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                  <text>8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 12. 1980

Area deaths
METIA MAY BENEDUM
Mrs. Metta May Benedwn, 89,
ReedsviUe , died early Saturday
morning at Mt. Carmel Hospital,
following an extended illness.
She was born at Big Battle. Doddridge County, W. Va., daughter of
the late James and Elsie Mallowy
Ford.
·
She was the oldest living member
of the J oppa United Methodist Church and had resided in the ReedsviUe
area for the past 59 years.
Survivors include four sons,
Charles of London, Ohio; Wilson,
Columbus; Francis of Tuppers
Plains and Loren of Reedsville;
three daughters, Mrs. Vi olet
Milhone, Tuppers PlairLS; Mrs.
Charles (Mary ) Valentine, Parkersburg, and Mrs. Don (Peggy )
Pullins of Williamstown, W. Va.; a
sister, Mrs. Kenneth (Lura ) Campbell, Mountlake, Washington. There
are also 20 grandchildren, 33 greatgrandchildren, and one great-greatgranddaughter.
She was preceded by her husband,
Meigs, in 1978 and by five brothers
and six sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. today from the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with Rev . Richard
Thomas and Rev . Freeland Norris
officiating. Burial will be in the Sand
Hill Cemetery at Long Bottom.

\~:~~-:_~:n!.~~:.~~s~t:'"!~..~a~~ trial

JOHN L. GREER, SR.
JO~" ' .. Greer, Sr., 82, died Monday at the Miami Heart Institute in
Miami, Fla.
Mr. Greer is survived by his wife,
Esther Bradbury Greer, formerly of
Middleport; two svns, two daughters
and several grandchildren.
Mr. Greer was a prominent
businessman in KnoJrVille, Tenn:,
and Miami.
Funeral services will be held in
Knoxville. In lieu of flowers, friends
may send contributions to the
American Cancer Society, the
Miami Heart Institute or the Little
Church by the Sea in Miami.

Jr., on trial for murder in the deaths
of 33 young men, offered a teen-ager
money in exchange lor sex and once
handcuffed the youth, a Cook County
Circuit Court jury was told.
Tony Antonicci, now 20, told jurors
Monday that Gacy, a remodeling
contractor and then his employer,
made advances on two occasions in
1975, when Antonicci was 16 .
The first incident occurred June 2,
when Gacy and Antonicci went to a
Democratic Party headquarters to
set up chairs for a meeting, An·
tonicci testified.
He said both oflhem had a drink of
whiskey and Gacy offered him "between $SO and $100" lor oral sex. An·

it was a joke and that Gacy was just
trying to test me under pressure."
Later that sununer, when An·
tonicci was at home alone, Gacy
stopped by and asked to come in, oflering the teen-ager wine and asking
if he would like to see some stag
movies. Antcnicci said he consented
and Gacy brought in some film and a
projector from his car.
After the movies, Antonicci said,
"we talked and then started
wrestling around ... He put me to the
floor and handcuffed both my hands
behind me with my face up. He un·
buttoned my shirt and pulled my
pants down, then he left the room
and went to Uw k;trhen.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Kathryn Fetter, Middleport; Charles Curfman, Racine;
Gloria Kapteina, Columbus; Ann
Johnson, Pomeroy; Sherry lndastad, Pomeroy; Emeline Findling, Pomeroy ; Tabatha Gardner
Gallipolis; Helen Gibbs, Hartford;
Penny Middleswart, Portland ;
Floyd Brookover, Pomeroy.
Discharge~-Everett Douglas,
Gerald Keaton, Charles Blakes,
Raymond Whaley.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Sumner Road for
Ralph Parker who was treated on
the scene at 4:47p.m. Monday.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - The FBI
has evidence crime syndicate bosses
were planning as recently as last
week to call a summit conference
and carve new boundaries in underworld fiefdoms spanning the
nation, knowledgeable sources say.
But FBI officials now believe the
session was canceled after public
disclosure of bureau investigations,
including Brilab, the sources said.
The secret summit, involving
crime bosses [rom an undetennined
nwnber of cities, was said to equal in
scope the notorious 1957 conclave of
more than 60 mob leaders in
Apalachin, N.Y.
The FBI learned of the planned
session through several major in·
vestigations of organized crime, including Brilab, the undercover
probe of mob involvement in insurance bribery and kickbacks in
the Southwest, said sources familiar
with the investigations.
The sources, who requested
anonymity, said mob leaders were
drafting plans to alter the boundaries and tenns of agreements
giving each of them exclusive rights

CLOSED MONDAY
COLUMBUS - Director Clifford
Reich of the Ohio Department of
Liquor Control announced today that
all state liquor stores, agencies and
departmental offices will be closed
Monday, February 18, in observance
of Presidents' Day.
MEET WEDNESDAY
Apple Grove United Methodist
Women will meet Wednesday at 7
p. m. at the church.

national crime syndicate did, indeed, exist.
Until then, J. Edgar Hoover, the
FBI director, had resisted urgings to
investigate organized crime. After
New York state police disclosed the
Apalachin summit, Hoover was forced to pay attention to crime syndicates.
But it was not until the 1970s that
the bureau focused on organized
crime in a major way.
When William H. Webster took
over as director two years ago, he

to a certain geographic region. The
mobsters involved are the bosses of
the syndicate the FBI calls La Cosa
Nostra.
"This included narcotics traffic
and everything else organized crime
is involved in," one source said.
" There were a variety of
modifications in the works."
The sources declined to say where
the swrunit was to have taken place.
The first hint of the underworld
plan surfaced when a letter from
Assistant Attorney General Philip
Heymann was made public in
federal court in Los Angeles on
Friday. Heymann wrote that the
FBI "is on the verge of developing
evidence regarding a massive,
nationwide conspiracy relating to
the allocation of territories in the
United States for certain types of
illicit activities."
The planned conclave was
reminiscent of the Apalachin summit, which startled the nation with
the strongest evidence to date that a

RED POlL HEART
I LB. $4.7$

S ll . ~l.·1

CLINIC FEBRUARY 16
The Ohio Junior Quarter Horse
Association will hold its Annual Winter Youth Clinic Saturday, Feb. 15,
at Cooper Arena on the Ohio State
Fairgrounds, Columbus. The clinic
will begin at 10. a.m. Admission will
be $2 and for $3 plus membership to
the Junior Quarter Horse
Association. The clinic is open to all
4-H, youth activity members and all
other interested youth and adult horsemen. For more information contact O.J.Q.H.A. President Beverly
Lewis 632-7470, or Charlie Menker
(513) 1143-7079.

(Continued from page 1)
between Turkoman rebels and
revolutionary guardsmen in Gonbad-e-Kavus, in northeast Iran :lO
miles from the Soviet border, according to the official Gulf news
agency in a report from Tehran
quoting a morning newspaper there.
In continuing fighting overnight,
the Turcomans had seized two army
tanks, it said. The town of 60,000 persons had been extensively damaged
by heavy artillery, the report said.
The Turcomans are one of Iran's
ethnic minorites seeking a measure
of autonornoy from the central
government.

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Fire
reconstruction expert Terry Hoyle
says he "found no indication" that
aluminum wiring was in any way
responsible for the May 28, 1977, fire
at the Beverly Hills Supper Oub.
Hoyle, president of Hoyle,
Klausing and Associates of Chicago,
testified before a federal jury Monday in regard to his investigation of
the fire , in which 165 persons were
killed and 50 injured.
He headed a team, hired by the
owners al the nightclub, thst
examined the fire debris and interviewed 250 patrons and employees of the Southgate club.
Lawyers for defendants in the civil
litigation - aluminum, wiring and
electrical-{ievice manufacturers have been presenting their own expert witnesses to counter the contentions made by the plaintiffs' experts.
The plaintiffs, including those injured and the families of persons
killed in the fire, allege that the
blaze was the result of faulty oldstyle aluminum wiring. They also
charge the industry conspired to
cover up tbese faults.
Hoyle said he found no aluminum
branch circuit wiring in the receptionist's cubbyhole outside the Zebra

Room, where attorneys for the plain.tifls contend the fire started.
He also testified that burning tar
paper caused the thick black smoke
that spread through the nightclub.
The tar paper had ~n placed on the
top of much of the club before a
second story was added, and was
still in place at the time of the fire,
he said.
The smoke overcame the filters
and was distributed throughout the
club, he added.
In addition to \ln!ir disagreement
over the cause of the fire, experts for
the two sides dispute where the fire
began.
Hoyle said that in his view, the
most probable causes of the fire
were a wan outlet on the north wall
of the alcove area or the pump cord
which came from outside the Zebra
Room.
Roger Landers, an electrical
engineer and fire expert from
Marietta, Ga., also testified that the
fire did not start in the cubbyhole
area.
He noted that the pump circuit to
an ornamental fountain was in·
terrupted long before the fire started, and yet the receptionist's light
in the cubbyhole continued to
ooerate.

Gallipolis to host
girls Class A event
Gallipolis will host the 1980 Oass A
Girls Sectional basketball tournament according to an announcement made today by Dan

VALENTINE'S DAY. FEBRUARY 14
A SSORTED
CHOCO LA TES

ILB.

accelerated the investigations with
more sophisticated techniques, often
employing
court-authorized
wiretaps and agents working undercover for months at a stretch.
Evidence of the new gangland
swrunit was developed partly from
the Southwest insurance investigation, another long-nmning
FBI probe of organized crime in the
Midwest, and at least one other
separate but interwoven investigation of organized crime.

Expert feels wiring
not cause of blaze

Hostage ••••

SA TI I\. HEART 2 Lit

handcuff." Antonicci said. "I stayed
there and then when he came near, 1
grabbed his legs and tackled him
down."
·'
Antonicci put the handcuffs on
Gacy and made him lie face down .
"1 held him there for maybe 5 or 10
minutes," he said. "The only thing
he said, was 'You are not only the
one who got out of handcuffs but put
them on me. "'
Robert Zimmennan, 18, testified
he became acquainted with Gacy at
a service station where he worked.
He said Gacy would come in for gas
several times a week and "offered
me marijuana on a lot of occasions

Gangland summit disclosed by FBI

JAMES KELLER
Graveside services for James
Keller, Oeveland, husband of Helen
Zahl, formerly of Minersville will be
held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the
Minersville Hill Cemetery.

.-... -:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-.- ·-·-:-:. ·.·.·.
.-.-.·.·.·.·. -.- ... ·. ::::.;.-:-:
.·.·.·.·.·.-.-.- ... · .-,-.·.-.-.-.-.·.·.

$3.75

Brisker, GAHS athletic director.
The tournament begins Saturday,
Feb. 23, and runs through Saturday,
Marchi.
Five teams will participate Cheshire-Kyger Creek; Crown City
Hannan Trace; Patriot Southwestern; Racine Southern and Vinton North Gallia.
Southern is top seeded with a 11).2
mark. Southwestern is seeded
second with a 7-7 record.
First game Tuesday, Feb. 26, pitS
Southern against Kyger Creek (4-6)
at 7 p.m. Nightcap on Feb. 26 pits
Hannan Trace (2-8) against the North Gallia-Southwestern winner.
The championship game is March
I, at 7; :lO p.m. The winner will advance to the Chillicothe District, and
play the Rock Hill Section Winner
Tuesday, March 4.

Zinunennan ~~~that In Novem-

her 1~8 he was InVIted after work to

G~cys home where there was beerdrmlung and ':"li"Jua~·smoklng
and G~cy propos1tio~ed him for oral
sex. Zunmennan sa1d he refiiBed.
The bodies of 29 young men and
boys ,were found last year under
Gacy s home In northw:st suburban
Norwood Park Township. Four additional bodies were found in
Chicago area nver_s. .
Gacy Ill . plea_ding mnocent by
reason of msaruty to the murder
charges.

One person killed
in train collision
ORlEANS ROAD, W.Va. (AP) Two Chessie System freight trains
collided head-on early today in
Morgan County, killing one person
and injuring at least four others,
authorities said.
Two tanker cars containing
hydrochloric acid overturned when
50 cars derailed in the accident, but
no leaks were reported.
Barbara Jean Hopkins, one of the
train crew members, was killed in
the collision, according to Lloyd
Lewis, a spokesman for Chessie.
Four men were taken to Morgan '
County Hospital in Berkeley
Springs. One was then transferred
by helicopter to a hospital in Hager·
stown, Md., according tc Ed Zadal,
hospital administrator.
The accident occurred about 5: 45
a.m., according to Vera Leclercq, a
Chessie System spokeswoman in ·
Baltimore.
One train had two locomotives and
125 cars, 49 of them empty, the
spokeswoman said. The other train
had two locomotives and 42 cars, she .
said.
Another Chessie spokesman, J.H.
Griffin, said the' derailment was expected to delay Amtrak passengers
riding the eastbound Shenandoah.
He said the Shenandoah travels
from Cincinnati, Ohio, and usually
arrives in Washington at about 9
a.m.

Cold temps continuing
High press,ure centered over the
central Plains will pass just south of ·
Ohio tcnlght. The National Weather
Service says skies will be clear
tonight with lows mostly between 10
and 15. It will be mostly sunny Wednesday with highs in the low to mid
30s.
Snow ended over most of the state
by midnight. The only exception was
in the northeast comer of Ohio,
where flurries still lingered this
morning. Temperatures dropped into the teens and single digits.
Youngstown was the only station
still reporting flurries at 6 a.m. Skies
were partly cloudy over extreme
northern Ohio and clear elsewhere
early this morning. Temperatures
ranged from 3 in Cincinnati and
Dayton to 17 in Chesapeake.

15 INS •..
(Continued from page 1)
sultants" who bribe low-level INS
employees to help bona fide aliens
entitled to legitimate paperwork to
avoid bureaucratic red tape.
-Payoffs ranging from daily $50
payments for employment pennits
to $40,000 for workups involving the
wholesale forgery of official files
and the issuance of "green cards"
that indicate legal immigration and
eligibility for work.
-Payoffs to destroy incriminating
files.
Targets of the investigatioo include file clerks, inspectors in the
travel documents section,. deportation officers, detention section
guards, contact representatives and
clerks in the citizenship, alien and
investigation sections.

e

Send A Little Love
To All Your Friencls
·Rer:nem ' special people on Wednesday,
February 14 with loving Hallmark Valentines.
They'll love your for it~

•

+u.- J..

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Middleport, 0.

ELBERFELDS 'IN POMEROY

a . . . ,_

••

.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 212

Dottie Will and Sandra Butcher were employed as substitute custodians ; Sandra Sargent and Virginia Buchanan as substitute cookS, and Brian Windon and .
Nancy Neutzling as substitute bus drivers. Hired for the remainder of the year
were Shirley Priddy, cook; Gary King, bus garage mechanic, and Linda
Stobart, an aide at Salem Center. Three part-time certified people were employed as driver education instructors. They are Robert Ashley, a teacher at
Southwestern in Gallia County, who will also serve as varsity track coach;
Margaret Teaford, and Gloria Whipple.
·
Retirement resignations were accepted from Lioyd Moore, high school
custodian, May 31, and Don Stivers, a teacher, who is ill. Carol Crow was hired
as a substitute teacher. The board adopted a policy on "incompletes" for
students in grades seven through 12. Board members questioned the policy in
that a student receiving two A's for two weeks work might fail as a result.
Mrs. Dorothy Oliver, a tea;her, said that normally an "A" student will make
up the work right away. Dan Morris, director of curriculum, indicated he also
favors the policy because under the present policy a student can drag out an incomplete for four years.
The new policy states that a student must pass two six-weeks of work course
to receive credit for the semester. An incomplete should be made up within a
maximum of one six weeks marking period after it is received. Exceptions will
be at the discretion of the administration. Incompletes will be reported as "F"
on report cards and permanent record folders.
An incomplete received the last six weeks of school cannot be carried over to
the next year without special pennission. The board declared Jan. 5, J an. 31
and Feb. 6 as district "calamity days" due to inclement weather and Jan. 23 as

Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday failed to take any action
upon a request by Roy Miller, supervisor of the Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation District and
Byron Thompson of the Soil Conservation Service lor a soil survey
for Meigs County.
The soli survey offers many advantages such as planning land for
!ann use, housing development, industry, and many other special
developments. They also added that
it was beneficial in tax evaluation.'
It would take five years with two
to three soil scientists doing the
work. Cost to the county over the
'

-~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·,,

'Beading' seen
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP)- Fire
reconstruction expert Terry
Hoyle observed a phenomenon
called "beading" in the cord to an
ornamental fountain shortly after
the Beverly Hills Supper Oub fire
in May 1977, Hoyle testified
Tuesday in U.S. District Court.
Hoyle, from Chicago, said the
formation of small bulbs on.
strands of copper wire "indicated
electrical distress of some kind." ·
He concluded that the fountain
cord was a probable cause of the
· fire which killed 165 people.
The cord led from the fountain
to a concealed space in the north
wall of the club's Zebra Room,
Hoyle
said.

Seek damages
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - Mr.
and Mrs. William Jackson of
Hamilton have filed suit in Butler
County Common Pleas Court
seeking $8.5 million In connection
with a truck-automobile collision
in February 1979.
Jackson contends that his car
was demolished and that he was
severely injured when his auto ·
.was struck from behind on In·
terstate"75 in Hamilton County by
a tractor-trailer whieh belonged
to Continental Conveyer and
Equipment Co. of Winfield, Ala.,
and was driven by Norman Gann
ofGuin,Aia.

Five injured
in accident
Five persons were Injured in
Meigs County during a two-vehicle
accident· investigated Tuesday by
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Called to the scene on SR 124, at
milepost 13, at 6:50 p.m., officers
report a west bound autc operated
by David Wilkes, 16, Rutland, went
off the right side of the roadway and
struck a parked vehicle owned by
Giles Smith, Rutland.
Wilkes and four passengers,
Charlene Patterson, 14, Charlotte
Patterson, Vickie Rowe, 14, aU of
Rutland, and Ivanette Freeman, 14,
Pomeroy, claimed injury and were
transported by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad tc Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Wilkes was cited on a charge of excessive speed. There was severe
damage to the Smith vehicle,
moderate damage to the Wilkes
auto.
In further action, the patrol was
called to the scene of a one-vehicle
accident on SR 588, just west of
milepost4, at 12:25 p.m.
Officers report an east bound
pickup truck driven by Vickie
Jessup, 24, Gallipolis, went out of
control, and passed off the right side
of the roadway through a fence.
Jessup claimed injury and was
transported to Holzer Medical Cen·
ter for treatment. No citation was
issued.

