and other
future Reps, Paul HousehoL · ddie Milner, Bruce Beryeni and
others as primary reasons .for the
optmistic feelings.
Despite the lack of trades or
failure to sign any free agent talent,
. ' second year manager John Me. . Namara, the quiet leader of the
Reds, feels his club should be improved." We were plesed with last
year's performance but we are not
satisified. We want to return a World
.,_
championship to Riverfront
Stadium" .
On the trade issue, McNamara
said it is good to make deals when
you strengthen your club but we're
not going to trade a car for a pair of
roller skates.
'
When asked a bout his outfield
situation which hinges on the
healthy return of speedy Ken Griffey, the outstanding season that
Dave Collins had last year as a
" .
.:·.. replacement for Griffey and George
·..-•.. Foster and the additional help SUJ&gt;"
'
plied by newcomer Hector Cruz, Mc'
'
Namara said that all jobs will have
to be decided in spring training.
Mac"
also said Ceasar
Geronimo was still in the outfield
picture although his bat remains
suspect.
Even though Griffey is ending the

.

...

.. .

·

1

"FoD" is playing at the Point Pleasant Inn on Sunday, January 27.
With the group will be Kim Krautter, who will be debuling as their female
vocalist. Showtime is 8 p.m.
Are there any Stephen King fans out there? His new novel, "The
Stand," starts with lyrics from songs by Bruce Springsteen, Blue Oyster
Cult, and Bob Oylari. "The Stand" is soon to be made into a motion picture.
Speaking of Blue Oyster Cult, they bave a new album out titled
"MiiTors." The Cult's members like to play strange jokes, one of these is
on the Mirrors album. If you play Mirrors seven times slower than the
nonnal speed for an lp, you will clearly hear the Lord's Prayer.

HAND IT OVER - Tom Hume, left, best reliever for the Cincinnati
~ in 1979 appears to be ready to hand the ball or something over to
manager John McNanara. Both expressed optimism for another championship season in 1980 at Thursday's noon luncheon at the HoUday Inn in
Huntington. Dale Rothgeb, Jr., photo.

&amp; Co. said : " We believ ein New
York and we believe it is the communications and entertainment center of the world. We also feel this city
deserves the greatest team in the
world. 11
Doubleday and Co. had not been
mentioned recently as a contender
to buy the team but outbid the in~
vestment firm of Allen and Co.,
whose spokesman was Earl E. T.
Smith, former U.S. Ambassador to
Cuba and a close friend of Charles
Payson.

'•

.,

National
Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

National Hockeyi.eague
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
campbell conference

Eastern Conference

Patrick Division

Atlantic Division

W. L. Pel. GB
36 11 .766
36 12 .760 '/2
23 28 .451 15
20 27 .426 16

New Jersey
21 29 .420 161h
Central Division

At lanta

28 23 .549

Sa n Antonio

27

Detro1 t

13

Houston
Indiana
Cleve land

By

''•

The Smith group originally su~
mitted a bid of $14 million and reportedly went as high as $19.1million after •the Payson family set the
minimum price at $17 million.
Smith's group was given a chance to
match the Doubleday offer but droJ&gt;"
ped out of the bidding at that point.
" I'm sorry we didn't get it," Smith
said from his office in Palm Beach,
Fla. " We did not want to go as high
as $21 million. It's a long way from
$14 million to $21 million. Along the
way, we were twice told that we

Pro standings.
Philadel phia
Boston
New York
Washi ngton

24

.529

I

24 25 .490 3
22 26 .458 4'12
22 29 .431 6

37 .260 14 112
Western Conference
_M idwest Division

George Strode

Kansas C1tv
Molwaukee
Ch1 cago
Denver
Ut ah

32 21 .604
28 24 .538 3'12
17 31 .354 12 112
17 35 .327 14'12

16 36 .308 15112
Pacifi c Div is ion

Seattle
LosAngeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Portland
Golden State

37
35
32
27
25
15

13
16
1a
27
27
34

.740
.686 2'12
.640 5
500 12
.481 13
.306 21'12

Phil a.
NY Rangers
NY Isla nders
At lanta
Washington

w. L. T. Pts GF

31
23
22
19
12

3 12
19 a
17 6
21 6
27 7

74
54
50
44
31

13 23 10 36 15a 197
14 28 5 33 150 181
13 31 5 31 125 195

Buffalo

29 13 6 6.:1 180 133

Wales Conference
Adams Division

Boston
Minnesota
Quebec
Toronto

62
52
44
42

178
183
143
170

12a
138
157
187

21 17 8 so
18 18 11 47
17 2t 7 41
13 21 10 36
Thursday's Games
Boston 4 Buffalo 3

194
159
153
149

178
168
151
165

Montreal

Los Ang.
Pitts.
Detroit
Hartford

28
22
19
19

12
14
21
23

6
a
6
4

Norris Division
'
25 17 6 56 185 154

. Fnday s Games
Wash.ngton at Boston

Chicago at Atlanta
Ph iladelphia iii Winnipeg

Sa n D!ego at lndtana
Oetrott at. New Je~sev

Sa1urday 's Games
Quebec at Washington

Los Angeles 5, Toronto 4

Friday's Games

Kansas C1ty at Ch)cago
Sea ttle at Sa n A?fonio

Atlanta at Detroit
Los Angeles at Minnesota

New York at G61den State

Hartford at NY Islanders

Boston at P ittsburgh
Colorado at St . Loui s
Toronto at Edmonton
Sunday 's Games
s t. Louis at Winnipeg

Portland at Denver

Los Angeles at Buffalo

. Sunday's Games

San Otego a t Bosto~

New York at Detroot

Chtc:ago at New J e r~y

Atlanta at San Anton1o

Golden State at Washington
Cleveland at 1ndiana
P hiladelphi a at Phoen ix
Milwaukee a l Los Angeles

Y. Mets

were the high bidder. But y_ou reach
a point where it's not worth it."
After last Friday's deadline fo;
final bids, a money war took place
between the Doubleday and Smith
groups. The latter was believed to be
the front-rwmer because of Smith's
friendship with Payson. The two are
Florida neighbors.
Nelson Doubleday 1 and Pickett
also are neighboi'S in the New York
City suburb of Upper Brookville.
They reportedly \lid not have the
resources to buy the Mets without
corporate help, although Doubleday
has invested in the Islanders as an
individual and not for the publisbing
company.
Pickett, a private investor, has
been identified with Sterling
Equities Inc. He specializes in
buying interests in businesses and
restructuting and improving them.
He turned the Islanders from a
financially troubled franchise into a
profitable one.
. ·
After finishing last in the National
League in five of their first six years
and ninth in 1968, the Mets stunned
the baseball world by winning the
world championship in 1969 and the
National League pennant In 1973.
However, because of money
squabbles they traded away such'
players as Tom Seaver, Dave
Kingman and Rusty Staub and fell
on hard times both on the field and in
the stands. Attendance plwnmeted
from a high of 2,697,479 In 1970 to a
low of 788,000 last SIUIIIIler.
Indications were that the new
ownership would not include Mrs.
Lorinda deRoulet, the Mets' board
chainnan, or her daughters, Bebe
deRoulet, the team's assistant controller, and Mrs. Whitney de Roulet
Bullock, assistant director of public
relations.

"'"- ~,;,

The first birthday of Matthew
Blair Ault, son of Dennis and Carol
Ault was celebrated with a party on
Dec. 28.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Willi!Un Ault, Jason Bush, Kay,
Dluin and Kevin Logan, Sheila and
Jamie Reeves, Connie, Davey and
Chad Dodson. Visiting earlier in the
day were Janice Evans and Celesta
Bush, sons, Greg and Nick.
Sending gifts were Nancy and
Martin Broderick, Mildred Shuster
and Dorothy Douglas, Ryan and
Chelsie Dodson, Merri Ault and Bill
Quickie.
A train cake baked by Mrs. Ault,
and a Kermit, the Frog cake, gift of
his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Sheets,
were served by Mr. and Mrs. Ault
with ice cream and punch.

NY Islanders at Washington

Minnesota at Chicago

m .sm

Toronto at vancouver

Our experts special ize in the repair of
a ll makes and models of watches.

AND LOOK
LIKE NEW
A watc h that run s li ke new

should Iook the part . And

nothing does t he job better
t han a st ylis h watchband fro m
Sped ide I. Speidel - originator
ot famous Twist ·O·Fiex'IPJ wat·
chband construction . Just the
th ing to Qi'v'e new life to an old
watch .

.. thorized

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~In,

-CALL 992-2156
BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5 PM

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,__.a..-----.,----~_;.---·

Giles infant

Birth
announced

'

r

:

Cal~ndar

I·

SAnJRDAY
PUBLIC SPAGHETII supper at
Pomeroy Elementary School, 4:30 to
7:30 p.m. Saturday by PTA; $2,
adults; $1 children, entertainment.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.m.
David Gleason, Meigs Local School
District superintendent, will be lbe
speak,er. Refreshments will be served. Parents urged to support the
school through the PTA with their
attendance at the meeting.

B\" Charlene Hoeflich

'!~
~

1

SAVE YOUR R.C., NEttl, ~.PPER 10;· DIEJ RITE &amp;.

I

DAD'S. ROOT 'BEER BOffiE CAPS FOR CHARITY

l

R.· C. BOTTLI "G CO.

I

Middleport, Ohio

Mill Street

-

992·3342 or 992-3344
/

.

I .,

I

.

• • •

Features • • •

•

I

Next Friday Meigs County girl
scouts will begin taking orders for
girl scout cookies, the way most fwr
ding for scout programs is produced.
While the scouts will be taking
orders, they will not be collecting for
the cookies unW they are delivered
in March. Again this year the kinds
of cookies are samoas, peanut butter
sandwiches, shortbread, peanut butter l!Btties covered in chocolate,
vanilla and chocolate cremes,
granolas, and thin mints. The
cookies are $1.50 a box.
Theme for the cookies sale is ''The
Cookie Olympics are Corning."
Prizes will be awarded to cookie
sellers with posters to color to all
sellers, patches to all, super seller
patches to girls selling 80 or more
boxes, .beach tote hags to girls selling 200 or more boxes, and T-shirts
to girls selling 300 or more boxes.
For each box sold, the troop
treasury receives 20 cents. Council
profit on each box Is 71 cents and
that goes toward camp development
and service to troopil. Mrs. Pat
Thoma and Mrs. Pat Philson are the
cookie chainnen for Meigs County.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 11139
Work orl the. badges for backyard
fun and observer was continued at a
meeting of the Middleport Junior
Troop 1039 beld at the home of Mrs.
Joy Clark, leader.
As a part of their badge work, the
·scouts made sit-upons this week.
The cookie sale was discussed and
reports were given on the recent
candy sale. Mrs. Clark expressed
ber thanka to the parents lor helping
with the candy sale. Winner with top
sales was Crystal Manley with Penny Clark as runner-up.
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP
l2ZO
Meeting TueSday afternoon at the
Meigs High School, the Brownies
worked on a container for their
brownie pins. They made an
envelope put of brown construction
paper, laced the edges with orange
yarn, and wrote "My Brownie Pins"
on the front.
Games were played and
refreshments served by J ody
Taylor, Tracy Casto, and Joan Simpson.

FOUR GENERATIONS of the Smith family gathered recenUy at the..
home of Mrs. Bessie HCI,Idricks, Middleport, for this family picture. The
year-&lt;&gt;ld twins, Randy Scott, left, and Ricky Joe, are pictured with their
great-grandmother, Mrs. Neva Gary, Columbus, their gran!lmother,
Mrs. Hendricks, and their mother, Mrs. Terri Smith.

16th birthday noted
Wendy Elkins of Tuppers Plains
celebrated her 16th birthday recentlY with a party in the social room of
the St. Paul's United Methodist
Church.
The party was hosted by her aunt,
Dorothy Lance, and her mother,
Judy Elkins.
Punch, cake and ice cream were
served to Tina Beaver, Rob Smith,
Greg Cole, Lee Gainer, Mike
Hauber, Melissa Thomas, Scott Hill,
Renee · Trussell, Synthia White,
Pebles Blake, Pam Murphy, April
Parker, Beth Ritchie, Mike Bissell,

Lori Lance, Sheryl Bush, Velvet
Elkins, Robin and Dale WiHong, and
Pete Wilfong.

,f

c:;:__ _

MEIGS

f Po~eroy, 0 .

jt

Ph. 992-2176

Hour.: 8-5 Mon.-Fri.
1·12 Sat.
..
I
Closed Sunday
I International
New Idea '
J Harvester
..,_...Equipment .
1
1·

..._

______ .... ___

JANUARY CLEARANCE

ONE LOT
ACME
&amp;

ALL WINTER

COATS
DINGO
&amp;.
VESTS BOOTS
20% OFF.30% OFF
'

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main

Pomeory, 0 .
THE STORE WITH 'ALL KINOS OF STUFF" - FOR
PETS , STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS~
LAWNS AND GARDENS .
992-2164

'

Revised Code Sections 4503 .06 and 4503.061 as amend ed by
Sub. H.B. No . 330 and Effective August 26, 1969
COMPUTED AND

ASSESSED BY -

•

,

PAYABLE AT-

TAX DUE
AND PAYABLE-

Cou"ty

Trusur~r · s

Office . Court House

When a house trailer has a situs In this state, as provided In tills section, on the
1st day·ot Janu•ry the full•mount of the pro rate t•x Is due and payable on or

before the 31stdoy of January, lfiO.

Wt.en ' hoyst trailer atqwirts a 5i lws in thi t stat e u provide d in this \ect ion , afte r
the f\ut day of Janua ry and on or .prior to the 3ht day of Dtctm b @r , the full
amo~o~nt o' the AfO flfa tax it d~o~e and ptyable immed iately upon the .. p irttlo n of
a 30 do~y period commencing witt! the date the situ" it uquired .

•

PENALTY -

If the pay"'ent of the tax is not made as provided obove a penalty of five dollars
or ten percent of the toxes due, whichever is greater, shall be imposed and

collected in addition to the tax due and owing.

DELINQUENT
TAXES -

RESPONSIBILITY
OF HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER-'- ·

The Co1.1nt! ~reuurer, in Jddition ~o ~ny other re,.,cdy pr~llidcd bv law for
the collection of faxes ~nd pen.alttes, shall enforce' colltctton of such taxes
and penalties by c iYil action in the name of such truuucr •tcainst the owner
for the U!COllery of the unpaid taus .

All ownen o f hous-. trailtrt having a situs in the State of Ohio and 1ubjed to the
tax 11 provided .1 bove MUST reg itltr such tra iler w1th !he County Auditor on ar
prior · to the dale the tu it due and payeble .
No person who it the owner of e tlowse trailer and wtlo is requ ired to regit ter •
house trailer thall hil lo d itplay on !he front of such tfailtf t~e certifiule or " Decal"
iteued by the County Tttuurer.

JIMDINE

CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -"Jim

Dine's. Etching," a retrospective
e:dlibltion rJ. more than 100 prints by
tbe Cincinnati-born artl8t, iii on view
at the Cincinnati Art .Museum

thr01J8b Dec. 31.
~ · 'lbe Qluseum says tbe . exbil!lt
1pa111 a 17"fear period frol'n 1981 to

lf18 and m~amlnes the hlatory of
Dlrie's work In drypolnt, engraving

~etcbktg.

year . Howe ~tor , if the m i, irnum lo x Df thirty. six dalton is applir ablo too kouse traile-r not

c:omm"nting with the dote of oc:quitition or entrtmce into this stat• .

Seed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil (Lynda) Giles,
Albany, are announcing the birth of
a son, Neil Desmond, born on Dec. 12
at O'Bleness Hospitlll, Athens. He 1
weighed 10 pounds, three ounces and I
was 221ncbes long.
Matemai grandparents are Mr, ·
and Mrs. Donald Bockhorst of
McHenry, m. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mnl. Clair
Giles, Pomeroy, and Samuel Hart of · '
Springfield ill a great-grandfather. · ·

County Auditor b y multiplying ttl• on• nobl e- .va lu e of the hou 'e trmi ler by the to• rote of
th !l ltning d inri(l in whilh the houu tr ailer has ill titus . rn. minimum tax is $.36.00 pe r

loc:o led in this state on the fint day of January, the lo ll it determined by mUlt iplying thr••
doltun by the numbrr of full montln remaining to the following thirty·fint of Dec:emb er

jimmy Warner

OPERATOR ·OF

A HOUSE TRAILER

'
.
.
Seeds • Bird $eeds - Oyster Shells and Grit - Fertilizers - Lime - Ce·

..

COURT-

ment &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt -·water Softener • Remedies -;Salt - Liters · :vaccine - Roofing - Paints•- Ract Brand Fenc:lnt - Baler and Binder
Twine . Sprays · Gates.

·' SUGAR RUN _MILLS
Mulberry :Ave.

Pomeroy

___

:...,_

-

t
J'
=J

1 EQUIPMENT CO.

HOUSE TRA.ILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE

I

'

Dealer

~&lt;:»"

'Q'Jnel~
212 E.
Pomeroy

PAPER .CARRIER
NEEDED. IN THE
POMEROY AND
"MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY ,SENTINEL

Social

Clubs

: Girl Scout Diary 1

Awards were presented when Boy
Scout Troop 249, Pomeroy, rnet in
regular session Wednesday evening.
Mike stone received his second
class award; Dewey Autherson
received communications and
physical fitness award; Adam Martin, Hiking and skill awards; Ray
Tryall, Bill Weaver and Tim
Ohlinger received scout awards.
Discussions were held on attending Muskingurn Boy Scout
Camp, the Scout-A-Rama in March
and campout at Kiashuta Feb. 1, 2,
and 3. Saturday the scouts will .be
parking cars at Meigs High for the
wrestling match on Saturday night.
The troop is selling toboggans in
high school colors and NFL and AFL
colors.
Attending were John Morris,
Melvin VanMeter, Mike H.atf!eld,
Chad Wjlliams, Matty Demoss, Jack
Braley, Craig Bo!fu, Danny Davis,
Andy H.awk, Jeff Hawk, BUJy
Colmer, Terry Snowden, Greg
Thomas, Adam Martin, Joe Fields,
Timmy Cohner, Larry Parson, Ray
Tryall, Mike Sinun, Mike Stone,
Dewey Autherson, John Bacon and
Allen Terry, scouts.
Adults attending were Ray
Laudermilt, Sheryl Laudermilt, Dan
Thomas, Bob Anns, Chad Ohlinger,
Bill Simrn, Darmy Will, and Bob
Workman, head chemist at Foote
Mineral.

r---

Community .•.

mints, and soft drinks were served
to Ellen WPars, Nina Rupe, Mary
Doerfer, Pat Elliott, Becky Meaige
and Crystal, Jeannette Mas, Jenevie
Jones, Lavina Meaige, Sue Sigman,
Janet Norris, Cindy Casto and
daughters , Wilma Weimann, Gail
Sisson, Starr Spires, Audrey Bradbury, Cora Rupe, Mary Sisson,
Melissa and Sununer Darst, Annabelle Sisson, Beverly Spires, Patsy Spires, and Rita White.
Sending gifts were Muriel Spires
Betty Stewart, Inna Bales Paulin~
Rife, Christine Napier, ' Rhonda
Markin, Ginny Halley, and Bonnie
' Wears.

,-----------------1

Awards presented
to boy scouts

Jimmy Warner, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James D. Warner, Syracuse,
recently celebrated his fourth birthday at the home of his aunt and uncle, Nancy and David Reed,
Pomeroy.
A Spidennan theme was carried
out for the party, with cake and ice
cream being served. Gifts wree
presented to the hOnored gueat. Attending were Nancy, David and Jennifer Reed, Shirley Ash, John Ash,
and Jamey Ash, Pomeroy; Jim,
Jeanne, and Jacey Waggoner and
Mary Lou Waggoner, Sandyville.
Sending gifts were his grandparents,
Pearl Ash, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Bonnie Conde, Ripley, W.Va.

Detroit at Quebec

NY Rangers at Colorado

Matthew Shane Evans, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Evans, Portland,
celebrated his second birthday
Saturday with a party at his home.
Attending were Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Matthew's grandmother, Mr.
and Mrs: Phil Ohlinger and Laura,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sisson
and Nate, Pomeroy; Mrs. Frankie
Hunnel and Artie, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Warth, David,
Darrin, and Amy, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Evans and Megan,
Harrisonville; Mrs. Jean Fitch,
Mrs. · Keith Fitch, Jason and
Nicholas, Portland; Mr. and Mrs.
H.arold Van Meter and grandson
Greg, Columbus; Leota Birch,
Portland; and Matthew's brother
and sister, Ryan and Cindy Evans.
Sending a gift was his grandmother,
Mrs. Bernice Evans, Gallipolis.-

Mrs. Daryl Wears, the former
Diana Spires, was honored with a
layet!P. shower at the Kyger lodge
hallonJan. 17.
Hostesses were Mrs. Beverly
Spires and Mrs. Sue Sigman. THe
gift table and refreshment table
were decorated in the traditional
pink and blue. Games were played
with prizes gong to Audrey Bradbury, Lavina Meaige and Rita
White. The door prize was awarded
to Annabe.lle Sisson.
Mter Mrs. Wears opened her gifts,
refreshment of cake, decorated by
Mrs. Patsy Spires, potato chips,

Life Style

Tumsfour years

Pittsburgh at Boston

. Philadelphia at Edmonton

Matthew Evans

Maithew Ault

ATTENTION:

WE'LL MAKE YOUR WATCH
RUN LIKE NEW

.. . J

Buffalo at Montreal

Phlladelph ta at Los Ange les
.
Saturday's Games
Cht~ago a t Atlan ta
ln dta na at C leve land
Sea1tle at Hou sto~

,

136
179
145
160
179

Edmonton
Colorado
Winnipeg

Montrea'l 7 Hartford 2
Colorado 4; P ittsburgh 1

Utah at Kansas C•tv

195
192
162
154
144

GA '

Smythe Division
~hicago
18 18 12 48 130 146
Sl. Louis
19 21 7 45 145 154
vancouver
15 25 8 38 151 169

Thursday's Games
New Jers~y 98, Wash ington 87
Kansas Col y 110, Utah a8
Port land 1~ 1 , L?sAngeles 103

M i lWaukee at Pfloent x

Two celebrate birthdays

CINCINNATI YOUTH - Three of the youngsters being counted on to
help this year's edition of the Cincinnati Reds were all smiling TueSday
during the club's annual caravan visit to Huntington. Red hopefulll are
left to right, lefty Charlie Leibrandt, Frank Pastore and Ron Oester.

Publishing firm purchases N.

Ohio Sportlight

•

By Mary Belb Obllz
Gary Fife's group, "Rampage," has been busy lately with a!&gt;"
•peanlllces around the county. On Wednesday, Janliary 16, they played the
Point Pleasant Inn, and on Jan. 18 and 19, they entertained the crowds at
the Green Gables T.avem In Kanauga. The band is going to perfonn at a
private party in Spencer this weekend. In the future, I will be posting aU
of their upcoming engagements.
Remember the Meigs County Jam 2 that never was? Well, rumors
have it that a cafe arolJDd the county is going to try to have some local
bands In for a jam. If the rumor is true, remember you beard it here first!

NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Mets, last-place finishers in
the National League East the past
three years, have been sold to a
group headed by the huge New York
publishing firm of Doubleday &amp; Co.
for a reported $21.1 million, a record
price!or a baseball team.
In a five-paragraph a nnouncement Thursday that ended a
two-month bidding war among as
many as 21 bidders, Doubleday said
it had purchased controlling interest
in the Mets. from the family of
Charles Shipman Payson, the
team's principal owner since the
franchise was awarded by the
National League in 1960. The Mets
began play two years later.
The announcement sa id
Doubleday would have two minority
partners - City Investing Co., a
diversified firm which was formed
in 1904, and Fred Wilpon, chainnan
of the board of Sterling Equities
Inc., a Manhasset, N.Y., real estate
firm .
The key men in the deal are
Nelson Doubleday, president of the
publishing company and a greatgrandnephew of 1-bner Doubleday,
credited in some quarters with inventing baseball in 1839, and John 0.
Pickett Jr., chainnan of the board of
the New York Islanders of the
National Hockey League.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ron
school my
season and
The sale must be approved by
Oester certainly hopes . there's a
part of my junior season." .
baseball's National League but that
parallel with his idol, Pete Rose.
The 6-foot-2, 100-pound Oester also • is expected to be a formality.
Rose, out of Cincinnati Western
spent his time last fall re-adapting to
The reported sale price of $21.1
Hills High School, won a starting job
second base in the Florida Inmillion far exceeded the $12 million
with the Cincinnati Reds 17 seasons
structional League.
paid last year in the sales of both the
ago as a 21-year-&lt;&gt;ld. Oester, 23, is
He said, " I played 25 games in the
Baltimore Orioles and Houston
confident he can duplicate the feat
instructional league and only made
Astros. Former New York Mayor
this spring.
one error at second base. On that
John V. Lindsay, spokesman for a
" This is the best opporunity I've
error the ball was hit right at me.
group that included the Twentieth
had. I 'll just have to show them I can
There was a runner on third base. I
Century-Fox Film Corp., said it was
hit major league pitching in the
looked up. I dropped the ball."
"incredible that anyone would pay
spring, " said the Cincinnatian Thurthat much."
This will be Oester's third trip to
sday night.
the Reds' spring training camp at
A Mets spokesman said the purOester, a graduate of Cincinnati
Tampa, but he says there is no comchase price would be announced at a
Withrow High School, isn't conparison with the first two trips.
press conference today, but added
ceding J·unior Kennedy anything as
"I went down in 1978 and 1979, both
that the $21.1 million figure was "not
Joe Morgan's replacement as the
far off."
times as a shortstop. It was just a
Cincinnati Rerls second baseman
good feeling being there. I didn't feel
In its announcement, Doubleday
this season.
I would make the major league club.
Morgan played out his option and" This year I know I'm going to make
American Association farm team in
failed to resign with the Reds. Kenit ~ it's just a question of whether
1979.
I'm going to start," he said.
nedy hit .273 and fielded well as the
"the first month all ijley threw at
oft-injured Morgan's replacement
"They (the Reds ) told me I have
me
was left-banders. I hit .150. It
last season.
as good as shot at second base as any
was
frustrating. So I switched back
Oester seems unconcerned about · body," said Oester, who hit .281 at
to
hitting
both ways. I finished .270
the switch from a minor league shorClass AAA Indianapolis last year. "I
as
a
right-handed
hitter, .290 as a
tstop to a major league second
don't expect them to give anything."
left-bander,"
he
said.
baseman.
One thing Oester does know : He
" It's really my natural position,"
will be hitting both ways in spring
training.
said Oester, part of the Reds' winter
caravan of four midwestern states.
The Reds unsucessfully persuaded
:·I was a second baseman in high
hirn to hit left-handed with their
'

•.

final year of a three year contract,
Chief Bender feels the Reds will
come to terms with the Denora. Pa.
native. When asked if Griffey would
be traded if no agreement was
reached Bender said he did riot think
so.
McNamara , who replaced the
popular Sparky Anderson last year,
must also find the right combination
at second base where Joe Morgan
has anchored the area since 1972.
Veteran infielder Junior Kennedy
who had an outstanding year as
Morgan 's chief replacement and
rookie Ron Oester are expected to
fight it out for the starting berth. Since Oester is a switchhitter he ahd
Kennedy may share the position.
The Cincy skipper who has many
complex problems to solve before
opening day did promise one thing,
to put the best lineup possible on the
field.
No mention was made of the
departed Morgan or last year's
defector Pete Rose.
Hume, Pastore, Oester, and
righthander Doug Bair, the Reds'
top reliver the past two years, all
believe the Reds have the material
to repeat as Western Division champs and to continue to be "The team
of the 80s just as they were the team
of the 70s".
Other issues touched upon during
the noon luncheon at the Holiday Inn
East were the current player
association negotiations and the
future catching situation when Johnny Bench retires.
The Reds are grooming Dave Van
Gorder, a former catcher at the
University of Southern California, as
Bench's replacement. Van Gorder,
in this third years as a professional
has been promoted to Indianapolis
this season after two years of Double
AA ball at Nashville.
Other club personnel making the
trip were publicity director Jim
Ferg uson ; Doug Beurman ,
traveling secretary ; Bill Brown,
television commentator; Marty
Brermarnan and Joe Nuxhall, radio
announcers; Jim Bermett and Eimer
Gray, scouts ; Gordy Coleman,
director of the Reds' speakers'
bureau; and Jim Lett, minor league
manager.

