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Gallipolis.

• •

1Continued from page I )
chemicals, construction materials,
aggregates, agricultural products,
limestone, and raw materials are
being moved with increasi ng
regularity along the Ohio.
" This 'increase in tonnage and
traffic underscores the need to
authorize the replacement of the
Gallipolis ·project without further
delay. Time is nolan ally. The loss of
tinoe means a reduction in jobs and
productivity, a halt to Ohio Valley
industrial expansion and economic
..
... 1"'
growth, and a greater dependence
on nondomestic sources of energy.
" As reported by the Ohio Valley
Improvement Association and con·
firmed by Corps ol Engineers reports, traffic congestion at Gallipolis is
rapidly approaching crisis propor- ·
lions. Volumes of traffic utilizing the
locks total 37.2 million tons in 1977.
The recently issued forecast of
future Ohio River Basin waterway
traffic prepared by Battelle Columbus Laboratories projects 1985
volume at 66,450,000 tons and 1980
Leadership Dinner; Richard Raab, Huntington, TriPLAN LEADERSillP DINNER - Table hosts
volume at 70,215,000 tons.
State
Area CoWJcU BSA Sustaining Membership Drive
were named and other plans initiated for the March 10
" Traffic delays at Gallipolis are
chairman; Dr. George Nibert, Point Pleasant, general
Leadership Dinner for the M-G-M Scouting District's
now averaging in excess of 5 hours
chairman of the M-G-M Sustaining Membership Drive
annual Sustaining Membership Drive during a dinner
per tow, often reaching 48 hours and
and Miles Epling, Gallia County chairman. The M-G-M
meeting Ibis week at Oscar's in Gallipolis. The dinner
longer, particularly when the
Scouting District Sustaining Membership Drive goal
was hosted by Peoples Bank of, Point Pleasant. Picdeteriorated main lock is closed for
for 1980 is $11,200. ABC-TV conunentator Dave Diles, a
tured, from left, are Robert Cree, Tri-State Area Counrepairs. Delay costs are estimated
Meigs County native, will be speaker for the March 10
cil Boy Scouts of America executive; Vitus Hartley ,
at $350 per tow-hour and often exevent at Oscar's. A Meigs County chainnan will be
Jr. , Peoples Bank president and chairman of the
ceed $5,000 per tow transit. Delay
named later.
costs are estimated at $3.5 million
annually and are conservatively
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL NEWS
estimated to reach $31 million in !988
Admitted-Lula Gilmore, Dexter;
and
$51 million in 1989.
Dana Howell, Pomeroy; Thomas
"I
cannot, Mr. Chairman, overemHOLZER
MEDICAL
CENTER
Young, Belpre; Unda Hubbard,
(Continued from page I )
phasize
the value of Gallipolis and
DISCHARGFS FEB. 5
Middleport ; James Stewart,
1979 vehicle, $18,485.
the
importance
of prompt House apMrs. Thomas E. Arney and son, Cheshire; Mary Eblin, Pomeroy.
Attending were Jones, Henry
proval
of
Ibis
legislation. As
Doris Atkins, Vita Z. CArman, Heidi
Discharged--Kenneth
Reed, ·
Wells and Chester Wells, comGallipolis
goes,
so
goes
the economic
Ann Caruthers, Stanley Cook, Clara
Charles Williams, James Amos,
missioners, Mrs. Hobstetter, and
health and welfare of the Ohio
Crank, Golden Cremeans, Kenneth
Helen Nelson, Chris Capehart.
Martha Chambers.
Valley."
Cundiff, Edward Dunfee, Mrs.
Voting "yes" Tuesday were six
Frank E. Farrar and daughter,
Democrats and eight Republicans.
Garrett Flesher, Florence Fraley,
Announcing the Revised
Voting "no" were four Democrats
George Henninger, Sylvesta
Office Schedule of
and
five Republicans.
Hollback,
Mrs.
Thomas
W.
Hoschar
Dr. Mateo P. Dayo, Jr.
·
306 N. 2nd Ave.,
The Ohio delegation's vote on the
and daughter, June Johnson, Tiffany
Middleport, Ohio
Pleasant Valley Hospital
bill was as follows:
King, Betty Loudermilk, Mrs.
Effective January 1980
Discharges
Democrats - Douglas Applegate,
Stephen J. Marshall and daughter,
Monday
Ennis
Herdman,
Joe
Wilson,
Mary
no;
Thomas L. Ashley, yes; Tony P.
10 :00· 1 :00
Myrtle Martin, Walter Miller,
2:00 -S :OO P.M .
Cox,
Curtis
Tulley,
Jason
Thomas,
Hall,
no; Thomas A. Luken, yes;
Deloris Myers, Lelie Quesenberry,
Tuesday, No Office
Annie
Young,
Myrtle
Craft,
Mary
Mary
Rose Oakar, yes; Donald J.
Wesley Quesenberry, Mrs. Charles
Wednesdav
Nibert,
Margaret
Diller,
Betty
SpenPease, no; John F. Seiberling, no;
9:00·11 : 30
RAnsom and son, Randy Ratcliff,
2:00·7 : 30 P.M.
ce, Helen Smith, Stephen Norville,
Louis Stokes, yes; Charles A. Yanik,
Michael
Richmond,
Forrest
Rogers,
Thursday
Helen Barker, Eugena SaWJders,
yes.
Rebecca Steyens, Jeffrey Tabor,
9: 00·11: 30
Kathryn
Severn, Quentin Smith,
Republicans - John M. Ashbrook,
2:00· 7 :30 P.M.
Robin Wallace. Mabel Willis, Delsa
Carl Nelson, Phyllis English.
Fridav
yes; Clarence J . Brown, yes;
Wray
.
.
10 : 00-1:00
BIRTIIS
2: 00-S :OO
Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Frisby,
9: OO·S: 00
daughter, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
EMcept the las1 Satur·
Charles Johnson, daughter, Oak
day of the month. . ·
Hill.

.

-

Meigs •••

Som«on« SJ)«cial

Special' people bring a very special pleasure into our
lives. They deserve special attention and a special
memory at the Valentine season.
Remember some special someone with a gift of !lowers
that will linger in their heart like a precious memory.
Because you care, order your gift early and begin a
grand new memory. Our floral specialists will help you
select the right gift. Just slop in orca II.

•ROSES

•CARNATIONS
•SILK &amp; PERMANENT
•CUT FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS . ARRANGEMENTS
•TERRARIUMS
•AZALEAS
•MUMS
•DISH GARDENS
•TULIPS

11.

POMEROY
FLOWER ·SHOP
Mrs. Mildred Van Meter
·Phone 992 -2039
106 Butternut Ave .
991 S721
Pomeroy, 0.
· We Accept all Major Credit Cards
We Wire Flow~rs l::verywl-tere

CB'ERS TO MEET
The Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club, Inc. will meet on Feb. 12 at
7:30 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Dues will he payable at
that meetirtg and np··· rr.:ombers will
be accepted into the club.

Challenges suit
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A suit
challenging the payment of $50,000
by the state to the widow of a man
linked with Cleveland organized
crime has been dismissed by a
Franklin County judge.
The money had been awarded by
the Ohio Court of Claims to Lillian
Nardi, widow of John A. Nardi who
was killed in a !977 car bombing.
State Sen. Thomas Van Meter, RAshland, filed the suit, contending ·
that Attorney General William J .
Brown improperly recommended
that Mrs. Nardi be the recipient of
$50,000 from the state's crime victim
fund.
Wall surfaces must be cleaned of
grease, dirt and peeUng paint before
repainting. Remove loose1:lirt with a
vacuum cleaner and grease with
paint thinner.
Samuel L. Devine, no; Willis D.
Gradlson Jr., no; Tennyson Guyer,
yes; William H. Harsha, yes;
Thomas N. Kindness, no; Delbert L.
Latta, no; Clarence E. Miller, yes;
Ralph S. Regula, yes; J. William
Stanton, yes; Lyle WUliams, no;
Chalmers P. Wylie, yes.
The project must now be approved
by Senate and White House officials.

County
Court
.

Seven defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Kenneth Longstreth,
Langsville, $10 and costs, failure to
stop for stop sign; Richard Cogar,
Pomeroy, $147 and costs, over.weight; Troy Ohlinger, Pomeroy,
$10 and coots, left of center; Kathryn
Ohlinger, Portland, $15 and costs,
speed; William J. Edwards, Rt. I,
Racine, and Paul Rees,Rt. I,
Gallipolis, $150 and costs each, three
days confinement, license suspended 30 days, DWI; Paul M. Sisson,
Rt. I, Rutland, $40 and costs, driving
over fresh paint.
Forfeiting bonds were Roy H. See,
Bidwell, $37.55, illegal parking;
James E. Barber, Jr. Rt. I, Reedsville, and David B. Dillard,
Pomeroy, $35.50 each, no valid
registration; James B. Robson, Rt.
3, Pomeroy, $35.50 no valid license
plates; Edward S. Fulks, Crown
City, $360.50, DWI; Ralph B.
Wells,Belpre, $37.55, expired license
tags; Terry Alan Wingate, Bristol,
Va., $35.50; speeding.

Mayor's

~ou~

Three defendants forfeited hoods
in the court of l.'ff11dleport Mayor
Fred Hof · ~ Tuesday night.
They were Timothy R. Roush,
Hartford, W. Va., 125. posted on a
charlie of traveUng the wrong way
on a one way street and S25, no
operator's license; Donnie Howard,
Sandy Hook, Ky., $29, speeding, and
Clu:i!l Neece, Pomeroy, S25. improper backing.
Five defendants forfeited bonds In
the court ol Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
They were Gregory F. Grover,
Route 4, Pomeroy, 125. posted on a
speeding charge; Steven Stewart,
Route 4, Pomeroy, 125, speeding;
Mary Reitmlre, Pomeroy, PI,
assured clear distance; WWlam A.
Henry, Route 1, Thurman, PI,
speeding, and Basil Haynes,
Pomeroy, $100, leaving the scene r:i
an accident.
TWO SQUAD CALUI
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to North Second Ave. at
!0:55a.m. Tuesdayforseven-mon~
old Amy Clonch who was ill. She
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 8:29 a.m. Wednesday the fire
department went to the home r:i
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Hooker Sl
Wu on the burners of a stove had
caught fire. There was some smoke
damage.

PUBUCSHOWER
A public shower for Mr. and Mrs.
Lan-y Fisher, whose home In the
Rock Springs area was extensively
damaged by fire over the weekend,
will be held at 7:·30 p.m. Thursday at
the Racine United Methodist Church. The church 8lllleX will be open
all day Thursday for those wWiing
to leave gifts for the shower.
The Paul Sayre stringed band will
provide entertainment and refreshments will be served Thursday
evening.

MEET TONIGIIT
The ladles awdllary of the Middleport Fire Department will meet
Ibis evening at 7:30p.m. at the fire
station. Hostesses are Phyllss Baker
and Ethel Lowery.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
Ronnie Eugene Powell, 22, Rt. 1,
Portland, and Becky Eileen Rowe,
·17, Pomeroy.
TO END MARRIAGE
Charles David Wilson, Jr., Rt. I,
Reedsville, and Rose Mary Wilaon,
Rt. I, Reedav!Ue, filed for
dissolution of marriage In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.

BUILD
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Effective thru
February 29, '80

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11.985%
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Feb. 7·13, '80

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heated air. prevents dry air damage In furniture,
valuables, Indoor plants. Lets you work, play and sleep
more comfortably! And Is custom hand-finish furniture
styling with burled patterned Inserts and brass·flnlshed
hardware makes it a hand$0me ad~lllon In your home, of·
ficeorshop!

Other Sovlngs Plans
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,

o Water Contioner Dispenser keeps air fresh
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ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
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Middleport, 0.

, By The Aaaoclated Press
A Kuwait newspaper reported
from Tehran today that the release
ol the Americans held hostage in the
U.S. Embassy for more than three
months ls "imminent."
The weekly newspaper AI Khadaf
said the number of young Iranian
militants occupying the embassy
has been reduced from 400 to 50, and
final arrangements for the release of
the approximately 50 captive
Americans are being completed
"following the election of
Abolhassan Bani Sadr as Iran's new
president."

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.
'

,J

The paper did not give the source
of its information, and there was no
inunediate confirmation of its report
from Washington or other quarters,
although Carter administration officials have expressed cautious optimism about the embassy standoff
in recent days.
"Bani Sadr has set the settlement
of the hostage crisis and the ending
of the duality of authority being
exercised in !rap as the main objectives at the beginning of his
term," the report said.
AI Khadaf said U.N. SecretaryGeneral Kurt Waldheim is trying to

persuade Bani Sadr to ·· pressure the
students to leave the embassy and
have them replaced by regular
Iranian troops."
The Kuwaiti press is highly competitive, and the reliability of the AI
Khadaf report was not known. But
the Kuwaitis have good contacts in
Iran because of the proximity of the
two countries. There is also a
relatively large Iranian community
in Kuwait.
Bani Sadr made plain Wednesday
that he was determined to trim the
.power of the embassy militants. He
castigated them for getting a gover-

(USPS 145-960)

VOL XXVIII

to stay 10 da ys.
The American delegation was
made up of persoll!l sympathetic to
the militants' demand for the return
of Shah Moharrunad Reza Pahlavi to
Iran for trial. The leader of the
group, Norman Forer of the University of Kansas, said the taking of the
hostages was illegal but must be
weighed "side by side with the
anguish of the Iranian people" under
the shah. Forer visited in Iran in
December and met with the militants then.
Bani Sadr denoWJced the militants

Wednesday because charges they
broadcast on the state radio and TV
resulted in the arrest of lnfonnation
and National Guidance Minister
Nasser Minachi. The president said
the ruling Revolutionary Council,
which he heads, ordered Minachl
freed inunedl.ateiy.
Bani Sadr said the militant.!'
charge that Minachi had "close links
with the CIA" was one for a judge to
investigate, and if people were
arrested on the basis of something
heard on the radio the country ran
the risk of collapsing in chaos.

•

enttne

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 208

runent minister arrested, calling
them "dictators who have created a
govenunent within the government," and gave the cold shoulder to
a U.S. delegation invited te Iran by
them.
Immigration authorities detained
the 49-member U.S. group for four
hours Wednesday night at Tehran
airport because they had no entry
visas, then sent them to a Tehran
hotel.
The Foreign Ministry issued the
group four-&lt;lay visas today at the
request of the embassy captors,
although the delegation had planned

•

e

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Red Cross visits
denied by_Karmal
PIITSBURGH - Steel induatry officials warned United
Steelworkers union negotiators
that casiH!hort companies can't
afford the contract Improvements the union has won in
the past.
"The Industry has tough problems, and you haVe to share
them," J. Bruce Johnston, chief
Industry negotiator, warned
Wednesday in the second day of
contract talks covering 450,000
workers involved in the basic
steel-making processes.
COLUMBUS - Senators have
approved , 29-2 a bill by Sen.
Charles J. Curran, D-Dayton,
allowing cities to place special
property tax levies before voters
to finance highway and bridge
construction,
Counties and townships
~ify iiiay propose such levies;
Curran said Wednesay, as his bill
went to the House.

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
- Oleering crowds brought food
to armed leftists holding the ambassador and seven other
hostages in the Spanish Embassy
while radical high school
students continued to hold hundreds of hostages in the Education Ministry.
The government's military
leaders, exercising "aU caution,"
made no effort to force either
group of leftists from the occupied buildings. Those In the
embassy, numbering about 20,
vowed to stay there until their
demands were met.
Government sources said embassadors rJ. several Latin
American countries were
negotiating for the releAse of the
embassy hostages.

Justice Brown
gets to drive
to work

WITH A SAVINGS PlAN
FROM THE
CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
PASSBOOK
"SAVINGS

Release of Americans 'imminent'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) + Ohio
Supreme Court Justice William B.
Brown has been given limited
driving privileges despite suspension of his license for refusal to take
a Breathalyzer test after an accident.
Brown was foWJd innocent during
a December jury trial of charges of
driving while intoxicated. But under
state law, refusal to take the test for
alcohol consumption when
requested by pollee requires
automatic license suspension for six
montha.
The minor two-car accident oCcured Oct. :it on a. Chillicothe city

street.

"The year 19'19 was one of the
greatest in growth and earnings in
the 107-year history of the Pomeroy
National Bank," said Edison
Hobstetter, president and chairman
of the board, at the bank's annual
meeting held Tuesday.
The total assets of the bank have
increased over ten times since yearend 1950 - from $3,000,000 to over
$30,000,000.
Directors reelected were Edison
Hobstetter, Chairman; Warren
Pickens, Vice Chairman; Horace
Karr, Phillip Kelly, Roger Morgan,
and Orion Roush. Maxine Griffith
was reelected secretary rJ. the
board.
Officers reelected were Edison
Hobstetter, President; Richard
Turner, Executive Vice President;
William J. Hobstetter, Vice President and Rutland Branch Manager;
Maxine Griffith, Cashier; Lera

EDIS.ON HOBSTETTER,
Pomeroy, was elected pres Ideal
of the Pomeroy NaUonalllaok for
the 39th cousecaUve year Tuesday when the bank's anaual
meetiDg of stockholden was
beld.

Utilities oppose coal tax
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) + otiio's
seven investor-owned electric
utilities are opposing legislation to
levy a 56-cents-per-ton coal tax to
help bring about broader use of
Ohio's high sulfur coal.
Gerald.M. Kirutery, executive vice
president of the Ohio Electric Utility
Institute, lambasted the bill Wednesday night by saying, basicaUy,
that it can't do the job intended by
sponsors.
He and other opponents testified
before the Senate Energy and Public
Utilities Committee on a bill levying
the tax on utilties and major other
Industrial users of Ohio coal.
Under the proposal, already
passed by the House, the state Coal
Commission would use an estimated
125 million a year in tax revenues In
two ways.
It would make loans to utilities or
companies which need but can't afford desulfurlzation equipment, and
it would help finance research into
new methods of technology to permit
more Ohio coal utilization.
The institute, representing the
seven bi'g Ohio coal-burning
utilities,also presented a witness

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday through Monday: A
cbaaee of snow Saturday. A
cbaaee ol snow flurries Sunday,
m001t1y in the euL Fair Monday.
Hllhs from the upper ZOa to the
lower 30s Saturday and from the
mid to upper ZOa Sunday aDd
Monday. Lows through the period
between 10 and 20.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Friday.
Lows tonight between 10 and 15.
Highs Friday in the low 30s. The
chance of snow is 10 percent tonight
and Friday.

Hiunilton County Municipal Judge
Donald J. Sch~ who presided over
the trial signed an order which
s011pends Brown license from Jan. 30
RUNS REPORTED
to July 30, but a!Jows the justice to
The newly formed Tuppers Plains
drive his car from his Chillicothe
Area Emergency Squad has made
home to the supreme court In Colum- eight runs since It organized the last
bus; from the residence of his son-inol December. They Include: Dec. 30,
law Dennis Esbaugh of ColwnbWI to a Tuppers Plains resilient to Camcourt lind from his Chillicothe home den Clark Hospital; Jan. 1, a Tupto hia three farms, two in Rosa Coun· pers Plains reai(\ent to Camden
ty and one .In Fafrlleld County for · Clark; Jan. 3, a 1Tuppers1 Plains
management purp!llll!ft.
resident to St. J.oseph;s Hospital;
"There is nothing unusual or Jan. 12, a call to Eaatem High
apecilll about the provisions In any School; Jan. 14, an . Eastern High
way," ~aid Franklin Caltrider, of the School student · to Veterans
Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehlcles. He
Memorlal'Hospltal; Jan. 21, a Reedsaid occupational driving privileges sville resident to O'Rleness Medical ·
are often granted first tlmf. of- Centeri Jan. 29, a Reedsville
fenders with 'good driving records.
resident to C8mden Cl~rk Hospital.

,

Jones, Assistant Cashier; Joan
Wolfe, Assistant Cashier; Marilyn
Wolfe, Assistant Cashier; Joseph
Young, lll8tallment Loan Officer;
Emilia Midkiff, Assistant Loan Of.
ficer; and Joan May, Assistant
Branch Manager of the Rutland Of·
flee. Other employees at the Rutland
Branch are Ruth Ann Grham,
Sharon Lee Barr, Georgene Grate,
and Marilyn Wilcox. Arthur W.
Nease, Jr. was reelected Branch
Manager of the Tuppers Plains
Branch with Marilyn Robinson,
Assistant Branch Manager. Other
employees at the Tuppers Plains
Branch are Mary Grover and Betsy
Riffle. Main office eltlployees are
James W. Hobstetter, Doris
Snowden, Michael Struble, Barbara
Dugan, Veneva Mae Gilliam, Jayne
Hutchinson, Lee Codner, Marty
Ferguson, Rhonda Hannahs, and
Susan Burgess.

~

from the Electric Power Research
Institute, Palo Alto, Calif., who said
that group already is spending much
of a $100 million-a-year grant to
research high-sulfur coal utilization.
Kurt Yeager, director of the
California institute's coal combustion systems division, said "Ibis
research is particularly important
to the State of Ohio since it is the
largest coal consuming state and
also one of the nation's leading
producers ...
"The majority of .the attention is
being given to improving the
utilization of high-sulfur bitwninous
coal which is the largest portion of
production and offers the greatest
challenge to environmental
capability."
Minnery said the research projects the bill envisions "in all
likelihood, would duplicate much of
the research already being conducted nationally on a much larger

scale."
He said the utilities believe that
the $25 million a year to be derived
from the tax "would be a drop In the
bucket when compared with the
·more than $1 billion already being
spent each year by the federal
government and other research
organizations."
Minnery referred to the section of

Kroger stores to
re-open Saturday
The 48 Kroger stores in the West
Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky service
area closed as the result of a three
week Teamsters strike will reopen
Saturday at 9 a.m.
That strike ended Wednesday as
the rank and file of Teamster Local
175 approved a 39 month contract by
a vote of 174 to 93. The members will
receive a $2.80 per hour increase,
which averages a 14 percent in·
crease each year in wages and
benefits, over the life of the contract
along with improvements in the
union's hospitallzation,beneflts and
pension plans.
A union spokesman said the company was to begin calling the company's mechanics back . ~o . work
early Ibis morning while the
warehousemen aild drivers would
come back to work later today.
Negotiations had bogged down
early in the strike and It wasn't until
the National Labor Relations Board
Intervened last week that talks
resumed.
After the strike started in
January, 2,500 Kroger employes at
Its warehouse in Charleston and
stores in the tri-state area refused to
cross the pirket line.

the bill allowing the state to make
loans for desulfurization equipment.
Over the next foilr years, the bill
would raise $100 million, or only 25
percent of the $400 million cost of the
scrubbers at the Bruce Mansfield
plant on the Ohio River, he said.
Committee Chairman Kenneth R.
Cox, D-Barberton, said the panel
may vote on the bill at a hearing
next week.
His committee also is considering
a major bill to require the Ohio coal,
before Its industrial use, to help
lower sulfur content and reduce
sulfur dioxide emmissions.
That proposal was cited by the
federal EPA earlier tbis week as an
Ohio "commitment" to help solve its
dirty air problems, as the agency announced it was halting sulfur dioxide
enforcement actions against Ohio
coal users for a year.
Cox said, however, that the bill
has technical problems, and will be
studied by a subcommittee, starting
next week.

Gunman kills hostage,
self in Purina seige
MILAN, Italy (AP) - Police stormed an office Wednesday that had

been seized by a self-styled guerrilla
and found the gurunan and a woman
hostage shot to death, police reported.
The gunman, Antonio Brambilla,
34, took over the offices of a subsidlacy of the Ralston Purina Co. in
downtown Milan on Tuesday after
killing a male employee and taking
seven J!Crsons hostage. Police soilr·
ces said he killed the 32-year-old
woman before commiting suicide,
police sources;said. The six other
hostages - four women and two
men - had been freed earlier Wednesday.
"It's aU over and the score is three
dead," a police rJ.flcial said.
While being held, the woman had
asked police by phon, not to tell her
husband because he had a heart
ailment.
Before police stormed the
,building, Brambllla's mother went
to the second floor office and shouted
his name, asking in vain that he open
the door.
..
Brambllla, an ex-convict who
reported!i had a history of mental
Instability, had kept dozens of sharpshoooters and anned policemen at
hay for 28 hours at the offices of
Ralston Purina Italla, a subsidiary
of Ralston Purina of St. Louis, Mo.
Pollee officials said despite his
denunciation of multi-national corporations, they believed the siege
· was inspired by his hatred iJf Gianbattista Ferrari, 40, , the office
messenl!er who was kllled Tuesday.

Babrak Karma!, Afghanistan's
Soviet-supported president, has
reneged on a promise to let an International Red Cross team' visit
political prisoners in Afghan jails.
The refusal, announced today at
the Gene\'11, Switzerland headquarters of the International Red Cross,
came two weeks after Karma! and
two of his ministers approved the
visits by a four-member Red Cross
team in Kabul, the Afghan capital,
an IRC spokeswoman said.
Spokeswoman Francoise Bory
said the IRC did not know what
prompted Karmal's change of heart.
A brief statement issued in
Geneva said the Red Cross had
"learned that IRC delegates in
Kabul have not yet been able to visit
detainees."
Red Cross Director Jacques
Moreillon, the leader of the team
sent to Kabul last month to negotiate
the . visits with Afghan authorities,
has returned to Geneva, the
spokeswoman told The Associated
J;'ress.
The remaining three members of
the team will stay In Kabul, at least
for the present. "They are waiting
for the promises we received to be
fuHilled," Bory said.
The agency will use "every
available means of pressure" to see

the prisoners, she added.
During initial talks with the Karma! government, the Red Cross
team was told there were 57 political
prisoners in Afghanistan. That number could not be confirmed. Unof·
ficial reports have put the nwnber of
political detainees at from several
hundred to several thousand.
In Kabul, the government has
dumped the man it named to edit an
official government newspaper after
the Soviet-backed Dee. '!I coup that
installed Karma! in power. Mohammed Rahim Rafat was fired as
editor of the English-language
Kabul New Times over the weekend
after he published two editorials last
week that were seen as critical of the
Karma! regime.
Across the border in Pakistan,
President Mohammed Zia ul·Haq
reportedly has proposed that a
peacekeeping force made up of In.dian, Iranian and Pakistani troops
be deployed to guard Afghanistan's
frontiers, presumably after Soviet
troops are withdrawn.
He said the peacekeeping force
"could look after the affairs of
Afghanistan.''
Zia gave no details of the proposal,
raised in an interview published
today in the Times of India.

Kelly says he 'took money
as inquiry into wrongdoing'
WASHINGTON (AP) - One of
eight members of Congress named
in the FBI's bribery investigation
admits taking 125,000 in cash, but
says he did so as part of his own personal inquiry into wrongdoing by
unidentified "shady characters."
Rep. Richard Kelly of Florida, the
only Republican named in the FBI
"sting," told that story in a lengthy
interview on a network television
news special Wednesday, shortly af·
ter the Justice Department . indicated there likely would be indictments in the case within 90 days.
Also Wednesday, Assistant Air
tomey General Philip Heymann
cautioned the House and Senate
Ethics Comittees that if they pursued their own competing in·
vestigations, they could imperil the
prosecution of those who may have
committed criminal acts.

Riffle renamed
board president
Officers were reelected for 1980
when the Meigs County Tuberculosis
Board of Trustees met at the Meigs
Inn.
Reelected were Charles Riffle,
president; Marie Birchfield, vice
president; Joan May, secretary, and
Barbara Knight, executive committee member at large. A membership committee was named and
includ~ Faye Wallace, Doris Ewing
and Thelllla Dillon. Ben Philson,
Joan May, Joan Tewksbary ant!
Maida Mora were named to the
budget and finance committee. The
names of Doris Ewing, Oriion Roush
and Yvonna Young Will be gtven to
the county commissioners for approval to the board. The three will
replace Doily Hayes, who died
recenUy; Mildred Betzing and
Howard Birchfield who are unable to
continue. ·
Barbara Knight presented the
second draft of the constitution
which was accepted by members
and Maida Mora . explained
procedures for the county
distribution of board members. Mrs.
Tewksbary, R.N., gave an office
report for the board.

...

"A number of guilty. individuals
may go unprosecuted or unpunished,'' Heymann said.
In New Jersey, where much of the
"sting" operation began, there were
newspaper reports that the investigation was reaching high Into
the administration of Gov. Brendan
Byrne.
Kelly appeared on the NBC
Nightly News, and later on an expanded version of the Interview, to
explain why he took the money,
which he said he took home stuffed
in his pockets.
In the interview with correspondent David Brinkley, Kelly said he
was ftrst contacted by a person
described only as "Gino," last
November.
Gino led him to a house In
Washington where he met some
"shady characters" whom he later
learned were FBI agents, Kelly said.

Patrol cites two
after accidents
-TWo drivers were cited following
two accidents investigated Wednesday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of .
a two-vehicle mishap on U.S. 35, at
the junction ofSR 180, at 11:45 a.m.
The patrol reports a west bound
auto operated by Anthony Remy, 18,
Galllpolis, made a lefl turn from the
right hand lane and struck the rear
of a west hound vehicle -driven by
Frank E. Carpenter, 25, Patriot.
Remy was cited on a . charge ol
mliklng an Improper left turn. Both
vehicles Incurred slight damage.
Officers Investigated a twovehicle accident In l-feiga County on
CR 21, at the Intersection of SR 7, at
7:35a.m.
·
The patrol reporla an auto
operated by· James Arn,ett, 19,
Lucaavllle, turned onto CR 21, alld
and struck a vehicle driven by
Claude McDennott, 34, W. Columbia, W.Va.
Arnett 'WIIS cited on a cbarse of excessive speed. Both vehicles In- ·
curred moderate damage.

,o .

�3-TheDaUySentinel,M ldleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday,Feb. 7,19M

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middlewrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 7,19M

In Washington:
By Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEAl - Teddy
: Roosevelt probably is spinning in his
· grave.
. More than three&lt;juarters of a century ago, President Theodore._
Roosevelt fonnulated a succinct but
profoundly sensible philosophy to
guide the United States in international affairs: "Speak softly and
carry a big stick."
But President Carter today has
turned tbat doctrine upside down,
picking_ fights he can't win, unnecessarily painting himself into
diplmnatic corners and generally
confinning the worst fears of those
who view him as inept, indecisive
and incompetent in the foreign
policy sphere.
U the White House has a current
version of Roosevelt's approach to
international relations, it probably
goes like this : "Shout · ominous

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1

~

Sentinel
t
Editorial !

I
I

I
I

l!

I'L

II

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Jimmy's Whitehouse
'

ByF'RANKOORMIER
Alloclated Presa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jinuny
Carter, owner of the most prominent
set of teeth in the land, is being told
by his dentist that he need not use
toothpaste.
'The dentist, Navy Capt. William
H. Maastricht, said tbat when Carter sought his views on toothpaste,
"I told him not to use any, unless he
wants the taste."
Maastricht agrees with a sizable
body of his colleagues in dentistry
tbat the important thing is to move
the bristles of a toothbrush over
teeth and gums. Toothpaste is very
secondary.

+++

their mutual interest in running.
Carter's zest for jogging has been
weD publicized, and he did nothing to
deflate reports of his athletic endeavors when he appeared recently
at a physical fitness conference.
After speaking of his "strenuous
exercise program," Carter told the
conferees, "I have done this to an
even greater degree during the last
few months when I have had additional problems and burdens and
responsibilities .... "

Meigs
Property
Transfers

How does the president preserve
his gleaming grin'
Maastricht related that he urged
Carter to use waxed dental floss
regularly, and added: "The next
Howard D. Nolan, Geneva H.
time I saw the president he hadn't
Nolan to Carroll R. Norris, Adie W.
mWed a single surface. He had
Norris,l.ll A.,Syracuse.
flossed so hard he'd caused
abrasions."
Robert E. Peoples, Georgie Anna
Mrs. Carter, the dentist confided,
Peoples, Wallace B. Ford, Edythe F.
"is as meticulous about her teeth as , Ford, Florence M. Mickey to Meigs
Co. Pioneer and Historial Society,
the president is, but not so much to
Inc., Lot, Pomeroy.
Jbenthdegree."
. +++
Homer HyseU, Pauline HyseU to
: The 17-year Navy veteran
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
ili.scussed his dealings with his most Co., Ease., Chester.
Delmar Baum, Kathryn Baum to
:tamous patients with reporter Meryl
·Harris for a recent feature article in Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
:the weekly ADA News, the official Co., Ease., Chester.
Harry N. Lodwick, Juanita Lod:Organ of the American Dental
;1\ssoclation.
wick, Lulu C. Lodwick to Columbus
: Maastricht, whose regular assign- &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co., Ease.,
Chester.
ment is as head of the staff dental
clinic at the National Naval Dental
Elson Spencer, Dorothy Spencer
to John N. Ihle, Mary Lou Ihle, 29 A.,
~nter, Bethesda, Md., sees Carter
at the White House every three mon- Sutton.
ths.
David Spencer, Unda Spjencer to
John N. Ilile, Mary Lou !hie, 13 A.
: The White House has its own small
and2'f.! A.
!!ental office, including a lean-back
Dan Satterfield to James Johnson
chair and all the accoutrements for
drilling and, heaven forbid, yanking Jr., Grace A. Johnson, Parcel," Middleport.
teeth.
MaryS. Lippincott, Dec., to Harry
+++
A. Lippincott, Cert. &lt;i Trans.,
When Carter and his Navy dentist
Letart.
get together, what do they talk
about•
Ralph Welker, Pearl Welker to
Ralph
Welker, Pearl Welker,
: Maastricht, who jogs about five
Parcels, Pomeroy.
miles daily, says they often discuss

Berry's World

"Would you believe I'm thinking about Ayatollah Kazem Shariat-Madan ' and Ayatollah
Mahoud Taleghani?"

' - - - - - - - - --- - - - - -

.:Bucks hope to end
;; }uffl:p this evening

Speak softly,
at least

threats and engage in unwarranted
saher-rattting. But if the opposition.
doesn't respond, retreat quickly
while resorting to meaningless facesaving gestures.''
After more tban three .years as
president, Carter's actions fonn a
clear and disturbing pattern that includes, but also extends far beyond,
the White House response to the current crises in Iran and Afghanistan.
Some examples:
In the summer of 1978, a federal
grand jury charged that DINA,
Chile's repressive secret police
organization, plotted the 1976 bombing that killed Chilean diplomat
Orlando Letelier, a critic of that
cou~try's
right-wing military
regime.
After the grand jury indicted three
high-ranking DINA officials, the
United States demanded their extradition and warned that failure to

comply could lead to withdrawal of
our ambassador to Chile and-or
economic sanctions in the form of
restricted credit extended to Chile
by United States banks.
When Chile refused to produce the
trio of indicted men to stand trial in
this country, the Carter admini.stra·
tion abandoned aU of its tough initial
threats in favor of a package of
essentiaUy meaningless sanctions.
" All right, we bluffed," a recent
news account quoted one highranking United States official in Santiago as saying. "They caUed our
bluff and we lost."
Carter bluffed and lost again last
autumn, when he denounced as "not
acceptable" the presence of a Soviet
combat brigade of 2,000 to 3,000
troops in Cuba, then demanded that
they be withdrawn.
When the Soviets stood firm and
insisted that troops were part of a
training force that had been in place
since the early 1960s, the White
House acquiesced and abandoned a
fight it probably shouldn't have picked.
When Soviet troops recently invaded Afghanislan, Carter responded with what was purported to be the
toughest sanctions of his presidency,
including a trade embargo on computers, drilling bits and other hightechnology export items.
To dramatize that decision, the
White House ordered the Commerce
Department to find' on one hour's
notice, eight pending applications
for export licenses that could be
denied, then to publicize tbat decision at a press conference.
The department complied, but
later was forced to admit tbat the
applications would have been denied
anyway under long-existing restrictions on Soviet trade.
Most of the other elements in the
package - including the withdrawal
of American consular officials from
Kiev, the expulsion of a handful of
Soviet diplomats from New York,
limitations on Soviet commercial
fishing in Alaskan waters and a cutback in cultural and educational exchanges - were little more than
symbolic window-dressing.
This isn't an appeal to !'get tough" ·
with the Chileans, the Cubans, the
Russians or any other real or imagined transgressors, because unwarranted escalation of United
States actions could lead to
hostilities whoUy inappropriate to
this country's vital interests in distant conflicts.
But Carter long ago missed the
final deadline for formulating a
unified foreign policy for his administration tbat would have provided a conceptual framework to
deyelop rational and appropriate
responses to continuing global
crises.

Business
•
mirror
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Busilless Aualyst
NEW YORK (AP) - The
professor had just completed a
profound, two-hour analysis of
domestic pricing, chalking the inputs-outputs and causes-effects in a
squiggly diagram across an eightfoot blackboard.
He paused. The class remained at·
tentive. Then a newsman, one of a
group invited to study the mysteries
of inflation, commented perceptively: "But professor, it doesn't
give the right answer."
·
Pause. "I knOw," said the
professor, an authority on the subject. "I know it doesn't, and we're
not reaDy certain why, but we're
working awfully hard to find the
reason why.''
True, economists work terribly
hard today, often unraveling many
of the worst dilenunas ever to face
the nation and the world. Often they
identify causes with laudatory
analyses. Often they don't.
The inability to accurately
forecast short-term trends, one of
the weaknesses of the profession,
doesn't however prevent it from
being a "growth industry," in the
words of economist Paul Samuelson.
Ironically, the very uil·
fatbomabiUty ri today's events
seem to assure a future for
forecasters, including those who
deal with the economy in general and gold, commodities, interest
rates and the like.
And, it would seem, it might reestablish an individual's good common sense as equal to that of the
most expensive consultant. And with
that in mind, herewith some common-sense expectatioll8:
INFLATION. You C11i1 rely on Jt.
Government spending and deficits,
lagging productivity growth, the
high costs of imported energy, and
perhaps some hard-to-change co.nSWI!er buying habits almost assure
il

RECESSION. The odds would
seem to favor it some limP. frjt Y•ar.

Nafional Basketball Association

~

Sports
World

.

By Will Grimsley

'

.....
'
~ .

"And don't you DARE step across this line!

Today's commentary
ByDoaGndf
It hss been quite an act, one of the
century's virtuoso performances in
statecraft.
For 35 years, Josip Broz Tito has
managed through political skill,
force of personality and sheer determination to hold a half dozen often
bitterly antagonistic nationalities
together as a nation.
Not only that, he has made tbat
unlikely nation a force in world af.
fairs. Yugoslavia's 1948 break with
the Soviet Union would have been
sufficient in itself to assure the country and its leader prominent mention in contemporary hiatory. But he
went on from there to play a balancing role in East-West relations for
the next three decades, not least
significantly as one of the foundin11
fathers - along with India's Nehru

Is there life
after Tito?

uiilike the customary chaotic successions in Marxist societies, will
devolve without challenge upon his
designated successors.
Since 1974 and the adoption of the
current constitution, Yugoslavia has
been governed by a collective
presidency representing the country's major ethnic, political and
religious components and with a
rotating chairmanship. There is no
question at any time as to who is
next in line -legaUy.
Tito's successors are a known
quantity and it is expected by both
Yugoslavs and the very great
number of interested outside
observers that the initial transition
will be smooth, preserving national
unity and discouraging what is
regarded as the greatest danger - a
Soviet move to return Yugoslavia to
the satellite status rejected in 1948.
An overt invasion is generally discounted, despite the evidence of
Afghanistan that Moscow is
' prepared for sucil eventualities.
ParadoxicaUy, Afghanistan may acdeed, lower living standards are the
tually
he an asset to YUgoslilvia at
likely consequence.
this point. It is questionable that the
For the first 20 years after World
Soviets would Invite another such .
War II, output per hour for all em·•
ployees in the private business sec- · backlash of world opinion.
And the Yugoslavs are also
tor increased at an average annua":.
prepared for eventualities. In addirate of just under 2.5 percent. It was
tion to a tough standing force of
no coincidence that the American
more than a quarter of a million,
slandard of llving soared during this
they are reported capable of fielding
period as well.
a trained partisan army of &amp;. million
But the annual productivity increased to 1.5 percent in 1965 · and a hall.within days of an attack.
And there is the availability of
through 1973, and less than 1 percent
Western assislance, probably not
since 1973. Administration
troops but certainly wilimited supeconomists say the best !hilt can
plies easily delivered by sea and air.
reasOnably be expected is now about
So in the short tenn, coming
1.5 percent a year, although it may
events in Yugoslavia would appear
he closer to I percent in reality.
The most frequently cited causes · to be a matter of intense world interest but not apprehension.
of the slowdown in productivity
It is the long term tbat promises to
growth in recent years were ti.sted in
be the problem. The main im-the president's annual economic
mediate threat to national stability
report for 19M. They include:
could well he economic.
-A slow-down in investment spenWhile the country as a whole is far
ding by businesses at the top of the
ahead of the rest of
Europe
list, accounting for about one-fifth of
by most standards of comparison,
the over&amp;U trend toward lower
progress has been at a price. Infla.
productivity gains in recent years.
tlon
roll:f on at something like a 00
- Diversion of resources to cornpercent annual rate. The foreign
ply with govenunent regulations.
debt is climbing, unemployment is
+A slowdown in research and
high and there is a dangerous gap
development spending," a less cerbetween the better-off parts and the
tain cause, the administration says.
still undeveloped southern regions.
It notes tbat while govemment spenAnd there is a problem built into
ding Is down, private spending has
the collective presidency. Although
Increased.
its members are Tito's closest
-Rising energy prices, which
associates and can be counted upon
may reduce the efficiency of some
to carry on his policies designed to
equipment.
·
reinforce national unity above all
- An inflation psychology tbat
else, most are close to his own
may adversely affect business
generation. They, too, must soon
deCisions.
pass from the scene, to be succeeded
by whom is a question tbat can only
be a matter for speculation at this
point.
It Is this coming succession, not
Today Is Thursday, Feb. 7, the
the immediate one, tbat will be mosl
38th day of 1980. There are 328 days
crucial to the Yugoslav future. And
left in the year.
there .can be no assurance that It will
Today's highlight In history:
be so carefully programmed as the
In 1964, thousands of fans jlli1Ulled
currently ~ent transterimce or·
New York's· Kennedy Airport to
tbat the International situation will
welcome the popular new Britlah
be as advantageous.
group, the BtaUes, to America.
Even Tltocan't win them all.
On this date:
In 1778, Daniel Boone and 71 other
pioneers were captured by Indians
in Blue l,lck, Ky.
In 1812, Charles Dickens was born.
In 1904, fire virtually wiped out
downtown Baltimore.
In 1962, 298 miners died In a coal
mine explosion In Saarbruecten,
Germany.
Five years ago, two Soviet
cosmonauts returnejlll&amp;fely to earth
after 30 days in orbit:
, ·
Last year, ~ of dla81dent
faimere continued ~ p1'1!811 .for new
!ann legislation at the u.s. Clipltol
In Washington, even though pollee
had tbelr tracton penned In on the •
Egypt's Nasser - of the
nonaligned bloc of nations.
Tito, at 87, baS now added another
touch to this already ample reputation as an iron man, returning to the
business of running Yugoslavia
aimost upon emerging from the
anesthesia for a leg amputation.
But it is very likely the final touch.
This latest doughty performance only emphasizes that one of the most
long-awaited and crucial power
transferals of the postwar era is at
hand.
No. one is more aware of the importance of the occasion than Tito
himself. Not one to confuse durabili·
ty with inunortality, he has been
preparing for it for years. d to the
extent that it is within his power he
has sought to ensure tbat that power,
and

Washington today
W(\SHINGTON (AP) -The Carter administration says it will try to
do something about the nation's
sinking productivity rate, but don't
bet it will have much success.
Productivity, or the hourly output
of goods and services per worker,
declined 0.9 percent last year, the
biggest drop yet in a recent trend
toward lower productivity.
Ironically, the fall in productivity
was a reason that uneniployment did
not increase last year, as it took
more workers tn produce the same
amount of goods. For those
Americans who might otherwise
have been out of work, the decline in
productivity was a blessing.
But in its Impact on the overall
economy, the failure of the
American economy to increaJ!e
worker output will be devastating
should it continue.
For one thing, the drop in productivity helped worsen the nation's inflation rate. As production costs incr~. so therefore did prices.
Falling productivity, coupled with
increased wages, pushed up the
last
labor costs for producing
year by 11.3 percent, on average,
compared with a 7.8 percent increase in 1978, which was also a bad
year.
And as long as productivity is
declining or remaining flat, there's
scant chance that Americans can increase their standard of living. In-

goods

You probably have noted tbat even
the President's advisers hedged on
this forecast, but there are some indications it finally will arrive.
DEFLATION. Not immediately.
Many Americans have forgotten
that prices cah go down 8s well as
up. In fact, since most were born since the Great Depression of the 1930s
they never experienced the
phenomenon.
WAGE INCREASES. Safe bet. But
the question, as almost everyone
knows, Is whether wage increases
will equal price increases, The odds
on tbat happening in the next two
years 941elit to be less than 51&gt;-50.
SAVINGS. Whether there is a rise
in the saVIngs nite, now under 5 percent, depends on whether those
wage increases exceed price rises.
In addition, the American attitude
toward savings may be changing.
Some people, for example, now consider their home equity to be
savings.
GREATER PRODUCTIVITY.
. YQ\11' guess is as good as anyoJle's.
American productivity, or the ef·
flciency wfth which -it produced,
made II rich. Some claim the low
rate of increase now Is inak!ng
America poorer.
CONCLUSION: It's your waUet,
your future. And all things
measured, your conclUBions are
probably as good as the !KKalled ex· '
perts.