•

enttne

·at

live year period would be between
$53,000 and $54,000. Payment would
be made when the survey is completed.
It was also noted that the survey
contains infonnation that can be applied in managing lanns and
woodlands, in selecting sites for
roads, building of ponds and
buildings. It would also inform persons if land was ideal for fanning or
suitable for a housing development.
Counties presently being surveyed
are Athens, Jackson Hocking and
Perry.
If Meigs County would agree to the
survey it would be two years before
work would begin. The first step for
the commissioners would be to Write
a letter of intent.
It was pointed out that such a survey would be most effective in the
Tuppers Plains area where a
problem exists in land drainage for a
sewage system. No action was
taken, however.

Co. for equipment. S_upt. Gleason said the athletic boosters are working on fund
raising projects and will pay $2,000 in forleitures because the high school football team did not play during the teach~rs' strike. The boosters •is? are
prepared to pay the costs of baseball, wrestlmg and track programs, he sa1d.
The board voted to purchase three new school buses lor next year. The stale
must approve. Supt. Gleason urged the board to purchase three bu.ses a year to
function on a regular plan. Dwight Goins, administrative assistant, reported
that many of the district's Tl buses are old with high mileage. Supt. Gleason
said the last buses purchased by the district were in 1977. Board Member
Snowden asked about making application to purchase more than three buses
with some state aid. He inquired about additional part time -help at the bus
garage since the buses are so old and are breakmg down. Goins will report on
the additional help question at the next meeting. Three buses have been in use
since 1969.
Supt. Gleason recommended 180 days of sick leave for non-certified per·
sonnel. Snowden also questioned this. He said sick leave for non~ertified per·
sonnel had been increased from 155 to 160 days this year.
Gleason said the 160 days for non-(!ertified employes was set before teachers
were allowed 180 days and that there is an attorney general's opinion that contracts for certified and non-(!ertified employes should be the same on sick leave.
Snowden said negotiations between the non-certified employes and the board
are to reopen in June. However, Gleason said negotiations, according to contract, can only take up calamity days and salaries.
The board contracted with the Gallia County Board of Mental Retardation for
(Continued on pa~e 16)

•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUAR Y 13, 1980

Commissioners fail to act
on request for soil survey _

BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) - Mary
PhiJ1ips, 21, of Neville, died Monday night at Oennont County
Hospital, where she has been a
patient since Jan. 2S.
Thomas Swart, 23, of Neville,
hlld been indicted on ·a charge of
attempted murder in eonnectloo
with the alleged beating of Miss
Phllllpa and is being held under
$50,(100 bond.
New Richmond Police Chief
Harold Keimedy said tbat he will
present . addltlonai evidence
against Swart when a grand jury
meets on Feb. 20..

Open M-W, 9 till, Thurs. &amp; Silt. 9 tii 12,
Friday 9 till &amp; 5 til 7

"The

(USPS 145-960)

this year and indicated that she felt Ms. McCoy should also receive $250 a "calamity day" in the Rutland Elementary School due to a major fire.
payment for serving.
The board trails!erred $6,942 to the athletic fund to pay Zide's Sporting Goods

•

e

Victim dies

Possible with a.......,~
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e 19791-Wlmark Cardl. lnt'

Meigs Local School District Board member Robert Snowden challenged
Superintendent David Gleason Tuesday night for breaking board policy and letting four students off who were caught drinking during a school activity recently.
Snowden said he would check into litigation on the controversial expulsion
rule, indicating that Gleason broke board policy when he did not force the
students to stay out of school for the full semester.
The board took no action to change the student expulsion policy.
Flaring tempers and public participation marked Tuesday's five hour board
session at the junior high school in Middleport. Approximately 75 people,
teachers and parents attended.
The meeting moved along smoothly until" subjects such as money for booster
organizations, expulsion, hiring of attorneys and the purchase of school buses
arose.
The board approved a request by Treasurer Jane Wagner for an advance
withdrawal of $490,000 from the county auditor. Also, Mrs. Wagner reported
that a tnLSt fund to benefit the district has been transferred from California.
111e board accepted -the resignations of Diane Haddad, elementary art
teacher at the end of the school year; Robert Downey as junior high intramural
coach, and Gladys Barrett as a substitute custodian. Granted leaves of absence
were Laura Harrison, a bus driver, for six months and Enuna Ashley, a
teacher, for six weeks.
Gordon Fisher was named girls' varsity track coach and Celia McCoy was
named a junior class advisor. She will receive $250 for the assignment this year,
the same salary as the other advisor, Dorothy Oliver.
Supt. David Gleason had recommended a payment of $141 for Ms. McCoy for
the remainder of the year. However, Mrs. Oliver said that little had been done

APPROVAL GIVEN
In other business, commissioners
agreed to participate in the planning
grant of the Conununity Corrections
Act. The act is designed to reduce
prisoo commitmets of non-violent offenders.
Fifteen local governmental units
- cities .or counties are eligible for
$10,000 planning grants and subsidy
payments from an an allocation of
$1,000,000. The village of Pomeroy
will also participate in the program.
• Meeling with the board regarding
HEADS BOARD - Dorset
the planning grant were Rick Crow,
Larkins, Long BoUom, has been
prosecutor, Paul Gerard, Judge
reelected as president of the
John C. Bacon, Mayor Clarence An·
Eastern
Local School District's
drews and Pomeroy Pollee Chief
Board
of
Education
lor 1980.
Harry Lyons.
The commissioners received a bid
from the Middleport Development
Company tc furnish office space for
the Meigs County Welfare Department.
The bid read as follows : "We
propose to lease the property now
•
occupied by the Welfare Departg~ven
ment to the Meigs County Commissioners, on the same tenns as
The balance in the expendable funcontained in your present lease, with
ds of Middleport Village Council, as
the exception that the ~nt for one
of Jan . . 31, totaled $73,433.90 acyear will be at the rate of $850 a moncording to the monthly report of Jon
th, for a one-year lease. The rent for . Buck, clerk-treasurer.
a tw(}-year lease will be $850 per
Receipts , disbursements and
month for the first year and $875 per
balance, respectively, for each fund
month for the second year. We would
during the month of January inpropose tc enter into a five-year
clude : General (safety), $10,744.11,
lease at the rental rate of $850 for the
$10,799.76, $14,771.97; street light, no
first year, per month; $875 per monreceipts, $997 .75, $10,019.69;
th for the second year; $900 per moncemetery, $602.49, $999.50, $1,331.12;
th the third year; $925 per month for
fire equipment, $2,600, $1,422.72,
the fourth year and $950 per month
$2,536.63; swimming pool, no receipfor the fifth year."
ts, $13.79, $3,474.81 ; fire truck,
No action on the lease was taken
$5,000, $420, $12,905.25; planning
by.the board.
commission, no receipts, $3.99,
The board named the following to
$162.60; street maintenance ,
the Meigs County Tuberculosis
$3,103.41, $4,117.24, $175.25 ; street
Board of Tnllltees; Marie Birlevy, no receipts, no disbursements,
chfield, Elizabeth Cutler, Thelma
$5,861.22; federal revenue sharing,
Dill, Doris Ewing, Barbara Knight,
$3,577, no disbursements, $12,346.15;
Joan May, Ben Philson, Maxine
HUD, $20,000,$10,151,$9,849.
Philson, Charles Riffle, Orion
Receipts for the month totaled
Roush, Marilyn Spencer, Faye
(Continued on page 16 )
Wallace and Yvonne Young.
Wesley Buehl, county engineer,
meeting with the board recommended commissioners accept the
low bid of Pomeroy Motor Company .
Partly cloudy tcnight and Thurin the amount of $15,083 for a new
sday. Lows tonight from the upper
·1!180 dump truck to which the com20s to the lower 30s. Highs Thursday
missioners agreed.
between 40 and 45. The chance of
a letter from Carl Hysell, Meigs
precipitation is 20 percent tonight
County Juvenile Office, requesting a
and Thursday.
salary increase was read. The
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:
request mas tabled until the .com·
Friday through Sunday: Fair
missioners can confer with Judge
Friday. A chance of snow or rain
Robert Buck.
Saturday and Sunday. Highs
Bob Bailey, EMS coordianator
through tbe period from tbe 30s to
was granted pennission to advertise
tbe low 4&amp;. Lows from between
for a new emergency vehicle.
15
and 25 Friday to tbe 20s SaturAttending were Richard Jones,
day
and Sunday.
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells commissioners.
:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::~:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::

Middleport

financial

report

Weather

Deputies . quiet
about shooting,
stabbing probed
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
remained mum toda y on the
shooting death of Mrs. Bonnie
Pickens, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, who died
enroute to St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg Tuesday.
Although no details were released
by investigating officers, it was learned that the victim had suffered a
gunshot wound at the rear of the
skull apparently from a rifle.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the Pickens home on
Route 124 at 7:16a.m. Tuesday.
Mrs. Pickens was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
was being taken to Parkersburg
when she died. Dr. R. R. Pickens
was with the squad when the attempt to take Mrs. Pickens to St.
Joseph Hospital was made .

Meanwhile, a Gallipolis man wail
allegedly stabbed in the buttock with
a navy bayonet during an altercation on Oliver St., in Middleport
Tuesday night.
Middlepqrt Police said the in·
cident waS' not reported directly but
was reported to them by the Gallia
·County Sheriff's Department. Ac·
cording to the report, Cha"rles Ken·
der, Gallipolis, and Larry Tay :~~.
were allegedly in an altercation on
Oliver St., when Kender was
allegedly stabbed. Kender, police
said, went to the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department and reported
the incident. The department
notified Middleport police who said
they felt the matter has been
referred to county court.

Ohio traffic deaths
show big hike in '79
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
number of traffic deaths in Ohio increased at a greater rate in 1979 than
at any time since World War II, according to statistics released by the
Oepartrilent of Highway Safety.
Figures showed 2,219 persons
were killed on the state's roadways
last year- an increase of 13 percent
over 1978.
Highway Safety officials said the
latest fatality figure was the state's
highest annual death toll since 1973,
but still was far short of the record of
2,778 set in 1969.
The 1979 increase, however, was
the largest single-year increase in
accident fatalities since 1945, when
the federal government ended
gasoline rationing and thousands of
American servicemen returned
from overseas.
Ohio Highway Safety Director
Robert Chiaramonte called the
figures "deeply disturbing." He said
his office has been working closely
with the Highway Patrol and local
police agencies to fund special "gettough" enforcement programs for

1900.

.

Department spokesman Dennis
Whalen said . Tuesday four such
programs are already under way in
the Cincinnati, Dayton, Columbus
and Delaware areas. Whalen said
National Highway Traffic Safety Ad·
ministration moneyis being used to
provide extra manpower for road
enforcement.
" Not every penny of the money we
get goes into enforcement," Whalen

said. "Some of it goes Into
automobile and bicycle safety
programs and alcohol abuse
education."
The department said a rash of onecar accidents accounted for most of
last year's increase. Figures showed
the rate of multiple-car crashes increased about 2 percent, while
deaths from single-vehicle crashes
rose 26 percent.
Olficials"said excessive speed was
to blame for nearly one quarter of all
accidents. Another major cause,
they said, was driving under the influence of alcohol.
"We've got a relatively small
group of drivers in Ohio who refuse
to obey the speed limit, insist on
driving after they've been drtnklng
and constantly ignore traffic laws,"
Chiaramonte said. "We prefer to
educate people and get them to comply with the law voluntarily, but If
arresting these irresponsible driveri
is the only way to keep them fronl ·
causing accidents, we'll do It ~
hard way."
The Ohio Highway Patrol ha8
already reactivated its statewide an:
ti·speeding program known ~
OASIS. The program uses federal
funds to keep extra~uty troopers
out on high-accident roadways tO
deter potential speeders.
.
Whalen said, " Our studiCll have
shown that more than 70 percent of
the increase in fatal accidents laat
year oecurred on the weekend$,
Friday through Sunday."

President orders 1,800 ·Mar:btes ·to Persian Gulf
'I'Iley said it is not related in any
WASHINGTON (AP) The Carter
administration, in a, new hands-off way to the continued imprisonment
of 50 American hostages at the U.S.
sigruil'to Russia, is ordering an amphibious warfare unit, including
Embassy in Tehran.
This will be the first time, as far as
1,800 U.S. Marines, to sail next month to waters near ihe Persian Gulf.
officials can recall, that a Marine
Administration · officials, who
combat Unit will be sent into the Indian Ocean area.
disclosed the Impending move
Tuesday night, stressed that It Is inThe officials, asking to remain
tended as part of Prel!ldent Carter's . anonymous, said a reinforced bat&lt;""measured effort to deter any Soviet
talion from the 3rd Marine Division
de8igns on control of the oll·rlch
arrived Tuesday at the U.S. naval
region.
base in Subic Bay, the Philippin~,

aboard a four-ship amphibious force. They brought with them M~
tanks, 105-mm artillery, anti-tank
missiles and 18 troop-carrying
heUcopters.
Officials said the Marines will
carry out exercises in the Philippines for about two weeks and then
enter the Indian Ocean for the loog
saU to the Arabian Sea, joining
carrier-led U.S. naval forces that
have lJeen .:~vering approaches to
the Persian Gulf for several months.

The Marines are expected to
remain at sea for an indefinite
period, with no Indications of any
U.S. intentions to land them even in
maneuvers.
The Marines boarded the four amphibious ships in Hawaii. The amphibious assault ship Okinawa, the
tank,landing ship Sail Bernardino,
the dOck·landing ship Alamo and the
amphfblous cargo ship Mobile left
San Diego in January.
The Soviet invasion al Af,~hanistan
'

r•

.···..
.:::::&gt;:-:;
.--·.·.·.·.·.·.·-·-·-·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.

in late December has prompted t!ie
Carter administration to intenslf:y
military moves designed . to
safeguard American ac:cess to Per- ·
sian Gulf oU. A ~up in
U.S.
military presence in the Indl8!l
Ocean area was already under way
as a result of the overthrow ol the
pro-American Shah of Iran a year
ago, increased instability in the
region and finally, the seizure of the
U.S. Embassy, and the takiJqj ·of
American hostages last November.

If'!:

�------.

2- The Daily Sentinel, MiddleiJOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 13, t980

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

aT8N '8o

Sen-t inel.
Editorial

i&lt;OC~Y

I 'LL T~;: L L

MTN

'{ov

ANYBODY VJWo TRi£§ To PLAY

N£V' Z,.

Po LITIC~ ~v !Tf-1 THE OLYMPIC~
1~ GONNA L0 § E
VOTE!

In Washington
One serious error
donations of $5,000 to major gifts of
uo to $250,000.
Bush received - but apparently
failed to report on the public
financial-disclosure statements required at the time - a total of
$106,000 from the Townhouse Operation.
None of the politicians who received the secret contributions was accused .of illegal activity, but the
Watergate Special Prosecution
Force obtained guilty pleas from
Kalmbach, Dent and Gleason on one ..
count each of operating a political
committee that failed to designate
officers and file financial reports as
required by federal law.
The Bush presidential campaign's
sensitivity toward the issue is il·
lustra ted by its handling of recent inquiries. In mid-January , a
spokesman said Bush was not per·
sonally aware of the transaction
because it was handled by an unnamed aide.
But after details of the Townhouse
Operation became known in the mid1970s, Gleason said that "every can·
dictate was personally apprised of
what was going on."
In adclition, an internal document
prepared by the prosecutors says
Gleason was instructed by the White
House to hand a portion of each
allocation directly to the candidate
"as part of a scheme for obtaining
leverage over the candidate himself
if he failed to report the · cash contribution."
By early February, the Bush
spokesman acknowledged "it's conceivable" that Bush personally accepted the money although "nobody
remembers" exactly what
transpired.
.Bus)! undoubtedly will survive
disclosure of the decade-old episode,
but 11 demonstrates that he - like
every other contender for the
presidency - is susceptible to mak·
ing serious errors of judgment.

Operation.''

He collected Kalmbach's pledges,
then disbursed the money to approx.
imately 30 Republican campaigns
including 18 lor Senate seats, thre~
for House seats and eight for governorships.
The recipients were seeking office
in at least 15 states, including
Maryland, Connecticut, Vermont,
Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, Texa,s,
Pennsylvania, Minnesota and New
Mexico' Contributions to individual
candidates ranged from nominal
11lE DAILY SEN1'1NEL
msPS lU-910~
~lb
qjv

~s:m~ ,........__......rr-·~-=~ · ­

DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEilEmOF
MEJc;.s..MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFOCH
City Edllor
Publlllbed dally tzttpt Sab&amp;tday by Tbt OhJt

VaUey Publllhlq Company- MtllUmtd.l.l We
111 Court SL, Pomeroy, OIUo &amp;S71!. ~La~
Office Pbooe 99!.. %151. EdJtortaJ Pbo~~t
tf!-.!157.

Se«&lt;Dd ela.11 pollltlllepaidatPomeroy, Oblo.
Na~ouladverUilq reprueat.Uve, l..DdOG
AJloclatea, 3101 Euclid Ave., Clenland. Obit
&lt;411S.
• Su'-crlptlon l'lltel: Of!Unred by carrier
where avau.ble te centl per week. By Motet
Route wbere carrier service aot avallabl~, Oat
moatb, ~.10.
Tbe DaUy Scatloel, by IDIID tn Ohio ... Wett
Vlrelnbl, ooe year SSUO; Six moodu U1'.51J
thrft moatbll U0.50. E~here $SUO; stt
moadwp).to ; thtttmooA$11.00.
Tbe Alloe.llted Preu ta eululvely eatwed
tel lbt ue for pubUcaUoa of aU Den dlspatellea
emU ... io the aew•,.per and alto tbt local
HWI pubJJabed beftla.

Report

MV

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

By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON ( NEA)
Republican presidential hopeful
George Bush has at least one
skeleton in his closet : He accepted
more than $100,000 in tainted campaign contributions from President
Richard M. Nixon 's political
operatives in 1970,. · ·•
That previously unreported
episode is noteworthy because a
·spate of recent Bush profiles, hastily
assembled by various newspapers
and magazines, have suggested that
there were virtually no enemies or
derogatory information in the candidate's past'
But aides to at least two other con·
tenders in the campaign for the
Republican presidential nomination,
former Texas Gov. John B. Connally
and Sen. Howard H. Baker of Tennessee, are working quietly to
disseminate the information as
widely as possible.
The embarrassing series of financial transactions occurred 10 years
ago, when Bush was the unsuccessful Republican nominee for a
Senate seat from Texas.
Nixon's senior political advisers
devised a scheme to secretly funnel
millions of dollars in unreported
donations into 1970 GOP campaigns
throughout the country.
The principal While House liaison
for the project was Harry S. Dent
Sr., then special counsel to the president. In mid-1970, Jack A. Gleason
left Dent's staff and secretly opened
an office in the basement of a
townhouse in downtown Washington.
Nixon's leading fund-raiser,
Herbert W. Kalmi;Jach, covertly collected at least $3 million from three
principal sources - individuals
holding ambassadorships, those
anxious to receive ambassadorships
and major contributors to Nixon's
1968 campaign'
Allocation of the funds to various
candidates was decided upon by
high-ranking member"i·of the White
House staff, but Gleason was in
charge of implementing what
became kno"n as the "Townhouse

Washington

ONE THING :

Capital Comment

Today in history
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 13, the
44th day of 1980. There are 322 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history :
On Feb. 13, 1689, the English
Parliament adopted a bill of rights .
On this date:
In 1633, the Italian astronomer
Galileo, arrived in Rome and wa~
detained by the Roman Catholic
Inquisition.
In 1635, the first public school in
America - the Boston Latin School
- was founded.
In 1920, the League of Nations admitted Switzerland and recognized
1t.s perpetual neutrality.
In 1974, dissident Soviet author
Alexander Solzhenitsyn was stripped of hia Soviet citizenship and sent
into exile.
Ten years ago, the Chicago 7 trial
drew to a close after five months of
chaotic courtroom argument. The
defendants were charged in connection with the violence surrounding the 1968 Democratic National
Convention.
Five years ago, Turkish Cypriots
proclaimed a separate administration in the TurkislHK:cupied
northern part of the island.
Last year, Energy Secretary
James Schlesinger said it might
take months for Iranian oil to
reswne flowing to United States.