The Grapevine ...· •

Mrs. Wears honored
by layette shower

Enry oper•tor of • house tr•iler court or park or every owntr pf property used
for such purpose when there is no operator shJII keep a register of all house·
trailers which m~ke use of tht court , park , or property.

HOWARD E. FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR
MEIGS CC'UNTY, OHIO
.
~

'

�&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan . 25, !980

New officers chosen
at annual meeting
New officel'll were elected at the annual congregational meeting of the
Middleport First Baptist Church.
'They include Darla Thomas, church clerk with Joan Hays as assistant;
Alwilda Werner, church treasurer, Norma Wilcox, assistant; Dorothy
Anthony, church organist, Janice Gibbs, assistant; Randy Hays, church
school superintendent with Dan Riggs, ass(stant ; Sarah Fowler, church
school secretary and treasurer with Norma Wilcox, assistant; and
Kathleen Anthony, church missions treasurer with Dreama Hudson,
assistant.
Named to the various board of the church were K.atheryn Metzger, Sue
Metzger, Nadine Barton, Adell White, Jerry Pullen and Dan Riggs, Board
of Christian Education; Bob Campbell, Gene Hudson, Kenneth Imboden,
Lacy Barton, Robert Lewis, Robert Parker, Gene Kauff, Manning Kloes,
and John Werner, board of deacons; Debbie Cleland, Cathy Riggs,
Dreama Hudson, Ancil VanMatre, Corine Ambrose , and Janice Daniels,
board of deaconesses.
Willis Anthony, Mary Brewer, Fred Klein, June Kloes, Russell Mills,
Dan White, Edison Baker, Clifford Hayes, and Edna Wilson, board of
turstees; Kathleen Anthony, Willis Anthony, and Frances Smart, trus~s
to the Rio Grande Association; Gerald Anthony, Carrol Cleland, Berruce
Baker, Harold Chase, Tom Dal'lltand Frances Smith, finance committee.
Elected ushel'll for one year tenns were Gerald Anthony, Joe Anthony,
Willis Anthony, Edison Baker, Lacy Barton, Clarence Boyles, Bob Campbell, Harold Chase, Carrol Cleland, Da:nd Darst, Tony Fowler, Randy
Hays, Clifford Hayes, Fred Hoffman, Milton Hood, Fred Klem, Mannmg
Kloes, Gene Hudson, Kenneth Imboden, Asa Jordan, Robert LeWIS,
Russell Mills, Rob Parker, John Riebel, Dan Riggs, John Werner, and
Don Wilson.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Bugs

get in the pantry

· DEAR POLLY- Just lately I have
had trouble with bugs getting into
my flour, com muffin mix and other
foods, even cookies. I have had to
throw away nearly all the food I kept
in my pantry and wonder what I can
do to get rid of the bugs as I have
never had this trouble before.
I have sprayed bug killer on the
shelves and even put the bags and
boxes of food in those locked or zippered bags, but they still get in. MRS.L.S.
DEAR MRS. L.S. - Open all such
new packages and if there are no
bugs add a few bay leaves to each
package and then tightly close it
again. This has always worked for
me even in hot, dry desert climate.
When bugs are discovered in a new
package take it back to the store
where you bought it. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Some time ago I
was forced to throw a way many
dollars worth of food due to weevils.
A friend suggested that I hang one of
th011e bug strips in the cabinet with
the food. I hang a new one each spring and then another each fall and
have had no bug trouble in four
years. -MRS. G.H.
DEAR POLLY - Sometimes I
need to make an urgent phone call
on a pay phone but do not have a
dime. I solved this by taping a dime
or two to the back of my address
book near emergency phone
numbers. -JUDY
' DEAR POLLY- When I am out of
silver polish I find a littl~ baking
soda on a damp sponge works just
fine. -MARGARET
DEAR POLLY - Lemons that
have hardened from long standing
can be fresheded by putting them in

boiling water to cover and letting
them siand for a few moments. M.J .
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippel'll if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column.
Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Super Bowl gets super ratitigs
NEW YORK (AP i - CBS out- SWJday evening watched the Super
scored the opposition with Super Bowl game between Pittsburgh and
Bowl XIV and the post-game show, Los Angeles, which began at 6 p.m.
then went on to win the networks' EST, an hour ahead of the start c:t
prime-time ratings race for the fifth prime-time. More than half stuck
week in a row, according to figures• aroun~ for the post-game show and
from the A. C. Nielsen Co.. .
" 60 Minutes," which followed.
CBS' triumph in the week ending
The rating for the game was 41i.3.
Jan. 20, though by a narrow margin, Nielsen says that means of all the
pulled the netw.ork even with ABC homes in the country with television,
for the season to date.
41i.3 percent watched at least part of
Tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of the TV audience the game.
CBS had six of the week's 10 .
highest-rated progrllffiB, and compiled a rating of 22.5. ABC was
second
at 20.2, and NBC third at 16.2.
lh lklo·n a nd~ .. ,. IIHth'l

Gem•ration Rap

WILL ASPANKING REFORM

LAZV, TV ADDICT BRIDE?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My new wife, Donna, has to be the
laziest woman on earth.
I get nothing but frozen TV dinners
and not even on time. Donna doesn't
work outside. All she does is watch
TV, go to bingo and shop for clothes.
The hamper is loaded with dirty
clothes; there must be a half-inch of
dust on the furniture. I've been having this problem for two months.
Today I came home to find dishes
still in the sink from breakfast
(which I fixed myself) and Donna
gabbing on the phone. I was furious
and the battle started. I slaffimed
down the receiver, she shouted at
me like a spoiled brat, then started
throwing dirty dishes which I dodged and they broke against the wall. I
said if she threw one more I'd spank
her, and she yelled, ''I dare you, you
:.___!"And threw it.
Well, I turned her over my knee
and spanked her soWJdly. She locked
herself in the bedroom, crying. It's
now II p.m. and she won't let me in,
not even to get my clothes for tomorrow. I'm tempted to break down the
door and give her an instant replay,
this time using the hairbrush.
Did I do right? Don't you thl'Mt
Donna deserved what she got' WIFESPANKER
DEARW.S.:
A small child might deserve a
spanking when she throws dishes,
and sirice Donna acted like one well, I wouldn't exactly call this wife
abuse. But- there are better ways.
Forget the hairbrush and try for
adult talks. If Donna never learned
to cook, clean or think of others at
home, she needs guidance more than
punishment. -H.
P.S. Okay, you few with long
memories: I well remember giving
a quite different answer to a similar
"spoiled wife" question some 20
years ago. I then applauded the
spanking husband and predicted his
bride would shape up now she realized he wouldn't take it any more.
Which she did, he wrote me later. So,
too, may Donna. -H. ·

BROTHERS TAKE PART
IN ARMY EXERCISE
FORT KNOX, Ky.- Two brothers
from Middleport, Spec. 4 Larry E.
and Pvt. Carroll R. Nelson, sons ci
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Nelson, 655
Sycamore St., are participating in ·
"Empire Glacier 80," an annual
joint readiness exercise at Fort
Drum,N. Y.
Empire Glacier will pro:nde a
simulated combat envirorunent for
participating units and is designed
to exercise and evaluate Army and
Air Force active and reserve component commandel'l!, staffs and forces in joint tactics, techniques, and
procedures.
The exercise will pro:nde a full
spectrum of conventional and unconventional warfare operations. It
DEAR HELEN:
pro:ndes cold weather training for
Our mother, 83, widowed, not
participating units In joint military
senile, has worn out her oldest
operations and logistics support.
daughter (me) and is now working
National Guard units will also take
her magic on the youngest one. This
part in the exercise.
woman has never learned that
Both are drivel'l! assigned to the
clutching ain't touching. She is a
a4th Infantry at Fort Knox, Ky.
barracuda who has always figured
Larry entered the Army in
she owns her children lock, stock
February, 1974. He is a 1971
and barrel. She brutally denied us
graduate of Meigs High &amp;hool,
the opportunity .to grow up, so
Pomeroy.
_ naturally, we left home at the
Carroll entered the Army in April,
earliest possible moment to escape
1979. He is a Hm graduate of Meigs
the unconditional obeisance she
High&amp;hool.
demanded: third-degrees, accompa-

Spagbetti supper set
The Pomeroy PI'A will serve a
spaghetti dinner Saturday evening at
the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Serving will begin at 4:30 and will
continue until 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $2
for adults and $1 for children and are
available either in advance or at the
door. The meal will include spaghetti,
bread, salad, and beverage. Dessert
will be sold for 25 cents extra as will
soft drinks.
Entertainment will be pro:nded by
the Senior Citizens kitchen band with
Mrs. Margaret Neuman at the piano.
Members of the band are Charles and
Esta David, Loretta Beegle, Ruth and
Kermit McElroy, Frances King,
Dean and Thora Blackwood, Alecia
Worner, Garnet Eme, Bertha
Robinson, Mae Weber, and Lillian
Napper.
There will also be blue grass and
country music provided by Darrell
and Carol Taylor, banjo and fiddle,
and Harry Clark, also on the banjo.
The square dancers will also be
presented during the evening.
nying us on dates, censored mail,
eavesdropping.
It took us a long time to settle
down, but now we've established
good homes with fine husbands.
Mother has never changed. She
can't live alone because of physical
infirmities, and her daughters are
stuck with her. She bosses, snoops,
criticizes, belittles, and when we
talk back, we're "monsters who
never loved her," and she weeps
with self-pity.
She can be warm, cheerful and
considerate to her friends; but she
takes off tile costume the minute
they're out of sight.
An adequate nursing home is out.
We can't afford one. Is there any
help for us? - ALMOST AT THE
ENDOFOURROPE
DEARAATEOOR:
All your lives you have either
given in to or escaped from an overpowering mother, but you avoided
"talking back' ' first through fear
and now because she makes you feel
guilty. In other words, you've never
grown up where she is concerned.
So start growling! Lay down
ground rules on meddling,
bossiness, WJcalled for criticism,
and have your husbands help enforce them. Tell your mother kindly
but firmly that in your houses,
things are done your way- and keep
reminding her, never mind the self·
pity she uses to keep you "children."
If she's too old for change try my
old stand-by - smile and go deaf:
When she belittles or bullies, pretend not to hear and change the subject... or simply walk away.- H.

The networks say that meaD9 in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 22.5 percent of the homes
in the county with television were
watc~CBS.

For the season to date, both CBS
and ABC have ratings rl 19.4 to
NBC's 17.7. The networks calculate
weekly and seasonal averages, and
though CBS and NBC call It a tie,
ABC maintains it still has the lead,
19.4 to 19.2forCBS and17.5 for NBC.
·Several programs introduced since the first of the year showed signB .
of promise. CBS' "House Calls" was
No. 13 in the ratings, and ABC's
"One in a Mlillon" finished 24th.
"Knots Landing," a companion of
sorts to CBS' popular "Dallaa," was
No. 30 in the ratings, and NBC's
"Skag" finished right behind.
It was nat a particularly good
week for specials. NBC's recently
condemned "Shirley" was No. 60,
followed by "The Adventurell of thf
Wilderness Family" on ABC; NBC'b
11
Prime Time Saturday;" a rMvie,
"The Late Show,'' on NBC; and
CBS' "Beatrice Arthur Special."
Here are the week's 10 highest
rated shows:
Superbowl XIV, with a rating of
41i.3 representing 35.3 million homes,
Superbowl XIV post-game, 35.7 or
'!1.2 million, and "60 Minutes," 33.2

Busy Bee Class meets
Members of the Busy Bee ClMII of

the Middleport First Baptist Church
meeting Thursday night at the
church voted to retain the current of·
ficers for 1980.
They are Mrs. Mary Brewer,
president; Mrs. Nelle Werner, vice
president; Mrs. Rosemary Lyons,
secretary; Mrs. Ulllan Demoskey,
assistant secretary; Mrs. Freda Edwards, treasurer; Mrs. Eva
Hartley, cards and flowers. Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis will continue
as SWJday school teacher and named
to the committee to serve dinners to
bereaved families were Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Lyons, Mrs.
Edwarda, Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs.
Werner, Mrs. Clarabelle Riley, and
Mrs. Brewer.
Cards were signed for Lacey Barton, Cora Pullen, Nora Mills, and
Freddie Houda.shelt. New yearbooks
were made out, and the hostesses,
Mrs. Werner, Thelma Hayes and
Mrs. Brewer served a salad COU!'lle.

In a 1936 Stanley Cup game,
Detroit defeated the Montreal
Maroo1111,1~. in six overtime periods
with the total playing time, 176
minutes and 30 seconds.

JANUARY

1976 CHEVffiE.. ........................... __ ...S2495
Club cab, auto., power and air .

1976 FORD F-100 ...... _... _... _,_,.,. ... _.. _.. _......... --'1995
Aufo., P.S., P.B.

1973 CHE~ C-10 ............................ _..... _. ___ ... 11195
•; , Ton long bed. aufo., P.S., P.B.

SATURDAY NIGHT AT 7:30
AT MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
FEATURING ••BANOO EXHIBITION"
Dave

Oil~

ABC Sportscaster, will be present

to award trophies to the winners.

1974 FORD STA. WAGON ................................. "595
1975 CHEV. VEGA STA. WAGON-............ ~.':~!;·.~~.: '595
1970 MERCURY ....................~~~s.~~:~~~.g:~~~·••• '195

1968 CADIUAC .......... .................................... '150

TICKETS ON SALE AT THE GATE!
SPONSORED BY MEIGS CO. JAYCEES

the day before publication
S......y
&lt;P.M.

Friday af~moon

Notices
GUN SHOOT EVERY
5.\.INDAY I PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GUN SHO'OT . Racine
Vplunteer Fire Dept .
!:very Saturday. 6:30p.m.
At ,their buildingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.

DOXOL SERVICE

antiques

and collec·

614·

coins, r ings, jewelry, etc.

RIDENOUR'S

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
2ND SEMESTER classes

GAia S!;'RV.ICE

in ballet, tap and jazz now

open. Classes ottered are
pre -school, ba llet, tap,

Racine, 0 .

jazz, and adult exercise
i~4:Z cl~sses. Cal l Shirley
Carpenter, Carpenter's

s.ance

1974

ios CUT. SUP. CPE............................... 1695 .
1

1975 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED.............................. 11595

mi leage, good condition,
auto., good tires. $1100 . 742·
2927 .

GET VALUABLE !raining
as a young business person
and earn gOod monev plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on

1967 FORD Pickup, 6 cyl.,
3·speed, $500. 1975 Olds

Starfire V·6, 4 speed, $900.

992 ·6323 after 6.

the eligibility list at 992·
21S6or992·2157 .
live

in

auto., P.S., posi -traction,

elderly lady. 6 days per
week . Call 304-882·2393.
Lady is ambulatory · lives
in Middleport, OH . No
heavy work required.

now

taking

.

Studio, 9~9 · 2710
~efore January 301h.

""
••
•INCOME

TAX service,
1federal and State. Wallace
~ussell,
Bradbury . 992·

;rna.

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

:FIEAR ING AID USERS:

&lt;Save used batteries, mer·

;tury and silver o&gt;&lt;ide,
adeem for cash. Diles
~earing
Aid
Center,
~thens.

Tel . 614·590571.

:
Help Wanted
A.\OTORIST
Insurance
~mpanies

have an op·

•e
!,t&gt;ance to build and OWN

j;i)rtuity waiting for you in
insurance market, a

¥Our

busineSs.

Establish

ze&gt;ur agency on a part time

ar full time basis. No prior

I?&lt;P"rlence-. required. we

1rovlde

training,

you

!"ovlde ambition. Call, or
rf'rlte ~

Don

Weidner ,

!District
Marketing
anager, PO Box 416,
thens, OH 45701 . Phone
2-5748.

ECRETAR IAL·CLE RIC ·
L job opening at· local
:Jluslness. Initially part·

f~me:

may develop into

ull-llme. Typing protlcien·
required, .some
t!!ookkeeping experience
~elpful.
Send complete

:l: v

~

sume

with

1969 Tl-l ,t.., VEL ALL 4x&lt;t,
$900 Hometite generator,
like new, $700 . 992 ·3847.

ONE 125,000 BTU Baird

propane gas. like new, un ·
damaged furnace complete
with all register and ducts.
Buyer to dismangte . Best

offer, 985·3862

JUST rece ived a shipment
ot figurines, owl jewelry ,
ow/lamps, brass items and
many other items. Open 6
days a week. S&amp;E , Gift

Shop, Syracuse, DH .
running

good

condition.

S125. Call985·4276.

985·3554 .

truck, 318 engine. Phone

DECORATED CAKES for
all occasions. Character '
cakes and sheet cakes. Call

992·6342 or 992·2583.
1979 FORD Pickup F·l50
Ranger,

automatic,

low

miles, 9243 miles, radio,

like new, nice topper, large

Pomeroy. Large Jots.Call
992·7479 .

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 10" on largesf
end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Dl!livered
fo Ohio Pallet Co .• Rf . 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689.

miles south of Tuppers
Plains, CR .46, 11h miles.
William Connolly . Phone

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
fs. Phone 992 5434.

667·3536.

ROOM AND BOARD. laun·

chainsaw, 6 cyl . Chevy II

dry.

L1 KE NEW 24" Homelite

Elderly or working . motor . 949·2428.

men. 992·-6022 .
RESTER 'S assistant for
Senior Citizens in Village

boxes,

brass

beds,

ice
iron

APT. FOR RENT, $150 plus
deposit. 992·6130.

beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M.D.

Miller . Rt .

~.

ca ll992·7760.

Pomeroy or

FOUR

apt .

in

992·2429.

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass. china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney,

ROOM

Ra cine. Phone 992 ·2838 or

antiques,

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

26 N.

2nd, Middleport. DH . 992·
3161.

recom -

endatlons to The Dally
entlnel, c-o P.O. Box 729
~·Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

LAFF- A- DAY

ches, class rings, wedding

bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, DH. 592·
6462.

MARTIN 'S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about .

good condition,

silver and other old coins,

acres, small barn, small
house,
needs some

household.

WON'T LAST LONG AT
$30,500.00.
NEW LISTING - 3

Gold,

repairs .
ONLY
$7,000.00.
NEW LI~TIIIIG - 2
story hom;(\• ~· omeroy ,

iron banks, too ls, antique

razors.

pockef

knives and other old items.

Caii99H370.

up to ~,_ddrms .,
carpetiny, paneling .

WILL PAY TOP dollar for

CHEAP at $7,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Ranch with lull base·

gold and si lver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
gl;&lt;~ss frames and antique
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household. · Call

ment,

1

acre,

needs

some repairs. ONLY
$11,500.00.
NEW LISTING

992'6370.

Mobile home like new,
located near fT''nes, on

st. Rt., tu'&lt;.n,\.\) shed, 1
c. -::JV water,
storage bldg., cement
drive, EXCELLENT AT
$13,500.00.
NEW LISTING

ALL GOLD AND SILVER
CO INS OF THE WORLD.
ALSO,
RINGS,
JEWELRY, CHAINS, AND
MISC .
ITEMS
AT
RECORD HIGH HONEST
UP·TO·DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP. MIQ·
DLEPORT, OH OR CALL
992·3476.

acre,

Rut land area 140 acres,
farm with 6 room house,
lot s of .t imber, coa l
rights, many other
possibilities, call for

Four foot S·curve rolltop

details.
NEW REMODELING
- 2 family in Mid -

evenings.

dleport, looks nice, rent
the upstairs, live in the

desk. - Call

742 · 2316,

downstairs. $31,000.00.
WATCH FOR THE
"OPEN
HOUSE"
NEXT WEEK
ANOTHER SERVICE
OF CLELAND REALTY.
.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

Wanted to Rent
AT Lj:AST 2'12 car garage
in Pomeroy , Middleport or

Athens county. For a Iran·
smlssion shop. Call 992·
5178.

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

harness .

Horses

~:;:;~u.;!t:::~~~~~
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

and
614·

Zl' E. Se~~d S1reef

$1750.00 DOWN - Buys'
this

~

bedroom home.
Has a formal din ing

room, equipped k'llchen,
basement, 2 car garage,
small business bldg. on

a corner level lot on R:t .
12~ .

11 ROOMS - 1'12 baths,
gas furnace, basement,
S bedrooms,
nice
carpeting, hobby room,
2 car garage on nice

level lot. Only 517,500.
$800.00 DOWN - If you
can qualify . Has
baseboard heat, T.P.
water, 2 bedrooms,
bath, and large lot tor
garden on R:t . 7 in Tup pers Plains.

SIMMONS OLDS-CADIUAC INC.
.·
"Yoc'll Llk•Our Qulllity Way of Doing Business"
.

.

·'

. 992·5342 '~OMEROY

Open Evenings 6:00--'-tll 5:00 P.M. Sit.

.

live : Afghan sheep dogs,

chihuahua ,

shepherd husky, one miMed
breed Collie, Gordon set·
ters, 1 border collie, 2 small.
Sf. l!ernard types,' terri or
lab, lab tv,pe • . German
pollce·N.orwegian elkhoun·
d, floppy earned Shepherd
type,, shepherd and beagle
types. Two cotker ·spanial

SR

689 .

SALEM CENTER - 4
year old 3 bedroom
home. 1112 baths, gas
furnace, nice kitchen,
L.C. water and one acre .

$2,000.00 DOWN .
SECLUDED - Native
sand stone I bedroom
home . Inside woodwork

like new. Natural gas
F .A.

furnace,

c:ity

water. bath, and over 2
acres. $1.000.00 DOWN .
BUY YOUR ROOST
FROM BRUCE. 5%
DOWN. LINE
992-3325 or 992-3876

Housing
Headquarters

5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautifUl
building lot. S7,ooo.
MIDDLEPORT ~

County

Building lot on S. Second, 63'x53' ..

$~.500.

· CALL ,992·234:l .

Bill Childs, ·Branch ·Mgr., Home 992·2449
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Hu•nane Society, 992·6260.

.,

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9·1 M .,

w., F.

Other limes by appoint-

EMERGENCY

107 Sycamore (Rear

power

Pomeroy, 0 .

- · buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
CONDITIONED hay tor
sale. 6\4·667 ·3349.
POTATOES, S8 per hun·
dred . 3 miles west of Oar·
win. Cecil laban.

FOUR YEAR old 3
bedroom home. carpeted.

All electric. Built·i n kit ·

SIDING
*New Kitchens
*Bathrooms
*New Home
*Add Ons
*Remoldings
*Free Estimates
Phone992·6011 1·4·(Pd .)

Quali1Y construction at
reasonable rates .
Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work

mile off Rt . 1 by -pa ss
on St . Rf 1'14 1oward
Ru11and.

1 ,

Block Work

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

CALL 992-7544

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

GaraRe

Ve1eran9 Admin. Loans.

ment.

4

Concre1e Finish ing
Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After S P.M . 992 -5S47

12·13·2 mo . pd .

30 ·tf c

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways,

.Aluminum Siding
el nsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
•Replacement Win ·
dows

IFREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rales

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Free Estimate

RACINE,O .
949·2748 or
P92-7314
12·28 ·pd .

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

10·19 1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

HOBSTETIER
REALTY
NEW LISTING -

EM ·

ceptional buy . 2 homes

ROOFING
All1ypes roof work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.

details.

Call Howard
949·2862
122-tlc

income

Good

producing property.
MIDDLEPORT - Ex ·

ecutive sty le 5 bedroom

home . · 2 lull

baths,

modern kitchen, family
room, living room and
full basement. Many
nice featureS to this
home . Call for an appt .
across

from

Asking $43,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Cozy
3 bedroom home in
Syracuse

on

Cherry

Street. Llvlng room , kit ·
chen, bath and base·
ment.

Small

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REF I NANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E. STATE , ATHENS.
614·592 ·3051. .
COUNTRY . HOME

With

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 alter 6.

TWO

STORY

house, 9

rooms, 11f2 baths, garage.

College Rd., Syracuse. Call
992·5133 or 992·3981 .

lot with

BY

NEW LISTING-Quali·

Pomeroy . Large living
room, dining room, built·in

tv built new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, uti Iity
and living room . Kit·

chen

has

garage

disposal
and
dishwasher . Situated on

a little over an acre.

OWNER,

house in

kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,

lots of carpet and paneling.

FA gas heal, lull basement.

one·third acre lot close to

hospilal and school . Call

992· 5917 for information.

Must see to appreciate
worknianship. Sells for

$-1.5,600.00.

Our homes are selling.

We

can

qualified

help

buyers

our

find

Estate problems, we ' ll

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

Phone 742-3092
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker 992-5739

Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
"Don 't cuss·Call u s"

1·18·(pd)

Business Services
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime haul ing
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7.41-2455.

SEWING
Repairs,

makes .

build ing . A rea I buy at
only S10,000.oo. Better

check this one out!!

Additional Hours

By Appointment

Free Estimates
ReasoQable Prices

other. Situated on 10
good acres. Ca II tor all

TWO ACRES ot land with a
14x70 1973 Vlndale mobile
home that has 2 bedrooms,

l4x7 expando room, air
conditioning, front porch

with

awn ing,

$19,000.

Located on New Lima Rd .,

Ruf land. Call614·696·1063.
7 ROOM house, Racine, 3
bedroom , 11;, baths, with

lull basemen!. Large lot,
ufility building. 992·3738.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
·we HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN.
WANTED·- Nice home with 4 or 5 bedrooms, taml·

ly room &amp; garage. Six to ten yrs . old. Five to 10

minutes from Pomeroy. We have a buyer lor the
right house. $15,000.00 price range.
JUST LISTED - One ot the finest estab lished

residential homes in Racine. This two story with
finished b~sement boasts of an "up to dl!lte" eat-in

kitchen , lormal dining area, family room, 3 to 5
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, thermo windows, (heavily In·
sulated). ca rpeted on all31evels, most drapes stay.
The exterior is Real Perma Stone, has 2 large in·
villng porches and a two car garage. Allot this and
mor•for $57 ,500.
· JUST LISTED - GoOd 3 bedrm. house wifh kltci1en,
dining &amp;· bath. City water and septic. Nice vinyl
siding. Located in Pomeroy Corp. Priced at $14,900.
$11,000 - Tr~ileer &amp; lot, 3 BR, all carpeted, front
porch, woOd underpinning, includes pool. Anxious to
sell.
WON 'T LAST -~ yrs. old, 3 BR. bath &amp; utilities, kit·
chen w·dishwasher, D.R. w·sliding glass doors to

service,

all

992 ·2284 .

The

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
ca n·

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

992-2143 .

IN STOCK lor immediate

delivery : various sizes of
pool l&lt;its. Oo·it·yourself or
let us install for you . D
Bumgardner Sa les, In c.

992·5724.

Mobile Homes - Sale ·
1972LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x63 with ex ·
panda, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12&gt;&lt;60 3 bdr.