4

Eastern

Today in history

mall . .
Today's birthday: Writer Gay
Taleee·ta.a.
Thought for 19day: Never give advice unless ·asked.
Gennan
proverb.

Atlantic Oi.v ision

Boston
Philadelp hia
New York

..

'Today's

~
:;: t

At A Glance
BV The "\_SSOCiated Press
Eastern Conference

NEW YORK (AP) - A few years
~~ ago when Barnum x Bailey Circus
came to Atlanta, it had to pitch its
tents In Macon 75 miles away. When
the city got its National Basketball
Association franchise in 1966, spectators had to watch the Hawks from
backless student benches in the
cramped Georgia Tech field house.
"It was embarrassing," Thomas
Cousins said. "For 13 years Atlanta
was zero in major league sports
franchises. Today it has five pro
teams. No other city in the Southeast
has more than one.
"We're the sports capital of the
South, the core of an area of 35
million people. We've moved fast I trust, not too fast. There's no doubt
we have brought Downtown Atlanta
back to life."
If Atlanta has been resuscitated, it
owes its renewed breath to Cousins,
a trim, dark·haired real estate
tycoon out of whose head and billfold
came the Omni.
The Otnni is Atlanta's Madison
Square Garden - a sprawling complex in the heart of the city with a
modern skyscraper hotel, business
offices, shops, restaurants and a $17
million Coliseum seating between
15,000 and 16,100 for hockey and
basket baD.
"We were sWI nailing down the
seats when the first hockey game
was played Oct. 14, 1972," Cousins
said.
Cousins is owner of the National
Hockey League Flames, who bave
mWed the NHL playoffs only once
since their conception eight years
ago.
He twice owned the NBA Hawks

before selling to Ted Turner, who
manages also to control the basebaU
Braves and the Nor:th American Soccer League's Chiefs while expanding
his cable TV empire and
establiahing himself as the premier
yachtsman of the world.
Atlanta, which gave us Coca Cola,
"Gone With the Wind," and the
South's second president of the century (via Plains, Ga.), now is
busting its buttons over its sports
and entertainment enterprises.
And with good reason.
· Cousins visited New York Wednesday with a group of Atlanta
busineaamen who form a coalition
called the "Greater Atlanta
Project." Sports represented a part
- though not aU - of the message
they wished to leave in the "Big Apple," the center of finance and communications.
"We wanted to leU the world about
it, and New York was the place to
start."
The Flames set up shop in 1972.
The Falcons, Braves and Hawka
were already open for business hsving put out their shingles in 1966.
The Chiefs' soccer team joined the
growing sports family in April, 1979.
Atlanta, just up the pike from the
Augusta Masters, is a regular stop
on the pro goH and tennis tours, both
men and women. The Peach Bowl
crowns the college footbaU season.
"Now tbat we've got the teams,"
said Thomas R. Williams, a banker
who heads the South's Olympic fund·
rsi.sing campaign, "all .we need are
some wiruters.''
Quick, now, who'll be Atlanta's first champion?

Falcons snap
Miami jinx
BY PETER KING
Allociated Presa Writer
Bowlirtg Green entered Wednesday night's Mid-American Con·
ference college basketbaU game
against Miami of Ohio with a lGgame losing streak against the Redskins. Luckless John Weinert
coached the last seven of those
defeats, including three straight
·
one-pointlosses.
But It's a different Bowling Green
team now, with a 17-3 record and a
nine-game winning streak. The
Falcons beat back a late Miami
comeback at home to win 64-01 and
retain a share of the Mid-American
Conference lead with a I~I conference mark.
II was Weinert's 200th college
coaching victory in al4-year career.
'.'Personal goals are secondary,
but No. :nl means a lot to me,"
Weinert said. "It ineans a lot
because, number one, it was against
a fine Miami team, and number two,
because it kept us at the top of the
Mid-American Conference. I'll
remember this one.''
Elaewhere in the conference, coleader Toledo kept pace with
Bowling Green with a 7l&gt;-62 victory
at home against Ohio University.
Two free throws by Allen Rayborn
with two seconds left in the game
gave Northern Dlinois a GUO triumph over Kent . State. Western
Michigan took over fourth place with
a 76-73 triumph over Central
Michigan and Ball State nipped
Eastern Michigan 7().69.
Freshman whiz Colin Irish scored
18 points and had 11 rebounds to
pace the Falcons over Miami, which·
led 24-17 near the end of the first
half. A 12-2 spurt by Bowling Green
gave the Falcons the lead for good.
Dlcli Miller led five Toledo star- .

ters in double figures with 23 points.
Playing without leading scorer Jim
Swaney, who has an ankle injury,
the Rockets were never threatened
by the Bobcats, who are 2-9 in the
conference. Ken Montague scored 13
points in Swaney's place.
"They're great without him," said
Ohio Coach Dale Bandy. His Bobcats
were led by Kirk Lehman with 20
points.
Both leaders play five more con·
ference games before the MAC's
new postseason tournament begins.
The two teams play art Toledo on
Feb. 23 in their final regular-season
game.
Northern Dlinois strengthened its
grip on third place thanks to
Rayborn's free throws and 18 points.
The Huskies are 7-4 in the conference. Kent State, which is H In
the MAC, got a game-high 20 points
from Trent Grooms.
Kenny Cunninghmn, the league's
leading scorer, fired in 30 points and
two decisive free throws to lead the
Broncos over Central ·Michigan,
which led by 10 points in the first

half.

W. L. Pel. GB
41 13 .759
39 15 .722 2
27 29 .482 15

Wa s h ington
23 29 .442 17
New Jersey
23 33 .411 19
Central Division

Atlanta

San Antonio
Houston
Indiana

32 23 .582
29

26

.527

3

26 28 .481 51!2
By GEORGE STRODE
26 29 .473 6
AP SporiB Writer
Cleveland
23 34 .404 10
COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P )
Detro it
14 40 .259 17 1h
We.stern Conference
Michigan Coach Johnny Orr mainDivision
tains Ohio State's basketbaU players Kansas CiMidwest
ty
36 25 .583
'will not be "down" when the Milwaukee
30 27 .526 31h
Denver
20 37 .351 13 1h
Wolverines face the slump-ridden
Utah
19 37 .339 1A
Buckeyes tonight.
Chicago
lB 37 .327 U 1h
Eldon Miller, his Ohio State
Pacific Division
Sea ttle
39 16 .709
coaching rival, seconds the notion 1h
Angeles
39 17 .696
even if the Buckeyes have fallen Los
Phoeni x
36 19 .655 3
from the Big Ten Conference lead San Diego
28 30 .483 121h
27 29 .482 121h
with four losses in their last five Portland
Golden
Stale
17 38 .309 22
league games.
Wednesday's Games
Orr's team started that downslide Boston 129, Philadelphi al iO
with a 7S.74 overtime upset, but he Milwaukee 111 , Cleveland 109
said, "Ohio State will be psyched up. Houston 115, New Jersey 114
Dem1er 122, Chi cago 111
They need this game very badly.' '
Phoeni x 97, Kansas City 95
Miller agreed. "I think it (the Golden Slate 117, San Diego 92
Thursday's Games
slump) definitely is not bad attitude.
Seattle at Detroit
I feel good after talking with our Washington at Indiana
players and where we go from Atlanta at Utah
Friday's Games
here," be said. "!have a lot of faith
Indiana
at
in this team. I think we can get it Los AngelesBoston
at New Jersey
together again."
Seattle at Philadelphia
With only eight conference con- "' Phoenix at Chicago
Washington at Milwaukee
tests left and Purdue leading with Cleveland
at Houston
just three defeats, Orr and Miller Portland at San D iego
realize the importance of this second Kansas City at Golden State
meeting. The Buckeyes have four
Big Ten losses and the Wolverines
National Hockey League
At A Glance
have five.
By The Associated Press
"People with five losses today are
Campbell Conference
still in it," said Miller. "But if we're
Patrick Division
serious about playing for the Big Ten
W ll T Pis. GF GA
title, we better not count on being it Phi Iadelphia 35 3 13 83 216 148
NY Rangers 24 21 9 57 207 196
with lllOre than five losses."
NY Islanders 24 20 7 55 176 167
That would happen if Michigan Atlanta
23 22 7 53 176 179
and Michigan State, Saturday Washington 13 30 9 35 161 198
Division
night's home opponent, duplicate Chicago Smythe
22 18 14 58 154 161
their first-round upsets. The Spar- st. Louis
23 22 9 55 172 177
17 26 10 44 196 220
tans, tied for fifth with Iowa and the Edmonton
16 28 8 40 161 185
vancou-ver
Wolverines, handed the Buckeyes Colorado
14 30 8 36 163 199
their worst beating of the season 74- Winnipeg
14 33 7 35 146 220
Wales Conference
54.
Adams Division
Ohio State shot a horrendous 33
33 14 6 72 207 141
Buffalo
percent from the floor against Boston
31 14 7 69 203 152
Michigan State and Miller believes Minnesota 23 17 10 56 201 158
Quebec
20 24 8 48 161 183
he knows why.
Toronto
21 26 4 46 190 210
"They (the players) found themNorris Division
selves at the beginning of the year Montreal
28 18 6 62 199 170
with a tremendously high ranking. It Los Angeles 21 23 9 51 213 223
Pittsburgh 19 22 11 49 174 189
(the pressure) aU came to a head at Detroit
20 24 8 48 178 176
once. We have to start having fun out Hartford
17 23 10 44 180 182
Wednesday's Games
there again and stop putting so much
Hartford 7, Los Angeles 3
pressure on ourselves," said the Washington
2. Detroit2, ti e
coach of the 14-5 Buckeyes, rated Chicago 3, Quebec 3, tie
St. Louis 6, Edmonton 3
No. 13 nationally this week.
Thursday ' s Games
Miller then warned, ''It would he a Toronto at
Boston
mistake to write us off at this point."
Pittsburgh at Buffalo
Ohio State bas a schedule break Colorado at Montreal
Los Angeles at NY I slanders
the next three weeks. They play five
Vancouver at Philadelphia
of their sill league games at home,
Friday's Games
going only to Minnesota. However, Colorado at Hartford
the Buckeyes must flnislt at Purdue Washington at Winnipeg
Atlanta at Edmonton
and Indiana.

Cleveland honors DiMaggio
CLEVELAND (AP) - As a
player, baseball Hall of Farner Joe
DiMaggio says Cleveland wasn't
usually his favorite place to visit.
But the former New York
Yankees' star came to town under
different circumstances Wednesday, as the honored guest at a
luncheon of the Wahoo Club, a
baseball booster organization.
More tban 1,100 people attended
the luncheon, which also featured
the man whose defensive work for
the Cleveland Indians helped bring
an end to DiMaggio's legendary 56game hitting streak.
DiMaggio vividly recaUs the two
outstanding fielding plays turned in
by third baseman Ken Keltner on
July 17, 1941, the night his streak
was stopped.

Barry sets new NBA
3-point play mark
By Tbe Associated Press
For openers, Houston's Rick
Barry showed seven 3's Wednesday
night but he had a pair of aces in the
hole that proved fatal to the New
Jersey Nets.
Barry set a National Basketball
Association record with seven threepoint baskets - he tried nine - but
it took hi.s pair of free throws with
four seconds left to give the Rockets
a four-point lead en route to a 11S.ll4
victory over the Nets.
"I can't go crazy with it (the threepointers)," said Barry, who hit ·his
first four long-distance shots late in
the opening period after the Rockets
feU behind 19-7. " I think all the shots
I took tonight were good. I just don 't
try to force them."
Elsewhere, the Boston Celtics
trounced the Philadelphia 76ers 129110, the Phoenix Suns nipped the
Kansas City Kings 97-95, the
Milwaukee Bucks edged the
Cleveland Cavaliers 111-109, the
Golden Stale Warriors routed the
San Diego Clippers 117·92 and the
Denver Nuggets whipped the
Chicago Bulls 122-lll.
Barry's long-range bombing

Transactions
Wednesday's Sports Transaction s

By The Associated Press
BASEBAl-L
National League

ATLANTA BRAVES - Named AI
Thornwell executive vice president.

ST . LOUIS CARDINALS - Signed

Keith Hernandez, first baseman, to
a,five ·year contract.

BASKETBALL

National Basketball Association

BOSTON CEL TICS -

Placed

Dave Cowens, center, on the injured
list . Activated Pete Maravich,
guard .
Women ' s Professional
Basketball League

MILWAUKEE DOES - Announ c·

ed the resignation of Larry Costello,
head coach .

FOOTBALL.

National Football League

DETROIT

LIONS

-

Named

Joseph Maden special teams coach .

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Nam·

ed Dave Levy offensive line coach .

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Signed

Larry Dorsey, wide receiver, an d
Mike Salzano, offensl\le tackle .

"It rained the night before,"
DiMaggio told the gathering. "It
rained very heavy. I don't know how
they got the field into playing condition."
"And there's Kenny out there
playing left field," he joked, amending tbat to "a long third base."
"Joe never bunted," Keltner said,
explaining why he played so deep.
"Both balls were hit very hard. They
both would have been base hits if I
wasn't playing so close to the line."
Keltner backhanded each of the
shotsanllthrewDiMaggioouttwice.
"If it hadn't rained the night
before, I would have beaten it,"
DiMaggio said of one of the plays.
After that night, he went on to hit
safely in 27 more consecutive
games.

enabled him to top the Rockets with
27 points. His seven three-point
baskets broke the NBA record of five
which he shared with Boston's Chris
Ford and San Diego's Brian Taylor.

College .
results
Wednesday 's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press

EAST

Boston u . 59, N. Caro·Wilmington 57
Ca nis ius 95 , Siena 87
Carnegie·M ellon 84, John CarrollS..
Connecticut 73, M assachuse t ts 55
De laware 63, W. Chester St. 60
Duquesne 49, W. Virginia 38
Fordham 85 , Fairfield 70

Georgetown, D.C. 81 , Seton Hall67
Hof stra SO, Temple 49
LaSalle 84, Rhode Island 76
Niagara 65, Colgate 63
Northeastern 67. Ll U 48

Rider 82, Lehigh 70
St. Francis, N.Y. 77, Wagner 173

St. Francis, Pa . 75, Robert Morris 69

swarethmore 67, Johns Hopkins 52
Tufts 80, Amherst 66
VIllanova 74, George Wash ington 72 ·
SOUTH
Appalachian St. 70. s. Carolina St. 61
Birmingham So. 71. Troy St. 63

Citadei9B, Davidson 88, OT
Clemson 86, Wake Forest69
Jacksonville St. 9-', Montevllo . 81
Kentucky 86, M ississipp i 72
Kentucky St. 85 , 'Bellarmine 84
Louis iana St . 68 , Alabama 66, OT
Louisville 88, Cincinnati 73
Miss issippi St. 62, Georgia 56
N. Carolina St . 60, Georgia Tech 49
ST. Andres 91, Methodist 71
Tennessee 100, Florida 76
Tennessee St . 83, Tenn. -Martin 76
'Vanderbil177, Auburn 73
Virginia 73, Duke 69
Virginia Union 107, Virgin ia St. 94

MIDWEST

Ball St . 70, E. Michigan 69
Butler62 , Oayton61
Findlay 67 , Anderson 63
Kansas St. 62, Colorado 61, OT
No. lllinois62, Kent St. 60
Notre Dame 93, Manhattan .49

Oklahoma St. 76, Oklahoma 67
St. Loui s 101 , Roose\lelt 53

Toledo 75, Oh io u·. 62

Valpara iso 58, Chi cago Circle 53
W. Michigan 76, Cent . Michigan 73

SOUTHWEST
Ark.·Lillle Rock 73, Grambling 63

Tex as A&amp;M 67, Southern Methodist

56

FAR WEST
Adams St. 85, Western St. 71
Pacific Lutheran 101, Pacific 68

J

\~\J..IJI~

f)l~ '1,111~

"My old tax service didn't
double-check everything.
I shoulda come here
last v~=u"

)I()N'l,ll

Master

MECHANIC ·•"

(P&amp;t)

"This has to be one of the best efforts of any Western team," Western
Michigan Coach Les Woethke said.
Chippewas' Coach Dick Parfitt
said, "This is a traumatic thing for
our team to go t])rough a home loss
like this. We fought real hard."
Ball State, which has lost five
games by a total of seven points this
season, finally won a close one at
Eastern Michigan. John Williams
had 17 points for the Cardinala and
teammate AI Gooden ·was sill-for-sbi
from the ftoor and thretfor-three
from the foul line for 15 points.
"We were hound to turn It
around," Ball State Coach Steve
Yoder said.

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...

�3-TheDaUySentinel,M ldleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday,Feb. 7,19M

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middlewrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 7,19M

In Washington:
By Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEAl - Teddy
: Roosevelt probably is spinning in his
· grave.
. More than three&lt;juarters of a century ago, President Theodore._
Roosevelt fonnulated a succinct but
profoundly sensible philosophy to
guide the United States in international affairs: "Speak softly and
carry a big stick."
But President Carter today has
turned tbat doctrine upside down,
picking_ fights he can't win, unnecessarily painting himself into
diplmnatic corners and generally
confinning the worst fears of those
who view him as inept, indecisive
and incompetent in the foreign
policy sphere.
U the White House has a current
version of Roosevelt's approach to
international relations, it probably
goes like this : "Shout · ominous

-------....

·----~-------------------.
I

1

~

Sentinel
t
Editorial !

I
I

I
I

l!

I'L

II

---~~~----------~-------~------- ,

Jimmy's Whitehouse
'

ByF'RANKOORMIER
Alloclated Presa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jinuny
Carter, owner of the most prominent
set of teeth in the land, is being told
by his dentist that he need not use
toothpaste.
'The dentist, Navy Capt. William
H. Maastricht, said tbat when Carter sought his views on toothpaste,
"I told him not to use any, unless he
wants the taste."
Maastricht agrees with a sizable
body of his colleagues in dentistry
tbat the important thing is to move
the bristles of a toothbrush over
teeth and gums. Toothpaste is very
secondary.

+++

their mutual interest in running.
Carter's zest for jogging has been
weD publicized, and he did nothing to
deflate reports of his athletic endeavors when he appeared recently
at a physical fitness conference.
After speaking of his "strenuous
exercise program," Carter told the
conferees, "I have done this to an
even greater degree during the last
few months when I have had additional problems and burdens and
responsibilities .... "

Meigs
Property
Transfers

How does the president preserve
his gleaming grin'
Maastricht related that he urged
Carter to use waxed dental floss
regularly, and added: "The next
Howard D. Nolan, Geneva H.
time I saw the president he hadn't
Nolan to Carroll R. Norris, Adie W.
mWed a single surface. He had
Norris,l.ll A.,Syracuse.
flossed so hard he'd caused
abrasions."
Robert E. Peoples, Georgie Anna
Mrs. Carter, the dentist confided,
Peoples, Wallace B. Ford, Edythe F.
"is as meticulous about her teeth as , Ford, Florence M. Mickey to Meigs
Co. Pioneer and Historial Society,
the president is, but not so much to
Inc., Lot, Pomeroy.
Jbenthdegree."
. +++
Homer HyseU, Pauline HyseU to
: The 17-year Navy veteran
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
ili.scussed his dealings with his most Co., Ease., Chester.
Delmar Baum, Kathryn Baum to
:tamous patients with reporter Meryl
·Harris for a recent feature article in Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
:the weekly ADA News, the official Co., Ease., Chester.
Harry N. Lodwick, Juanita Lod:Organ of the American Dental
;1\ssoclation.
wick, Lulu C. Lodwick to Columbus
: Maastricht, whose regular assign- &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co., Ease.,
Chester.
ment is as head of the staff dental
clinic at the National Naval Dental
Elson Spencer, Dorothy Spencer
to John N. Ihle, Mary Lou Ihle, 29 A.,
~nter, Bethesda, Md., sees Carter
at the White House every three mon- Sutton.
ths.
David Spencer, Unda Spjencer to
John N. Ilile, Mary Lou !hie, 13 A.
: The White House has its own small
and2'f.! A.
!!ental office, including a lean-back
Dan Satterfield to James Johnson
chair and all the accoutrements for
drilling and, heaven forbid, yanking Jr., Grace A. Johnson, Parcel," Middleport.
teeth.
MaryS. Lippincott, Dec., to Harry
+++
A. Lippincott, Cert. &lt;i Trans.,
When Carter and his Navy dentist
Letart.
get together, what do they talk
about•
Ralph Welker, Pearl Welker to
Ralph
Welker, Pearl Welker,
: Maastricht, who jogs about five
Parcels, Pomeroy.
miles daily, says they often discuss

Berry's World

"Would you believe I'm thinking about Ayatollah Kazem Shariat-Madan ' and Ayatollah
Mahoud Taleghani?"

' - - - - - - - - --- - - - - -

.:Bucks hope to end
;; }uffl:p this evening

Speak softly,
at least

threats and engage in unwarranted
saher-rattting. But if the opposition.
doesn't respond, retreat quickly
while resorting to meaningless facesaving gestures.''
After more tban three .years as
president, Carter's actions fonn a
clear and disturbing pattern that includes, but also extends far beyond,
the White House response to the current crises in Iran and Afghanistan.
Some examples:
In the summer of 1978, a federal
grand jury charged that DINA,
Chile's repressive secret police
organization, plotted the 1976 bombing that killed Chilean diplomat
Orlando Letelier, a critic of that
cou~try's
right-wing military
regime.
After the grand jury indicted three
high-ranking DINA officials, the
United States demanded their extradition and warned that failure to

comply could lead to withdrawal of
our ambassador to Chile and-or
economic sanctions in the form of
restricted credit extended to Chile
by United States banks.
When Chile refused to produce the
trio of indicted men to stand trial in
this country, the Carter admini.stra·
tion abandoned aU of its tough initial
threats in favor of a package of
essentiaUy meaningless sanctions.
" All right, we bluffed," a recent
news account quoted one highranking United States official in Santiago as saying. "They caUed our
bluff and we lost."
Carter bluffed and lost again last
autumn, when he denounced as "not
acceptable" the presence of a Soviet
combat brigade of 2,000 to 3,000
troops in Cuba, then demanded that
they be withdrawn.
When the Soviets stood firm and
insisted that troops were part of a
training force that had been in place
since the early 1960s, the White
House acquiesced and abandoned a
fight it probably shouldn't have picked.
When Soviet troops recently invaded Afghanislan, Carter responded with what was purported to be the
toughest sanctions of his presidency,
including a trade embargo on computers, drilling bits and other hightechnology export items.
To dramatize that decision, the
White House ordered the Commerce
Department to find' on one hour's
notice, eight pending applications
for export licenses that could be
denied, then to publicize tbat decision at a press conference.
The department complied, but
later was forced to admit tbat the
applications would have been denied
anyway under long-existing restrictions on Soviet trade.
Most of the other elements in the
package - including the withdrawal
of American consular officials from
Kiev, the expulsion of a handful of
Soviet diplomats from New York,
limitations on Soviet commercial
fishing in Alaskan waters and a cutback in cultural and educational exchanges - were little more than
symbolic window-dressing.
This isn't an appeal to !'get tough" ·
with the Chileans, the Cubans, the
Russians or any other real or imagined transgressors, because unwarranted escalation of United
States actions could lead to
hostilities whoUy inappropriate to
this country's vital interests in distant conflicts.
But Carter long ago missed the
final deadline for formulating a
unified foreign policy for his administration tbat would have provided a conceptual framework to
deyelop rational and appropriate
responses to continuing global
crises.

Business
•
mirror
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Busilless Aualyst
NEW YORK (AP) - The
professor had just completed a
profound, two-hour analysis of
domestic pricing, chalking the inputs-outputs and causes-effects in a
squiggly diagram across an eightfoot blackboard.
He paused. The class remained at·
tentive. Then a newsman, one of a
group invited to study the mysteries
of inflation, commented perceptively: "But professor, it doesn't
give the right answer."
·
Pause. "I knOw," said the
professor, an authority on the subject. "I know it doesn't, and we're
not reaDy certain why, but we're
working awfully hard to find the
reason why.''
True, economists work terribly
hard today, often unraveling many
of the worst dilenunas ever to face
the nation and the world. Often they
identify causes with laudatory
analyses. Often they don't.
The inability to accurately
forecast short-term trends, one of
the weaknesses of the profession,
doesn't however prevent it from
being a "growth industry," in the
words of economist Paul Samuelson.
Ironically, the very uil·
fatbomabiUty ri today's events
seem to assure a future for
forecasters, including those who
deal with the economy in general and gold, commodities, interest
rates and the like.
And, it would seem, it might reestablish an individual's good common sense as equal to that of the
most expensive consultant. And with
that in mind, herewith some common-sense expectatioll8:
INFLATION. You C11i1 rely on Jt.
Government spending and deficits,
lagging productivity growth, the
high costs of imported energy, and
perhaps some hard-to-change co.nSWI!er buying habits almost assure
il

RECESSION. The odds would
seem to favor it some limP. frjt Y•ar.

Nafional Basketball Association

~

Sports
World

.

By Will Grimsley

'

.....
'
~ .

"And don't you DARE step across this line!

Today's commentary
ByDoaGndf
It hss been quite an act, one of the
century's virtuoso performances in
statecraft.
For 35 years, Josip Broz Tito has
managed through political skill,
force of personality and sheer determination to hold a half dozen often
bitterly antagonistic nationalities
together as a nation.
Not only that, he has made tbat
unlikely nation a force in world af.
fairs. Yugoslavia's 1948 break with
the Soviet Union would have been
sufficient in itself to assure the country and its leader prominent mention in contemporary hiatory. But he
went on from there to play a balancing role in East-West relations for
the next three decades, not least
significantly as one of the foundin11
fathers - along with India's Nehru

Is there life
after Tito?

uiilike the customary chaotic successions in Marxist societies, will
devolve without challenge upon his
designated successors.
Since 1974 and the adoption of the
current constitution, Yugoslavia has
been governed by a collective
presidency representing the country's major ethnic, political and
religious components and with a
rotating chairmanship. There is no
question at any time as to who is
next in line -legaUy.
Tito's successors are a known
quantity and it is expected by both
Yugoslavs and the very great
number of interested outside
observers that the initial transition
will be smooth, preserving national
unity and discouraging what is
regarded as the greatest danger - a
Soviet move to return Yugoslavia to
the satellite status rejected in 1948.
An overt invasion is generally discounted, despite the evidence of
Afghanistan that Moscow is
' prepared for sucil eventualities.
ParadoxicaUy, Afghanistan may acdeed, lower living standards are the
tually
he an asset to YUgoslilvia at
likely consequence.
this point. It is questionable that the
For the first 20 years after World
Soviets would Invite another such .
War II, output per hour for all em·•
ployees in the private business sec- · backlash of world opinion.
And the Yugoslavs are also
tor increased at an average annua":.
prepared for eventualities. In addirate of just under 2.5 percent. It was
tion to a tough standing force of
no coincidence that the American
more than a quarter of a million,
slandard of llving soared during this
they are reported capable of fielding
period as well.
a trained partisan army of &amp;. million
But the annual productivity increased to 1.5 percent in 1965 · and a hall.within days of an attack.
And there is the availability of
through 1973, and less than 1 percent
Western assislance, probably not
since 1973. Administration
troops but certainly wilimited supeconomists say the best !hilt can
plies easily delivered by sea and air.
reasOnably be expected is now about
So in the short tenn, coming
1.5 percent a year, although it may
events in Yugoslavia would appear
he closer to I percent in reality.
The most frequently cited causes · to be a matter of intense world interest but not apprehension.
of the slowdown in productivity
It is the long term tbat promises to
growth in recent years were ti.sted in
be the problem. The main im-the president's annual economic
mediate threat to national stability
report for 19M. They include:
could well he economic.
-A slow-down in investment spenWhile the country as a whole is far
ding by businesses at the top of the
ahead of the rest of
Europe
list, accounting for about one-fifth of
by most standards of comparison,
the over&amp;U trend toward lower
progress has been at a price. Infla.
productivity gains in recent years.
tlon
roll:f on at something like a 00
- Diversion of resources to cornpercent annual rate. The foreign
ply with govenunent regulations.
debt is climbing, unemployment is
+A slowdown in research and
high and there is a dangerous gap
development spending," a less cerbetween the better-off parts and the
tain cause, the administration says.
still undeveloped southern regions.
It notes tbat while govemment spenAnd there is a problem built into
ding Is down, private spending has
the collective presidency. Although
Increased.
its members are Tito's closest
-Rising energy prices, which
associates and can be counted upon
may reduce the efficiency of some
to carry on his policies designed to
equipment.
·
reinforce national unity above all
- An inflation psychology tbat
else, most are close to his own
may adversely affect business
generation. They, too, must soon
deCisions.
pass from the scene, to be succeeded
by whom is a question tbat can only
be a matter for speculation at this
point.
It Is this coming succession, not
Today Is Thursday, Feb. 7, the
the immediate one, tbat will be mosl
38th day of 1980. There are 328 days
crucial to the Yugoslav future. And
left in the year.
there .can be no assurance that It will
Today's highlight In history:
be so carefully programmed as the
In 1964, thousands of fans jlli1Ulled
currently ~ent transterimce or·
New York's· Kennedy Airport to
tbat the International situation will
welcome the popular new Britlah
be as advantageous.
group, the BtaUes, to America.
Even Tltocan't win them all.
On this date:
In 1778, Daniel Boone and 71 other
pioneers were captured by Indians
in Blue l,lck, Ky.
In 1812, Charles Dickens was born.
In 1904, fire virtually wiped out
downtown Baltimore.
In 1962, 298 miners died In a coal
mine explosion In Saarbruecten,
Germany.
Five years ago, two Soviet
cosmonauts returnejlll&amp;fely to earth
after 30 days in orbit:
, ·
Last year, ~ of dla81dent
faimere continued ~ p1'1!811 .for new
!ann legislation at the u.s. Clipltol
In Washington, even though pollee
had tbelr tracton penned In on the •
Egypt's Nasser - of the
nonaligned bloc of nations.
Tito, at 87, baS now added another
touch to this already ample reputation as an iron man, returning to the
business of running Yugoslavia
aimost upon emerging from the
anesthesia for a leg amputation.
But it is very likely the final touch.
This latest doughty performance only emphasizes that one of the most
long-awaited and crucial power
transferals of the postwar era is at
hand.
No. one is more aware of the importance of the occasion than Tito
himself. Not one to confuse durabili·
ty with inunortality, he has been
preparing for it for years. d to the
extent that it is within his power he
has sought to ensure tbat that power,
and

Washington today
W(\SHINGTON (AP) -The Carter administration says it will try to
do something about the nation's
sinking productivity rate, but don't
bet it will have much success.
Productivity, or the hourly output
of goods and services per worker,
declined 0.9 percent last year, the
biggest drop yet in a recent trend
toward lower productivity.
Ironically, the fall in productivity
was a reason that uneniployment did
not increase last year, as it took
more workers tn produce the same
amount of goods. For those
Americans who might otherwise
have been out of work, the decline in
productivity was a blessing.
But in its Impact on the overall
economy, the failure of the
American economy to increaJ!e
worker output will be devastating
should it continue.
For one thing, the drop in productivity helped worsen the nation's inflation rate. As production costs incr~. so therefore did prices.
Falling productivity, coupled with
increased wages, pushed up the
last
labor costs for producing
year by 11.3 percent, on average,
compared with a 7.8 percent increase in 1978, which was also a bad
year.
And as long as productivity is
declining or remaining flat, there's
scant chance that Americans can increase their standard of living. In-

goods

You probably have noted tbat even
the President's advisers hedged on
this forecast, but there are some indications it finally will arrive.
DEFLATION. Not immediately.
Many Americans have forgotten
that prices cah go down 8s well as
up. In fact, since most were born since the Great Depression of the 1930s
they never experienced the
phenomenon.
WAGE INCREASES. Safe bet. But
the question, as almost everyone
knows, Is whether wage increases
will equal price increases, The odds
on tbat happening in the next two
years 941elit to be less than 51&gt;-50.
SAVINGS. Whether there is a rise
in the saVIngs nite, now under 5 percent, depends on whether those
wage increases exceed price rises.
In addition, the American attitude
toward savings may be changing.
Some people, for example, now consider their home equity to be
savings.
GREATER PRODUCTIVITY.
. YQ\11' guess is as good as anyoJle's.
American productivity, or the ef·
flciency wfth which -it produced,
made II rich. Some claim the low
rate of increase now Is inak!ng
America poorer.
CONCLUSION: It's your waUet,
your future. And all things
measured, your conclUBions are
probably as good as the !KKalled ex· '
perts.

4

Eastern

Today in history

mall . .
Today's birthday: Writer Gay
Taleee·ta.a.
Thought for 19day: Never give advice unless ·asked.
Gennan
proverb.

Atlantic Oi.v ision

Boston
Philadelp hia
New York

..

'Today's

~
:;: t

At A Glance
BV The "\_SSOCiated Press
Eastern Conference

NEW YORK (AP) - A few years
~~ ago when Barnum x Bailey Circus
came to Atlanta, it had to pitch its
tents In Macon 75 miles away. When
the city got its National Basketball
Association franchise in 1966, spectators had to watch the Hawks from
backless student benches in the
cramped Georgia Tech field house.
"It was embarrassing," Thomas
Cousins said. "For 13 years Atlanta
was zero in major league sports
franchises. Today it has five pro
teams. No other city in the Southeast
has more than one.
"We're the sports capital of the
South, the core of an area of 35
million people. We've moved fast I trust, not too fast. There's no doubt
we have brought Downtown Atlanta
back to life."
If Atlanta has been resuscitated, it
owes its renewed breath to Cousins,
a trim, dark·haired real estate
tycoon out of whose head and billfold
came the Omni.
The Otnni is Atlanta's Madison
Square Garden - a sprawling complex in the heart of the city with a
modern skyscraper hotel, business
offices, shops, restaurants and a $17
million Coliseum seating between
15,000 and 16,100 for hockey and
basket baD.
"We were sWI nailing down the
seats when the first hockey game
was played Oct. 14, 1972," Cousins
said.
Cousins is owner of the National
Hockey League Flames, who bave
mWed the NHL playoffs only once
since their conception eight years
ago.
He twice owned the NBA Hawks

before selling to Ted Turner, who
manages also to control the basebaU
Braves and the Nor:th American Soccer League's Chiefs while expanding
his cable TV empire and
establiahing himself as the premier
yachtsman of the world.
Atlanta, which gave us Coca Cola,
"Gone With the Wind," and the
South's second president of the century (via Plains, Ga.), now is
busting its buttons over its sports
and entertainment enterprises.
And with good reason.
· Cousins visited New York Wednesday with a group of Atlanta
busineaamen who form a coalition
called the "Greater Atlanta
Project." Sports represented a part
- though not aU - of the message
they wished to leave in the "Big Apple," the center of finance and communications.
"We wanted to leU the world about
it, and New York was the place to
start."
The Flames set up shop in 1972.
The Falcons, Braves and Hawka
were already open for business hsving put out their shingles in 1966.
The Chiefs' soccer team joined the
growing sports family in April, 1979.
Atlanta, just up the pike from the
Augusta Masters, is a regular stop
on the pro goH and tennis tours, both
men and women. The Peach Bowl
crowns the college footbaU season.
"Now tbat we've got the teams,"
said Thomas R. Williams, a banker
who heads the South's Olympic fund·
rsi.sing campaign, "all .we need are
some wiruters.''
Quick, now, who'll be Atlanta's first champion?

Falcons snap
Miami jinx
BY PETER KING
Allociated Presa Writer
Bowlirtg Green entered Wednesday night's Mid-American Con·
ference college basketbaU game
against Miami of Ohio with a lGgame losing streak against the Redskins. Luckless John Weinert
coached the last seven of those
defeats, including three straight
·
one-pointlosses.
But It's a different Bowling Green
team now, with a 17-3 record and a
nine-game winning streak. The
Falcons beat back a late Miami
comeback at home to win 64-01 and
retain a share of the Mid-American
Conference lead with a I~I conference mark.
II was Weinert's 200th college
coaching victory in al4-year career.
'.'Personal goals are secondary,
but No. :nl means a lot to me,"
Weinert said. "It ineans a lot
because, number one, it was against
a fine Miami team, and number two,
because it kept us at the top of the
Mid-American Conference. I'll
remember this one.''
Elaewhere in the conference, coleader Toledo kept pace with
Bowling Green with a 7l&gt;-62 victory
at home against Ohio University.
Two free throws by Allen Rayborn
with two seconds left in the game
gave Northern Dlinois a GUO triumph over Kent . State. Western
Michigan took over fourth place with
a 76-73 triumph over Central
Michigan and Ball State nipped
Eastern Michigan 7().69.
Freshman whiz Colin Irish scored
18 points and had 11 rebounds to
pace the Falcons over Miami, which·
led 24-17 near the end of the first
half. A 12-2 spurt by Bowling Green
gave the Falcons the lead for good.
Dlcli Miller led five Toledo star- .

ters in double figures with 23 points.
Playing without leading scorer Jim
Swaney, who has an ankle injury,
the Rockets were never threatened
by the Bobcats, who are 2-9 in the
conference. Ken Montague scored 13
points in Swaney's place.
"They're great without him," said
Ohio Coach Dale Bandy. His Bobcats
were led by Kirk Lehman with 20
points.
Both leaders play five more con·
ference games before the MAC's
new postseason tournament begins.
The two teams play art Toledo on
Feb. 23 in their final regular-season
game.
Northern Dlinois strengthened its
grip on third place thanks to
Rayborn's free throws and 18 points.
The Huskies are 7-4 in the conference. Kent State, which is H In
the MAC, got a game-high 20 points
from Trent Grooms.
Kenny Cunninghmn, the league's
leading scorer, fired in 30 points and
two decisive free throws to lead the
Broncos over Central ·Michigan,
which led by 10 points in the first

half.

W. L. Pel. GB
41 13 .759
39 15 .722 2
27 29 .482 15

Wa s h ington
23 29 .442 17
New Jersey
23 33 .411 19
Central Division

Atlanta

San Antonio
Houston
Indiana

32 23 .582
29

26

.527

3

26 28 .481 51!2
By GEORGE STRODE
26 29 .473 6
AP SporiB Writer
Cleveland
23 34 .404 10
COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P )
Detro it
14 40 .259 17 1h
We.stern Conference
Michigan Coach Johnny Orr mainDivision
tains Ohio State's basketbaU players Kansas CiMidwest
ty
36 25 .583
'will not be "down" when the Milwaukee
30 27 .526 31h
Denver
20 37 .351 13 1h
Wolverines face the slump-ridden
Utah
19 37 .339 1A
Buckeyes tonight.
Chicago
lB 37 .327 U 1h
Eldon Miller, his Ohio State
Pacific Division
Sea ttle
39 16 .709
coaching rival, seconds the notion 1h
Angeles
39 17 .696
even if the Buckeyes have fallen Los
Phoeni x
36 19 .655 3
from the Big Ten Conference lead San Diego
28 30 .483 121h
27 29 .482 121h
with four losses in their last five Portland
Golden
Stale
17 38 .309 22
league games.
Wednesday's Games
Orr's team started that downslide Boston 129, Philadelphi al iO
with a 7S.74 overtime upset, but he Milwaukee 111 , Cleveland 109
said, "Ohio State will be psyched up. Houston 115, New Jersey 114
Dem1er 122, Chi cago 111
They need this game very badly.' '
Phoeni x 97, Kansas City 95
Miller agreed. "I think it (the Golden Slate 117, San Diego 92
Thursday's Games
slump) definitely is not bad attitude.
Seattle at Detroit
I feel good after talking with our Washington at Indiana
players and where we go from Atlanta at Utah
Friday's Games
here," be said. "!have a lot of faith
Indiana
at
in this team. I think we can get it Los AngelesBoston
at New Jersey
together again."
Seattle at Philadelphia
With only eight conference con- "' Phoenix at Chicago
Washington at Milwaukee
tests left and Purdue leading with Cleveland
at Houston
just three defeats, Orr and Miller Portland at San D iego
realize the importance of this second Kansas City at Golden State
meeting. The Buckeyes have four
Big Ten losses and the Wolverines
National Hockey League
At A Glance
have five.
By The Associated Press
"People with five losses today are
Campbell Conference
still in it," said Miller. "But if we're
Patrick Division
serious about playing for the Big Ten
W ll T Pis. GF GA
title, we better not count on being it Phi Iadelphia 35 3 13 83 216 148
NY Rangers 24 21 9 57 207 196
with lllOre than five losses."
NY Islanders 24 20 7 55 176 167
That would happen if Michigan Atlanta
23 22 7 53 176 179
and Michigan State, Saturday Washington 13 30 9 35 161 198
Division
night's home opponent, duplicate Chicago Smythe
22 18 14 58 154 161
their first-round upsets. The Spar- st. Louis
23 22 9 55 172 177
17 26 10 44 196 220
tans, tied for fifth with Iowa and the Edmonton
16 28 8 40 161 185
vancou-ver
Wolverines, handed the Buckeyes Colorado
14 30 8 36 163 199
their worst beating of the season 74- Winnipeg
14 33 7 35 146 220
Wales Conference
54.
Adams Division
Ohio State shot a horrendous 33
33 14 6 72 207 141
Buffalo
percent from the floor against Boston
31 14 7 69 203 152
Michigan State and Miller believes Minnesota 23 17 10 56 201 158
Quebec
20 24 8 48 161 183
he knows why.
Toronto
21 26 4 46 190 210
"They (the players) found themNorris Division
selves at the beginning of the year Montreal
28 18 6 62 199 170
with a tremendously high ranking. It Los Angeles 21 23 9 51 213 223
Pittsburgh 19 22 11 49 174 189
(the pressure) aU came to a head at Detroit
20 24 8 48 178 176
once. We have to start having fun out Hartford
17 23 10 44 180 182
Wednesday's Games
there again and stop putting so much
Hartford 7, Los Angeles 3
pressure on ourselves," said the Washington
2. Detroit2, ti e
coach of the 14-5 Buckeyes, rated Chicago 3, Quebec 3, tie
St. Louis 6, Edmonton 3
No. 13 nationally this week.
Thursday ' s Games
Miller then warned, ''It would he a Toronto at
Boston
mistake to write us off at this point."
Pittsburgh at Buffalo
Ohio State bas a schedule break Colorado at Montreal
Los Angeles at NY I slanders
the next three weeks. They play five
Vancouver at Philadelphia
of their sill league games at home,
Friday's Games
going only to Minnesota. However, Colorado at Hartford
the Buckeyes must flnislt at Purdue Washington at Winnipeg
Atlanta at Edmonton
and Indiana.