Have to call it progress
had for thia, other than his being
By Robert J. Wagman
dead,
is that he is being held. And we
WASfllNGTON (NEA) ·The siege
did
not
want to contemplate his beof the U.S. Embassy in Iran has
entered its third month and no end is ing dead ."
Well, the "new" Iranian governin sight, at least on the suriace. But
one thorny problem, at least, has ment has officially confirmed that a
50th hostage really does exist and is
been solved.
For the first time, U.S. officials . being held, and a lot of people are
beginning to breathe easier in the
are certain that 50 U.S. nationals are
being held hostage by the Tehran State Department's crisis center.
During the last 10 days, Presidentterrorists.
elect
Abolhassan Bani-&amp;ldr has
At various times since the
at least three pointed
made
takeover, the militants have given
references
to there being 50
out different nwnbers. Sometimes
hostages.
Twice
he used the nwnber
they put the hostage count at 49,
in
foreinn
newspaPI)r
interviews;
other times at 50.
once
he
gave
it
directly
to U.S. ofThe Iranian government, such as
it is, was no help whatever. It stead- ficials.
Why the easy breathing in Foggy
fastly refused to provide an official
Bottom?
count and even refused to help clear
Explained our source: "What
up the discrepancy.
would have happened if at the end of
So, while U.S. government officials for the last three months have this thing they had returned 49 peDple to us? We would have insisted
bren publicly saying 50 U.S. nathat
one was missing and they would
tionals are being held, they privately
have
'insisted that all had been
were admitting they could be wrong.
returned.
It would have been a
That could have only made matters
we would be exactly the
standoff
and
worse when (and if) the hostages
same
place
where
we are now.
are released and orily 49 come home.
"Not
to
mention
how we would exAs one Foggy Bottom official close
plain to the media and the public
to the confused situation explained
that.the Iranians may be telling the
it: " Based on the information given
truth after all, that 49 people were
us by the black and wmenn hostages
all they had and no American had
who were returned, we were able to
been killed or is still being held.
compile a list of 49 who we're ab"Now, this problem has been
solutely sure are being held. But in
eliminated.
And the way things have
the case of a 50th individual, a
been going, you would have to call
civilian, we could never be sure.
this progress.
"We know for a fact that he was in
the embassy less than an hour
0)1 a related topic, the reason the
before it was attacked. But none of
State
Department steadlastly refusthe blacks or women reported seeing
ed to provide the public with a list of
him, and none of the clerics on
the hostages was that doing so
Christmas morning saw him.
would have jeopardized the six U.S.
" In fact, no one anywhere has
nationals who found safe haven in
heard from him since the embassy
the Canadian Embassy.
takeover. Even his family has not
Any list of the hostages would not
heard from him. And if he did get
have included the six, obviously, and
away, he has had more than ample
their stateside relatives would have
tune to get to a friendly embassy in
demanded
information that State
Tehran even if he had gone into
could
not
have
provided. It would not
hiding for some reason.
have
been
able
to tell anyone that
"The only possible explanation we

MA

"Politics makes strange bedfellows," and there is no more vivid
illustration of this than the current
relationship our country enjoys with
the Peoples Republic of China. For
25 years we were the most hostile of
enemies. We fought against them in
Korea. We fought against them in
Vietnam. They posed a constant
threat to free world interests
throughout Asia. If aligned with the
Soviets, they would be a force
capable of ruling the world. ,
Now aU of that appearsEcluinged.
Sino-Soviet relations have
drastically cooled while SinoAmerican relations could not appear
more cordiaL What has brought this
strange course-of events about? Why
have the Chinese, a fervently communistic people, changed their
outlook toward the capitalistic West
and toward the United States, in particular?
It aU goes back to the basic
distrust the Soviets and the Chinese
have for each other. Sharing a large
conunon border, each has long been
wary of the other. Each has wanted
their particular brand of communism to be the common ideology
to which other conununist countries
subscribed. Their differing approaches to the practice of communism led China, under Mao, to
brand the Soviet govenunent of
Nikita Khrushchev as being too lax
in pursuit of the true ideals of Lenin.
In response to such charges,
Khrushchev recalled much of the advisory and technical support the
Soviets had been providing the
Chinese at that time, further
widening the schism between the
two countries.
This in turn, accelerated China's
efforts to extend their sphere of in·
fluence into all parts of the world,
particularly the third world nations
of Africa. When they were unable to
make any meaningful inroads
world-wide, and when internal
political problems arose in the form
of the Cultural Revolution, they

the six were hiding out with the
Canadians, nor could it have left
anyone with even the impression
that any or all of the six had been
killed.
Hence, no names were released
and all the concerned re: -- •ives and
friends asswned their loved ones
were among the hostages. The six
finally escaped Tehran with forged
passports and papers provided by
Canada.

By Clarence
Miller
were forced to turn inward to work
on developing and harnessing the
potential and might of their own expansive nation. The Russians, wary
of the potential harbored by their
fellow conununists the Chinese,
were not willing to help.
··
It was shortly after this that then
President Nixon recognized the opportunity to rewrite the course of our
dealings with the Peoples Republic
of China. Instead of a policy of an. tagonism and confrontation which
had marked most of . our dealings
with the Peoples Republic
throughout the 1950s and 60s, we turned to a policy of coexistence and
cooperation, a policy wherein each
nation acknowledged the sovereign
rights of the other.
Our dealings were limited at first
to grain trade and token cultural exchanges. Today, however, the scope
of our relationship has broadened to
the point where we are w1l1ing to
trade almost every form of product
with the Chinese, short of military
weapons. During his recent visit to
the Peoples Republic in January, U.
S. Secretary of Defense Harold
Brown, · underscored just how far
and fast we have come in our
relations with this nation of ~.!most
one billion people. During one of the
many diplomatic dinners staged in
hia honor, the Secretary raised his
glass to a toast calling for
"cooperation between our armed
forces." Such is the drAmatic turn of
events in recent years.
I, for one, view thia new found
friendship with caution. We can't
forget that the Chinese are our
philosophical opposites, that they
are dedlca~ to a course of communism for their people that is contrary to everything we stand for: At
the same time, we should appreciate
the strategic role they play in world
affairs, that by keeping them out of
the Soviet sphere of influence, we
are keeping the balance for world
peace tilted in our favor . By playing
our so-called "China card," we have
widened the division betw.een tbe
Soviets and the Chinese, and in turn
softened our lines of difference with
the Chinese. At present, this kind of
accommodation is much to our ad-

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�------.

2- The Daily Sentinel, MiddleiJOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 13, t980

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

aT8N '8o

Sen-t inel.
Editorial

i&lt;OC~Y

I 'LL T~;: L L

MTN

'{ov

ANYBODY VJWo TRi£§ To PLAY

N£V' Z,.

Po LITIC~ ~v !Tf-1 THE OLYMPIC~
1~ GONNA L0 § E
VOTE!

In Washington
One serious error
donations of $5,000 to major gifts of
uo to $250,000.
Bush received - but apparently
failed to report on the public
financial-disclosure statements required at the time - a total of
$106,000 from the Townhouse Operation.
None of the politicians who received the secret contributions was accused .of illegal activity, but the
Watergate Special Prosecution
Force obtained guilty pleas from
Kalmbach, Dent and Gleason on one ..
count each of operating a political
committee that failed to designate
officers and file financial reports as
required by federal law.
The Bush presidential campaign's
sensitivity toward the issue is il·
lustra ted by its handling of recent inquiries. In mid-January , a
spokesman said Bush was not per·
sonally aware of the transaction
because it was handled by an unnamed aide.
But after details of the Townhouse
Operation became known in the mid1970s, Gleason said that "every can·
dictate was personally apprised of
what was going on."
In adclition, an internal document
prepared by the prosecutors says
Gleason was instructed by the White
House to hand a portion of each
allocation directly to the candidate
"as part of a scheme for obtaining
leverage over the candidate himself
if he failed to report the · cash contribution."
By early February, the Bush
spokesman acknowledged "it's conceivable" that Bush personally accepted the money although "nobody
remembers" exactly what
transpired.
.Bus)! undoubtedly will survive
disclosure of the decade-old episode,
but 11 demonstrates that he - like
every other contender for the
presidency - is susceptible to mak·
ing serious errors of judgment.

Operation.''

He collected Kalmbach's pledges,
then disbursed the money to approx.
imately 30 Republican campaigns
including 18 lor Senate seats, thre~
for House seats and eight for governorships.
The recipients were seeking office
in at least 15 states, including
Maryland, Connecticut, Vermont,
Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, Texa,s,
Pennsylvania, Minnesota and New
Mexico' Contributions to individual
candidates ranged from nominal
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Report

MV

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

By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON ( NEA)
Republican presidential hopeful
George Bush has at least one
skeleton in his closet : He accepted
more than $100,000 in tainted campaign contributions from President
Richard M. Nixon 's political
operatives in 1970,. · ·•
That previously unreported
episode is noteworthy because a
·spate of recent Bush profiles, hastily
assembled by various newspapers
and magazines, have suggested that
there were virtually no enemies or
derogatory information in the candidate's past'
But aides to at least two other con·
tenders in the campaign for the
Republican presidential nomination,
former Texas Gov. John B. Connally
and Sen. Howard H. Baker of Tennessee, are working quietly to
disseminate the information as
widely as possible.
The embarrassing series of financial transactions occurred 10 years
ago, when Bush was the unsuccessful Republican nominee for a
Senate seat from Texas.
Nixon's senior political advisers
devised a scheme to secretly funnel
millions of dollars in unreported
donations into 1970 GOP campaigns
throughout the country.
The principal While House liaison
for the project was Harry S. Dent
Sr., then special counsel to the president. In mid-1970, Jack A. Gleason
left Dent's staff and secretly opened
an office in the basement of a
townhouse in downtown Washington.
Nixon's leading fund-raiser,
Herbert W. Kalmi;Jach, covertly collected at least $3 million from three
principal sources - individuals
holding ambassadorships, those
anxious to receive ambassadorships
and major contributors to Nixon's
1968 campaign'
Allocation of the funds to various
candidates was decided upon by
high-ranking member"i·of the White
House staff, but Gleason was in
charge of implementing what
became kno"n as the "Townhouse

Washington

ONE THING :

Capital Comment

Today in history
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 13, the
44th day of 1980. There are 322 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history :
On Feb. 13, 1689, the English
Parliament adopted a bill of rights .
On this date:
In 1633, the Italian astronomer
Galileo, arrived in Rome and wa~
detained by the Roman Catholic
Inquisition.
In 1635, the first public school in
America - the Boston Latin School
- was founded.
In 1920, the League of Nations admitted Switzerland and recognized
1t.s perpetual neutrality.
In 1974, dissident Soviet author
Alexander Solzhenitsyn was stripped of hia Soviet citizenship and sent
into exile.
Ten years ago, the Chicago 7 trial
drew to a close after five months of
chaotic courtroom argument. The
defendants were charged in connection with the violence surrounding the 1968 Democratic National
Convention.
Five years ago, Turkish Cypriots
proclaimed a separate administration in the TurkislHK:cupied
northern part of the island.
Last year, Energy Secretary
James Schlesinger said it might
take months for Iranian oil to
reswne flowing to United States.

Have to call it progress
had for thia, other than his being
By Robert J. Wagman
dead,
is that he is being held. And we
WASfllNGTON (NEA) ·The siege
did
not
want to contemplate his beof the U.S. Embassy in Iran has
entered its third month and no end is ing dead ."
Well, the "new" Iranian governin sight, at least on the suriace. But
one thorny problem, at least, has ment has officially confirmed that a
50th hostage really does exist and is
been solved.
For the first time, U.S. officials . being held, and a lot of people are
beginning to breathe easier in the
are certain that 50 U.S. nationals are
being held hostage by the Tehran State Department's crisis center.
During the last 10 days, Presidentterrorists.
elect
Abolhassan Bani-&amp;ldr has
At various times since the
at least three pointed
made
takeover, the militants have given
references
to there being 50
out different nwnbers. Sometimes
hostages.
Twice
he used the nwnber
they put the hostage count at 49,
in
foreinn
newspaPI)r
interviews;
other times at 50.
once
he
gave
it
directly
to U.S. ofThe Iranian government, such as
it is, was no help whatever. It stead- ficials.
Why the easy breathing in Foggy
fastly refused to provide an official
Bottom?
count and even refused to help clear
Explained our source: "What
up the discrepancy.
would have happened if at the end of
So, while U.S. government officials for the last three months have this thing they had returned 49 peDple to us? We would have insisted
bren publicly saying 50 U.S. nathat
one was missing and they would
tionals are being held, they privately
have
'insisted that all had been
were admitting they could be wrong.
returned.
It would have been a
That could have only made matters
we would be exactly the
standoff
and
worse when (and if) the hostages
same
place
where
we are now.
are released and orily 49 come home.
"Not
to
mention
how we would exAs one Foggy Bottom official close
plain to the media and the public
to the confused situation explained
that.the Iranians may be telling the
it: " Based on the information given
truth after all, that 49 people were
us by the black and wmenn hostages
all they had and no American had
who were returned, we were able to
been killed or is still being held.
compile a list of 49 who we're ab"Now, this problem has been
solutely sure are being held. But in
eliminated.
And the way things have
the case of a 50th individual, a
been going, you would have to call
civilian, we could never be sure.
this progress.
"We know for a fact that he was in
the embassy less than an hour
0)1 a related topic, the reason the
before it was attacked. But none of
State
Department steadlastly refusthe blacks or women reported seeing
ed to provide the public with a list of
him, and none of the clerics on
the hostages was that doing so
Christmas morning saw him.
would have jeopardized the six U.S.
" In fact, no one anywhere has
nationals who found safe haven in
heard from him since the embassy
the Canadian Embassy.
takeover. Even his family has not
Any list of the hostages would not
heard from him. And if he did get
have included the six, obviously, and
away, he has had more than ample
their stateside relatives would have
tune to get to a friendly embassy in
demanded
information that State
Tehran even if he had gone into
could
not
have
provided. It would not
hiding for some reason.
have
been
able
to tell anyone that
"The only possible explanation we

MA

"Politics makes strange bedfellows," and there is no more vivid
illustration of this than the current
relationship our country enjoys with
the Peoples Republic of China. For
25 years we were the most hostile of
enemies. We fought against them in
Korea. We fought against them in
Vietnam. They posed a constant
threat to free world interests
throughout Asia. If aligned with the
Soviets, they would be a force
capable of ruling the world. ,
Now aU of that appearsEcluinged.
Sino-Soviet relations have
drastically cooled while SinoAmerican relations could not appear
more cordiaL What has brought this
strange course-of events about? Why
have the Chinese, a fervently communistic people, changed their
outlook toward the capitalistic West
and toward the United States, in particular?
It aU goes back to the basic
distrust the Soviets and the Chinese
have for each other. Sharing a large
conunon border, each has long been
wary of the other. Each has wanted
their particular brand of communism to be the common ideology
to which other conununist countries
subscribed. Their differing approaches to the practice of communism led China, under Mao, to
brand the Soviet govenunent of
Nikita Khrushchev as being too lax
in pursuit of the true ideals of Lenin.
In response to such charges,
Khrushchev recalled much of the advisory and technical support the
Soviets had been providing the
Chinese at that time, further
widening the schism between the
two countries.
This in turn, accelerated China's
efforts to extend their sphere of in·
fluence into all parts of the world,
particularly the third world nations
of Africa. When they were unable to
make any meaningful inroads
world-wide, and when internal
political problems arose in the form
of the Cultural Revolution, they

the six were hiding out with the
Canadians, nor could it have left
anyone with even the impression
that any or all of the six had been
killed.
Hence, no names were released
and all the concerned re: -- •ives and
friends asswned their loved ones
were among the hostages. The six
finally escaped Tehran with forged
passports and papers provided by
Canada.