1973

Skyline

\2x55

2

bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBI LE HOME
SALES. PT . PLEASA NT,
wv . 304-675·442d.

Services Offered
WILL po odds a nd ends,
paneling , floor 1ile, cei ling
t ile . Fred Miller , 99'1:·6338 .

WILL CARE torfheelderly
in our hom e, trained and
experienced
Phone 991 ·

7314.

CARPENTRY

WORK .

Floors, cei ling s, Paneling,

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949· 2487 or 949:2000. racine,

992·2759.

Ohio, Crift Bradford .
ELWOOD
REPAIR -

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LimE
SAVE A LOT

BOWERS
sweepers .

toasters , irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway

Garage on Roufe 7, 985·
3825.

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

S &amp; G Carpet Clean ing.
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable

'4"

and up
Cash &amp; Carry

rates. Scolchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211 .
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.
TUNING .

SALE ON ALL
CARPET
IN STOCK

and
Lane

Daniels. New phone num ·
ber, 742 ·2951. Service to
school's and home since

'9!tp

1965.

Installed with Pad Free

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech st. Rewind and

GOOD REMNANT
SELECTION

repair electric motors. 992 ·

2356. Wi ll make serv ice
calls.

6'XJ2'fO 1l'Xl6 '

J&amp;O Painting. Interior, e)( ·
terior . Reasonable rates, in

Mason . 304-773-5566 or 304·
773 '570~.

RURAND
FURNI11JRE

Giveaway
LONG HAl RED black cat.

Call 742-2211
Rutland, o.

9~9· 2854 .

acre. Crpeted in beautiful taste. $«,900.

L,OTS OF LOTS - From I to 75 acres, bordering,
Pomeroy .
PRICE DRASTICALLY A EDUCED- 3 BR home,
kitchen, bUIII·in cabinets, sfove &amp; retrlg. Storage
building with concrete floor. Lg. lot. Middleport.
Reduced to $28,000.
storage. Priced fo sell. $39,000.
WELL KEPT - 4 BR home, lg. L.R., tam . room,
~at·in

kitchen, attached garage, hardwood floors,
plenty ot yard, fruit trees &amp; garden space. s.l8;900.
NEWLiY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum. sided home

welcomes you with Its split entry hall. Carpeted
throughout, 3 BR, utility area, sliding glass doOr to
redwoqd deck. Only ~ yrs. old. lmmed. Poss.
$~1. 500 .

MACHINE

Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors.

PIANO

patio ,:~;,.

•New homes extensive remodel ing
*Electrical work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 99H583
1·17·1 mo .

Middleport, 0.
Automo1ive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon. thru sat.

All work guaranteed.

Both in excellent shape.
Live in one and rent the

ROUSH .
CONSTRUCTION

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

H. L WRITESEL

on Beech Grove Road .

bath, porches and good

garden.

Rodney .Downing, Broker, .Home 9'92-3731

types, male. Shots and 'wor ·

-----

apples at $4 per bu . BesT for

Roger Hysell

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

apple butler. Call 669·3785,

be glad to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-21103

outbui l dings,
good
fenc!es, and minerals .
Nice old 10 room home,

.

Meigs

APPLES - ROME beauty

financing . Call us and
discuss your Real

REAL ESTATE

m'ed.

669 ·

Nice lay·
ing land, lots ot good

80 ACRES -

ponies. Ruth Reeves.
698·3290. Bording ana
Riding Lessons and Horse 1'------------------'
Care
boots. products.
Children's Western
$15.50. I, . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. .
AdultsS29.oo
3'12 YR. OLD RANCH HOME - Just~ miles from
RISING STAR Kennel.
Pomeroy. Quiet country living in this beautiful 3
Boarding. Call367·0292.
bedroom, two bath with central heal and air condl·
lion. over 3 acres of flatland with a split rail fence,
POODLE GROOMING.
garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large eor·
ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms. 1'12 bath, garage.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
$27,000.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
ROCK SPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath, tully'equlp·
Also AKC registered
ped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fully furnish·
Oobermans. 614·4&gt;16·7795.
ed. $25,000 . .
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
POMEROY - L.incoln His. 2 bedroom, bath, large
Adopt a homeless pet.
· living room, full baSement, new lurnace. $11,500.
Healthy, shots, wormed .
Donations required. 1192·
MIDDLEPORT - Two bedroom brick only 1 block
6260, noon·7 p.m.
from center of town. Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.
AKC Registered bassett
RUTLAND - one bedroom down, two upstairs, on
puppies, 8 we~ks old . Call
large corner lot. Just needs a lillie point &amp; paper.
985-4279 . .
S9,900.
T!iESE DOGS beg for 11
' SYRA·CUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.
ManChester

Wil~esville ,

el ectric, 3 bedroom,
brick home or.~ Ma in
Street . 1'12 baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room and ful l basement .

last time for a chance to

· See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

Phone
3785 .

Eastern High. Very
goOd building site. AsK ·
ing $7,000.00.
RUTLAND - Total

air &amp; heat, tully equip

china, glass, old toys, dolls.
clothing,

CIDER

HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·

acres

c~ntral

ped kit., many features.

plete

APPLES

NEW LISTING - 2.41

608 E.
MAl N . • _.W.~W.,ol
POMEROY,O.
"2-2259
NEW LISTING -5 Pis.,
3 Bdrm. ranch, level lot,

to lose money? Over 25
years experience in buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur ·
niture. One piece or com·

Business·Services

3891 .

PHONE 742-2003

Manor apts. Call992·7787.
FURNITURE,

~=====····====·=====================·

sand
Q t it v el .
ca l cium
chtortdc, t .: :- t iltz~r . dog
food , and dll Types of salt
Exc&lt;'l&lt;:.tor Sa lf wor~s . Inc. ,
E . M ain St .. Pomeroy , 992

mirrors, $5,000. 1976 Pinto chen. Attached garage. l'l2
Near Mines 1 and 2.
Runabout 2·door, 4 cylin· . acres.
For Rent
Moving out of slate. Will
der, new tires, 4 on the
COUNTRY MOBILE Home floor, easyon gas, battery, sacrifice. 742·2385 .
Park , Route 33, north of . 49,639 miles. · $2300. I'll

RN OR LPN, full time . 3·
11:30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 11 to 7:30.
Call Mr. Zidian a.t Pomeroy

OLD

For Sale
COAL
L 1ME5TO NE ,

al terna tors - own the best

742·3161.

speed, lock·out, $1995. 1973
Jimmy Blazer 4 speed.
lock·oul. $1095. Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom, OH.

the Setlliiie1 Ciassifieds

lil

Fitzpatri ck Orchard,

1973 CUTLASS Supreme,

1975 lf• ton Ford 4x4, 4.

•

chard. State Roufe 689.

PARTS from a 1970 Dodge

P.S. , P 8 ., air, FM radio,

formation, write box 729H,
c·o the Daily Sentinel,
Pomery, OH. 45769.

For S.'!'.e___ _

front and rear . 992·2679.

63,000 miles, Good con·
dition, 992·7567.

ap·

__

WHITE Whirlpool dryer,

1975 BRONCO 4X4, V·8,

with

t~·ouJt(l

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

1 PAY highest pr ices
possible tor gold and silver

1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN ................... -......... 11695

75214 .

TO

LOW

~143 .

1976 VEGA wagon. good

thnJFrtday
&lt;P.M.

Rd., Pomeroy.

1

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

LADY

742

mileage and loaded .

Health Care Center, Man·

Tueoday

For all your home entertainment
and appllan~e needs.

1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON............................. '1895

Phone

per week
experience

day through Friday, 9-5.

will be prepared by ap·
· pointmenl. 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Clitt

1975 PINTO CPL ......................................... 1395 ,

2 Dr .. P.S., P.B .. and air.

Noon on Saturday

INCOME TAX SERVICE.
Quarterly, Federal and all

1972 COM El_ ... _.. __... _....... _~-?~; ~ :~: ~·~: .a.u.t~-':'~~~~·••• 1795
1977 FORD LTD. II STA. WGN ... -.. -.................... 12595
1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA .............................. 1695

MDnday

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 196~ OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S.

1977 OLDS CUTlASS BROUGHAM CPL ........ -... -... '3995

ADDRESSERS

wanted . S500
possible. No

time help. For more in·

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
. DEADUNES

WINTER
RETREADS

1976 BUICK LIMITED CPE............................... 14295 .

1

NOTICE

coin collections. Call
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

1976 OLDS CUTlASS "S" SEDAN••..• ,_ ...... _...... _... 13495

HOME

1979 CAMARO Z·211 . auto.

plications tor lull or part

guns, pocket watches l!lnd

1977 CADIUAC ELDORADO ..... ,_.--.--.---- ~~:~:':'~ -e.s;. '6995

rust proofed, brOwn with
bu c kskin interior . Ex ·
cellent condition, $7700

the
Middleport
and
Pomeroy areas . Call ttle
Daily Sentinel between 8:30

are

for

1977 .CADILLAC CPE. DEVIllE .....•. .• .- ..- .• .-.- .. --··· '6595

and 5:00p.m., 992·2156.

--~-----.---

NEED EXTRA CASH? We

tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

WANT IN A

Auto Sales
1979 FORD PIN TO. d cyl. , d
speed . 949 2176.

Phone !lll2-~156

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

1976 BUICK REGAL CPE... ................... -........... 1895

.

incorrect ln-

OM

to Boy scout Troop 2~9.

2 Dr., V·8, automatic , power and air . 69,000 miles!

302 V·B, automatic, power &amp; air .

~bllsher will not be resrmslble

b- more than
sertlon. .

Rutland . Proceeds donated

1

1971 CHEVROLET CAPRICE ................. -.. --·---- ..... '695

right to «&lt;ll or rejed any ada
deemed objectional. The

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
).2 :00. Factory choke only.
corn Hollow Gun Club,

1975 OLDS 98 LS ......... --............................. 1995

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

Mobile Home iaft and Yard
&amp;Ilea are accepted only wUh
euh with IX'dtr. 25 eent charge
for ads caf'I"Yina Boz Nwnbel' In
Care of The Sentinel.

1be Publllher reserves the

Hoffman.

1

1976 GREMLIN ................ -_ .. .......~:~!: _a.~~~~-~~.i~:. _!1895
1975 FORD GRANADA ....... -............. -............. ,. 11795

·

Officers for the new year were
named and meeting times changed
when the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club met
Wednesday night at the home of
Mrs. NetUe Boyer.
The officel'll are Mrs. Jonl Hoffman, president; Mrs. Nettie Boyer,
vice president; Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore, secretary; Mrs. Pandora
Collins, treasurer. . Mrs. Flo
Strickland will have charge of cards,
Shirley Baity and Betty Wehrung, ·
gifts, and Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel '
and Mrs. Lenora McKnight, flowers .
Meetings were ~uced from twice ,
a month to once with the second .
Wednesday of each month set.
Next meeting will be on Feb. 13
with the members to take a
homemade hat wit~ a valentine,
theme to be sold as a money-making
project. Mrs. Joni Hoffman won the
door prize.
Mrs. Boyer served refreshments
to thOIIe named and Mn:. Lucy
White, Mrs. BMbara Mullen, Mrs.
Mildred Wells, and Mrs. Martha

1

1978 FORD F·250 XLT .................... -............... 3995

In memO&lt;Y, Card of Thanh
and Obitual')': 8 centll per word,
'13.00 mlnlmwn. Callh In ad·
Nonce.

Are

Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in

the I day rate.

1980 officers
named recently

4 cy l., 4 spd., 2 dr ., radio, rack.

1

Each W'ord over the rninim\11\
15 worda is 4 centa per word per
day. Ada running t:Jtherthan consecutive days wfll be charged at

''if

llilLE CPE
Loaded, 8,700 miles. ,
8295
1979 Ro '"
·•···········•··•··•····················
1979 CUTlASS BROUGHAM CPE•• ,_ •.•..... ~:~ ~~~~~; .•'6295

EXTRA SPECIAL

15 Wonb or Under
Cash
Charge
1.00
1.2$
1.50
1.90
1.110
2.15
3.00
3.75

I day
I daya
3daya
8 daya

11

SIMMONS OLD~DIUAC INC.

SPECIALS!!!

WANT AD
CHARGES

state income tax reports

Chester,O.

Buy~

Your Best

or 25.3 million, all CBS; "Three's
Company," 31 or 23.7 million, ABC;
· 'M~A-8-H," 29.8 or 22.7 million,
CBS; "Taxi,'' '!1.8 or 21.2 million,and "Fantasy Ialand," '!1.3 or 20.8
million, lxath ABC; Dallas/' '11.2 or,
20.7 million, CBS; "Love Boat," 26.1
or 19.9 million, ABC, and "Dukes fl .
Hazzard," 25.7 or 19.6 million, CBS.
The next 10 shows: "Hart to '
Hart,'' ABC; "Little House on the ,
Prairie," NBC; "House Calls," ,
CBS; "Soap," ABC; "Barney
Millet' and "Eight is Enough,'' both
ABC, tie; "Real People,'' NBf', and .
Things Were Different," CBS,
tie, and "Mork and Mindy" and
"Benson," both ABC.

GOOD USED CAR • • • .COME TO-

BOXING Ill

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fridav. Jan. 25. 19110

.

MUST SELL - 3 BR mOdular In nice development.
Includes bullt·on family room, set up tor wood burn·
lng ,stove. All carpeted, partiolly closed In carport,
s.torogo. Priced to sell $39,500.
PRIVACY - Close to town, 2 BR home. Good size
lot. Nee'ds attention . City water. $6,000.

WANT TO SEll? - GIVE US ACALL
CALl JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATES 949·2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949-26S.. or 949-2591

Home At

Riggs Crest

608 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2259

Manor

.3 BR RANCH .. -.......'39,900

SUNDAY, JANUARY 27th
2 PM TO 4 PM
RT. 7 _, PAST
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
Watch For Sl nsiiU
~-

iOciiOCIIOD..-

�&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan . 25, !980

New officers chosen
at annual meeting
New officel'll were elected at the annual congregational meeting of the
Middleport First Baptist Church.
'They include Darla Thomas, church clerk with Joan Hays as assistant;
Alwilda Werner, church treasurer, Norma Wilcox, assistant; Dorothy
Anthony, church organist, Janice Gibbs, assistant; Randy Hays, church
school superintendent with Dan Riggs, ass(stant ; Sarah Fowler, church
school secretary and treasurer with Norma Wilcox, assistant; and
Kathleen Anthony, church missions treasurer with Dreama Hudson,
assistant.
Named to the various board of the church were K.atheryn Metzger, Sue
Metzger, Nadine Barton, Adell White, Jerry Pullen and Dan Riggs, Board
of Christian Education; Bob Campbell, Gene Hudson, Kenneth Imboden,
Lacy Barton, Robert Lewis, Robert Parker, Gene Kauff, Manning Kloes,
and John Werner, board of deacons; Debbie Cleland, Cathy Riggs,
Dreama Hudson, Ancil VanMatre, Corine Ambrose , and Janice Daniels,
board of deaconesses.
Willis Anthony, Mary Brewer, Fred Klein, June Kloes, Russell Mills,
Dan White, Edison Baker, Clifford Hayes, and Edna Wilson, board of
turstees; Kathleen Anthony, Willis Anthony, and Frances Smart, trus~s
to the Rio Grande Association; Gerald Anthony, Carrol Cleland, Berruce
Baker, Harold Chase, Tom Dal'lltand Frances Smith, finance committee.
Elected ushel'll for one year tenns were Gerald Anthony, Joe Anthony,
Willis Anthony, Edison Baker, Lacy Barton, Clarence Boyles, Bob Campbell, Harold Chase, Carrol Cleland, Da:nd Darst, Tony Fowler, Randy
Hays, Clifford Hayes, Fred Hoffman, Milton Hood, Fred Klem, Mannmg
Kloes, Gene Hudson, Kenneth Imboden, Asa Jordan, Robert LeWIS,
Russell Mills, Rob Parker, John Riebel, Dan Riggs, John Werner, and
Don Wilson.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Bugs

get in the pantry

· DEAR POLLY- Just lately I have
had trouble with bugs getting into
my flour, com muffin mix and other
foods, even cookies. I have had to
throw away nearly all the food I kept
in my pantry and wonder what I can
do to get rid of the bugs as I have
never had this trouble before.
I have sprayed bug killer on the
shelves and even put the bags and
boxes of food in those locked or zippered bags, but they still get in. MRS.L.S.
DEAR MRS. L.S. - Open all such
new packages and if there are no
bugs add a few bay leaves to each
package and then tightly close it
again. This has always worked for
me even in hot, dry desert climate.
When bugs are discovered in a new
package take it back to the store
where you bought it. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Some time ago I
was forced to throw a way many
dollars worth of food due to weevils.
A friend suggested that I hang one of
th011e bug strips in the cabinet with
the food. I hang a new one each spring and then another each fall and
have had no bug trouble in four
years. -MRS. G.H.
DEAR POLLY - Sometimes I
need to make an urgent phone call
on a pay phone but do not have a
dime. I solved this by taping a dime
or two to the back of my address
book near emergency phone
numbers. -JUDY
' DEAR POLLY- When I am out of
silver polish I find a littl~ baking
soda on a damp sponge works just
fine. -MARGARET
DEAR POLLY - Lemons that
have hardened from long standing
can be fresheded by putting them in

boiling water to cover and letting
them siand for a few moments. M.J .
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippel'll if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column.
Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Super Bowl gets super ratitigs
NEW YORK (AP i - CBS out- SWJday evening watched the Super
scored the opposition with Super Bowl game between Pittsburgh and
Bowl XIV and the post-game show, Los Angeles, which began at 6 p.m.
then went on to win the networks' EST, an hour ahead of the start c:t
prime-time ratings race for the fifth prime-time. More than half stuck
week in a row, according to figures• aroun~ for the post-game show and
from the A. C. Nielsen Co.. .
" 60 Minutes," which followed.
CBS' triumph in the week ending
The rating for the game was 41i.3.
Jan. 20, though by a narrow margin, Nielsen says that means of all the
pulled the netw.ork even with ABC homes in the country with television,
for the season to date.
41i.3 percent watched at least part of
Tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of the TV audience the game.
CBS had six of the week's 10 .
highest-rated progrllffiB, and compiled a rating of 22.5. ABC was
second
at 20.2, and NBC third at 16.2.
lh lklo·n a nd~ .. ,. IIHth'l

Gem•ration Rap

WILL ASPANKING REFORM

LAZV, TV ADDICT BRIDE?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My new wife, Donna, has to be the
laziest woman on earth.
I get nothing but frozen TV dinners
and not even on time. Donna doesn't
work outside. All she does is watch
TV, go to bingo and shop for clothes.
The hamper is loaded with dirty
clothes; there must be a half-inch of
dust on the furniture. I've been having this problem for two months.
Today I came home to find dishes
still in the sink from breakfast
(which I fixed myself) and Donna
gabbing on the phone. I was furious
and the battle started. I slaffimed
down the receiver, she shouted at
me like a spoiled brat, then started
throwing dirty dishes which I dodged and they broke against the wall. I
said if she threw one more I'd spank
her, and she yelled, ''I dare you, you
:.___!"And threw it.
Well, I turned her over my knee
and spanked her soWJdly. She locked
herself in the bedroom, crying. It's
now II p.m. and she won't let me in,
not even to get my clothes for tomorrow. I'm tempted to break down the
door and give her an instant replay,
this time using the hairbrush.
Did I do right? Don't you thl'Mt
Donna deserved what she got' WIFESPANKER
DEARW.S.:
A small child might deserve a
spanking when she throws dishes,
and sirice Donna acted like one well, I wouldn't exactly call this wife
abuse. But- there are better ways.
Forget the hairbrush and try for
adult talks. If Donna never learned
to cook, clean or think of others at
home, she needs guidance more than
punishment. -H.
P.S. Okay, you few with long
memories: I well remember giving
a quite different answer to a similar
"spoiled wife" question some 20
years ago. I then applauded the
spanking husband and predicted his
bride would shape up now she realized he wouldn't take it any more.
Which she did, he wrote me later. So,
too, may Donna. -H. ·

BROTHERS TAKE PART
IN ARMY EXERCISE
FORT KNOX, Ky.- Two brothers
from Middleport, Spec. 4 Larry E.
and Pvt. Carroll R. Nelson, sons ci
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Nelson, 655
Sycamore St., are participating in ·
"Empire Glacier 80," an annual
joint readiness exercise at Fort
Drum,N. Y.
Empire Glacier will pro:nde a
simulated combat envirorunent for
participating units and is designed
to exercise and evaluate Army and
Air Force active and reserve component commandel'l!, staffs and forces in joint tactics, techniques, and
procedures.
The exercise will pro:nde a full
spectrum of conventional and unconventional warfare operations. It
DEAR HELEN:
pro:ndes cold weather training for
Our mother, 83, widowed, not
participating units In joint military
senile, has worn out her oldest
operations and logistics support.
daughter (me) and is now working
National Guard units will also take
her magic on the youngest one. This
part in the exercise.
woman has never learned that
Both are drivel'l! assigned to the
clutching ain't touching. She is a
a4th Infantry at Fort Knox, Ky.
barracuda who has always figured
Larry entered the Army in
she owns her children lock, stock
February, 1974. He is a 1971
and barrel. She brutally denied us
graduate of Meigs High &amp;hool,
the opportunity .to grow up, so
Pomeroy.
_ naturally, we left home at the
Carroll entered the Army in April,
earliest possible moment to escape
1979. He is a Hm graduate of Meigs
the unconditional obeisance she
High&amp;hool.
demanded: third-degrees, accompa-

Spagbetti supper set
The Pomeroy PI'A will serve a
spaghetti dinner Saturday evening at
the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Serving will begin at 4:30 and will
continue until 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $2
for adults and $1 for children and are
available either in advance or at the
door. The meal will include spaghetti,
bread, salad, and beverage. Dessert
will be sold for 25 cents extra as will
soft drinks.
Entertainment will be pro:nded by
the Senior Citizens kitchen band with
Mrs. Margaret Neuman at the piano.
Members of the band are Charles and
Esta David, Loretta Beegle, Ruth and
Kermit McElroy, Frances King,
Dean and Thora Blackwood, Alecia
Worner, Garnet Eme, Bertha
Robinson, Mae Weber, and Lillian
Napper.
There will also be blue grass and
country music provided by Darrell
and Carol Taylor, banjo and fiddle,
and Harry Clark, also on the banjo.
The square dancers will also be
presented during the evening.
nying us on dates, censored mail,
eavesdropping.
It took us a long time to settle
down, but now we've established
good homes with fine husbands.
Mother has never changed. She
can't live alone because of physical
infirmities, and her daughters are
stuck with her. She bosses, snoops,
criticizes, belittles, and when we
talk back, we're "monsters who
never loved her," and she weeps
with self-pity.
She can be warm, cheerful and
considerate to her friends; but she
takes off tile costume the minute
they're out of sight.
An adequate nursing home is out.
We can't afford one. Is there any
help for us? - ALMOST AT THE
ENDOFOURROPE
DEARAATEOOR:
All your lives you have either
given in to or escaped from an overpowering mother, but you avoided
"talking back' ' first through fear
and now because she makes you feel
guilty. In other words, you've never
grown up where she is concerned.
So start growling! Lay down
ground rules on meddling,
bossiness, WJcalled for criticism,
and have your husbands help enforce them. Tell your mother kindly
but firmly that in your houses,
things are done your way- and keep
reminding her, never mind the self·
pity she uses to keep you "children."
If she's too old for change try my
old stand-by - smile and go deaf:
When she belittles or bullies, pretend not to hear and change the subject... or simply walk away.- H.

The networks say that meaD9 in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 22.5 percent of the homes
in the county with television were
watc~CBS.

For the season to date, both CBS
and ABC have ratings rl 19.4 to
NBC's 17.7. The networks calculate
weekly and seasonal averages, and
though CBS and NBC call It a tie,
ABC maintains it still has the lead,
19.4 to 19.2forCBS and17.5 for NBC.
·Several programs introduced since the first of the year showed signB .
of promise. CBS' "House Calls" was
No. 13 in the ratings, and ABC's
"One in a Mlillon" finished 24th.
"Knots Landing," a companion of
sorts to CBS' popular "Dallaa," was
No. 30 in the ratings, and NBC's
"Skag" finished right behind.
It was nat a particularly good
week for specials. NBC's recently
condemned "Shirley" was No. 60,
followed by "The Adventurell of thf
Wilderness Family" on ABC; NBC'b
11
Prime Time Saturday;" a rMvie,
"The Late Show,'' on NBC; and
CBS' "Beatrice Arthur Special."
Here are the week's 10 highest
rated shows:
Superbowl XIV, with a rating of
41i.3 representing 35.3 million homes,
Superbowl XIV post-game, 35.7 or
'!1.2 million, and "60 Minutes," 33.2

Busy Bee Class meets
Members of the Busy Bee ClMII of

the Middleport First Baptist Church
meeting Thursday night at the
church voted to retain the current of·
ficers for 1980.
They are Mrs. Mary Brewer,
president; Mrs. Nelle Werner, vice
president; Mrs. Rosemary Lyons,
secretary; Mrs. Ulllan Demoskey,
assistant secretary; Mrs. Freda Edwards, treasurer; Mrs. Eva
Hartley, cards and flowers. Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis will continue
as SWJday school teacher and named
to the committee to serve dinners to
bereaved families were Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Lyons, Mrs.
Edwarda, Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs.
Werner, Mrs. Clarabelle Riley, and
Mrs. Brewer.
Cards were signed for Lacey Barton, Cora Pullen, Nora Mills, and
Freddie Houda.shelt. New yearbooks
were made out, and the hostesses,
Mrs. Werner, Thelma Hayes and
Mrs. Brewer served a salad COU!'lle.

In a 1936 Stanley Cup game,
Detroit defeated the Montreal
Maroo1111,1~. in six overtime periods
with the total playing time, 176
minutes and 30 seconds.

JANUARY

1976 CHEVffiE.. ........................... __ ...S2495
Club cab, auto., power and air .

1976 FORD F-100 ...... _... _... _,_,.,. ... _.. _.. _......... --'1995
Aufo., P.S., P.B.

1973 CHE~ C-10 ............................ _..... _. ___ ... 11195
•; , Ton long bed. aufo., P.S., P.B.

SATURDAY NIGHT AT 7:30
AT MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
FEATURING ••BANOO EXHIBITION"
Dave

Oil~

ABC Sportscaster, will be present

to award trophies to the winners.

1974 FORD STA. WAGON ................................. "595
1975 CHEV. VEGA STA. WAGON-............ ~.':~!;·.~~.: '595
1970 MERCURY ....................~~~s.~~:~~~.g:~~~·••• '195

1968 CADIUAC .......... .................................... '150

TICKETS ON SALE AT THE GATE!
SPONSORED BY MEIGS CO. JAYCEES

the day before publication
S......y
&lt;P.M.

Friday af~moon

Notices
GUN SHOOT EVERY
5.\.INDAY I PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GUN SHO'OT . Racine
Vplunteer Fire Dept .
!:very Saturday. 6:30p.m.
At ,their buildingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.

DOXOL SERVICE

antiques

and collec·

614·

coins, r ings, jewelry, etc.

RIDENOUR'S

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
2ND SEMESTER classes

GAia S!;'RV.ICE

in ballet, tap and jazz now

open. Classes ottered are
pre -school, ba llet, tap,

Racine, 0 .

jazz, and adult exercise
i~4:Z cl~sses. Cal l Shirley
Carpenter, Carpenter's

s.ance

1974

ios CUT. SUP. CPE............................... 1695 .
1

1975 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED.............................. 11595

mi leage, good condition,
auto., good tires. $1100 . 742·
2927 .