Cleveland honors DiMaggio
CLEVELAND (AP) - As a
player, baseball Hall of Farner Joe
DiMaggio says Cleveland wasn't
usually his favorite place to visit.
But the former New York
Yankees' star came to town under
different circumstances Wednesday, as the honored guest at a
luncheon of the Wahoo Club, a
baseball booster organization.
More tban 1,100 people attended
the luncheon, which also featured
the man whose defensive work for
the Cleveland Indians helped bring
an end to DiMaggio's legendary 56game hitting streak.
DiMaggio vividly recaUs the two
outstanding fielding plays turned in
by third baseman Ken Keltner on
July 17, 1941, the night his streak
was stopped.

Barry sets new NBA
3-point play mark
By Tbe Associated Press
For openers, Houston's Rick
Barry showed seven 3's Wednesday
night but he had a pair of aces in the
hole that proved fatal to the New
Jersey Nets.
Barry set a National Basketball
Association record with seven threepoint baskets - he tried nine - but
it took hi.s pair of free throws with
four seconds left to give the Rockets
a four-point lead en route to a 11S.ll4
victory over the Nets.
"I can't go crazy with it (the threepointers)," said Barry, who hit ·his
first four long-distance shots late in
the opening period after the Rockets
feU behind 19-7. " I think all the shots
I took tonight were good. I just don 't
try to force them."
Elsewhere, the Boston Celtics
trounced the Philadelphia 76ers 129110, the Phoenix Suns nipped the
Kansas City Kings 97-95, the
Milwaukee Bucks edged the
Cleveland Cavaliers 111-109, the
Golden Stale Warriors routed the
San Diego Clippers 117·92 and the
Denver Nuggets whipped the
Chicago Bulls 122-lll.
Barry's long-range bombing

Transactions
Wednesday's Sports Transaction s

By The Associated Press
BASEBAl-L
National League

ATLANTA BRAVES - Named AI
Thornwell executive vice president.

ST . LOUIS CARDINALS - Signed

Keith Hernandez, first baseman, to
a,five ·year contract.

BASKETBALL

National Basketball Association

BOSTON CEL TICS -

Placed

Dave Cowens, center, on the injured
list . Activated Pete Maravich,
guard .
Women ' s Professional
Basketball League

MILWAUKEE DOES - Announ c·

ed the resignation of Larry Costello,
head coach .

FOOTBALL.

National Football League

DETROIT

LIONS

-

Named

Joseph Maden special teams coach .

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Nam·

ed Dave Levy offensive line coach .

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Signed

Larry Dorsey, wide receiver, an d
Mike Salzano, offensl\le tackle .

"It rained the night before,"
DiMaggio told the gathering. "It
rained very heavy. I don't know how
they got the field into playing condition."
"And there's Kenny out there
playing left field," he joked, amending tbat to "a long third base."
"Joe never bunted," Keltner said,
explaining why he played so deep.
"Both balls were hit very hard. They
both would have been base hits if I
wasn't playing so close to the line."
Keltner backhanded each of the
shotsanllthrewDiMaggioouttwice.
"If it hadn't rained the night
before, I would have beaten it,"
DiMaggio said of one of the plays.
After that night, he went on to hit
safely in 27 more consecutive
games.

enabled him to top the Rockets with
27 points. His seven three-point
baskets broke the NBA record of five
which he shared with Boston's Chris
Ford and San Diego's Brian Taylor.

College .
results
Wednesday 's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press

EAST

Boston u . 59, N. Caro·Wilmington 57
Ca nis ius 95 , Siena 87
Carnegie·M ellon 84, John CarrollS..
Connecticut 73, M assachuse t ts 55
De laware 63, W. Chester St. 60
Duquesne 49, W. Virginia 38
Fordham 85 , Fairfield 70

Georgetown, D.C. 81 , Seton Hall67
Hof stra SO, Temple 49
LaSalle 84, Rhode Island 76
Niagara 65, Colgate 63
Northeastern 67. Ll U 48

Rider 82, Lehigh 70
St. Francis, N.Y. 77, Wagner 173

St. Francis, Pa . 75, Robert Morris 69

swarethmore 67, Johns Hopkins 52
Tufts 80, Amherst 66
VIllanova 74, George Wash ington 72 ·
SOUTH
Appalachian St. 70. s. Carolina St. 61
Birmingham So. 71. Troy St. 63

Citadei9B, Davidson 88, OT
Clemson 86, Wake Forest69
Jacksonville St. 9-', Montevllo . 81
Kentucky 86, M ississipp i 72
Kentucky St. 85 , 'Bellarmine 84
Louis iana St . 68 , Alabama 66, OT
Louisville 88, Cincinnati 73
Miss issippi St. 62, Georgia 56
N. Carolina St . 60, Georgia Tech 49
ST. Andres 91, Methodist 71
Tennessee 100, Florida 76
Tennessee St . 83, Tenn. -Martin 76
'Vanderbil177, Auburn 73
Virginia 73, Duke 69
Virginia Union 107, Virgin ia St. 94

MIDWEST

Ball St . 70, E. Michigan 69
Butler62 , Oayton61
Findlay 67 , Anderson 63
Kansas St. 62, Colorado 61, OT
No. lllinois62, Kent St. 60
Notre Dame 93, Manhattan .49

Oklahoma St. 76, Oklahoma 67
St. Loui s 101 , Roose\lelt 53

Toledo 75, Oh io u·. 62

Valpara iso 58, Chi cago Circle 53
W. Michigan 76, Cent . Michigan 73

SOUTHWEST
Ark.·Lillle Rock 73, Grambling 63

Tex as A&amp;M 67, Southern Methodist

56

FAR WEST
Adams St. 85, Western St. 71
Pacific Lutheran 101, Pacific 68

J

\~\J..IJI~

f)l~ '1,111~

"My old tax service didn't
double-check everything.
I shoulda come here
last v~=u"

)I()N'l,ll

Master

MECHANIC ·•"

(P&amp;t)

"This has to be one of the best efforts of any Western team," Western
Michigan Coach Les Woethke said.
Chippewas' Coach Dick Parfitt
said, "This is a traumatic thing for
our team to go t])rough a home loss
like this. We fought real hard."
Ball State, which has lost five
games by a total of seven points this
season, finally won a close one at
Eastern Michigan. John Williams
had 17 points for the Cardinala and
teammate AI Gooden ·was sill-for-sbi
from the ftoor and thretfor-three
from the foul line for 15 points.
"We were hound to turn It
around," Ball State Coach Steve
Yoder said.

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�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 7, 19110
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursdav. Feb. 7. 1980

Formulas for Fun!

Kentucky outlasts Ole Miss, 86·72
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Good things carne in small - and
big - packages for the Kentucky
Wildcats Wednesday night.
And once they unwrapped Kyle
Macy and Sam Bowie, the party was
over for the Mississippi Rebels.
Macy scored 28 points and Bowie
collected 15 more and blocked six
shots as fiftb.ranked Kentucky
defeated Ole Miss, 86-72.
"Macy was playing with great
confidence," Mississippi Coach Bob
Weltlich said of Kentucky's fine
guard. "There isn't much you can
plan against a player like that. We
just tried to do the best job we could
in guarding him. "
Nor was there much the Rebels
could do against Bowie, the seven·
foot freshman center who seems to
be playing at the top of his game
theaedays.
"Bowie has improved a lot since
the first game against us," said
Weltlich. "We let him get started
with a lob dunk. That was our
mistake because we knew It was
coming, ~ut we just weren't ready

for it defensively. He got his con·
fidence and was a big factor."
Kentucky Coach Joe B.Hall called
Bowie's perfonnance "the best
defensive game he has played this
year." Not only did Bowie block six
shots, Hall said, " but he intimidated
many, many more and caused a lot
of walks."

Ralph Sampsbn, another sen·
sational freshman center, scored 20
points to help 18th-ranked Virginia
defeat loth-ranked Duke 73-69 in
another big game Wednesday night.
In other action involving Top
Twenty teams, No.3 Louisville stqpped Cincinnati 88-73; No.6 Louisiana
State edged Alabama 68-66 in over·
time; No.9 Notre Dame walloped
Manhattan 93-49; No.l5 Missouri
beat Iowa State 84-70 and No.16
Clemson blasted Wake Forest 86-69.
Macy scored eight of his gam.,.
leading points in an 1~2 second-half
run that helped Kentucky break the
game open against Mississippi. John
Stroud, the SOutheastern Conference's leading scorer, had 27
points for the Rebels.
"We were very concerned about

Mississippi because of the fine way
they've been playing," said Hall.
"That was a real good victory for
us ."
Sampson scored 16 of his points in
the second half, and the Cavaliers
needed just about every one.
Virginia 's 7-foot-4 center contributed several key baskets, tn·
eluding a layup with just under six
minutes to go, to boost the Cavaliers
into a four-point lead they never lost.
Noted Duke Coach Bill Foster a!·
ter losing his fifth Atlantic Coast
Conference game in 10 this year : "I
really don't have much to say. We
played much better in the second
half. We overcame 30 percent
shooting in the first half. It's a tough
loss for us."
Derek Smith scored a career-high
26 points and Darrell Griffith scored
13 and became the first player in
Louisville history to hit the career
2,~point level in the Cardinals'

victory over Cincinnati. Griffith · games with back spasms and scored derbilt edged Auburn 77·73; John
15 points to lead Notre Dame past
Danks and Henry Johnson teamed
finished the game with 2,oo:; points
for
39 points to carry Texas over
Manhattan.
Tripucka
had
eight
of
(or his four-year career.
TCIJ
!I(H;2; Jari Wills hit a baseline
his
points
as
the
Irish
rushed
to
a
" I think Louisville's defense is
never-headed
20-2lead
in
the
first
10
jumper
with seven seconds left in
built on quick spurts. You've seen
minutes.
overtime
to give Kansas State a 6:1,that all season," said Cincinnati
"It
was
good
to
see
Tripucka
get
61
decision
over Colorado; Eric
Coach Ed Badger. "Our game plan
back
in
the
groove,"
said
Notre
Floyd
and
John
Duren each scored
was not to get into a running match
Dame
Coach
Digger
Phelps.
"He
20
points,
leading
Georgetown over
with them. We started out and got
was
a
little
shaky
(:l-7)
at
the
free
Seton
Hall
81-97;
Tony
Warren's 23
behind them and wanted to attack.
throw
line.
That
will
just
take
time."
points led Butler over Dayton 6~1;
"Then we got into a rat race, we
Curtis Berry scored 20 points and
Mike McKay bad 17 as Connecticut
went up and down, made three
collected 10 rebounds to lead
defeated Massachusetts 73-55;
errors in a row, they made three
Greer Huguley's 22 points powered
Missouri over Iowa State. Larry
buckets in a row and that was the
Nance sank 12 of 15 shots from the
The Citadel to a 9ft.ll8 overtime victhing right there."
floor
and
finished
with
a
career-high
tory over Davidson and Colin Irish
Willie Sims hit two free throws
scored
25
points
as
Clemson
defeated
Wake
18 points and grabbed 11
with four seconds remaining in over·
Forest.
rebounds
to pace ~owling Green to a
time to lead !.SU over Alabama. The
64-61
triumph
over Miami (Ohio).
Elsewhere,
Michael
Brooks
Tigers controlled the ball for the en20
points
and
grabbed
13
scored
tire overtime period and with four
rebounds to pace LaSalle past Rhode
seconds left, Mike Davis fouled
Island
84-76; Hawkeye Whitney had
The median age of U.S. tarm
Sims, who calmly put through the
13
points
in
a
balanced
attack
as
residents
in 1978 was 33.8, compared
winning points.
to
29.5
for
the non-fanr. population.
North
Carolina
State
whipped
Kelly Tripucka returned to the
Georga
Tech
6()..49;
Reggie
Johnson
starting lineup after missing four
scored a career-high 43 points to . - - - - - - - - - - - trigger Tennessee past Florida 10076; Terry Lewis hit six straight free
Your "Extra Touch"
throws in · the final 2:33 to help
Florist Since 1957
Mississippi State beat Georgia 62-56
and Duquesne defeated West
Virginia 49-38 behind Bruce Atkins'
14 points.
FLORIST
Also, Rynn Wright's 20 points led
PH.
-992·2644
Texas AXM over SMU 67-56; Mike
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
I
Rhodes collected 26 points as Van·
work if he doesn't sign a contract.
Your FTO Flori_st .

Griffey may play
Ohio Sportlight . without contract
CINCINNATI (~P) - Outfielder
Ken Griffey, one of 15 players on the
Cincinnnati Reds' 46-man roster who
has not yet signed a contract for this
season, is flirting with the idea of
playing without a contract so he can
enter the fre.,.agent draft next
season.

By
George Strode

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hamilton Garfield Coach Don
Gillespie calls Oxford Talawanda's
basketball stall against his Rams a
psychological ploy.
"From the tournament drawing,
he knew lie would have to play us
twice. I don't think he was trying to
win. I think he was trying to build a
psychological edge," Gillespie said
after Garfield prevailed 25-10.
Not so, countered Talawanda
Coach Steve Termeer.
"We had planned to do that since
the beginning of the season," said
Termeer, histeamnow4-12 and Gar·
field 11-7. "There was no way we
could play with them siZe wise. We
definitely would have gotten blown

out."
Talawanda, holding the ball from
the beginning, made its first shot
with three seconds left for a 2·2 firstquarter tie. The Braves muffed their
second field goal try with three
seconds left in the opening half. Garfield led 4-2 at halftime.
Once the score mOWJted to ~2 after three quarters, Talawanda was
forced to play a more nonnal game
in the last eight minutes.
Around Ohio : Dayton Beimont, 142 and on a 13-game winning streak,
is seeded first in the Dayton Class
AJtA District for the first time since
1964, the year of its state title team.
Seven-year Belmont Coach Mike
t4ford calls it his best squad.
&lt;pilllicothe (If&gt;.!) has given up a
combined 70 points its last two vic-

Fund-raising
marathon set
February 9
-

RIO GRANu~&lt;; - The Rio Striders
and the Rio Grande College track
team will hold a lund raising
marathon Saturday, Feb. 9, 6 a.m. to
&amp;p.m.
The Striders, the booster arm of
the Rio Grande track and cross
country program, are attempting to
purchase 20 pairs of training shoes
for the Rio track team.
Two teams of Rio runners will
compete in the 12 hour run. A team
of distance runners each running a
mile at a time and another made up
of sprinters going baH miles will run
for·arnounts pledged.
Sponsors are still needed for the
event. Pledges can be made by calling Lyne Center (245-9330) between
8:30and4:30p.m. through Friday.

11

tories. Tom Cuppett, the Cavaliers'
coach, calls his 1-3-1 zone defense "a
monster nultchup." Chillicothe i&lt;
yielding 42.7 points a game this
season.

Randy Smith scored 33 points
against Madison and now ranks as
Hamilton Ross' all-time career
scoring leader with nearly 900 poin·
ts. Minster, only 7-9, is yielding just
44.1 points per start.
In his first season at Ottoville,
Coach Steve Penhorwood has the
Putoam County school off to a IS-O
record. Ottoville has won 19 straight
regular season games. Their biggest
decision in that stretch was a 62-91
triumph over previously unbeaten
JWjda Friday.
Dennis WilliamS' 52 points broke
the Holgate school record, topping
the 51 held by Greg Gerken.
Don Cantrell of Beaver Eastern
now has a career record of 101·30 af.
ter the Eagles trimmed Oak Hill and
Latham Western last week.
Wrestling - Vaughn Broadnax,
Xenia High School's highly recruited
fullback, carries an 1~ record in
wrestling, including 17 pins. The 6foot.J, 24().pound senior, the 1979
Class AAA state heavyweight
wrestling runnerup, is considering
Ohio State, Michigan and Navy for
his college football.
Career milestones - Donnie
SOsby, f&gt;-11 senior guard for Jackson
Center, I ,028 points; Tim
Aschemeier, 8-3 senior center for
Tinora, 1,2eo; Tim Reiser, 6-1 senior
guard for Napoleon, 1,025; and John
Bell, 8-3 senior forward for Swanton,
1,015.
Roy Dudley, a starting center on
Cleveland St. Joseph's 1979 Class
AAA state runnerup, has been ruled
academically ineligible lor the rest
of this season. SO has Greg Wither·
spoon, a teammate.
Girls - Chris Pryor, junior at
Danbury-Lakeside, scored 52 points
in an 82-56 victory over North
Baltin;10re. Pryor sank 22 of 44 sho~

r-,;;;;;;;;;:;;;:::::::::::::::;1

It's in my subconscious," said

Griffey, who missed the last half of
last season because of knee surgery.
"It's getting late and I'd rather not
discuss contract in spring training. I
have more important things on my
mind then.
"I guess I have a on.,.track mind. I
don't want any distractions when I
play."

Griffey, 29, would qualify lor freeagent status now if he had been on
the Reds' major league rO.ter lor
one more day a few seasons ago.
" If push comes to shove, I won't
sign and I'll play out my option,"
Griffey s,aid. "But I don't think it'll
come to that. I feel both sides can
resolve the problems which exist."
Griffey has a .310 career batting
average with the Reds . Under
baseball rules, the club would be
obliged to pay him only 80 percent of
last year's salary for this season's

Mid-American
Conference
Mid· American Conference

· By The Associated Press
Cont. All Games
L Pet. W L Pet.
1 .909 17 3 .850
1 .909 17 4 .810
4 .36311 9 .550
6 .455 7 14 .333
6 .455 10 ll .476
7 417 11 11 .500
7 .364 10 10 .500
7 .364 10 11 .476
B .444 6 15 .286

W
Bowling Green 10
Toledo
10
N. lll.
7
M ia mi , Ohio
5
W. M;ch.
5
Ball St .
5
C. M;ch.
4
E . M;ch .
4
Kent St.
4
Oh ;o u .
2 9 . 182

t-::2

Dear Beth,
I ceme from very poor conditions
and have recently thought of what
my mother gave me to help me lise
above my circumstances to become
an educated, weB-adjusted, happy
adult. It was DIGNITY in the midst
of poverty. Her love gave me seH·
esteem, and her faith In God gave
me a solid foundation on which to
build my life.
These together gave me dignity of
the soul which helped me to see
myseH not as the ragged little child
playing in the dust, but¥ a beautiful
human being, loved by my Maker
and made for a purpose which only I
COIIId fuHill. She also taught me to
make the most of every opportunity
which came my way. For theae
qualitiea I am eternally grateful.
Please tell your readers that the
material things parents give their
children are not what counts. It is
their self-esteem, honesty, faith in
God, and qualities of good character
which matter In the course of We.
And theae things don't cost a penny! .

·

T~

" [know
I could
playblocking
without aout
COD·
tract.
It would
mean
a
lot of things, but I know I could do
it," Griffey said. "But I wouldn't
want to go through the situation Joe
Morgan went through last year. I'd
make sure somebody wanted me.
"Joe had some injuries, but lie
might have been pressing a little,
too. I know I wouldn 't do that. The
fans are going to boo if you don't do
well, but I could block that out.
" It was a very tough year for Joe.
It was demoralizing for him," Grif·
fey said. "I'd have to stop all that
from happening to me. I'd make
sure I'd be in a position to go out in
the fr..,.agent market and get what I
felt I deserved."
Morgan batted .250 last season and
was drafted by just four clubs in the
free-agent draft before eventually
signing with the Houston Astros,
who obtained negotiating rights to
him in a supplemental draft.
"Joe never changed toward the
ballplayers, and he always talked to
the press," Griffey said "I'd
probably keep lalking -to the press
(in a similar situation), but I'd have
to cut out reading the newspaper."
Griffey considered fighting for
free-agent status this year, but
backed out of a battle over that one
day of major league credit that
would be worth big money in
negotiations now.
"I know I had a good case, but my
intentions were not to go out on the
money,"
said. "Itodon't
wantthat
to
free-agenthemarket
get all
leave Cincinnati. The organization
has been good to me.
"I feel if a person is worth that
much money somewhere eise, he
should be worth that much or more
to his own team, a team you've been
on through a few championship
years."

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii,
LA TEST IN

SPRING STYLES
by

CONNIE

You're in it for the comfort and the fashi on .
Thai's why ou r poly bottoms will mean so
Available in
muc h to you . They'll give you o il the
Black &amp; White
comfort you desire-with
Patent
fi exy soles - and top that off with
th e most updated good loo ksl

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N. 2nd Ave.

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When the weekend roll s around. we roll the prices down. Every weekend
we' re offering great deals o n selected menu items. The kind spec ial
people like you like to ea t - the kind th at saves you money.

i

I

I

SATl r\ 1-!E i\I{T :.! Lit $ 11.9:-i

I!
II
Weekend Saver Specials,
Friday. Saturday and Sunda y o nly.
ASSOR TED
CUOCO LAT ES
!LB. $ 3.75

Big She!'" Plaue r
Big Shef. Regular Fries.

Medium Drink and

Turnover

\

Reg. $2.~9

Weekend
Saver
Special
Price

Billy Francis
'

,.

Combines
VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and ,
powerful
STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING

•
I

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Gallipolis, Ohio

to loosen . disso lve
and extract
deep· seated d111 and

2325 Jackson Avenue
· Pt. Plea'sdant, West Virginia

SWISHER LOHSE

· Gets ca rpets
cleaner. Fa ster! And

it's easy 10 operate

698 West Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pharmacy

too.

NO UFTtN Gt
CLEANING WAND

•.

EQUIPPED WITH
WHEELS
HANDLES LII(E
AVACUUfyl

SWEEPE R

STAR SUPPLY
Racine, 0.

i
1
I

I

Kenneth McCullough, R . Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Haoning, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8; 00 a.m. to 9 p. m . .
Sunday 10:30 to 1·2: 30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PRESCRI PT'i.ONS•. •
.
PH. 992·2955
Friendly Serv1ce
Open Nights til 9
E. Main

·--·

·'
I

.,
1

Qlfer·good•,.

'

l;'&lt;.i)fll&lt;lf.)l 8. 9. &amp; 10, 1980.

No Coupon Necessary.
.

...

I
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.•

'·
•

'

Abe walked twenty miles to
borrow books, and once had to shuck
corn for three days to Jiy for a book
damagecl by the rain. We today cannot identify personally with such a
thirst for learning, since free public
school and libraries are readily
available. Walk with your child to
the library and discuss a wi!)Lof
twenty miles for one book.
Relate the famlllar story of Un·
coin walldng three miles to repay 6\!o
cents which he had overcharged a
lady. The name, ''llonestAbe" from
then on became hla. Empha$.ze to
your childeii that reputations for
your deeds follow you all your life.
You will find many other excellent
chai'acter lessons to discuss with
your children in Abraham Lincoln
by Ingrl and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire,
by Doubleday. Part of this Is reprinted in Collier's Encyclopedia Junior
Classics, Vol. 6. It is well-written for
reading aloug.

Generation Rap
By H•·l.. n and Stw Botlt•l

•
HER LOVE IS REAL, BUTSO IS HIS PIUES'I1IOOD!
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I wrote you about being in love
with Tom for abnost four years.
When you printed my letter, you left
out the fact that he Is very jealous
and possessive of me and I !mow he
lov.. me, even though he won't admit it. I guess you figured mention·
ing he was a Catholic priest was
enough.
Please print all my letter this
time. I want to be Tom's wife and
have his children. Sure, there's
some differenCe in our ages, but that
doesn't stop love. It's really
noticeable by all that he loves me
too. I'm not just a kid with a crush on
a priest. I want him till death does us
part. - LONGING FOR THAT
VERY SPECIAL DAY
DEARLFTVSD:
We doubt that printing all your letter will make your wish come true. A
fOUI'year silence demonstrates pre!·
ty conclusively that Tom's conunltment to God rules out earthly mar·
riage. ·HELEN

Dear Reader,
'fhank you so much for sharing
this. I am using this letter today
because I feel It parallels what
Abraham Uncoln's parents and his
step-mother did for him, which
molded his life for the course It took.
This week, as we celebrate the birthday of our sixteenth President, use
this opportunity to read with your
children biographic · sketches of
events in the early life of Abraham
Lincoln. True stories and legends of
heroic figures are an Important
building block In your child's
character. Hard work and a great '· LONGING :
Twice now you've asked that we
thirst for knowledge are among the
outstanding traits which be pol' virtually print a proposal of mar·
trays. Mr. Lincoln, who had only riage to your Catholic priest.
Why don't you tell him bow you
about a year of formal education,
feeland oo prepared to take "No"
read voraciously and taught himself
for
an
answer?
-SUE
all he knew. Does your child realize
he can learn anything he wishes to
know by reading? Or is reading only DEAR RAP:
I must protest your answers to
a drudgery to be endured In school
and as homework? Television and "Protected Out of My Mind," the
other mechanical entertainments teen whose father censors her
have neatly replaced reading in the reading (even to "Catcher in the
Rye"), only lets her see Disney
lives of most children.
Read to your children about how movies, and forbids her to watch
Uncoln was so hungry to learn that "Roots" and "Holocaust.''
You wrote, "What ileeps you f(or
he read by firelight after working
seeing)
those
banned
hard all day. Let your children try to
read by firelight to discover how dlf. classics outside the home l When one
parent is wrong, the other too weak
flcultlt is.
to change things, then I say disobedience Is justified.".
We owe our lives to our parents
and we are thus under obligation as
YOWI!l people to be obedient to them
In every way, regardless of whether
they are right or~The family Is ui1der great strain
today and your replies did nothing to
lessen that struggle.
"Protected's" somewhat fanatical
father understands we are lvmbarded witb propaganda and filth from .
literature, cinem!l and even rellgi011.
-Many of us are not prepared to deal
with this,- as suicide ranks second or
third killer among the young.
He bas held on to worthwhile
beliefs and strOng principles In the
face of a decadent society. If the girl
Is 811181't, she'll continue to respect
her father's decisions, as her mother
)las. .OUTRAGED IN ORANGE
READERS AU.:
Would you believe that over threefourths of these rigid "Obey your
parents even If they're dead wrong"
letters come fnm males? 1bla one Is
no ezcepUon. - HELEN AND

~r 'Your '"Valentine
!Jhwsdm~ Cfb t.f-

residues.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Ms.
Virginia Ace took the lead half\Vay
down the stretch and won by a length
in 2:08 1-li in the featured mile
claiming pace Wednesday night at
Lebanon Raceway.
Ma. Virginia Ace paid SG. S3.60 and
S2.60. Royal LouAnn returned $3.60
and $2.-10 to place, and Dottie Grand
Slam paid $4.20 to show.
The 6-2 daily double of Aporta and
Noble Pleasure was worth f32.«1.
A crowd of 1,050 wagered fll5,~75.

5 16 .238

BY BETH STONE
Copyright Beth Stone, 1980
Our contest closing date,
February 20, is drawing near. Be
sure to send all your best ideu
which pertain to children. One d.
them might win you S25 oc S15. Send
as many Ideas as you wish. You may
enclooe several cards or letters in
ooe envelope and each will lle a
separate entry. Please write your
name and address on each
separately. Encourage your
children to enter alao.
The following letter is a beautiful
tribute to the writer's mother and
excellent food for thought for the
rest of us parents.

.

Turns one year
On Jan. :i, Mr. and Mn. WWiam
E. Ftai)Cll celebrated·the lint birthday of their son, BUiy ~.. at their
borne.
.
A Winnie the Pooh cake wu
pmented to the youngster. Cake,
~ cream, punch and CGffee were
served to the Susie Francl4, Mildred
Brooks, matemal grandmother,
Kathleen FrBIICls, paternal grandmother Mr. and Mn. Ropr Brooks
and
Mr, and Mn. David
~ and· . Stacie' . Jan Brooks,
George Franclll, Mr. and Mn. Uoyd
Brooks, !Cevin, Jim, Boll and Debbie
Brookll. ·Sendlnll glfta and cards
wete Freda Duffy, areat·
llfllldmother, Mr. and Mra. Mark
Puerr, Mr. and Mra. Edward Sloter,
Julie and Jeffrey·, Qall Neal, Mn .
Nanna Goodwin, Mr. and Mra. Glll'nltt Watldns,- Mr. and Mn. VIc Jfannabl, and Pauline Morarlty.

rr'ivia,

Riverby announces
classes and workshops

.

CHOICES
Karen Blaker PhD.

-

Workshops.for children and classes for adults have been a&lt;;heduled at
Riverby, the home of the Freneh Art Colony at 530 First Avenue in
GalllP9ila, according to an aMouncement by Janet E. Byers wbo chairs
the education program for the French Art Colony.
On Satunlay afternoon, Feb. 9, from 2:30 p.m. untll4 p.m., an exciting
workshop for children, ages five through eight, will be conducted by Col'
1nne Lwtd.It will be a Valenline Workshop and the children wbo attend
will be able to make valentines that they can take borne to share with
their families. To be sure of a place in the workshop, Mrs. Byers hsould be
called at 446-1903. The cost of this special children's workshop lsf1.50.
.
Starting on Tuesday, Feb. 19, on consecutive days, classes will be
taught In three media. The Tuesay class from 7 p.m. untl9 p.m. will be in
Ceramics hand built and throwing on the pottery wheel, to be taught by
Gary Bo~ wbo Is CWTently employed as an art teacher in the Gallla
County Schools. 1bla class will meet each Tuesday evening for two hours
as scheduled, for a perlnd of ten weeks. The cost is $24 for members and
sao for non-members, plUB a $Slab fee.
Bone will also teach ·a beginning class in Watercolors on Thursday
evenings, also from 7 p.m. untll9 p.m., and continuing for 10 weeks, sial'
ting on Feb. 21. The cost Is $24 for members of the French Art Colony and
sao for nOIHIIelllbers.
.
A series fliO classes in Drawing will be taught by Sally Weintraub on
Wednesdays, from 7 p.m. WJtU 9 p.m., over a 10 week period. These
classes will start on Feb. 20, and again the cost is $24 for members and sao
for non-tnembers.
Afternoon clas•es are now open on Tuesdays as an Introduction to Painting, taught by Margaret Brim. This is an open end opportunity so that
anyone Interested can come any Tuesday frtm l.J p.m. and attend for six
weeks to complete the course. The cost is f14 for memben and f17 for
non-members.
In addition to his classes in Ceramics and Beginning Watercolors, ~(~try
Bone will conduct a three part Kite Making Workshop for children who
are eight years of age and older, and for adults. These workshops wildl be
held on three consecutive Satunlay afternoons, starting on March 22, with
the second workshop on March 29, and concluding on April 5. The
workshop will be held at Rlverby from 2 p.m. untll4 p.m. on each of those
Saturdays. Registration fee for children Is $3 for the workshops and $5 fll'
adults. Included will be ~I history of kites and kite flying, information
about oriental kites, bow to make kites and also how to fly them. ·
Bone Is a graduate of Ohio State University, holding a Bachelor of Art
Education degree with majors In drawing and painting. He taught for
three years following hla graduation in early childhood schools and pisced heavy emphasis on art in a child's development. He presented a
workshop at the 1979 Ohio Art Education Association's convention 011
kitemaking. He . bas taught beginning and intermediate courses In
photography, ceramics and sUkscreen and advanced clases in painting
and drawing. He is now a member of the French Art Colony faculty.
To register or get additional information on either workshops or classes
at the Fench Art Colony, contact Mn. Byers at 446-1903.

New arrival
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davis (Unda
Shupe), Burbonnals, ru., announce
the birth fl their first child, a
daughter, Jessica Morgan Davis, at
four pounds, 14 ounces, born
January 21 at Riverside Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Shupe,
Gallipolis; paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Gene Davis,
tbester, ·w. Va. Maternal great·
grandparents are Mn. Isaac Shupe,
Bidwell, and Mn. Calvin Jarvis,
Bidwell.

hasn't read or seen the things he forbids. -CHERYLANN
DEAR CHERYL ANN:
"Burn the books and films" types
aren't good candidates for father·
daughter talks. They're too busy
shouting down the decadents. HELEN AND SUE

son's misbehavior.
On one hand, he wanted the
YOWli!Sier to behave. On the other,
he got a kick out of seeing Ills son
display- spunk.
.
Such conflicting expectations put
a child in a real bind. That's why I
recommended family therapy.
Does your job have you cUmbing
the walls? Write for Dr. Blaker's
new hotllne, ''How to Reduce Job
Stress." Send 50 oonta plus a
stamped, self-addressed envelope to
Dr. Blaker in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Boz475, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
Write to .Dr, Blaker at the above
address. Volume of mail prohibits
personal replies, but questions of
general Interest will be discussed in
future colUIIUlS.

Why family therapy?

TO OOMPETE FOR QUEEN
Patty Parker, a senior at Meigs
High School, will go to Columbus
Friday to compete in the state contest for queen of the Ohio Holstein
Association.
Patty, the District 6 queen, will be
accompanied to Colwnbus by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Parker, for the contest which will be
held at the Carousel Inn in conjunction with the state convention.
FREE BLOOO PRJ;:.SSURE CLINIC

Teh Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club Will hold a free blood pressure
clinic from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday at the town hall in Harrisonville.
Blood pressures will be taken by
Mrs. Fern Story, R.N.
BOOSTERS TO MEET

A meeting of the Eastern High
School Band Boosters scheduled for
Tuesday, Feb. 12, has been postpon.
ed untll Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 7:30
p.m. in the band room of the high
school.

DEAR DR. BLAKER - Recently
you recommended family therapy t.l
the parent of a child who was
misbehaving in school.
I was interested to read for the
first time about this new kind of
treatment. But could you ezptatn in
more detaU why ~rs believe
that disturbed children s bebavi&lt;r
almoet always stems from their
parents' marital problems?
DEAR READER - In the early
1950s, researchers started studying
the interaction . between
schizophrenic children and their
mothers during vlalting hours at a
state mental hospital.
They saw problems tn the mother·
child relationship that were clearly
caused by the mother. All a result,
they
coined
the
term
"schlzophrenogenic mother" - that
Is, a mother who creates a
schizophrenic.
As Augustus Napier and Carl
Whitaker sarcastically point out In
thetr new book "The Family Cruel·
ble," mothers loved this period of
psychiatric history.
Then researchers turned thetr at·
tentlon to the fathers of theae
. children. They found the men to be
generally distant and passive with
their offspring.
At this point, their observations
shifted to the parents as a couple. It
became evident in almost every
case that the parents had severe,
·longstanding marital difficulties.
"Furthennore," write Naple.. and
Whitaker, "the psychotic episodes of
the 'patient' seemed to be related to
the cycles of marital conruct.
' 'The parents would get into a batUe, and as it began to intensify the
son (or daughter) would begin to
become psychotic. Once hospltallz.
ed, the couple would call off their
war in order to be, again, the
parents of a 'sick' child.
"Actually, their child's disturbed
behavior seemed to have a very
practical result: It helped the couple
deal with their conflict by giving
them a way of avoiding it. The family's very stability seemed to be
maintained by the periodic Il-

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lnesses."

.This research helped social scientists start looking at the family as a
system instead of merely as a BfOUP
of individuals. The family Itself Is a

functioning unit with flzed roles,
goala and rules of behavior.
Treating the family as such is
often the Ollly way counselors can
truly help one or more of Ita
members.
DEAR DR. BLAKER- I bope the
parent with the disturbed son throws
your advice in the trash. All that
freshkidneedsisagoodbeating.
What ever happened to discipline l
DEAR READER - Discipline is
stll1 necessary in child rearing, but it
mustbeconsistent.
That father indicated clearly that
he bad conflicting feelings about his

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I am a high school junioc writing
In lespollll! to ''Protected Out of My
Mind." Last year our wbole tentb
grade bid 'to read "Catcher··in the
Rye" and be quizzed 011 it. WQII)d her
father have insisted she flunk? Our
required reading list is far from
shocking, but I'll bet he wouldn't

agree.

•.

Parents like hera only contribute
to the problem. Kids think, "U it's
banned, It must be good," and
maybe they'll go 011 to read really
raqnchy stuff.
In our health c1aaa we recently
.w a movie cilrtoon about VD. It included 1101111! very ~t photos
rl. lhfected. patlenll'&lt;HZ orpils. By
tbe way, It wu a Walt Dlaney pro.
ductlon.
• ·
, . .
The movies . "Roots" and
"Holoc8ust" are baaed 011 actual occumncea. Tbeit viOlence Is history.
How eQuid a father or mother ban
them? Our lchool give us extra ·
credit if we watcbed then) at-borne.
I suggest that Protected have a
long t.11t with her father. Maybe he

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�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 7, 19110
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursdav. Feb. 7. 1980

Formulas for Fun!

Kentucky outlasts Ole Miss, 86·72
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Good things carne in small - and
big - packages for the Kentucky
Wildcats Wednesday night.
And once they unwrapped Kyle
Macy and Sam Bowie, the party was
over for the Mississippi Rebels.
Macy scored 28 points and Bowie
collected 15 more and blocked six
shots as fiftb.ranked Kentucky
defeated Ole Miss, 86-72.
"Macy was playing with great
confidence," Mississippi Coach Bob
Weltlich said of Kentucky's fine
guard. "There isn't much you can
plan against a player like that. We
just tried to do the best job we could
in guarding him. "
Nor was there much the Rebels
could do against Bowie, the seven·
foot freshman center who seems to
be playing at the top of his game
theaedays.
"Bowie has improved a lot since
the first game against us," said
Weltlich. "We let him get started
with a lob dunk. That was our
mistake because we knew It was
coming, ~ut we just weren't ready

for it defensively. He got his con·
fidence and was a big factor."
Kentucky Coach Joe B.Hall called
Bowie's perfonnance "the best
defensive game he has played this
year." Not only did Bowie block six
shots, Hall said, " but he intimidated
many, many more and caused a lot
of walks."

Ralph Sampsbn, another sen·
sational freshman center, scored 20
points to help 18th-ranked Virginia
defeat loth-ranked Duke 73-69 in
another big game Wednesday night.
In other action involving Top
Twenty teams, No.3 Louisville stqpped Cincinnati 88-73; No.6 Louisiana
State edged Alabama 68-66 in over·
time; No.9 Notre Dame walloped
Manhattan 93-49; No.l5 Missouri
beat Iowa State 84-70 and No.16
Clemson blasted Wake Forest 86-69.
Macy scored eight of his gam.,.
leading points in an 1~2 second-half
run that helped Kentucky break the
game open against Mississippi. John
Stroud, the SOutheastern Conference's leading scorer, had 27
points for the Rebels.
"We were very concerned about

Mississippi because of the fine way
they've been playing," said Hall.
"That was a real good victory for
us ."
Sampson scored 16 of his points in
the second half, and the Cavaliers
needed just about every one.
Virginia 's 7-foot-4 center contributed several key baskets, tn·
eluding a layup with just under six
minutes to go, to boost the Cavaliers
into a four-point lead they never lost.
Noted Duke Coach Bill Foster a!·
ter losing his fifth Atlantic Coast
Conference game in 10 this year : "I
really don't have much to say. We
played much better in the second
half. We overcame 30 percent
shooting in the first half. It's a tough
loss for us."
Derek Smith scored a career-high
26 points and Darrell Griffith scored
13 and became the first player in
Louisville history to hit the career
2,~point level in the Cardinals'

victory over Cincinnati. Griffith · games with back spasms and scored derbilt edged Auburn 77·73; John
15 points to lead Notre Dame past
Danks and Henry Johnson teamed
finished the game with 2,oo:; points
for
39 points to carry Texas over
Manhattan.
Tripucka
had
eight
of
(or his four-year career.
TCIJ
!I(H;2; Jari Wills hit a baseline
his
points
as
the
Irish
rushed
to
a
" I think Louisville's defense is
never-headed
20-2lead
in
the
first
10
jumper
with seven seconds left in
built on quick spurts. You've seen
minutes.
overtime
to give Kansas State a 6:1,that all season," said Cincinnati
"It
was
good
to
see
Tripucka
get
61
decision
over Colorado; Eric
Coach Ed Badger. "Our game plan
back
in
the
groove,"
said
Notre
Floyd
and
John
Duren each scored
was not to get into a running match
Dame
Coach
Digger
Phelps.
"He
20
points,
leading
Georgetown over
with them. We started out and got
was
a
little
shaky
(:l-7)
at
the
free
Seton
Hall
81-97;
Tony
Warren's 23
behind them and wanted to attack.
throw
line.
That
will
just
take
time."
points led Butler over Dayton 6~1;
"Then we got into a rat race, we
Curtis Berry scored 20 points and
Mike McKay bad 17 as Connecticut
went up and down, made three
collected 10 rebounds to lead
defeated Massachusetts 73-55;
errors in a row, they made three
Greer Huguley's 22 points powered
Missouri over Iowa State. Larry
buckets in a row and that was the
Nance sank 12 of 15 shots from the
The Citadel to a 9ft.ll8 overtime victhing right there."
floor
and
finished
with
a
career-high
tory over Davidson and Colin Irish
Willie Sims hit two free throws
scored
25
points
as
Clemson
defeated
Wake
18 points and grabbed 11
with four seconds remaining in over·
Forest.
rebounds
to pace ~owling Green to a
time to lead !.SU over Alabama. The
64-61
triumph
over Miami (Ohio).
Elsewhere,
Michael
Brooks
Tigers controlled the ball for the en20
points
and
grabbed
13
scored
tire overtime period and with four
rebounds to pace LaSalle past Rhode
seconds left, Mike Davis fouled
Island
84-76; Hawkeye Whitney had
The median age of U.S. tarm
Sims, who calmly put through the
13
points
in
a
balanced
attack
as
residents
in 1978 was 33.8, compared
winning points.
to
29.5
for
the non-fanr. population.
North
Carolina
State
whipped
Kelly Tripucka returned to the
Georga
Tech
6()..49;
Reggie
Johnson
starting lineup after missing four
scored a career-high 43 points to . - - - - - - - - - - - trigger Tennessee past Florida 10076; Terry Lewis hit six straight free
Your "Extra Touch"
throws in · the final 2:33 to help
Florist Since 1957
Mississippi State beat Georgia 62-56
and Duquesne defeated West
Virginia 49-38 behind Bruce Atkins'
14 points.
FLORIST
Also, Rynn Wright's 20 points led
PH.
-992·2644
Texas AXM over SMU 67-56; Mike
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
I
Rhodes collected 26 points as Van·
work if he doesn't sign a contract.
Your FTO Flori_st .