By Clarence
Miller
were forced to turn inward to work
on developing and harnessing the
potential and might of their own expansive nation. The Russians, wary
of the potential harbored by their
fellow conununists the Chinese,
were not willing to help.
··
It was shortly after this that then
President Nixon recognized the opportunity to rewrite the course of our
dealings with the Peoples Republic
of China. Instead of a policy of an. tagonism and confrontation which
had marked most of . our dealings
with the Peoples Republic
throughout the 1950s and 60s, we turned to a policy of coexistence and
cooperation, a policy wherein each
nation acknowledged the sovereign
rights of the other.
Our dealings were limited at first
to grain trade and token cultural exchanges. Today, however, the scope
of our relationship has broadened to
the point where we are w1l1ing to
trade almost every form of product
with the Chinese, short of military
weapons. During his recent visit to
the Peoples Republic in January, U.
S. Secretary of Defense Harold
Brown, · underscored just how far
and fast we have come in our
relations with this nation of ~.!most
one billion people. During one of the
many diplomatic dinners staged in
hia honor, the Secretary raised his
glass to a toast calling for
"cooperation between our armed
forces." Such is the drAmatic turn of
events in recent years.
I, for one, view thia new found
friendship with caution. We can't
forget that the Chinese are our
philosophical opposites, that they
are dedlca~ to a course of communism for their people that is contrary to everything we stand for: At
the same time, we should appreciate
the strategic role they play in world
affairs, that by keeping them out of
the Soviet sphere of influence, we
are keeping the balance for world
peace tilted in our favor . By playing
our so-called "China card," we have
widened the division betw.een tbe
Soviets and the Chinese, and in turn
softened our lines of difference with
the Chinese. At present, this kind of
accommodation is much to our ad-

~~~~:~ =:~~

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We should let our alliance with
the Soviets in World War II serve as
a reminder to us in our dealings with
the Chinese. Let's not give them the
capability to wage world war as we
did the Russians, only to find that
when they do, it is us they turn their
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�Wednesd•Y . Ftbruory 13, ltiO

.

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·PQmeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980

XIII winter olympics
1overshadow turmoil
..

- LAKE

•

PLACID, N..V. (AP) With all of the pomp and pageantry
that is so much a part of the Olympic
tradition, the opening ceremonies of
the XIII Winter Games were held
today, overshadowing at least for
· the moment the politica l turmoil
which threatens the very foundation
of the Games.
Nearly 1,300 athletes who have
gathered for this ice and snow
festival celebrated the opening of
the Games, parading through horse
show grounds in a meadow on the
• outskirts of this sleepy town which
will hold center stage in the sports
world for the next 12 days.
Following
the
opening
ceremonies, the first sled runs in the
treacherous luge competition were
scheduled for tonight with speed
skating and skiing set to begin on
Thursday.
Hockey got an early start on the
other sports with six games Monday,
including an emotional 2-2 tie for the
young United States team against
Sweden.
Cheered on by their fans who
screamed support and waved ban·
ners and flags, the Americans
rallied for the deadlock on a goal by
defenseman Bill Baker with only 27
seconds left to play after they had
pulled their goalie for an extra at·

-1

I

m
UJ

~z

Gl

tacker.
In the other hockey openers, the
powerful Soviet learn, gold medal
favorites, walloped Japan U;..{J.
Canada, returning to the Olympic
hockey tournament for the first time
in 12 years, battered Holland 1(}.1,
Romania surprised .West Germany
&amp;-4 , powerful Czechoslovakia routed
Norway 11~ and Poland upset
Finland f&gt;-4.
International Olympic Committee
officials presided over today's
opening ceremonies less than 24
hours after announcing rejection of
an American request that the Summer Games at Moscow be moved,
canceled or postponed because of
Russian
intervention
in
Mghanistan.
"The IOC is fully aware of, and
sensitive to, the world conditions
which have created the most serious
challenge to confront the Olympic
Games," Lord Killanin, IOC, said.
"The \'ery existence of the Olympic Games, the Olympic mqvement
and the organization of sport
through
the
international
federations is at stake. All 73 members (including Americans Douglas
F. Roby and Julian K. Roosevelt)
present at the 82nd session of the International Olympic Committee are
unanimous that the Games must be

held in Moscow as plaiUled."
Robert Kane, president of the U.S.
Olympic Committee, and Col. F.
Don Miller, its execMtive director,
who had presented the American
position to the IOC delegates on
Monday, refused immediate com·
menton Killanin's remarks.
But Roby supported the roc
position, saying, "I think it's the best
thing we can do right now, and under
these circumstances. I think our
athletes will compete at Moscow
unless some drastic measures are
taken by the government."
President Carter has asked the
USOC to pass up the Moscow GB.IlleS
unless Soviet troops are removed
from Afghanistan by next Wedne.sday and he could lift passports to
enforce that position. After
Killanin's statement Tuesday night,
President Carter asked for a "prompt decision against sending a team"
to Moscow. The USOC has until May
24 to officially accept or reject the
IOC's invitation to participate in the
Summer Games.
While the IOC was stating its intention to go ahead with the Moscow
Games , the way was cleared for
mainland China to participate in the
Olympics for the first time since that
country's 1949 revolution ..

MAGNIFICENT CREATURE - Donald Olson
(right), Chief of the Division of Parks and Recreation
of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR),
admires a rare golden eagle being held by John Means,
naturalist with ODNR at Hueston Woods State Park in

Southern top-seeded
The Class A Boys Basketball Sectional Tournament will again be held
at Meigs High School in Morrison
Gymnasium.
Southern High School, defending
District champions with a 16-1
record, is the top-seeded team.
Action gets underway Feb. 25 at 7
when Kyger Creek, 6-12, meets North Gallia, 10-8. The second game of
the evening, which begins at 8:3(),
pits Southern ·against Southwestern.

Reds preparing for lockout
CINCINNATI (AP) -Some mem·
bers of the Cincinnati Reds, from
veteran Johnny Bench to relative
newcomer Ray Knight, say they are
prepared to delay the start of
baseball season if major league
owners fail to negotiate a suitable
basic agreement with the Players'
Association.
"We're the only industry in the
last 30 years that negotiates hackwards," Bench said. "Negotiations
are supposed to start from where
you already are; in baseball, they
take away from what you already
have."
Negotiations between players and
owners have been going on for 13
weeks. The longer the talks last, the
more united the players become.
"It's the strongest show of unity
I've seen in my seven years in the
Players' Association," National
League player representative Bob
Boone, a Philadelphia Phillie's cat·
cher, said Tuesday.
"In an industry.as prosperous and
successful as this one has been since
the r~H!ntry draft, why do the
p'·:·~rs have to take any form of cut
or reduced privileges?
"Right now the players are getting
21 percent of the pie. That's very low
for any industry, especially a service industry where the players
provide the service."
,
One key point of contention is the
owners' proposal for a fixed salary

..
f·"

schedule for players who have been
in the major leagues less than six
years.

Bench said he knows it would be
more difficult for younger, less
financially established players to
support a strike, however.
"It's hard for you to support (a
strike) and pay the bills at the same
time, " Bench said. "Coming to the
plate in the ninth inning is a different
kind of pressure because you know
what that's like. But as part of the
Players' Association, sure, I'd support a strike."
George Foster, the Reds' highestpaid player in the neighborhood of
$750,000 a year, said he would stick
with the majority of players.
"I'm part of the association,"
Foster said. " I feel everyone should
stick together. Otherwise, the
owners will be getting their wish."
Knight, the Reds' player representative, predicted the response
among highly-paid players in both
leagues to the possibility of a boycott
would be "overwhelming." But he
said a strike would be a financial
burden on younger players and
''that's what the owners are banking
on.''
"The owners want to know how far
they can push us," said Knight, who
is taking his own salary dispute with
the Reds to arbitration. "Well, we're
going to back our feelings. We're not
going to regress.
"If We miss a month or two of the
season, then that's what we do. I'm
prepared to do it. "
·

Marauder gals
top-seeded in
Oass AA event
Tournament pairings for the girls'
Class AA basketball tournament at
Athens High School have been an·
nounced.
The top-seeded Meigs Marauders
drew a first round bye and willrplay
the winner of the New LexingtonBelpre game on Tuesday, Feb. 26 at
6:30p.m.
The tournament starts off with
three games on Saturday, F·eb. 23 .
Belpre meets New Lexington at 4:30,
AleKander plays Warren at 6: 30
while Sheridan plays Nelsonville at
8:30p.m.
On Tuesday Meigs plays the winner of the Belpre-New Lexington
game at 6:30, and at 8:30 the winner
of the Alexander and Warren game
will play the winner of the SheridanNelsonville game, with the winner of
those two squaring in .the championship game on Friday, Feb. 29 at
7:30 p.m. The winner there will face
the winner of the Portsmouth Sectional at the District's in Athens.

,,"

..,..•.
.,.
l •

No. 2's

.... ...
:zz
:arE

-

C::!:C
en~
.' ?.
:..~

-~~

-c

...

~

)

''

WE'VE CUT OUR OF
RE6IJLAR PRICE
DRCO FREEDOM

~

·•

•r

......
llltel"eStltite

BATTERIES!

.•.

•
·r..
~·

I
J.

....
'Expressecl as annual effective yield subje&lt;l to change at renewal,
based on reinvestment of principal and Interest at maturity. Federal
regulations prohibit the compounding of Interest during the term of
the account. A substantial interest penalty Is required lor eaHy
withdrawal.

~

•

DELCO FREEDOM 50

~

50 MONTH WARRANTY•

"

1f

PACKED WITH STARTING POWER
MAINTENANCE - FREE
YOU NEV&amp;R ADD WATER

•'

..'

•
· Ill:

Ill

.:·•.
••

j

ALL DELCO BATTERY PRICES
COMPARABLY SLASHED
UP TO $20.00 OFF OUR REG. PRICES

l~ALE ENDS 2-23·80

P,arts

Plus.

lib

,~

~

THE ATHENS COt)NTY
~SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

WE ' RE LOCATED NE AR YOU

.G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
14.4 W. 2nd Ave.
Pomeroy, OH.

'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
Rt. 33
Mason,

w. va •

NPROFEISIONAL
PARTS
·

Athens • 592-6681 - ,.Pomeroy. • 992·6655

PEOPLE

'

:1

•

'12.256% ~~

.',,

i

"

'

THANKS DELCO!

en a. .
• ·

"'

,·

'

••'
Q
"V

~

EACH

(.

·1:1
•

Q

99~

..

•"'

"'"'

-\·

., . .:._ .

Now you can get the interest you earn monthly,
even on high yield Six Month Money Market
Certificates. It's easy. Just tell us you want Money
in the Mail every Month when you open your
Money Market-Certificate with aminimum deposit
of $10,000. At Athens County Savings, we can
make it happen for you.

•'

-..•.

tJt

cet
in the
every month

"BRAND NAMES YOU CAN TRUST"

.

Second-round action is scheduled
for February 21 at 7:3() p.m. when
Hannan Trace, 1-15, plays the winner of the Ky ger Creek-North Gallia
contest. The winner of that game
goes to the finals on February 2!l at
7:3() p.m. against the winner of the
Southern-Southwestern game.
The wiiUler of the Sectional Tournament goes to District competition
at Chillicothe March 11 at 7:30p.m.

'-

Parts Plus
autostorC'

'

10-8.

LATONIA.RESULTS
FLORENCE, ,!(y. &lt;AP) - Actiontown, ridde8:, ,·by Alan Ten·
nanbawn, won
featured mile
race in 1:42 'f'oeSday .night at
Latonia and returned $1;, $4 and
$3.60.
Second-place D' Artaigmm paid
$3.60 and $2.40, ~e Mary's Pride
finished third and returned $3.40.
The :HI daily double of Olympia
Mt. and Rose of Ky . paid$1S3.40.
The crowd ol 2,914 wagered
$325,679.

.

••

'

southwest Ohio. The one-year-old bird-of-prey, not
native to Ohio, was brought from Kentucky where it
had been injured. ODNR plans to find a mat;e for the
eagle to start'Ohio's first captive breeding program foc
golden eagles.

j

{ '

�Wednesd•Y . Ftbruory 13, ltiO

.

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·PQmeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980

XIII winter olympics
1overshadow turmoil
..

- LAKE

•

PLACID, N..V. (AP) With all of the pomp and pageantry
that is so much a part of the Olympic
tradition, the opening ceremonies of
the XIII Winter Games were held
today, overshadowing at least for
· the moment the politica l turmoil
which threatens the very foundation
of the Games.
Nearly 1,300 athletes who have
gathered for this ice and snow
festival celebrated the opening of
the Games, parading through horse
show grounds in a meadow on the
• outskirts of this sleepy town which
will hold center stage in the sports
world for the next 12 days.
Following
the
opening
ceremonies, the first sled runs in the
treacherous luge competition were
scheduled for tonight with speed
skating and skiing set to begin on
Thursday.
Hockey got an early start on the
other sports with six games Monday,
including an emotional 2-2 tie for the
young United States team against
Sweden.
Cheered on by their fans who
screamed support and waved ban·
ners and flags, the Americans
rallied for the deadlock on a goal by
defenseman Bill Baker with only 27
seconds left to play after they had
pulled their goalie for an extra at·

-1

I

m
UJ

~z

Gl

tacker.
In the other hockey openers, the
powerful Soviet learn, gold medal
favorites, walloped Japan U;..{J.
Canada, returning to the Olympic
hockey tournament for the first time
in 12 years, battered Holland 1(}.1,
Romania surprised .West Germany
&amp;-4 , powerful Czechoslovakia routed
Norway 11~ and Poland upset
Finland f&gt;-4.
International Olympic Committee
officials presided over today's
opening ceremonies less than 24
hours after announcing rejection of
an American request that the Summer Games at Moscow be moved,
canceled or postponed because of
Russian
intervention
in
Mghanistan.
"The IOC is fully aware of, and
sensitive to, the world conditions
which have created the most serious
challenge to confront the Olympic
Games," Lord Killanin, IOC, said.
"The \'ery existence of the Olympic Games, the Olympic mqvement
and the organization of sport
through
the
international
federations is at stake. All 73 members (including Americans Douglas
F. Roby and Julian K. Roosevelt)
present at the 82nd session of the International Olympic Committee are
unanimous that the Games must be

held in Moscow as plaiUled."
Robert Kane, president of the U.S.
Olympic Committee, and Col. F.
Don Miller, its execMtive director,
who had presented the American
position to the IOC delegates on
Monday, refused immediate com·
menton Killanin's remarks.
But Roby supported the roc
position, saying, "I think it's the best
thing we can do right now, and under
these circumstances. I think our
athletes will compete at Moscow
unless some drastic measures are
taken by the government."
President Carter has asked the
USOC to pass up the Moscow GB.IlleS
unless Soviet troops are removed
from Afghanistan by next Wedne.sday and he could lift passports to
enforce that position. After
Killanin's statement Tuesday night,
President Carter asked for a "prompt decision against sending a team"
to Moscow. The USOC has until May
24 to officially accept or reject the
IOC's invitation to participate in the
Summer Games.
While the IOC was stating its intention to go ahead with the Moscow
Games , the way was cleared for
mainland China to participate in the
Olympics for the first time since that
country's 1949 revolution ..

MAGNIFICENT CREATURE - Donald Olson
(right), Chief of the Division of Parks and Recreation
of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR),
admires a rare golden eagle being held by John Means,
naturalist with ODNR at Hueston Woods State Park in

Southern top-seeded
The Class A Boys Basketball Sectional Tournament will again be held
at Meigs High School in Morrison
Gymnasium.
Southern High School, defending
District champions with a 16-1
record, is the top-seeded team.
Action gets underway Feb. 25 at 7
when Kyger Creek, 6-12, meets North Gallia, 10-8. The second game of
the evening, which begins at 8:3(),
pits Southern ·against Southwestern.

Reds preparing for lockout
CINCINNATI (AP) -Some mem·
bers of the Cincinnati Reds, from
veteran Johnny Bench to relative
newcomer Ray Knight, say they are
prepared to delay the start of
baseball season if major league
owners fail to negotiate a suitable
basic agreement with the Players'
Association.
"We're the only industry in the
last 30 years that negotiates hackwards," Bench said. "Negotiations
are supposed to start from where