GET VALUABLE !raining
as a young business person
and earn gOod monev plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on

1967 FORD Pickup, 6 cyl.,
3·speed, $500. 1975 Olds

Starfire V·6, 4 speed, $900.

992 ·6323 after 6.

the eligibility list at 992·
21S6or992·2157 .
live

in

auto., P.S., posi -traction,

elderly lady. 6 days per
week . Call 304-882·2393.
Lady is ambulatory · lives
in Middleport, OH . No
heavy work required.

now

taking

.

Studio, 9~9 · 2710
~efore January 301h.

""
••
•INCOME

TAX service,
1federal and State. Wallace
~ussell,
Bradbury . 992·

;rna.

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

:FIEAR ING AID USERS:

&lt;Save used batteries, mer·

;tury and silver o&gt;&lt;ide,
adeem for cash. Diles
~earing
Aid
Center,
~thens.

Tel . 614·590571.

:
Help Wanted
A.\OTORIST
Insurance
~mpanies

have an op·

•e
!,t&gt;ance to build and OWN

j;i)rtuity waiting for you in
insurance market, a

¥Our

busineSs.

Establish

ze&gt;ur agency on a part time

ar full time basis. No prior

I?&lt;P"rlence-. required. we

1rovlde

training,

you

!"ovlde ambition. Call, or
rf'rlte ~

Don

Weidner ,

!District
Marketing
anager, PO Box 416,
thens, OH 45701 . Phone
2-5748.

ECRETAR IAL·CLE RIC ·
L job opening at· local
:Jluslness. Initially part·

f~me:

may develop into

ull-llme. Typing protlcien·
required, .some
t!!ookkeeping experience
~elpful.
Send complete

:l: v

~

sume

with

1969 Tl-l ,t.., VEL ALL 4x&lt;t,
$900 Hometite generator,
like new, $700 . 992 ·3847.

ONE 125,000 BTU Baird

propane gas. like new, un ·
damaged furnace complete
with all register and ducts.
Buyer to dismangte . Best

offer, 985·3862

JUST rece ived a shipment
ot figurines, owl jewelry ,
ow/lamps, brass items and
many other items. Open 6
days a week. S&amp;E , Gift

Shop, Syracuse, DH .
running

good

condition.

S125. Call985·4276.

985·3554 .

truck, 318 engine. Phone

DECORATED CAKES for
all occasions. Character '
cakes and sheet cakes. Call

992·6342 or 992·2583.
1979 FORD Pickup F·l50
Ranger,

automatic,

low

miles, 9243 miles, radio,

like new, nice topper, large

Pomeroy. Large Jots.Call
992·7479 .

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 10" on largesf
end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Dl!livered
fo Ohio Pallet Co .• Rf . 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689.

miles south of Tuppers
Plains, CR .46, 11h miles.
William Connolly . Phone

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
fs. Phone 992 5434.

667·3536.

ROOM AND BOARD. laun·

chainsaw, 6 cyl . Chevy II

dry.

L1 KE NEW 24" Homelite

Elderly or working . motor . 949·2428.

men. 992·-6022 .
RESTER 'S assistant for
Senior Citizens in Village

boxes,

brass

beds,

ice
iron

APT. FOR RENT, $150 plus
deposit. 992·6130.

beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M.D.

Miller . Rt .

~.

ca ll992·7760.

Pomeroy or

FOUR

apt .

in

992·2429.

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass. china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney,

ROOM

Ra cine. Phone 992 ·2838 or

antiques,

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

26 N.

2nd, Middleport. DH . 992·
3161.

recom -

endatlons to The Dally
entlnel, c-o P.O. Box 729
~·Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

LAFF- A- DAY

ches, class rings, wedding

bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, DH. 592·
6462.

MARTIN 'S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about .

good condition,

silver and other old coins,

acres, small barn, small
house,
needs some

household.

WON'T LAST LONG AT
$30,500.00.
NEW LISTING - 3

Gold,

repairs .
ONLY
$7,000.00.
NEW LI~TIIIIG - 2
story hom;(\• ~· omeroy ,

iron banks, too ls, antique

razors.

pockef

knives and other old items.

Caii99H370.

up to ~,_ddrms .,
carpetiny, paneling .

WILL PAY TOP dollar for

CHEAP at $7,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Ranch with lull base·

gold and si lver coins,
silverware, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
gl;&lt;~ss frames and antique
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household. · Call

ment,

1

acre,

needs

some repairs. ONLY
$11,500.00.
NEW LISTING

992'6370.

Mobile home like new,
located near fT''nes, on

st. Rt., tu'&lt;.n,\.\) shed, 1
c. -::JV water,
storage bldg., cement
drive, EXCELLENT AT
$13,500.00.
NEW LISTING

ALL GOLD AND SILVER
CO INS OF THE WORLD.
ALSO,
RINGS,
JEWELRY, CHAINS, AND
MISC .
ITEMS
AT
RECORD HIGH HONEST
UP·TO·DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP. MIQ·
DLEPORT, OH OR CALL
992·3476.

acre,

Rut land area 140 acres,
farm with 6 room house,
lot s of .t imber, coa l
rights, many other
possibilities, call for

Four foot S·curve rolltop

details.
NEW REMODELING
- 2 family in Mid -

evenings.

dleport, looks nice, rent
the upstairs, live in the

desk. - Call

742 · 2316,

downstairs. $31,000.00.
WATCH FOR THE
"OPEN
HOUSE"
NEXT WEEK
ANOTHER SERVICE
OF CLELAND REALTY.
.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

Wanted to Rent
AT Lj:AST 2'12 car garage
in Pomeroy , Middleport or

Athens county. For a Iran·
smlssion shop. Call 992·
5178.

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

harness .

Horses

~:;:;~u.;!t:::~~~~~
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

and
614·

Zl' E. Se~~d S1reef

$1750.00 DOWN - Buys'
this

~

bedroom home.
Has a formal din ing

room, equipped k'llchen,
basement, 2 car garage,
small business bldg. on

a corner level lot on R:t .
12~ .

11 ROOMS - 1'12 baths,
gas furnace, basement,
S bedrooms,
nice
carpeting, hobby room,
2 car garage on nice

level lot. Only 517,500.
$800.00 DOWN - If you
can qualify . Has
baseboard heat, T.P.
water, 2 bedrooms,
bath, and large lot tor
garden on R:t . 7 in Tup pers Plains.

SIMMONS OLDS-CADIUAC INC.
.·
"Yoc'll Llk•Our Qulllity Way of Doing Business"
.

.

·'

. 992·5342 '~OMEROY

Open Evenings 6:00--'-tll 5:00 P.M. Sit.

.

live : Afghan sheep dogs,

chihuahua ,

shepherd husky, one miMed
breed Collie, Gordon set·
ters, 1 border collie, 2 small.
Sf. l!ernard types,' terri or
lab, lab tv,pe • . German
pollce·N.orwegian elkhoun·
d, floppy earned Shepherd
type,, shepherd and beagle
types. Two cotker ·spanial

SR

689 .

SALEM CENTER - 4
year old 3 bedroom
home. 1112 baths, gas
furnace, nice kitchen,
L.C. water and one acre .

$2,000.00 DOWN .
SECLUDED - Native
sand stone I bedroom
home . Inside woodwork

like new. Natural gas
F .A.

furnace,

c:ity

water. bath, and over 2
acres. $1.000.00 DOWN .
BUY YOUR ROOST
FROM BRUCE. 5%
DOWN. LINE
992-3325 or 992-3876

Housing
Headquarters

5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautifUl
building lot. S7,ooo.
MIDDLEPORT ~

County

Building lot on S. Second, 63'x53' ..

$~.500.

· CALL ,992·234:l .

Bill Childs, ·Branch ·Mgr., Home 992·2449
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Hu•nane Society, 992·6260.

.,

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9·1 M .,

w., F.

Other limes by appoint-

EMERGENCY

107 Sycamore (Rear

power

Pomeroy, 0 .

- · buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
CONDITIONED hay tor
sale. 6\4·667 ·3349.
POTATOES, S8 per hun·
dred . 3 miles west of Oar·
win. Cecil laban.

FOUR YEAR old 3
bedroom home. carpeted.

All electric. Built·i n kit ·

SIDING
*New Kitchens
*Bathrooms
*New Home
*Add Ons
*Remoldings
*Free Estimates
Phone992·6011 1·4·(Pd .)

Quali1Y construction at
reasonable rates .
Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work

mile off Rt . 1 by -pa ss
on St . Rf 1'14 1oward
Ru11and.

1 ,

Block Work

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

CALL 992-7544

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

GaraRe

Ve1eran9 Admin. Loans.

ment.

4

Concre1e Finish ing
Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After S P.M . 992 -5S47

12·13·2 mo . pd .

30 ·tf c

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways,

.Aluminum Siding
el nsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
•Replacement Win ·
dows

IFREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rales

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Free Estimate

RACINE,O .
949·2748 or
P92-7314
12·28 ·pd .

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

10·19 1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

HOBSTETIER
REALTY
NEW LISTING -

EM ·

ceptional buy . 2 homes

ROOFING
All1ypes roof work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.

details.

Call Howard
949·2862
122-tlc

income

Good

producing property.
MIDDLEPORT - Ex ·

ecutive sty le 5 bedroom

home . · 2 lull

baths,

modern kitchen, family
room, living room and
full basement. Many
nice featureS to this
home . Call for an appt .
across

from

Asking $43,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Cozy
3 bedroom home in
Syracuse

on

Cherry

Street. Llvlng room , kit ·
chen, bath and base·
ment.

Small

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REF I NANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E. STATE , ATHENS.
614·592 ·3051. .
COUNTRY . HOME

With

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 alter 6.

TWO

STORY

house, 9

rooms, 11f2 baths, garage.

College Rd., Syracuse. Call
992·5133 or 992·3981 .

lot with

BY

NEW LISTING-Quali·

Pomeroy . Large living
room, dining room, built·in

tv built new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, uti Iity
and living room . Kit·

chen

has

garage

disposal
and
dishwasher . Situated on

a little over an acre.

OWNER,

house in

kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,

lots of carpet and paneling.

FA gas heal, lull basement.

one·third acre lot close to

hospilal and school . Call

992· 5917 for information.

Must see to appreciate
worknianship. Sells for

$-1.5,600.00.

Our homes are selling.

We

can

qualified

help

buyers

our

find

Estate problems, we ' ll

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

Phone 742-3092
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker 992-5739

Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
"Don 't cuss·Call u s"

1·18·(pd)

Business Services
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime haul ing
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7.41-2455.

SEWING
Repairs,

makes .

build ing . A rea I buy at
only S10,000.oo. Better

check this one out!!

Additional Hours

By Appointment

Free Estimates
ReasoQable Prices

other. Situated on 10
good acres. Ca II tor all

TWO ACRES ot land with a
14x70 1973 Vlndale mobile
home that has 2 bedrooms,

l4x7 expando room, air
conditioning, front porch

with

awn ing,

$19,000.

Located on New Lima Rd .,

Ruf land. Call614·696·1063.
7 ROOM house, Racine, 3
bedroom , 11;, baths, with

lull basemen!. Large lot,
ufility building. 992·3738.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
·we HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN.
WANTED·- Nice home with 4 or 5 bedrooms, taml·

ly room &amp; garage. Six to ten yrs . old. Five to 10

minutes from Pomeroy. We have a buyer lor the
right house. $15,000.00 price range.
JUST LISTED - One ot the finest estab lished

residential homes in Racine. This two story with
finished b~sement boasts of an "up to dl!lte" eat-in

kitchen , lormal dining area, family room, 3 to 5
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, thermo windows, (heavily In·
sulated). ca rpeted on all31evels, most drapes stay.
The exterior is Real Perma Stone, has 2 large in·
villng porches and a two car garage. Allot this and
mor•for $57 ,500.
· JUST LISTED - GoOd 3 bedrm. house wifh kltci1en,
dining &amp;· bath. City water and septic. Nice vinyl
siding. Located in Pomeroy Corp. Priced at $14,900.
$11,000 - Tr~ileer &amp; lot, 3 BR, all carpeted, front
porch, woOd underpinning, includes pool. Anxious to
sell.
WON 'T LAST -~ yrs. old, 3 BR. bath &amp; utilities, kit·
chen w·dishwasher, D.R. w·sliding glass doors to

service,

all

992 ·2284 .

The

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
ca n·

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

992-2143 .

IN STOCK lor immediate

delivery : various sizes of
pool l&lt;its. Oo·it·yourself or
let us install for you . D
Bumgardner Sa les, In c.

992·5724.

Mobile Homes - Sale ·
1972LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x63 with ex ·
panda, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12&gt;&lt;60 3 bdr.

1973

Skyline

\2x55

2

bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBI LE HOME
SALES. PT . PLEASA NT,
wv . 304-675·442d.

Services Offered
WILL po odds a nd ends,
paneling , floor 1ile, cei ling
t ile . Fred Miller , 99'1:·6338 .

WILL CARE torfheelderly
in our hom e, trained and
experienced
Phone 991 ·

7314.

CARPENTRY

WORK .

Floors, cei ling s, Paneling,

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949· 2487 or 949:2000. racine,

992·2759.

Ohio, Crift Bradford .
ELWOOD
REPAIR -

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LimE
SAVE A LOT

BOWERS
sweepers .

toasters , irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway

Garage on Roufe 7, 985·
3825.

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

S &amp; G Carpet Clean ing.
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable

'4"

and up
Cash &amp; Carry

rates. Scolchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211 .
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.
TUNING .

SALE ON ALL
CARPET
IN STOCK

and
Lane

Daniels. New phone num ·
ber, 742 ·2951. Service to
school's and home since

'9!tp

1965.

Installed with Pad Free

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech st. Rewind and

GOOD REMNANT
SELECTION

repair electric motors. 992 ·

2356. Wi ll make serv ice
calls.

6'XJ2'fO 1l'Xl6 '

J&amp;O Painting. Interior, e)( ·
terior . Reasonable rates, in

Mason . 304-773-5566 or 304·
773 '570~.

RURAND
FURNI11JRE

Giveaway
LONG HAl RED black cat.

Call 742-2211
Rutland, o.

9~9· 2854 .

acre. Crpeted in beautiful taste. $«,900.

L,OTS OF LOTS - From I to 75 acres, bordering,
Pomeroy .
PRICE DRASTICALLY A EDUCED- 3 BR home,
kitchen, bUIII·in cabinets, sfove &amp; retrlg. Storage
building with concrete floor. Lg. lot. Middleport.
Reduced to $28,000.
storage. Priced fo sell. $39,000.
WELL KEPT - 4 BR home, lg. L.R., tam . room,
~at·in

kitchen, attached garage, hardwood floors,
plenty ot yard, fruit trees &amp; garden space. s.l8;900.
NEWLiY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum. sided home

welcomes you with Its split entry hall. Carpeted
throughout, 3 BR, utility area, sliding glass doOr to
redwoqd deck. Only ~ yrs. old. lmmed. Poss.
$~1. 500 .

MACHINE

Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors.

PIANO

patio ,:~;,.

•New homes extensive remodel ing
*Electrical work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 99H583
1·17·1 mo .

Middleport, 0.
Automo1ive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon. thru sat.

All work guaranteed.

Both in excellent shape.
Live in one and rent the

ROUSH .
CONSTRUCTION

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

H. L WRITESEL

on Beech Grove Road .

bath, porches and good

garden.

Rodney .Downing, Broker, .Home 9'92-3731

types, male. Shots and 'wor ·

-----

apples at $4 per bu . BesT for

Roger Hysell

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

apple butler. Call 669·3785,

be glad to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-21103

outbui l dings,
good
fenc!es, and minerals .
Nice old 10 room home,

.

Meigs

APPLES - ROME beauty

financing . Call us and
discuss your Real

REAL ESTATE

m'ed.

669 ·

Nice lay·
ing land, lots ot good

80 ACRES -

ponies. Ruth Reeves.
698·3290. Bording ana
Riding Lessons and Horse 1'------------------'
Care
boots. products.
Children's Western
$15.50. I, . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. .
AdultsS29.oo
3'12 YR. OLD RANCH HOME - Just~ miles from
RISING STAR Kennel.
Pomeroy. Quiet country living in this beautiful 3
Boarding. Call367·0292.
bedroom, two bath with central heal and air condl·
lion. over 3 acres of flatland with a split rail fence,
POODLE GROOMING.
garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large eor·
ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms. 1'12 bath, garage.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
$27,000.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
ROCK SPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath, tully'equlp·
Also AKC registered
ped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fully furnish·
Oobermans. 614·4&gt;16·7795.
ed. $25,000 . .
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
POMEROY - L.incoln His. 2 bedroom, bath, large
Adopt a homeless pet.
· living room, full baSement, new lurnace. $11,500.
Healthy, shots, wormed .
Donations required. 1192·
MIDDLEPORT - Two bedroom brick only 1 block
6260, noon·7 p.m.
from center of town. Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.
AKC Registered bassett
RUTLAND - one bedroom down, two upstairs, on
puppies, 8 we~ks old . Call
large corner lot. Just needs a lillie point &amp; paper.
985-4279 . .
S9,900.
T!iESE DOGS beg for 11
' SYRA·CUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.
ManChester

Wil~esville ,

el ectric, 3 bedroom,
brick home or.~ Ma in
Street . 1'12 baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room and ful l basement .

last time for a chance to

· See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

Phone
3785 .

Eastern High. Very
goOd building site. AsK ·
ing $7,000.00.
RUTLAND - Total

air &amp; heat, tully equip

china, glass, old toys, dolls.
clothing,

CIDER

HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·

acres

c~ntral

ped kit., many features.

plete

APPLES

NEW LISTING - 2.41

608 E.
MAl N . • _.W.~W.,ol
POMEROY,O.
"2-2259
NEW LISTING -5 Pis.,
3 Bdrm. ranch, level lot,

to lose money? Over 25
years experience in buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur ·
niture. One piece or com·

Business·Services

3891 .

PHONE 742-2003

Manor apts. Call992·7787.
FURNITURE,

~=====····====·=====================·

sand
Q t it v el .
ca l cium
chtortdc, t .: :- t iltz~r . dog
food , and dll Types of salt
Exc&lt;'l&lt;:.tor Sa lf wor~s . Inc. ,
E . M ain St .. Pomeroy , 992

mirrors, $5,000. 1976 Pinto chen. Attached garage. l'l2
Near Mines 1 and 2.
Runabout 2·door, 4 cylin· . acres.
For Rent
Moving out of slate. Will
der, new tires, 4 on the
COUNTRY MOBILE Home floor, easyon gas, battery, sacrifice. 742·2385 .
Park , Route 33, north of . 49,639 miles. · $2300. I'll

RN OR LPN, full time . 3·
11:30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 11 to 7:30.
Call Mr. Zidian a.t Pomeroy

OLD

For Sale
COAL
L 1ME5TO NE ,

al terna tors - own the best

742·3161.

speed, lock·out, $1995. 1973
Jimmy Blazer 4 speed.
lock·oul. $1095. Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom, OH.

the Setlliiie1 Ciassifieds

lil

Fitzpatri ck Orchard,

1973 CUTLASS Supreme,

1975 lf• ton Ford 4x4, 4.

•

chard. State Roufe 689.

PARTS from a 1970 Dodge

P.S. , P 8 ., air, FM radio,

formation, write box 729H,
c·o the Daily Sentinel,
Pomery, OH. 45769.

For S.'!'.e___ _

front and rear . 992·2679.

63,000 miles, Good con·
dition, 992·7567.

ap·

__

WHITE Whirlpool dryer,

1975 BRONCO 4X4, V·8,

with

t~·ouJt(l

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

1 PAY highest pr ices
possible tor gold and silver

1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN ................... -......... 11695

75214 .

TO

LOW

~143 .

1976 VEGA wagon. good

thnJFrtday
&lt;P.M.

Rd., Pomeroy.

1

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

LADY

742

mileage and loaded .

Health Care Center, Man·

Tueoday

For all your home entertainment
and appllan~e needs.

1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON............................. '1895

Phone

per week
experience

day through Friday, 9-5.

will be prepared by ap·
· pointmenl. 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Clitt

1975 PINTO CPL ......................................... 1395 ,

2 Dr .. P.S., P.B .. and air.

Noon on Saturday

INCOME TAX SERVICE.
Quarterly, Federal and all

1972 COM El_ ... _.. __... _....... _~-?~; ~ :~: ~·~: .a.u.t~-':'~~~~·••• 1795
1977 FORD LTD. II STA. WGN ... -.. -.................... 12595
1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA .............................. 1695

MDnday

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 196~ OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S.

1977 OLDS CUTlASS BROUGHAM CPL ........ -... -... '3995

ADDRESSERS

wanted . S500
possible. No

time help. For more in·

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
. DEADUNES

WINTER
RETREADS

1976 BUICK LIMITED CPE............................... 14295 .

1

NOTICE

coin collections. Call
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

1976 OLDS CUTlASS "S" SEDAN••..• ,_ ...... _...... _... 13495

HOME

1979 CAMARO Z·211 . auto.

plications tor lull or part

guns, pocket watches l!lnd

1977 CADIUAC ELDORADO ..... ,_.--.--.---- ~~:~:':'~ -e.s;. '6995

rust proofed, brOwn with
bu c kskin interior . Ex ·
cellent condition, $7700

the
Middleport
and
Pomeroy areas . Call ttle
Daily Sentinel between 8:30

are

for

1977 .CADILLAC CPE. DEVIllE .....•. .• .- ..- .• .-.- .. --··· '6595

and 5:00p.m., 992·2156.

--~-----.---

NEED EXTRA CASH? We

tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

WANT IN A

Auto Sales
1979 FORD PIN TO. d cyl. , d
speed . 949 2176.

Phone !lll2-~156

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

1976 BUICK REGAL CPE... ................... -........... 1895

.

incorrect ln-

OM

to Boy scout Troop 2~9.

2 Dr., V·8, automatic , power and air . 69,000 miles!

302 V·B, automatic, power &amp; air .

~bllsher will not be resrmslble

b- more than
sertlon. .

Rutland . Proceeds donated

1

1971 CHEVROLET CAPRICE ................. -.. --·---- ..... '695

right to «&lt;ll or rejed any ada
deemed objectional. The

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
).2 :00. Factory choke only.
corn Hollow Gun Club,

1975 OLDS 98 LS ......... --............................. 1995

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

Mobile Home iaft and Yard
&amp;Ilea are accepted only wUh
euh with IX'dtr. 25 eent charge
for ads caf'I"Yina Boz Nwnbel' In
Care of The Sentinel.

1be Publllher reserves the

Hoffman.

1

1976 GREMLIN ................ -_ .. .......~:~!: _a.~~~~-~~.i~:. _!1895
1975 FORD GRANADA ....... -............. -............. ,. 11795

·

Officers for the new year were
named and meeting times changed
when the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club met
Wednesday night at the home of
Mrs. NetUe Boyer.
The officel'll are Mrs. Jonl Hoffman, president; Mrs. Nettie Boyer,
vice president; Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore, secretary; Mrs. Pandora
Collins, treasurer. . Mrs. Flo
Strickland will have charge of cards,
Shirley Baity and Betty Wehrung, ·
gifts, and Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel '
and Mrs. Lenora McKnight, flowers .
Meetings were ~uced from twice ,
a month to once with the second .
Wednesday of each month set.
Next meeting will be on Feb. 13
with the members to take a
homemade hat wit~ a valentine,
theme to be sold as a money-making
project. Mrs. Joni Hoffman won the
door prize.
Mrs. Boyer served refreshments
to thOIIe named and Mn:. Lucy
White, Mrs. BMbara Mullen, Mrs.
Mildred Wells, and Mrs. Martha

1

1978 FORD F·250 XLT .................... -............... 3995

In memO&lt;Y, Card of Thanh
and Obitual')': 8 centll per word,
'13.00 mlnlmwn. Callh In ad·
Nonce.

Are

Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in

the I day rate.

1980 officers
named recently

4 cy l., 4 spd., 2 dr ., radio, rack.

1

Each W'ord over the rninim\11\
15 worda is 4 centa per word per
day. Ada running t:Jtherthan consecutive days wfll be charged at

''if

llilLE CPE
Loaded, 8,700 miles. ,
8295
1979 Ro '"
·•···········•··•··•····················
1979 CUTlASS BROUGHAM CPE•• ,_ •.•..... ~:~ ~~~~~; .•'6295

EXTRA SPECIAL

15 Wonb or Under
Cash
Charge
1.00
1.2$
1.50
1.90
1.110
2.15
3.00
3.75

I day
I daya
3daya
8 daya

11

SIMMONS OLD~DIUAC INC.

SPECIALS!!!

WANT AD
CHARGES

state income tax reports

Chester,O.

Buy~

Your Best

or 25.3 million, all CBS; "Three's
Company," 31 or 23.7 million, ABC;
· 'M~A-8-H," 29.8 or 22.7 million,
CBS; "Taxi,'' '!1.8 or 21.2 million,and "Fantasy Ialand," '!1.3 or 20.8
million, lxath ABC; Dallas/' '11.2 or,
20.7 million, CBS; "Love Boat," 26.1
or 19.9 million, ABC, and "Dukes fl .
Hazzard," 25.7 or 19.6 million, CBS.
The next 10 shows: "Hart to '
Hart,'' ABC; "Little House on the ,
Prairie," NBC; "House Calls," ,
CBS; "Soap," ABC; "Barney
Millet' and "Eight is Enough,'' both
ABC, tie; "Real People,'' NBf', and .
Things Were Different," CBS,
tie, and "Mork and Mindy" and
"Benson," both ABC.

GOOD USED CAR • • • .COME TO-

BOXING Ill

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fridav. Jan. 25. 19110

.

MUST SELL - 3 BR mOdular In nice development.
Includes bullt·on family room, set up tor wood burn·
lng ,stove. All carpeted, partiolly closed In carport,
s.torogo. Priced to sell $39,500.
PRIVACY - Close to town, 2 BR home. Good size
lot. Nee'ds attention . City water. $6,000.