Griffey may play
Ohio Sportlight . without contract
CINCINNATI (~P) - Outfielder
Ken Griffey, one of 15 players on the
Cincinnnati Reds' 46-man roster who
has not yet signed a contract for this
season, is flirting with the idea of
playing without a contract so he can
enter the fre.,.agent draft next
season.

By
George Strode

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hamilton Garfield Coach Don
Gillespie calls Oxford Talawanda's
basketball stall against his Rams a
psychological ploy.
"From the tournament drawing,
he knew lie would have to play us
twice. I don't think he was trying to
win. I think he was trying to build a
psychological edge," Gillespie said
after Garfield prevailed 25-10.
Not so, countered Talawanda
Coach Steve Termeer.
"We had planned to do that since
the beginning of the season," said
Termeer, histeamnow4-12 and Gar·
field 11-7. "There was no way we
could play with them siZe wise. We
definitely would have gotten blown

out."
Talawanda, holding the ball from
the beginning, made its first shot
with three seconds left for a 2·2 firstquarter tie. The Braves muffed their
second field goal try with three
seconds left in the opening half. Garfield led 4-2 at halftime.
Once the score mOWJted to ~2 after three quarters, Talawanda was
forced to play a more nonnal game
in the last eight minutes.
Around Ohio : Dayton Beimont, 142 and on a 13-game winning streak,
is seeded first in the Dayton Class
AJtA District for the first time since
1964, the year of its state title team.
Seven-year Belmont Coach Mike
t4ford calls it his best squad.
&lt;pilllicothe (If&gt;.!) has given up a
combined 70 points its last two vic-

Fund-raising
marathon set
February 9
-

RIO GRANu~&lt;; - The Rio Striders
and the Rio Grande College track
team will hold a lund raising
marathon Saturday, Feb. 9, 6 a.m. to
&amp;p.m.
The Striders, the booster arm of
the Rio Grande track and cross
country program, are attempting to
purchase 20 pairs of training shoes
for the Rio track team.
Two teams of Rio runners will
compete in the 12 hour run. A team
of distance runners each running a
mile at a time and another made up
of sprinters going baH miles will run
for·arnounts pledged.
Sponsors are still needed for the
event. Pledges can be made by calling Lyne Center (245-9330) between
8:30and4:30p.m. through Friday.

11

tories. Tom Cuppett, the Cavaliers'
coach, calls his 1-3-1 zone defense "a
monster nultchup." Chillicothe i&lt;
yielding 42.7 points a game this
season.

Randy Smith scored 33 points
against Madison and now ranks as
Hamilton Ross' all-time career
scoring leader with nearly 900 poin·
ts. Minster, only 7-9, is yielding just
44.1 points per start.
In his first season at Ottoville,
Coach Steve Penhorwood has the
Putoam County school off to a IS-O
record. Ottoville has won 19 straight
regular season games. Their biggest
decision in that stretch was a 62-91
triumph over previously unbeaten
JWjda Friday.
Dennis WilliamS' 52 points broke
the Holgate school record, topping
the 51 held by Greg Gerken.
Don Cantrell of Beaver Eastern
now has a career record of 101·30 af.
ter the Eagles trimmed Oak Hill and
Latham Western last week.
Wrestling - Vaughn Broadnax,
Xenia High School's highly recruited
fullback, carries an 1~ record in
wrestling, including 17 pins. The 6foot.J, 24().pound senior, the 1979
Class AAA state heavyweight
wrestling runnerup, is considering
Ohio State, Michigan and Navy for
his college football.
Career milestones - Donnie
SOsby, f&gt;-11 senior guard for Jackson
Center, I ,028 points; Tim
Aschemeier, 8-3 senior center for
Tinora, 1,2eo; Tim Reiser, 6-1 senior
guard for Napoleon, 1,025; and John
Bell, 8-3 senior forward for Swanton,
1,015.
Roy Dudley, a starting center on
Cleveland St. Joseph's 1979 Class
AAA state runnerup, has been ruled
academically ineligible lor the rest
of this season. SO has Greg Wither·
spoon, a teammate.
Girls - Chris Pryor, junior at
Danbury-Lakeside, scored 52 points
in an 82-56 victory over North
Baltin;10re. Pryor sank 22 of 44 sho~

r-,;;;;;;;;;:;;;:::::::::::::::;1

It's in my subconscious," said

Griffey, who missed the last half of
last season because of knee surgery.
"It's getting late and I'd rather not
discuss contract in spring training. I
have more important things on my
mind then.
"I guess I have a on.,.track mind. I
don't want any distractions when I
play."

Griffey, 29, would qualify lor freeagent status now if he had been on
the Reds' major league rO.ter lor
one more day a few seasons ago.
" If push comes to shove, I won't
sign and I'll play out my option,"
Griffey s,aid. "But I don't think it'll
come to that. I feel both sides can
resolve the problems which exist."
Griffey has a .310 career batting
average with the Reds . Under
baseball rules, the club would be
obliged to pay him only 80 percent of
last year's salary for this season's

Mid-American
Conference
Mid· American Conference

· By The Associated Press
Cont. All Games
L Pet. W L Pet.
1 .909 17 3 .850
1 .909 17 4 .810
4 .36311 9 .550
6 .455 7 14 .333
6 .455 10 ll .476
7 417 11 11 .500
7 .364 10 10 .500
7 .364 10 11 .476
B .444 6 15 .286

W
Bowling Green 10
Toledo
10
N. lll.
7
M ia mi , Ohio
5
W. M;ch.
5
Ball St .
5
C. M;ch.
4
E . M;ch .
4
Kent St.
4
Oh ;o u .
2 9 . 182

t-::2

Dear Beth,
I ceme from very poor conditions
and have recently thought of what
my mother gave me to help me lise
above my circumstances to become
an educated, weB-adjusted, happy
adult. It was DIGNITY in the midst
of poverty. Her love gave me seH·
esteem, and her faith In God gave
me a solid foundation on which to
build my life.
These together gave me dignity of
the soul which helped me to see
myseH not as the ragged little child
playing in the dust, but¥ a beautiful
human being, loved by my Maker
and made for a purpose which only I
COIIId fuHill. She also taught me to
make the most of every opportunity
which came my way. For theae
qualitiea I am eternally grateful.
Please tell your readers that the
material things parents give their
children are not what counts. It is
their self-esteem, honesty, faith in
God, and qualities of good character
which matter In the course of We.
And theae things don't cost a penny! .

·

T~

" [know
I could
playblocking
without aout
COD·
tract.
It would
mean
a
lot of things, but I know I could do
it," Griffey said. "But I wouldn't
want to go through the situation Joe
Morgan went through last year. I'd
make sure somebody wanted me.
"Joe had some injuries, but lie
might have been pressing a little,
too. I know I wouldn 't do that. The
fans are going to boo if you don't do
well, but I could block that out.
" It was a very tough year for Joe.
It was demoralizing for him," Grif·
fey said. "I'd have to stop all that
from happening to me. I'd make
sure I'd be in a position to go out in
the fr..,.agent market and get what I
felt I deserved."
Morgan batted .250 last season and
was drafted by just four clubs in the
free-agent draft before eventually
signing with the Houston Astros,
who obtained negotiating rights to
him in a supplemental draft.
"Joe never changed toward the
ballplayers, and he always talked to
the press," Griffey said "I'd
probably keep lalking -to the press
(in a similar situation), but I'd have
to cut out reading the newspaper."
Griffey considered fighting for
free-agent status this year, but
backed out of a battle over that one
day of major league credit that
would be worth big money in
negotiations now.
"I know I had a good case, but my
intentions were not to go out on the
money,"
said. "Itodon't
wantthat
to
free-agenthemarket
get all
leave Cincinnati. The organization
has been good to me.
"I feel if a person is worth that
much money somewhere eise, he
should be worth that much or more
to his own team, a team you've been
on through a few championship
years."

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii,
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by

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Abe walked twenty miles to
borrow books, and once had to shuck
corn for three days to Jiy for a book
damagecl by the rain. We today cannot identify personally with such a
thirst for learning, since free public
school and libraries are readily
available. Walk with your child to
the library and discuss a wi!)Lof
twenty miles for one book.
Relate the famlllar story of Un·
coin walldng three miles to repay 6\!o
cents which he had overcharged a
lady. The name, ''llonestAbe" from
then on became hla. Empha$.ze to
your childeii that reputations for
your deeds follow you all your life.
You will find many other excellent
chai'acter lessons to discuss with
your children in Abraham Lincoln
by Ingrl and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire,
by Doubleday. Part of this Is reprinted in Collier's Encyclopedia Junior
Classics, Vol. 6. It is well-written for
reading aloug.

Generation Rap
By H•·l.. n and Stw Botlt•l

•
HER LOVE IS REAL, BUTSO IS HIS PIUES'I1IOOD!
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I wrote you about being in love
with Tom for abnost four years.
When you printed my letter, you left
out the fact that he Is very jealous
and possessive of me and I !mow he
lov.. me, even though he won't admit it. I guess you figured mention·
ing he was a Catholic priest was
enough.
Please print all my letter this
time. I want to be Tom's wife and
have his children. Sure, there's
some differenCe in our ages, but that
doesn't stop love. It's really
noticeable by all that he loves me
too. I'm not just a kid with a crush on
a priest. I want him till death does us
part. - LONGING FOR THAT
VERY SPECIAL DAY
DEARLFTVSD:
We doubt that printing all your letter will make your wish come true. A
fOUI'year silence demonstrates pre!·
ty conclusively that Tom's conunltment to God rules out earthly mar·
riage. ·HELEN

Dear Reader,
'fhank you so much for sharing
this. I am using this letter today
because I feel It parallels what
Abraham Uncoln's parents and his
step-mother did for him, which
molded his life for the course It took.
This week, as we celebrate the birthday of our sixteenth President, use
this opportunity to read with your
children biographic · sketches of
events in the early life of Abraham
Lincoln. True stories and legends of
heroic figures are an Important
building block In your child's
character. Hard work and a great '· LONGING :
Twice now you've asked that we
thirst for knowledge are among the
outstanding traits which be pol' virtually print a proposal of mar·
trays. Mr. Lincoln, who had only riage to your Catholic priest.
Why don't you tell him bow you
about a year of formal education,
feeland oo prepared to take "No"
read voraciously and taught himself
for
an
answer?
-SUE
all he knew. Does your child realize
he can learn anything he wishes to
know by reading? Or is reading only DEAR RAP:
I must protest your answers to
a drudgery to be endured In school
and as homework? Television and "Protected Out of My Mind," the
other mechanical entertainments teen whose father censors her
have neatly replaced reading in the reading (even to "Catcher in the
Rye"), only lets her see Disney
lives of most children.
Read to your children about how movies, and forbids her to watch
Uncoln was so hungry to learn that "Roots" and "Holocaust.''
You wrote, "What ileeps you f(or
he read by firelight after working
seeing)
those
banned
hard all day. Let your children try to
read by firelight to discover how dlf. classics outside the home l When one
parent is wrong, the other too weak
flcultlt is.
to change things, then I say disobedience Is justified.".
We owe our lives to our parents
and we are thus under obligation as
YOWI!l people to be obedient to them
In every way, regardless of whether
they are right or~The family Is ui1der great strain
today and your replies did nothing to
lessen that struggle.
"Protected's" somewhat fanatical
father understands we are lvmbarded witb propaganda and filth from .
literature, cinem!l and even rellgi011.
-Many of us are not prepared to deal
with this,- as suicide ranks second or
third killer among the young.
He bas held on to worthwhile
beliefs and strOng principles In the
face of a decadent society. If the girl
Is 811181't, she'll continue to respect
her father's decisions, as her mother
)las. .OUTRAGED IN ORANGE
READERS AU.:
Would you believe that over threefourths of these rigid "Obey your
parents even If they're dead wrong"
letters come fnm males? 1bla one Is
no ezcepUon. - HELEN AND

~r 'Your '"Valentine
!Jhwsdm~ Cfb t.f-

residues.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Ms.
Virginia Ace took the lead half\Vay
down the stretch and won by a length
in 2:08 1-li in the featured mile
claiming pace Wednesday night at
Lebanon Raceway.
Ma. Virginia Ace paid SG. S3.60 and
S2.60. Royal LouAnn returned $3.60
and $2.-10 to place, and Dottie Grand
Slam paid $4.20 to show.
The 6-2 daily double of Aporta and
Noble Pleasure was worth f32.«1.
A crowd of 1,050 wagered fll5,~75.

5 16 .238

BY BETH STONE
Copyright Beth Stone, 1980
Our contest closing date,
February 20, is drawing near. Be
sure to send all your best ideu
which pertain to children. One d.
them might win you S25 oc S15. Send
as many Ideas as you wish. You may
enclooe several cards or letters in
ooe envelope and each will lle a
separate entry. Please write your
name and address on each
separately. Encourage your
children to enter alao.
The following letter is a beautiful
tribute to the writer's mother and
excellent food for thought for the
rest of us parents.

.

Turns one year
On Jan. :i, Mr. and Mn. WWiam
E. Ftai)Cll celebrated·the lint birthday of their son, BUiy ~.. at their
borne.
.
A Winnie the Pooh cake wu
pmented to the youngster. Cake,
~ cream, punch and CGffee were
served to the Susie Francl4, Mildred
Brooks, matemal grandmother,
Kathleen FrBIICls, paternal grandmother Mr. and Mn. Ropr Brooks
and
Mr, and Mn. David
~ and· . Stacie' . Jan Brooks,
George Franclll, Mr. and Mn. Uoyd
Brooks, !Cevin, Jim, Boll and Debbie
Brookll. ·Sendlnll glfta and cards
wete Freda Duffy, areat·
llfllldmother, Mr. and Mra. Mark
Puerr, Mr. and Mra. Edward Sloter,
Julie and Jeffrey·, Qall Neal, Mn .
Nanna Goodwin, Mr. and Mra. Glll'nltt Watldns,- Mr. and Mn. VIc Jfannabl, and Pauline Morarlty.

rr'ivia,

Riverby announces
classes and workshops

.

CHOICES
Karen Blaker PhD.

-

Workshops.for children and classes for adults have been a&lt;;heduled at
Riverby, the home of the Freneh Art Colony at 530 First Avenue in
GalllP9ila, according to an aMouncement by Janet E. Byers wbo chairs
the education program for the French Art Colony.
On Satunlay afternoon, Feb. 9, from 2:30 p.m. untll4 p.m., an exciting
workshop for children, ages five through eight, will be conducted by Col'
1nne Lwtd.It will be a Valenline Workshop and the children wbo attend
will be able to make valentines that they can take borne to share with
their families. To be sure of a place in the workshop, Mrs. Byers hsould be
called at 446-1903. The cost of this special children's workshop lsf1.50.
.
Starting on Tuesday, Feb. 19, on consecutive days, classes will be
taught In three media. The Tuesay class from 7 p.m. untl9 p.m. will be in
Ceramics hand built and throwing on the pottery wheel, to be taught by
Gary Bo~ wbo Is CWTently employed as an art teacher in the Gallla
County Schools. 1bla class will meet each Tuesday evening for two hours
as scheduled, for a perlnd of ten weeks. The cost is $24 for members and
sao for non-members, plUB a $Slab fee.
Bone will also teach ·a beginning class in Watercolors on Thursday
evenings, also from 7 p.m. untll9 p.m., and continuing for 10 weeks, sial'
ting on Feb. 21. The cost Is $24 for members of the French Art Colony and
sao for nOIHIIelllbers.
.
A series fliO classes in Drawing will be taught by Sally Weintraub on
Wednesdays, from 7 p.m. WJtU 9 p.m., over a 10 week period. These
classes will start on Feb. 20, and again the cost is $24 for members and sao
for non-tnembers.
Afternoon clas•es are now open on Tuesdays as an Introduction to Painting, taught by Margaret Brim. This is an open end opportunity so that
anyone Interested can come any Tuesday frtm l.J p.m. and attend for six
weeks to complete the course. The cost is f14 for memben and f17 for
non-members.
In addition to his classes in Ceramics and Beginning Watercolors, ~(~try
Bone will conduct a three part Kite Making Workshop for children who
are eight years of age and older, and for adults. These workshops wildl be
held on three consecutive Satunlay afternoons, starting on March 22, with
the second workshop on March 29, and concluding on April 5. The
workshop will be held at Rlverby from 2 p.m. untll4 p.m. on each of those
Saturdays. Registration fee for children Is $3 for the workshops and $5 fll'
adults. Included will be ~I history of kites and kite flying, information
about oriental kites, bow to make kites and also how to fly them. ·
Bone Is a graduate of Ohio State University, holding a Bachelor of Art
Education degree with majors In drawing and painting. He taught for
three years following hla graduation in early childhood schools and pisced heavy emphasis on art in a child's development. He presented a
workshop at the 1979 Ohio Art Education Association's convention 011
kitemaking. He . bas taught beginning and intermediate courses In
photography, ceramics and sUkscreen and advanced clases in painting
and drawing. He is now a member of the French Art Colony faculty.
To register or get additional information on either workshops or classes
at the Fench Art Colony, contact Mn. Byers at 446-1903.

New arrival
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davis (Unda
Shupe), Burbonnals, ru., announce
the birth fl their first child, a
daughter, Jessica Morgan Davis, at
four pounds, 14 ounces, born
January 21 at Riverside Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Shupe,
Gallipolis; paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Gene Davis,
tbester, ·w. Va. Maternal great·
grandparents are Mn. Isaac Shupe,
Bidwell, and Mn. Calvin Jarvis,
Bidwell.

hasn't read or seen the things he forbids. -CHERYLANN
DEAR CHERYL ANN:
"Burn the books and films" types
aren't good candidates for father·
daughter talks. They're too busy
shouting down the decadents. HELEN AND SUE

son's misbehavior.
On one hand, he wanted the
YOWli!Sier to behave. On the other,
he got a kick out of seeing Ills son
display- spunk.
.
Such conflicting expectations put
a child in a real bind. That's why I
recommended family therapy.
Does your job have you cUmbing
the walls? Write for Dr. Blaker's
new hotllne, ''How to Reduce Job
Stress." Send 50 oonta plus a
stamped, self-addressed envelope to
Dr. Blaker in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Boz475, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
Write to .Dr, Blaker at the above
address. Volume of mail prohibits
personal replies, but questions of
general Interest will be discussed in
future colUIIUlS.

Why family therapy?

TO OOMPETE FOR QUEEN
Patty Parker, a senior at Meigs
High School, will go to Columbus
Friday to compete in the state contest for queen of the Ohio Holstein
Association.
Patty, the District 6 queen, will be
accompanied to Colwnbus by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Parker, for the contest which will be
held at the Carousel Inn in conjunction with the state convention.
FREE BLOOO PRJ;:.SSURE CLINIC

Teh Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club Will hold a free blood pressure
clinic from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday at the town hall in Harrisonville.
Blood pressures will be taken by
Mrs. Fern Story, R.N.
BOOSTERS TO MEET

A meeting of the Eastern High
School Band Boosters scheduled for
Tuesday, Feb. 12, has been postpon.
ed untll Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 7:30
p.m. in the band room of the high
school.

DEAR DR. BLAKER - Recently
you recommended family therapy t.l
the parent of a child who was
misbehaving in school.
I was interested to read for the
first time about this new kind of
treatment. But could you ezptatn in
more detaU why ~rs believe
that disturbed children s bebavi&lt;r
almoet always stems from their
parents' marital problems?
DEAR READER - In the early
1950s, researchers started studying
the interaction . between
schizophrenic children and their
mothers during vlalting hours at a
state mental hospital.
They saw problems tn the mother·
child relationship that were clearly
caused by the mother. All a result,
they
coined
the
term
"schlzophrenogenic mother" - that
Is, a mother who creates a
schizophrenic.
As Augustus Napier and Carl
Whitaker sarcastically point out In
thetr new book "The Family Cruel·
ble," mothers loved this period of
psychiatric history.
Then researchers turned thetr at·
tentlon to the fathers of theae
. children. They found the men to be
generally distant and passive with
their offspring.
At this point, their observations
shifted to the parents as a couple. It
became evident in almost every
case that the parents had severe,
·longstanding marital difficulties.
"Furthennore," write Naple.. and
Whitaker, "the psychotic episodes of
the 'patient' seemed to be related to
the cycles of marital conruct.
' 'The parents would get into a batUe, and as it began to intensify the
son (or daughter) would begin to
become psychotic. Once hospltallz.
ed, the couple would call off their
war in order to be, again, the
parents of a 'sick' child.
"Actually, their child's disturbed
behavior seemed to have a very
practical result: It helped the couple
deal with their conflict by giving
them a way of avoiding it. The family's very stability seemed to be
maintained by the periodic Il-

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lnesses."

.This research helped social scientists start looking at the family as a
system instead of merely as a BfOUP
of individuals. The family Itself Is a

functioning unit with flzed roles,
goala and rules of behavior.
Treating the family as such is
often the Ollly way counselors can
truly help one or more of Ita
members.
DEAR DR. BLAKER- I bope the
parent with the disturbed son throws
your advice in the trash. All that
freshkidneedsisagoodbeating.
What ever happened to discipline l
DEAR READER - Discipline is
stll1 necessary in child rearing, but it
mustbeconsistent.
That father indicated clearly that
he bad conflicting feelings about his

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. SU.DEAR HElEN AND SUE:

I am a high school junioc writing
In lespollll! to ''Protected Out of My
Mind." Last year our wbole tentb
grade bid 'to read "Catcher··in the
Rye" and be quizzed 011 it. WQII)d her
father have insisted she flunk? Our
required reading list is far from
shocking, but I'll bet he wouldn't

agree.

•.

Parents like hera only contribute
to the problem. Kids think, "U it's
banned, It must be good," and
maybe they'll go 011 to read really
raqnchy stuff.
In our health c1aaa we recently
.w a movie cilrtoon about VD. It included 1101111! very ~t photos
rl. lhfected. patlenll'&lt;HZ orpils. By
tbe way, It wu a Walt Dlaney pro.
ductlon.
• ·
, . .
The movies . "Roots" and
"Holoc8ust" are baaed 011 actual occumncea. Tbeit viOlence Is history.
How eQuid a father or mother ban
them? Our lchool give us extra ·
credit if we watcbed then) at-borne.
I suggest that Protected have a
long t.11t with her father. Maybe he

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�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 7, 1980

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 7, 1980 '

'60 Minutes ' rated No. 1 this week
0

We're proud to Salute the Boy Scouts

NEW YORK {AP) -ABC llnlahed
No. 1 In the networb' prime-time
ratings competition lor the first tlnle
In seven weeks, and pulled even with
CBS In their race lor first place lor
the !le8liOII to date.
ABC's triumph In the week enc:U.ng
Feb. 3 came despite the fact CBS
Jilted ala of the 10 hlgbm.rated
showa, and NBC had two. CBS'
newsmagazine "60 Minutes," the top
show for the aeason so far, waa No. 1
for the week.
Figure&amp; from the A. C. Nielsen Co.
showed "60 MiDutes" with a rating
of 29.2, to 28.8 for the runner-up,

of America on their 70th .Anniversary.

ABC's "Three's Company."

Nielsen ssys that meana of all the
1V.equlpped bomes in the COWitry.
29.2 percent saw at least part of "60
Minutes.''
CBS slipped past ABC In the
season's ratings a week .ago, after
winning the weekly cocnpetition ala
straight times. The two networks ended the most recent Nielsen sw-vey
tied.
ABC's strength In the most recent
cheek waa through the middle - few
big winners and few big losers.
NBC, on the other, had its best
week In some time, with "Real

Pecple" No. 4 In the ratings, and
"UWe House on the Prairie" loth.
Through the Top 2il, CBS had nine
shows,. ABC ileven and NBC four.
ABC bad eight ol the nen 10.
NBC's rating for the week was 19,
Ita highest in a month, to CBS' :1Al.2
and ABC's 2il.7. The networks say
thet means In an average primetime minute during the week, :ln.7
percent of the homes in the country
with television were tuned to ABC.
ABC's atlempt to revive "Bat-

tlestar Galactlca" as "Galactlca :
1980" was not particularly successful. The show was No. 44 for the

week. NBC's mlnlseries, "The Martian Chronicles," likewise stumbled
in the ratings. Part II was No. 34 for
the week, and the conclusion was
42nd.
NBC and CBS each had two of the

" Prime Time Saturday,'·' and 21.3 million, NBC; " Dukes of Haz. 1"!rd," 27 .7 or 21.1 million, "M-A.S.
"Featherstone Nest" on CBS.
H," 27.3 or 20.8 million, and "House
The week's Top !Oprograrns:
Calls," 26.9 or 20.:i million, all CBS:
"60 Minutes," with a rating of 29.2
representing 22.3 million homes, " Eight is Enough," 26.4 or 2il.l
million, ABC. and "Alice," CBS, and
CBS; "Three's Company," 28.8 or 22
"Uttle House on the Prarie,'' NBC
million, ABC; "Dallas," 28.6 or 21.8
both 26 or 19.8 million.
million, CBS; "Real People,'' 27.9 or

week's five lowest-rated programs. . - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - NBC's "Siegfried and Roy" was No.
63, followed by "Stone" on ABC, a
CBS movie, "'Ibe Driver," NBC's

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

Life Style

A PRESENTATION BY THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY MERCHANTS:

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat .

Community •••

POLLY'S POINTERS

8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

Chills .••

Polly Cramer

Herman Grate

Feat•,res ••••
Trouble with drip pans

ERWIN'S GULF

STAR SUPPLY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

DOWNING-CHILDS INS.
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POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
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MIDDLEPORT OHIO

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DALE C. WARNER AGENCY
POMEROY, OHIO

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CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

RACINE FOOD MARKET
. RACINE, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

MARGUERITE SHOES

MARK V

POMEROY, OHIO

r---

Social Calendar

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EWING FUNERAL HOME

FRANCIS FLORIST

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

ATHENS CO. SAVINGS &amp; LOAN,

MEIGS AUTO PARTS

MEIGS BRANCH
POMEROY, OHIO

DEAR POLLY - U anything boils
over onto the almninum drip pans on
rily electric stove It is very hard to
remove -no matter what I use. I hope
you have some help for me.
I would also Uke to know how I can
prevent spaghetti ssuce from boiling
oot of the pot on the electric stove. I
never had that trouble when I used a
gas stove but now the ssuce "plops"
up from the center.- ALICE R. ·
DEAR AUCE - U a cloth wrung
out of soapy water Ia used on the drip
pans inunediately there should be.no
trouble. Rinse away with cloth
wrung out of clear water. Should any
food splatters stick a mild scouring
(X'wder or fine steel wool pad ahould
remove it.
Perhaps you are not cooking the
lipagbetti ssuce In a large enough
pan or the heat is twned too hlgb.
Also you might try putting some but·
ter or margarine around the top rim
of the pot. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - If you enJoY being organized when you cook or bake
(as I do) then my hint will come In
bandy. I save plastic Ice cream and
yogurt containers and find they are

POMEROY, OHIO

TIIURSDAY
.EVANGEUNE CHAPI'ER 172,
Onler of the Eastern Star, 7:30p.m.
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Initiatory work to be carried out.
Members to wear chapter dresses
and are reminded to lake a_!dft_fo~
members at Pinecrest and a ssck
lunch.
MEIGS Mlsoclation for retarded
citizens Thursday 7 p.m. at Meigs
Inn. PubUcwelcome.
BIG BEND CITIZENS BAND
RADIO CLUB, LadlesAuxlllary7:30
'lbursday at the home of Mrs. Patty
Capehart.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

EBERSBACH HAR[nNARE
'

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

REUTER-BROGAN INS.

MOORE'S STORE·
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

ROYAL CROWN BOmiNG CO.

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OHIO VALLEY PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

CLELAND REALTY
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY OHIO

We salute the Scouts of America ... dedicated to a
better way ... making a better world through
team spirit and civic action. ~ .
sharing interests and.fun!

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE HOME NATIONAL-BANK
RACINE, OHIO

PUBI.JC SHOWER at 7:30 toitlght
at the Racine United Methodist
Church for Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Fjsher whose home was extensively
damaged .by fire last weekend.
Entertainment by the Paul Sayre
slringed band and refreshments will
beaerved.
···----FiuDAY
RETURN JONATHAN MEIGS
Cllapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution, 1:30 p.m. Friday at the home of Mrs, James
Brewington. Mrs. JOBeph Cook to
present the program on "Music In
the Life of Thomas Jeffenon."
Aulstant hoeteres wl1l be Mrs.
~er Luckeydoo, Mrs. Nan Moore,
and Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
MASONIC Lodge Fr\day 8 p.m.
Ceremonial. Potluck refreshments.
FRIED PIE·IIBie by Rutland Church of God Friday; for onlen and information phone 742-2789, Rutland
uea; 992-6688, Pomeroy · and Middleport, and Dt&amp;-2613, Racine.
- SUNDAY
SHIRLEY HUSTON will present
lUtory of her home at Feb. 10
meeting of Meigs County Pioneer
and Hlstorlcal Society, 2 p.m. at the
Meigs Museum: The home was

perfect for holding measured flour,
sugar, vegetables or virtually
anything. Then &gt;~hen it is time to add
them to whatever you are maldng
they are all ready to pour in.' So easy
and clean. - ROSEMARY
DEAR POLLY- My husband and
I both read your colWM faithfully
and I am always interested when someone suggests something I have
done lor years.
When using that pretty adhesivebacked paper to line shelves or
drawers I cut the paper to fit and
then Instead of peeling off ALL the
back I jUBt peel it back an Inch or so.
Trim that part off, leaving only the
edge of the sticky stuff. The paper Ia
much eaaier to handle, does not stick
o Itself or wrap Itself around ooe's
banda. 'lbe layer of backing gives an
extra bit of padding, is a nice noise
deadener and It ls eaaler to remove
after. 'Ibis also works well on large
Items Uke a toy box. -JEANNIE
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newapapeN.'Oupon
clippers H she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS In care of this
newspaper.
originally built by Quartus
Bridgeman approximately 11140-46 ·
and was retained by the fsmUy unW
It was acquired by Paul and Shirley
Huston and restored.
SUNDAY
GROUP ONE, Middleport
Presbyterian Church will S(IOIIBOI' a
Valentine luncheon IQUowing church
services Sunday. AU food will be provided by Group One. All proceeds
will be used for the work of the
Women's Association.
TUESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeting,
8 p.m. Tuesday at the home oi Vic
. Gaul. Board of directors asks all
members to attend to lake part in
organizational planning; all young
men between 17 and 35 are invited.

LAMAZE CLASSES OFFERED

ATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation Classes,
sponsored by O'Bieness Memorial
Hosj,ltal, will begin on Thunday,
Feb. 21. This clliB8 Ia for couples
whose upecled date of delivery ls
prior to Aprll18.
Class participants will learn
breathing and relaxation teclullques
filr first stage labor, effective expulalon technique for second stage .
labor, physical and emotional aspects of the birth process, and bodyconditioning exercises to promote
comfort during pregnancy and postpartum.
The fee for the series is $35. To
pre-register for this series, or to
request a schedule of future classes,
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside
Drive, Athens, OH 45701, or call 5935049.

The biggest
name in
little computers '"'

TOOBSERVEBIRmDAY
Mrs. Jamea (Margaret) Clatworthy will observe her 87th birthday Friday at her residence, 764 S.
Third Ave., Middleport. Mrs. Clatworthy is known to her many friends
in the cooununlty as "Ma". On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. James Clatworthy, Jr., entertained with a dinner at their home honoring his

Complete

mother •

U your doctor I'I!CIIIIllllel a
special diet, stick with it. This
measure may help to conttol your

blood presaure and reduce your rta1t
ol beart attack or stroke. Regular
check-upi are a IIIIIBt, too, Call your
local heart auoclation for more inlonnatioo. They're flghtlng fcir your
life.
LUcy Maud Montgomery, author
of "Anne of Green Gables," was
bomln1874.

Sr«MSUITS, SLEEPWEAR

40~

While others try to sell you $1 5.000 computer systems and ask you to
wait for months . Radio Shack sells you one that's priced " righ t" and

delivered for sure in 4 weeks or tess from the date of your order 1 The
TRS -80 can save you money as it speeds through payroll . billing.
inventory, word processing and more' See why more than 150,000
owners have made tl"\e TRS-80 Model I t ...e most popular personal
CQmputer in the world'

0

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NEEDS AME

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·· POMERQY, OHIO
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Manufacturing Inventory Control. Prints inventory

-

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Real Eotate Vol, l·IV. Programs include casnllow,

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In a world ol'skyroeketlng polces the TRS-80 starter·
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Includes data recorder, 2 game tapes and 232·page
manual.'2t-1051

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Disk BASIC Cour11. tetvour TRS·BO teech you to use·
disk BASIC' For 16K dosk syslems. 26-2007 29.95
TRS-80 FORTRAN. Compiler, linking loader,·edlloo,
llbraoy. Requires 32K disk sys1em. 21-2201 99.9.5
Olok EdltoriAIHmblar. Macro·assembli&gt;lj.linklng
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I TRS-80 . 26· 200312.95
General ledger I. Tracks up to 100 accounts and gives
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THE DAILY SENTINEL

• •

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monthly balance sheet and income statement For 32K

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�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 7, 1980

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 7, 1980 '

'60 Minutes ' rated No. 1 this week
0

We're proud to Salute the Boy Scouts

NEW YORK {AP) -ABC llnlahed
No. 1 In the networb' prime-time
ratings competition lor the first tlnle
In seven weeks, and pulled even with
CBS In their race lor first place lor
the !le8liOII to date.
ABC's triumph In the week enc:U.ng
Feb. 3 came despite the fact CBS
Jilted ala of the 10 hlgbm.rated
showa, and NBC had two. CBS'
newsmagazine "60 Minutes," the top
show for the aeason so far, waa No. 1
for the week.
Figure&amp; from the A. C. Nielsen Co.
showed "60 MiDutes" with a rating
of 29.2, to 28.8 for the runner-up,

of America on their 70th .Anniversary.

ABC's "Three's Company."

Nielsen ssys that meana of all the
1V.equlpped bomes in the COWitry.
29.2 percent saw at least part of "60
Minutes.''
CBS slipped past ABC In the
season's ratings a week .ago, after
winning the weekly cocnpetition ala
straight times. The two networks ended the most recent Nielsen sw-vey
tied.
ABC's strength In the most recent
cheek waa through the middle - few
big winners and few big losers.
NBC, on the other, had its best
week In some time, with "Real

Pecple" No. 4 In the ratings, and
"UWe House on the Prairie" loth.
Through the Top 2il, CBS had nine
shows,. ABC ileven and NBC four.
ABC bad eight ol the nen 10.
NBC's rating for the week was 19,
Ita highest in a month, to CBS' :1Al.2
and ABC's 2il.7. The networks say
thet means In an average primetime minute during the week, :ln.7
percent of the homes in the country
with television were tuned to ABC.
ABC's atlempt to revive "Bat-

tlestar Galactlca" as "Galactlca :
1980" was not particularly successful. The show was No. 44 for the

week. NBC's mlnlseries, "The Martian Chronicles," likewise stumbled
in the ratings. Part II was No. 34 for
the week, and the conclusion was
42nd.
NBC and CBS each had two of the

" Prime Time Saturday,'·' and 21.3 million, NBC; " Dukes of Haz. 1"!rd," 27 .7 or 21.1 million, "M-A.S.
"Featherstone Nest" on CBS.
H," 27.3 or 20.8 million, and "House
The week's Top !Oprograrns:
Calls," 26.9 or 20.:i million, all CBS:
"60 Minutes," with a rating of 29.2
representing 22.3 million homes, " Eight is Enough," 26.4 or 2il.l
million, ABC. and "Alice," CBS, and
CBS; "Three's Company," 28.8 or 22
"Uttle House on the Prarie,'' NBC
million, ABC; "Dallas," 28.6 or 21.8
both 26 or 19.8 million.
million, CBS; "Real People,'' 27.9 or

week's five lowest-rated programs. . - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - NBC's "Siegfried and Roy" was No.
63, followed by "Stone" on ABC, a
CBS movie, "'Ibe Driver," NBC's

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

Life Style

A PRESENTATION BY THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY MERCHANTS:

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat .

Community •••

POLLY'S POINTERS

8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

Chills .••

Polly Cramer

Herman Grate

Feat•,res ••••
Trouble with drip pans

ERWIN'S GULF

STAR SUPPLY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

DOWNING-CHILDS INS.
AGENCY

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
"BANK OF THE CENTURr'
POMEROY, RUTLAND, TUPPERS PlAINS

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

heritage house

DALE C. WARNER AGENCY
POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

RACINE FOOD MARKET
. RACINE, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

MARGUERITE SHOES

MARK V

POMEROY, OHIO

r---

Social Calendar

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EWING FUNERAL HOME

FRANCIS FLORIST

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

ATHENS CO. SAVINGS &amp; LOAN,

MEIGS AUTO PARTS

MEIGS BRANCH
POMEROY, OHIO

DEAR POLLY - U anything boils
over onto the almninum drip pans on
rily electric stove It is very hard to
remove -no matter what I use. I hope
you have some help for me.
I would also Uke to know how I can
prevent spaghetti ssuce from boiling
oot of the pot on the electric stove. I
never had that trouble when I used a
gas stove but now the ssuce "plops"
up from the center.- ALICE R. ·
DEAR AUCE - U a cloth wrung
out of soapy water Ia used on the drip
pans inunediately there should be.no
trouble. Rinse away with cloth
wrung out of clear water. Should any
food splatters stick a mild scouring
(X'wder or fine steel wool pad ahould
remove it.
Perhaps you are not cooking the
lipagbetti ssuce In a large enough
pan or the heat is twned too hlgb.
Also you might try putting some but·
ter or margarine around the top rim
of the pot. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - If you enJoY being organized when you cook or bake
(as I do) then my hint will come In
bandy. I save plastic Ice cream and
yogurt containers and find they are

POMEROY, OHIO

TIIURSDAY
.EVANGEUNE CHAPI'ER 172,
Onler of the Eastern Star, 7:30p.m.
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Initiatory work to be carried out.
Members to wear chapter dresses
and are reminded to lake a_!dft_fo~
members at Pinecrest and a ssck
lunch.
MEIGS Mlsoclation for retarded
citizens Thursday 7 p.m. at Meigs
Inn. PubUcwelcome.
BIG BEND CITIZENS BAND
RADIO CLUB, LadlesAuxlllary7:30
'lbursday at the home of Mrs. Patty
Capehart.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

EBERSBACH HAR[nNARE
'

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

REUTER-BROGAN INS.

MOORE'S STORE·
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

ROYAL CROWN BOmiNG CO.

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OHIO VALLEY PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

CLELAND REALTY
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY OHIO

We salute the Scouts of America ... dedicated to a
better way ... making a better world through
team spirit and civic action. ~ .
sharing interests and.fun!

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE HOME NATIONAL-BANK
RACINE, OHIO

PUBI.JC SHOWER at 7:30 toitlght
at the Racine United Methodist
Church for Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Fjsher whose home was extensively
damaged .by fire last weekend.
Entertainment by the Paul Sayre
slringed band and refreshments will
beaerved.
···----FiuDAY
RETURN JONATHAN MEIGS
Cllapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution, 1:30 p.m. Friday at the home of Mrs, James
Brewington. Mrs. JOBeph Cook to
present the program on "Music In
the Life of Thomas Jeffenon."
Aulstant hoeteres wl1l be Mrs.
~er Luckeydoo, Mrs. Nan Moore,
and Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
MASONIC Lodge Fr\day 8 p.m.
Ceremonial. Potluck refreshments.
FRIED PIE·IIBie by Rutland Church of God Friday; for onlen and information phone 742-2789, Rutland
uea; 992-6688, Pomeroy · and Middleport, and Dt&amp;-2613, Racine.
- SUNDAY
SHIRLEY HUSTON will present
lUtory of her home at Feb. 10
meeting of Meigs County Pioneer
and Hlstorlcal Society, 2 p.m. at the
Meigs Museum: The home was

perfect for holding measured flour,
sugar, vegetables or virtually
anything. Then &gt;~hen it is time to add
them to whatever you are maldng
they are all ready to pour in.' So easy
and clean. - ROSEMARY
DEAR POLLY- My husband and
I both read your colWM faithfully
and I am always interested when someone suggests something I have
done lor years.
When using that pretty adhesivebacked paper to line shelves or
drawers I cut the paper to fit and
then Instead of peeling off ALL the
back I jUBt peel it back an Inch or so.
Trim that part off, leaving only the
edge of the sticky stuff. The paper Ia
much eaaier to handle, does not stick
o Itself or wrap Itself around ooe's
banda. 'lbe layer of backing gives an
extra bit of padding, is a nice noise
deadener and It ls eaaler to remove
after. 'Ibis also works well on large
Items Uke a toy box. -JEANNIE
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newapapeN.'Oupon
clippers H she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS In care of this
newspaper.
originally built by Quartus
Bridgeman approximately 11140-46 ·
and was retained by the fsmUy unW
It was acquired by Paul and Shirley
Huston and restored.
SUNDAY
GROUP ONE, Middleport
Presbyterian Church will S(IOIIBOI' a
Valentine luncheon IQUowing church
services Sunday. AU food will be provided by Group One. All proceeds
will be used for the work of the
Women's Association.
TUESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeting,
8 p.m. Tuesday at the home oi Vic
. Gaul. Board of directors asks all
members to attend to lake part in
organizational planning; all young
men between 17 and 35 are invited.

LAMAZE CLASSES OFFERED

ATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation Classes,
sponsored by O'Bieness Memorial
Hosj,ltal, will begin on Thunday,
Feb. 21. This clliB8 Ia for couples
whose upecled date of delivery ls
prior to Aprll18.
Class participants will learn
breathing and relaxation teclullques
filr first stage labor, effective expulalon technique for second stage .
labor, physical and emotional aspects of the birth process, and bodyconditioning exercises to promote
comfort during pregnancy and postpartum.
The fee for the series is $35. To
pre-register for this series, or to
request a schedule of future classes,
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside
Drive, Athens, OH 45701, or call 5935049.

The biggest
name in
little computers '"'

TOOBSERVEBIRmDAY
Mrs. Jamea (Margaret) Clatworthy will observe her 87th birthday Friday at her residence, 764 S.
Third Ave., Middleport. Mrs. Clatworthy is known to her many friends
in the cooununlty as "Ma". On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. James Clatworthy, Jr., entertained with a dinner at their home honoring his

Complete

mother •

U your doctor I'I!CIIIIllllel a
special diet, stick with it. This
measure may help to conttol your

blood presaure and reduce your rta1t
ol beart attack or stroke. Regular
check-upi are a IIIIIBt, too, Call your
local heart auoclation for more inlonnatioo. They're flghtlng fcir your
life.
LUcy Maud Montgomery, author
of "Anne of Green Gables," was
bomln1874.