you already are; in baseball, they
take away from what you already
have."
Negotiations between players and
owners have been going on for 13
weeks. The longer the talks last, the
more united the players become.
"It's the strongest show of unity
I've seen in my seven years in the
Players' Association," National
League player representative Bob
Boone, a Philadelphia Phillie's cat·
cher, said Tuesday.
"In an industry.as prosperous and
successful as this one has been since
the r~H!ntry draft, why do the
p'·:·~rs have to take any form of cut
or reduced privileges?
"Right now the players are getting
21 percent of the pie. That's very low
for any industry, especially a service industry where the players
provide the service."
,
One key point of contention is the
owners' proposal for a fixed salary

..
f·"

schedule for players who have been
in the major leagues less than six
years.

Bench said he knows it would be
more difficult for younger, less
financially established players to
support a strike, however.
"It's hard for you to support (a
strike) and pay the bills at the same
time, " Bench said. "Coming to the
plate in the ninth inning is a different
kind of pressure because you know
what that's like. But as part of the
Players' Association, sure, I'd support a strike."
George Foster, the Reds' highestpaid player in the neighborhood of
$750,000 a year, said he would stick
with the majority of players.
"I'm part of the association,"
Foster said. " I feel everyone should
stick together. Otherwise, the
owners will be getting their wish."
Knight, the Reds' player representative, predicted the response
among highly-paid players in both
leagues to the possibility of a boycott
would be "overwhelming." But he
said a strike would be a financial
burden on younger players and
''that's what the owners are banking
on.''
"The owners want to know how far
they can push us," said Knight, who
is taking his own salary dispute with
the Reds to arbitration. "Well, we're
going to back our feelings. We're not
going to regress.
"If We miss a month or two of the
season, then that's what we do. I'm
prepared to do it. "
·

Marauder gals
top-seeded in
Oass AA event
Tournament pairings for the girls'
Class AA basketball tournament at
Athens High School have been an·
nounced.
The top-seeded Meigs Marauders
drew a first round bye and willrplay
the winner of the New LexingtonBelpre game on Tuesday, Feb. 26 at
6:30p.m.
The tournament starts off with
three games on Saturday, F·eb. 23 .
Belpre meets New Lexington at 4:30,
AleKander plays Warren at 6: 30
while Sheridan plays Nelsonville at
8:30p.m.
On Tuesday Meigs plays the winner of the Belpre-New Lexington
game at 6:30, and at 8:30 the winner
of the Alexander and Warren game
will play the winner of the SheridanNelsonville game, with the winner of
those two squaring in .the championship game on Friday, Feb. 29 at
7:30 p.m. The winner there will face
the winner of the Portsmouth Sectional at the District's in Athens.

,,"

..,..•.
.,.
l •

No. 2's

.... ...
:zz
:arE

-

C::!:C
en~
.' ?.
:..~

-~~

-c

...

~

)

''

WE'VE CUT OUR OF
RE6IJLAR PRICE
DRCO FREEDOM

~

·•

•r

......
llltel"eStltite

BATTERIES!

.•.

•
·r..
~·

I
J.

....
'Expressecl as annual effective yield subje&lt;l to change at renewal,
based on reinvestment of principal and Interest at maturity. Federal
regulations prohibit the compounding of Interest during the term of
the account. A substantial interest penalty Is required lor eaHy
withdrawal.

~

•

DELCO FREEDOM 50

~

50 MONTH WARRANTY•

"

1f

PACKED WITH STARTING POWER
MAINTENANCE - FREE
YOU NEV&amp;R ADD WATER

•'

..'

•
· Ill:

Ill

.:·•.
••

j

ALL DELCO BATTERY PRICES
COMPARABLY SLASHED
UP TO $20.00 OFF OUR REG. PRICES

l~ALE ENDS 2-23·80

P,arts

Plus.

lib

,~

~

THE ATHENS COt)NTY
~SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

WE ' RE LOCATED NE AR YOU

.G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
14.4 W. 2nd Ave.
Pomeroy, OH.

'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
Rt. 33
Mason,

w. va •

NPROFEISIONAL
PARTS
·

Athens • 592-6681 - ,.Pomeroy. • 992·6655

PEOPLE

'

:1

•

'12.256% ~~

.',,

i

"

'

THANKS DELCO!

en a. .
• ·

"'

,·

'

••'
Q
"V

~

EACH

(.

·1:1
•

Q

99~

..

•"'

"'"'

-\·

., . .:._ .

Now you can get the interest you earn monthly,
even on high yield Six Month Money Market
Certificates. It's easy. Just tell us you want Money
in the Mail every Month when you open your
Money Market-Certificate with aminimum deposit
of $10,000. At Athens County Savings, we can
make it happen for you.

•'

-..•.

tJt

cet
in the
every month

"BRAND NAMES YOU CAN TRUST"

.

Second-round action is scheduled
for February 21 at 7:3() p.m. when
Hannan Trace, 1-15, plays the winner of the Ky ger Creek-North Gallia
contest. The winner of that game
goes to the finals on February 2!l at
7:3() p.m. against the winner of the
Southern-Southwestern game.
The wiiUler of the Sectional Tournament goes to District competition
at Chillicothe March 11 at 7:30p.m.

'-

Parts Plus
autostorC'

'

10-8.

LATONIA.RESULTS
FLORENCE, ,!(y. &lt;AP) - Actiontown, ridde8:, ,·by Alan Ten·
nanbawn, won
featured mile
race in 1:42 'f'oeSday .night at
Latonia and returned $1;, $4 and
$3.60.
Second-place D' Artaigmm paid
$3.60 and $2.40, ~e Mary's Pride
finished third and returned $3.40.
The :HI daily double of Olympia
Mt. and Rose of Ky . paid$1S3.40.
The crowd ol 2,914 wagered
$325,679.

.

••

'

southwest Ohio. The one-year-old bird-of-prey, not
native to Ohio, was brought from Kentucky where it
had been injured. ODNR plans to find a mat;e for the
eagle to start'Ohio's first captive breeding program foc
golden eagles.

j

{ '

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 19&amp;0

Tuesday's Ohio basketball scores
By The AssOCiett ed 'Prcss
Akron Ftresrone 97 , Akron Coven
try 54
Akron Kenmore 78, Copley 54
Arkon St Vin St Mary 68 , T•Ailn
sburg 67
Ash t abula
Edgewood
~9 .
Pymatun ing Val. 44
Ashtabula Harbor 72, Jefferson 52
Ashtabula 51 . JOhn 68, Perry 45
Austiontown Fit c h
67 , W.:Hren
Howland 34
Avon Lake 54, Av on 46
Badger 66. New ton Falls 55
Batavia 70, N . Adams 42

BediOICI61 , Eu c11U 59

8erohol1 Sprrng 77 , Salrnevdle 5

b6
8erk 51W e 68, Sr rs tol 36
Bexley 64, Groveport 54
Br ad f ord 51, Mendon Union 47
Brooke. W Vn AD. E Lrverpool53
BucKeye Trall75 , Ft . Frye63
Canal Fulton NW 62 , Chippewa 58
Cin . Chr1 st . 83, Crn Seven H ills 72
Cin lnd1an Hill 58, Cr n . Wyoming

55
C1n . M oc ller61, W . ChestPr Lakota

56
Cin. Purce l l73, Leha no n64

C1n r att JJ, Day Je1ten.on b6
Cl eve A.ddm" 75, Shc1ker Hts 68
Cleve Central Cath 68, Cle''c
Un1ver c;, try 67
CIPve Colli nwood 48. Cleve E rl&lt;. t

51

E Crtnlon 5Y ~ ant.J y Valley 51
Ea~tlakc

)9
Cleve

Glenvtlle 78, Cleve hayes

47

6()

Cleve Hay 71, Cleve. W. Tech64
Cleve
Lincoln We~ ! 66, Cleve
Rhodes 54
Columbiana Crestview 60 , Lisbon

Hardin Northern 63, McComb61
Harvey 58, Fairport Ha rd ing 49
Hudson W. Re sesrve 58, CVCA 44
I nd ian Val l eyS. 82. Conof1 on Va l .

Col. H ami lton Twp . 71. Tea ys Val.

.,

Col. South 83, Col. Beechcrofl69
coshocton 73, Cl aymon t 71, ot
Crestwood 86. A urora 59

Fremont Ross 59 , Tol Whitmer S'l
Gtbso nburg 73, wooam ore 64
Glenn 60, Sheriuan 54
Grand River Acad. 60, Corinth

ChrisT. 48

57

65

N 61. Moyh e ld 58

[ ,lc,fwonll80, Oak H arbor 65
E 111 1Wr1od 70. Genoa 50
Elvna Cath . 92, Lorai n Brookstdl?

54

Oay . Cham Ju l 80, Tipp City 56

Kam.as Lakota 81. Otsego 54
Kenton Ridge 60, Gr eenan 59

Day . M eadowda le 68, Day . Carroll

Kettering A lter 58. Fai r mont W. 54

Lakevtew 54, Warren Champion 43
Lee t onta 74. United Local 5o
Logan Elm 71. Ctrclevi l le57
Loratn 66, vermilion 52
Lorain Cath 73, Columbia 65
Lora tn Ktng, / 4, Bav Village 59
Lord~ Town 83, ·Farmington 68
Lutheran E 93, Cleve . He ritage
Christ . 5 1
Madi son Pl a ins 69, S Char les ton

SE 65

54

_9 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980

'

Mogadore 52, Garrettsvi ll e Gar·
field 38
Morgan 78, PhilO SB
New L exi ngton 51, Crooksville .49
N ewcc'Tier st own 62 , Ridgewood 58
N iles M cKi nley 48 , Po la nd
Semi nar )I ..S5
N . Ba lfi m ore71 , Liberty Benton67
O ld Trail64, Bratenahl 51

Kyger Creek snapped a hve-gamc
losing streak Tuesday night with a
~2-41 non-conference win over Elk
Vafley of Kanawha County, W. Va.
The win gave the Bobcats a 7-12
record going mto Friday 's last
regular season game against Han-

Olmsted Falls97, Midpark 48

Mapl e Ht s. 81, Willoughby S. 58

Orr vi l ie 7.8, Akron Hoban 1'2

Mason 78 , Charlis le 69
M a umee Val. 60, D iv ine Word 51
M aysvi ll e 66. Riv er View 65
M ed inaH igh land 64, Rittman 62
M entor 57, Bru sh 45
M entor Lake Ca th . 54, Gi l mou r 39
Mineral Ridge 85 , Jackson·M i!ton

Parma Hol y Name 46, Brooklyn 44
Paulding 58, Swa nton 53
Richmond Hts. 81. Ledgemont -16

Maplewood 52, Bl oom fie ld 49

.Bobcats snap losing streak

Ottov ille68, Pandora Gilboa 57
Rip ley 58, Lynchburg Clay 50

College
results

Seb r ing 65, Stanton 45
Shenandoah 75 1 Beallsvi lle 70

Skyvue 71, Caldwell5'1

Ohio

Othe r Games
Marquette 82, Xavier 7,0

'

,
II

Eller~
o l th9Se' 1IO\Ien1se&lt;l nems rs reQ wrOCJ 10 be
read1ly ava1lab~ lor sale rn eacn 1'. 10{181 Store . lllCept as
~ noted 1n this ad If ...e dO 1\!n out of an advortlsod
nem . we Will ottw vou vour l hOice ot a compali!ble •tem .
when ava1lable, rell&amp;ctrng tl1e samf! sa~,~rngs or a l &lt;l•"chock
'Nt·uch w1ll ent1tle you to purc haSE the act,.er11sad 1tem at the
ad\ler1t S8d p fll:8 Mlhrn lJ doh'S

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUAR AN TEE
Every1tl1ng you' Duy at l(rOQf!f rs yuarant66d l or your !ot.al
satrstac1•0l1 regardless o t manl.l taclu•er II yOu are no t ;.a !Is
lied . Kroger w1 tl repli!Ce vour •lam wolh t he s.ame brand or a
comparaole br ;~nd u1&lt;!!lur~d v0u1 pu1chase pnce
COPYIIGMT ltiO ~· THf KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
COOO WiONESOAY F-U . ll.THIU SATURDAY FEI . 16 . 19lD

IN GALLI POLI S AND POMEROY STORES .

'

Wlllli5UVE THE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD

All Kroger stores in this area are now open regular hours.
Kroger trucks are now delivering fresh supplies to all Kroger
stores. The shelves are being restocked quickly. Kroger
regrets any Inconveniences you've had the last few weeks.
Kroger appreciates your business and Is glad to be open to
serve you again.

TO DEALERS

t'

I

Iceberg
Head Lettuce

U.S. NO . 1

IN THE DAIRY DEPT.

Round White Potatoes

Kroger Fresh
•
'!,-Gal.
J
0 range u1ce .... Jug

10

Dan Dee •
8-oz .
Potato Ch 1ps .... ... Pkg .

-lb.

Bag

400 SHEETS PER
ROUND TOP

Charm in
Bath Tissue

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread
PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES

a$ 19

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola

$ 09

Vefico~~est S~eciot\
RUSSER

"$149
Fresh Made to99 C
Glazed Donuts
For

$2 79
Whole Boneless $3 99
Beef R1b Eye ...

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
11·13-LB. AVG.

QUARTERS

Mrs. Filbert's
• ........ _. __ .Pkg
1-lb.
Margar1ne
.

•

·' SLICED

lb.

FREE

Kroger
24-ax.
CoHage Cheese . Ctnr.

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef -

$_

49

Willie Flunoy, 5-11 sophomore
guard, tossed in 24 points to pace
visiting Urbana to an 110-77 Mid-Ohio
Conference basketball victory over
Rio Grande College in Lyne Center
Tuesday night.
The victory left Urbana with a 1313 season record. In MOC play, the
Blue Knights upped their season
mark to 7-:&gt;.
Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande
Redmen dropped to 7-17 overall and
!&gt;-7 in league action.
Dave Gustin added 19 points for
the Blue Knights. Mike Rengert added 1P.
T001 Dorsey paced the Redmen
with 25 points. Vince Phelps and
Bret McConnick tallied 14 points

Whole or Rib
Half Pork Loin

FG

Ftm~Att

Rick Barnitz
Larry Gibbs

Vince Weaver

J eff !tmold
Gary ruchards

Scott Barnitz

By Dave Harris
The Meigs Marauders girls team
raced out to an early lead and never
looked backl as they rolled over
Jackson Tuesday night 59-38.
The h95t Marauders opened up a
32-19 haHtime lead.
Senior center Terri Wilson led
Meigs with 22 points. Dodie Chapman and Sonla Ash chipped in with
12 each as the Marauders raised
their record to 13-4 and 6-4 in the
league. Jackson was led by Cheryl
Massay and Rose Stiffler with 15
points each. J:a~kson dropped to 1-12
in the league and 4-16 overall.
Meigs hit only 28 of 71 shots for a
cool 30 percent while Jackson could
manage on 13 of 50 shots for 26 per-

In the reserve contest, the Uttle
Marauders remained in a first place
tie witlllronton with a hard fouglt
22-18 victory over Jackson in overtlme1 Ylckl DeBord led Meigs with .
10 points including four in overtime
while the Meigs defense held
Jackson scoreless. Jackson .ws led
by Wilson with six. Meigs ls j2·3
overall and H in ~league.
The Marauders travel to Ironton
Thlll'llday nglht to battle the league
leading gal.!l from Ironfon.

Meigs (59 -- .Wilson 10-2-22 ; T. Ash
2-0·4; Chapman 6·Q-12; King 2·0·4;
Anderson 1-0-2; s. Ash 6·0·12; Lightfoot D-D-0; Smith 0-0·0; Drehel 0-1·1;
Ollvert1 -0·2. Totals 28-3-59.
· Jac~so.n (38) -- Massay 6-3·15; Sill-.
fler 5-5-15; Juhasz 2;.J·5; Per ry 0:3-3;
Davis o-0-0; Dorsey u·O-O; cook o-o-o.
Totals 13-12-38.

B~

MENS TUBE
SOCKS
F ils size 10 to 13. Mul ti .co lor
st ripe tops. Irregulars of $5.99
va lue. Fu ll cushion foot.

6 PAIR PACK

~ 24

Pt. Pleasan t
Jac k son
M e igs

Tues day 's results:
Hurri cane84 Pt'. Pleasant 54
Wellston 10 1 Beaver -Pike 80
Friday ' s games :

4
I

1-3
&lt;HI
:hi

Halves paying
Quarters paying
·Dimes paying
Clad Halve~

$8.60
$4.30
$1 .72
$2.40 .

4

4

4-S 10
2&lt;-2 :u
1-2 1$
&lt;HI 4
1-1 9

I
30

s-u u

3
13
7

Todd Baker

Dale Newberry

2

G-1

2

Gray

H&gt;-2;

Inge.ls

1-0-2;

K.

K. Creek
E Valley

3-4-10: Kit c he n 4-0-8; Paugh
Sisk 1.0·2 ; Powell 2·3·7: Jeff
4-6-14; Totals 19-18-00.

SOUTHWESTERN

(13 1-

995

960
1066
1135
1072

lt

!*

,.*

DRAFT

LADIES

NITE

NITE
THURSDAYS

***ll- 9TUESDAYS
P.M. to 1A.M.

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE niRU
748 N. 2nd St.

Middleport, 0 .

Made In U.S.A.

MEN'S

BIC
BUTANE
LIGHTER

TERRY
WASH
CLOTHS

THERMAL
BOOT
SOCKS

Regular 89'

PACK OF 12
One Dozen

IRR - Fits 9-13

$344

D88~.

Save 68c.

A once a year offe ring fr om a well . known
Southern Hosi ery Mill . While they last!
Beige , taupe , suntan, coffee , color tones.

1st Quality - Reg. 89'

Price

4PAIR

Southwestern 24.

88¢

PRINTED TERRY

KITCHEN TOWELS

eWOMENS SWEATERS
eWOMENS BLOUSES &amp; TOPS
eMENS SHIRTS
eWOMENS PANTS - HANDBAGS

NOW

1h

MAGNETIC
20 PAGES

towel. Several des ig ns and
color s. Lay in a supply , you' ll
save.

2

FOR

Why Pay 12.49?

$} 00

=
111

COINS

79' IF PERFECT
PRINTED

For Silver Dollars 'dated

or Scrap.
Top price for sterling. Cash
for old or new silverware.

and

Our Reg. 1'1.49

Holds 3 Bushel

EXTRA
WIDE
PANTY
HOSE

PLASTIC
TRASH
BAGS

Size

lnxd\

96

Scrap Gold: Rings,
tches, etc.
Top price paid for coins or sera

¢
PR.'

PRICE ·

PHOTO ALBUMS

Made in U.S.A. The se are I
sligh t i rr egu la rs of a $1. 19

R YOUR

more for better condlinn nd
__· - --1

THATS
TOMORROW!

SAVE 50.%

KNEE HIGH NYLONS

1· 1-3; Lewis 1· 5-7; Forgay 6· 1:·14;
Carr 1-0-2 ; McNeil 1-D- 2; S t ewar t
1-0-2; Walk e r 0-1·1;
Baker l-0-2 ;
Totals 12-9-.'13.
S«lre by Quarters:
I! H 13 II ii6
Wahama
Southwestern
6 2 11 14 33
T ota I
Foul s
Wa ham a
23;

1935 or earlier. Paying

9P
12M

DISPOSABLE

· WOMENS COMFORT TOP

l -2·4:
Roush

ANNOUNCING THE REVISED
OFFICE SCHEDULE OF
DR. MATEO P. DAYO, JR .
306 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio ·
Effective January 1980
Monday-10;00-1:00
2:00-l:OO P.M.
Tuesday, No Office
Wednesday-9:00-11 :30
2:00-7:30 P.M.
Thursday 9:00-11:30,2-7:30 P.M.
Friday \0:00-1:00,2:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-5:00
Except the last Saturday of the

10 18 11 13··52
7 12, 6 16.. 41

r-------------------~

2-3·7:

TERRY
POT
HOLDERS
Has binding all around .

Affached loop for
hanging. A Good Buy'

Regular 11.39

10 77~
For

4

Limit
4
Pair

MENS

BROWN
JERSEY
GLOVES
Regular 89'

66~.

For

MENS

BIG YAN'K
'JEANS

ASK FOR MARK AT

ROBiftSON'S LAUNDRY

Values To 114.99

216 E. Second 992·5428

Flar .,. ,

stra ight

l £g &lt;: . Df!n im s,
cor du ,. o. -;
brush e d
denim s. W('st crn an d
f ul! r. vt . Si zes 10 42.

Affi.l iated with MTS Coin Shop, Galllpalis, Ohio.
Open this Wed. and Thurs. nights 6: 3o:a : 30
(121 State Street, Next to High School)

,,,

855
1159
810

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

Weaver

•CLASS RINGS (marked 10K) GOLD BANOS
•STERLING, SILVER and GOLD COINS

.

946

~~FEB.I4'!'y

\)REmEmBER

12 20 22 23 17

Fouled Out- Potter .
Officiala - Ron Ellis and Mike Pour
RESERVE GAME
WAHAMA (51)
Lavender

MTS will consistently pay
gold coins or scrap.

GOLD

Douglas 1·4·6; Tucci 2·8 ·12; Light 1·
4·6; William s 4 0·6; Reyeal 2·0·.4 and
Norm anO · l-1. Totals 12-17-41.
By quarters :

9
2

S011111WESTERN 1181

CASH

For each $1.00 of Silver
coins dated 19~ or

18-16.52.
Elk Valley 1•11 -- Davis 2 0·4;

Por t smouth Ea st at Whe elersburg
Portsmouth at 1ren ton

month.

WEPAY

Barr 0·2·2 and Gilmore 1·2·4. Totals

OP
739
778
91 1
103 1

Waverly at Ga llipoli s
Athens at Well ston
Me igs at 1ren ton
Logan at Jack.son