WANT TO SEll? - GIVE US ACALL
CALl JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATES 949·2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949-26S.. or 949-2591

Home At

Riggs Crest

608 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2259

Manor

.3 BR RANCH .. -.......'39,900

SUNDAY, JANUARY 27th
2 PM TO 4 PM
RT. 7 _, PAST
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
Watch For Sl nsiiU
~-

iOciiOCIIOD..-

�'

8- The Da1ly Sentinel , M1ddleport-Pome1o) . (), F'nday, Jan 20, 1900

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINITY CH URCH

poster Roy Moyer
Church Scho ol

Rev

W

H

Pem n

Sunday r.c hoo l sup t

9 15 om

worshtp ser-

vtc e 10 30 o m Chotr rehearsal Tuesday
7 30 p m under dt rec tton of Al• ce NeoH~
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

Corne r Unton and Mulberry Rev Clyde V
Henderson pastor Sunday school q 30

a m
sl-11p

Glen McC lung supt morn tng war
10 30 o m &amp;\'emng se nn ce 7 30

m•d week 59rvtce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E
Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Robert 8

Gr oves rector Sunday servtces ot 10 30
a m

wllh Holy Communton on the l.r st

Su nday ol each month

and comb•ned

wii'K Morntng Prayer on teh thtrd Sunday

M orntng Prayer and Sermon on a l l o ther

S!Jndoys ol the month Church Schoo l and
nursery core provkled Coffee hour 1n the
Paosh Hol l •mmed•otely follo wmg the ser
\I I C9

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRI ST 212 W
Motn Sf Ne•l Proudfoot pastor Bible
sc hool q 30 o m mornmg worshtp 10 30
o m You th meetings 6 30 p m evenmg
worshtp 7 30 Wednesday nigh t prayer
meetmg and Btble study 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and M rs Ray Wm
1ng olttce rs 1n charge Sunday hohness
meetmg 10 am Sunday Sc hoo l 10 30
a m Sunday sc hoo l leader YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p m , solvatto n meeftng
venous speakers a nd mus1 c spec tal s
Thursday 10 a m to 2 p m ladtes Home
league all women tnvtted 7 30 p m
prayer meettn g and Stbl e study Bob
Estep
leader
Rev
Noel Hermon
teacher
BURLINGTON
SO UTH ERN BAPTIS T
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade- Pa sto r Bobby
Elk1ns Sunday scho61 5 p m
Sunday
wo rshtp 5 45 p m
Wednesday praye r
se rvtce 7 30 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST 200 W Matn St ConservotNe
non mstrume ntol, Sunday worshtp 10
a m
8tble st udy I I om worshtp 6
p m Wednesday Btble study 7 p m
OLD DE XTER BIBLE CHRI STIAN CHURCH
Rev Rolph Sm tih pa sto r Su nday sc hool
9 30
o m
Mrs
Worley
Fran ciS
superm lenden t Preach•ng serv1ces f~r s t &amp;
Hmd Sundays fo ll ow tng Sund ay Sc hoo l
GRAHAM
UNITE D
METHODIST
Pr eachtng 9 30 a m f ~r s t and seco nd Sun
days ol each month , thtrd and f our th Sun
days each month worsh1p serv1ce at 7 30
p m Wednesday eve mngs at 7 30 Prayer
and 81ble Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulbe"y
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor A lbert
Dttfes Sabbath Schoo l Supennt en dent
R1to Wh1te Sabbath Sc hoo l Sa turday
afternoon at 2 00 w1th Worsh1p Serv1ce
follow1ng at 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIS T CHURC HSister Homett Worne r Sup! Sunda y
Sc hool , 9 30 am mormng wo rsh1p 10 45
am
THE HILAND CHAPEL George Casto
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m , eve n1ng
wOr5 htp 7 30 Thursday evemng prayer
serv 1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTI ST Dov1 d Mann ,
m mtster Wtlltam Watson Sunday schoo l
supt Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m morntng
wo rsh1p 10 30 a m
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTI ST 282 Mu lberry
Ave Pom eroy He r she l McClur e Sunday
sc hool supenntendent Sunday sc hool
9 30o m mo rnmg wo rshtp 10 30 even
tng worsh tp 7 ()() p m M1dweek prayer
se rv1ce 7 00 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER Dexter
Rd , longlv tll e , Oh1o , Rev Clyde Ferre\\ ,
Pastor Sunday School 1 l a m Saturday
preodung serv1ces 7 30 p m Wednesday
evenmg B1ble study ot 7 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Batley
Run Rood Rev Emme rt Rowson pa stor
Han dley Dunn sup! Sunday sc hool 10
a m Sunday evenmg serv1ce 7 30 Btbl e
teochtng 7 30 p m Thutsdoy
DYESV ILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Ro ger C Turne r pastor Sunday school ,
9 30 am
S1Jndoy rt\orntng worsh tp
10 30 Sunday eventng serv te e 7 30
'
M IDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
post er Mrs
Ru sse ll Young
Sunday
Sc hool Su p! Sunday School 9 30 a m
Evenmg worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday prayer
meet tng 7 30 p m
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Ractn e- Rev James So tt erf1 eld , pa stor
Mornmg worshtp, 9 45 o m
Sunda y
sc hool 10 A5 o m even 1ng wo rsh 1p 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
lad tes prayer
meet•ng Wednesday, 7 30p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST , Corner
Suc th and Palm er th e Rey Mark M cC lung
Sunday sc hoo l 9 I S a m , Don Wtlson ,
su permt end ent lacy Borton oss1 supt
M orn•ng Worsh1p 10 15om Btble study ,
10 30om of church Youth meeltng 7 30
p m Wedn esda y Wednesday n1ght 81b le
study and pray e r se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST Moddl epaot 51h
and Mo•n Bob Melton mm1 ster , Mtk e
Gerlach supenn tendent Terry Yankey
youth mtnt ster Btble sc hoo l 9 30 o m
mornmg worsh tp 10 30 o m youth group
Svnday 6 30 p m even mg worsh1p 7 30
prayer serv1ce , 7 30 p.m Wednesday
MIDD LE PORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Rev J1m Broome pastor 8tll
Sunday schoo l supt
Sunday
Wh1te
school '9 30 o m morn1ng wors htp 10 30
a m , Sunday evangel1 stt c meet 1ng, 7 00
p m. Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUN TY Dw1ght l Zov1t1 d1rec
too
HARRISON V IllE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernest Stnc khn pastor Sunday chur ch
school 9 30 o m , Mr! Homer lee supt
marnmgworsh1p 10 30
MIDDLEPO RT , Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m
RIChard Vaughan supt Morn tng wo r shtp
10 30
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTE RIAN
Church Worsh1p servt ce 9 30 a m Sunday
School 10 30 am Mr s Sampson Hal l
sup!
RUTLAN D CHURCH OF GOD Rev Bob
by Po rte r , pas tor Sunday school 10 a m
Sunday worsh 1p 11 a m Sun day eventng
serv1 ce, 7 p m Wednesday Fomdy Tro1
ing Hour 7 p m Wednesday wors h1p se r
VICe, 7 3Qp m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Long Bottom Edsel Hart poste r Sunday
school, lOam , Church, 7 30p m prd'yer
meehng 7 30 p m Thu rsday
MIDDLEPORT PENTE COSTAL
Thoo d
Ave , the Rev Will iam Knlllel pastor
Thomas Kelly , Sunday School Supt Sun
day school , I 0 a m Classes for a l l ag es ,
evening serv •ce
7 30
Bible study
Wednesday 7 30 p .m , youth serv1ces
Friday, 7 '30 p m
'"
MIDDLEPOHT FREEWILL BAPTI ST Cooneo
.., Ath and Plum : Noel Herrman pastor
.. , Saturday even~ng service, 7 30 p m Sun
day School , 10.30 a .m .
I,
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
R1chard W . Thomas, Directo r
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Ro bert M cGee
Rev . James Corb111
POMEROY, Sunday" S&lt;hool 9 15 om .
, Worshtp serv•c• 10:30 a m Cho•r rehear ·
~ sol , Wednesday , 7 p.m . RaY . Robert
: McGee , pastor .
'
ENTERPRIS~ . Worshtp 9 a .m . Churc h
1
5chool10 am
ROCK SPRINGS , Church School 10 am
Worship 10om. UMYF6.30p.m .
FLATWOOr&gt;S. Church School 10 o m
Wprs hip 1 t a . m .

1

..

MIDDLEPORl CLUSTER
HEAT H Chur ch Sc hool 9 30 o m War
shtp 10 30 am UMYF b p rn Ro ber t
Rob1nson Pastor
RUTLAND Church School 9 30 am
Worsh1p 10 30 o m Wdbu1 Hdt Pa stor
SALEM CENTER , Wo rsh1p 9 om Ch ur ch
School 9 45 o m
SY RACUSE ClUS TE R
Rev Harvey Koch Jt
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 am Chur ch
Sc hool 10 o m
MINERSVIll E Chur ch Schoo l 9 a m
Worsh1p 10 om
ASBURY Church Sc: hoo l 9 50 a m War
sh1p 11 o m Btble Study 7 30 p m Thu rs
day UMW ftsl Tuesday
SOUTHERN ClUS TEH
Rev Do vt d H orrt s
Rev Mark. Flynn
Rev Florence Sm tth
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY (Dorcas ) Wors htp 9 00 o m
Church School 10 00 a m
CARMEL Chru ch Sc hool 9 30 a m Wor
shtp 10 30 am 2n d end 4th Su nday s
APPLE GROVE Su n dov School9 30 o m
Wo rs h•p 7 30 p m lsi ond 3rd Sunday s
Prayer meettng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Fellowsh1p supper ft rst Saturday 6 p m
UMW 2n d Tu esday 7 30 p m
EAST lET ART Chruch School 9 a m
Worsh 1p serv tce 10 o m Prayer meetmg
7 30 p m Wedn esday UMW second Tues
doy730pm
,
RACIN E WESLEYAN - Sunday sc hool 10
a m
wo r sh tp 11 a m Cho~r procltce
Th ur5doy 8 p m
LETAR T fAllS- Worshtp serv1ce q am
Chu rch Schooi iO a m
MORNING STAR Wor sh1 p 9 30 om
Churc h
School
10 30 a m
Youth
Tuesdays 7 p m
MORSE CHAPEL, Ch u rch Sc hoo l 9 30
a m Worsh1p 1 I a m
POR TLAND Church Schoo l 9 30 o m
Wor sh1p 11 o m
SUTTON Church Schoo l 9 30 a m War
sh1p lsi and 3rd Sundays 10 30om
NO~ TH EA S T CLU STER
ReY RIChard W Thomas
Duane Sydenstn cker Sr
John W Douglas
Charl es Dom• gon
JOPPA Wor shtp 9 00 a rn Church
Sc hoo l 10 00 a m
CHESTER
Worsh1p 9 a m
Church
Sc hoo l 10 am Cho tr Rehe arsa l 7 p m
Wednesday B1bl e Study Wednesdays
7 30p m
lONG BOTTO M , Sunday Sc hool at 9 30
o m Evemng Worshtp at 7 30 p m Thur s·
day Btble Study 7 30 p m
REEDSV IllE Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m
Morn1ng Worshtp 10 30 am Eventng War
shp 7 30 p m B1ble Study Wednesdays at
7 30p m
ALFRED , Sunday School of 9 45 a m
Mor n 1ng Worsh1p at 11 a m Wednesday
N tght Prayer Meehng 7 30 p m
ST PAUL , (Tuppers Plom s) Sunday
Sc hoo l 9 00 a m Morn mg Worshtp ot
10 00 a m Monday N•ght Btbl e Study 7 30

pm
SOUTH BETHEL (S ilver R1dge) Sunday
Sc hoo l 9 00 am Mornmg Wo sh tp 10 00
a m Wednesday Btble Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST serv tces
each Sunday 9 30 o m George Ptekens ,
pastor wtth preochmg on ftr sl and thtrd
Su nday of month Ol1ver Swain Supt
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Rev Ke ot h
Ebltn pastor Sunday School 9 30 o m
Leonard G1 lmore ftrsl elder eventng ser ·
vtce , 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m
, BEARWALLOW RIDGE CH URCH OF
CHRIST Duane Worden mm tster B1bl e
cl ass 9 30 a m mormng worsh1p 10 30
o m
eventng worshtp
6 30 p m
Wednesday Btble study 6 30 p m
NEW
STIVERSV ILLE • COMMUNITY
Church Sunday School serv1ce, 9 45 o m
Wor sh 1p servtee 10 30 EvangelistiC Ser ·
v1ce , 7 30 p m . Wednesday
Prayer
meet1ng 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST , Pomeroy
Hamsonvdl e Rd Robert Purtell pastor
Btl I McElroy Sunday school supl Sunday
sc hool 9 30 o m , mornmg worsh1p and
commumon 10 30 am Sunday wa rsht p
serv tce
7 pm
Wednesday evenmg
prayer meehng and Btble study 7 p m
ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH Pme
Grove The Rev Wdltom Mtddlesworth
Pastor Chu rch se r-11ces 9 30 o m Sunday
SchooiiO 30 am
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST , Sunday
sc hool , 9 30 om ., worsh tp servtce 10 30
a m Other meettngs as announced
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev Eaol Shuleo
pastor Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m Church
se rvtce
7 p m
youth meeftng
6
p m Tuesday B•ble Study , 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
Rev John A Co ffman pastor Frankli n
Imboden chatrmon of the Boord of Ch m
f1on Lt fe Sunday School 9 30om morn ·
tng worsh tp 10 30 Sunday even1 ng wor ·
sh tp 7 30 p m Pra yer meetmg , Wednes
doy 7 30pm
RACINE FI RST BAPTIST , Don l Walker ,
Pa stor Ronm e Salser Su nday sc hoo l
supt Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m morntng
wars h tp 10 40 o m Sunday even•ng wor ·
sh tp 7 30 Wednesday even1ng Btbl e
study 7 30
DAN V ILLE WESLEYAN
Rev
R D
Brown , pastor Sunday School , 9 30om ,
morn 1ng w orsh1p 10 45 youth servtee,
6 45 p m , event ng worship 7 30 p m
praye r and pro1se , Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Marvtn
Marktn pastor Steve ltttle Sunday school
su p! Su nday sc hoo l I 0 o m
morn1ng
worsh tp 11 a m Sunday evenmg war ·
sh1p , 7 30 Prayer meet1ng and B1ble
study Thursday 7 30 p m youth serv1ce
6 p m Sunday
CH ESTER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E
Rob tn son , pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m worshtp serv1ce 11 o m , eyenmg
se rv 1ce 7 00 yout h ser vtee Wednesday
700pm
LANG SVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Robert Mu sser , pastor Sunday school
9 30 p m Roy St gmon supt , mornmg
wors hip 10 30 Sunday even tng serv tce
7 30 , m1d· w eek serv tce Wednesday , 7
pm
SYRACU SE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
R:ev Dale Bo ss pastor
Sunday school ,
9 30 am , mormng worsh1p , 10 45 om
evange liS tiC serviCe 7 p m Wednesday
servtees - prayer and pratse , 7 p m ,
youth meetmg , 7 p m Men s prayer
meeltng Satur day ' 7 p m .
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST ,
Elden R Bloke , pastor Sunday School 10
am Roberl Reed , supt Morning ser ·
mo n I I a m
Sunday ntght serv1ces
Chn sllon Endeavor, 7 30 p m Song ser·
v1ce, B p m
Preochmg 8 30 p m
M1dweek Prayer meehng, Wednesday , 7
p m . Alv1n Reed loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST , Loco led ot
Rutland on New l •mo Road , next to Forest
A cre Pork Rev Roy Rouse , pastor, Robert
Mu sse r
Sunday School supt , Sunday
school , 10 30 am worship 7 30 p m BIbl e Study , Wedne&amp;doy ,' 7 30 p .m Satur·
day ntght prayer service, 1 30 p m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rover
Watson . pastor, Mildred Zieg ler , Sunday
school supt Morning worship , 9 30 a m .
Sundoyschool 10·30 a m
eventng se r
VICe, 7 3Q
MT
UNION BAPTIST, Cec tl Co)(
m.nfst er
Joe Sayre
Sunday Schoo l
Supenn tenen t Sunday schoo l 9 45 a m
evemng wors h1p, 7 30 p m
Prayer
meetmg 7 JO p m Wednesday
TUPPER S PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
Randy Koehler pastor , Qenn1s Newland ,
Sunday sc hool suPenntendent Sunday
Sc ho ol , 9 30 o m , mormng church ser·
111ce 10 30 om Sunday even ing Bible
srudy 7 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED BRETHREN, Rev
Freel and t-J oms poster Floyd N orr •s
supt 5undoy school , 9 30 o .m morning
sermon
10 30 a m
Prayer ser v•u•

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

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o

Wednesday 7,30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Gro te pastor Fronk Rtffle ,
sup! Sunday Sc hoo l Q 30 a m Worsh1p
ser ytce 11 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meet•ng Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LAUREL CUFF FREE
METHO DIST
CHURCH , Rev Fl oyd f Shook , pastor
lloyd Wnght Sunday Sc hool Sup! Morn
tng Worsh1p 9 30 a m , Sunday School
10 20 a m Wednesday Prayer and 81ble
Study 7 30 p m Sunday evenmg w orshtp
7 30 p m , Cho1r Practice Thursday 7 p m
DE XTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Charles
Rus se ll Sr , m 1n 1ster R1ck Maco mber
su p! Sunday school , 9 30 a m worsh1p
serv1ce 10 30 o m B1ble Study Tuesday
730 pm
REORGANIZED CHURCH O F JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAIN TS , Po rtland
RoetnE! Rood W il ltom Ro ush pastor
Phyllis Sto bart Su nday School Sup! Sun
day School 9 30 a m Morn1ng wors h1p ,
10 30 o m Sunday even tn g serv1 ce 7 p m
Wednesday ove nmg prayer se rvtees 7 30
p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Ea rl Shuler
pastor Worsh1p servtee , 9 30om Sunday
sc hoo l 10 30 a m Btble Study and p rayer
serv1ce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH, K1ngsbury Rood
Gary K1ng , poster Sunday school Q 30
am , Rolph Carl , supenntendenl , evemng
worship , 7 30 p m
Prayer m eeltng
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN George F
P1cken!i pa sto r Walla ce Damewood
Su pt 81ble School , 9 45 am Preochtng
servtce' 10 45 om f•rst and th trd Sun
days 7 p m second and f ourth Sunda ys
Btble study 8 p m Tuesdays
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Okey Cart, pastor. Sunday Sc hool
9 30 Morning servtee 10 30 o rn , Sunday
evemng and Thu rsday evemng servtees at

7 ClOp m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob Rev Lawrence Gluesencomp , Sr ,
pa stor Roger W tlll ord Sr Sunday schoo l
supt Sunday school 9 30 a evenmg war·
shtp 7 30 p m Prayer meetmg , Wednes ·
day 7 30 p m Youth meeftng Sunday
5 30 p m w1th Don and Mar tha Meadows
1n charge
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Coolville RO Re v Roy
Deeter pos tor . Sunday schoo l 9 30 am
worsh 1p serv1ce 10 30 o .m B1ble study
and prayer serv1ce Wednesday , 7 30 p .m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHR IST Bo ad
Henders on pasto r , Herb Elhott Sun day
sc hool supt Sunday school 9 30 a m ,
m ornmg wors h1p and comumon 10 30
am
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
Amos Tillis , poster Donny T1llt s, Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
followed by morntng worsh1p Sunday
evemng servtce
1 00 p m
Prayer
meetrng , Wednesday , 7 OOp.m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Re v lloytl 0 Grimm Jr. pastor Sunday
school , 9 30 o ,m . worshtp ser viCe, 10 30
a .m . Broadcast l1ve over WMPO , young
peoples serviCe 7 p .m . Evangelistic ser·
v 1ce 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce , 7 JO
pm ,
,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner of Se
con d and Anderson Ma son Pa stor Fr ank
Lowther ,Sunday school, 9 4S a m , wor ·
sh1p servt ce 11 a m and 7 30 p m '(leek ·
ly B1ble Study , Wednesday , 7 30 p,m ,
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Moiler Sl ,
Mason W Vo Aunce Mick pastor Sun ·
day B1ble Study 10 a .m .;" Worship II o ,m
and 7 p m Bibl e Study Wednesday 1 p m
Vacol mus1c.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud dong
la ne Mason W Va Re v Ronme 8 Rose
Pastor. Sunday Sc hoo/9 45 am Morntn'g
Worshlr, 11 om Ev en mg Servt ce 7 :10

p m Wedne5day Women 's Mtnt slrt es 9
o m (meetmg and prayer Pray er and B1
ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CH RISTIAN UNION , The Rev Wtl lt am
Campbell pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 30
am James Hughes , supt , evenmg ser
vtce
7 30 p m Wed nesd ay evemng
prayer meeftng 7 30 p m Youth prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , Letoot W
Vo , Rt 1, Mark lrwm , pastor Wo rsh 1p
serv1ces 9 30 a m
Sunday sch ool , 11
a m evemng w orsh 1p , 7 30 p m Tuesday
cott age prayer meet•ng and Btble st u dy
9 JO a m Worshtp 5e rv 1ce Wedn esday
7 30p m
CALVARY BIBLE CH URCH now loc ated
on Pomeroy P1ke Co unty Rood 25 , near
Fla twoods Re v Blackwood , pas To r Ser
v1ces on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m wt th Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m Btbl e
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH INC
Pear l St , M•d dl epo rt Rev 0 Del l
Manley pasto r Sonny Hudson Su nday
schoo l supt Sunday schoo l , 9 30 a m ,
even1ng worship 7 30 p m Praye r and
pro1 se servtee Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CH URCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elde r James M1ller Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 30 p m , Sunday
Sc hoo l , 10 am Sunday n1ght serviCe , 7 30

pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS HornsonY1IIe Rood Dewey King pastor
Ed1 son Weaver , os s•stant Henry Eblm ,
Jr Sunday sc hoo l supt Sunday sc hool
q 30 o m , morn •ng wors h1p , I I a m Sun
day evemng
serv1ce , 7 30, proy1H
mee hng , Thursday 7 30 p m .
,SYRACUSE FIR ST CHURCH OF GOD No t Pentecostal
Rev George Oder
pastor Wonh1p serv1ce Sunday , 9 -45
o m , Sunday sc hoo'l . 11 a m· , w o rstHp
Thursday prayer
serv1ce, 7 30 p m
meat•ng , 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Un1ted Brethren Church
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship ser v tce
10 45 am Preoc htng servtees every Sun .
day a lternating w 1th C E Wednesday ·
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Rev James
leach pastor Dov1d Ho lter loy leader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 m1/e east at.
Rutland 1unction of Route 124 and Noble
Summtt Rood (T· 17-4) Sunday 81ble lee·
ture , 9'30 a . Watchtower study, 10·30
am Tuesday , Bibl e study 7 and B 15
p m , Thursday , theocrottc schoo l , 7 30
p m , servtce mee tmg , 8·30 p m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church Leland Holey , pastor Sunday school , 10
a m eventng serYice, 7 30 p m Prayer
meetmg, Wednesday , 7 30p ,m .
CHURCH OF GOD ol Prophecy. l ocated
on tne 0 J, Wh1 te Rood off h1ghway 160
Sunday School 10 a m . Supermtendanl
John Loveday Ftrs t Wednesday n 1ght of
month CPMA servtces second Wednes
day WMB meetm,g third through f1fth
youth serYIC&amp; George Croy le, pasto r
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570Grant St. ,
Middleport Rev Don Bloke, pastor Sun·
day sc hool , 9.30 a .m .. morning worshtp,
10 30 a m
evening Wonh1p , 7 p m
Wednesday even1ng B1ble study and
praye r meeting, 7 p m Affi liated wtth
Southern Bopt ts l Conven ti on
BRADFORD C HUR~H OF CHRIST~
Euge ne UnderwOod pdstor Harry H en·
dr lcks, su penntendent Sunday school,
9 30om morning worship , 10' 30 a .m .,
evenmg worshtp, 1 p .m . Wednesday Bible
study 7 p m
,
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's
Cn•ek Rood Rev C. J Lemley , pastor;
John Fellur e
supenntenden t Church
sc hool q 30 o m , morning worship ,
10 30, eventno se rvice , 1 p m . Yovth
rte" ttng t.u nd ~1v 6 p .m , Clble study in

'

depth Wednesday , 7 p m Classes for al l
ages Nurs~ery pro v1ded for worshtp ser
VICe
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
of Sycamore and Second Si s , Pomeroy
The Rev William Middlesworth , Pastor
Sunday School at 9 45 a m an d Church
Se rY tces 11 o m
SACRED HEART, Rev Father Paul 0
Welton , pester Phone 992-2825 Saturday
evenmg Moss , 7 30 Sunday Mass B and
10 am
Conleu 1o n , Saturday , 7-7 301
pm
VICTORY BAPTtST - On the Route 7
bypass James E Keesee , pastor Sunday
schoo l , 10 o .m
mornmg worsh1p 11
a m evenmg servtee , 7
TRINITY Chnst1a n Assembly , Coolville
G 1lbert Spencer , pastor
Sunday
mornmg worshtp , 11
school, 9 30 o m
a m . Sunday evenmg servtce, 7 30 p m
m1dweek prayer servtee Wednesday , 7 30
pm
MOUNT Ohve Commumty Church ,
Lawrence Bush pastor, Max Folmer, Sr
Supermtenden t. Sunday School and morr. ·
mg warsh 1p 9·30 a m Sunday even1ng
serv1ce, 7 p.m., Youth meehng end Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Mason . meet at
Umted Steel Workers Umon Holt , Railroad
Str eet Mason Pastor, lev Joy MitChell
Morn 1ng worshtp 9 45 a .m ., Sunday
School
10 30 a m
Preyer meetmg

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Charles R. Houdashelt, Mary L.
Houdashelt to Frederick J. Stobart,
Roger Adams, 48 acres, Bedford.
James F. Gtbson, Mary V. Gibson
to Janies F Gibson, Mary 1./. Gibson, Parcels, Scipio.
Raymond R. Cotterill, U!tha Cot·
terill to Raymond R. Cotterill, -Letha
Cotterill, 62¥• acres, Scipio.
Margaret Ella Lewis to Clem E.
Babcock, Lot 282, V. B. Horton's
Ad&lt;\, Mtddleport.
Virgie Klein, Affidavit, Salisbury.
Vtrgie Klem to William L. Klein,
Lots, Salisbury'
Charles 0. Usle, Beatrice Lisle to
Lawence P. Lisle, Cecilia G. Lisle,
Lots 10, 11, 12, Crooks 2nd Add.,
Syracuse Village.
George F. Cremeans, Audrey M.
Cremeans to Earl R. Cremeans, Betty A. Cremeans,_5.02 acres, Orange.
James W. Duvall, Mary B. Duvall
to Liberty Oil and Gas Corp., Right
ofWay,Olive.
Sandra Munn Ohlinger, Michael
Ohlinger, Sandra M1111n fal'lllerly
· Sandra Haning to Ronald J. Haning,
o,ect of Correction, Scipio - ColliJJlo
bla.
Hassan Masri, Suzanne E. Masri
to Ronuld E. Reynolds,. Mary R.

He can't he lp 1t
1f he loolt.s a
l1ttle d1ffer

Wednesday , 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden
pastor . Cornelius Bunch
superintendent Sunday school, 9 30 a m ,
second and fourth Sundays worsh1p ser·
VIC8af2 30p m .
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fa uoth and
Mom St , Middleport. Rev. Celvm Mmn1s ,
pastor Mrs Elvtn Bumgardner, supt . Sun ·
day school, 9 30 a .m . wo~ship serv1ce
10 AS am
NORTH BETHEL
Unoted
Methadiu
Churc h Rev . Charles Domtgon , poster
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worsh1p Ser VICe , 10.45 am. Sunday B•ble Study , 7 00
p m Wednesday prayer meetmg, 7 30
p .m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN
BAPTIS'T
CHURCH , ~toute 1, Shade Pastor
Block Affll1eted w•th Southern Bapti!t
COnvenhon S!.fnday school , 1·30 p .m .;,..
Sunday worship , 2.30 p m Thursdov .
evemng 81ble study, 7 p ,m
~
PENTECOSTAL
ASSEMBLY
Rocone,
Route 124 , W1lllam Hoback pastor Sun-'··
day school 10 a m ., Sunday even1ng sar 1
vl.:e , 6 30 p..m Wednesday eenmg ser- )
\liCe, 7.
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rev Foealand ~
Norr11 pastor Don Chead l e, Supt . Sun.! 1.1
day School , 9 30 am Mornmg Worsh1p••
10·30 o .m , Prayer ServiCe olternota Sun-. v
d,ays
"' •

oon

' :X
"'
VETERANBS MEMORIAL · ,,
HOSPITAL
Admltted--Mitziann Lewis ,''~:
Rutland ; Darra Lynn Peck,' ·•s
Pomeroy; Ruth Wolfe, Racine; .
Doris Miller, Racine; Ivor Logan, : .:
Racine.
'
Discharged-Tracy Whaley, David' ··~
Jenkins, Clarence Spurrier, Charles.' ::
Eads, .Grace Knighting, Benjamin, "Hackett, John Powell, Coosle Grant. ••

..