Sr«MSUITS, SLEEPWEAR

40~

While others try to sell you $1 5.000 computer systems and ask you to
wait for months . Radio Shack sells you one that's priced " righ t" and

delivered for sure in 4 weeks or tess from the date of your order 1 The
TRS -80 can save you money as it speeds through payroll . billing.
inventory, word processing and more' See why more than 150,000
owners have made tl"\e TRS-80 Model I t ...e most popular personal
CQmputer in the world'

0

~

AND SPORTSWEAR

You Get It All;
• TRS·80 Model I (32K ILII)
• Expansion Interface
• 2 Mlni·Disk Drives
• Tractor-Feed Printer &amp; Cable
• System Desk &amp; Printer Stand

STI
IN

Reductions of 40% ·to 50%
JACKETS, COAlS,

FF

Genuine TRS-80 Disk
Drives Now Available!

"

50%!

Quality Assured!

Look-alike ''bargain·· drives lor your TRS-80
are readily available-but will they work and
taa t? With Radio Shack's mini-disk drives
you can store thousands of characters of
data and build a large library of tiles on several "tloppy '' diskllnes. 26·1160126-1161

'·

Each ''·

Hours :
9:30 to 5:00
Mon. lhru Sal.

~:.~~~·,oo

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Great
American
Bargain!

2nd St.
·POMEROY, 0.

AMERICA
.
NEEDS·SCOUTING.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS
POMEROY, OHIO

SCOUTING.
NEEDS AME

POMEROY, OHIO

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS
·· POMERQY, OHIO
,.

W-2 and

COATS.
%PRICE

ADOLPH'S 'DAIRY VALLEY
'

For 32K business system.

.

Manufacturing Inventory Control. Prints inventory

-

report, bill ot maleri als , more. 28·1559199.95
Real Eotate Vol, l·IV. Programs include casnllow,

GOODS

depreciation. capitalization ra te and slf!?pped income
analysis. For 16K Level II TRS-80
26·1571 •• 26-1573 29.95 each

TRs-80 4K Level I

PRICE

Personal Computer
In a world ol'skyroeketlng polces the TRS-80 starter·
•veltm remains low polced. Use It tor personal budget
planning, business or relax with games . Computer
Includes data recorder, 2 game tapes and 232·page
manual.'2t-1051

SPORTSWEAR
%..PRICE

POMEROY, OHIO

Disk BASIC Cour11. tetvour TRS·BO teech you to use·
disk BASIC' For 16K dosk syslems. 26-2007 29.95
TRS-80 FORTRAN. Compiler, linking loader,·edlloo,
llbraoy. Requires 32K disk sys1em. 21-2201 99.9.5
Olok EdltoriAIHmblar. Macro·assembli&gt;lj.linklng
loader. fldlloo &amp; cross relerence. 28·2202 9~.95

Rug Y~rn , Zippers

.NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY,

~a1rotl chec~s .

26·1551 199.95

POMEROY, OHIO

..,

THE FABRIC SHOP

Levell BASIC Course. Sell-paced course. For 4K Level
I TRS-80 . 26· 200312.95
General ledger I. Tracks up to 100 accounts and gives
business system. 26-1552 99.95
Dllk Payroll. Payroll lor up to 100 employees. Prints

THE DAILY SENTINEL

• •

Ready-To-Run Program Packs

monthly balance sheet and income statement For 32K

'

CENTRAL TRUST CO.

Mason, w. Va.

713-5592

Oiuo'

'

'

.

- ~.''200
'•

.·

·,

Motllltms ......._ _...,._

fiADI(J SHACK HAS t;JVIR 11111D STOIIIS AND DEALERS IN THE IJSA AND CANADA/

~- . . . . .

&amp;ISO IVII IIble It

Claii'V'

Fled•o snactc

s·ILVER BRIDG.EPLAZA n·~~~~~~~0

.ea...y If••.;..;·.
HOME
OHIO ·

. WMPO :

SATURDAYS
.. - .
8 til Noon

''

·.'

· Thread.· croe~et CoHon.

. %'PRICE

.,

~-· '

'

' ' ' .:
&lt;

' '

'

'

'

...._""!1!1!0
. ·" "·• ..

/

••

' J.

IIA DIVISION,OF TANDY CO RPOHATION

(

~k .

PRICES MAY VARY AT

•

'

.

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 7, 1980

8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middlep&lt;lrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., 11m~y , Feb. 7, 1980

Layette
Group makes mon-etary contribution shower
planned
'

A donation was made to the March of Dimes and to
Dorothy Lelfheit, "adopted" handicapped lady, for expenses &lt;:1. participating in the J . F. KeMedy special
olympics this spring at the Tuesday night meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary Juniors, Drew Webster'
Post39, Pomeroy.
Meeting at the home &lt;:1. Anna Wiles, the meeting
opened in rituallstlc form. The girls spent the evening
working on the Eighth District Conference to be held in
Pomeroy in April. Mrs. Veda Davis, junior advisor,
reviewed the rules on the conference cover contest.
It was reported that Kim Patterson and Adam Martin are ill and get-well cards were signed for them.
Valentines will be sent to Miss Leifheit, Bill Rovnak ,

Mrs. Jed Webster, Sr., Billy Anderson, and Mrs. Louise
Hawkins.
For the program, the juniors reviewed the history of
America, noting that when Colwnbusstepped foot on
this CO\Ifltry's shore, Uttie did he realize the greatness
of his discovery. Members were reminded that the first
act of the freedom seeking pilgrims was to compose the
Mayflower compact. Then came the Declrara Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution, along with
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address in 11163.
The next meeting will be held on Feb. 18 at the home
of Mrs. Davis, 7 p.m. Miss Wiles served pizza, koolaid
and hot chocolate.

5mall-time. gangsters run
gamut--maybe not anymore
NEW YORK (AP) - An eUte belief that when a trial comes
police squad has been created to around, the victim will be long gone
arrest, and send to prison, Manhat, and unable to testify. McCaM said
tan's "Misfortune 500" - the thugs police will pay to have some victims
who rape and steal and hustle up and return for trials.
down the island, sidestepping
McCaM says the district attorney
punislunent with ease.
will not allow plea bargaining for the
.\~though civil libertarians have
500 targeted criminals, but Manhat·
their qualms, police and prosecutors tan District Attorney Robert
say they are excited about the Morgenthau says plea bargaining
program.
· will not be necessary if the program
"We feel that a significant amount produces enough evidence to make
of crime in the city is done by a very stiff charges stand up in court.
small group of criminals between
"They'll notify us so that we'll
the ages of 18 and 25," said Lt. know if someone comes In on ro~
Terence McCann, executive director bery and the guy has five robberies,
of the management division of the well, they're going to tell us that so
Chief of Detectives' office.
we can tell the court and get stricter
To catch those criminals and help
to convict them, McCaiin9aid, the
police department has devised a
three-point program: -First, a unit
combs police records for the worst
500 offenders. A type of rating is
compiled as the number and types of
crimes are weighted. For example,
Dale Russell of Columbus was
a man who 8BS8ults elderly women
recent visitor of Lincoln Russell.
gets more "demerits" than one who
Lincoln Russell was recent visitor
beats young men.
of his sister, Iva Johnson.
-&amp;cond, 50 officers in a street
Mr. and Mrs. William Grueser of
crime unit will keep the 500 worst ofMinersville were Saturday evening
fenders under surveillance. Officers
visitors of Mrs. Bertha Russell and
will stake out areas where a known
Earl Russell.
offender works In the Mpe of cat·
Bertha Russell and Earl Russell
chlng him committing a crime.
were Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
- Third, when one of the targeted
and Mrs. William Russell of Miner·
individuals is arrested, members of
sville, observing Bertha Russell's
an Investigative team of 25 top of·
92nd birthday.
ficers will work to build a good case,
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp of
seeking corroborating witnesses and
Langsville were Sunday dinner
evidence. Up to now, police relied
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
largely on the testimony of victims.
Smith, Charles, Kevin and Kail
McCann said many of the
Knapp, observing 14th birthday of
criminals pick on tourists in the
Charles and Kevin Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell spent
a few days last week with Mr. and
Mrs. Tom SUmmerfieid, Cl\ndy,
Wendy and Crystal of Medina, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith,
Kanauga, were last Sunday visitors
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball, Colwn- of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith, Kail,
bus, spent a few days with Frances Kevin and Charles.
Young recently.
Mrs. Ardis Waggoner had a hip
operation at Holzer Medical Center Mrs. Gretta Simpson for December
meeting in Baptist Church
and is improving slowly.
Catherine Weaver visited Sunday Fellowship room. Devotions by
In Columbus with ber daughter and Helen Simpson opened with the
hymn, ''0 Come, Ail Ye Faithful."
. family, Mr. and Mrs. James
She used for the topic "l'he Best
· Cheadle.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire attended Gift. " Scripture was from Matthew
1:18,25. A poem "l'he Gift of God's
the camping show at State
Love,
" was read. Prayer was by
Fairgrounds and spent the weekend
Mrs.
Florence
Adams. Mrs. Gretta
with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson and
Simpson,
president,
presided at the
Roblo.
W.Slness
session.
The
program was
Bessie Graham spent a few days
presented
by
Mrs.
Ura
Morris. The
In Charleston, W. Va. visiting her
topic was "Light In Your Darkness."
brother who is In Veterans Hospital.
Scripture was from John 12: 46. The
Rev. and Mrs. David Wtseman,
hymn "l'he Light of the World is
Lima, visited his parents Saturday
Jesus" was sung. Readings were
afternoon, the Roy Wtsemans.
''God's Light," "It W'ill Light Your
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. carr and Mr.
lkme," "l'he Work of Christmas,"
and Mrs. Clarence Cash, Athena, are
''Millions Haven't Heard" and four
spending a week In Florida.
readings oo the Advent. Refresh·
ments were served by the hostess,
8S8isted by her daughter, Mrs.
Lillian Hayman, at a table'
beautifully decorated for Clqistmas.

Wolf Pen
News Notes

Harrisonville
Social News

Racine
Social Events

Subject A, one of the targets, has
been hustling for a long time. He is
23 years old, 6 feet tall and 200 pounds; he hangs around Washington
Square Park In Greenwich Village
with several cohorts, snorting
cocaine and smoking dape,
His first adult arrest was In 1975,
when he was charged with petty larceny, assaul! and possession of
stolen property. The charges were
dismissed. Three months later, he
was charged with robbery, assault
and criminal trespass. The charges
were dismissed.
Since then, he has been arrested
eight times on 17 charges ranging
from narcotics possession to riot to
grand larceny.

Loose goose chase ends happily.
-

WAYNE, N.J. (AP) -The oncenoosed goose is loose without the
noose, but Joyce Shapiro will ·still
know it by the gimp of Its limp.
And so the tale of a 4-month-long
wild goose chase ended happily
Tuesday wben the 5$-year-old Mrs.
Shapiro trapped a Canada goose and
freed it from the plastic wound
around its neck and bead.
"Oh, I was so happy," Mrs.
Shapiro said Wednesday. "I now feel
as free as the bird itself. I've spent
hours with this goose."
Mrs. Shapiro's vigil began·last October when a golfer at the
Packanack Golf Club noticed the
long-necked bird's predicament.
Its black head and neck were
wrapped in plastic from a six-pack
of beer or soda, and the large bird
could not open its beak more than a
quarter-inch, Mrs. Shapiro said. The
plastic collar seemed to frighten
other geese and Isolate the bird from
the hundreds of others feeding In the
area, she said.
"And he wasn't able to eat much,"
she said of the goose, ooe of many
birds at her lakefront home in this
suburban conununity of 49,000
people.
Golfers and bird watchers tried In

By the Day

'WANTS ACCURACY

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Hale Irwin,
the 1979 U.S. Open champion, thinks
golf writers should be more exact
about their reporting.
"I don't drink coffee," the onetime college football stsr said. "It
bOthers me when a reporter writes
that we aat down and talked over a
cup of coffee. It may add some atmosphere to the story, but it simply
is not true."

vain to capture the bird, which stands more than a foot high and weighs
about oo pounds, to free it from the
noose. Game wardens were atuJn.
ped. State officials, contacted
because the Canada goose is protected In New Jersey, advised leaving
the bird alone as long as it could
walk, fly and eat.
Others gave up, but Mrs. Shapiro
would not quit.
Each morning, she scattered
cracked corn In her backyard on
Lake Packenpack. And she built a
gated 6-by 6-foot chicken wire cage
In hopes of catching the bird.
"I was looking out the window
yesterday, when I saw that the goose
was actually sitting all the way In
the cage eating the cracked corn,''
she recalled excitedly.
"I started to pull the string to the
gate, which ran through the window
of my husband's study. Of course,
tbe goose heard me but I climbed out
the window and managed to force
him back. It must have been quite a

• •

Folonlory I, 1110

''

.

.,.,

Plans for a benefit bridge to be
held at Grace Episcopal Church on
Feb. 21 were made at a recent
meeting of Grace Episcopal Churchwomen held at the home of Mrs.
Evelyn Knight.
The benefit bridge, open to the
public, will begin with a 1 p.m. salad
luncheon In the Parish House.
Chairmen are Mrs. Dale Du~n.
Mrs. Edith Reed, and Mrs. Jean
Moore.
.
Speaker for the luncheon meeting ·
was Judge Robert Buck who talked
about his work as a juvenile judge.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
James Titus. Hostesses for the luncheon were Mrs. Knight, Mrs Vincent Knight, and Mrs. Jean Will.

I;

sight."
Afraid to handle the bird without
help, Mrs. Shapiro called her
brother to "goose sit" while she ';.,
drove to the nearby home of Glsets •
Kartsn, a member of the WildUfe
Rehabllitatioo Fund.
"When the wildUfe lady got here, •
she crawled Into the cage and picked ~ .
the goose up. We took it into the
playroom, and I cut the piece of
plastic off. It had kind of grown into
his beak," Mrs. Shapiro said.
The women freed the bird hours
later after feeding it a piece &lt;:1. bread
- likely its first bulky food since encountering the plastic noose.
"He didn't seem afraid," Mrs.
Shapiro said. "He honked Uke geese
do, asifto thank us."
·rl'

SPECI~L

REGIS

..
.,,

PURE ·
ELEGANCE
BY P!DWIN
AT:

"

THE
SHOE BOX

.,

..

Ohio
."'

5 TIL 10

Salad Bar
White Fish
Baked Potato
Vegetable

U you have high blood pressure

you feel bad, you may as well not
take It at all. Your American Heart
Association reminds you: get used to
the idea ct taking your , blood
pressure pills every day, for the rest
of your life. Call your local chapter
for further information.

Roll,
Tea,

7

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE
OF
VASHTI
GRIMM , DECEASED
Case No. 22947
NOTICE t'!F
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Jan uary 17, 1980, in
the M eigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 229.4 7, Bar
bara J . Brutvan, 1123Q
Ironwood
Cou r t,
Cin
cinna 1ir Ohio 45242 was ap ·

pointeo Executri x of the
Grimm,
de.ceased , late of Route 2,
Racine , O h io.

esta te of Vashti

Robert E . Buck

Sarah Bernhardt made
her acting debut in 1861 .
devoted to -doing things 101
others, and you' ll enJOY It Be
careful, nowever, not to let yourself be used.
TAURUS (April 2Q.Mar 20) You
won't be happy today unless
you're wltn those who enjoy the
same activities as you. Avoid the
bossy types, If 111 all possible.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Pmj·
ects around the nouse give you
the most pleasure today, but il
you expect them to come out
wet!, reject well-m88.nlng advtce.
CANCER (JUIM 21-JUIJ 22)
Make It a point to get together
with some fun friends today .
You'll be looking for excitement .
and the best way to find " Is with
them

Ill

P robate Judge
Clerk
31
121 7, 3tc

24,

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Nothing is
too good for your family today .
You'll demonstrate this in every
way you c:an. Take care, howev~
er. not to become overly so li citous regarding the,lr wellare .
VIIIGO (AUg. 23-Sap1. 22) You
won 't walt for things to come to
:;oou today. If what you wanU sn't
happening fast enough, .vou'll
take the bull by the horns and
direct the action yourself.
UBRA (Bep1, 23-0c:1. 23) Trust
your Instincts today to guide you
toward acquiring a material
desire, and to Ignore those
who'd try to sell you a "get-rich quick" scheme.
SCORPIO (0c1. 2........ 22) Bett Pr make plaM tn !)et out ol the

...

$625 Plus. Tax
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
han and rural districts.
Other students are also affected
Ohio Education Association says
discipline is "the biggest problem • by the lack of discipline, Brundige
facing the schools of the state" and
said.
"Kids are afraid to go to school in
there is an urgent need for
the
morning because they fear
legiststion to deal with it.
harassment
from their fellow
Association President Eugene
students.
There
are students right
Brundige of Athens told the Senate
Education and Health Committee
Wednesday night his group is
"solidly behind" a bill sponsored by
Sen. John K. Mahoney, D·
Springfield.
It would, among other ·things, ·
require school boards to adopt a
policy outlining responsibilities and
By Tbe Associated Preos
rights of school employees, students
Snow
half a foot deep In places was
and parents in maintaining
spread from the Great Lakes deep
discipline.
Into Georgia as a winter storm
The bill would authorize the state
pushed into the mid-Atlantic ststes
Board of Education to establish a
Wednesday:
system designed to report, handle
Schools closed and roads were
and prevent school violence and
treacherous
In much of TeMessee,
crimes.
Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia.
Student convicted of assaulting
In South Carolina, 6.3 inches of
school employees would be
snow was measured In Cleveland
prohibited from returning to the
and 4 Inches was reported at
building In which the 8BS8ult took
Woodruff. The highway patrol said
p~.
there were a number of minor acAild it would create an In·
cidents across the state.
teragency Coordinating Committee
That part of Dixie got much the
made up of state agencies and courts
same treatment as Wisconsin,
which deal with disruptive students
where 6 inches of snow fell in Racine
and juvenile offenders.
and an unofficial 9inches was repor,
Assaults on teachers and other
ted at Oster.
school employeeS are Increasing,
As of Wednesday afternoon, the
but the problems of crime and
Milwaukee County sheriff's office
disruption are not confined to big
had counted 65 accidents since the
city·districts, Brundige aaid.
snow began falling Tuesday, in"Thi8 is not an urban problem as
cluding three trucks that jack-knifed
some would have us believe," Brunand blocked traffic. Two persona
dige said. It is also found In suburwere killed in weather-related traf·
fie accidents Tuesday in Wisconsin.
The National Weather Service
reported snow covered much of the
Ohio Valley eastward into the midAtlantic ststes. Heavy ~now warnings were posted for parts of North
.
Carolina, Virginia, Maryl!lnd and
,Ralph Welker, Pearl Welker to southern Delaware.
Ralph
Welker, Pearl Welker,
Up to 4 inches of snow fell as far
....
Parcels, Bedford.
south as Dublin ln central Georgia,
.Paul Manuel, aka Paul L. Manuel with 7 Inches in the northern mounto'Lester P. Manuel, Cert. of Trans.,
tains and 3 inches in the suburbs of
~rt.
Atlanta.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, W. W.
Four to~ inches fell in middle and
Bragg, eta!. to Marvin C. Walker,
western Tennessee and up to 2 inMlni8 H. Walker, 1.1 A., Orange.
ches were reported In northeast
James J . Proffitt, Sherif, Jacob Alabama.
Walters, eta!. to Gordon L. Holter,
The Coast Guard closed 13.7 miles
JiUHolter, OOA., Lebanon.
of the Ohio River along western Ken·
'.lames J. Proffitt, Sheri,ff, Rebec- tucky to loaded barges because of
Cil'Walters, etal. to Edward Fischer,
low water caused by frozen
4() A., Lebanon.
tributaries.
Schools in Nashville and most
middle TeMessee counties were
'' VETERANS HOSPITAL
closed, as were many schools in
4dmitted--Rita
Freeman,
Georgia.
Cl)eshire; Marlene H~. Pomeroy;
A National Weather Service
Willlam Hoschar, Pomeroy; John
forecaster In Nashville said, " we
Harrison, Middleport; Samuel
may have snow again by Friday
P!Ckena, Shade; Cindy Petit, Long
night."

much of Dixie

AU. LEGAL

FINE WEA~ING
APPARAL FOR MEN
AND WOMEN.
'

\

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Open6 Days
. M.·Sat. t: 3ci til$

,

lFHE. MEIGS
INN.
.
'

PIGOTT , DECEASED
C.lsc No. 2294()

·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
nF FIOUCIARY

On January 17, 1980, in
the MEIGS County Probate
Court , Case No. 21940 ,
Donald PigoTt , Route _ 1.
Long BoTtom , Ohio 45143

wa s appointed

E~ecutor

Gov. Rhodes ' veto overridden
by House on jobless benefits

ot

the estate o f Riley Pigott ,
dece ased , la te of Rovte 1.
Lonq Bottom . Oh 10 -45 743
Robert E . Bu ck
Probate Judge
Clerk

11124,311217, Jtc

house today. You're far too resttess and need to be around
stlmUating people who can
sweep the cobwebs and doldrums away.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)
You make such a fine impression
that others want to do nice
things for you today. A jealous
onlooker, however, may have a
few unkind things to say about
Ihie;

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 11) II
won 't be difficult to put Into
immed iate practice anything you
are taught today . Seek out the
teachers who can help develop
your skills.
{NEWSPAPER ENTERf'R~E ASSN I

COLUMBUS, Ohio IAP I - The
House has voted to override Gov.
James A. Rhodes' veto for the first
time since the 113th General Assembly convened in January 1979.
The 63-33 vote came Wednes&lt;!ay on
a bill giving unemployed workers an
extra 13 weeks of jobless benefits.
However, the Senate has yet to act
on the veto, and majority Democrats
there probably will fall short, for
lack 'of needed support from
minority Republicans.
The House tally was three votes
more than the three-fifths majority
of 60 needed in the 99-member cham,
ber.
The matter was postponed in the
Senate, due to absence of President
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, who is
taking a week's rest on doctors' or,
ders. The Senate will not meet in
floor session again untilTuesday .
Two House Republicans, Reps.
Michael Fox, R,Hamilton, and
Charles Ash, R-North Industry,
joined 61 majority Democrats to
override the GOP governor.
Rep. Edward J. Orlett, D-Dayton,
the bill's chief sponsor, disputed
several assertions by Rhodes in the
latter's veto message.
He took issue In particular to an
assertion by the governor that the
proposal could bankrupt the state
unemployment compensation fund.
The Dayton lawmaker said the ex,
Ira 13 weeks, which would not be
paid until a worker exhausted his
nonnal 26 weeks of benefits, would
be charged back to the employer
who laid off workers in closing a

• PROFFnT,ROMOTED

'

I '

•
"

'",..

Prj)ffitt, Rt. 1, Racine, has received
his,first promotion in the U.S. Air

f*ttfJUil'

~~
f1.t ~. ·•

1

Proffitt, promoted to airman, is
asllgned to Offutt Air Force Base,
here, as a vehicle operatorldispat-

••

divorce from BenwOlX.I D. Bick er~ on

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

pliance with the law or standards,"
William L. Phillis, said.
The state currently has authority
to assign such school systems to
vocational districts, with the cost
assessed to the schools' general
revenue fund, he said.
The proposed bill, sponsored by
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville, would allow residents
of such an assigned district to object
through a petition and referendum
procedure.
But barring such a vote, it would
allow the county auditor to apply to
the assigned district the tax levy of
the joint vocational system it joined .

CHUCK WAGON.... .79¢
.,

WITH FRIES ........ ~1 19
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
992,2556

Pomeroy, o.

valentine Love Unes
ASpecial Feature mThe Daily SeuliNI an Vale111iii!'s Day

After

..

wonderful

years of marriage, I' m
still head-over -heels In
love w lfh you!
Walter Z.

To Mom and Dad ...
We couldn't have picked
1 nicer pair of parents In
the world! Have
Happy Valentine's Deyt

•

Mike and Sue

I...--------------~-------------~-----------------------,
WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND BRING lT
1
1
I
I
I
I
I

OR MAIL IT WITH '1.00 BY FEBRUARY 1ZIH 10 THE
DAILY SENTINEl, P. 0. BOX 729, POMEROY, 0.
16 DDS 'l.OG-CASH WITH ORDER

2. _ _ _ __ 3, _ _ _ __ 4, _ _ __
0:1
8.___.__ __
5, _ _ __ 6, _ _ _ __ ],
11. _ _ __ 12..____~10:_-:---9•--:---I
1 13._ _ __ 14. _ _ _,....-- 15. _ _ __ 16. _ __

~~

ALL AMERICAN

'

·see our lot model today.

1,,_ _ __

_____

PHONE 992-2156

~

· · 1100

L:

E ~ Ma111

...

. ~? ·1th.1
~- ~-,....·~ .

,,

.

:'

THE DAILY SE.NTINEL

· ··

omt:r "' •,Ohio
~

'

570 W. Main

Tdfl.at~Aaheto~tt~apewl~iA

l

·KINGSBURY ,
- HOME ·sALES

"

charges of gross neglect of duty

·j

'To My Wife, Ann ...

JAMESPROF'FIII'

':' REPORTS FOR DUTY
J:{avy AviatiOn Boatswain's Mate
lst;:Class James G. Proffitt, son of
~nee G. J&gt;roffltt of Box 53,
P0!11and, has reported for duty at
Wlildbey Island Naval Air Station,
oU Harbor, WasiJ. He's also the son
of luth Foreman, Langsville .
~1971 graduate of Southern Local
HiAh School,_Racine, he joined the
Na&gt;vy In August,l971.

MARRIAG ES ENDED
Florence Griggs, Reedw11Ie . and
Jerry W. Griggs, Belpre, filed for
dissolution of marriage in Me1gs
County Common Pleas Court.
Edith A. Bickers was granted a

(Linit 16 Words-Sizes 1austratec1 Balow)

II

eAFHA&amp;VA

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Park St. at 12:52 p.m.
Wednesday for Billie Fink, Jr. , who
had received lacerations in a sleigh
riding accident. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL At
9:15a.m. Thursday, the squad was
called for Helen Shuler, 150 N. Th.ird
Ave. She was taken to the Hol2er
Medical Center Plaza.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

Meets
eOhio Building Codes

Force.

SLEDDING MISHAP
REPORTED

legislation.
At least two of the Republicans
would have to jotn a united
Democratic caucus for an overnde
in the Senate. It a(l'peared that at
least two of the three would vote to
uphold the Republican governor's
veto.
·
Sens. Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
Ashland, and Theodore M. Gray, RColwnbus, said they would sustatn
Rhodes. Sen. Sam Speck. R-New
Concord, the third GOP senat or who
supported the bill ea rlier, said hr
had not decided what to do.
Senate Minority Leader Paul E.
Gillmor, R,Port Clinton. satd he
doubts the bill's supporters haw
enou~h votes in the Senate to
override the governor's veto.
Rhodes ' has vetoed only a fev.
items since the !13th General ~
Assembly began. The y indudcoct a
bill requiring the appointment of
deputy voter registrars tn high
schools and some lme items in the
two-year budget bill, all of whicll "
wentunchalienged .

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and oHer you 11 truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and best
wishes.

By
.

plant or curtailing operations.
. Orlett said there are 700 employers of :;oo workers or' more in
Ohio, the only ones covered by the
bill, and " if they closed down
tomorrow, this bill in and of itself
would not bankrupt the fund. ''
The bill was introduced by Orletl
after General Motors' Frigidaire
Division in Dayton shut down la&gt;t
year, res ulting in the layoff of 6,200
employees.
Many of them have exhausted
their state benefits, along with
thousands of others around the state
put out of work by plant closings, he
said.
His bill was approved initially in
the House by a vote of 6H5.
It subsequently cleared the Senate
21-12, with three Republicans joining
18 Democrats in support of the

.

MODULAR
HOMES

OMAHA, Neb. - Michael L. prof·
fit( son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer L.

,: .

You m11st be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian. ·

RILEY

now who would like to learn who
don't have an opportunity to do so,"
he added.
The panel also heard support
voiced by the Ohio Federation of
Teachers for a related bill. It would
strengthen student suspension and
expulsion laws.
In other business, the committee
reconunended for passage a bill
allowing Cleveland schools to hold
classes in July to make up days lost
during an 11-week employees strike.
The measure, sponsored by Sen.
M. Morris Jackson, o.aeveland, lif.
Is a legal requirement that would
have ended the school year June 30.
Also Wednesday night, the state
Department of Education called for
approval of a House-passed bill
designed to bring all school districts
into compliance with the state's
vocational education law.
"The bill is directed toward those
44 districts that are not in com,

"chi'r.
•

BEVERAGES SOlD

OF

1·.

•'

CREATIO·N

g \\\\

.

Discharged-Walter KeMedy, Bel·
ty".. Jokhnson, Ralph RadcUffee,
· J8,1lles Turley, Ruth Mulford,
PI!Yllis Gilkey, Robert Landers,
Louise Myers.

'

4 PC. GROUP
. (1 GAL, 3 GUYS)
FROM ASHLAND, KY.

ESTATE

OEA claims discipline is
'biggest problem' in schools

BOttom.

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY .&amp;SATURDAY
NIGHT

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO

Property
Transfers

-MENU

and only take your medicine when

Conditions more 10 your liking
could nappen for you tnta comIng year because you won't sit
idly by. waiting for sotneone else
to make It so for you. An
Increase In your bank account is
possible as a result .
AQUARIUS (Jon. -ob. 11)
Competitive situations are your
cup of tea today. That old ftgrutn
you will come 10 the fore and
help ~ grab the trophy. Don't
let push get to shove. however .
Find out more of what lies ahead
rOr you In the year foUowlng your
bir1tlday by sending lor your
copy of Astro-Graph Letter . Mall
$1 fOf each to Astro-GrBph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify blr1h
date.
.
PISCES (fob. zo..M.c:h 20)
Once you set yoor mind on a
goal today you 'll be very aggressive abou\ . se«ing it realized,
even though you may have a
m:~gatlve -person trying
to
discourage you.
ARIES (MMch 21· April111 Most
of your ene rQies _t oday will bf'

LEGAL NOTICE
PUBLIC SALE
The following described
collateral will be sold for
cas h at a public sa le at
11 : 00 A .M . on February 22.
1980 at
Sm 1th Nelson
Motors, Inc ., ,soo E. Main
Street, Pom eroy, Oh. Writ·
ten bids mav be submitted
at GMAC at 318 Mai n
Street, B elpre, Ohio. The
seller reserves the right to
bid. 1978 Pontiac. Seri~t
NO. 2U87Z8N 100210. Ac cou nt No. 232-1925·87579.
GENERAL MOTORS
ACCEPTANCE
COR PORAT IO N
121 7, lie

Snow blankets

Benefit planned

FRIDAY NIGHT

20%
. TO
50% oN

r

·'

Weekend At Meigs Inn

SAVINGS
OF

Middleport, o .

,,
;.:

.~

NUESI

N. 2nd Ave.

Bernice Bede Osol

'· 1

Carmel News,
Mr. and ·Mrs. Jim Patterson and
sons, Racine Rd., viSited Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle recently.
Mrs. Elsie Circle and Florence
Circle visited Mr. and Mrs. Garrett
Circle of Racine on a Monday.
Mrs. Ray Johnaon and son of
Eagle Ridge called on Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle a recent Friday.
Mrs. Linda Patterson, Mrs. Elsie
Circle and Florence Circle visited
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Blazer and
famUy of Belpre a recent Sunday.
Betty VanMeter and Eunie
Brinker were at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Carelton and
daughter, Angela Dawn, on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle, New
Haven, was at the home of Mary Circle on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ables
of Bald Knobs on Saturday.
There were :14 present for Sunday
School on Jan. 13.

ASTRO·GRAPH

'

valved in the details of the final acts,
18111JS YOUR lJFE?
The world seems to be as un- they move the action Into sl~w
certain as the weather. The news, motion. Thi8 is to highten the m·
whether local or from the other enda tensity of your attention and inof the world, are cries of un- trigue. If this method is used suecertainty. Such reading adds to our . cessfuily In TV movies, would it not
A shower honoring Debra Lawson own struggles and uncertainties. We be as effective In our everyday
and Raymond Michael was held are unable to find comfort in what living? We cannot afford to continue
recently at the horne of Judy we read. Our Uves may feel Uke the our carefree, irresponsible and
Stewart.
environment In which we live is illogical actions of running through
·A cake decorated In pink and blue nothing more than a giant vise Ufe grabbing what has been tenned
was served with mints, chips, sand- tryulng to crush us Into a particular the "gusto" &lt;:1. Ufe. Such action, I
wiches, and drinks. Attending were shape, a condition which we find our- believe, to be actions of irres)lOD'
Tammy Landers, Robbie Landers, selves with Uttle control. People are slble Christianity. Thi8 is not what
Charlie Landers, Matthew Stewart, seen grabbing what has been Christ meant when He said to all His
Lester Marchand, Joe McCloud, publicized as tbe "gusto" of Ufe, disciples, " As thou didst send Me inDuane Priddy, Bill Priddy, Clarence throwing aside reason and logic.
to the world, so I have sent eilllnto
Lawson, Rerna Lawson, Kevin
What is needed is the ability to slow the world." (Johnl7:18)j
Stewart, Tammy Blake, Jackie
by Pastor Harvey Koch
down. Let me explain.
Syracuse Cluster
Petrie, Arthur Petrie, Bob Petrie,
Have you noticed that when the TV
Aretta Flint, Brenda Petrie and ' movies want yC!U to become more inUnited Methodist Church
Jerry Kirkham.

WINTER
CLEARANCE
SALE

HARRISON, KATHY IHLE, ANGIE

The Eiiiher Circle ·of the
MIAionary Society wlill hatted by

hustle."

1:

Coffee or Milk

Forty-three students at Racine
Elementary School have been
named to the honor roll ,Students
must maintain a "B" or better to be
named to the roll. Students whose
names are In capital letters received
all " .• ;s."
Nalned to the roll were:
Grade One - Jarrod Circle, Jennifer Damron, Janella Gillilan, John
Bill Hoback, ·Shelly WinebreMer,
MAYLA YOACHAM.
.
Grade Two -: Harold Bird, Dennis
Booth, Chris Murphy, Ammy Roush,
SheUy Sawyers, candl Smith, Alisa
Wilford, Shannon Williams, AMY
MANUEL, TRICl.A WOLFE, BREN,
DA ZIRKLE, AIMEE WOLFE.
Grade Three "" Shawn Diddle,•
Chris Jewell, Mark Porter, Melanie
VanMeter.
·
Grade Four - Angie Bostick, An·
neU Clirone, .Patrece Circle, Marty
.Cleland, Tammy Holter, Donnie Rif.
.tie, Tina Sioter, HeatherSalle,r.
·
Grade Five - Matt J~ll, DES:
B~ MURP,HY, RACJiEL REIBER,
?:'IIDIIIY Tllebs, Tammy Wolfe. ·
·. Grade· ~b!'- Lon Adami, Melissa
. Illil; . Ryan Oliver, Kelly Hirer1
.RObbi Savage, B!!cky VanMeter. ·

sentences," Morgenthau said.
The program started Jan. 14. The
target list of 500 offenders has been
compiled, and three men have _been
arrested- two by happenstance and
one who allegedly committed a
burglary while under surveillance.
"These guys run the gamut street robbery, narcotics, larceny,
8BS8ult, rape, burgtsry, w~pons
possession," McCann said. "They're
not specialists. They're criminal opportunists. U you ask them what
they do for a living, they'll say they

Sermonette

' Fob. I
Frldoy;

.J
'

..

.,

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 7, 1980

8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middlep&lt;lrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., 11m~y , Feb. 7, 1980

Layette
Group makes mon-etary contribution shower
planned
'

A donation was made to the March of Dimes and to
Dorothy Lelfheit, "adopted" handicapped lady, for expenses &lt;:1. participating in the J . F. KeMedy special
olympics this spring at the Tuesday night meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary Juniors, Drew Webster'
Post39, Pomeroy.
Meeting at the home &lt;:1. Anna Wiles, the meeting
opened in rituallstlc form. The girls spent the evening
working on the Eighth District Conference to be held in
Pomeroy in April. Mrs. Veda Davis, junior advisor,
reviewed the rules on the conference cover contest.
It was reported that Kim Patterson and Adam Martin are ill and get-well cards were signed for them.
Valentines will be sent to Miss Leifheit, Bill Rovnak ,

Mrs. Jed Webster, Sr., Billy Anderson, and Mrs. Louise
Hawkins.
For the program, the juniors reviewed the history of
America, noting that when Colwnbusstepped foot on
this CO\Ifltry's shore, Uttie did he realize the greatness
of his discovery. Members were reminded that the first
act of the freedom seeking pilgrims was to compose the
Mayflower compact. Then came the Declrara Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution, along with
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address in 11163.
The next meeting will be held on Feb. 18 at the home
of Mrs. Davis, 7 p.m. Miss Wiles served pizza, koolaid
and hot chocolate.

5mall-time. gangsters run
gamut--maybe not anymore
NEW YORK (AP) - An eUte belief that when a trial comes
police squad has been created to around, the victim will be long gone
arrest, and send to prison, Manhat, and unable to testify. McCaM said
tan's "Misfortune 500" - the thugs police will pay to have some victims
who rape and steal and hustle up and return for trials.
down the island, sidestepping
McCaM says the district attorney
punislunent with ease.
will not allow plea bargaining for the
.\~though civil libertarians have
500 targeted criminals, but Manhat·
their qualms, police and prosecutors tan District Attorney Robert
say they are excited about the Morgenthau says plea bargaining
program.
· will not be necessary if the program
"We feel that a significant amount produces enough evidence to make
of crime in the city is done by a very stiff charges stand up in court.
small group of criminals between
"They'll notify us so that we'll
the ages of 18 and 25," said Lt. know if someone comes In on ro~
Terence McCann, executive director bery and the guy has five robberies,
of the management division of the well, they're going to tell us that so
Chief of Detectives' office.
we can tell the court and get stricter
To catch those criminals and help
to convict them, McCaiin9aid, the
police department has devised a
three-point program: -First, a unit
combs police records for the worst
500 offenders. A type of rating is
compiled as the number and types of
crimes are weighted. For example,
Dale Russell of Columbus was
a man who 8BS8ults elderly women
recent visitor of Lincoln Russell.
gets more "demerits" than one who
Lincoln Russell was recent visitor
beats young men.
of his sister, Iva Johnson.
-&amp;cond, 50 officers in a street
Mr. and Mrs. William Grueser of
crime unit will keep the 500 worst ofMinersville were Saturday evening
fenders under surveillance. Officers
visitors of Mrs. Bertha Russell and
will stake out areas where a known
Earl Russell.
offender works In the Mpe of cat·
Bertha Russell and Earl Russell
chlng him committing a crime.
were Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
- Third, when one of the targeted
and Mrs. William Russell of Miner·
individuals is arrested, members of
sville, observing Bertha Russell's
an Investigative team of 25 top of·
92nd birthday.
ficers will work to build a good case,
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp of
seeking corroborating witnesses and
Langsville were Sunday dinner
evidence. Up to now, police relied
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
largely on the testimony of victims.
Smith, Charles, Kevin and Kail
McCann said many of the
Knapp, observing 14th birthday of
criminals pick on tourists in the
Charles and Kevin Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell spent
a few days last week with Mr. and
Mrs. Tom SUmmerfieid, Cl\ndy,
Wendy and Crystal of Medina, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith,
Kanauga, were last Sunday visitors
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball, Colwn- of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith, Kail,
bus, spent a few days with Frances Kevin and Charles.
Young recently.
Mrs. Ardis Waggoner had a hip
operation at Holzer Medical Center Mrs. Gretta Simpson for December
meeting in Baptist Church
and is improving slowly.
Catherine Weaver visited Sunday Fellowship room. Devotions by
In Columbus with ber daughter and Helen Simpson opened with the
hymn, ''0 Come, Ail Ye Faithful."
. family, Mr. and Mrs. James
She used for the topic "l'he Best
· Cheadle.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire attended Gift. " Scripture was from Matthew
1:18,25. A poem "l'he Gift of God's
the camping show at State
Love,
" was read. Prayer was by
Fairgrounds and spent the weekend
Mrs.
Florence
Adams. Mrs. Gretta
with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson and
Simpson,
president,
presided at the
Roblo.
W.Slness
session.
The
program was
Bessie Graham spent a few days
presented
by
Mrs.
Ura
Morris. The
In Charleston, W. Va. visiting her
topic was "Light In Your Darkness."
brother who is In Veterans Hospital.
Scripture was from John 12: 46. The
Rev. and Mrs. David Wtseman,
hymn "l'he Light of the World is
Lima, visited his parents Saturday
Jesus" was sung. Readings were
afternoon, the Roy Wtsemans.
''God's Light," "It W'ill Light Your
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. carr and Mr.
lkme," "l'he Work of Christmas,"
and Mrs. Clarence Cash, Athena, are
''Millions Haven't Heard" and four
spending a week In Florida.
readings oo the Advent. Refresh·
ments were served by the hostess,
8S8isted by her daughter, Mrs.
Lillian Hayman, at a table'
beautifully decorated for Clqistmas.

Wolf Pen
News Notes

Harrisonville
Social News

Racine
Social Events

Subject A, one of the targets, has
been hustling for a long time. He is
23 years old, 6 feet tall and 200 pounds; he hangs around Washington
Square Park In Greenwich Village
with several cohorts, snorting
cocaine and smoking dape,
His first adult arrest was In 1975,
when he was charged with petty larceny, assaul! and possession of
stolen property. The charges were
dismissed. Three months later, he
was charged with robbery, assault
and criminal trespass. The charges
were dismissed.
Since then, he has been arrested
eight times on 17 charges ranging
from narcotics possession to riot to
grand larceny.

Loose goose chase ends happily.
-

WAYNE, N.J. (AP) -The oncenoosed goose is loose without the
noose, but Joyce Shapiro will ·still
know it by the gimp of Its limp.
And so the tale of a 4-month-long
wild goose chase ended happily
Tuesday wben the 5$-year-old Mrs.
Shapiro trapped a Canada goose and
freed it from the plastic wound
around its neck and bead.
"Oh, I was so happy," Mrs.
Shapiro said Wednesday. "I now feel
as free as the bird itself. I've spent
hours with this goose."
Mrs. Shapiro's vigil began·last October when a golfer at the
Packanack Golf Club noticed the
long-necked bird's predicament.
Its black head and neck were
wrapped in plastic from a six-pack
of beer or soda, and the large bird
could not open its beak more than a
quarter-inch, Mrs. Shapiro said. The
plastic collar seemed to frighten
other geese and Isolate the bird from
the hundreds of others feeding In the
area, she said.
"And he wasn't able to eat much,"
she said of the goose, ooe of many
birds at her lakefront home in this
suburban conununity of 49,000
people.
Golfers and bird watchers tried In

By the Day

'WANTS ACCURACY

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Hale Irwin,
the 1979 U.S. Open champion, thinks
golf writers should be more exact
about their reporting.
"I don't drink coffee," the onetime college football stsr said. "It
bOthers me when a reporter writes
that we aat down and talked over a
cup of coffee. It may add some atmosphere to the story, but it simply
is not true."

vain to capture the bird, which stands more than a foot high and weighs
about oo pounds, to free it from the
noose. Game wardens were atuJn.
ped. State officials, contacted
because the Canada goose is protected In New Jersey, advised leaving
the bird alone as long as it could
walk, fly and eat.
Others gave up, but Mrs. Shapiro
would not quit.
Each morning, she scattered
cracked corn In her backyard on
Lake Packenpack. And she built a
gated 6-by 6-foot chicken wire cage
In hopes of catching the bird.
"I was looking out the window
yesterday, when I saw that the goose
was actually sitting all the way In
the cage eating the cracked corn,''
she recalled excitedly.
"I started to pull the string to the
gate, which ran through the window
of my husband's study. Of course,
tbe goose heard me but I climbed out
the window and managed to force
him back. It must have been quite a

• •

Folonlory I, 1110

''

.