Wh ee lersbu rg at Northwest
Chilli co th e at Westland
Court House at Mi a mi Trace
Rav en swood aT Pt. Pl easant
Saturday's games :

4-6 16
4-6 12
2&lt;-2 \0

Southwestern
12 15 21 20 68
Total Foul3 - Wshama 17; Southwestern 19.

18 32 44 59
13 19 32 38

Spn nger 1·0·2; Pr ice 1-1·3; Westfall

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW··· WHILE QUANTITIES LASTI

%9 lt-30 77

Scon byQ\W1en;
Wahama

Quarters :

Meigs
Jackson

SIGNS FREE AGENT
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Mike
Chronister, who holds several records at Brigham Young University
has signed a free agent contract with
the Cincinnati Bengals.
The 6-foot, 192-pound wide
receiver was signed by the San
Francisco 49ers as a free agent last
season, but was cut shortly before
the regular season.
Chronister ca ught 121 passes for
2,205 yards and 21 touchdowns in
three seasons with Brigham Young.

TP

9
6
4
4

I

TimRoll.'lh
Total

&amp;.II R,..ll
TOTAL'!

apiece. Grant Greenwood added 10.
Rio Grande held a 37-35 haHtime
lead.
The Redmen hit 34 of 70 field goal
attempts for 48.6 percent. Rio was
nine of 17 at the foul line for 52.9 percent. The Redmen picked off 33
rebounds, nine by McConnick and
eight by Dorsey. Rio had 16 assists ,
six by Phelps, and 16 turnovers.
Urbana hit 36 of 81 field goal attempts for &lt;H.4 percent. The Blue
Knights were eight of 19 at the foul
line for 42.1 percent.
Urbana had 31 rebounds, six by
Rengert. The visitors had 29 turnovers.
Friday, Rio will play Tiffin
University at Tiffin.

Box Score
Kyger Creek (5%) - Sa nds J.0 ·6;

WAHAMA !77)

Jay Burl~
Shennan Potter

Urbana rallies,
defeats R edmen

cent.
14-17-LB. AVG.

attempts for 51percent and had 19 of
30 go through the hoop from the foul
line for 66 percent. They committed
18 turnovers and had 32 rebounds
with Larry Gibbs owning 10.
Southwestern shot 49 percent from
the floor (30-61 ) and 73 percent at the
free throw stripe. The Highlanders
conunitted 24 turnovers and had 26
rebounds. Newberry topped the rebounding list with 13.
The White Falcon junior varsity
built a 32-41 halftime lead and then
coasted to a 56-33 win over the Little
Highland ers . in Tuesday's
preliminary clash.
Keith Sayre's charges upped their
season record to 12-4 on the year
with four games remaining.
Jeff Roush led Wahama with 14
points while Kendall Weaver added
10. Forgay sank 14 tallies for
Southwestern.
Wahama returns to action Friday
night when they visit the Spencer
Yellow Jackets. The White Falcons
own a 71-:&gt;7 decision over the Yellow
Jackets so far this year. Tip-off
timesare6 :00 p.m. and 8:00p.m.

Duane Forgay

Meigs wzns 13th game
Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak. ___lb .

:!~:~~~

Wahama.
The first quarter of action was a
real dog fight with Larry Gibbs scoring baH of Wahama 's 12 points total
in the canto. Southwestern got a
balanced attack to score 12 tallies of
their own to knot the score after
eight minutes of play .
Jeff Arnold carne off the bench for
the Mason Countians in the second
stanza to score eight points and help
give Wahama a 32-27 halftime advantage. Newberry also notched
eight markers in the period but the
White Falcon quintet managed to
give Coach Lewis Hall a five point
spread at intennission.
The third quarter was a scoring
duel between Newberry and Rick
Barnitz. When the eight minute span
had ended Newberry had piled up 10
more points while Barnitz was racking up 12 to give Wahama a 22-21
edge in the period and a 54-48 lead
going into the final turn.
Barnitz continued to give the
locals the leadership they needed in
the fourth quarter with 10 more
markers, six of which came on free
throws. With 3:09 remaining
Wahama held a slim ~ lead but
outscored the Highlanders ~ the
rest of the way to preserve the victory. Wahama made 15 of 21 free
throws in the final eight minutes
which kept Southwestern at bay as
the bend area team prevailed by a
77-68 score.
Wahama made 29 of 56 field goal

•

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

All All ABU ONLY IN STORES WITH Olll DEPAITMINTS
HOT FOODS AVAILABU 11om Ttl Tpm.DA1LY

BY GARY CLARK
Despite being out-goaled from he
field the Wahama White Falcons
were on target with their free throw
shooting Tuesday night which enabled them to claim a 77-68 win over the
Southwestern Highlanders.
Wahama kept their victory string
alive at 12 straight with the win and
raised their season slate to 14-2 as
the 197!HIO regular season draws to a
close. The bend area Falcons have
just four regular season games remaining, three of which are on the
road.
The White Falcons placed four
men in double figures in chalking up
the win but had to overcome a 28
point
performance
by
Southwestern's Dale Newberry.
Rick Barnitz led the local attack
with his third consecutive 20 points
plus night. The senior backcourt star
finished the night with 24 points
while Rainbow Gibbs added 16,
Vince Weaver 12 and Jeff Arnold 10.
Besides Newberry's game high 28
markers for Southwestern were
Duane Forgay with 15 and Todd
Baker with 10.
The host Highlanders managed to
make one more shot from the field
(3()-29) than the visiting White
Falcons but Wahama continued its
mastery at the free throw stipe by
connecting on 19 of 30 attempts for 66
percent. Southwestern hit on 73 per-·
cent of their charity tosses (11-11) but
failed to get as many attempts as

W L P
16 I ~24
14 2 946
12 5 1076
12 5 1222
12 6 1219
II 6 955
11 7 1259
9 7 890
8 9 950
6 12 880
2 14 806
2 16 849
I 15 765

TEAM
Chi II icothe
I ron ton
Portsmouth
Wh ee lersburg
A th en s
Ga ll i polia
W ells to n
Waver ly
Logan

Cour t House

White Falcons record 12th
•
•
wzn_1n row, 77-68 Tuesday

•••

ADVERTI SED ITEM POLICY

have come against West Virgmia
schools.
Tuesday night, semor guard Greg
Smith enj oyed one of his best nights
this sea ~on with 22 points. Senior
guard John Westfall dwnped in 11
points. Pacing Elk Valley's attack

J.S·ll; Smith H 22; Porter J.0·2;

Baldwi n ·Wallace 77, Oberlin 68
Mid·Ohio
Cedarville 104, Ohio Domin rca n 82
Ma l one 99, Wa l sh 93
Urba n ~ 80, Rio Grande 77

Team members are, left to right, Coach Lewis Hall,
Gary Richards, Joey Roush , Kendell Weaver, Tim
Roush, Larry Gibbs, York Ingels, Jeff Fowler, Jeff Arnold, Vince Weaver, Scott Barnitz, Rick Barnitz and
Assistant Coach Keith Sayre.

was Tucci with 12 points.
Kyger Creek sank 18 of 39 floor attempts for 46 percent and 16 of 32
foul attempts.
Elk Valley hit just 12 of ~3 from the
fie ld and 17 of 22 at the charity
stripes.
Kyger Creek held a 36-34 rebounding edge. The Bobkittens won the
reserve contest, 42-39.

victori~s

Cage standings

Ohio Coll ege Ba ske tba ll
By Th ~ As soctated Press
Tuesday Night
Confer ence

WAHAMA VARSITY - The Wahama High School
varsity basketball team, currently sporting an exceptional14-2 record, was rated sixth in the Associated
Press Class AA ratings last week. Last night, Wahama
won its 12th straight game, 77-68 over Southwestern.

nan Trace.
Six or the Bobcats' seven

•I

$744
Pr.

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON
••

,,

\J -

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 19&amp;0

Tuesday's Ohio basketball scores
By The AssOCiett ed 'Prcss
Akron Ftresrone 97 , Akron Coven
try 54
Akron Kenmore 78, Copley 54
Arkon St Vin St Mary 68 , T•Ailn
sburg 67
Ash t abula
Edgewood
~9 .
Pymatun ing Val. 44
Ashtabula Harbor 72, Jefferson 52
Ashtabula 51 . JOhn 68, Perry 45
Austiontown Fit c h
67 , W.:Hren
Howland 34
Avon Lake 54, Av on 46
Badger 66. New ton Falls 55
Batavia 70, N . Adams 42

BediOICI61 , Eu c11U 59

8erohol1 Sprrng 77 , Salrnevdle 5

b6
8erk 51W e 68, Sr rs tol 36
Bexley 64, Groveport 54
Br ad f ord 51, Mendon Union 47
Brooke. W Vn AD. E Lrverpool53
BucKeye Trall75 , Ft . Frye63
Canal Fulton NW 62 , Chippewa 58
Cin . Chr1 st . 83, Crn Seven H ills 72
Cin lnd1an Hill 58, Cr n . Wyoming

55
C1n . M oc ller61, W . ChestPr Lakota

56
Cin. Purce l l73, Leha no n64

C1n r att JJ, Day Je1ten.on b6
Cl eve A.ddm" 75, Shc1ker Hts 68
Cleve Central Cath 68, Cle''c
Un1ver c;, try 67
CIPve Colli nwood 48. Cleve E rl&lt;. t

51

E Crtnlon 5Y ~ ant.J y Valley 51
Ea~tlakc

)9
Cleve

Glenvtlle 78, Cleve hayes

47

6()

Cleve Hay 71, Cleve. W. Tech64
Cleve
Lincoln We~ ! 66, Cleve
Rhodes 54
Columbiana Crestview 60 , Lisbon

Hardin Northern 63, McComb61
Harvey 58, Fairport Ha rd ing 49
Hudson W. Re sesrve 58, CVCA 44
I nd ian Val l eyS. 82. Conof1 on Va l .

Col. H ami lton Twp . 71. Tea ys Val.

.,

Col. South 83, Col. Beechcrofl69
coshocton 73, Cl aymon t 71, ot
Crestwood 86. A urora 59

Fremont Ross 59 , Tol Whitmer S'l
Gtbso nburg 73, wooam ore 64
Glenn 60, Sheriuan 54
Grand River Acad. 60, Corinth

ChrisT. 48

57

65

N 61. Moyh e ld 58

[ ,lc,fwonll80, Oak H arbor 65
E 111 1Wr1od 70. Genoa 50
Elvna Cath . 92, Lorai n Brookstdl?

54

Oay . Cham Ju l 80, Tipp City 56

Kam.as Lakota 81. Otsego 54
Kenton Ridge 60, Gr eenan 59

Day . M eadowda le 68, Day . Carroll

Kettering A lter 58. Fai r mont W. 54

Lakevtew 54, Warren Champion 43
Lee t onta 74. United Local 5o
Logan Elm 71. Ctrclevi l le57
Loratn 66, vermilion 52
Lorain Cath 73, Columbia 65
Lora tn Ktng, / 4, Bav Village 59
Lord~ Town 83, ·Farmington 68
Lutheran E 93, Cleve . He ritage
Christ . 5 1
Madi son Pl a ins 69, S Char les ton

SE 65

54

_9 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980

'

Mogadore 52, Garrettsvi ll e Gar·
field 38
Morgan 78, PhilO SB
New L exi ngton 51, Crooksville .49
N ewcc'Tier st own 62 , Ridgewood 58
N iles M cKi nley 48 , Po la nd
Semi nar )I ..S5
N . Ba lfi m ore71 , Liberty Benton67
O ld Trail64, Bratenahl 51

Kyger Creek snapped a hve-gamc
losing streak Tuesday night with a
~2-41 non-conference win over Elk
Vafley of Kanawha County, W. Va.
The win gave the Bobcats a 7-12
record going mto Friday 's last
regular season game against Han-

Olmsted Falls97, Midpark 48

Mapl e Ht s. 81, Willoughby S. 58

Orr vi l ie 7.8, Akron Hoban 1'2

Mason 78 , Charlis le 69
M a umee Val. 60, D iv ine Word 51
M aysvi ll e 66. Riv er View 65
M ed inaH igh land 64, Rittman 62
M entor 57, Bru sh 45
M entor Lake Ca th . 54, Gi l mou r 39
Mineral Ridge 85 , Jackson·M i!ton

Parma Hol y Name 46, Brooklyn 44
Paulding 58, Swa nton 53
Richmond Hts. 81. Ledgemont -16

Maplewood 52, Bl oom fie ld 49

.Bobcats snap losing streak

Ottov ille68, Pandora Gilboa 57
Rip ley 58, Lynchburg Clay 50

College
results

Seb r ing 65, Stanton 45
Shenandoah 75 1 Beallsvi lle 70

Skyvue 71, Caldwell5'1

Ohio

Othe r Games
Marquette 82, Xavier 7,0

'

,
II

Eller~
o l th9Se' 1IO\Ien1se&lt;l nems rs reQ wrOCJ 10 be
read1ly ava1lab~ lor sale rn eacn 1'. 10{181 Store . lllCept as
~ noted 1n this ad If ...e dO 1\!n out of an advortlsod
nem . we Will ottw vou vour l hOice ot a compali!ble •tem .
when ava1lable, rell&amp;ctrng tl1e samf! sa~,~rngs or a l &lt;l•"chock
'Nt·uch w1ll ent1tle you to purc haSE the act,.er11sad 1tem at the
ad\ler1t S8d p fll:8 Mlhrn lJ doh'S

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUAR AN TEE
Every1tl1ng you' Duy at l(rOQf!f rs yuarant66d l or your !ot.al
satrstac1•0l1 regardless o t manl.l taclu•er II yOu are no t ;.a !Is
lied . Kroger w1 tl repli!Ce vour •lam wolh t he s.ame brand or a
comparaole br ;~nd u1&lt;!!lur~d v0u1 pu1chase pnce
COPYIIGMT ltiO ~· THf KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
COOO WiONESOAY F-U . ll.THIU SATURDAY FEI . 16 . 19lD

IN GALLI POLI S AND POMEROY STORES .

'

Wlllli5UVE THE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD

All Kroger stores in this area are now open regular hours.
Kroger trucks are now delivering fresh supplies to all Kroger
stores. The shelves are being restocked quickly. Kroger
regrets any Inconveniences you've had the last few weeks.
Kroger appreciates your business and Is glad to be open to
serve you again.

TO DEALERS

t'

I

Iceberg
Head Lettuce

U.S. NO . 1

IN THE DAIRY DEPT.

Round White Potatoes

Kroger Fresh
•
'!,-Gal.
J
0 range u1ce .... Jug

10

Dan Dee •
8-oz .
Potato Ch 1ps .... ... Pkg .

-lb.

Bag

400 SHEETS PER
ROUND TOP

Charm in
Bath Tissue

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread
PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES

a$ 19

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola

$ 09

Vefico~~est S~eciot\
RUSSER

"$149
Fresh Made to99 C
Glazed Donuts
For

$2 79
Whole Boneless $3 99
Beef R1b Eye ...

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
11·13-LB. AVG.

QUARTERS

Mrs. Filbert's
• ........ _. __ .Pkg
1-lb.
Margar1ne
.

•

·' SLICED

lb.

FREE

Kroger
24-ax.
CoHage Cheese . Ctnr.

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef -

$_

49

Willie Flunoy, 5-11 sophomore
guard, tossed in 24 points to pace
visiting Urbana to an 110-77 Mid-Ohio
Conference basketball victory over
Rio Grande College in Lyne Center
Tuesday night.
The victory left Urbana with a 1313 season record. In MOC play, the
Blue Knights upped their season
mark to 7-:&gt;.
Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande
Redmen dropped to 7-17 overall and
!&gt;-7 in league action.
Dave Gustin added 19 points for
the Blue Knights. Mike Rengert added 1P.
T001 Dorsey paced the Redmen
with 25 points. Vince Phelps and
Bret McConnick tallied 14 points

Whole or Rib
Half Pork Loin

FG

Ftm~Att

Rick Barnitz
Larry Gibbs

Vince Weaver

J eff !tmold
Gary ruchards

Scott Barnitz

By Dave Harris
The Meigs Marauders girls team
raced out to an early lead and never
looked backl as they rolled over
Jackson Tuesday night 59-38.
The h95t Marauders opened up a
32-19 haHtime lead.
Senior center Terri Wilson led
Meigs with 22 points. Dodie Chapman and Sonla Ash chipped in with
12 each as the Marauders raised
their record to 13-4 and 6-4 in the
league. Jackson was led by Cheryl
Massay and Rose Stiffler with 15
points each. J:a~kson dropped to 1-12
in the league and 4-16 overall.
Meigs hit only 28 of 71 shots for a
cool 30 percent while Jackson could
manage on 13 of 50 shots for 26 per-

In the reserve contest, the Uttle
Marauders remained in a first place
tie witlllronton with a hard fouglt
22-18 victory over Jackson in overtlme1 Ylckl DeBord led Meigs with .
10 points including four in overtime
while the Meigs defense held
Jackson scoreless. Jackson .ws led
by Wilson with six. Meigs ls j2·3
overall and H in ~league.
The Marauders travel to Ironton
Thlll'llday nglht to battle the league
leading gal.!l from Ironfon.

Meigs (59 -- .Wilson 10-2-22 ; T. Ash
2-0·4; Chapman 6·Q-12; King 2·0·4;
Anderson 1-0-2; s. Ash 6·0·12; Lightfoot D-D-0; Smith 0-0·0; Drehel 0-1·1;
Ollvert1 -0·2. Totals 28-3-59.
· Jac~so.n (38) -- Massay 6-3·15; Sill-.
fler 5-5-15; Juhasz 2;.J·5; Per ry 0:3-3;
Davis o-0-0; Dorsey u·O-O; cook o-o-o.
Totals 13-12-38.

B~

MENS TUBE
SOCKS
F ils size 10 to 13. Mul ti .co lor
st ripe tops. Irregulars of $5.99
va lue. Fu ll cushion foot.

6 PAIR PACK

~ 24

Pt. Pleasan t
Jac k son
M e igs

Tues day 's results:
Hurri cane84 Pt'. Pleasant 54
Wellston 10 1 Beaver -Pike 80
Friday ' s games :

4
I

1-3
&lt;HI
:hi

Halves paying
Quarters paying
·Dimes paying
Clad Halve~

$8.60
$4.30
$1 .72
$2.40 .

4

4

4-S 10
2&lt;-2 :u
1-2 1$
&lt;HI 4
1-1 9

I
30

s-u u

3
13
7

Todd Baker

Dale Newberry

2

G-1

2

Gray

H&gt;-2;

Inge.ls

1-0-2;

K.

K. Creek
E Valley

3-4-10: Kit c he n 4-0-8; Paugh
Sisk 1.0·2 ; Powell 2·3·7: Jeff
4-6-14; Totals 19-18-00.

SOUTHWESTERN

(13 1-

995

960
1066
1135
1072

lt

!*

,.*

DRAFT

LADIES

NITE

NITE
THURSDAYS

***ll- 9TUESDAYS
P.M. to 1A.M.

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE niRU
748 N. 2nd St.

Middleport, 0 .

Made In U.S.A.

MEN'S

BIC
BUTANE
LIGHTER

TERRY
WASH
CLOTHS

THERMAL
BOOT
SOCKS

Regular 89'

PACK OF 12
One Dozen

IRR - Fits 9-13

$344

D88~.

Save 68c.

A once a year offe ring fr om a well . known
Southern Hosi ery Mill . While they last!
Beige , taupe , suntan, coffee , color tones.

1st Quality - Reg. 89'

Price

4PAIR

Southwestern 24.

88¢

PRINTED TERRY

KITCHEN TOWELS

eWOMENS SWEATERS
eWOMENS BLOUSES &amp; TOPS
eMENS SHIRTS
eWOMENS PANTS - HANDBAGS

NOW

1h

MAGNETIC
20 PAGES

towel. Several des ig ns and
color s. Lay in a supply , you' ll
save.

2

FOR

Why Pay 12.49?

$} 00

=
111

COINS

79' IF PERFECT
PRINTED

For Silver Dollars 'dated

or Scrap.
Top price for sterling. Cash
for old or new silverware.

and

Our Reg. 1'1.49

Holds 3 Bushel

EXTRA
WIDE
PANTY
HOSE

PLASTIC
TRASH
BAGS

Size

lnxd\

96

Scrap Gold: Rings,
tches, etc.
Top price paid for coins or sera

¢
PR.'

PRICE ·

PHOTO ALBUMS

Made in U.S.A. The se are I
sligh t i rr egu la rs of a $1. 19

R YOUR

more for better condlinn nd
__· - --1

THATS
TOMORROW!

SAVE 50.%

KNEE HIGH NYLONS

1· 1-3; Lewis 1· 5-7; Forgay 6· 1:·14;
Carr 1-0-2 ; McNeil 1-D- 2; S t ewar t
1-0-2; Walk e r 0-1·1;
Baker l-0-2 ;
Totals 12-9-.'13.
S«lre by Quarters:
I! H 13 II ii6
Wahama
Southwestern
6 2 11 14 33
T ota I
Foul s
Wa ham a
23;

1935 or earlier. Paying

9P
12M

DISPOSABLE

· WOMENS COMFORT TOP

l -2·4:
Roush

ANNOUNCING THE REVISED
OFFICE SCHEDULE OF
DR. MATEO P. DAYO, JR .
306 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio ·
Effective January 1980
Monday-10;00-1:00
2:00-l:OO P.M.
Tuesday, No Office
Wednesday-9:00-11 :30
2:00-7:30 P.M.
Thursday 9:00-11:30,2-7:30 P.M.
Friday \0:00-1:00,2:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-5:00
Except the last Saturday of the

10 18 11 13··52
7 12, 6 16.. 41

r-------------------~