ARE A5LEEP BY NCW, AND
LOOK ATUS LEAIZN IN0
THE lATEST DISCO
BTEP

MEET INTERE~IN6
GUY$ IN T&gt;&lt;ESE
PLACE-5?

IAliNPia'
RUUM

Television Viewing

PEANUTS

(11A'AM,THE SNOW
15 COMING THROUGH
THE CEILING AGAIN ...

~~UJW~;rl
, by fHOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

10 Japanese

1 ReUgiOIIB

RI61-IT UP THERE, SEE?
RIGIH THROUGH THAT
HOLE THERE IN
THE CEILING ...

capttal

group
5 Israeli

11 Ayatollah
land

DOWN
1 100 centesimi 1 Fmish off
9 Poets
a dragon
13lrish
2 Colleen's
airport

Islands

land

14 "Our Man

Yesterday's Answer
1% Whiter
Z7 Stored,
lhiB winter
as supplies
18 Tough
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19 English
33 Woman's
Mver
name

3 Emergency

project

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11 "Hell/'

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.

7 Fish a

18 Aldrich's

certain

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34 First place

seaport

38 Beam
of light
37 Deneuve's

way

23 Morse Is

at

wheel

one

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name

friend

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ALL

HUMAN

UNHAPPINESS

COMES FROM NOT KNOWING HOW TO STAY QUIETLY IN A

Zl Mllallm judge r.--r,-t.-r.-

ROOM - PASCAL

!4 Unger about

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31 Ancient
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'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDl.BAAXB
II

LONGFELLOW

One lelter almplY atands for another. ln this sample A is
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc Single leiters,
apottrophel, the length and formation of the wonit are all
hJntt. Etch day the code ]etten are different

Reynolds, Parcels, Sutton.
Ear.! J. Wright, Beulah B. Wright
to Earl J. Wright, Beulah B: Wright,''
123.50 atres, Salem.
· ,
·,
Green Wade Vance, deed. to"Daiay
Vance. Cert. of trans., Sclplo.

J.

· CBYPTOQUDTES

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J H'R J

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FRIDAY ,JANUARY 25,1980
6 30-NBCNews3, 15 . ABCNewsl:l .
Ca rol Burnett 6, CB S News 8, 10,
Bob New hart 17 , V 1lla Aleg re 20,
Wild Wtld World of Anima ls 33
7 00-Cross Wits 3 Tic Tac Dough
11 ,
Newlywed
Game 6, 13,
Ma c N e il Leh re r Repor t 33
News 10, l ave, American Style
15, Love American Style 15,
Dick C~~~o~e tt .20
7 30-Price Is Right 3. 3's A Crowd
6 Joker 's Wild 8, Family Feud
1(), Pop Goes th e Country 13, 15 ,
A il In The Fam 1l y 17 MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20
8 00-Shi rl ey 3, 1.5 , 8 AD Cat s 6, 13,
Incre dibl e
Hul k
B, 10
Washington Week m Review
20,33; Movie " The Rav en" 17
8 30-Wall Street Wee k 20,33
9 00- Top of the Hill 3 Movie
" M o th e r &amp; Daughter " 6 , 13 ,
Movi e " Marriage IS Ali ve an d
Well " 15, Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10,
Capitol Beat 33, Free to Choose
20
tO GO-Knots Landing 8,1(), Per
spec t1 ve on Gr eatness 17; News
20 , David Susskind 33
10 30-----Pavarotti at J\Jitl lard 20
11 oo-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15, Last of
lh e Wtld 17 , D ick Cavett 20,
Monty Pyt hon 's F lying Circus 33
11 30- Tonlght 3, 15 , Char l ie ' s
Angels 6; Movie " Dull a Dead ly
Number" 8 ' ABC Capt ioned
News 33, Movie " The Hound of
lhe Baskervllles " 10, M ovie
'' The Gr een Berels" 13, M ovie
" TH X 1138" 17
12 AO- FSI • 6 ,
1 00- Midnlght
Speci al 3,15 , M ovie "The In
destructible M an " 10, 1·2.sNews 17
1 30-Movle " Beac h Ball" 17, 2
News 13
2 30--NewsJ, 3 25--Movle "Edge of
Darkness" 17

oo-

USulflx

31 Hamitic

MY

0 A

QTFJ

J

I I I

j

Answer here:

"[

. I

Yesterday s

GOBE

G D M•

V .- M G D L L

J

TD

NOw arr•nge lhe circled litters to
torm tnt surprise an~;wer, It aug·
gest~ by thfi abOve canoon

I I I l-r I I I I )"
-

.

C11Y. AN!7 WHO EVER
SAl D YOU CO ULl7

HE'IZE I

.._....

~E5,

'

YEAH, IT 5 ONE OF MY
MORE EXCITIN0"
NI6HT5 IN -:J&lt;E: 1310

MUST B5.
tYEW iWOUN7

21Glve a
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL "
. ~·
Two men were taken to Holzer . •
Mediclll Center by the Rutland , ..:
Emergency Squad Wednesday nlght :n
from Meigs Mine l of the Southern ' ·~
Ohlo Coal Co. It was reported that a '
small fire occurred ln the ·
preparation plant apparenUy cauaed 7 ~
by an electrical problem. The two "'
men reported to liave been suffering ' .:
from smoke inhalaUon are Andy . ·~
Doc2ie, R!lute 1, Middleport, and •.
Mike McManus, Wellston.
'·

8UREf ,ou

t9fl'O"OW)

Jt.Jmbles FLOUR HONOR • GOL.FER DARING
Anawer What the repairman said when the dri~er
complllned thal his engl'!)e was sm~klng WELL, IT'S OLD ENOUGH!
•

SATURDAY ,JANUARY 26,1980
5 45-World at Large 17, 6 DOSocieties In Trans ition 10 ,
Human Otmenslon 17
6 ~o-S aturday Repo r t 3, 4 S Farm
Report 10, It's Your 8\J!Iness 17
7 OO-Big Blue Marble 3, Porky P ig
8, It' s Your Business 10; Ken
tucky Afi el d 13 ; Three. Stooges
Little Rascal s 17
7 3D-Little Rasca ls 3; Bay City
Roller 15, M atters of L1 fe 6. Not
For Wom en Only 10, Sp ider
woman 13
"oo--GodLilla , Globetrotter s " 3, 15 ;
S uperfr~end s
6 13
M i ghty
Mouse-Hec k le &amp; JecKie 8, 10 :
Ultra Man 17 ; Woman 's P lace 33
$ JO...- Partridge Fam1ly 17 , P 1itnet
of Man 33
'J 4'0 .~ Fred 8. ~.l• ney 3 15 Pl clS tl c

Man 6, 13 Bugs Bunny Road
Runner a, 10, Maver ic k 17 ,
Fam1ly Portrait JJ
10 oo-Mov1e " The Un forg 1ven" 17 ,
Consumer E l(penence 33
10 30--D affy Duck J, 15 Scooby &amp;
Sc rappy Doo 6, 13, Popeye a,
Mov1e' Road lo R1o' 10
11 00--Casper &amp; lhe Angels 3,15
Growmg Years 33
11 30--F ia sh Gordon 3; G1gglesnort
Hotel 6, Fat A lbert 8, Act1on
News tor Kids 13, PTL Club I S
12 DO- Hot Hero
Andwlch 3
Weekend Spec Ia 16, 1J, Shazam a,
Sneak Prev iew 33
12 3D- A m er ican Bandstand 13,
Potnt of View 6, Tarzan Su per 7
B, Mov1e " Honeymoons Will Kill
You" 10, Market to Market 33
12 A5-Movte "Fa nf~re for a Dea th
Scene" 17
1 oo- Bob Zuffel ata Basketbal l 3,
Columbus Bowling Cla ssic 6,
West Vtrginla Outdoors 33
1 30-V•ewpolnt a, Gale Cat lett 13.
O ld Houseworks 33
2 QO-Sports Afield 6, Marla &amp; lhe
Mag ic Movie Machine 13 ,
Mlt!terplece Thea tre 33
2 30-Bewttched 6; In The Know 10;
TriState 13 Mov i e " War Gods of
8abylpn " 17
3 00-Prd Bowl ing 6, 13, Voyage to
the Bottom of the Se~ 10, Upst airs, Downsta irs JJ
3 30-Cotlege Baskelbal l 3,15
4 ·oo-Galf 8, 10, All Creatures Greal
&amp; Small 33
'
4 J()--Wtde World o f Sports 6, 13,
Untouchablet 17
s 00- Sport s Spec tacular e,
Lifesaving A Part of Living 10,
Lap Qu ilting 20, Search for the
Nile 33
5 30--Bewltched 3, Better Way 15,
Wrestling 17, Old Houseworks
20
6 00-N ews 3, 10, Con cern 8, God
Ha s The Answer IS; Upstairs,
Downstarls 20, Catch 33 33
6 '30-NBC News 3, 15 ; News 6,
Muppet, Show 8, CBS News 10;
actldn Newsm ake r 13, Know
Your Schools 33 .
7 CIO-An Inside Look 3. Hee Haw
6,8; Lawrence Welk 15; Bugs
Bunny 10. S1 98 Beauty Show 13;
Once Upon A Classic 20,33.
7 3o-:..Dance Fever 3; Ramle·O &amp;
J u lie 8 tO ; $100,000 Name Thot
Tune 13 . NHL Hockey 17.... Best of
Groucho ,2$), College Boskelboll

22
8 QO-C hlps 3, 15, One In a Million
6, 13 ; Cttsl holm s B; College
Basketball 16 , Masterpiece
Theatre 20
8 30-Ropers 6, 13
9 oo-Top 01 The Hill J Love llaot
6, 13. BJ &amp; the Bear 15, Mo~le
"The S5 20 An Hour Dr eam " 8;
Every Four Yr ars 20

'

9 30--Movle "Condemned " 33

(

10 oo-Fantasy Is 6, 13, Prime Time
Sa turday 15 , Chlshotms 10, Pop
Goes The Country 17
10 3D-That Nashville Music 17
11 00- News 3, 6.8.10, 13. 15, Di c k
Maurice &amp; Co 17
11 15-ABC News 6, 11 30--Colle-ge
Baske tbal l 3, Saturday Nlgtt t
Live 15, Movie " The 10th Vic
tim " 6, Movie " The Treasure of
Pancho
VIlla '
8,
Movie
' Fathom " 10, Movie " Chamber
of Horrors" 13
12 IXl-Don Ku·shner 's Rock Concert

"

1 DO-Movie "T he Frozen Dead" 13
1 30-Saturday Night Live 3, Movie
'They 'Nho Dare" 17 , 2 ·Jo-ABC
New s 13
3 00- News
J,
J 30- Movle
" Da ngero u s" 3, J · AC)-Movle
" Witness to Murder" 17 , S.QO-.
Movie ' Daugh ters Courageous"

3

J
SUNDAY;JANUARY 27,1980
s JG-AG-USA 17 ; 6:00-Amerlcan
Problems &amp; Cha ll enges 10 .
Betwtten The Lines 17
6 30-Chl"lstopher Closeup J , Better
Way e. Treettouse Club 10;
Action Newsmaker 13
7 QO- Th i s Is The Life 3; J..-ry
Falwell 8, Urban League 10;
J immy Swaggart 17, Gospel
Outreach 13
7 30--TV Chapel 3. Eddie Soundors
6, Jerry Falwe ll 10, The Bible
Answers 13, Jimmy Swaggart
15, It Is Written 17
8 ~Mormon Choir 3; Day of
Dl sco't'ery B; Grace Cathedral 6;
Ewangellcal Outreach 13; Three
1 Stooges 17, Sesame St. M),33.
8 30- Rev Leonard Repass 8;
Contact 6, James Robison 10;
Lower Llghthouse1J; Open Bible
1S
9 110--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3, Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6;
ReV\ Jim Franklin 13, Ernest
Ang ley ts. lost In Space 17;
Mister Rogers 20; Studio See 33.
9 3D-Robert Schuller 8, It Is
Written 10; Rev R A . West 13;
Sesame St 20. Big Blue Morblo

1.'

t

33 .
lO :»-Human' Dimension 3;
Are People Too 6; Movie

Kids

"The

Ambushers"
10;
Jimmy
Swaggart 13; Gospel Singing
Jubilee 1S; Hazel 17: Sesame St.
33
10 JO-Re)l Humbard J; Ernest
Ang ley 8, Zoom 20; Movf•
" Three Coins In the Fountain"

17 ,
11 :00- Re)( Humbard 15; Rev .
Henry Mahon 13; Eltc. Co. 20;
Foolsteps 33.
11 ·30- BIII Dance Outdqors 3;
Animals, Anlmalst Anlmals 6,13;
Foce the Notion I ; Big Blut
Marble 20; Unlcol-n Tales ~-

.,

.

"I

i'

�'

8- The Da1ly Sentinel , M1ddleport-Pome1o) . (), F'nday, Jan 20, 1900

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINITY CH URCH

poster Roy Moyer
Church Scho ol

Rev

W

H

Pem n

Sunday r.c hoo l sup t

9 15 om

worshtp ser-

vtc e 10 30 o m Chotr rehearsal Tuesday
7 30 p m under dt rec tton of Al• ce NeoH~
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

Corne r Unton and Mulberry Rev Clyde V
Henderson pastor Sunday school q 30

a m
sl-11p

Glen McC lung supt morn tng war
10 30 o m &amp;\'emng se nn ce 7 30

m•d week 59rvtce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E
Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Robert 8

Gr oves rector Sunday servtces ot 10 30
a m

wllh Holy Communton on the l.r st

Su nday ol each month

and comb•ned

wii'K Morntng Prayer on teh thtrd Sunday

M orntng Prayer and Sermon on a l l o ther

S!Jndoys ol the month Church Schoo l and
nursery core provkled Coffee hour 1n the
Paosh Hol l •mmed•otely follo wmg the ser
\I I C9

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRI ST 212 W
Motn Sf Ne•l Proudfoot pastor Bible
sc hool q 30 o m mornmg worshtp 10 30
o m You th meetings 6 30 p m evenmg
worshtp 7 30 Wednesday nigh t prayer
meetmg and Btble study 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy Envoy and M rs Ray Wm
1ng olttce rs 1n charge Sunday hohness
meetmg 10 am Sunday Sc hoo l 10 30
a m Sunday sc hoo l leader YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p m , solvatto n meeftng
venous speakers a nd mus1 c spec tal s
Thursday 10 a m to 2 p m ladtes Home
league all women tnvtted 7 30 p m
prayer meettn g and Stbl e study Bob
Estep
leader
Rev
Noel Hermon
teacher
BURLINGTON
SO UTH ERN BAPTIS T
CHAPEL Route 1 Shade- Pa sto r Bobby
Elk1ns Sunday scho61 5 p m
Sunday
wo rshtp 5 45 p m
Wednesday praye r
se rvtce 7 30 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST 200 W Matn St ConservotNe
non mstrume ntol, Sunday worshtp 10
a m
8tble st udy I I om worshtp 6
p m Wednesday Btble study 7 p m
OLD DE XTER BIBLE CHRI STIAN CHURCH
Rev Rolph Sm tih pa sto r Su nday sc hool
9 30
o m
Mrs
Worley
Fran ciS
superm lenden t Preach•ng serv1ces f~r s t &amp;
Hmd Sundays fo ll ow tng Sund ay Sc hoo l
GRAHAM
UNITE D
METHODIST
Pr eachtng 9 30 a m f ~r s t and seco nd Sun
days ol each month , thtrd and f our th Sun
days each month worsh1p serv1ce at 7 30
p m Wednesday eve mngs at 7 30 Prayer
and 81ble Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulbe"y
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor A lbert
Dttfes Sabbath Schoo l Supennt en dent
R1to Wh1te Sabbath Sc hoo l Sa turday
afternoon at 2 00 w1th Worsh1p Serv1ce
follow1ng at 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIS T CHURC HSister Homett Worne r Sup! Sunda y
Sc hool , 9 30 am mormng wo rsh1p 10 45
am
THE HILAND CHAPEL George Casto
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m , eve n1ng
wOr5 htp 7 30 Thursday evemng prayer
serv 1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTI ST Dov1 d Mann ,
m mtster Wtlltam Watson Sunday schoo l
supt Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m morntng
wo rsh1p 10 30 a m
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTI ST 282 Mu lberry
Ave Pom eroy He r she l McClur e Sunday
sc hool supenntendent Sunday sc hool
9 30o m mo rnmg wo rshtp 10 30 even
tng worsh tp 7 ()() p m M1dweek prayer
se rv1ce 7 00 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER Dexter
Rd , longlv tll e , Oh1o , Rev Clyde Ferre\\ ,
Pastor Sunday School 1 l a m Saturday
preodung serv1ces 7 30 p m Wednesday
evenmg B1ble study ot 7 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Batley
Run Rood Rev Emme rt Rowson pa stor
Han dley Dunn sup! Sunday sc hool 10
a m Sunday evenmg serv1ce 7 30 Btbl e
teochtng 7 30 p m Thutsdoy
DYESV ILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Ro ger C Turne r pastor Sunday school ,
9 30 am
S1Jndoy rt\orntng worsh tp
10 30 Sunday eventng serv te e 7 30
'
M IDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
post er Mrs
Ru sse ll Young
Sunday
Sc hool Su p! Sunday School 9 30 a m
Evenmg worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday prayer
meet tng 7 30 p m
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Ractn e- Rev James So tt erf1 eld , pa stor
Mornmg worshtp, 9 45 o m
Sunda y
sc hool 10 A5 o m even 1ng wo rsh 1p 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
lad tes prayer
meet•ng Wednesday, 7 30p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST , Corner
Suc th and Palm er th e Rey Mark M cC lung
Sunday sc hoo l 9 I S a m , Don Wtlson ,
su permt end ent lacy Borton oss1 supt
M orn•ng Worsh1p 10 15om Btble study ,
10 30om of church Youth meeltng 7 30
p m Wedn esda y Wednesday n1ght 81b le
study and pray e r se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST Moddl epaot 51h
and Mo•n Bob Melton mm1 ster , Mtk e
Gerlach supenn tendent Terry Yankey
youth mtnt ster Btble sc hoo l 9 30 o m
mornmg worsh tp 10 30 o m youth group
Svnday 6 30 p m even mg worsh1p 7 30
prayer serv1ce , 7 30 p.m Wednesday
MIDD LE PORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Rev J1m Broome pastor 8tll
Sunday schoo l supt
Sunday
Wh1te
school '9 30 o m morn1ng wors htp 10 30
a m , Sunday evangel1 stt c meet 1ng, 7 00
p m. Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUN TY Dw1ght l Zov1t1 d1rec
too
HARRISON V IllE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernest Stnc khn pastor Sunday chur ch
school 9 30 o m , Mr! Homer lee supt
marnmgworsh1p 10 30
MIDDLEPO RT , Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m
RIChard Vaughan supt Morn tng wo r shtp
10 30
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTE RIAN
Church Worsh1p servt ce 9 30 a m Sunday
School 10 30 am Mr s Sampson Hal l
sup!
RUTLAN D CHURCH OF GOD Rev Bob
by Po rte r , pas tor Sunday school 10 a m
Sunday worsh 1p 11 a m Sun day eventng
serv1 ce, 7 p m Wednesday Fomdy Tro1
ing Hour 7 p m Wednesday wors h1p se r
VICe, 7 3Qp m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Long Bottom Edsel Hart poste r Sunday
school, lOam , Church, 7 30p m prd'yer
meehng 7 30 p m Thu rsday
MIDDLEPORT PENTE COSTAL
Thoo d
Ave , the Rev Will iam Knlllel pastor
Thomas Kelly , Sunday School Supt Sun
day school , I 0 a m Classes for a l l ag es ,
evening serv •ce
7 30
Bible study
Wednesday 7 30 p .m , youth serv1ces
Friday, 7 '30 p m
'"
MIDDLEPOHT FREEWILL BAPTI ST Cooneo
.., Ath and Plum : Noel Herrman pastor
.. , Saturday even~ng service, 7 30 p m Sun
day School , 10.30 a .m .
I,
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
R1chard W . Thomas, Directo r
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Ro bert M cGee
Rev . James Corb111
POMEROY, Sunday" S&lt;hool 9 15 om .
, Worshtp serv•c• 10:30 a m Cho•r rehear ·
~ sol , Wednesday , 7 p.m . RaY . Robert
: McGee , pastor .
'
ENTERPRIS~ . Worshtp 9 a .m . Churc h
1
5chool10 am
ROCK SPRINGS , Church School 10 am
Worship 10om. UMYF6.30p.m .
FLATWOOr&gt;S. Church School 10 o m
Wprs hip 1 t a . m .

1

..

MIDDLEPORl CLUSTER
HEAT H Chur ch Sc hool 9 30 o m War
shtp 10 30 am UMYF b p rn Ro ber t
Rob1nson Pastor
RUTLAND Church School 9 30 am
Worsh1p 10 30 o m Wdbu1 Hdt Pa stor
SALEM CENTER , Wo rsh1p 9 om Ch ur ch
School 9 45 o m
SY RACUSE ClUS TE R
Rev Harvey Koch Jt
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 am Chur ch
Sc hool 10 o m
MINERSVIll E Chur ch Schoo l 9 a m
Worsh1p 10 om
ASBURY Church Sc: hoo l 9 50 a m War
sh1p 11 o m Btble Study 7 30 p m Thu rs
day UMW ftsl Tuesday
SOUTHERN ClUS TEH
Rev Do vt d H orrt s
Rev Mark. Flynn
Rev Florence Sm tth
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY (Dorcas ) Wors htp 9 00 o m
Church School 10 00 a m
CARMEL Chru ch Sc hool 9 30 a m Wor
shtp 10 30 am 2n d end 4th Su nday s
APPLE GROVE Su n dov School9 30 o m
Wo rs h•p 7 30 p m lsi ond 3rd Sunday s
Prayer meettng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Fellowsh1p supper ft rst Saturday 6 p m
UMW 2n d Tu esday 7 30 p m
EAST lET ART Chruch School 9 a m
Worsh 1p serv tce 10 o m Prayer meetmg
7 30 p m Wedn esday UMW second Tues
doy730pm
,
RACIN E WESLEYAN - Sunday sc hool 10
a m
wo r sh tp 11 a m Cho~r procltce
Th ur5doy 8 p m
LETAR T fAllS- Worshtp serv1ce q am
Chu rch Schooi iO a m
MORNING STAR Wor sh1 p 9 30 om
Churc h
School
10 30 a m
Youth
Tuesdays 7 p m
MORSE CHAPEL, Ch u rch Sc hoo l 9 30
a m Worsh1p 1 I a m
POR TLAND Church Schoo l 9 30 o m
Wor sh1p 11 o m
SUTTON Church Schoo l 9 30 a m War
sh1p lsi and 3rd Sundays 10 30om
NO~ TH EA S T CLU STER
ReY RIChard W Thomas
Duane Sydenstn cker Sr
John W Douglas
Charl es Dom• gon
JOPPA Wor shtp 9 00 a rn Church
Sc hoo l 10 00 a m
CHESTER
Worsh1p 9 a m
Church
Sc hoo l 10 am Cho tr Rehe arsa l 7 p m
Wednesday B1bl e Study Wednesdays
7 30p m
lONG BOTTO M , Sunday Sc hool at 9 30
o m Evemng Worshtp at 7 30 p m Thur s·
day Btble Study 7 30 p m
REEDSV IllE Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m
Morn1ng Worshtp 10 30 am Eventng War
shp 7 30 p m B1ble Study Wednesdays at
7 30p m
ALFRED , Sunday School of 9 45 a m
Mor n 1ng Worsh1p at 11 a m Wednesday
N tght Prayer Meehng 7 30 p m
ST PAUL , (Tuppers Plom s) Sunday
Sc hoo l 9 00 a m Morn mg Worshtp ot
10 00 a m Monday N•ght Btbl e Study 7 30

pm
SOUTH BETHEL (S ilver R1dge) Sunday
Sc hoo l 9 00 am Mornmg Wo sh tp 10 00
a m Wednesday Btble Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST serv tces
each Sunday 9 30 o m George Ptekens ,
pastor wtth preochmg on ftr sl and thtrd
Su nday of month Ol1ver Swain Supt
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Rev Ke ot h
Ebltn pastor Sunday School 9 30 o m
Leonard G1 lmore ftrsl elder eventng ser ·
vtce , 7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer
meetmg 7 30 p m
, BEARWALLOW RIDGE CH URCH OF
CHRIST Duane Worden mm tster B1bl e
cl ass 9 30 a m mormng worsh1p 10 30
o m
eventng worshtp
6 30 p m
Wednesday Btble study 6 30 p m
NEW
STIVERSV ILLE • COMMUNITY
Church Sunday School serv1ce, 9 45 o m
Wor sh 1p servtee 10 30 EvangelistiC Ser ·
v1ce , 7 30 p m . Wednesday
Prayer
meet1ng 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST , Pomeroy
Hamsonvdl e Rd Robert Purtell pastor
Btl I McElroy Sunday school supl Sunday
sc hool 9 30 o m , mornmg worsh1p and
commumon 10 30 am Sunday wa rsht p
serv tce
7 pm
Wednesday evenmg
prayer meehng and Btble study 7 p m
ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH Pme
Grove The Rev Wdltom Mtddlesworth
Pastor Chu rch se r-11ces 9 30 o m Sunday
SchooiiO 30 am
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST , Sunday
sc hool , 9 30 om ., worsh tp servtce 10 30
a m Other meettngs as announced
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev Eaol Shuleo
pastor Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m Church
se rvtce
7 p m
youth meeftng
6
p m Tuesday B•ble Study , 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
Rev John A Co ffman pastor Frankli n
Imboden chatrmon of the Boord of Ch m
f1on Lt fe Sunday School 9 30om morn ·
tng worsh tp 10 30 Sunday even1 ng wor ·
sh tp 7 30 p m Pra yer meetmg , Wednes
doy 7 30pm
RACINE FI RST BAPTIST , Don l Walker ,
Pa stor Ronm e Salser Su nday sc hoo l
supt Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m morntng
wars h tp 10 40 o m Sunday even•ng wor ·
sh tp 7 30 Wednesday even1ng Btbl e
study 7 30
DAN V ILLE WESLEYAN
Rev
R D
Brown , pastor Sunday School , 9 30om ,
morn 1ng w orsh1p 10 45 youth servtee,
6 45 p m , event ng worship 7 30 p m
praye r and pro1se , Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Marvtn
Marktn pastor Steve ltttle Sunday school
su p! Su nday sc hoo l I 0 o m
morn1ng
worsh tp 11 a m Sunday evenmg war ·
sh1p , 7 30 Prayer meet1ng and B1ble
study Thursday 7 30 p m youth serv1ce
6 p m Sunday
CH ESTER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E
Rob tn son , pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m worshtp serv1ce 11 o m , eyenmg
se rv 1ce 7 00 yout h ser vtee Wednesday
700pm
LANG SVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Robert Mu sser , pastor Sunday school
9 30 p m Roy St gmon supt , mornmg
wors hip 10 30 Sunday even tng serv tce
7 30 , m1d· w eek serv tce Wednesday , 7
pm
SYRACU SE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
R:ev Dale Bo ss pastor
Sunday school ,
9 30 am , mormng worsh1p , 10 45 om
evange liS tiC serviCe 7 p m Wednesday
servtees - prayer and pratse , 7 p m ,
youth meetmg , 7 p m Men s prayer
meeltng Satur day ' 7 p m .
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST ,
Elden R Bloke , pastor Sunday School 10
am Roberl Reed , supt Morning ser ·
mo n I I a m
Sunday ntght serv1ces
Chn sllon Endeavor, 7 30 p m Song ser·
v1ce, B p m
Preochmg 8 30 p m
M1dweek Prayer meehng, Wednesday , 7
p m . Alv1n Reed loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST , Loco led ot
Rutland on New l •mo Road , next to Forest
A cre Pork Rev Roy Rouse , pastor, Robert
Mu sse r
Sunday School supt , Sunday
school , 10 30 am worship 7 30 p m BIbl e Study , Wedne&amp;doy ,' 7 30 p .m Satur·
day ntght prayer service, 1 30 p m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rover
Watson . pastor, Mildred Zieg ler , Sunday
school supt Morning worship , 9 30 a m .
Sundoyschool 10·30 a m
eventng se r
VICe, 7 3Q
MT
UNION BAPTIST, Cec tl Co)(
m.nfst er
Joe Sayre
Sunday Schoo l
Supenn tenen t Sunday schoo l 9 45 a m
evemng wors h1p, 7 30 p m
Prayer
meetmg 7 JO p m Wednesday
TUPPER S PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
Randy Koehler pastor , Qenn1s Newland ,
Sunday sc hool suPenntendent Sunday
Sc ho ol , 9 30 o m , mormng church ser·
111ce 10 30 om Sunday even ing Bible
srudy 7 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED BRETHREN, Rev
Freel and t-J oms poster Floyd N orr •s
supt 5undoy school , 9 30 o .m morning
sermon
10 30 a m
Prayer ser v•u•