.,.,

Plans for a benefit bridge to be
held at Grace Episcopal Church on
Feb. 21 were made at a recent
meeting of Grace Episcopal Churchwomen held at the home of Mrs.
Evelyn Knight.
The benefit bridge, open to the
public, will begin with a 1 p.m. salad
luncheon In the Parish House.
Chairmen are Mrs. Dale Du~n.
Mrs. Edith Reed, and Mrs. Jean
Moore.
.
Speaker for the luncheon meeting ·
was Judge Robert Buck who talked
about his work as a juvenile judge.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
James Titus. Hostesses for the luncheon were Mrs. Knight, Mrs Vincent Knight, and Mrs. Jean Will.

I;

sight."
Afraid to handle the bird without
help, Mrs. Shapiro called her
brother to "goose sit" while she ';.,
drove to the nearby home of Glsets •
Kartsn, a member of the WildUfe
Rehabllitatioo Fund.
"When the wildUfe lady got here, •
she crawled Into the cage and picked ~ .
the goose up. We took it into the
playroom, and I cut the piece of
plastic off. It had kind of grown into
his beak," Mrs. Shapiro said.
The women freed the bird hours
later after feeding it a piece &lt;:1. bread
- likely its first bulky food since encountering the plastic noose.
"He didn't seem afraid," Mrs.
Shapiro said. "He honked Uke geese
do, asifto thank us."
·rl'

SPECI~L

REGIS

..
.,,

PURE ·
ELEGANCE
BY P!DWIN
AT:

"

THE
SHOE BOX

.,

..

Ohio
."'

5 TIL 10

Salad Bar
White Fish
Baked Potato
Vegetable

U you have high blood pressure

you feel bad, you may as well not
take It at all. Your American Heart
Association reminds you: get used to
the idea ct taking your , blood
pressure pills every day, for the rest
of your life. Call your local chapter
for further information.

Roll,
Tea,

7

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE
OF
VASHTI
GRIMM , DECEASED
Case No. 22947
NOTICE t'!F
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Jan uary 17, 1980, in
the M eigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 229.4 7, Bar
bara J . Brutvan, 1123Q
Ironwood
Cou r t,
Cin
cinna 1ir Ohio 45242 was ap ·

pointeo Executri x of the
Grimm,
de.ceased , late of Route 2,
Racine , O h io.

esta te of Vashti

Robert E . Buck

Sarah Bernhardt made
her acting debut in 1861 .
devoted to -doing things 101
others, and you' ll enJOY It Be
careful, nowever, not to let yourself be used.
TAURUS (April 2Q.Mar 20) You
won't be happy today unless
you're wltn those who enjoy the
same activities as you. Avoid the
bossy types, If 111 all possible.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Pmj·
ects around the nouse give you
the most pleasure today, but il
you expect them to come out
wet!, reject well-m88.nlng advtce.
CANCER (JUIM 21-JUIJ 22)
Make It a point to get together
with some fun friends today .
You'll be looking for excitement .
and the best way to find " Is with
them

Ill

P robate Judge
Clerk
31
121 7, 3tc

24,

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Nothing is
too good for your family today .
You'll demonstrate this in every
way you c:an. Take care, howev~
er. not to become overly so li citous regarding the,lr wellare .
VIIIGO (AUg. 23-Sap1. 22) You
won 't walt for things to come to
:;oou today. If what you wanU sn't
happening fast enough, .vou'll
take the bull by the horns and
direct the action yourself.
UBRA (Bep1, 23-0c:1. 23) Trust
your Instincts today to guide you
toward acquiring a material
desire, and to Ignore those
who'd try to sell you a "get-rich quick" scheme.
SCORPIO (0c1. 2........ 22) Bett Pr make plaM tn !)et out ol the

...

$625 Plus. Tax
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
han and rural districts.
Other students are also affected
Ohio Education Association says
discipline is "the biggest problem • by the lack of discipline, Brundige
facing the schools of the state" and
said.
"Kids are afraid to go to school in
there is an urgent need for
the
morning because they fear
legiststion to deal with it.
harassment
from their fellow
Association President Eugene
students.
There
are students right
Brundige of Athens told the Senate
Education and Health Committee
Wednesday night his group is
"solidly behind" a bill sponsored by
Sen. John K. Mahoney, D·
Springfield.
It would, among other ·things, ·
require school boards to adopt a
policy outlining responsibilities and
By Tbe Associated Preos
rights of school employees, students
Snow
half a foot deep In places was
and parents in maintaining
spread from the Great Lakes deep
discipline.
Into Georgia as a winter storm
The bill would authorize the state
pushed into the mid-Atlantic ststes
Board of Education to establish a
Wednesday:
system designed to report, handle
Schools closed and roads were
and prevent school violence and
treacherous
In much of TeMessee,
crimes.
Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia.
Student convicted of assaulting
In South Carolina, 6.3 inches of
school employees would be
snow was measured In Cleveland
prohibited from returning to the
and 4 Inches was reported at
building In which the 8BS8ult took
Woodruff. The highway patrol said
p~.
there were a number of minor acAild it would create an In·
cidents across the state.
teragency Coordinating Committee
That part of Dixie got much the
made up of state agencies and courts
same treatment as Wisconsin,
which deal with disruptive students
where 6 inches of snow fell in Racine
and juvenile offenders.
and an unofficial 9inches was repor,
Assaults on teachers and other
ted at Oster.
school employeeS are Increasing,
As of Wednesday afternoon, the
but the problems of crime and
Milwaukee County sheriff's office
disruption are not confined to big
had counted 65 accidents since the
city·districts, Brundige aaid.
snow began falling Tuesday, in"Thi8 is not an urban problem as
cluding three trucks that jack-knifed
some would have us believe," Brunand blocked traffic. Two persona
dige said. It is also found In suburwere killed in weather-related traf·
fie accidents Tuesday in Wisconsin.
The National Weather Service
reported snow covered much of the
Ohio Valley eastward into the midAtlantic ststes. Heavy ~now warnings were posted for parts of North
.
Carolina, Virginia, Maryl!lnd and
,Ralph Welker, Pearl Welker to southern Delaware.
Ralph
Welker, Pearl Welker,
Up to 4 inches of snow fell as far
....
Parcels, Bedford.
south as Dublin ln central Georgia,
.Paul Manuel, aka Paul L. Manuel with 7 Inches in the northern mounto'Lester P. Manuel, Cert. of Trans.,
tains and 3 inches in the suburbs of
~rt.
Atlanta.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, W. W.
Four to~ inches fell in middle and
Bragg, eta!. to Marvin C. Walker,
western Tennessee and up to 2 inMlni8 H. Walker, 1.1 A., Orange.
ches were reported In northeast
James J . Proffitt, Sherif, Jacob Alabama.
Walters, eta!. to Gordon L. Holter,
The Coast Guard closed 13.7 miles
JiUHolter, OOA., Lebanon.
of the Ohio River along western Ken·
'.lames J. Proffitt, Sheri,ff, Rebec- tucky to loaded barges because of
Cil'Walters, etal. to Edward Fischer,
low water caused by frozen
4() A., Lebanon.
tributaries.
Schools in Nashville and most
middle TeMessee counties were
'' VETERANS HOSPITAL
closed, as were many schools in
4dmitted--Rita
Freeman,
Georgia.
Cl)eshire; Marlene H~. Pomeroy;
A National Weather Service
Willlam Hoschar, Pomeroy; John
forecaster In Nashville said, " we
Harrison, Middleport; Samuel
may have snow again by Friday
P!Ckena, Shade; Cindy Petit, Long
night."

much of Dixie

AU. LEGAL

FINE WEA~ING
APPARAL FOR MEN
AND WOMEN.
'

\

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Open6 Days
. M.·Sat. t: 3ci til$

,

lFHE. MEIGS
INN.
.
'

PIGOTT , DECEASED
C.lsc No. 2294()

·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
nF FIOUCIARY

On January 17, 1980, in
the MEIGS County Probate
Court , Case No. 21940 ,
Donald PigoTt , Route _ 1.
Long BoTtom , Ohio 45143

wa s appointed

E~ecutor

Gov. Rhodes ' veto overridden
by House on jobless benefits

ot

the estate o f Riley Pigott ,
dece ased , la te of Rovte 1.
Lonq Bottom . Oh 10 -45 743
Robert E . Bu ck
Probate Judge
Clerk

11124,311217, Jtc

house today. You're far too resttess and need to be around
stlmUating people who can
sweep the cobwebs and doldrums away.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)
You make such a fine impression
that others want to do nice
things for you today. A jealous
onlooker, however, may have a
few unkind things to say about
Ihie;

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 11) II
won 't be difficult to put Into
immed iate practice anything you
are taught today . Seek out the
teachers who can help develop
your skills.
{NEWSPAPER ENTERf'R~E ASSN I

COLUMBUS, Ohio IAP I - The
House has voted to override Gov.
James A. Rhodes' veto for the first
time since the 113th General Assembly convened in January 1979.
The 63-33 vote came Wednes&lt;!ay on
a bill giving unemployed workers an
extra 13 weeks of jobless benefits.
However, the Senate has yet to act
on the veto, and majority Democrats
there probably will fall short, for
lack 'of needed support from
minority Republicans.
The House tally was three votes
more than the three-fifths majority
of 60 needed in the 99-member cham,
ber.
The matter was postponed in the
Senate, due to absence of President
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, who is
taking a week's rest on doctors' or,
ders. The Senate will not meet in
floor session again untilTuesday .
Two House Republicans, Reps.
Michael Fox, R,Hamilton, and
Charles Ash, R-North Industry,
joined 61 majority Democrats to
override the GOP governor.
Rep. Edward J. Orlett, D-Dayton,
the bill's chief sponsor, disputed
several assertions by Rhodes in the
latter's veto message.
He took issue In particular to an
assertion by the governor that the
proposal could bankrupt the state
unemployment compensation fund.
The Dayton lawmaker said the ex,
Ira 13 weeks, which would not be
paid until a worker exhausted his
nonnal 26 weeks of benefits, would
be charged back to the employer
who laid off workers in closing a

• PROFFnT,ROMOTED

'

I '

•
"

'",..

Prj)ffitt, Rt. 1, Racine, has received
his,first promotion in the U.S. Air

f*ttfJUil'

~~
f1.t ~. ·•

1

Proffitt, promoted to airman, is
asllgned to Offutt Air Force Base,
here, as a vehicle operatorldispat-

••

divorce from BenwOlX.I D. Bick er~ on

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

pliance with the law or standards,"
William L. Phillis, said.
The state currently has authority
to assign such school systems to
vocational districts, with the cost
assessed to the schools' general
revenue fund, he said.
The proposed bill, sponsored by
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville, would allow residents
of such an assigned district to object
through a petition and referendum
procedure.
But barring such a vote, it would
allow the county auditor to apply to
the assigned district the tax levy of
the joint vocational system it joined .

CHUCK WAGON.... .79¢
.,

WITH FRIES ........ ~1 19
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
992,2556

Pomeroy, o.

valentine Love Unes
ASpecial Feature mThe Daily SeuliNI an Vale111iii!'s Day

After

..

wonderful

years of marriage, I' m
still head-over -heels In
love w lfh you!
Walter Z.

To Mom and Dad ...
We couldn't have picked
1 nicer pair of parents In
the world! Have
Happy Valentine's Deyt

•

Mike and Sue

I...--------------~-------------~-----------------------,
WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND BRING lT
1
1
I
I
I
I
I

OR MAIL IT WITH '1.00 BY FEBRUARY 1ZIH 10 THE
DAILY SENTINEl, P. 0. BOX 729, POMEROY, 0.
16 DDS 'l.OG-CASH WITH ORDER

2. _ _ _ __ 3, _ _ _ __ 4, _ _ __
0:1
8.___.__ __
5, _ _ __ 6, _ _ _ __ ],
11. _ _ __ 12..____~10:_-:---9•--:---I
1 13._ _ __ 14. _ _ _,....-- 15. _ _ __ 16. _ __

~~

ALL AMERICAN

'

·see our lot model today.

1,,_ _ __

_____

PHONE 992-2156

~

· · 1100

L:

E ~ Ma111

...

. ~? ·1th.1
~- ~-,....·~ .

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:'

THE DAILY SE.NTINEL

· ··

omt:r "' •,Ohio
~

'

570 W. Main

Tdfl.at~Aaheto~tt~apewl~iA

l

·KINGSBURY ,
- HOME ·sALES

"

charges of gross neglect of duty

·j

'To My Wife, Ann ...

JAMESPROF'FIII'

':' REPORTS FOR DUTY
J:{avy AviatiOn Boatswain's Mate
lst;:Class James G. Proffitt, son of
~nee G. J&gt;roffltt of Box 53,
P0!11and, has reported for duty at
Wlildbey Island Naval Air Station,
oU Harbor, WasiJ. He's also the son
of luth Foreman, Langsville .
~1971 graduate of Southern Local
HiAh School,_Racine, he joined the
Na&gt;vy In August,l971.

MARRIAG ES ENDED
Florence Griggs, Reedw11Ie . and
Jerry W. Griggs, Belpre, filed for
dissolution of marriage in Me1gs
County Common Pleas Court.
Edith A. Bickers was granted a

(Linit 16 Words-Sizes 1austratec1 Balow)

II

eAFHA&amp;VA

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Park St. at 12:52 p.m.
Wednesday for Billie Fink, Jr. , who
had received lacerations in a sleigh
riding accident. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL At
9:15a.m. Thursday, the squad was
called for Helen Shuler, 150 N. Th.ird
Ave. She was taken to the Hol2er
Medical Center Plaza.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

Meets
eOhio Building Codes

Force.

SLEDDING MISHAP
REPORTED

legislation.
At least two of the Republicans
would have to jotn a united
Democratic caucus for an overnde
in the Senate. It a(l'peared that at
least two of the three would vote to
uphold the Republican governor's
veto.
·
Sens. Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
Ashland, and Theodore M. Gray, RColwnbus, said they would sustatn
Rhodes. Sen. Sam Speck. R-New
Concord, the third GOP senat or who
supported the bill ea rlier, said hr
had not decided what to do.
Senate Minority Leader Paul E.
Gillmor, R,Port Clinton. satd he
doubts the bill's supporters haw
enou~h votes in the Senate to
override the governor's veto.
Rhodes ' has vetoed only a fev.
items since the !13th General ~
Assembly began. The y indudcoct a
bill requiring the appointment of
deputy voter registrars tn high
schools and some lme items in the
two-year budget bill, all of whicll "
wentunchalienged .

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and oHer you 11 truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and best
wishes.

By
.

plant or curtailing operations.
. Orlett said there are 700 employers of :;oo workers or' more in
Ohio, the only ones covered by the
bill, and " if they closed down
tomorrow, this bill in and of itself
would not bankrupt the fund. ''
The bill was introduced by Orletl
after General Motors' Frigidaire
Division in Dayton shut down la&gt;t
year, res ulting in the layoff of 6,200
employees.
Many of them have exhausted
their state benefits, along with
thousands of others around the state
put out of work by plant closings, he
said.
His bill was approved initially in
the House by a vote of 6H5.
It subsequently cleared the Senate
21-12, with three Republicans joining
18 Democrats in support of the

.

MODULAR
HOMES

OMAHA, Neb. - Michael L. prof·
fit( son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer L.

,: .

You m11st be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian. ·

RILEY

now who would like to learn who
don't have an opportunity to do so,"
he added.
The panel also heard support
voiced by the Ohio Federation of
Teachers for a related bill. It would
strengthen student suspension and
expulsion laws.
In other business, the committee
reconunended for passage a bill
allowing Cleveland schools to hold
classes in July to make up days lost
during an 11-week employees strike.
The measure, sponsored by Sen.
M. Morris Jackson, o.aeveland, lif.
Is a legal requirement that would
have ended the school year June 30.
Also Wednesday night, the state
Department of Education called for
approval of a House-passed bill
designed to bring all school districts
into compliance with the state's
vocational education law.
"The bill is directed toward those
44 districts that are not in com,

"chi'r.
•

BEVERAGES SOlD

OF

1·.

•'

CREATIO·N

g \\\\

.

Discharged-Walter KeMedy, Bel·
ty".. Jokhnson, Ralph RadcUffee,
· J8,1lles Turley, Ruth Mulford,
PI!Yllis Gilkey, Robert Landers,
Louise Myers.

'

4 PC. GROUP
. (1 GAL, 3 GUYS)
FROM ASHLAND, KY.

ESTATE

OEA claims discipline is
'biggest problem' in schools

BOttom.

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY .&amp;SATURDAY
NIGHT

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO

Property
Transfers

-MENU

and only take your medicine when

Conditions more 10 your liking
could nappen for you tnta comIng year because you won't sit
idly by. waiting for sotneone else
to make It so for you. An
Increase In your bank account is
possible as a result .
AQUARIUS (Jon. -ob. 11)
Competitive situations are your
cup of tea today. That old ftgrutn
you will come 10 the fore and
help ~ grab the trophy. Don't
let push get to shove. however .
Find out more of what lies ahead
rOr you In the year foUowlng your
bir1tlday by sending lor your
copy of Astro-Graph Letter . Mall
$1 fOf each to Astro-GrBph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify blr1h
date.
.
PISCES (fob. zo..M.c:h 20)
Once you set yoor mind on a
goal today you 'll be very aggressive abou\ . se«ing it realized,
even though you may have a
m:~gatlve -person trying
to
discourage you.
ARIES (MMch 21· April111 Most
of your ene rQies _t oday will bf'

LEGAL NOTICE
PUBLIC SALE
The following described
collateral will be sold for
cas h at a public sa le at
11 : 00 A .M . on February 22.
1980 at
Sm 1th Nelson
Motors, Inc ., ,soo E. Main
Street, Pom eroy, Oh. Writ·
ten bids mav be submitted
at GMAC at 318 Mai n
Street, B elpre, Ohio. The
seller reserves the right to
bid. 1978 Pontiac. Seri~t
NO. 2U87Z8N 100210. Ac cou nt No. 232-1925·87579.
GENERAL MOTORS
ACCEPTANCE
COR PORAT IO N
121 7, lie

Snow blankets

Benefit planned

FRIDAY NIGHT

20%
. TO
50% oN

r

·'

Weekend At Meigs Inn

SAVINGS
OF

Middleport, o .

,,
;.:

.~

NUESI

N. 2nd Ave.

Bernice Bede Osol

'· 1

Carmel News,
Mr. and ·Mrs. Jim Patterson and
sons, Racine Rd., viSited Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle recently.
Mrs. Elsie Circle and Florence
Circle visited Mr. and Mrs. Garrett
Circle of Racine on a Monday.
Mrs. Ray Johnaon and son of
Eagle Ridge called on Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle a recent Friday.
Mrs. Linda Patterson, Mrs. Elsie
Circle and Florence Circle visited
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Blazer and
famUy of Belpre a recent Sunday.
Betty VanMeter and Eunie
Brinker were at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Carelton and
daughter, Angela Dawn, on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle, New
Haven, was at the home of Mary Circle on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ables
of Bald Knobs on Saturday.
There were :14 present for Sunday
School on Jan. 13.

ASTRO·GRAPH

'

valved in the details of the final acts,
18111JS YOUR lJFE?
The world seems to be as un- they move the action Into sl~w
certain as the weather. The news, motion. Thi8 is to highten the m·
whether local or from the other enda tensity of your attention and inof the world, are cries of un- trigue. If this method is used suecertainty. Such reading adds to our . cessfuily In TV movies, would it not
A shower honoring Debra Lawson own struggles and uncertainties. We be as effective In our everyday
and Raymond Michael was held are unable to find comfort in what living? We cannot afford to continue
recently at the horne of Judy we read. Our Uves may feel Uke the our carefree, irresponsible and
Stewart.
environment In which we live is illogical actions of running through
·A cake decorated In pink and blue nothing more than a giant vise Ufe grabbing what has been tenned
was served with mints, chips, sand- tryulng to crush us Into a particular the "gusto" &lt;:1. Ufe. Such action, I
wiches, and drinks. Attending were shape, a condition which we find our- believe, to be actions of irres)lOD'
Tammy Landers, Robbie Landers, selves with Uttle control. People are slble Christianity. Thi8 is not what
Charlie Landers, Matthew Stewart, seen grabbing what has been Christ meant when He said to all His
Lester Marchand, Joe McCloud, publicized as tbe "gusto" of Ufe, disciples, " As thou didst send Me inDuane Priddy, Bill Priddy, Clarence throwing aside reason and logic.
to the world, so I have sent eilllnto
Lawson, Rerna Lawson, Kevin
What is needed is the ability to slow the world." (Johnl7:18)j
Stewart, Tammy Blake, Jackie
by Pastor Harvey Koch
down. Let me explain.
Syracuse Cluster
Petrie, Arthur Petrie, Bob Petrie,
Have you noticed that when the TV
Aretta Flint, Brenda Petrie and ' movies want yC!U to become more inUnited Methodist Church
Jerry Kirkham.

WINTER
CLEARANCE
SALE

HARRISON, KATHY IHLE, ANGIE

The Eiiiher Circle ·of the
MIAionary Society wlill hatted by

hustle."

1:

Coffee or Milk

Forty-three students at Racine
Elementary School have been
named to the honor roll ,Students
must maintain a "B" or better to be
named to the roll. Students whose
names are In capital letters received
all " .• ;s."
Nalned to the roll were:
Grade One - Jarrod Circle, Jennifer Damron, Janella Gillilan, John
Bill Hoback, ·Shelly WinebreMer,
MAYLA YOACHAM.
.
Grade Two -: Harold Bird, Dennis
Booth, Chris Murphy, Ammy Roush,
SheUy Sawyers, candl Smith, Alisa
Wilford, Shannon Williams, AMY
MANUEL, TRICl.A WOLFE, BREN,
DA ZIRKLE, AIMEE WOLFE.
Grade Three "" Shawn Diddle,•
Chris Jewell, Mark Porter, Melanie
VanMeter.
·
Grade Four - Angie Bostick, An·
neU Clirone, .Patrece Circle, Marty
.Cleland, Tammy Holter, Donnie Rif.
.tie, Tina Sioter, HeatherSalle,r.
·
Grade Five - Matt J~ll, DES:
B~ MURP,HY, RACJiEL REIBER,
?:'IIDIIIY Tllebs, Tammy Wolfe. ·
·. Grade· ~b!'- Lon Adami, Melissa
. Illil; . Ryan Oliver, Kelly Hirer1
.RObbi Savage, B!!cky VanMeter. ·

sentences," Morgenthau said.
The program started Jan. 14. The
target list of 500 offenders has been
compiled, and three men have _been
arrested- two by happenstance and
one who allegedly committed a
burglary while under surveillance.
"These guys run the gamut street robbery, narcotics, larceny,
8BS8ult, rape, burgtsry, w~pons
possession," McCann said. "They're
not specialists. They're criminal opportunists. U you ask them what
they do for a living, they'll say they

Sermonette

' Fob. I
Frldoy;

.J
'

..

.,

�10- TI1e Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomer oy, 0., Thursday , Feb. 7, 1980

11- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb . 7, 1900
DICK TRACY

Your Best B1tys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIG S COUNTY ,
OHIO
P ROBATE 011/ISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Ad
m inistratriK of the Estate

of
Ida
M.
Deceased/
Pl ai n i ft

Chr i stie

vs .
EDNA N. WOOD ,

Defendants .
No. 22 704

NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYLOR ,
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43, SIBBERT,
WEST 1/IRGINIA ; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD ·
MINISTRATORS, EXEC
UTORS AND ASSIGNS , IF
ANY , OF EACH OF THE
FOLLOWING : IDA M
CHRISTIE, DECEASED ,
DOUGLAS
YOUNG ,
DECEASED : RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE
D; GLADYS GOEGLEI N,
DECEASED ; DELLA RIF ·
FLE,
DECEASED ,
FLORENCE
HENRY ,
DECEASED ;
DAI/ID
KING , DECEASED ; BER
NARD
KING ,
DECEASED; HAROLD
Kl NG, DECEASED ,
LENA
DOERFER ,
DECEASED A.K .A. LANA
OORFER , DECEASED:
OTHO
YOUNG ,
DECEASED ;
LAURA
KNAPP ,
DECEASED ,
HENRY DOERFER ,
DECEASED ;
OLEN
DOERFER , DECEASED ;
DAYTON
YOUNG ,
DECEASED ;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIELS ,
DECEASED ; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
FRED
KING ,
DECEASED ; SAMUEL J
CHRISTIE, DECEASED ;
AND
THOMAS
F
TAYLOR DECEASED.
Plaintiff has brought this
ac ti on naming you as
defendants in the above
named court by f iling her
complaint on November

13th . 1979. The Complaint

rec ites t hat each of you is
possibly an he i r -at -law and
nex t of kin of Ida M
Ch r ist ie, Deceased ; that at
tt1e time of her death Ida
M . Christie was se i zed of
t he entire interest of the
re al estate desc r ibed in the

Fl RST COUNT of the Com

pla int, whi ch said real
es tate is described as
follows :
Situate in the County of
Me i9s, in the State of Ohi o
and 1n the Township of Bed ·
ford, and bounded and
described as follows :.
Beg inning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of

the..&gt;Outheast quarter of

Secti on No. Seven, Town
No . Three and Range No .
Thirteen of the Ohio Com pany 's Purchase ; thence
Nor th f eu- enough so that by
running due West to the
center of the State Road;
thence along the center of
said road to the section
line ; thence East to the
place of beginning so that it
shall contain thirty acres,
but subject to a Illegal high ways .
The
aforesaid
described real estate be ing
the same real estate con veyed by William Smith ,
Jr . to Lucetta Smith by
deed bearing date of the
187~

of

Seplember

and recorded in Vol .'

-45, ,..ages 607 and 608 of the

records of deeds in the
Recorder 's Office of Meigs
County , Ohio.
And being the .J same
property conveyed ov Guy
A . Smith, Executor of the
Estate of Lucetta Smith,
Deceased , to Samuel J .
Christie and
Ida M .
CHristie by deed dated
June 1, 1925, and recorded

in Book 127, at Page -448 of

the Deed Records of Mei gs

County Ohio .
EXCEPTING one-fourth

of an acre more or less con ·
veyed by Ida M . Christie to
Cecil c . Heilman and A llen
C. Heilman by deed recor -

ded in 1/ol . 247, Page 483

Deed Records , Meigs Coun ·

ty , Ohio .
In SECOND COUNT Ida

M . Christie was seized of
the undivided one -fourt h
part of the following
described real estate :
The following described
r eal estate situated in the
51ate of Ohio, in the County
of Meigs and in Salisbury
Township : It being near

the middle of the South half
of lh.e North llil]LoL Section

No . l8, Town No . 2 in Range
13 Ohio Company 's Pur ·
chase and on the South line
of said South half of the
North half and beginning at
th e Northwest corner of
James A . Young 's 36 acre
lot ; thence north 2'h Deg .
East 7 chains and 75 links

to the county road ; thence
Sout h oil Deg . East 5chains

and 40 links along said
road ; thence South 68 Deg .

Easl1 chai n and f41inks to

Finnan Smith 's West line ;
thence South 2 112 Oeg . West
3 chains and 40 links to his
Southwest corner ; thence
West to the pla ce of begin ·
n ing , containing fwo acres
more or less.
1
Al so, th e following r eal
esta te situated in Section

No. 18{ Town 2 and Range
13 of he Ohio Company 's

Purchase and described as
. fo llowst- _to -w it : Beginni ng
at the :)QUthwest corner of
George Young 's lot in said

5e&lt;:llon ;

lhence South

8

rods and 7 feet ; thence

East 19 rods ; thence North
8 rods and 7 feet; thence
West 19 rods to the place of
beQinnlng, conta iniOg one
acre .

Also, the fofl owinJI real

estate situated In Section

No. 18, Town 2 and Range
No. 12 of the Ohio Com -

pany's Purchase and boun ded and described as
follows~ to -wlf : Beg inning

at

G~orge

U W!Xds or Under
Cash
(.'b arge
1 day
1.00
1.2$
2 days
1.50
1.90
J days
l.liO
2.25
3. 00

Young's

Southeast corner in said

section ; thence East 21
rods to ttl• road1thence in
a w..sterly dlre,ctlor\ along
said road 15 rOds and 10
feet 1 thence west 20 rods ;
thence 15 rods and 10 feet to
the place of beginning, con ·
talnlng 2 acres.·.
Also. the . following
descrl~d real estate in
Sallsburl Township, Meigs
Countv, Ohio, Beginning at
a stone corner East 70.545
rods of the Northwest cor·
ner of yV. s . Wills 69'12 acre
lot n&lt;!ar a willOW 1ree about
JO 1riches fn 'diameter 1
thence Spoth 8.&amp;5 rods to a

Pets for Sale

Notices ·
GUN SHOO T EV E RY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONL Y. RAC IN E
GU N CLUB .
GUN

SHOOT .

Rac in e

Volunt eer
Fire
Dept .
E very Sa tur d ay . 6:30 p.m .
A t th eir buildingin Bashan.
Factor y chok e gun s only .

3.7$

Each word uver the minimum
15 words 1.s 4 cents per word per

Et a I.,

day

WANT AD
CHARGES

6days

2080 Gree nw ich Road
Wads wo r th , Oh io 44281

15th .

·..-------.....,

day. Ads runnin~ other tha n consecutive days Wlll be charged at
the 1 Lilly rate.

GUN SHOOT everv Sundav
12 :00. Factorv choke onlv .
Corn Hollow Gun Club ,

In memory, Card of Thank.!
and Obitua ry : 6 cen~ per word ,
f3 _00 minimum . C'...~:~sh in ad-

Rutl a nd . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

vance.

ATTENT I ON :
{IM ~
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

Mobile Home sales and Yard
sales .11re act.-epted only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge

pay cash or certified check
for ant iques and col lec t ibles or entire estates.
Noth ing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614-

for ads carrying Boll Number In

Careof TheSentinel.

The Publishe r reserves the
right to edit or rejed any ads

deemed

objectiona l.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet .
Healthy , shots, wormed .
Donations requ ired. 992·
6260, noon-7 p .m .

AKC Registered St . Ber·
nard pups, 6 weeks old . 985·

3867 .
1
.
• MALE Pek1nese, house
: br oken. 11f:z years old , all
shots. Sell or trade of equal
value . 304·882·2810.

Auto Sales

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COl NS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
{ANY
AMOUNT) . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY . SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN'S .

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

I

PAY

highest

prices

possible for gold and silver
·' coins, r ings, jewel r y, etc .

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Monday
Noon on Saturday

INCOME

TAX

service,

Federal and State. Wallace

lhruFr!day

Russell ,
7228 .

4 P.M.
the day befo~ publication

Sunday
4 P.M.

Bradbury .

992·

HEARING AID USERS:

Friday afternoon

'--------

save used batteries, mercury and silver oxide,
redeem for cash. Diles
Hear i ng
Aid
Center ,

A then•. Tel. 614·594·3571.

In Memory
IN MEMORY of our loved
one, Charles L. Wyatt, who
we lost in an accident 2
yea r s ago today, February
6.
We cannot hear your frien ·
dly voice,
That used to fill the room
Or any f leet echo that

might
Penetrate the gloom
We canot seem to reach
your hand
Or see your w i stful face
Not even in the Magic
flames

That light the fireplace.
And yet, somehow wi t hin
ourselves
We tee I your presence near
And in our loneliness we
wish
That you were really here!
Sadly missed by wife,
Margaret, children, Clif ford, Terry, Bret, Helena,
Dora and Jane, also grand·
children.

WILL FILL out income
tax, Federal (short form

only) and State, both for
$10. Fast service. Teresa
block from swimming pool,
after 6 p.m .

LOST: black , while, tan
beagle , male , wearing
col lar. Scar on face . 992·

5864.

1-I ~=========...j
stake East of a double
chestnut abOut 3 feet in
diameter ; thence South
101!1 degrees west 6.94 rods
to a stake 1 foot South of
white oak 4 feet i n
diameter; thence South
591;4 Oeg. West 8.33 1/ :J rods
to a stake 3 feet East of a
chestnut tree ; thence South

49'1, Deg . West6.212 rods to

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 1011 on largest

end . $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. SlOper ton. Delivered

OLD

FURNITURE,

ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M .D.
M
iller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
call992·7760.

ANTIQUES,

FUR ·

NITURE ,

china,

glass,

anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney , antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .

62.483 rods containing 7
acres 25square rods.
Also, beginning at a stone
at the Southeast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
feet from said sugar tree 6
ln . in diameter ; thence in
an Easterly direction
following said road about

24.84 rods to Ida Young's 2

acre lot ; thence west 20.84

North

to

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

135, Page 241 Deed Recor ·
dstMeigs County, Ohio.
he obi eel of the Com ·

plaint is to sell the interest ·
of Ida M . Christie in each

parcel of real estate In or·
der to pay the debts of the
estate and cOsts of ad ·
ministering the estate .

Plaintiff demands the
real estale described In the
FIRST COUNT be sold;
that the entire Interest In

Ranger XL T , blue and
white, excellent condition,
V-8, automatic, air, P.S.,
P.B ., low mileage, white

ispoke wheels , rust
proofed . $6500. 992·2369.

P.B., $4950 . 7 p.m. until
midnight or before 10 a.m .

742·2395.
1953 Pontiac, 2 Farmall

tractors. 1972 F·600 Ford
truck. 38071oader. 974 440· B
John Deere skidder . To·20

Ferguson ' s .

3

block

sawmill. 1953 GMC Ph ton

truck. 1949 Chevv 1 ton
truck. 985·3S90.
1975 Bronco 4X4, V·8, AT,
P.S., posl ·traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. -4 new

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

the eligibility list at 992·
2156or992·2157 .
RN OR LPN, full time. 3·
ll:JO and lllo 7:30. Port
time RN or LPN, t1 to 7:30.
Call Mr. Zidian at Pomeroy

742·2316, evenings.

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY {OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING.
GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD,
Rl NGS,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SilliER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD HIGH, HONEST,
UP· TO· DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT , OH . OR CALL
992·3476.

Yard Sale

AL iob opening at local
business. Initially part·
time; may develop Into

(boys .

girls,

men's,

odds and ends. Some free
items l!lnd free coffee. Sl!lle

and

You are required to an -

notice which will be
pub I ished once each week
for six successive weeks

and the last publication will
be made on the 7th . day of
February, 1980.

player, tape layer, records,
held

at

against you for the relief
demanded in the com -

plaint .

Robert E. Buck
Judge and E• ·Oiflcio Clerk
Common Pleas Court

Larry

O'Brien

residence, turn left at first

lane past Racine Locks and
Dam , 2nd house on right .
w~tch for signs.

In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise

respond as permitted by
the Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure within lhe lime
stated ,
\· udgment
by
default wi 1 be rendered

g;&gt;7 s~cn&gt; 3, 10. 11, 24, 31,

Fitzpatrick Orchard,
689 .

SR

power

- · buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
DECORATED CAKES for
all

occasions.

Character

cakes and sheet cakes . Call
992·6342 or 992 ·2583 .

DIS 0 NT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Ser11ice

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

Sentinel, c·o P.O. Box 72'1

boots. Children's
Adults $29.00.

515.50 .

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367 ·0292.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

evenings.

RUTLAND HARDWARE,
822 Main St., Rutland. 742 ·
2255. 4 only coal and wood
heaters with blower, US

Stove Co., $400. One only
King·O·Heal coat heat, 75
lb. capacity, $182. Taking
orders for coal and wood

munition .
Two
4-foot
flourescent lights w ith 2
tubes each, like new. 992-

3061.

1970 Mark Twain \/·hull, 16
foot with 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call after 5 p.m., 992·2528 .

Real Estate for Sale
MOBILE HOME, one· half
acre land, septic system,

water system. 54,000. Call
or
992 ·3589,
992·2720
0' Brien and Crow Really.

college or 2 years of sales.
If you qualify call Lee E .
Tyler at {6141 446·-1367, for
a

confidential

interview.

An equal opportunity em·
player. Reg . No. 74·02·4728.

perience necessary . Phone

992·2480.
APPL I C.ATIONS

being

taken for two law enforcement
officers in

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS
FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

216 E. Se~!"'d Str..i
bedroom starter home
with central heating and
rural water. Has 4 lots
in town l!lnd on Ohio
Power. Nice home with

large lot for 528,500.
PRII/A:(E - Country
location

with

bedrooms,

nice

bath,

2

acres. $12,000.
INCOME- and home. 3
bedroom apartment up
and 3 large business
rooms down with extra

lot tor parking. Natural
gas,

city

water,

and

Ohio
Power.
Only
$27,500.
.
1/ACANT LAND - 75
acres with W"'"1er, gas,
and eiP;;.(\\S) closeby.

Can be o ':1-1 ,,ed Into A ~
frame suodivlslon. Ask·

1970 \lindale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x603 bdr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr. ·
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304-67S·4424.

BORN LOSER

REDUCED -

1·22-lfc

Garage
mile off Rt, 7.by-pass ,

on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

AUTO &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
·I

carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 . 446·2359 after 6.
STORY

house,

9

rooms, 11h baths, garage.

College Rd., Syracuse: Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.
FARM FOR SALE. Barn
and building. Good land .
Mineral rights. 36 acres.
Pomeroy area . Phone 992·

7559.
SEVEN room house, 862
Pearl St., Middleport, OH.
992-3341.
7 room house, Racine, 3

bedrooms, 1'12 baths, with
full basement. Large rot,
utility building . 992·3738.

men!,

acr~

lot west of

Rutllmd, 4 acres near
Pomeroy , ani::l 3 acres

near Portland.
·
BUILDING LOTS many

locations,

In

SileS

and prices. If you are
going to build, call us.
MORTGAGE MONEY
IS HARD TO GET BUT
IF YOU WANT TO BUY
DR SELL, WE MAY
HELP. CALL992·3325 or
992·3876.

Housing
Headquartets

ou~!~~ H~!!A!!

MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1112 bath, garage.
527,000 .
ROCK SPRINGS -2 bedroom and bath, fully equipped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fullv furnish·
ed. $25,000.

RUTLAND - one bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a little paint &amp; paper.
19,900.
SYRACUSE -6 room house on nice lot. 111,600.
5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot. S7,doo..
·
MIDDLEPORT - Building lot on S. Second, 63'X53'.
$4,500.

CALL ~92•2342

, Bill Childs, ·Branch Mgr., Home ~~l.~44!1
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992·3731
.

OHIO ·

+AKQ3

YOU MUST TRY

··· I KNO'I&lt; HOW MUCH
PRESSURE YO!JUE
~EEN UNDER FROM
YOUR COUNTRYMEN

Reasonable Rates
"Doo't CUSS·Ciu"Us,; ''

TO GO ALONG WITH
THe PRICE HIKE$ ...

~ALN

car

garage .

needs some repairs but
a good buy"' $16,500.00.
PRICE REDUCED- 5
rQOm house In town, 2

bedrooms, utility room,
private parking space,
would make • good ren·
tal al$9,000.00.
REDUCED 9 big
rooms, 5 bedrooms, part
basement, central heat
and air cond ., flh baths,
brick and frame, sPiral
staircase,

and

(

•

US

EVER
K NO~

KN OWING ~ ~ IS
E~OUGH ···

THE

Af'.t-a"NER

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

TOTAL WI? DOM OR PERFECT
BEAUTY··· WE CA NNOT STOP

West

Nortb

East

STRIVING FOR THEM SECAUSE

Obi.

THE Y ARE UI'IATTAINAB !..E "'

Pass

2 NT
5t

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pa~

TO THAT~::::::::--)

Soutb
I+
4 NT
6+

Q

Scissors.

IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been canyour
celled?
Lost
operator's license? Phone
992·21.:1.
IN STOCK for immediate

delivery: various slles of

pool kits. Do·lt·vourself or
let us Install for vou. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.
BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
9~9-24117 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

GASOIJNE AiLEY

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

Glomp'd trac~
,.

Joel,

em

I think it
I·WOUIICI be

down!

Best thin' is t' make a stan'
riqht here on familiar
qroun'!

better

away
from
here!

and

ACROSS

1 Bluenose
5 Premise
10 Stringed

11 Garland
13 Gaelic
14 Types
15 Ovine

Torch~

Free

. .. - - - - .. .~L~0~U~E~
S~S~~~O~U~C~A~N~~hv.~~~~~/~TH~IS~IS~A~4-A1EAN A55(1ME THAT .
FIZINGE ~ENE F IT I
WHILE...
YOU 'VE 00T A
DIDN'T COUNT ON !
KEY TO IT
HAVEN'T YOU ?

AND

/NS/6

e;o

~NDY
WE

TO ER
APARTMENT
FOR DINNER
TONIGHT/

OUR LI TfLE 61RL
IS BECOMING
qUITE DOMESTIC 1
IS N'T SHE "?

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win st
Bridge, .. care of this newspaper, P. 0. Bpx 489, Radio City
Station , New York, N. Y.
10019.)

U Licit
C3 Artist
Warhol

DOWN
1 West
Pointer

2 Bucolic
3 What's the
difference?

utterance
16 Fowl

WINNIE

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~~-"ttt
br JHOMAS JOSEPH
Instrument

to take

from North. However, South.
counted only 19 points and
opened one club. Naturally,
West doubled and North bid
two notrump which in their
partnership was a limit raise
in clubs, i .e., 9 to 11 points and
five or more clubs. South, by
thtS trme, discovered an extra
queen and Blackwooded .
The opening heart lead was
won in the closed hand with
the ace and trumps were
drawn in three rounds .
Declarer decided West's vulnerable double must include
the ace-queen of diamonds as
only I 0 high-card points were
missing. If Weot also had four
or mor~ spades, a likely possi·
bility, South saw a way to
make his slam.
South cashed the king of
hearts and played three more
rounds of trumps.
On the fifth and sixth
trumrs _South pitched his two
smal d1amonds. West was in
a quandary on the last trump.
II he pitched a spade declarer 's fourth spade would be the
12th trick. Accordingly, he
prtched the diamond queen.
South led a small diamond to
his king and West's ace.
Dummy's jack of diamonds
was now established and the
spade ace was the entry to
cash it.
West was really unhappy.
He realized that if he had
originally led a spade, declarer wouldn't have been able to
make the slam by this unusual
squeeze.