2-3·7:

TERRY
POT
HOLDERS
Has binding all around .

Affached loop for
hanging. A Good Buy'

Regular 11.39

10 77~
For

4

Limit
4
Pair

MENS

BROWN
JERSEY
GLOVES
Regular 89'

66~.

For

MENS

BIG YAN'K
'JEANS

ASK FOR MARK AT

ROBiftSON'S LAUNDRY

Values To 114.99

216 E. Second 992·5428

Flar .,. ,

stra ight

l £g &lt;: . Df!n im s,
cor du ,. o. -;
brush e d
denim s. W('st crn an d
f ul! r. vt . Si zes 10 42.

Affi.l iated with MTS Coin Shop, Galllpalis, Ohio.
Open this Wed. and Thurs. nights 6: 3o:a : 30
(121 State Street, Next to High School)

,,,

855
1159
810

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

Weaver

•CLASS RINGS (marked 10K) GOLD BANOS
•STERLING, SILVER and GOLD COINS

.

946

~~FEB.I4'!'y

\)REmEmBER

12 20 22 23 17

Fouled Out- Potter .
Officiala - Ron Ellis and Mike Pour
RESERVE GAME
WAHAMA (51)
Lavender

MTS will consistently pay
gold coins or scrap.

GOLD

Douglas 1·4·6; Tucci 2·8 ·12; Light 1·
4·6; William s 4 0·6; Reyeal 2·0·.4 and
Norm anO · l-1. Totals 12-17-41.
By quarters :

9
2

S011111WESTERN 1181

CASH

For each $1.00 of Silver
coins dated 19~ or

18-16.52.
Elk Valley 1•11 -- Davis 2 0·4;

Por t smouth Ea st at Whe elersburg
Portsmouth at 1ren ton

month.

WEPAY

Barr 0·2·2 and Gilmore 1·2·4. Totals

OP
739
778
91 1
103 1

Waverly at Ga llipoli s
Athens at Well ston
Me igs at 1ren ton
Logan at Jack.son
Wh ee lersbu rg at Northwest
Chilli co th e at Westland
Court House at Mi a mi Trace
Rav en swood aT Pt. Pl easant
Saturday's games :

4-6 16
4-6 12
2&lt;-2 \0

Southwestern
12 15 21 20 68
Total Foul3 - Wshama 17; Southwestern 19.

18 32 44 59
13 19 32 38

Spn nger 1·0·2; Pr ice 1-1·3; Westfall

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW··· WHILE QUANTITIES LASTI

%9 lt-30 77

Scon byQ\W1en;
Wahama

Quarters :

Meigs
Jackson

SIGNS FREE AGENT
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Mike
Chronister, who holds several records at Brigham Young University
has signed a free agent contract with
the Cincinnati Bengals.
The 6-foot, 192-pound wide
receiver was signed by the San
Francisco 49ers as a free agent last
season, but was cut shortly before
the regular season.
Chronister ca ught 121 passes for
2,205 yards and 21 touchdowns in
three seasons with Brigham Young.

TP

9
6
4
4

I

TimRoll.'lh
Total

&amp;.II R,..ll
TOTAL'!

apiece. Grant Greenwood added 10.
Rio Grande held a 37-35 haHtime
lead.
The Redmen hit 34 of 70 field goal
attempts for 48.6 percent. Rio was
nine of 17 at the foul line for 52.9 percent. The Redmen picked off 33
rebounds, nine by McConnick and
eight by Dorsey. Rio had 16 assists ,
six by Phelps, and 16 turnovers.
Urbana hit 36 of 81 field goal attempts for &lt;H.4 percent. The Blue
Knights were eight of 19 at the foul
line for 42.1 percent.
Urbana had 31 rebounds, six by
Rengert. The visitors had 29 turnovers.
Friday, Rio will play Tiffin
University at Tiffin.

Box Score
Kyger Creek (5%) - Sa nds J.0 ·6;

WAHAMA !77)

Jay Burl~
Shennan Potter

Urbana rallies,
defeats R edmen

cent.
14-17-LB. AVG.

attempts for 51percent and had 19 of
30 go through the hoop from the foul
line for 66 percent. They committed
18 turnovers and had 32 rebounds
with Larry Gibbs owning 10.
Southwestern shot 49 percent from
the floor (30-61 ) and 73 percent at the
free throw stripe. The Highlanders
conunitted 24 turnovers and had 26
rebounds. Newberry topped the rebounding list with 13.
The White Falcon junior varsity
built a 32-41 halftime lead and then
coasted to a 56-33 win over the Little
Highland ers . in Tuesday's
preliminary clash.
Keith Sayre's charges upped their
season record to 12-4 on the year
with four games remaining.
Jeff Roush led Wahama with 14
points while Kendall Weaver added
10. Forgay sank 14 tallies for
Southwestern.
Wahama returns to action Friday
night when they visit the Spencer
Yellow Jackets. The White Falcons
own a 71-:&gt;7 decision over the Yellow
Jackets so far this year. Tip-off
timesare6 :00 p.m. and 8:00p.m.

Duane Forgay

Meigs wzns 13th game
Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak. ___lb .

:!~:~~~

Wahama.
The first quarter of action was a
real dog fight with Larry Gibbs scoring baH of Wahama 's 12 points total
in the canto. Southwestern got a
balanced attack to score 12 tallies of
their own to knot the score after
eight minutes of play .
Jeff Arnold carne off the bench for
the Mason Countians in the second
stanza to score eight points and help
give Wahama a 32-27 halftime advantage. Newberry also notched
eight markers in the period but the
White Falcon quintet managed to
give Coach Lewis Hall a five point
spread at intennission.
The third quarter was a scoring
duel between Newberry and Rick
Barnitz. When the eight minute span
had ended Newberry had piled up 10
more points while Barnitz was racking up 12 to give Wahama a 22-21
edge in the period and a 54-48 lead
going into the final turn.
Barnitz continued to give the
locals the leadership they needed in
the fourth quarter with 10 more
markers, six of which came on free
throws. With 3:09 remaining
Wahama held a slim ~ lead but
outscored the Highlanders ~ the
rest of the way to preserve the victory. Wahama made 15 of 21 free
throws in the final eight minutes
which kept Southwestern at bay as
the bend area team prevailed by a
77-68 score.
Wahama made 29 of 56 field goal

•

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

All All ABU ONLY IN STORES WITH Olll DEPAITMINTS
HOT FOODS AVAILABU 11om Ttl Tpm.DA1LY

BY GARY CLARK
Despite being out-goaled from he
field the Wahama White Falcons
were on target with their free throw
shooting Tuesday night which enabled them to claim a 77-68 win over the
Southwestern Highlanders.
Wahama kept their victory string
alive at 12 straight with the win and
raised their season slate to 14-2 as
the 197!HIO regular season draws to a
close. The bend area Falcons have
just four regular season games remaining, three of which are on the
road.
The White Falcons placed four
men in double figures in chalking up
the win but had to overcome a 28
point
performance
by
Southwestern's Dale Newberry.
Rick Barnitz led the local attack
with his third consecutive 20 points
plus night. The senior backcourt star
finished the night with 24 points
while Rainbow Gibbs added 16,
Vince Weaver 12 and Jeff Arnold 10.
Besides Newberry's game high 28
markers for Southwestern were
Duane Forgay with 15 and Todd
Baker with 10.
The host Highlanders managed to
make one more shot from the field
(3()-29) than the visiting White
Falcons but Wahama continued its
mastery at the free throw stipe by
connecting on 19 of 30 attempts for 66
percent. Southwestern hit on 73 per-·
cent of their charity tosses (11-11) but
failed to get as many attempts as

W L P
16 I ~24
14 2 946
12 5 1076
12 5 1222
12 6 1219
II 6 955
11 7 1259
9 7 890
8 9 950
6 12 880
2 14 806
2 16 849
I 15 765

TEAM
Chi II icothe
I ron ton
Portsmouth
Wh ee lersburg
A th en s
Ga ll i polia
W ells to n
Waver ly
Logan

Cour t House

White Falcons record 12th
•
•
wzn_1n row, 77-68 Tuesday

•••

ADVERTI SED ITEM POLICY

have come against West Virgmia
schools.
Tuesday night, semor guard Greg
Smith enj oyed one of his best nights
this sea ~on with 22 points. Senior
guard John Westfall dwnped in 11
points. Pacing Elk Valley's attack

J.S·ll; Smith H 22; Porter J.0·2;

Baldwi n ·Wallace 77, Oberlin 68
Mid·Ohio
Cedarville 104, Ohio Domin rca n 82
Ma l one 99, Wa l sh 93
Urba n ~ 80, Rio Grande 77

Team members are, left to right, Coach Lewis Hall,
Gary Richards, Joey Roush , Kendell Weaver, Tim
Roush, Larry Gibbs, York Ingels, Jeff Fowler, Jeff Arnold, Vince Weaver, Scott Barnitz, Rick Barnitz and
Assistant Coach Keith Sayre.

was Tucci with 12 points.
Kyger Creek sank 18 of 39 floor attempts for 46 percent and 16 of 32
foul attempts.
Elk Valley hit just 12 of ~3 from the
fie ld and 17 of 22 at the charity
stripes.
Kyger Creek held a 36-34 rebounding edge. The Bobkittens won the
reserve contest, 42-39.

victori~s

Cage standings

Ohio Coll ege Ba ske tba ll
By Th ~ As soctated Press
Tuesday Night
Confer ence

WAHAMA VARSITY - The Wahama High School
varsity basketball team, currently sporting an exceptional14-2 record, was rated sixth in the Associated
Press Class AA ratings last week. Last night, Wahama
won its 12th straight game, 77-68 over Southwestern.

nan Trace.
Six or the Bobcats' seven

•I

$744
Pr.

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON
••

,,

\J -

�10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1!!80

- - -·- - --- - ·-

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
INFESTED wrnJ MOTHS
POU.V'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - We are .told to
use moth baU. to keep moths out of
our woolens but we are never told
what to do if the moths get into them.
My entire store room is infested with
moths . What will kill them ? - MRS.
R.M.
DEAR MRS. R.M. - If your entire
store room is infested with moths
you need to call a pest control service and then make a clean start.
Those moths will keep eating and
breeding as loog as they can find any
source of food such as woolens, fell,
furs and so on. Keep these things
that have been exposedlo the moths
away from clothes in other rooms or
closets, or they may spread. Moths
like dark, warm areas- sun, air and
cleanliness are their mortal
enemies. Wash, brush, air and shake
out any ite!llB that might be a good
breeding ground . - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - To get lid of
sptders I put moth crystals in small
mesh bags, tape the tops closed and
then tape these bags, about three
feet apart, across the tops of the out·
side of the windows. Whr n the

crystals evaporate l refill the bags
and ha ve not had a spider since I
started doing this.- MRS. K.F .
DEAR POLLY - The way I keep
sheets and bed pads in place ill our
camper would ·also work well on a
bed at home. I bought two pairs of
men's suspenders and took one pair
apart and fastened one piece under
the foot of the mattress and the other
under the top I head ) of the mattress .
I crossed the other in the center and
clipped on both sides of the pad and
sheet. No more slipping. - ELOISE
DEAR POLLY -1 use a liquid window cleaner to remove spots from
my cafllet and upholstered fur·
niture. It works great and dries
quickly.- C.S.
DEAR C.S. - Thank you. The win·
dow cleaner certatnly eliminated
two•brown spots on my light beige
carpet that had been marked by socalled brass "casters" on the bottom
of chair legs. -POLLY
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper-&lt;:oupon
clippers if she uses one of your
favorite Pointers, Peeves or Problems in her column. Write Polly 's
Pointers in care of this newspaper.

Crisisline enters third year
Crisisline, the telephone counseling service for Gallia, Jackson
and Meigs Counties, ts beginning its
fourth year of operations this
February. In its first three years of
service, Clisisline staf£ and trained
volunteers answered over 7,000
calls. Concerns expressed by callers
ranged from personal problems
such as depression, family troubles,
or sexual concerns, to requests for
information about hous ing, jobs,
health and mental he;11lh services.
Callers ranged from 10 to 110 years of
age .
Before Crisisline service began, in
February of 1977, there was no after
hours emergency help for troubled
people. Duling its first few months
of operation, a call diverter was
used on the home telephones of mental health center staff members for
after-hour calls.
With the employment of five mental

1977, to cover weekend and evening
hours, a staff person was available
to answer crisis caU. in the office. At
that time, the first training class for
volunteers began.
The Clisisline goal is to provide
service to any individual regardless
of location , age, sex or problem con·
cerns. Trained volunteers supplement the nine full and part lime
employees who cover the phone 24
hours a day, seven days a week.
Backup service is ava ilable through
the mental health center.

'Dallas ' rates as no.
one zn weekly survey

.

US • • •lh llo·lo·n

Recent additions to the Crisisline
services are R.E.A.C. H. , the Rape
Crisis Team and CAN-HELP, a
progrma in Jackson affiliated with
the Jackson County Welfare Departmenl for the reporting of child abuse
and neglect.
Clisisline numbers are : 446-5554 in
Gallia, 28&amp;-55!&gt;4 in Jackson and 992-

,

.

CANDY

ATI'END HEART FUND CONVENTION - Two members of the
Meigs County Heart Branch recently met actor-singer Ed Ames,
honorary chairman of the 19110 Central Ohio Heart Chapter Heart Fund
campaign. Pictured is Ames, center, discussing campaign plans with
Heart Fund volunteers. Ames was the honored guest at the chapter's
campaign kick-off luncheon Jan . 26 at the Sheraton-Columbus Hotel. The
chapter's 1980 goal of over million will support cardiovascular resear·
ch and education .. Ames lost a close friend to heart disease and actively
s upports Heart Association programs such as CPR (cardiopulmonary
resuscitation). He is currently training to be an instructor in the CPR lifesaving technique. A:J Heart volunteers, Lois Kelly and Roberta O'Brien
are working in Meigs County to reduce the risk of prl!mature death and
disability due to heart disease.

'I

Communion observed Sunday
Communion was observed Sunday
at St. Paul's United Methodist
Church, Tuppers Plains.
Forty-three attended Sunday
school and worship service with the
Rev. Richard Thomas giving scripture from Luke 14, and the message
topic being " Count the Cost."
Today at 1:30 p.m. at the church
the United Methodist Women will
meet and on Feb. 25 the United
Methodist Men will have a meeting.
The Rev. Mr. Thomas will speak on
opening night nf "Evangelism
Week" at the Heath United
Methodist Church in Middleport,
7:30p.m.

Plans are being ·made for a
charge-wide Bible study during the
month of March with the Rev. Mr.
Thomas and the Rev. Dave Janis of
Raeine to team-teach the sessions.
The parables of Jesus will be
discussed. Dr. Wesley Clarke had
charge of the county conference of
Methodists held at the A:Jbury
Church in Syracuse Mooday night.

Authoriled CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

'I Sears

r

Phone 992·2178
234 E. Main 51.

Pomeroy , O.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon. thru Wed. P·S,

Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed

or Your Money Back

~---'-

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

PIZZA BURGER •••• ·gge

Willi FRIES .••••••.$1 19
"

Gerlach vows to be repeated

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
992·2556

570W. Main
Pom'eroy, 0,

.O·e

CENTER CUT RIB .

tardiness.
AU this we do because we feel guil·
ty : Heaven forbid that anyone would
think we're neglecting our families
for our jobs!
WiD women ever become
emanicipated to the point where we
consider houSe and chlldren joint
projects, divided equally between
males and females- not "women's
work" with a little help from our
men] - TRYING TO GET THERE
DEARTIGT:
We will ..'.we will... butfor many of
US, probably not ffi this generation. -

PORK CHOPS.........L!·•••

1
~
HAMS..................... ...
112

-~~

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

lB

$}&amp;g

CHUCK ROAST.......•.
FLAVORITE GRADE A

TURKEYs..~~:~~ ....... ~ 7
CRISPY SERVE

BACON...................L!·.

-

FLORIDA

'

MIDDLEPORT OHIO
•

pI"QA................. ~3.o!••

The rustic charm of Lea's "Country Tavern" is as easy
on the eve as It is on the pocket book 1 The tops and sides
are all wood products. 'Fronts are solid pine. The
warmth of the engraved and highlighted finish offers a

the antique brass plated hardware.
The simply stated carvings also capture the casual
mood of the 11,roup and soften the overall effect•. "Country Tavern" ... another value from Lea.

4 Pc. Suite, 5 drawer chest, 6 drawer dresser and

5 AvE *1

fr~med mirror._

. ..

'REG. PRICE '749.95 SALE

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWEL
In

'

$64··ggs

.

WOMEN'S AGLOW Fellowship
Thursday Meigs Inn. Dinner 7 p.m.
meeting at 8 p.m . The Rev. Dale
J&lt;auffman Is the speaker.
' PRECEPTOR BETA Chapter .
Sorority meeting, Thursday evenfng
at home of Mrs. Paul Elch.
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA .
.CHAPI'ER, Beta Sigma Phi Sororl·
,ty, 7:30 Thursday night at the home
;of Mrs. Grace Elch. Mrs. Elch will
•preaent the program on Libya in
'North Africa .
; ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
Thursday night at the hall.
' LAOREL CLIFF BE'rl'ER Health
:Club, 7:30 .p.m. Thursday In the
;Riverboat Room of the Athens Coun:tY Savlnga and Loan Co., Pomeroy.
•RepresentaUve of the Cancer Socle•tytospeak.Mrs. Jean Wright will be

•

JIF

.

,.Uddleport.

TIDE ...;.............!9.~

.menta.

; E!.EANOR CIRCLE, 7:30 ThUrv

:aay at tile Heath United Methodist

'ChurclL .lifargle B1ake, Jean Cook
and Mary Wise to be~ .
'

·I

'

' '

2~0

$

VAUEY FARMS GRADE A

•••

~

FLAVORITE

$} 09

. ..

.DETERGENT

.1

49

9
MILK........~~:;..~} 5

LARGE--EGGS
....•.
~.5
;
..

,,,.~,.,._~ =~

COU PO

'An o::t .L

ORANGE

NK

31$200
'

1 WEATHER

, PERMITTING,
meeting ~ the Ohio Valley Grange
'21112, Letart Falls, 'I'IW!'sday, 7:30
•p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrit.
. ,Her~ Rou.llbl potluck refresh- .

.

Butte[.-;:2~...

Peanut

·hostess.
: MEIGS cOUNTY Humane Society
.Thursday 7:30p.m. at ThrUt Shop in