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

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I'LL ~ET WINNIE ANI/ BILL 1

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o

Wednesday 7,30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Gro te pastor Fronk Rtffle ,
sup! Sunday Sc hoo l Q 30 a m Worsh1p
ser ytce 11 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meet•ng Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LAUREL CUFF FREE
METHO DIST
CHURCH , Rev Fl oyd f Shook , pastor
lloyd Wnght Sunday Sc hool Sup! Morn
tng Worsh1p 9 30 a m , Sunday School
10 20 a m Wednesday Prayer and 81ble
Study 7 30 p m Sunday evenmg w orshtp
7 30 p m , Cho1r Practice Thursday 7 p m
DE XTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Charles
Rus se ll Sr , m 1n 1ster R1ck Maco mber
su p! Sunday school , 9 30 a m worsh1p
serv1ce 10 30 o m B1ble Study Tuesday
730 pm
REORGANIZED CHURCH O F JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAIN TS , Po rtland
RoetnE! Rood W il ltom Ro ush pastor
Phyllis Sto bart Su nday School Sup! Sun
day School 9 30 a m Morn1ng wors h1p ,
10 30 o m Sunday even tn g serv1 ce 7 p m
Wednesday ove nmg prayer se rvtees 7 30
p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Ea rl Shuler
pastor Worsh1p servtee , 9 30om Sunday
sc hoo l 10 30 a m Btble Study and p rayer
serv1ce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH, K1ngsbury Rood
Gary K1ng , poster Sunday school Q 30
am , Rolph Carl , supenntendenl , evemng
worship , 7 30 p m
Prayer m eeltng
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN George F
P1cken!i pa sto r Walla ce Damewood
Su pt 81ble School , 9 45 am Preochtng
servtce' 10 45 om f•rst and th trd Sun
days 7 p m second and f ourth Sunda ys
Btble study 8 p m Tuesdays
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Rev Okey Cart, pastor. Sunday Sc hool
9 30 Morning servtee 10 30 o rn , Sunday
evemng and Thu rsday evemng servtees at

7 ClOp m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob Rev Lawrence Gluesencomp , Sr ,
pa stor Roger W tlll ord Sr Sunday schoo l
supt Sunday school 9 30 a evenmg war·
shtp 7 30 p m Prayer meetmg , Wednes ·
day 7 30 p m Youth meeftng Sunday
5 30 p m w1th Don and Mar tha Meadows
1n charge
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Coolville RO Re v Roy
Deeter pos tor . Sunday schoo l 9 30 am
worsh 1p serv1ce 10 30 o .m B1ble study
and prayer serv1ce Wednesday , 7 30 p .m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHR IST Bo ad
Henders on pasto r , Herb Elhott Sun day
sc hool supt Sunday school 9 30 a m ,
m ornmg wors h1p and comumon 10 30
am
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
Amos Tillis , poster Donny T1llt s, Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
followed by morntng worsh1p Sunday
evemng servtce
1 00 p m
Prayer
meetrng , Wednesday , 7 OOp.m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Re v lloytl 0 Grimm Jr. pastor Sunday
school , 9 30 o ,m . worshtp ser viCe, 10 30
a .m . Broadcast l1ve over WMPO , young
peoples serviCe 7 p .m . Evangelistic ser·
v 1ce 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce , 7 JO
pm ,
,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner of Se
con d and Anderson Ma son Pa stor Fr ank
Lowther ,Sunday school, 9 4S a m , wor ·
sh1p servt ce 11 a m and 7 30 p m '(leek ·
ly B1ble Study , Wednesday , 7 30 p,m ,
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Moiler Sl ,
Mason W Vo Aunce Mick pastor Sun ·
day B1ble Study 10 a .m .;" Worship II o ,m
and 7 p m Bibl e Study Wednesday 1 p m
Vacol mus1c.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud dong
la ne Mason W Va Re v Ronme 8 Rose
Pastor. Sunday Sc hoo/9 45 am Morntn'g
Worshlr, 11 om Ev en mg Servt ce 7 :10

p m Wedne5day Women 's Mtnt slrt es 9
o m (meetmg and prayer Pray er and B1
ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CH RISTIAN UNION , The Rev Wtl lt am
Campbell pastor Sunday Schoo l 9 30
am James Hughes , supt , evenmg ser
vtce
7 30 p m Wed nesd ay evemng
prayer meeftng 7 30 p m Youth prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , Letoot W
Vo , Rt 1, Mark lrwm , pastor Wo rsh 1p
serv1ces 9 30 a m
Sunday sch ool , 11
a m evemng w orsh 1p , 7 30 p m Tuesday
cott age prayer meet•ng and Btble st u dy
9 JO a m Worshtp 5e rv 1ce Wedn esday
7 30p m
CALVARY BIBLE CH URCH now loc ated
on Pomeroy P1ke Co unty Rood 25 , near
Fla twoods Re v Blackwood , pas To r Ser
v1ces on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30
p m wt th Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m Btbl e
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH INC
Pear l St , M•d dl epo rt Rev 0 Del l
Manley pasto r Sonny Hudson Su nday
schoo l supt Sunday schoo l , 9 30 a m ,
even1ng worship 7 30 p m Praye r and
pro1 se servtee Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CH URCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elde r James M1ller Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 30 p m , Sunday
Sc hoo l , 10 am Sunday n1ght serviCe , 7 30

pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS HornsonY1IIe Rood Dewey King pastor
Ed1 son Weaver , os s•stant Henry Eblm ,
Jr Sunday sc hoo l supt Sunday sc hool
q 30 o m , morn •ng wors h1p , I I a m Sun
day evemng
serv1ce , 7 30, proy1H
mee hng , Thursday 7 30 p m .
,SYRACUSE FIR ST CHURCH OF GOD No t Pentecostal
Rev George Oder
pastor Wonh1p serv1ce Sunday , 9 -45
o m , Sunday sc hoo'l . 11 a m· , w o rstHp
Thursday prayer
serv1ce, 7 30 p m
meat•ng , 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Un1ted Brethren Church
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worship ser v tce
10 45 am Preoc htng servtees every Sun .
day a lternating w 1th C E Wednesday ·
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Rev James
leach pastor Dov1d Ho lter loy leader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 m1/e east at.
Rutland 1unction of Route 124 and Noble
Summtt Rood (T· 17-4) Sunday 81ble lee·
ture , 9'30 a . Watchtower study, 10·30
am Tuesday , Bibl e study 7 and B 15
p m , Thursday , theocrottc schoo l , 7 30
p m , servtce mee tmg , 8·30 p m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church Leland Holey , pastor Sunday school , 10
a m eventng serYice, 7 30 p m Prayer
meetmg, Wednesday , 7 30p ,m .
CHURCH OF GOD ol Prophecy. l ocated
on tne 0 J, Wh1 te Rood off h1ghway 160
Sunday School 10 a m . Supermtendanl
John Loveday Ftrs t Wednesday n 1ght of
month CPMA servtces second Wednes
day WMB meetm,g third through f1fth
youth serYIC&amp; George Croy le, pasto r
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570Grant St. ,
Middleport Rev Don Bloke, pastor Sun·
day sc hool , 9.30 a .m .. morning worshtp,
10 30 a m
evening Wonh1p , 7 p m
Wednesday even1ng B1ble study and
praye r meeting, 7 p m Affi liated wtth
Southern Bopt ts l Conven ti on
BRADFORD C HUR~H OF CHRIST~
Euge ne UnderwOod pdstor Harry H en·
dr lcks, su penntendent Sunday school,
9 30om morning worship , 10' 30 a .m .,
evenmg worshtp, 1 p .m . Wednesday Bible
study 7 p m
,
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's
Cn•ek Rood Rev C. J Lemley , pastor;
John Fellur e
supenntenden t Church
sc hool q 30 o m , morning worship ,
10 30, eventno se rvice , 1 p m . Yovth
rte" ttng t.u nd ~1v 6 p .m , Clble study in

'

depth Wednesday , 7 p m Classes for al l
ages Nurs~ery pro v1ded for worshtp ser
VICe
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
of Sycamore and Second Si s , Pomeroy
The Rev William Middlesworth , Pastor
Sunday School at 9 45 a m an d Church
Se rY tces 11 o m
SACRED HEART, Rev Father Paul 0
Welton , pester Phone 992-2825 Saturday
evenmg Moss , 7 30 Sunday Mass B and
10 am
Conleu 1o n , Saturday , 7-7 301
pm
VICTORY BAPTtST - On the Route 7
bypass James E Keesee , pastor Sunday
schoo l , 10 o .m
mornmg worsh1p 11
a m evenmg servtee , 7
TRINITY Chnst1a n Assembly , Coolville
G 1lbert Spencer , pastor
Sunday
mornmg worshtp , 11
school, 9 30 o m
a m . Sunday evenmg servtce, 7 30 p m
m1dweek prayer servtee Wednesday , 7 30
pm
MOUNT Ohve Commumty Church ,
Lawrence Bush pastor, Max Folmer, Sr
Supermtenden t. Sunday School and morr. ·
mg warsh 1p 9·30 a m Sunday even1ng
serv1ce, 7 p.m., Youth meehng end Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Mason . meet at
Umted Steel Workers Umon Holt , Railroad
Str eet Mason Pastor, lev Joy MitChell
Morn 1ng worshtp 9 45 a .m ., Sunday
School
10 30 a m
Preyer meetmg

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Charles R. Houdashelt, Mary L.
Houdashelt to Frederick J. Stobart,
Roger Adams, 48 acres, Bedford.
James F. Gtbson, Mary V. Gibson
to Janies F Gibson, Mary 1./. Gibson, Parcels, Scipio.
Raymond R. Cotterill, U!tha Cot·
terill to Raymond R. Cotterill, -Letha
Cotterill, 62¥• acres, Scipio.
Margaret Ella Lewis to Clem E.
Babcock, Lot 282, V. B. Horton's
Ad&lt;\, Mtddleport.
Virgie Klein, Affidavit, Salisbury.
Vtrgie Klem to William L. Klein,
Lots, Salisbury'
Charles 0. Usle, Beatrice Lisle to
Lawence P. Lisle, Cecilia G. Lisle,
Lots 10, 11, 12, Crooks 2nd Add.,
Syracuse Village.
George F. Cremeans, Audrey M.
Cremeans to Earl R. Cremeans, Betty A. Cremeans,_5.02 acres, Orange.
James W. Duvall, Mary B. Duvall
to Liberty Oil and Gas Corp., Right
ofWay,Olive.
Sandra Munn Ohlinger, Michael
Ohlinger, Sandra M1111n fal'lllerly
· Sandra Haning to Ronald J. Haning,
o,ect of Correction, Scipio - ColliJJlo
bla.
Hassan Masri, Suzanne E. Masri
to Ronuld E. Reynolds,. Mary R.

He can't he lp 1t
1f he loolt.s a
l1ttle d1ffer

Wednesday , 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden
pastor . Cornelius Bunch
superintendent Sunday school, 9 30 a m ,
second and fourth Sundays worsh1p ser·
VIC8af2 30p m .
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fa uoth and
Mom St , Middleport. Rev. Celvm Mmn1s ,
pastor Mrs Elvtn Bumgardner, supt . Sun ·
day school, 9 30 a .m . wo~ship serv1ce
10 AS am
NORTH BETHEL
Unoted
Methadiu
Churc h Rev . Charles Domtgon , poster
Sunday School 9 30 a m Worsh1p Ser VICe , 10.45 am. Sunday B•ble Study , 7 00
p m Wednesday prayer meetmg, 7 30
p .m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN
BAPTIS'T
CHURCH , ~toute 1, Shade Pastor
Block Affll1eted w•th Southern Bapti!t
COnvenhon S!.fnday school , 1·30 p .m .;,..
Sunday worship , 2.30 p m Thursdov .
evemng 81ble study, 7 p ,m
~
PENTECOSTAL
ASSEMBLY
Rocone,
Route 124 , W1lllam Hoback pastor Sun-'··
day school 10 a m ., Sunday even1ng sar 1
vl.:e , 6 30 p..m Wednesday eenmg ser- )
\liCe, 7.
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rev Foealand ~
Norr11 pastor Don Chead l e, Supt . Sun.! 1.1
day School , 9 30 am Mornmg Worsh1p••
10·30 o .m , Prayer ServiCe olternota Sun-. v
d,ays
"' •

oon

' :X
"'
VETERANBS MEMORIAL · ,,
HOSPITAL
Admltted--Mitziann Lewis ,''~:
Rutland ; Darra Lynn Peck,' ·•s
Pomeroy; Ruth Wolfe, Racine; .
Doris Miller, Racine; Ivor Logan, : .:
Racine.
'
Discharged-Tracy Whaley, David' ··~
Jenkins, Clarence Spurrier, Charles.' ::
Eads, .Grace Knighting, Benjamin, "Hackett, John Powell, Coosle Grant. ••

..

ARE A5LEEP BY NCW, AND
LOOK ATUS LEAIZN IN0
THE lATEST DISCO
BTEP

MEET INTERE~IN6
GUY$ IN T&gt;&lt;ESE
PLACE-5?

IAliNPia'
RUUM

Television Viewing

PEANUTS

(11A'AM,THE SNOW
15 COMING THROUGH
THE CEILING AGAIN ...

~~UJW~;rl
, by fHOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

10 Japanese

1 ReUgiOIIB

RI61-IT UP THERE, SEE?
RIGIH THROUGH THAT
HOLE THERE IN
THE CEILING ...

capttal

group
5 Israeli

11 Ayatollah
land

DOWN
1 100 centesimi 1 Fmish off
9 Poets
a dragon
13lrish
2 Colleen's
airport

Islands

land

14 "Our Man

Yesterday's Answer
1% Whiter
Z7 Stored,
lhiB winter
as supplies
18 Tough
Z9 Stone tablet
19 English
33 Woman's
Mver
name

3 Emergency

project

Fllnt" star
15 Of course
11 "Hell/'

4 Healthy
look
said Shemllll1 5 Setting

11 New:

1 Olfactory

sensations

comb. fonn
II Salutes

.

7 Fish a

18 Aldrich's

certain

"Marlory - " 10 Hazard

n Have

the

Z1 Stumped
Z% Italian

34 First place

seaport

38 Beam
of light
37 Deneuve's

way

23 Morse Is

at

wheel

one

Z5 - au rhwn

amblllollB . 11Foot lever

name

friend

Yeolerday's Cryptoquote :

ALL

HUMAN

UNHAPPINESS

COMES FROM NOT KNOWING HOW TO STAY QUIETLY IN A

Zl Mllallm judge r.--r,-t.-r.-

ROOM - PASCAL

!4 Unger about

Zl Actor,
Peter It Medicinal

plant
Z"IScallng
device

•a

-up

Zf Cavalry

weapon .,,.
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31 Joae'a &amp;Wit

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WHA"i ON!! HEAR5
WHEN L.OVERS F'INI7
NO NEED iO iAL.l&lt;.

tri.besman
31 Ancient
Persian

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDl.BAAXB
II

LONGFELLOW

One lelter almplY atands for another. ln this sample A is
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc Single leiters,
apottrophel, the length and formation of the wonit are all
hJntt. Etch day the code ]etten are different

Reynolds, Parcels, Sutton.
Ear.! J. Wright, Beulah B. Wright
to Earl J. Wright, Beulah B: Wright,''
123.50 atres, Salem.
· ,
·,
Green Wade Vance, deed. to"Daiay
Vance. Cert. of trans., Sclplo.

J.

· CBYPTOQUDTES

Z·J

RY CE

'G C Q J Ill L

Y0

CQGLJ

JFYBL

•ZJ

l

J H'R J

J

J BF J L

\'

FRIDAY ,JANUARY 25,1980
6 30-NBCNews3, 15 . ABCNewsl:l .
Ca rol Burnett 6, CB S News 8, 10,
Bob New hart 17 , V 1lla Aleg re 20,
Wild Wtld World of Anima ls 33
7 00-Cross Wits 3 Tic Tac Dough
11 ,
Newlywed
Game 6, 13,
Ma c N e il Leh re r Repor t 33
News 10, l ave, American Style
15, Love American Style 15,
Dick C~~~o~e tt .20
7 30-Price Is Right 3. 3's A Crowd
6 Joker 's Wild 8, Family Feud
1(), Pop Goes th e Country 13, 15 ,
A il In The Fam 1l y 17 MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20
8 00-Shi rl ey 3, 1.5 , 8 AD Cat s 6, 13,
Incre dibl e
Hul k
B, 10
Washington Week m Review
20,33; Movie " The Rav en" 17
8 30-Wall Street Wee k 20,33
9 00- Top of the Hill 3 Movie
" M o th e r &amp; Daughter " 6 , 13 ,
Movi e " Marriage IS Ali ve an d
Well " 15, Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10,
Capitol Beat 33, Free to Choose
20
tO GO-Knots Landing 8,1(), Per
spec t1 ve on Gr eatness 17; News
20 , David Susskind 33
10 30-----Pavarotti at J\Jitl lard 20
11 oo-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15, Last of
lh e Wtld 17 , D ick Cavett 20,
Monty Pyt hon 's F lying Circus 33
11 30- Tonlght 3, 15 , Char l ie ' s
Angels 6; Movie " Dull a Dead ly
Number" 8 ' ABC Capt ioned
News 33, Movie " The Hound of
lhe Baskervllles " 10, M ovie
'' The Gr een Berels" 13, M ovie
" TH X 1138" 17
12 AO- FSI • 6 ,
1 00- Midnlght
Speci al 3,15 , M ovie "The In
destructible M an " 10, 1·2.sNews 17
1 30-Movle " Beac h Ball" 17, 2
News 13
2 30--NewsJ, 3 25--Movle "Edge of
Darkness" 17

oo-

USulflx

31 Hamitic

MY

0 A

QTFJ

J

I I I

j

Answer here:

"[

. I

Yesterday s

GOBE

G D M•

V .- M G D L L

J

TD

NOw arr•nge lhe circled litters to
torm tnt surprise an~;wer, It aug·
gest~ by thfi abOve canoon

I I I l-r I I I I )"
-

.

C11Y. AN!7 WHO EVER
SAl D YOU CO ULl7

HE'IZE I

.._....

~E5,

'

YEAH, IT 5 ONE OF MY
MORE EXCITIN0"
NI6HT5 IN -:J&lt;E: 1310

MUST B5.
tYEW iWOUN7

21Glve a
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL "
. ~·
Two men were taken to Holzer . •
Mediclll Center by the Rutland , ..:
Emergency Squad Wednesday nlght :n
from Meigs Mine l of the Southern ' ·~
Ohlo Coal Co. It was reported that a '
small fire occurred ln the ·
preparation plant apparenUy cauaed 7 ~
by an electrical problem. The two "'
men reported to liave been suffering ' .:
from smoke inhalaUon are Andy . ·~
Doc2ie, R!lute 1, Middleport, and •.
Mike McManus, Wellston.
'·

8UREf ,ou

t9fl'O"OW)

Jt.Jmbles FLOUR HONOR • GOL.FER DARING
Anawer What the repairman said when the dri~er
complllned thal his engl'!)e was sm~klng WELL, IT'S OLD ENOUGH!
•

SATURDAY ,JANUARY 26,1980
5 45-World at Large 17, 6 DOSocieties In Trans ition 10 ,
Human Otmenslon 17
6 ~o-S aturday Repo r t 3, 4 S Farm
Report 10, It's Your 8\J!Iness 17
7 OO-Big Blue Marble 3, Porky P ig
8, It' s Your Business 10; Ken
tucky Afi el d 13 ; Three. Stooges
Little Rascal s 17
7 3D-Little Rasca ls 3; Bay City
Roller 15, M atters of L1 fe 6. Not
For Wom en Only 10, Sp ider
woman 13
"oo--GodLilla , Globetrotter s " 3, 15 ;
S uperfr~end s
6 13
M i ghty
Mouse-Hec k le &amp; JecKie 8, 10 :
Ultra Man 17 ; Woman 's P lace 33
$ JO...- Partridge Fam1ly 17 , P 1itnet
of Man 33
'J 4'0 .~ Fred 8. ~.l• ney 3 15 Pl clS tl c

Man 6, 13 Bugs Bunny Road
Runner a, 10, Maver ic k 17 ,
Fam1ly Portrait JJ
10 oo-Mov1e " The Un forg 1ven" 17 ,
Consumer E l(penence 33
10 30--D affy Duck J, 15 Scooby &amp;
Sc rappy Doo 6, 13, Popeye a,
Mov1e' Road lo R1o' 10
11 00--Casper &amp; lhe Angels 3,15
Growmg Years 33
11 30--F ia sh Gordon 3; G1gglesnort
Hotel 6, Fat A lbert 8, Act1on
News tor Kids 13, PTL Club I S
12 DO- Hot Hero
Andwlch 3
Weekend Spec Ia 16, 1J, Shazam a,
Sneak Prev iew 33
12 3D- A m er ican Bandstand 13,
Potnt of View 6, Tarzan Su per 7
B, Mov1e " Honeymoons Will Kill
You" 10, Market to Market 33
12 A5-Movte "Fa nf~re for a Dea th
Scene" 17
1 oo- Bob Zuffel ata Basketbal l 3,
Columbus Bowling Cla ssic 6,
West Vtrginla Outdoors 33
1 30-V•ewpolnt a, Gale Cat lett 13.
O ld Houseworks 33
2 QO-Sports Afield 6, Marla &amp; lhe
Mag ic Movie Machine 13 ,
Mlt!terplece Thea tre 33
2 30-Bewttched 6; In The Know 10;
TriState 13 Mov i e " War Gods of
8abylpn " 17
3 00-Prd Bowl ing 6, 13, Voyage to
the Bottom of the Se~ 10, Upst airs, Downsta irs JJ
3 30-Cotlege Baskelbal l 3,15
4 ·oo-Galf 8, 10, All Creatures Greal
&amp; Small 33
'
4 J()--Wtde World o f Sports 6, 13,
Untouchablet 17
s 00- Sport s Spec tacular e,
Lifesaving A Part of Living 10,
Lap Qu ilting 20, Search for the
Nile 33
5 30--Bewltched 3, Better Way 15,
Wrestling 17, Old Houseworks
20
6 00-N ews 3, 10, Con cern 8, God
Ha s The Answer IS; Upstairs,
Downstarls 20, Catch 33 33
6 '30-NBC News 3, 15 ; News 6,
Muppet, Show 8, CBS News 10;
actldn Newsm ake r 13, Know
Your Schools 33 .
7 CIO-An Inside Look 3. Hee Haw
6,8; Lawrence Welk 15; Bugs
Bunny 10. S1 98 Beauty Show 13;
Once Upon A Classic 20,33.
7 3o-:..Dance Fever 3; Ramle·O &amp;
J u lie 8 tO ; $100,000 Name Thot
Tune 13 . NHL Hockey 17.... Best of
Groucho ,2$), College Boskelboll

22
8 QO-C hlps 3, 15, One In a Million
6, 13 ; Cttsl holm s B; College
Basketball 16 , Masterpiece
Theatre 20
8 30-Ropers 6, 13
9 oo-Top 01 The Hill J Love llaot
6, 13. BJ &amp; the Bear 15, Mo~le
"The S5 20 An Hour Dr eam " 8;
Every Four Yr ars 20

'

9 30--Movle "Condemned " 33

(

10 oo-Fantasy Is 6, 13, Prime Time
Sa turday 15 , Chlshotms 10, Pop
Goes The Country 17
10 3D-That Nashville Music 17
11 00- News 3, 6.8.10, 13. 15, Di c k
Maurice &amp; Co 17
11 15-ABC News 6, 11 30--Colle-ge
Baske tbal l 3, Saturday Nlgtt t
Live 15, Movie " The 10th Vic
tim " 6, Movie " The Treasure of
Pancho
VIlla '
8,
Movie
' Fathom " 10, Movie " Chamber
of Horrors" 13
12 IXl-Don Ku·shner 's Rock Concert

"

1 DO-Movie "T he Frozen Dead" 13
1 30-Saturday Night Live 3, Movie
'They 'Nho Dare" 17 , 2 ·Jo-ABC
New s 13
3 00- News
J,
J 30- Movle
" Da ngero u s" 3, J · AC)-Movle
" Witness to Murder" 17 , S.QO-.
Movie ' Daugh ters Courageous"

3

J
SUNDAY;JANUARY 27,1980
s JG-AG-USA 17 ; 6:00-Amerlcan
Problems &amp; Cha ll enges 10 .
Betwtten The Lines 17
6 30-Chl"lstopher Closeup J , Better
Way e. Treettouse Club 10;
Action Newsmaker 13
7 QO- Th i s Is The Life 3; J..-ry
Falwell 8, Urban League 10;
J immy Swaggart 17, Gospel
Outreach 13
7 30--TV Chapel 3. Eddie Soundors
6, Jerry Falwe ll 10, The Bible
Answers 13, Jimmy Swaggart
15, It Is Written 17
8 ~Mormon Choir 3; Day of
Dl sco't'ery B; Grace Cathedral 6;
Ewangellcal Outreach 13; Three
1 Stooges 17, Sesame St. M),33.
8 30- Rev Leonard Repass 8;
Contact 6, James Robison 10;
Lower Llghthouse1J; Open Bible
1S
9 110--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3, Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6;
ReV\ Jim Franklin 13, Ernest
Ang ley ts. lost In Space 17;
Mister Rogers 20; Studio See 33.
9 3D-Robert Schuller 8, It Is
Written 10; Rev R A . West 13;
Sesame St 20. Big Blue Morblo

1.'

t

33 .
lO :»-Human' Dimension 3;
Are People Too 6; Movie

Kids

"The

Ambushers"
10;
Jimmy
Swaggart 13; Gospel Singing
Jubilee 1S; Hazel 17: Sesame St.
33
10 JO-Re)l Humbard J; Ernest
Ang ley 8, Zoom 20; Movf•
" Three Coins In the Fountain"

17 ,
11 :00- Re)( Humbard 15; Rev .
Henry Mahon 13; Eltc. Co. 20;
Foolsteps 33.
11 ·30- BIII Dance Outdqors 3;
Animals, Anlmalst Anlmals 6,13;
Foce the Notion I ; Big Blut
Marble 20; Unlcol-n Tales ~-

.,

.