4 Mild oath

Yesterday'&amp; Allswer

5 A must
creature
wilh lox
17 ln9ect
1 About
18 Building part 7 - Angelo,
19 Porker
Texas
ZO Make edging 8 Ex-wombmate
21 Dregs
9 Arranged
Z3 Tiny bit
In series

a

11 Listen to Z8 Famous
ZZ Fish
composer
Z3 Spoil
:ro Michelangelo
U Venerated
work
25 The Santa 3% Grammy, e.g.

Maria

33 Slow
38 Put on the -

WBB one

39 One kind
of horse

%6 Cheap

U Took proper U Import

cigar : sl.

measures
Z&amp;Snake •
2'7 ArleneZ8 Kibbutz

dance
Z9 Rich rock

foodoo,h••JiriH

Services Offered

38 Bland
31Seatfor""

PIANO expert In·
structlon In most plano
style. House calls. 15c per
mlle. For appointment, call ~:
. 992·7275.
.
.

many

other extras. Call for
details I
RIVER FRONTAGE 1 acre, 3 bedroom double wide, 2 baths, 10x26
fl. deck, wood burning
stove, fireplace, a 2
bedroom mobile home
which rents for S150.00 a
month. All this for
$35,000.00.
WANT TO BUILDP Here Is 2 acres, all
utilities Installed, nice
level location. Call for
Information.
LOOKING
FOR
ACREAGE? - We have
Itt JO acres, 1 tillable,
some building sll.es,
mostly fenced, lots of
road frontage for
113,900.00.
SHOULD BE SOLD Owner w•nts action
now •. price reduced to
~.500 plus , Inventory,
"The Kiddie ShC)ppe".
Cleland Rutty, the only
name you nied to know
when buying and selling
...alestatet
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussill f49·2UO ·
Roger &amp; DoHit Tumtr
742-2474
OFFICE I'HONI!I
.99H2Sf

THI! STARS ···

OF

COUCD IMAGiiNE A STICK

I'll TH ONLY ONE END. ~eMTR UE '+IIGDOM LIES IN

SOT AS WITH

A misbid through miscounting values or not hearing the
auction properly usually leads
to disaster. In today's hand
however, declarer miscounted
his high-card points and later
bragged about it.
Six clubs is a fine contract.
It only depends upon a win·
nlng guess in diamonds.
Although both diamond honors
are offside in the diagrammed
hand, declarer was able to
make the contract by an unusual end play against West.
If South knew he had 21
points he would have opened
two notrump, silencing West
and eliciting three notrump

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make service
calls.

House

THe SAHO AND

Wll.. L

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2'151. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

NEW LISTING
6
room house and bath,
partial basement. New
1500 gal. septic tank. Ap·
prox. ~ acre lot, well
plus L.C.C.D. water. 2

U5 .

WHEN WE AAA65
HAD NOTHING BUT

I

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

. WALL PAPERING
Painting. 742·2328.

POMERO.Y, 0 .
992·2259

UH DERS TA~O

TO

Opening lead:¥

estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211.

r

• 8 72

+10 6 5
SOUTH

•As
+K6 5

'ANNIE

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning.

608 E.

+J98742
WEST
EAST
• J 10 8 3
• 972
· .QJIO 9 2
• 7 543

U I Pool 011'

Phone 992·2390

cleaned.

2-7-80

+KQ65

MiddlepOrt, 0.
Automotive Repair
Open 9·• Mon.thru Sat.
Additional Hours
By APPOintment

Steam

HOOKED PRAYER

They called hirn the .. cream " of fighters
because he always gal th is- "WHlPPED"

NORTH

+ AQ 9 4

1·18· (p0. )

4·30 ·1fc

TWO

I Answer -

WHOOP

+A 4
• !\ 6
• J 10 3

.....

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

baths, central heal, and

wooded, some cleared/
27 or 14 acres near Forked Run Park, 5 wooded
acres near Nease Settle·

SIJC!WW TO THe;; TOP CK
MY 1-lf'.AD!

CALL 992-7544

rural water. 1 level acre
with large trees and

sparkling brook. Now
only $2'1,500.
ACREAGE Some

HMl,llU~ 16- OOTHl~,J.\'1' &amp;J&lt;.
~ I 'IJ/&gt;6 '((:;IW. ~I IT

949·2862

Newer 3

3'12 YR.
• miles trom
Pomeroy. Quiet country living In this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath with central heat and air condl·
tion. over 3 acres of flatland with a split rail fence.
garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.

'

I I I )"

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Pomeroy, 0.

bedroom home with l'h

MIDDLEPORT- Two bedroom brick only I block
from center of town . Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.

Mobile Homes· Sale

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

ing $334 per acre .

Send resume to City Hall,
Pomeroy, OH .

Apply in prson.

"(

BRIDGE

Hours 9·1 M., W., F.
Other times by apPOint·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

All work guaranteed.

gas

F.A, furnace, Leading
Creek water tap. on llh

POMEROY- Lincoln HIS. 2 bedroom, bath, large·
living room, full basement, new furnace. 117,500.

plicatlons for waltresses,
no e)(perience necessary,

cleaning and painting.

14

Jumbles· LUCID

Yesterday's

,lARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

All types roof work, new
or reJ)illr gutters and
downspouts,
gutter

or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

NEW LISTING- Nice2

Po.meroy . Must have high
school diploma . Should
have basic law schooling.

BLUE TARTAN. Mid·
dleport taking ap·

Now arrange the cirded leners 10
form the surprise answer. as suggesled by the above cartoon .

Prlntanswerhere :

·
F'NANCING
Feder.t Housing &amp;
1/elerans Admin. Loans .

COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond for swimming

District
Marketing
Manager, PO Box 416,
Athens, OH 45701 . Phone
592·5748.

have a minimum of 2 years

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

convertible or portl!ble
dishwasher. Like new, excellent condition . 1 year

TWO WEATHER goals, 8
mo. old . $15 ea . . 742 ·2316

III

I

T'TALI&lt;.I

REAL ESTATE

HARVEST gold Whirlpool

old . $150. 992 5348 .

DRIZAL

rJ

IHAT

HE HAD M ISTAKEN
FOFe SOI.ID GOI.D.

WfLLIN6

12-28-pd.

Roger Hysell

Phone 992·7201 or 992·330'1.

FIREWOOD, dry har ·
dwood, S30 load . Tire
c;hains, 5 inch top condition,
$25. Mixed hay, square
bales, 75c.

perience. Applicant must

I

BILl'S AUTO
REPAIR

hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available .

your business. Establish
your agency on a part time
or full time basis . No prior
experience required . We
provide train ing,
you
provide ambition. Call, or
write,
Don
Weidner,

WELL -ESTABLISHED

m -n14

12·13·2 mo. pd .

WILL HAUL limestone and
grovel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7~2-2-ISS.

MOTORIST INSURANCE

business college is taking
applications for a good,
mature
admissions
representative
n
the
Gallipolis and surrounding
area. Salary based on ex-

s P.M. 992·5547

After

~OMS'THING

(Answers tomorrow)

CONDITIONED

with shelves that will hold
300·400 boxes of am ·

bedroom

Rid ing Lessons and Horse
care products. Western

Pomeroy

SUPPOSE He WON'T~ He
COULD PLAY HIDE!·ANP. ~EEl&lt;.
WITH YA ALL Ni6HT IN
THe"E WOOl&gt;"!

IHifJHT BE

FINANCING·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHAiE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS.
614·592-3051.

GOOD

with 2 tubes. 1 gun rack,
holds 4·5 rifles or shotguns

A

RACINE,O.
949·2741or

Free Estimates

&gt;.:·3795
1·30·1 mo.

IIUT NOW WE'JI:E P~T THe MARSHY

GROUND IJEAR T~E- CII:!£K.4\NP THI:

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Business Services

G, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

harness .

ponies . Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290 . Barding and

Guaranteed Work

WON'T 8E
liASY FINDINl
'EM- THAT'S
FOR SURE-! IIUT
MAY&amp;t; IF CHRI6
TRU~TS ME, HE-

TliSJiR'5 PRINT6 FADE OUT HERE!

Real Estate for Sale

ONE 8ft. flourescentlight

1972 LYNN HAllEN 14x65 3

and

statements, all federal
and state forms.

'IOII'RI! POIIJ' ISREAT 50 FAR, EASY!

WHEN HE 5TOI.E'

I KJ

CAPTAIN EASY

and

!FREE ESTIMATES.
Reduced Winter Rates

Block Work
Concrete Finishing

618 E . Mroin

walks

drfvew•ya .

Brick Work

992 ·2133 .

resume
with
recom ·
mendations to The Daily

Send

HOOF HOLLOW; English
and Western. Saddles and
Horses

Siding

Blil 5 Mon. thru Fri.
Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30-pd.

complete

cy
required,
some
bookkeeping experience

Pets for Sale

Meigs County, Ohio
Probate Division

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Beslfor
apple butler. Call 669·3785,

LARGE utility tool chest
for pickup. Also set of
metal racks. See at 400
Lasley St., Pomeroy, DH.

full ·lime. Typing proficien·

BABYSITTER needed. 992·
6233 after 6.

swer the complaint within
twenty &lt;&gt;ight davs after the
last publication of this

made

669·

1963 DUMP truck, $1000.
1972 International backhoe,
58000. 949·2042 .

chance to build and OWN

provided and for such
other relief as to which she
mav be entitled to.

case

Wilkesville,

SECRETAR I AL·CLE RIC ·

S ~ curve

women's, all in various
sizes and some brand new),
kitchenware, toys, shoes,
purses, coats, r.ecord

such

Phone

work,

Payrolls, profit &amp; loss

3785.

cook stove. $199.95.

es t ate

in

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, Slate Route 689.

Health Care Center, Mon·
day through Friday, 9·5.

in excellent condition.
Sheets, bedspreads, cur·
tains,
dried
flower
arrangements, clothing

described

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Ma in St.. Pomeroy , 992·

3891 .

Additions

W""A"T HE FEL.I

KEEBAT

Gutter work, dawn
spouts, some concrete

Remodeling

Buslness· Farms
Partnerships &amp;
CorpOrations

food, and all types of salt:

1971 VW Karman Ghia, 4

FANTASTIC four lamily .
basement sale . Feb . 7, 8, 9
SALES TRAINEE . Salary
(Thurs ., Fri. and Sat .)
plus commissions . No ex·
from 9 a.m . to? Most items

SECOND COUNT ac ·
cording to the statutes in

sand , gravel, calcium
chloride, fert ilizer, dog

I I I

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

1·17·1 mo.

4x4,

that the rights, interests
and liens of all parties may
be flllly determined, ad ·usted and protected, and

lhat Plaintiff be authorized
and ordered .to sen rfie er;-:'
tire interest in the real

LIME STONE ,

1 ton dump,

F·250

Wanted to Buy : Four foot

the real estate described in

SECOND COUNT be sold;

For Sale
COAL ,

N. L CONSTRUCTION

TRI.COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

24,000 miles, radio, P .S.,

FORD

Companies have an opportunity waiting for yhou
in the insurance market, a

rolltop desk . Call

GNATY

992·7818.

*New homes
extensi11e remodel ·
lng
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

helpful.
OLD COINS, pocket wat

8 : ~Buck

Setter ,

alternators- own the best

GET VALUABLE training

West of white oak tree 3
feet in diameter; thence

about 51.97 rods; thence
North to place of beginning

IR ISH

1976 PICKUP truck in good

742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462 .

South 69 Deg . west 14.515

FEMALE

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 7,1910

been spayed, to good home .

EMERGENCY

949~ 2662 .

1978

·Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
onelener to each square, to form
fourordihary words.

Blisiness Services

hound

shape. Contact Joe Young,

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,

rods to center of road ;
thence in an easterly direc tion following sa id road to a
stone corner on South side
of road 31 feet East of
Sugar tree 61n . in diameter

coon

new tires, snow tires, new

a stake 21h feet South of an
ash 61n . in diameter; then ce south 49 114 Oeg. west

8.272 rods to a stake 3 feet

par t

front brakes, new clutch,
GOLD,
SILliER
OR good
engine. 30 plus mpg .
FOREIGN COINS , OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR $350. 985·3979.
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
Help w.anted
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ADDRESSERS
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP HOME
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH wanted. $500 per week
OSBY {OSSIEJ MARTIN possible. ·No experience
PO
BEFORE
SELLING. required . A.S.D .,
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO Drawer 140069, Dallas, TX
75214 .
APPRAISING .

Pomeroy 992 · 2689.

Lost and Found

thence

eel lent cOndition . 14ft. Midwest truck bed with twin
cylinders, Hercules hoist .

Cremeans. 591 Broadway,
Middleport, OH 45760, 1 shocks. 992·2679 .

to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt. 2,

rods;

1976 BUICK Limited , ex·

1977 GMC

t'uesday

FIV E

pups . 985·427o .

Doberm ans. 6 1 4 · 446 ~ 7795 .

Publisher will not be responsible

for more than one lncorred insertion.
Phone 992-2156

KE NNELS.

Boa rding, all breeds. Clean
indoor -outdoor fa cil i t ies.
Al so
AK C
regis t e r ed

76nl67 or 557·3411.

The

~111,USCAAMBLEDWOADQAME
byHenriArnoldandBobloo

Giveaway

PO ODL E GR OOM I NG.
Judy Taylor . 614·367·7220.
HI L LCREST

'if\1\iNfiD'il

~ ~ ~~ "

34 Ethiopian
prince
35 Suffix
for Joseph
31 Couple

ROOM, boord andlaundry.
Elderly handicapped or
working men. 992·6022 .

BALlS 0' FIRE!!
YOU CAN'T JUMP

BACKWARDS 1'N
CHECKERS!!

For Rent

land

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ia

PEANt11'8

MOBILE HOME. 1 kid ac·
cept,ed.
No
drunks.
Deposit , Utilities paid.
Jolin Sheets, Rt. 7, 3'Ai
miles south 01 Middleport.

CIIYPTOQUOTES

STOCKING CAPS

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -· !

,
1
•
'
,

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter aim ply atandl ·for another. In thla 11m pie A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the lencth and formation of the worda are all
hintl. Each day the code lettera are different.

THREE BEDROOM house
with bath In Rutland. m:· ~

58,58.

tt Reduce ·
41 Leprechaun

3 AND ~ RM furnished ap- :
ts. Phone 992·5434.

II

on an
envelope

in rank

COUNTRY MOBILE Home :
Park, Route 33, norlh 01 ·
Pomeroy. Large lots.Call :
992-7~79 .
.

RENTER'S assistance tor ·
Senior Citizens In VIllage -:
Milnor apts. Call 992· 7787.

37 Got around
39 Initials

ARE

6~fAT

NU

QB

EDVA

--~---·----------- !

'
. tlJ

' . 4f'Til&gt;

0 t*tiJ~I1-- h•\ute ~~1t'A1•, lflll.

YDAV

QXOV
FB

QB
0

BOV,

WMYYME

AMDIWB
MFAWDIB
Yeslmlay'a Cryptoqaote:, WHAT WOULD· YOU DO IF THE
S~Y WERE FAWNG: RUN FOR SHELTER, OR TRY TO
CATCH A I.JTI'LE BIT OF HEAVEN?-ROBERT HENRY
MILLER

HNBV.

HALO
DOUBLE
2)
bedroom, seml·furnlllled. j
Adults only. No children or 1
pegs. Deposit 992·2749.
,l

OIB

' ::Z. -1

'.

Rogers 3, 15i Mork &amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Walloos 8; Bill
Movers' Journal 20.33 ; College
Basketba 1' 10; Americans 17.
8:30-Benson 6 , 13.
9 : ~ulncy 3, 15; Barney Miller
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; Rat
Patrol 17 .
'
9:30-Soap 6.13; Camero Three 20;
NBA Basketball17; Sports Close
Up 33.
IO :oo-Skag 3, 15; 20·20 6. 13; Knots
Landing B, 10; News 20; National
Geographic 33.
10:30--Qver Easy 20; 11 : ~News
3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20;
Fall &amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin
33.
11 :30-Tonight 3, 15; Pollee Woman
6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC Captioned
News 33; Movie "The Odd .
Couple" 10.
11 :&gt;IS-Movie "Cain &amp; Mabel " 17;
12 :4()-Barella 6, 13.
I : ~Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:15-Black Sheep squadron 8; 1:45-- ~
News 17.
I :50-News 13; NBA Basketball 17;
"Incident
at
4: 05-Movie
Phantom Hill " 17.

FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 1,1910
5:4-S-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13 .
6 : ~700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 1S;
Health Field 10; 6:05--World at
Large 17; 6:30-Kidsworld 10;
News 17; 6: 4-S-Morning Report
3: A.M. Weather 33 .
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia
13; 6:55-News 13. '
7:~Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6 , 13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:3()-Familv Affair 10; 7: S5-Chuck
, . White Reports 10.
.
8:0Q-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave II
lo Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17.
9:~Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
15, 13; Big \/alley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Hogan' s Heroes 10;
Lucy Show 1-7.
'
9:3o-Bob Newharl8; One Day AI A
Time tO; Green Acres fl.
IO :OQ-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie "Lilith" 17.
10: 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10 : 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : ~High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Rlght $, 10;
Elec . Co. 20.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
20,33.
12:00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8.10,13; Health Field 15.
12:30-Rvan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Movie "These
Are the Damned" 17; E lee. Co.
33.
I : ~DaysofOur Llves3,15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
·
Restless 8, 10.
2 : ~Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Llv~
6, 13; As The World Turns 8,101
2: 25-News 17.
2: 30- Another
World
3, 15;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00- General
Hospital
6,13;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
3:3()-FIIntstdlles 17; Over Easy 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4: 30-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 81
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:0Q-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; ' Mister Rogers

20,33.
5:30-Mash ~; News 6; Ploy the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I ·
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3·2·1 Contact
20,33.
6 :30-NBC News3, 15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals ··
33 .
•
' : ~Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil - Lehrer Report 331
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7:30-Prlce Is Right 3; ; 3' s A CrOVfd
6 ; Family Feud 10; Joker's 'Wild
8; Dick Cavett 33; Pop Goes the
Country 13,15; All In The Family
17; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8:oo-Famlly Circus 3,15; B.A.D.
Cats 6,13; Incredible Hulk 8,10;
Washington Week In ·Review
20,33; Movie "Cat People" 17.
8:30-Lucllle Ball 3, 15; Wall Street
Week ·20,33.
9:oo-Movle "Swan Song" 6,13;
Dukes of Hauard 8,101 Capitol
Beat 33; Free to Choose 20.
_9:30-NHL Hockey 17; American
Short Story 33.
lO:oo-Eivls Remembered: Nashville to Hollywood 5PtCial: 3,151
Dallas 8. 10; News 20 .
10:»--ver Easy .20; Murder Most
English 33.
11: Oo-News 316,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick
Cavett 20.
11: 3()-Tonight 3, 15; Charlie's
Angels 6; Movie "Sign_If Deal~." ,
. 8; ABC tapfloned lilttws 331.
Movie "Let's Scare Jessica to
Death" 1o: Movie 13.
12:011-Movle "The Tingler" 17; ·
' David Susskind 33. .
..
12 : 40-FBI 6;
1:0G-Midnlght
Special 3,151 Moviv',The Giant
Behemoth" 10.
· .
·•
. ·
1: 3()-News 131 1:35-f\jliws 17; .
1: 40-Movle
"Cock!Uhell
Heron" 17.
•
2:30'-News 3; 3:-"I-MOVIe "Edge of
E1ernlty" 171 5: 15-LOVt_; ;·: .
American Sl)'le 11.
·• · • :·
•'

�10- TI1e Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomer oy, 0., Thursday , Feb. 7, 1980

11- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb . 7, 1900
DICK TRACY

Your Best B1tys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIG S COUNTY ,
OHIO
P ROBATE 011/ISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Ad
m inistratriK of the Estate

of
Ida
M.
Deceased/
Pl ai n i ft

Chr i stie

vs .
EDNA N. WOOD ,

Defendants .
No. 22 704

NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYLOR ,
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43, SIBBERT,
WEST 1/IRGINIA ; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEES ,
AD ·
MINISTRATORS, EXEC
UTORS AND ASSIGNS , IF
ANY , OF EACH OF THE
FOLLOWING : IDA M
CHRISTIE, DECEASED ,
DOUGLAS
YOUNG ,
DECEASED : RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE
D; GLADYS GOEGLEI N,
DECEASED ; DELLA RIF ·
FLE,
DECEASED ,
FLORENCE
HENRY ,
DECEASED ;
DAI/ID
KING , DECEASED ; BER
NARD
KING ,
DECEASED; HAROLD
Kl NG, DECEASED ,
LENA
DOERFER ,
DECEASED A.K .A. LANA
OORFER , DECEASED:
OTHO
YOUNG ,
DECEASED ;
LAURA
KNAPP ,
DECEASED ,
HENRY DOERFER ,
DECEASED ;
OLEN
DOERFER , DECEASED ;
DAYTON
YOUNG ,
DECEASED ;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIELS ,
DECEASED ; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
FRED
KING ,
DECEASED ; SAMUEL J
CHRISTIE, DECEASED ;
AND
THOMAS
F
TAYLOR DECEASED.
Plaintiff has brought this
ac ti on naming you as
defendants in the above
named court by f iling her
complaint on November

13th . 1979. The Complaint

rec ites t hat each of you is
possibly an he i r -at -law and
nex t of kin of Ida M
Ch r ist ie, Deceased ; that at
tt1e time of her death Ida
M . Christie was se i zed of
t he entire interest of the
re al estate desc r ibed in the

Fl RST COUNT of the Com

pla int, whi ch said real
es tate is described as
follows :
Situate in the County of
Me i9s, in the State of Ohi o
and 1n the Township of Bed ·
ford, and bounded and
described as follows :.
Beg inning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of

the..&gt;Outheast quarter of

Secti on No. Seven, Town
No . Three and Range No .
Thirteen of the Ohio Com pany 's Purchase ; thence
Nor th f eu- enough so that by
running due West to the
center of the State Road;
thence along the center of
said road to the section
line ; thence East to the
place of beginning so that it
shall contain thirty acres,
but subject to a Illegal high ways .
The
aforesaid
described real estate be ing
the same real estate con veyed by William Smith ,
Jr . to Lucetta Smith by
deed bearing date of the
187~

of

Seplember

and recorded in Vol .'

-45, ,..ages 607 and 608 of the

records of deeds in the
Recorder 's Office of Meigs
County , Ohio.
And being the .J same
property conveyed ov Guy
A . Smith, Executor of the
Estate of Lucetta Smith,
Deceased , to Samuel J .
Christie and
Ida M .
CHristie by deed dated
June 1, 1925, and recorded

in Book 127, at Page -448 of

the Deed Records of Mei gs

County Ohio .
EXCEPTING one-fourth

of an acre more or less con ·
veyed by Ida M . Christie to
Cecil c . Heilman and A llen
C. Heilman by deed recor -

ded in 1/ol . 247, Page 483

Deed Records , Meigs Coun ·

ty , Ohio .
In SECOND COUNT Ida

M . Christie was seized of
the undivided one -fourt h
part of the following
described real estate :
The following described
r eal estate situated in the
51ate of Ohio, in the County
of Meigs and in Salisbury
Township : It being near

the middle of the South half
of lh.e North llil]LoL Section

No . l8, Town No . 2 in Range
13 Ohio Company 's Pur ·
chase and on the South line
of said South half of the
North half and beginning at
th e Northwest corner of
James A . Young 's 36 acre
lot ; thence north 2'h Deg .
East 7 chains and 75 links

to the county road ; thence
Sout h oil Deg . East 5chains

and 40 links along said
road ; thence South 68 Deg .

Easl1 chai n and f41inks to

Finnan Smith 's West line ;
thence South 2 112 Oeg . West
3 chains and 40 links to his
Southwest corner ; thence
West to the pla ce of begin ·
n ing , containing fwo acres
more or less.
1
Al so, th e following r eal
esta te situated in Section

No. 18{ Town 2 and Range
13 of he Ohio Company 's

Purchase and described as
. fo llowst- _to -w it : Beginni ng
at the :)QUthwest corner of
George Young 's lot in said

5e&lt;:llon ;

lhence South

8

rods and 7 feet ; thence

East 19 rods ; thence North
8 rods and 7 feet; thence
West 19 rods to the place of
beQinnlng, conta iniOg one
acre .

Also, the fofl owinJI real

estate situated In Section

No. 18, Town 2 and Range
No. 12 of the Ohio Com -

pany's Purchase and boun ded and described as
follows~ to -wlf : Beg inning

at

G~orge

U W!Xds or Under
Cash
(.'b arge
1 day
1.00
1.2$
2 days
1.50
1.90
J days
l.liO
2.25
3. 00

Young's

Southeast corner in said

section ; thence East 21
rods to ttl• road1thence in
a w..sterly dlre,ctlor\ along
said road 15 rOds and 10
feet 1 thence west 20 rods ;
thence 15 rods and 10 feet to
the place of beginning, con ·
talnlng 2 acres.·.
Also. the . following
descrl~d real estate in
Sallsburl Township, Meigs
Countv, Ohio, Beginning at
a stone corner East 70.545
rods of the Northwest cor·
ner of yV. s . Wills 69'12 acre
lot n&lt;!ar a willOW 1ree about
JO 1riches fn 'diameter 1
thence Spoth 8.&amp;5 rods to a

Pets for Sale

Notices ·
GUN SHOO T EV E RY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONL Y. RAC IN E
GU N CLUB .
GUN

SHOOT .

Rac in e

Volunt eer
Fire
Dept .
E very Sa tur d ay . 6:30 p.m .
A t th eir buildingin Bashan.
Factor y chok e gun s only .

3.7$

Each word uver the minimum
15 words 1.s 4 cents per word per

Et a I.,

day

WANT AD
CHARGES

6days

2080 Gree nw ich Road
Wads wo r th , Oh io 44281

15th .

·..-------.....,

day. Ads runnin~ other tha n consecutive days Wlll be charged at
the 1 Lilly rate.

GUN SHOOT everv Sundav
12 :00. Factorv choke onlv .
Corn Hollow Gun Club ,

In memory, Card of Thank.!
and Obitua ry : 6 cen~ per word ,
f3 _00 minimum . C'...~:~sh in ad-

Rutl a nd . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

vance.

ATTENT I ON :
{IM ~
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

Mobile Home sales and Yard
sales .11re act.-epted only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge

pay cash or certified check
for ant iques and col lec t ibles or entire estates.
Noth ing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614-

for ads carrying Boll Number In

Careof TheSentinel.

The Publishe r reserves the
right to edit or rejed any ads

deemed

objectiona l.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet .
Healthy , shots, wormed .
Donations requ ired. 992·
6260, noon-7 p .m .

AKC Registered St . Ber·
nard pups, 6 weeks old . 985·

3867 .
1
.
• MALE Pek1nese, house
: br oken. 11f:z years old , all
shots. Sell or trade of equal
value . 304·882·2810.

Auto Sales

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COl NS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
{ANY
AMOUNT) . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY . SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN'S .

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

I

PAY

highest

prices

possible for gold and silver
·' coins, r ings, jewel r y, etc .

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Monday
Noon on Saturday

INCOME

TAX

service,

Federal and State. Wallace

lhruFr!day

Russell ,
7228 .

4 P.M.
the day befo~ publication

Sunday
4 P.M.

Bradbury .

992·

HEARING AID USERS:

Friday afternoon

'--------

save used batteries, mercury and silver oxide,
redeem for cash. Diles
Hear i ng
Aid
Center ,

A then•. Tel. 614·594·3571.

In Memory
IN MEMORY of our loved
one, Charles L. Wyatt, who
we lost in an accident 2
yea r s ago today, February
6.
We cannot hear your frien ·
dly voice,
That used to fill the room
Or any f leet echo that

might
Penetrate the gloom
We canot seem to reach
your hand
Or see your w i stful face
Not even in the Magic
flames

That light the fireplace.
And yet, somehow wi t hin
ourselves
We tee I your presence near
And in our loneliness we
wish
That you were really here!
Sadly missed by wife,
Margaret, children, Clif ford, Terry, Bret, Helena,
Dora and Jane, also grand·
children.

WILL FILL out income
tax, Federal (short form

only) and State, both for
$10. Fast service. Teresa
block from swimming pool,
after 6 p.m .

LOST: black , while, tan
beagle , male , wearing
col lar. Scar on face . 992·

5864.

1-I ~=========...j
stake East of a double
chestnut abOut 3 feet in
diameter ; thence South
101!1 degrees west 6.94 rods
to a stake 1 foot South of
white oak 4 feet i n
diameter; thence South
591;4 Oeg. West 8.33 1/ :J rods
to a stake 3 feet East of a
chestnut tree ; thence South

49'1, Deg . West6.212 rods to

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 1011 on largest

end . $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. SlOper ton. Delivered

OLD

FURNITURE,

ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M .D.
M
iller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
call992·7760.

ANTIQUES,

FUR ·

NITURE ,

china,

glass,

anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney , antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .

62.483 rods containing 7
acres 25square rods.
Also, beginning at a stone
at the Southeast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
feet from said sugar tree 6
ln . in diameter ; thence in
an Easterly direction
following said road about

24.84 rods to Ida Young's 2

acre lot ; thence west 20.84

North

to

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

135, Page 241 Deed Recor ·
dstMeigs County, Ohio.
he obi eel of the Com ·

plaint is to sell the interest ·
of Ida M . Christie in each

parcel of real estate In or·
der to pay the debts of the
estate and cOsts of ad ·
ministering the estate .

Plaintiff demands the
real estale described In the
FIRST COUNT be sold;
that the entire Interest In

Ranger XL T , blue and
white, excellent condition,
V-8, automatic, air, P.S.,
P.B ., low mileage, white

ispoke wheels , rust
proofed . $6500. 992·2369.

P.B., $4950 . 7 p.m. until
midnight or before 10 a.m .

742·2395.
1953 Pontiac, 2 Farmall

tractors. 1972 F·600 Ford
truck. 38071oader. 974 440· B
John Deere skidder . To·20

Ferguson ' s .

3

block

sawmill. 1953 GMC Ph ton

truck. 1949 Chevv 1 ton
truck. 985·3S90.
1975 Bronco 4X4, V·8, AT,
P.S., posl ·traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. -4 new

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

the eligibility list at 992·
2156or992·2157 .
RN OR LPN, full time. 3·
ll:JO and lllo 7:30. Port
time RN or LPN, t1 to 7:30.
Call Mr. Zidian at Pomeroy

742·2316, evenings.

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY {OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING.
GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD,
Rl NGS,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SilliER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD HIGH, HONEST,
UP· TO· DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT , OH . OR CALL
992·3476.

Yard Sale

AL iob opening at local
business. Initially part·
time; may develop Into

(boys .

girls,

men's,

odds and ends. Some free
items l!lnd free coffee. Sl!lle

and

You are required to an -

notice which will be
pub I ished once each week
for six successive weeks

and the last publication will
be made on the 7th . day of
February, 1980.

player, tape layer, records,
held

at

against you for the relief
demanded in the com -

plaint .

Robert E. Buck
Judge and E• ·Oiflcio Clerk
Common Pleas Court

Larry

O'Brien

residence, turn left at first

lane past Racine Locks and
Dam , 2nd house on right .
w~tch for signs.

In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise

respond as permitted by
the Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure within lhe lime
stated ,
\· udgment
by
default wi 1 be rendered

g;&gt;7 s~cn&gt; 3, 10. 11, 24, 31,

Fitzpatrick Orchard,
689 .

SR

power

- · buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
DECORATED CAKES for
all

occasions.

Character

cakes and sheet cakes . Call
992·6342 or 992 ·2583 .

DIS 0 NT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Ser11ice

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

Sentinel, c·o P.O. Box 72'1

boots. Children's
Adults $29.00.

515.50 .

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367 ·0292.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

evenings.

RUTLAND HARDWARE,
822 Main St., Rutland. 742 ·
2255. 4 only coal and wood
heaters with blower, US

Stove Co., $400. One only
King·O·Heal coat heat, 75
lb. capacity, $182. Taking
orders for coal and wood

munition .
Two
4-foot
flourescent lights w ith 2
tubes each, like new. 992-

3061.

1970 Mark Twain \/·hull, 16
foot with 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call after 5 p.m., 992·2528 .

Real Estate for Sale
MOBILE HOME, one· half
acre land, septic system,

water system. 54,000. Call
or
992 ·3589,
992·2720
0' Brien and Crow Really.

college or 2 years of sales.
If you qualify call Lee E .
Tyler at {6141 446·-1367, for
a

confidential

interview.

An equal opportunity em·
player. Reg . No. 74·02·4728.

perience necessary . Phone

992·2480.
APPL I C.ATIONS

being

taken for two law enforcement
officers in

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS
FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

216 E. Se~!"'d Str..i
bedroom starter home
with central heating and
rural water. Has 4 lots
in town l!lnd on Ohio
Power. Nice home with

large lot for 528,500.
PRII/A:(E - Country
location

with

bedrooms,

nice

bath,

2

acres. $12,000.
INCOME- and home. 3
bedroom apartment up
and 3 large business
rooms down with extra

lot tor parking. Natural
gas,

city

water,

and

Ohio
Power.
Only
$27,500.
.
1/ACANT LAND - 75
acres with W"'"1er, gas,
and eiP;;.(\\S) closeby.

Can be o ':1-1 ,,ed Into A ~
frame suodivlslon. Ask·

1970 \lindale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x603 bdr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr. ·
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304-67S·4424.

BORN LOSER

REDUCED -

1·22-lfc

Garage
mile off Rt, 7.by-pass ,

on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

AUTO &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
·I

carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 . 446·2359 after 6.
STORY

house,

9

rooms, 11h baths, garage.

College Rd., Syracuse: Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.
FARM FOR SALE. Barn
and building. Good land .
Mineral rights. 36 acres.
Pomeroy area . Phone 992·

7559.
SEVEN room house, 862
Pearl St., Middleport, OH.
992-3341.
7 room house, Racine, 3

bedrooms, 1'12 baths, with
full basement. Large rot,
utility building . 992·3738.

men!,

acr~

lot west of

Rutllmd, 4 acres near
Pomeroy , ani::l 3 acres

near Portland.
·
BUILDING LOTS many

locations,

In

SileS

and prices. If you are
going to build, call us.
MORTGAGE MONEY
IS HARD TO GET BUT
IF YOU WANT TO BUY
DR SELL, WE MAY
HELP. CALL992·3325 or
992·3876.

Housing
Headquartets

ou~!~~ H~!!A!!

MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1112 bath, garage.
527,000 .
ROCK SPRINGS -2 bedroom and bath, fully equipped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fullv furnish·
ed. $25,000.

RUTLAND - one bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a little paint &amp; paper.
19,900.
SYRACUSE -6 room house on nice lot. 111,600.
5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot. S7,doo..
·
MIDDLEPORT - Building lot on S. Second, 63'X53'.
$4,500.

CALL ~92•2342

, Bill Childs, ·Branch Mgr., Home ~~l.~44!1
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992·3731
.

OHIO ·

+AKQ3

YOU MUST TRY

··· I KNO'I&lt; HOW MUCH
PRESSURE YO!JUE
~EEN UNDER FROM
YOUR COUNTRYMEN

Reasonable Rates
"Doo't CUSS·Ciu"Us,; ''

TO GO ALONG WITH
THe PRICE HIKE$ ...

~ALN

car

garage .

needs some repairs but
a good buy"' $16,500.00.
PRICE REDUCED- 5
rQOm house In town, 2

bedrooms, utility room,
private parking space,
would make • good ren·
tal al$9,000.00.
REDUCED 9 big
rooms, 5 bedrooms, part
basement, central heat
and air cond ., flh baths,
brick and frame, sPiral
staircase,

and

(

•

US

EVER
K NO~

KN OWING ~ ~ IS
E~OUGH ···

THE

Af'.t-a"NER

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

TOTAL WI? DOM OR PERFECT
BEAUTY··· WE CA NNOT STOP

West

Nortb

East

STRIVING FOR THEM SECAUSE

Obi.

THE Y ARE UI'IATTAINAB !..E "'

Pass

2 NT
5t

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pa~

TO THAT~::::::::--)

Soutb
I+
4 NT
6+

Q

Scissors.

IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been canyour
celled?
Lost
operator's license? Phone
992·21.:1.
IN STOCK for immediate

delivery: various slles of

pool kits. Do·lt·vourself or
let us Install for vou. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.
BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
9~9-24117 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

GASOIJNE AiLEY

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

Glomp'd trac~
,.

Joel,

em

I think it
I·WOUIICI be

down!

Best thin' is t' make a stan'
riqht here on familiar
qroun'!

better

away
from
here!

and

ACROSS

1 Bluenose
5 Premise
10 Stringed

11 Garland
13 Gaelic
14 Types
15 Ovine

Torch~

Free

. .. - - - - .. .~L~0~U~E~
S~S~~~O~U~C~A~N~~hv.~~~~~/~TH~IS~IS~A~4-A1EAN A55(1ME THAT .
FIZINGE ~ENE F IT I
WHILE...
YOU 'VE 00T A
DIDN'T COUNT ON !
KEY TO IT
HAVEN'T YOU ?

AND

/NS/6

e;o

~NDY
WE

TO ER
APARTMENT
FOR DINNER
TONIGHT/

OUR LI TfLE 61RL
IS BECOMING
qUITE DOMESTIC 1
IS N'T SHE "?

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win st
Bridge, .. care of this newspaper, P. 0. Bpx 489, Radio City
Station , New York, N. Y.
10019.)

U Licit
C3 Artist
Warhol

DOWN
1 West
Pointer

2 Bucolic
3 What's the
difference?

utterance
16 Fowl

WINNIE

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~~-"ttt
br JHOMAS JOSEPH
Instrument

to take

from North. However, South.
counted only 19 points and
opened one club. Naturally,
West doubled and North bid
two notrump which in their
partnership was a limit raise
in clubs, i .e., 9 to 11 points and
five or more clubs. South, by
thtS trme, discovered an extra
queen and Blackwooded .
The opening heart lead was
won in the closed hand with
the ace and trumps were
drawn in three rounds .
Declarer decided West's vulnerable double must include
the ace-queen of diamonds as
only I 0 high-card points were
missing. If Weot also had four
or mor~ spades, a likely possi·
bility, South saw a way to
make his slam.
South cashed the king of
hearts and played three more
rounds of trumps.
On the fifth and sixth
trumrs _South pitched his two
smal d1amonds. West was in
a quandary on the last trump.
II he pitched a spade declarer 's fourth spade would be the
12th trick. Accordingly, he
prtched the diamond queen.
South led a small diamond to
his king and West's ace.
Dummy's jack of diamonds
was now established and the
spade ace was the entry to
cash it.
West was really unhappy.
He realized that if he had
originally led a spade, declarer wouldn't have been able to
make the slam by this unusual
squeeze.

4 Mild oath

Yesterday'&amp; Allswer

5 A must
creature
wilh lox
17 ln9ect
1 About
18 Building part 7 - Angelo,
19 Porker
Texas
ZO Make edging 8 Ex-wombmate
21 Dregs
9 Arranged
Z3 Tiny bit
In series

a

11 Listen to Z8 Famous
ZZ Fish
composer
Z3 Spoil
:ro Michelangelo
U Venerated
work
25 The Santa 3% Grammy, e.g.

Maria

33 Slow
38 Put on the -

WBB one

39 One kind
of horse

%6 Cheap

U Took proper U Import

cigar : sl.

measures
Z&amp;Snake •
2'7 ArleneZ8 Kibbutz

dance
Z9 Rich rock

foodoo,h••JiriH

Services Offered

38 Bland
31Seatfor""

PIANO expert In·
structlon In most plano
style. House calls. 15c per
mlle. For appointment, call ~:
. 992·7275.
.
.

many

other extras. Call for
details I
RIVER FRONTAGE 1 acre, 3 bedroom double wide, 2 baths, 10x26
fl. deck, wood burning
stove, fireplace, a 2
bedroom mobile home
which rents for S150.00 a
month. All this for
$35,000.00.
WANT TO BUILDP Here Is 2 acres, all
utilities Installed, nice
level location. Call for
Information.
LOOKING
FOR
ACREAGE? - We have
Itt JO acres, 1 tillable,
some building sll.es,
mostly fenced, lots of
road frontage for
113,900.00.
SHOULD BE SOLD Owner w•nts action
now •. price reduced to
~.500 plus , Inventory,
"The Kiddie ShC)ppe".
Cleland Rutty, the only
name you nied to know
when buying and selling
...alestatet
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussill f49·2UO ·
Roger &amp; DoHit Tumtr
742-2474
OFFICE I'HONI!I
.99H2Sf

THI! STARS ···

OF

COUCD IMAGiiNE A STICK

I'll TH ONLY ONE END. ~eMTR UE '+IIGDOM LIES IN

SOT AS WITH

A misbid through miscounting values or not hearing the
auction properly usually leads
to disaster. In today's hand
however, declarer miscounted
his high-card points and later
bragged about it.
Six clubs is a fine contract.
It only depends upon a win·
nlng guess in diamonds.
Although both diamond honors
are offside in the diagrammed
hand, declarer was able to
make the contract by an unusual end play against West.
If South knew he had 21
points he would have opened
two notrump, silencing West
and eliciting three notrump

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make service
calls.

House

THe SAHO AND

Wll.. L

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2'151. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

NEW LISTING
6
room house and bath,
partial basement. New
1500 gal. septic tank. Ap·
prox. ~ acre lot, well
plus L.C.C.D. water. 2

U5 .

WHEN WE AAA65
HAD NOTHING BUT

I

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

. WALL PAPERING
Painting. 742·2328.

POMERO.Y, 0 .
992·2259

UH DERS TA~O

TO

Opening lead:¥

estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211.

r

• 8 72

+10 6 5
SOUTH

•As
+K6 5

'ANNIE

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning.

608 E.

+J98742
WEST
EAST
• J 10 8 3
• 972
· .QJIO 9 2
• 7 543

U I Pool 011'

Phone 992·2390

cleaned.

2-7-80

+KQ65

MiddlepOrt, 0.
Automotive Repair
Open 9·• Mon.thru Sat.
Additional Hours
By APPOintment

Steam

HOOKED PRAYER

They called hirn the .. cream " of fighters
because he always gal th is- "WHlPPED"

NORTH

+ AQ 9 4

1·18· (p0. )

4·30 ·1fc

TWO

I Answer -

WHOOP

+A 4
• !\ 6
• J 10 3

.....

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

baths, central heal, and

wooded, some cleared/
27 or 14 acres near Forked Run Park, 5 wooded
acres near Nease Settle·

SIJC!WW TO THe;; TOP CK
MY 1-lf'.AD!

CALL 992-7544

rural water. 1 level acre
with large trees and

sparkling brook. Now
only $2'1,500.
ACREAGE Some

HMl,llU~ 16- OOTHl~,J.\'1' &amp;J&lt;.
~ I 'IJ/&gt;6 '((:;IW. ~I IT

949·2862

Newer 3

3'12 YR.
• miles trom
Pomeroy. Quiet country living In this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath with central heat and air condl·
tion. over 3 acres of flatland with a split rail fence.
garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.

'

I I I )"

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Pomeroy, 0.

bedroom home with l'h

MIDDLEPORT- Two bedroom brick only I block
from center of town . Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.

Mobile Homes· Sale

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

ing $334 per acre .

Send resume to City Hall,
Pomeroy, OH .

Apply in prson.

"(

BRIDGE

Hours 9·1 M., W., F.
Other times by apPOint·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

All work guaranteed.

gas

F.A, furnace, Leading
Creek water tap. on llh

POMEROY- Lincoln HIS. 2 bedroom, bath, large·
living room, full basement, new furnace. 117,500.

plicatlons for waltresses,
no e)(perience necessary,

cleaning and painting.

14

Jumbles· LUCID

Yesterday's

,lARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

All types roof work, new
or reJ)illr gutters and
downspouts,
gutter

or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

NEW LISTING- Nice2

Po.meroy . Must have high
school diploma . Should
have basic law schooling.

BLUE TARTAN. Mid·
dleport taking ap·

Now arrange the cirded leners 10
form the surprise answer. as suggesled by the above cartoon .

Prlntanswerhere :

·
F'NANCING
Feder.t Housing &amp;
1/elerans Admin. Loans .

COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond for swimming

District
Marketing
Manager, PO Box 416,
Athens, OH 45701 . Phone
592·5748.

have a minimum of 2 years

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

convertible or portl!ble
dishwasher. Like new, excellent condition . 1 year

TWO WEATHER goals, 8
mo. old . $15 ea . . 742 ·2316

III

I

T'TALI&lt;.I

REAL ESTATE

HARVEST gold Whirlpool

old . $150. 992 5348 .

DRIZAL

rJ

IHAT

HE HAD M ISTAKEN
FOFe SOI.ID GOI.D.

WfLLIN6

12-28-pd.

Roger Hysell

Phone 992·7201 or 992·330'1.

FIREWOOD, dry har ·
dwood, S30 load . Tire
c;hains, 5 inch top condition,
$25. Mixed hay, square
bales, 75c.

perience. Applicant must

I

BILl'S AUTO
REPAIR

hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available .

your business. Establish
your agency on a part time
or full time basis . No prior
experience required . We
provide train ing,
you
provide ambition. Call, or
write,
Don
Weidner,

WELL -ESTABLISHED

m -n14

12·13·2 mo. pd .

WILL HAUL limestone and
grovel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7~2-2-ISS.

MOTORIST INSURANCE

business college is taking
applications for a good,
mature
admissions
representative
n
the
Gallipolis and surrounding
area. Salary based on ex-

s P.M. 992·5547

After

~OMS'THING

(Answers tomorrow)

CONDITIONED

with shelves that will hold
300·400 boxes of am ·

bedroom

Rid ing Lessons and Horse
care products. Western

Pomeroy

SUPPOSE He WON'T~ He
COULD PLAY HIDE!·ANP. ~EEl&lt;.
WITH YA ALL Ni6HT IN
THe"E WOOl&gt;"!

IHifJHT BE

FINANCING·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHAiE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS.
614·592-3051.

GOOD

with 2 tubes. 1 gun rack,
holds 4·5 rifles or shotguns

A

RACINE,O.
949·2741or

Free Estimates

&gt;.:·3795
1·30·1 mo.

IIUT NOW WE'JI:E P~T THe MARSHY

GROUND IJEAR T~E- CII:!£K.4\NP THI:

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Business Services

G, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

harness .

ponies . Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290 . Barding and

Guaranteed Work

WON'T 8E
liASY FINDINl
'EM- THAT'S
FOR SURE-! IIUT
MAY&amp;t; IF CHRI6
TRU~TS ME, HE-

TliSJiR'5 PRINT6 FADE OUT HERE!

Real Estate for Sale

ONE 8ft. flourescentlight

1972 LYNN HAllEN 14x65 3

and

statements, all federal
and state forms.

'IOII'RI! POIIJ' ISREAT 50 FAR, EASY!

WHEN HE 5TOI.E'

I KJ

CAPTAIN EASY

and

!FREE ESTIMATES.
Reduced Winter Rates

Block Work
Concrete Finishing

618 E . Mroin

walks

drfvew•ya .

Brick Work

992 ·2133 .

resume
with
recom ·
mendations to The Daily

Send

HOOF HOLLOW; English
and Western. Saddles and
Horses

Siding

Blil 5 Mon. thru Fri.
Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30-pd.

complete

cy
required,
some
bookkeeping experience

Pets for Sale

Meigs County, Ohio
Probate Division

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Beslfor
apple butler. Call 669·3785,

LARGE utility tool chest
for pickup. Also set of
metal racks. See at 400
Lasley St., Pomeroy, DH.

full ·lime. Typing proficien·

BABYSITTER needed. 992·
6233 after 6.

swer the complaint within
twenty &lt;&gt;ight davs after the
last publication of this

made

669·

1963 DUMP truck, $1000.
1972 International backhoe,
58000. 949·2042 .

chance to build and OWN

provided and for such
other relief as to which she
mav be entitled to.

case

Wilkesville,

SECRETAR I AL·CLE RIC ·

S ~ curve

women's, all in various
sizes and some brand new),
kitchenware, toys, shoes,
purses, coats, r.ecord

such

Phone

work,

Payrolls, profit &amp; loss

3785.

cook stove. $199.95.

es t ate

in

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, Slate Route 689.

Health Care Center, Mon·
day through Friday, 9·5.

in excellent condition.
Sheets, bedspreads, cur·
tains,
dried
flower
arrangements, clothing

described

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Ma in St.. Pomeroy , 992·

3891 .

Additions

W""A"T HE FEL.I

KEEBAT

Gutter work, dawn
spouts, some concrete

Remodeling

Buslness· Farms
Partnerships &amp;
CorpOrations

food, and all types of salt:

1971 VW Karman Ghia, 4

FANTASTIC four lamily .
basement sale . Feb . 7, 8, 9
SALES TRAINEE . Salary
(Thurs ., Fri. and Sat .)
plus commissions . No ex·
from 9 a.m . to? Most items

SECOND COUNT ac ·
cording to the statutes in

sand , gravel, calcium
chloride, fert ilizer, dog

I I I

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

1·17·1 mo.

4x4,

that the rights, interests
and liens of all parties may
be flllly determined, ad ·usted and protected, and

lhat Plaintiff be authorized
and ordered .to sen rfie er;-:'
tire interest in the real

LIME STONE ,

1 ton dump,

F·250

Wanted to Buy : Four foot

the real estate described in

SECOND COUNT be sold;

For Sale
COAL ,

N. L CONSTRUCTION

TRI.COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

24,000 miles, radio, P .S.,

FORD

Companies have an opportunity waiting for yhou
in the insurance market, a

rolltop desk . Call

GNATY

992·7818.

*New homes
extensi11e remodel ·
lng
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

helpful.
OLD COINS, pocket wat

8 : ~Buck

Setter ,

alternators- own the best

GET VALUABLE training

West of white oak tree 3
feet in diameter; thence

about 51.97 rods; thence
North to place of beginning

IR ISH

1976 PICKUP truck in good

742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462 .

South 69 Deg . west 14.515

FEMALE

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 7,1910

been spayed, to good home .

EMERGENCY

949~ 2662 .

1978

·Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
onelener to each square, to form
fourordihary words.

Blisiness Services

hound

shape. Contact Joe Young,

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,

rods to center of road ;
thence in an easterly direc tion following sa id road to a
stone corner on South side
of road 31 feet East of
Sugar tree 61n . in diameter

coon

new tires, snow tires, new

a stake 21h feet South of an
ash 61n . in diameter; then ce south 49 114 Oeg. west

8.272 rods to a stake 3 feet

par t

front brakes, new clutch,
GOLD,
SILliER
OR good
engine. 30 plus mpg .
FOREIGN COINS , OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR $350. 985·3979.
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
Help w.anted
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ADDRESSERS
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP HOME
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH wanted. $500 per week
OSBY {OSSIEJ MARTIN possible. ·No experience
PO
BEFORE
SELLING. required . A.S.D .,
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO Drawer 140069, Dallas, TX
75214 .
APPRAISING .

Pomeroy 992 · 2689.

Lost and Found

thence

eel lent cOndition . 14ft. Midwest truck bed with twin
cylinders, Hercules hoist .

Cremeans. 591 Broadway,
Middleport, OH 45760, 1 shocks. 992·2679 .

to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt. 2,

rods;

1976 BUICK Limited , ex·

1977 GMC

t'uesday

FIV E

pups . 985·427o .

Doberm ans. 6 1 4 · 446 ~ 7795 .

Publisher will not be responsible

for more than one lncorred insertion.
Phone 992-2156

KE NNELS.

Boa rding, all breeds. Clean
indoor -outdoor fa cil i t ies.
Al so
AK C
regis t e r ed

76nl67 or 557·3411.

The

~111,USCAAMBLEDWOADQAME
byHenriArnoldandBobloo

Giveaway

PO ODL E GR OOM I NG.
Judy Taylor . 614·367·7220.
HI L LCREST

'if\1\iNfiD'il

~ ~ ~~ "

34 Ethiopian
prince
35 Suffix
for Joseph
31 Couple

ROOM, boord andlaundry.
Elderly handicapped or
working men. 992·6022 .

BALlS 0' FIRE!!
YOU CAN'T JUMP

BACKWARDS 1'N
CHECKERS!!

For Rent

land

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ia

PEANt11'8

MOBILE HOME. 1 kid ac·
cept,ed.
No
drunks.
Deposit , Utilities paid.
Jolin Sheets, Rt. 7, 3'Ai
miles south 01 Middleport.

CIIYPTOQUOTES

STOCKING CAPS

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -· !

,
1
•
'
,

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter aim ply atandl ·for another. In thla 11m pie A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the lencth and formation of the worda are all
hintl. Each day the code lettera are different.

THREE BEDROOM house
with bath In Rutland. m:· ~

58,58.

tt Reduce ·
41 Leprechaun

3 AND ~ RM furnished ap- :
ts. Phone 992·5434.

II

on an
envelope

in rank

COUNTRY MOBILE Home :
Park, Route 33, norlh 01 ·
Pomeroy. Large lots.Call :
992-7~79 .
.

RENTER'S assistance tor ·
Senior Citizens In VIllage -:
Milnor apts. Call 992· 7787.

37 Got around
39 Initials

ARE

6~fAT

NU

QB

EDVA

--~---·----------- !

'
. tlJ

' . 4f'Til&gt;

0 t*tiJ~I1-- h•\ute ~~1t'A1•, lflll.

YDAV

QXOV
FB

QB
0

BOV,

WMYYME

AMDIWB
MFAWDIB
Yeslmlay'a Cryptoqaote:, WHAT WOULD· YOU DO IF THE
S~Y WERE FAWNG: RUN FOR SHELTER, OR TRY TO
CATCH A I.JTI'LE BIT OF HEAVEN?-ROBERT HENRY
MILLER

HNBV.

HALO
DOUBLE
2)
bedroom, seml·furnlllled. j
Adults only. No children or 1
pegs. Deposit 992·2749.
,l

OIB

' ::Z. -1

'.

Rogers 3, 15i Mork &amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Walloos 8; Bill
Movers' Journal 20.33 ; College
Basketba 1' 10; Americans 17.
8:30-Benson 6 , 13.
9 : ~ulncy 3, 15; Barney Miller
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; Rat
Patrol 17 .
'
9:30-Soap 6.13; Camero Three 20;
NBA Basketball17; Sports Close
Up 33.
IO :oo-Skag 3, 15; 20·20 6. 13; Knots
Landing B, 10; News 20; National
Geographic 33.
10:30--Qver Easy 20; 11 : ~News
3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20;
Fall &amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin
33.
11 :30-Tonight 3, 15; Pollee Woman
6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC Captioned
News 33; Movie "The Odd .
Couple" 10.
11 :&gt;IS-Movie "Cain &amp; Mabel " 17;
12 :4()-Barella 6, 13.
I : ~Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:15-Black Sheep squadron 8; 1:45-- ~
News 17.
I :50-News 13; NBA Basketball 17;
"Incident
at
4: 05-Movie
Phantom Hill " 17.

FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 1,1910
5:4-S-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13 .
6 : ~700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 1S;
Health Field 10; 6:05--World at
Large 17; 6:30-Kidsworld 10;
News 17; 6: 4-S-Morning Report
3: A.M. Weather 33 .
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia
13; 6:55-News 13. '
7:~Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6 , 13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:3()-Familv Affair 10; 7: S5-Chuck
, . White Reports 10.
.
8:0Q-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave II
lo Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17.
9:~Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
15, 13; Big \/alley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Hogan' s Heroes 10;
Lucy Show 1-7.
'
9:3o-Bob Newharl8; One Day AI A
Time tO; Green Acres fl.
IO :OQ-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie "Lilith" 17.
10: 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10 : 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : ~High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Rlght $, 10;
Elec . Co. 20.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
20,33.
12:00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8.10,13; Health Field 15.
12:30-Rvan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Movie "These
Are the Damned" 17; E lee. Co.
33.
I : ~DaysofOur Llves3,15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
·
Restless 8, 10.
2 : ~Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Llv~
6, 13; As The World Turns 8,101
2: 25-News 17.
2: 30- Another
World
3, 15;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00- General
Hospital
6,13;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
3:3()-FIIntstdlles 17; Over Easy 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4: 30-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 81
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:0Q-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; ' Mister Rogers

20,33.
5:30-Mash ~; News 6; Ploy the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I ·
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3·2·1 Contact
20,33.
6 :30-NBC News3, 15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals ··
33 .
•
' : ~Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil - Lehrer Report 331
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7:30-Prlce Is Right 3; ; 3' s A CrOVfd
6 ; Family Feud 10; Joker's 'Wild
8; Dick Cavett 33; Pop Goes the
Country 13,15; All In The Family
17; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8:oo-Famlly Circus 3,15; B.A.D.
Cats 6,13; Incredible Hulk 8,10;
Washington Week In ·Review
20,33; Movie "Cat People" 17.
8:30-Lucllle Ball 3, 15; Wall Street
Week ·20,33.
9:oo-Movle "Swan Song" 6,13;
Dukes of Hauard 8,101 Capitol
Beat 33; Free to Choose 20.
_9:30-NHL Hockey 17; American
Short Story 33.
lO:oo-Eivls Remembered: Nashville to Hollywood 5PtCial: 3,151
Dallas 8. 10; News 20 .
10:»--ver Easy .20; Murder Most
English 33.
11: Oo-News 316,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick
Cavett 20.
11: 3()-Tonight 3, 15; Charlie's
Angels 6; Movie "Sign_If Deal~." ,
. 8; ABC tapfloned lilttws 331.
Movie "Let's Scare Jessica to
Death" 1o: Movie 13.
12:011-Movle "The Tingler" 17; ·
' David Susskind 33. .
..
12 : 40-FBI 6;
1:0G-Midnlght
Special 3,151 Moviv',The Giant
Behemoth" 10.
· .
·•
. ·
1: 3()-News 131 1:35-f\jliws 17; .
1: 40-Movle
"Cock!Uhell
Heron" 17.
•
2:30'-News 3; 3:-"I-MOVIe "Edge of
E1ernlty" 171 5: 15-LOVt_; ;·: .
American Sl)'le 11.
·• · • :·
•'

�•j' ~

•'

House rejects lottery bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I - A bill
tightening management of the
beleaguered state lottery has hit
another snag in the Legislature.
On one of the busiest days of the
session, the House refused 46-51
Wednesday to accept a conference
committee's version · of the bill.
Senators had accepted it 28-5 on Jan.
31.
Sen. John K. Mahoney, !).
Springfield, the chief sponsor, said
the Senate-House panel, or possibly
a new joint committee, will again try
to iron out differences.
They mainly stem from House in·

with a shutoff of utility services.
Eckart's bill goes to the Senate,
which held a brief session Wednesday and passed a bill ap.
propriating $1.5 million as the
state's share of a major renovation
project at the Ohio Veterans' Home
in Sandusky.
Funds for the proiect had been

WOUWN'T YOU RATHER HAVE A BUICK? This 1912 Buick touring car was photographed at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds some 6ll years ago. Readers
will notice that the steering wheel is on the right.
Driver of the car is the late W. F. Price who was a

Pomeroy pharmacist. The late Mr. Price is behind the
wheel but the owner of the photo would like to know
who the passengers are. Any reader being able to identify them may call The Sentinel office.

State says

Area deaths
FRED JENKINS

Fred Jenkins, 69, Syracuse. died
Wednesday at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Jenkins was preceded in death
by his parents, George Arthur and
Jennie Bell Wiggins Jenkins and one
brother, Cecil Jenkins. He was a
member of the First Church of God,
Syracuse.
He is survived by his wife, Lenora
Jenkins; five sons, Fred Jenkins,
Jr., and Gene Jenkins, both of
Columbus; Lanny Jenkins ,
Pomeroy; Gary Jenkins, JacksonviUe, N. C., and Mike Jenkins of
Gallipolis;' one daughter, Donna
Koehler, Syracuse; four sisters,
Helen U&gt;vett, Faye Brown and
Freda Barre all of Cincinnati, and
Alberta Schirhart, Cleveland; one
brother, George Morgan Jenkins,
Brooksville, Fla.; 14 grandchildren
and three great grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. George Oiler officiating. Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at

the funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.
NORA McCRERY
Mrs. Nora Curtis McCrery, 71, formerly of Middleport, died unexpectedly at her home Monday.
Surviving are her husband, Pearl
L. McCrery; three sons, James of
Annadale, Va.; Charles of San Jose,
Calif., and Michael of Columbus;
five grandchildren, several nieces
and nephews; a brother, Law&lt;ence
Curtis of St. Petersburg, Fla.; three
sisters, Mrs . Joseph (Curtis)
Corrigan, Columbus; Frances Curtis Mcintosh, Dayton, and Mary Cur·
tis Andrew, U&gt;ng Botlom, and two
local cousins, Nellie Andrew, U&gt;ng
Bottom, and Robert Mackin, Columbus.
Funeral services will be held at
10:30 a.m. Friday at the St. Anthony
Catholic Church in Columbus with
burial to be in the Resurrection
Cemetery.
Friends are being
received at the Rutherford-Corbin
Chapel, 515 High St., Worthington,
from 7to 9 this evening.

Critics say water projects

hill 'porkharrel giveaway'
WASHINGTON (AP) - Critics of
a $4.2 billion water projects biU ap.
proved by the House are hoping to
get objectionable provisions
removed in the Senate.
·
The bill passed the House by a 283127 vote despite protests by the administration and civic organizations
that it is little more than a porkbarrel giveaway.
Administration lobbyists are
hoping cuts can be made in a Senate
version now pending in committee.
Some White House lobbyists have
said the Senate bill in its present
state is "far worse" than the House
measure passed Tuesday.
President Carter has indicated a
veto is likely if the final legislation
sent to him is not changed from the
present state of the two bills.
The measure approved Tuesday
by the House authorizes some 200
construction projects and feasibility
studies around the nation for such
things as flood control, harbor
navigation and shore erosion
prevention.
Supporters say it carries a
backlog ci projects that were
delayed by the feud between
Congress and the president over
water policy. They argued that
many of the projects are badly
needed to save lives or jobs.
But Conunon Cause and the .
League of Women Voters opposed
the measure, as did Howard Jarvis
of Proposition 13 fame. The National

Taxpayers Union called the
measure "fiscally irresponsible."
The White House said the House
action "continues the longestablished tradition of authorizing
water projects that are unstudied,
that benefit only special interests at
the expense of the Atnerican taxpayer, and that move the federal
government into an increasingly
larger role in state and local
decision-making.''
Rep. William Harsha, R-Ohio, the
senior Republican on the House
Public Works Committee, defended
the bill, charging that environmental groups were putting out
" propaganda, distortions and
misrepresentations" in an effort to
defeat it.
There there was little doubt from
the beginning that the bill would
pass easily.
Even its ~taunchest opponent,
Rep. Robert Edgar, J).Pa ., conceded
there were simply too many
congressmen with a stake in the bill
- a project planned for their
district, debts owed for projects ap.
proved in the past or an eye toward
projects in the future.

facility
unsuitable
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Apple Creek Developmental Center,
Ohio's fourth largest mental retardation facility, is beset with staff
shortages, low morale and "constant

turnover"

in

its

ad-

ministration, according to a state
report.
The biggest problem at the
eastern Ohio center seems to be that
Apple Creek has lost five superintendents, four program directors
and four medical directors in the
past five years, a state mental
health spokesman said.
"The constant administrative turnover was a surprise," said Terry
Freeman of the Joint Mental Health
and Mental Retardation Advisory
and Review Committee, the agency
which monitors state-run mental
health centers. The committee inspected Apple Creek last year and
issued a report on its findings this
week.
The state agency also reported a
shortage of doctors, nurses, and
physical, speech and occupational
therapists . at the facility, about 25
miles west of Canton.
"The professional staff shortages
seem to be a statewide problem,"
said Freeman. "This situation (at
Apple Creek) may be due in part to
its rural location."

Also cited by the inspection committee were a continual
reorganization and shifting of
responsibilities affecting services
because of staff turnover; possible
patient abuse in one living unit;
apathy and low morale; extensive
damage to some areas; and a lack of
training for new staff.
The Apple Creek center is already
under court order to reduce its
population from its present 560
residents to 356 by July 1982.
Freeman said Cleveland and
Youngstown-area menial health
centers will be taking some patients.
Freeman also said there will be
further inspection of the facility by a
local watchdog group and by the
joint commission "in the next six to
nine months."

RA

provision, which would have the lottery go out of business in 1983 unless
renewed by the Legislature.
Mahoney's bill, endorsed by Gov.
James A. Rhodes, beefs up the
powers of the lottery director and
puts lottery employees under civil
service, while reducing the often
fragmented, five-member lottery
commission from management to
advisory status.
In other action Wednesday, the
House for the first time this session
voted to override a veto by Gov.
James A. Rhodes.
The Senate has yet to act on the
veto. The bill rejected by Rhodes
would provide an additional 13
weeks jobless benefits to workers
idled by major plant shutdowns.
Two Republicans joined 61
Democrats for a 63-33 vote on the
override, three more than the threefifths majority needed.
Otherwise, the House approved 7619 a major bill creating a 12th state
appeUate court district in southwest
Ohio, hiking the number of such
districts from 11.
Sponsors said the measure grew
out of dramatic increases in case
loads faced by the appellate judges.
In addition to making the new
district, from three existing ones,
the proposal also adds a judge each
in six districts, and adds one each to
conunon pleas courts in Clennont,
Huron, and Portage counties.
Without dissent, the House ap.
proved a bill by Rep. Dennis E.
Eckart, 0-Euclid, which allows the
Welfare Department to distribute
$39.8 million in federal funds to help
the poor with winter heating bills.
Of the total, $34.4 million would be
distributed + in payments ranging
from $54 for ilidividuals up to $108
for families + to recipients of
general relief, food stamps, and aid
to dependent children.
The other $5.4 million would
replace state funds earmarked for
the U&gt;w Income Energy Assistance
Program. It provides up to $250
during the winter to low-income
Ohioans experiencing or threatened

PASSBOOK Compounded Daily 5 lj4%

lAdkin

Blsclts
Dec/rep

PLUS MANY,
MANY MORE

...

90 DAY CERTIFICATE .......~;~:~~~.5• :~~·.0:0.... 5¥2%
1

·'

1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......':'.;~::':~:':~.~:~~·~....... 6%

..

4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~:~::':~:':~~:~~~~..... 7114%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ..... ..~:~:':'.~':'.~~·.0•0•0:~~ ••••• Jllz%
Minimum 51,000.00

Jlft,%

AKRON - Computing the enormous amounts of data sent back
from satellites is steadily becoming a massive problem - a prt&gt;blem engineers at Goodyear
Aerospace are attempting to
SJ!ve.
Under a contract from the National Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration, Goodyear says the
computer it is designing will be
the fastest one in the world.
The machine will be capable of
performing up to six billion
mathematical functions a second, said Fred R. Neibiker,
manager of advanced programs
at Goodyear. NASA is paying
Goodyear $4.7 million for its
work, he says.

8 YEAR CERTIFICATE............................ "
30 MONTH CERTIFICATE

10AO%

Min. $1,000

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
SIO,OOO minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treasury
bill rate. As determined at weekly auction.

Current rate 11.985% effective February 7·13, 1980.
Substantial penalty required for early withdrawal.
New 30 month certificate (2'12 yrs.&gt;
$1,000 minimum 10.15%

~~~~~~ii A Home Bank

UMA, Ohio - Negotiators for
the city and its safety forces met
into the early hours today in an
effort to reach a contract agreement and end a strike by pollee
and firemen. About 110 police and
· filemen walked off the job Thursday.
Tbeir picket lines were honored
by non-unHonned workers, leaving the water and sewer depart·
ments also manned only by
supervisory personnel.
Mayor Harry Moyer.said a contract accepted by non-unifonned
workers would be offered to safety forces, but there was no word
on what transpired during talks
with a federal mediator Thursday.

For

Meigs County
People

RACINE
POMEROY EMERGENCY
GOES TO DARWIN
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a caU to Darwin at 6:44
p.m. Wednesday for Samuel Pickens
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was ad·
mitted.

HOME NATIONAl

BANK
Racine, Ohio

r------------.L-----------------------_:

Mock draft

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
WINTER. CLEARANCE SALE

C)lrds burned

'

at Kent State

PRICE
Women's Coordinate Sportswear

Men's 3 Piece Suits

Women's Winter Gowns and Robes

Children's Snowsuits

Men's Flannel Work Shirts

Buster Brown

Junior Coordinate Sportswear ·

Boys's Sweaters

Women's Sweaters and Vests

Junior Sweaters

Men's Sport Coats

Boys' Shirts

Men's Sport Shirts

Women's Winter Coats

little Girls Tops and Sweaters

Junior KnH Tops

Men's Sweaters

Men's Flannel Pajamas

Children's Sleepweaf
'
liHie Boys' Shirts &amp;Tops

Men's Winter Jackets

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FR IDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Hopes inc.rease for hostages' release
By The Associated Press
President Abolhassan Bani Sadr
consolidated his power in Iran today
and intensified his crackdown on the
young militants holding some 50
Americans hostage in the U.S. Embassy.
Hopes increased for the release of
the hostages soon. But the ruling
Revolutionary Council said the
crisis would be considered after an

LIMITED QUANTinES - All SALIS FINAL

Tools

VOL XXVIII NO. 209

~en tine

at

a r intensifies crack own

ON WINTER APPAREL FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN

VISE·
GRIRt

(USPS 145-960)

SAVING

Haggis, the national dish ci
Scotland, is made from calf's or
sheep hearts, livers, lungs and smaU
intestines, boiled in the animal's
stomach.

Eight juveniles
fined recently
Eight juveniles were fined when
they appeared before Judge Robert
E. Buck.
Fined were Tim Sauter, 17, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, $14 and costs, speed; Dale
Riffle, 17, Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
driving privileges suspended 30
days, DWI; Larry Byer, 17, Middleport, $13 and COllis, speed; John
R. Weddle, 17, Rt. I, Portland, $16
and costs, speed; John Hoffman, 17,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, driving
privileges suspended one week, stop
sign violation; Brian Wolfe, 16,
Racine, $10 and costs, accident involved, excessive speed; James
Gheen, 16, Middleport, $10 and costs,
stop sign violation; Usa Ga.·ctner,
15, Rt. I, Middleport, $15 and custs,
reckless operation.

.

e

CURRENT

sistence on a so-called "sunset"

-

placed in the state's twt&gt;-year capital·
improvements bill, stalled in a:
Senate-House conference com-:
•
mittee. .
Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord,·
said prompt action was needed in or-:
der to qualify for $2.7 million in mat·:
ching federal funds available for the:
Sandusky project.

•

•,.

'

KENT, Ohio (AP) - Demon·
strators angered by President Carter's call for draft regiatratlon bur·
ned mock draft cards following an
anti-draft rally on the Kent State
University campus.
In a separate incident at Kent
State Thursday, a pon.student from
Cleveland claiming to be a member
of the Revolutionary Communist
Party burned an American flag. The
Incident spurred a shouting match
between the demonstrator and an
Akron television cameraman
angered by the flag-burning.
About 50 demonstrators burned
the mock draft cards In front of the
Klva Student Center.
Earlier, a crowd ol about 350
people cheered antklraft speakers
at the rally in Kiva Auditorium.
However, when some persons urged
overthrowing the govenunent, most
people in the crowd booed.
Patrick O'Malley, a member of
the Kent State Student Caucus, said
he was among student leaders from
across the country who have been invited to dlsc\ISS the draft _with Car·
ter.

GAME POSTPONED
Due to a flu e~mle at lbe
Waverly lll8b School, tonllhl's
came . betweea tile Melcs
Mlnlllden and Waverly Tlgen
l1u beeD postpoaed. La~t nllh~
tbe Prla· COlllelt betw~n lbe
· I8Die tw41 teaJDS. was also called
olf. Saturday'• Meigs pme at
Wallama between the boys'
leaJDS u sitU OD.

international panel is set up to probe
its charges against the shah. It did
not say whether the captives would
be freed at that time or after the investigation is over.
Tehran Radio announced the
elevation of the president from acting chainnan to head of the cowtcil
with the consent of AyatoUah
Ruhollah Khomeini, the 7~year-old
leader of the Iranian revolution.
~ 1

Hasan Habibi, the council's
spokesman, said Bani Sadr would
chair the policy-making council's
sessions, exercise the council head 's
legislative and executive powers
and "harmonize proceedings" with
government ministers who are not
members of the council.
Habibi indicated that this setup
would continue until a Majlis, or
parliament, is elected March 7.

Tbe announcement confinned
Bani Sadr, who got 75 percent of the
vote in the presidential election Jan.
25, as Iran's second most influential
leader after the aged, ailing
Khomeini, who is convalescing after
a heart attack.
The president demonstrated his
growing clout by a!tacking the
militant young students occupying
the American Embassy as tyran-

Windfall tax may
end in reductions
WASHINGTON (AP)- A SenateHouse conference conunittee inched
toward agreement early today to set
aside most of the money from the
new "windfall profits" tax on the oil
industry for general income tax
reductions.
The shape and timing of the .tax
cuts, which would total $114 )&gt;illion
or more In the 1980s, would be
decided by later legislation.
One option is a tax reduction that
would take effect a month before the
Nov. 4 elections and would be worth
at least$10.4 billion In 1981.
The Carter administration op.
poses any tax cut now, fearing such
a move would worsen inflation and
deepen the federal budget deficit.
Unless spending programs are
reduced, any 1981 tax cut would ex·
pand the U5 billion deficit foreseen
in President Carter's 1981 budget.
But Carter could be either forced
to accept some type of tax cut
package or else risk loss of the "win·
dfall" tax - a key element of his
energy program.
Before ending a 14-hour session
shortly after midnight Thursday, the ·
conferees took no final vote on the
tax cut provisions. Because of next
week's congressional recess for Lin·

Gas cost
•
gomg
up

coin's and Washington's btrthdays,
the conferees put off consideration
of the bill until about Feb. 20.
But their discussions indicated
that across-the-board tax relief
would take 50 to 60 percent of the
$227.3 billion that the oil tax is·expected to bring the government
during the coming decade.
Another big chunk of the money
would be used to help lower-income
Americans pay rising energy costs.
That, along with the general tax
reductions, would leave con·
siderably less money than Carter
had requested to develop synthetic
fuels.
Although that package is not yet
complete, the panel reached
preliminary decisioM Thursday
night to spend about $11.5 billion in
the 1980s for energy incentives. Tbe
Senate had voted for $25 billion wor·
th; the House approved none.
House delegates to the conference
generally oppose most of the Senatepassed spending provisions and
want a bigger chunk of the oil tax
money set aside for income tax
reductions. Senators say the credits
would speed the nation's drive to
reduce dependence on importad oil.
Although no final agreement was
reached, the Senate and House
delegations seemed to favor
distribution of the "windfall". tax
revenues in this fashion: -10 per·
cent, or $22.7 billion, for tax incentives for conservation and
development of non-oil fuels.
-10 percent for improving the
nation's transportation system and
for government loans and grants to
developers of exotic fuels.
-25 percent, or $56.8 billion, in
grants to help weHare recipients
cope with rising fuel costs.
-55 percent, or $125 billion, for
general incume tax cuts, probably
for businesses as well as individuals.

Columbia Gas of Ohio has filed a
gas cost rate adjustment with the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
The increase of 4.508 cents per 100
cubic feet amounts to $5.86 on an
average monthiy customer bill of
13,000 cubic feet and will be effective
with bills rendered after March 11 in
all Ohio conununities governed by
the new gas cost recovery clause.
The quarter!:( filing was made in
accordance with PUCO rules governing recovery of natural gas costs.
The increase reflects higher
prices paid to gas producers under
Federal Energy Regulatory Com- '
The Tenth Congressional District
mission regulations and expiration Democratic Action Club will hold its
of refund from pipeline suppliers.
next meeting on W~esday, Feb. 13
Columbia will notify the individual
at the Ohio University Inn in Athens
COI1llllunities of the change in their
and will begin at 8 p.m.
respective rates through letters to
Major topic of discussion at the
city council.
meeting will be the Congressional
Tbe quarterly computation is subDistrict caucuses which will be held
ject to review .by the PUCO and wlll
throughout the state on Feb. 21, to
not affect Columbia of Ohio's profits.
select delegate candidates who will
run in the June primary,in an effort
to become delegates to the
Democratic National Convention in
EXTENDED FORECAST
New York. Five delegates will be
Sunday tbrollgh Tuesday; A
chosen to represent the Tenth
chance of flurries Sullday aod
Congressional. District at that con·
Tuesday, m01tly Ill the northeast,
vention.
and over the entire state Monday.
Highs through the period from
the upper Z08 to the mid 3011. Lows
TRUSTEES TO MEET
from tbe teens to the lower ZOS.
Chester Town:thip Trustees will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
town hall at Chester. At the group's
annual organizational session held
in January, Ralph W. Ours was elected president, and Alfred WoHe was
~winter stonn watch is in effect
named vice president. 'l'iJe trustees
for tonight and Saturday. Cloudy
will meet in 1980 on the second
tonight with snow likely late tonight.
Tuesday of each month at 7:30 p.m.
Silow Saturday, heavy at times.
Lows tonight near 20. Highs Satur·
SWEETIIEART BALL TONIGHT
day.in the low to mid 30s. The chance
Meigs High School Junior Class is
of snow Is 60 percent tonight and
sponsoring
a Sweetheart Ball this
near 100 percent Saturday.
evening at the school from 8 p.m. to
11 p.m. with mllsic by Starship
SQUAD RUNS REPORTED
Sound.
The Pomeroy Emergenct ~uad . Admission is $1.M a single or $2 a
was called to Pine Grove at· 6:55 couple. A king and queen of hearts
a.m. Friday for Peggy White who wiU be crowned.
·
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital as a medical patient. She
BI.,OOI;)MOBILE DUE
was treated and released. At 1:09
The
Meigs County Bloodmobile
p.m. Thursday, tbe squad went to
will
be
at the Pomeroy Elementary
Peach Fork for Mi3S Jessie SaunSchool Monday, ·Feb. 18, £rem I :30
ders, who was also taken to Veterans
p.m. to5:30 p.m. ·
Memorial HO'lp1tai.

Club will meet
February 13th

Weather ·

nical, lawless foes of the government for the second straight day
Thursday. He also had the
Revolutionary Council limit their access to the national radio and TV
network and granted only four-day
visas to the 49 Americans they invited to publicize their cause instead
of the 1(k!ay visas they sought.
"Why do those students who caU
themselves followers of Ayatollah

Ruhollah Khomeini violate the constitution by their illegal acts?" he
said in a new attack on the militants
for engineering the arrest of Information Minister Nasser Minachi
by broadcasting charges that papers
found in the embassy linked him to
the CIA.
"Is this Islamic or Stallnistic?" he
asked in an interview with the
(Continued on page 10)

Ord rehired as
superintendent

PROMOTED - Ralph E. Amburgey has been promoted to the
positloa of Productioa
Superlntendent-Malnleoance at
Ohio Valley Electric Corpora·
lion's Kyger Creek Station according to U&gt;uls R. Ford, Jr.,
Plaut MaDBger. Amburgey joined OVEC in 1966 as a Test
Engineer and in 19'11 was pr.,.
moted to Senlor·Test Engineer, a
position be beld until his recent
promotion to Production
Superintendent· Main lena nee.
Ralph is a 1966 graduate of Tennessee Tecbnologleal UD1ver11ity
with a degree in Mecbaalcal
EngineCrlng. He resides at 906
M01sman Circle, Point Pleasant,
with his Wife Carle, Hill Kevin
and Steven, and daughler Klodra.

OEA spokesman
says pocketbook
problems reality
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Spokesmen for the Ohio Education
Association acknowledge it has
pocketbook problems but say reports of impending bankruptcy are
blown out of proportion.
Raymond L. Randels, interim
director of OEA, said its executive
committee is concerned enough
about the agency's financial future
to want to cut operating costs.
And OEA Spekesman William
Martin said it's a matter of coping
with inflation.
"We don't have any hassle over
money," Martin said. "It's a matter
of coping With inflation. Charges
that we are bankrupt are absurd."
John Grossman, president of the
3,600-member Columbus Education
Association, said the state union of
teachers circulated a letter to local
leaders which stated OEA has $4
million of debts.
"But reports of OEA's bankruptcy
are overstated," Grossman added.
"That's ridiculous." He said the·
reports originated with an unnamed
newspaper.
Randels, who assumed leadership
of the 80,000 member state
organization last September, said
there is nothing new about OEA's
financial situation, "except that, If
anything, the whole matter has improved."
"The OEA for a number of year11
has been spending more money than
it has
taking in," Randels said.
"The executive committee determined thlit the organization should
live within its 1,11eans."
He said the executive committee
plans to cut a up to $207,000 from the
organization's 1980 budget.
Grossman said that while OEA
has a SIO million aMual budget
there Is a need for reorganization
and restructuring.
He said he is proposing changes In
what he tenned OEA 's service
structure.
"We should start at the local level
and rebuild the state organization to
what we can afford," he said.
"We're talking about maintaining
service to our members which is the
main reason for OEA and carrying
on whatever we can afford at the
stal ·' le\·el," he.said. .

Bobby Ord was rehired as superintendent of Southern Local School
District by a four to one vote when
the board of education met Tuesday
night.
The name of the board member
voting no was not released. Ord was
given a two year contract.
The board by mutual consent set
the following policy in regard to
visitors. In the future anyone
wishing to discuss a problem with
the board must get in contact with
the superintendent one week prior to
the regular meeting and state the
problem they wish to discuss in order that it may be put on the agenda.
Anyone who does not foUow the
policy will be recognized and given
three to five minutes to state their
business but no action will be taken
by the board at that time.
In other business the board gave
Ord approval to make applicaiton
for funding for a 65 passenger school

bus.
Aaron Sayre, Vt&gt;-Ag teacher and
students, Bob Lee and Albert
Holman, asked the board for an acre
of land, next to the footbaU field, to
raise potatoes. The request was ap.
proved.
Students of Sayre and Mike Elber·
feld, industrtal arts teacher, were
granted pennission to refinlsh the
chair.! at the study hall. Carla Shuler
resigned as senior play director due
to earlier commi!rnents.
Florence Circle and Carol Crow
were approved as substitute
teachers for the 1979-l!O school year.
Frank W. Porter, attorney, is
representing the board in regard to
the Title IX program.
Attending were Shirley Johnson,
president, Sue Grueser, Denny
Evans, Charles Pyles, and Don
Smith, board members, Ord, Sayre,
Elberfeld, Jim Adams, principal
and Nancy Carnahan, clerk.

Grant applications
are signed Thursday
BY~KA TIE CROW

Grant applications, which will be
forwarded to the EPA, were signed
Thursday night at a combined
meeting of the Syracuse-Racine
Regional Sewage District, Syracuse,
Racine and Rutland councils.
The grant appllications affect the
Syracuse-Racine Sewer Distict only
since Rutland's sewage plans will
have to be revised.
Meeting with the three groups
were Ed Tinkle of Commonwealth
Engineering and Myron Frazier,
rate consultant with H. J. Umbaugh
and Associates.
Tinkle explained that the signing
of the grant applications completes
step two. Apreliminary clearance of
step one, an archeological study, has
been completed.
Tinkle went on to explain that
when the grant applications are ap.
proved the system will go into step
three. Step three is the advertising
of bids and actual construction.
Advertising for bids , if all work is
completed, could take place May I.
If this occurs bids will be opened on
June I; with actual construction to
begin Aug. I.
This will happen providing work
on easements is started im·
mediately. The easements must be
obtained before bids are advertised.
Tinkle stressed the importance ol
obtaining easements.
Tinkle went on to explain that the
sewage system in the vlllages of

been

omo LOTl'ERY
00-CentPyramld: 25; 796; 0183.
Sl Bonanza: 2S; 511; 3874; 68474;
245227.
KITCHEN BURNS
The Middleport Fire Department
answered a call to the Walter McDaniel home, 663 North Front St., at
\O:p:! p.m. Thursday where there
was a fire in the kitchen. Tbe blaze
was confined· to the kitchen, but
there was smoke damage mother
rooms of the home. At the same
time the emergency squad was
caUed to 342 Beech St. for Margaret
Nunn, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and sdmitted~

Syracuse and Racine will take ap.
proximately 18 months to complete.
Tinkle also observed that use of
the sewer system is mandatory. All
residents must hook into the sewer
system even if the property is
located 300 feet from the sewer line.
FoUowing completition residents
must hook into the system within 90
days in order to avoid paying a tap
fee which would range in price from
$250 to $300.
Tinkle explained that rates for the ~
sewage system depends a great deal
on whether bids or high or low. If
bids come in low the rates woold be
lowered or if the bids are high the
rates could be higher.
Tinkle In conclusion stressed that
work on the easements should be
begin at once in order to proceed as
ouUined above.
Myron Frazier, rate consultant,
explained the costs of construction
ana anticipated rates for residents
of both Syracuse and Racine.
Frazier explained that the EPA
requires adoption of certain method
of charges. Frazier went on to say
that everyone will pay a fair share of
the sewage system. Ordinances
must be drawn up in order that
customers are not overcharged or
undercharged, Frazier explained.
Tbe rate for sewage is based on
the engineer's estimated cOO of construction, Frazier noted.
Cost of buillding the system Is
$5,929,150. Grants from EPA and
FHA total $4,667,150 leaving a balance of, for Syracuse and Racine,
$1,262,000. Tbe balaDce will be paid
over a 38 year period at 5 percent Interest or a payment of $74,816 a year.
Frazier further explained that It
will cost $137,537 year to operate the
system. The $137,537 Includes
operation and maintenance apense,
replacement cost, user charge
requirement and average aMual
debt service.
The estimated homes and
bu.sinemies to be serviced in the two
villages is 738.92 customers.·
It Is estimated that it wW C&lt;JIIt
each single family residence $15.55
per month. This is for sewage ser.
vice alone .and does not include the
mqnthly water bill.
Proposed monthly C&lt;JIIts for other
users are as follows: . commercial,
retail establishtnent, first three employes, $15.55, each addltooal employe; $3.95; gasoline service
stations, with car wash faclli~es.
...-.90, without car wash facWtles,
$23.35; laundromata, $11.70 per
{Continued onpaJe 10)

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