"I

i'

�Orange.:.
1Continued from page 1)
call 667-0192.
Meetings are held on the second
and fourth Wednesdays of each month, 7:30p.m. Anyone who feels an in·
teres! in membership - as well as
the public - is invited to any of the
meetings.
Meantime, department members
are extending a big vote of thanks to
residents and businesses of Tuppers
Plains and the township for tremendous community support which has
been demonstrated to this point.
With a $4,000 indebtedness, the
department plans several fund drive
activities and, of course, always
welcomes contributions which may
be sent to The Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department, Tui&gt;'
pers Plains.

NEW TRUCK - Terry Deem, left, president of the
Orange Townshio Volunteer Fire Department, and

Keith Miller, £ire' chief, are pictured with the department's new pumper truck.

Direct care at center said beluw national

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Donna
Davis,
Pomeroy; Mildred Wolfe, Pomeroy;
Willard Mowery, Pomeroy; Charles
Williams, Middleport; Alma Young,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Jess Pickens, Albert
Frank, Florence Werry, Herman
Warner, Opal Eichinger, Ida Dudding, Darra Peck.

avera~e

Double agency concept of service causes
confusion and struggle for leadership
(Second in a series)
By LARRY EWING
In making a motion Tuesday night
directing the Prosecuting Attorney
to take " 00. whatever steps necessary
to . evict the Gailia-Jackson-Meigs
Mental Health and Mental Retardation 648 Board .. ," from two county
owned buildings currently housing
mental health services, Gallia County Commission President Paul DNidsy expressed concern with an apparent attempt by some mental
health providers to eliminate the
current double-agency concept of
service.
G-J-M Community Mental Health
Center Director Dr. Bernard Niehm
charged on January 3, during
testimony in Gallipolis Municipal
Court, that the December 17
takeover of the Nelsonville Alternative Residential Facility by the
646 Board is the first step by the 646
Board to create one agency for the
delivery of mental health care in the
tri-county area,
Many area mental health
professionals and local government
officials say privately they believe
the current controversy between the
Center and 648 Board is a simple,
political power struggle-an attempt
to create a mental health empire
controlled by _648 Board administrator s
and
staff .
On the state level, James 0. Gibson, President of the Ohio Council of
Community Mental Health Centers,
wrote to Dr. Timothy Moritz, Director of the Ohio Department of Mental H!'lllth and Mental Retardation,
on January 9 expressing his concern
about the role of the Department in
relation to actions by certain 648
Boards against their contract agencies.
Gibson's letter reads, in part, as
follows:
"As you are aware, the member
agencies of the Council have taken a
firm position that 646 Boards should
not directl y operate service
programs, and they certainly should
not take over existing contract agencies. You have stated that the
Department is neutral on the
position of 648 Boards operating services, We have asswned from your

A bank
is still the
best place
to funnel

essential componerits of the
program. We helped plar! the
program, we developed it, watched
it grow and be\:,ome ready for
operations. We know that the facility
was not quite ready to open and
should not have been opened as yet.
The takeover wss a shock and an insultto us.
"We are questioning the 648
Board's motives for taking the
program. It was not because they
wished to deliver high quality men·
tal health care. If that were true,
they would have left the program in
our hands...Another issue with
which we are concerned is the lack
services.
of a contract between the 648 Board
-"Allowing the Jefferson Co_unty
and the Center. We fear that the 648
646 Board to take over the mental
Board will use the lack of a current
health center and assume operation
contract as an excuse to take the
of the services_
-"Permitting the Gallia-J ackson- Center itself over,
"We believe in separating the funMeigs 648 Board to take over and
ction
of the 646 Board from the funcoperate the children's residential
tion
of
the Center. We are in fuU SUi&gt;'
facility."
port
of
a continued separation.
Locally, Annette Levine, ChairProviding
direct service is the area
man of the 648 Board, addressed the
of our expertise. Planning, funding
question of a possible merger o[ the
and evaluation is and sbould be the
two boards in a letter sent to Center
646 BoBrd function. We do not want
Board members on January 9. She
to work directly for the 648 Board,
wrote :
Nothing positive can be gained by
"Since it seems that having two
their attempting to take over the
boards is making operations dif.
Center."
ficult, a solution has been offered by
Maxine S, Plummer, Executive
the district manager. He suggested
Director
of the G-J-M 648 Board,
both boards should continue as
said
earlier
this week she could see
separate entities, but with one direcmany
positive
gains coming from a
tor of both operations. In this manof
the
two mental health
merger
ner, both boards would receive the
boards,
same information. The 648 Board
"Merger would not sacrifice
would use this information to plan, .
care," Plummer said Wednesday,
fund and monitor; the Center Board
"and it would eliminate some of the
would use this information to
administrative positions that are
operate the Community Mental
currently duplicated by the two
Health Center. Another solution
board$."
would be to have one board, con"I would like to see more direct
solidating the membership and
she continued.
services,''
having a monitoring advisory board
Plummer
said that the perfor the Center."
formance
of
Center
staff in offering
Certain of the Center staf£ comdirect
care
to
clients
is ai&gt;'
mented on the takeover of the
proximately
45
percent
below
the
children's facility and the possibility
national
average
for
mental
health
of total Center takeover on January
service. According to the Executive
9 in a letter directed to Leah Ord,
Director, nationally, clinicians
Chairman of the G-J:M Center
spend 55 percent of their total time
Board.
in direct client care. G-J-M
Portions of that letter read, "In
their haste to open the doors to the · clinicians spend, on average, ai&gt;'
proximately 30 percent of their total
children's facility, they ignored
time in the delivery of such services,
Plummer said.
The Executive Director further
questioned methods of hiring and
promotion allegedly used at the
Mental Health Center_
According to Plummer, the policy
of allowing in-house bidding on jobs
that become available has led to a
"definite weakening" o[ programs.
The executive director charged that
often job promotions are based upon .
personal rather than professional
considerations.
position that you would not allow 646
Boards to begin operating service
programs until the issue could be
decided by the legislature through
Senate Bill 160,
"However; recent actions by the
Department raise serious questions
as to the neutrality of your position.
In fact, it appears as though the
Department is lending support to 646
Boards in their "take over actions,"
I am referring to the [ollowing actions by the Department:
-" Consenting to the Clark County
648 Board as an applicjnt agency for
a federal grant for mental health

What other financial institution offers all kinds of
checking acc ounts . insured savings up to
$40,000, every type of loan for helping you or your
business. safe deposit, travelers checks _.. the list
is almost endless_

REGULAR MEETINGS

Regular meetings of the Bedford
Township Trustees have been set for
6 p.m. on the first Saturday of each
month at the home of Helen Swartz,
the clerk,
SQUAD CALLED

(Continued from page I)
$16,883.76.
Public assistance, grants, $12,960;
total, $12,960. Historical society,
grants, $3,500; total, $3,500.
Insurance, pe1111ions and taxe~~, insurance on property, county
buUdings, $13,000; workman's compensation (county) and disabled
workmen's relief, PIX'; public employe's , retirement, $70,000; total,
$96.IKIO.

Miscellaneous, $15,379.90. Contingencies, $8,299.53. Dog and Kennel fund, salaries, employes, $4,820;
public employes retirement, $80;
other ellpenses, $2,100; tot8), $7,000. Public usistance, adminlatration
and operation, saslarles, $20'1',925;
supplies, $9,500; equipment, $5,500;
contracts-repair, $1,400; public
assistance, $100,000; leap, $23,087;
medical assistance, $1,300; aid for
aged, food stamp outreach, $14,050;
food stamps, $34,000; facilities, rent,
$18,000; official bonds, $125; travel
and ellpenses, f2,700; public employe's retirement, $23,000; workmen's Compensation and ' disabled
workmen's relief, $5,396.90; other
ellpenses, $9,640; public social services, salaries, employes,
$55,116.50; supplies, $800; equli&gt;'
ment, $900; contracts-repairs, f200;
facilities, $1,000; travel and expenses, $800; public employe!t
retirement system, $500; workmen's
compensation and workmen's relief,
$500; purchase of service,
$101,095.50; other expenses, $2,280;
salaries, $13,500; travel, $800; rent,
$1,000; equipment, $900; supplies,
$800; purchases of services, f32,000;
public employes retirement, f200;
workmen's compensation and DWR,
f200; other ellpenses, $820; total,
$669,445.90.
Real estate assessment fund,
salaries, employes, f2Q,OOO; SUi&gt;'
plies, $8,000; contracts-services,
$8,000; public employe's retirement,
$3,000; workmen's compensation
and disabled workmen's relief, $600;
other ellpenses, $2,081; total, $39,681.
Motor Vehicle and gasoline tal
fund, engineer, salary, llfflclal,
$19,000; salaries, employes,

SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency Squsd
answered two calls Thursday. At
11:10 a.m. the unit took Willard
Mowery from his Pomeroy home to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
9:19 p.m., Alma Young was taken
from her home to Veterans
Memorial also.

Against commission, sheriff

$38,961.50; supplies, $IKIO; equil&gt;'

ment. $2,200; contracts-repair, $200;

travel, $100; ellpeMeS, $1,200; other
expense, $40,000; roads, wages or
salaries, employes, $214,000;
materials, $359,500.01; equipment, $5,000; contractHervices, $:1,000;
contracts-projects, $15,000; compensation and damages, $1,000; co&amp;
tracts-projects, $15,000; c:ompensal:lon and damages, $1,000; advertising and printing, $200; pbuUc
employe's retirement, $50,000;
workmen's compensation and DWR,
$8,000; other expenses, $500; bridges
and.culverts, wages or salaries, employes, $5,000; ·materials, $29,000;
contracts-projects, $40,000; total,
$984,681.51.
Health, mental health and cllnlcs,
salaries, employes, $19'1,734; IIIIP'
plies, $10,000; equipment, $5,000;
contracts-repair, $3,too; contract.
services, $59,IKIO; contracted agen- ,
cles, $1,240,543; travel and ellpenses,
$23,900;
public employe's
retirement, $27,584; workmen's
compensation and DWR, $8,275;
other eKpenses, $64,738; total,
$1,640,774.
.
Emergency ~cal · ~ces.
salaries, employes, $17,050; supplies, $5,844; materials, $:1,250;
equipment, $4,688; contracts-repair,
$860; contractHervices, $16,456;
rentala, $2,400; advertising and printing, PliO; travel and ~
$7,839; public employe's retil'!!lllent,
$1,300; other expenses, $41,964; transfers, $2,000, total, $106,100.
' Federal revenue sharing,
$126,641.88.

LEGAL BEACH-HEAD ESTABLISHED AT MENTALHEALTHCENTER-'IbeGaUiaCountyBosrdo£
Commissioners Friday directed the Gallia County
Sheriff to "go to the real estate owned by the county to
reclaim those facilities on behalf of the Gallia County

Would you recognize an angel
if you saw one? .
What is their effect on you?
What is their divine pmrposer

NOW YOU

One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident investigated
Thursday by the Gallia·Meigs Post,
Highway Patral on U.S. 35, at the intersection of SR 7.
Called to the scene at 12:45 p.m.,
officers report an east bound auto
operated by AHred Ruschel, 46,
Pomeroy, was unable to stop at the
intersection .and struck a south
bound vehicle operated by Ivan L.
Miller, 46, Gallipolis, in the right
rear. ·
There wss moderate damage to
the Rusche! auto, no damage '" the
Miller vehicle. Rusche! was cited on
a charge of !allure to yield.
The Gallla-Meigs Post Investigated nine other accidents
Thursday during which there w~
no injuries were sustained and no .
citations iSsued.

FROM GAILlA COUNTY TO MAXINE PLUMMER : "Please take
notice that you are askeel to leave the premises 00. Tl)e board does not
have ally kind of lease with the County and you are being asked to leave
~ premises immediately ... If you do not leave, an eviction action may
he initiated against you." Notice delivered by Sheriff James M. Montgomery Friday to 648 Board Executive Director Plummer,

their office located In the

courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio

until noon, Feb. 1, 1980.
The scheduled time lor
opening bids will be Feb, 1.
1980 al12 o'clock noon.
Specifications shall read:
12 passenger van
350-360englne, V·B
Air Conditioning

Power Steering
Power Brakes
West Coast Mirrors
Radio
Stabilizer Bar
Heavy Duty Cooling
System
courtesy Lights
Heavy Duty Suspension
Roof and Floor Insulation
Front of envelope with
enclosed bid should be
marked, "Sealed bid lor
Children's Residential
Facility vehicle." Bidders
are to furnish their own bid
forms.
Meigs County Commis·
~loners reserve the right to
re(ect any and all bids or
part thereof. Price,
availability of service, and
deadline date will be considered In awarding contract
Meigs County Commissioners
January 15, 1980
·Mary Hobst&lt;'"er, Clerk
(1) 18, 25

Deadline near for A and B motorists

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WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

tntittt
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

tgolnery posted a deputy at the entrance to the buUding with orders to
allow no one to enter.

Vance, who was forcibly removed
from the vehicle, was later transferred to the Meigs County JaU
where he was charged with iJn.
proper handling of a firearm while
under the influence of alcohoL
Mrs. Russell notified the sheriff's
department that a csr was parked in
her driveway and that shots had
been fired inside the vehicle.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday - ·
A chance ol snow flurries northeast Monday and Tuesday aad
snow possible over tbe state Wednesday. Hlgbs ill tbe 20s and low
308. Lows ill tbe teeDB aad low 20s
Monday lowerlag to five to 15 by
Wednesday morning.

Services still
available at
3 health clinics
GAU.IPOJJS - Due to the
current conflict between the GalUs
County Commissioners and GallisJackson-Melgs 648 Board there
seema to be some confusion as to
whether services are available at
the Gallia-J ackson-Melga Community Mental Health Center's
three clinics.
Community members are assured
that general outpatient, adult community training, in)latient services,
personal advocacy, senior friends,
crisisline and speech and hearing
services are- still available to the
public and will not at any time be interrupted, according to clinic
spokesman.

The clinics in each of the counties
are open and community members
are welcome to call or c;ome in with_
any concerns that they may have.
Clinic members in the three counties
are
GalUs, 4411-5500; Jackson, 5
Cloudy with a good chance of snow
5075
or Meigs, 992-2192. Crlsisline
Sunday. Highs Sunday in the low to
numbers
are Gallia, 4~;
mid · 30s . The chance of.
Jackson
286-,;554
or Meigs, 992-5554.
precipitstion: 50 percent.

:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;::: :: ;:;:;:;:;:;: ;: ;:;~: :;:; :;:;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; :; :;:;:·

Weather

GAU.IPOLIS - Charging that a
offer those services.
section of the Ohio Revised Code
Such a situatioo Is now occurring
which allows Community Mental
between the G-J-M Center Board
Health and Mental Retardation 648
and the G-J-M 648 Board, the suit
Boards to "dlrectiy operate" mental
charges.
health facilities on an interim basis
Controversy between the two
is unconstitutional, Prosecuting Atboards surfaced on December 17
torney Joseph L. Cain fUed suit
when the 648 Board directed the
Friday againBt the Gallia-Jacksontakeover by 648 Board staff of the
Melgs 648 Board in Glillia County
Nelsonville Residential Facility.
Conunon Pleas Court.
That facility l;lad, prior to that date,
The suit, which was filed on behalf
been operated under the authority of
ri tbe GaJIIa County Board of Comthe Center Board.
missioners, also names the G-J-M
Following the takeover, Center
Cornnlunity Mental Health Center
employes who were assigned to the
Inc. and Oblo Attorney General childreB's residential facility were
WIJJiamJ. Brown as cbodc(endants.
reportedly told by 648_ Board adThe section, 340.03 (J), &lt;:l the
ministrators that if they wished to
O.RC. referred to in the suit grants
retain their jobs 'they wduld.birle to
648 Boards the following power: "In
resign from the Center. to be emthe event a needed service cannot be
ployed by the 648 Board.
provided by an existing public or
Friday's action charges . the .
privaje agency, directly operate a
£ollowing with respect to that
mental health or mental retardation
takeover:
facility unW such time as this
- The 648 Board has not met the
responsibility can be assumed by
licensure requirements mandated
another agency."
by Ohio Jaw for the facility. ~
The action claims that section of
-The 648 Board at the time of the
the code Is Wlconstitutional in that · takeover did not have a license from
there are no guidelines promulgated the GaUia County Board of Health as
by which the 648 Board must make a
required by law.
detennlnation (I) ss to whether a .
- The 648 Boards Community Plan
service Is needed, and (2) ss to
did not provide for the takeover,
whether that needed service cannot
and, to the belief of the Center, had
be provided. The acts of the 648
not been amended to provide [or
Board are thus labeled as arbitrary,
such an action.
·
capricious and subjective.
-The 648 Board has. jeopardized a
According to the suit, use of that
$2,063,000 grant from the federal :
section of the code places the con- govenunent to the Center for Its
tracting Center Boards in "positions
operation and treatment ·of triof Impossibility," in that 648 Boards
county clients.
may withhold funds so that Center
- The 648 Board has threatened to
Boards cannot offer programa and
and is now withholding monlea,
then declare that the programs are
around $400,000, from the Center.
needed services that CBIUIOt be That withholding jeopardi%es the
provided by the Centers-thus
Center's service obligations and
allowing the 648 Boards to dlrectiy
(cOntinued on P&amp;iie A-2)

Vinton to fonn Jaycees chapter
VINTON - A new area Ja:ycees
chapter Is in the process of being formed In the Vinton area.
During a recent organizational
meeting sponsored by' the Gallipolis
Area Jaycees, the following temporary officers were elected :
Russell Potts, president, and Roy
Meade, treasurer.
Another organizational meeting
will be held on Wednesday, Jan. 30,
at 8 p.m. in the Vinton Town Hall.

AU males between the ages of 18
and 35 interested in joining the new
community action group are Invited
to attend.

I

Will spend $3.4 million this year

Direct funding of 648 Board comes
from federal, state, -local monies _
(Thlnllll a series)
By LARRY EWING

1

GAIJlPOUS - On May 2, 1972
citizens in GalUs, Jackson and

M;eigS I Counties approved, . by a
10,538 to 8,978 vote, a .2 mill levy
tcovering a 10 year period) lor the

OPEN FRIDAY Til. 8

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
~~~----~~'•'•M·I·L·L-·S·T..................~

0

••

o o o • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

'Farm news ......
0'

'

.I

has approximately 2,500 vehicle
owners whose last names begin with
A and B. A:3 of Saturday, about 1,500
in that name category had pur·
chased their new tags.
Fees for the passenger cars this
year total $22. It's $37 £or non comContinued on page D-2

GAIJJPOIJS - Mrs. Paul North,
Gallipolis License Bureau's deputy
registrar, Saturday reminded Gallia
motorists whose last names begin
'!rith A and B have until Thursday,
Jan. 31, to purchase their 1960
.vehicle plates and stickers.
State official! estimated Gallia

'n PRICE

AVAILABLE ATt

Vance reportedly accidentally suffered the wound whUe sitting in his
car in the driveway at the home of
Mrs. Norma Russell, Rt. I, Middleport.

POMEROY- Gene Vance, 41, Rt.
1, Middleport, was treated and
~eleased Friday afternoon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital for a
jpmshot wound in the left hip.

•

.KNOW

JlUARD POSTED AT FACilJTY - After directing 648 personnel at

u.! 'f.ielsonville Alternative Facility to leave the premises, Sheriff Mon-

I Meigs man suffers wound

Automatic Transmission

PAJAMASr ROBES, GOWNS
AND SLEEPERS

CAN

By LARRY EWING
GAU.IPOJJS - Reacting to a
Tuesday action by the GalUs County
Board &lt;:l Commissioners directing
the Prosecuting Attorney to take,
" .. .whatever steps necessary to
evict the Gallis-Jackson-Meigs Mental Health and Mental Retardation
648 Board,.. " from two county
owned buUdings currenUy housing
mental health services, 648 Board
Executive Director Maxine S. Plum-

,mer said Wednesdsy she was,
" ... very comfortable that we shall
remain in the buUdlngs."
Friday morning, PIUO)iner and
her staff were ordered to iJn.
mediately leave the G-J-M Community Mental Health ·Center on
Jackson Pike and the Alternative to
Nelsonville Children's Residential
Facility on SR 160.
That order came following an
emergency meeting ri the county
commission with Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L. Cain early Friday.
Emerging from that meeting was a
motion directing Sheriff James M.
Montgomery to, "go to the real
Continued on 0.2

Suit IS filed by
Gallia prosecutor

ELBERFELD$

SAVE 50% ON WINTER
SLEEPWEAR FOR LimE
BOYS ANO GIRLS!

SUNDAY, JANUARY 27, 1980

driver after wreck

.Classified ads .•

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Falrlane Drive at 11:15
p.m. Thursday for Bob Byer who
was ill. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

tmts

10:23 a.m. Saturday in that court.
Sheriff Montgomery ordered the
deputy stationed at the facility to not
honor the restraining order until
legal counsel was obtained.

•

Board of Commissioners in

JUDGMENT FILED
A judgment and foreclosure in the
amount of $1,881.40 bas been fUed In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court ,
by the Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., Pomeroy, against George and
Sally Pierce, Pomeroy.
Granted divorces were Juanita
Wilkinson from Gerald Wilkinson on
charges of gross neglect and Kim
Friend from Jeff Friend on charges
of gross neglect and extreme
cruelty.

GAU.IPOJJS - Gallia County
Commissioners and the GalUs County Sheriff were served a temporary
restraining order Saturday at ai&gt;'
prollimately 2 p.m. ordering them to
refrain from any and all acts which
interfere with the use and access of
the Nelsonville Alternatives ·
Residential Facility unW such time
as the defendants obtain a legal order of eviction.
Saturday's order wss issued by a
Judge William Ammer through the
Gallia County Common Pleas Court.
The restraining order did not
csrry the official stamp of the clerk
of local court, but rather contained a
handwritten note that it was fUed at

+

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

VOL. 13 NO. 52

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed bids will be
received by llle Meigs

STOLEN VEHICLE RECOVERED
William Anthony Mowers, ?D,
Columbus, presently residing in
Racine, was arrested Wednesday af·
ternoon by the Sheriff's Dept. regarding a stolen 1978 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo recovered Saturday evening
near East Letart.
The vehicle had been stripped of
Its radio, battery and a spare tire.
After giving a statement to Meigs
County officials, Mowers was turned
over to GaJIIa County Sheriff's
department for prosecution.
Mowers indicated to offictals that
he was on probation out of Franldln
County on a charge ri receiving
stolen property. Investigation is continuing and additional arrests may
result.

Commission," Following the passage &lt;:l an emergency
motion to that effect, Commissioners Paul Niday and
Lorude Burger, Sheriff Jam~ M. Montgomery al)d two
deputies went to the Jackson Pike Mental Health Center and told 648 Board employes to get out

unba

"

NOW ON DISPLAY!

Add to this, extremely attractive interest rates that
are guaranteed and our bank is one that becomes
a real working partner_ We would like to be your
banker in 19aD. Let's talk .

Serve .temporary
restraining order

Patrol cites one

CHILDREN'S

money in
19801

"Mental health service positions
are unique," Plummer said, "it
bothers me that a person can start
as a janitor at the Center and six
months later become a therapist."
648 Boards were created to serve
as parent organizations for smaller
agencies that would provide mental
health services to clients. The
largest agency funded by the local
648 Board is the G-J-M Community
Mental Health Center Inc., a nonprofit corporation,
Approximately f2 million of the
$3.4 million annual budget of the 646
Board Is spent for services contracted through the Center Board.
Direct funding of the G-J-M 646
Board comes from federal and state
grants, as well as .2 mill tax levies In
each of the three counties served by
the local board.
Since the relationship between the
648 Board and the Center Is contracted-and despite the fact the
Center spends approximately $2
million annually in federal, state
and local tax dollars-county of.
ficials do not see the Center Board's
payroll or how it spends its money,
In announcing a legislative
initiative which would impose spending and accounting guidelines on
county mental health boards
statewide, State Representative
Alan Norris, R-Westerville,
questioned the operation of such
agencies.
He said the use of those' agenices,
which are not · supervised by the
county, may circumvent safeguards
normally required when public
agencies buy goods and services.
"Contracted Services" Is a key
term in the current delivery of men·
tal health services in the tri-county
area. Wheh the 648 Board makes
payment to the Center, the only information received in the county
auditor's office is a voucher, without
itemization, made out to the Center
for "Contracted Services.''
Millions of dollars in federal, state
and local funds are so spent each
year ip. Gallia, Jackson and Meigs
Counties for the delivery of mental
health service.
(Sunday: the cost of m~ntal health.)

Commissioners .

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY

•

0

REELECTED PRJ!SIDENT
-Rlellard.E. (RI~) Joaes, (R,),
1111 beell reelected prealdeiat of
, lbe Melp County Board llf Com·
• mlal-n for 1110.
·

JUDGE BUCK DID IT
POMEROY - Probate Judge
Robert E. Buck, acting Conimon
Pleas Judge, · made the determination in establishing procedures
'to be followed by tile Carleton
College Board ri Trustees not Judge
· John C. Bacon as preViously' reported.
'

benefit of communitY mental health smaller agencies that would provide
direct mental health services.
and mental retardation prograinll.
The largest .agency funded by the
Prior to that time the G-J,M Menlocal
648 Board is the G-J-M Comtal Health and Mental RetardaUon
munity
Mental Health Center Inc., a
648 Board, which was (ormed In 1969,
non-profit
corpora lion. Apoffered on~y-a-week clinics in
prollimately
$2
million of the $3.4
each of the three counties.
million annual budget ri the 648
This year the G-J-~ 648 Iloard will
Board Is spent for services conspend approximately $3.4 million.
Direct funding__of the G-J'M 648 tracted from the Center Board.
"Contracted Services" is a key
B\lllrd ·comes from fed~ral nJ1d state.
term
iii the current delivery ol men-_
grants, as well as the .2 mill tal
tal
health
services In the tri-county
levied in each ol the three counties.
·
area.
When
the 648 Board makes
• Such poards were' created !~years
payment
to
the
Center, the ori!y In·
ago by state Jeglsl8tion not to deliver
fonnation
received
in the county
direet services to.clients, but to seraudiior'soffice
Is"
voucher,
wlthout
R~ fl~rent Organizations for

vt

Itemization, made out to the Center
for "Contracted Services."
Mllll~ of dollars In federal, state
and local funds are so spent In
Gallla, Jackson and Meigs CoWities
for the deliveey ol mental health services.
Approximately 70 percent ol those
£unds go toward the payment .of
salaries for mental health admlniatratora and staff. Those
salaries are among the higheSt paid
In any of the three counties served
by the two Boards.
Maxine Plwnmer, . E:lecutlve
Director of the G-J-M 648 Board said
(Continuedllll page A-2)

.

1

A

.

NEW PRESIDENT - o-p

Harrl•,

Pomeroy,

aeaen1

maaager of SlmmoDI Old·
IJIICibl1e.Oidlc, - . dected
prealdetrt ol tbe I'OiDenJ Ga
Club-nunda)'. Jlairll )1u _.
ved oa tbe board aiiiDii!ll Qd
II IISiiatant cbel. He -. Ilea! 'a
IDfJ!!ber o1 tbe dub .f• tbe put ·
ftve ,ean. 'l'lle clab -c. enrj
nund&amp;y ud bu II
ir1. • ' ,
Other alflcen . eleeW .-e .-..
Horace Karr, vice )ritklelit,ud .,....

Mil.

Paal Eleb, lleeftlal'y-trntae~.
. ..
~

"

·

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