/

JENO'S FROZEN

wu.on

.,· )! '

VILLAGE PHARMACY

WHITE OR PINK

GRAP EFR UIT......:.L!·.

THURSDAY
PAST Officers Club, Racine
Chapter, 7:30 ·Thursday at the
Masonic Temple. A potluck supper
will ·be served. Program by Mrs.
Carpenter and' Mrs. Bert

Grlnun.

PRICE

OR WHOLE

Meigs Inn.

PRICE

1/2

$ •g

SUf'ERIOR E-Z-CARVE BONELESS

Lions Club Wednesday at noon at

PERFRUME

'

••

$}59

CENTER CUT LOIN

Sam.-H.
DEAR HELEN.
I received a card from a fellow
career woman-wife. It showed a
married female in fur coat and
shoulder bag standing before a
sinkful of dirty dishes. The capt\on :
"!clawed my way to the middle! "
How true! Many of us have raised
our sights to expect rewarding
careers rather than little "boost
family income" jobs, but we're still
housewives at heart, and maybe
always will be. Even u'our husbands
and children are willing to help out,
we can't let go. We rush home to
cook ; we spend weekends cleaning ;
throw a load in the washer before we
leave for work. We redecorate and
shop and nurse sick children
(schools always can the mother!).
We're the ones who must call the
plumber or rep&amp;irman, then beg
time off at the office to await their

$}49

_

PORK CHOPS .........L~-

POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT

SELECTED GROUP

RINGS, STICKPINS, BRACELETS, EARRINGS,
NECKlACES AND CHAINS

••

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 16TH, 1980

r---Social Calendar

TIMEX
WATCHES
15% OFF
·Nt:JEVELRY

N. 2ND AVE. ·

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

WEDNESDAY
APPLE GROVE United Methodist
Women Wednesday 7 p.m. at the
church.

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S JEWELRY

27i

My husband and I are halfseriously considering divorce so we
can become happy roommates.
,Why? Because society is pressuring
·· us to do so.
· We have equal careers in the same
·large company, and neither wishes
to change jobs. But the powers
·disapprove of married people work·ing in the same office, so or.e us may
be moved to a different area.
·· It's been well-publicized that a
husband and wife in our joint earning bracket must pay hundreds of
dollars more income tax than do two
similarly employed singles.
Society's laws are behind the
times for career couples and until
they change, the only logical way tq
go is the unmarried way.
To stay together, solvently, it may
be necessary for us to legally part!
-SAD BUT TRUE
DEAR READBRS:
Should anyone doubt "S but T's "
tax complaint, here are sample
figures :
Two singles with equal taxable
earnings of $18,200, each paid $3,565
income tax for 197ll, or $7,130 com·
blned. U they were married and had
the same taxable income of $36,400,
their joint federal bite would have
been ~,678 . "Living in sin" could
therefore have whacked $1548 from
their annual contribution to Uncle

H.

KODAK PR-10
INSTANT PRINT
FILM
REG. '8.50
ONLY

Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm

'

the World Is Jesus" was sung by the
group, scripture II Cor. 4:f&gt;.6 was
read. She had a reading "Love." The
offerings of the Circles were presented by Mildred Hart and Doris Hen·
sler which was $210. Gretta gave the
Dedication Prayer. A skit entitled ·
"Reflections" followed with Martha
Lou Beegle, Mary K. Yost, Phyllis
David Pitts and Pamela Gerlach
Bailey, Marjorie Grirrun, Barbara
Gheen, taking parts and using a worship center with an open Bible in
front of a mirror. After singing,
"Just a Closer Walk With Thee," the
Clyde and Geraldine Gerlach, Rt. 2, Letart, are announcing the
meeting closed with a unison prayer.
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Pamela Jo, to
David W. Pitts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn D. Pitts, Canton, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace, Mrs .
The bride-&lt;!lect is employed by the Lowndes Bank, Clarksburg, W.Va . Her
Pearl Adams and Helen Simpson
fian ce is employed by the Rish Equipment Co., Bridgeport, W.Va.
spent a day recently shopping in
A Feb. 14 wedding is being planned.
Dunbar and St. Albans, W. Va. and
visited Merle and Bill Call and
Myron Leadman at Winfield , W.Va.

lf2

Store Hours:

-~ sense.

VALENTINE GIFT IDEAS

VALENTINE
CARDS

Huth-1

,
TAXES!TAXES!TAXES!
' 1HEV PENALIZE MARRIAGE
DEAR HELEN :
Your reader controversy over
marriage vs. living-together has
omitted one important point; the lat. ter often makes better ecooomic

FELLOWSHIP DINNER SUNDAY
The aMual fellowship dinner of
the Trinity Congregational Church
wiU be held Sunday irrunediately
following the morning worship service . Members are to take a covered
dish.

heai~:::~~;~i~m~i:ents

By Mn. Francis Morris
The Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society was hosted by the Ruth Circle with a six o'clock dinner served
in the fellowship room at the First
Baptist Church Friday evening,
Feb. I. The tables were beautiful
with Valentine decorations. Twentytwo members were present. Martha
Lou Beegle, president, presided over
the meeting which followed. " More
About Jesus" was sung with LiUian
Hayman at the piano. There was
prayer by Marjorie Grtmm. Scripture was from I John 4:17 and Numbers '!l:f~7 . Mrs. Beegle gave a
meditation on American Baptist
Women of Ohio Leadership development. After a business session Gret·
ta Simpson, president of Christian
Service, presented the Love Gift
program. The hymn, "The Light of

_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomejrfo~y,~o~.,~W~edn~esda~~Y~·~F~
eb~-~~3~,=19110:'::=~~~~~~~~~~~~r!!

Helen Help

Nielsen says llhat means of all the
TV-equippe&lt;! homes in the country,
31.1 percent SI!W at least part of the
show.
NBC spotted " Little House on the
Prairie" as high as No. 3 for the
week, and "CHiPs" was sixth, But
the third-place network fell nat after
that.
NBC; in addition, had three Jlf the
week 's five lowest-rated progrartlB,
including No. 64 "Prime Time Satur·
day, " a special, "Elvis Remembered," 65th, and " Best of Saturday
Night Live" 67th. An ABC movie,
"Swan Song," was No. 66, and ABC's
"Stone" 68th.
Here are the week's Top !O shows:
"Dallas," with a rating of 31.1
representing 23.7 million homes, and
"Dukes of Hazzard," 30.4 or 23.2
million, both CBS; " Little House on
the Prairie," 28.9 or 22.1 million,
NBC; "Three's Company," 'l/ ,7 or
21.1 million, ABC; "60 Minutes,"
27.4 or 20. ~ million, CBS; " CHiPs,"
25.6 or 19.5 million, NBC; "Archie
Bunker's Place, CBS, ·and "Ten·
speed and Brown Shoe," ABC, both
25.4 or 19.4 million; "Alice," 25 or
19.1 million, CBS, and Movie-" The
Deep," Part I, 2-4 .6 or 18.8 million,
ABC.
The next 10 shows:
" M·A-8-H," CBS; " Eight is
Enough" and "Taxi, " both ABC;
" The Jeffersons" and "One Day at a
Time," both CBS, and "Hart to
Hart," " Barney Miller," "Fantasy
Island, " "Happy Days" and "Love
Boat," aU ABC .

NEW YORK lAP / - CBS and
ABC swapped ftrst place in the net·
works' prime-lime ratings race lor
the third time in a row in the week
ending Feb. 10, figures from the A.C.
Nielsen Co. show, and victory in the
weekly contest pushed CBS ahead of
the opposition for the season so far.
CBS, after a slow start in September, has finished ahead of ABC
and NBC 10 times in the last 13
weeks. ABC· is likel y to regain command over the next two week.• with
broadcasts of the Winter Olympics.
ABC won the previous week 's
race, but CBS took first again in the
most recent survey with five of the
top 10 shows, including No. I
" Dallas" and " Dukes of Hazzard" in
second place .
CBS' rating for the week was 20.4
to 19.8 for ABC and 18.6 for NBC. The
networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 20.4 per cent of the homes
in the country with television were
tuned to CBS.
CBS' rating for the season to date
is 19.6 to 19.5 for ABC and 18.6 for
NBC. ABC, which began the season
a week ahead of the competition,
continues to claim first place by a
tenth of a point.
CBS' success has been with continuing series , like "Dallas" and
"Dukes of Hazzard" rather than
with movies and specials. In ad·
dition to the two series already
named, CBS placed "60 Minutes,"
"Archie Bunker's P lace" and
"Alice" among the 10 highest-rated.
The rating for "Dallas" w•.• 31 I.
'

11

5404

'

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good On tv at Powell.' s
Off1~r !Expires
1980

~~II

,;~!

.

'

LIBBY'S

HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
10 oz. .
59

$4

BANQUET

TOMATO .JUICE
460Z.

2/$100

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only al Powell's .
Feb. 16, 1980
Offer

.

''

.
'

I'

FRIED CHICKEN
32

oz.

$179

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
res Feb. 16, 1910 ·

...

�10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1!!80

- - -·- - --- - ·-

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
INFESTED wrnJ MOTHS
POU.V'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - We are .told to
use moth baU. to keep moths out of
our woolens but we are never told
what to do if the moths get into them.
My entire store room is infested with
moths . What will kill them ? - MRS.
R.M.
DEAR MRS. R.M. - If your entire
store room is infested with moths
you need to call a pest control service and then make a clean start.
Those moths will keep eating and
breeding as loog as they can find any
source of food such as woolens, fell,
furs and so on. Keep these things
that have been exposedlo the moths
away from clothes in other rooms or
closets, or they may spread. Moths
like dark, warm areas- sun, air and
cleanliness are their mortal
enemies. Wash, brush, air and shake
out any ite!llB that might be a good
breeding ground . - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - To get lid of
sptders I put moth crystals in small
mesh bags, tape the tops closed and
then tape these bags, about three
feet apart, across the tops of the out·
side of the windows. Whr n the

crystals evaporate l refill the bags
and ha ve not had a spider since I
started doing this.- MRS. K.F .
DEAR POLLY - The way I keep
sheets and bed pads in place ill our
camper would ·also work well on a
bed at home. I bought two pairs of
men's suspenders and took one pair
apart and fastened one piece under
the foot of the mattress and the other
under the top I head ) of the mattress .
I crossed the other in the center and
clipped on both sides of the pad and
sheet. No more slipping. - ELOISE
DEAR POLLY -1 use a liquid window cleaner to remove spots from
my cafllet and upholstered fur·
niture. It works great and dries
quickly.- C.S.
DEAR C.S. - Thank you. The win·
dow cleaner certatnly eliminated
two•brown spots on my light beige
carpet that had been marked by socalled brass "casters" on the bottom
of chair legs. -POLLY
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper-&lt;:oupon
clippers if she uses one of your
favorite Pointers, Peeves or Problems in her column. Write Polly 's
Pointers in care of this newspaper.

Crisisline enters third year
Crisisline, the telephone counseling service for Gallia, Jackson
and Meigs Counties, ts beginning its
fourth year of operations this
February. In its first three years of
service, Clisisline staf£ and trained
volunteers answered over 7,000
calls. Concerns expressed by callers
ranged from personal problems
such as depression, family troubles,
or sexual concerns, to requests for
information about hous ing, jobs,
health and mental he;11lh services.
Callers ranged from 10 to 110 years of
age .
Before Crisisline service began, in
February of 1977, there was no after
hours emergency help for troubled
people. Duling its first few months
of operation, a call diverter was
used on the home telephones of mental health center staff members for
after-hour calls.
With the employment of five mental

1977, to cover weekend and evening
hours, a staff person was available
to answer crisis caU. in the office. At
that time, the first training class for
volunteers began.
The Clisisline goal is to provide
service to any individual regardless
of location , age, sex or problem con·
cerns. Trained volunteers supplement the nine full and part lime
employees who cover the phone 24
hours a day, seven days a week.
Backup service is ava ilable through
the mental health center.

'Dallas ' rates as no.
one zn weekly survey

.

US • • •lh llo·lo·n

Recent additions to the Crisisline
services are R.E.A.C. H. , the Rape
Crisis Team and CAN-HELP, a
progrma in Jackson affiliated with
the Jackson County Welfare Departmenl for the reporting of child abuse
and neglect.
Clisisline numbers are : 446-5554 in
Gallia, 28&amp;-55!&gt;4 in Jackson and 992-

,

.

CANDY

ATI'END HEART FUND CONVENTION - Two members of the
Meigs County Heart Branch recently met actor-singer Ed Ames,
honorary chairman of the 19110 Central Ohio Heart Chapter Heart Fund
campaign. Pictured is Ames, center, discussing campaign plans with
Heart Fund volunteers. Ames was the honored guest at the chapter's
campaign kick-off luncheon Jan . 26 at the Sheraton-Columbus Hotel. The
chapter's 1980 goal of over million will support cardiovascular resear·
ch and education .. Ames lost a close friend to heart disease and actively
s upports Heart Association programs such as CPR (cardiopulmonary
resuscitation). He is currently training to be an instructor in the CPR lifesaving technique. A:J Heart volunteers, Lois Kelly and Roberta O'Brien
are working in Meigs County to reduce the risk of prl!mature death and
disability due to heart disease.

'I

Communion observed Sunday
Communion was observed Sunday
at St. Paul's United Methodist
Church, Tuppers Plains.
Forty-three attended Sunday
school and worship service with the
Rev. Richard Thomas giving scripture from Luke 14, and the message
topic being " Count the Cost."
Today at 1:30 p.m. at the church
the United Methodist Women will
meet and on Feb. 25 the United
Methodist Men will have a meeting.
The Rev. Mr. Thomas will speak on
opening night nf "Evangelism
Week" at the Heath United
Methodist Church in Middleport,
7:30p.m.

Plans are being ·made for a
charge-wide Bible study during the
month of March with the Rev. Mr.
Thomas and the Rev. Dave Janis of
Raeine to team-teach the sessions.
The parables of Jesus will be
discussed. Dr. Wesley Clarke had
charge of the county conference of
Methodists held at the A:Jbury
Church in Syracuse Mooday night.

Authoriled CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

'I Sears

r

Phone 992·2178
234 E. Main 51.

Pomeroy , O.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon. thru Wed. P·S,

Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed

or Your Money Back

~---'-

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

PIZZA BURGER •••• ·gge

Willi FRIES .••••••.$1 19
"

Gerlach vows to be repeated

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
992·2556

570W. Main
Pom'eroy, 0,

.O·e

CENTER CUT RIB .

tardiness.
AU this we do because we feel guil·
ty : Heaven forbid that anyone would
think we're neglecting our families
for our jobs!
WiD women ever become
emanicipated to the point where we
consider houSe and chlldren joint
projects, divided equally between
males and females- not "women's
work" with a little help from our
men] - TRYING TO GET THERE
DEARTIGT:
We will ..'.we will... butfor many of
US, probably not ffi this generation. -

PORK CHOPS.........L!·•••

1
~
HAMS..................... ...
112

-~~

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

lB

$}&amp;g

CHUCK ROAST.......•.
FLAVORITE GRADE A

TURKEYs..~~:~~ ....... ~ 7
CRISPY SERVE

BACON...................L!·.

-

FLORIDA

'

MIDDLEPORT OHIO
•

pI"QA................. ~3.o!••

The rustic charm of Lea's "Country Tavern" is as easy
on the eve as It is on the pocket book 1 The tops and sides
are all wood products. 'Fronts are solid pine. The
warmth of the engraved and highlighted finish offers a

the antique brass plated hardware.
The simply stated carvings also capture the casual
mood of the 11,roup and soften the overall effect•. "Country Tavern" ... another value from Lea.

4 Pc. Suite, 5 drawer chest, 6 drawer dresser and

5 AvE *1

fr~med mirror._

. ..

'REG. PRICE '749.95 SALE

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWEL
In

'

$64··ggs

.

WOMEN'S AGLOW Fellowship
Thursday Meigs Inn. Dinner 7 p.m.
meeting at 8 p.m . The Rev. Dale
J&lt;auffman Is the speaker.
' PRECEPTOR BETA Chapter .
Sorority meeting, Thursday evenfng
at home of Mrs. Paul Elch.
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA .
.CHAPI'ER, Beta Sigma Phi Sororl·
,ty, 7:30 Thursday night at the home
;of Mrs. Grace Elch. Mrs. Elch will
•preaent the program on Libya in
'North Africa .
; ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
Thursday night at the hall.
' LAOREL CLIFF BE'rl'ER Health
:Club, 7:30 .p.m. Thursday In the
;Riverboat Room of the Athens Coun:tY Savlnga and Loan Co., Pomeroy.
•RepresentaUve of the Cancer Socle•tytospeak.Mrs. Jean Wright will be

•

JIF

.

,.Uddleport.

TIDE ...;.............!9.~

.menta.

; E!.EANOR CIRCLE, 7:30 ThUrv

:aay at tile Heath United Methodist

'ChurclL .lifargle B1ake, Jean Cook
and Mary Wise to be~ .
'

·I

'

' '

2~0

$

VAUEY FARMS GRADE A

•••

~

FLAVORITE

$} 09

. ..

.DETERGENT

.1

49

9
MILK........~~:;..~} 5

LARGE--EGGS
....•.
~.5
;
..

,,,.~,.,._~ =~

COU PO

'An o::t .L

ORANGE

NK

31$200
'

1 WEATHER

, PERMITTING,
meeting ~ the Ohio Valley Grange
'21112, Letart Falls, 'I'IW!'sday, 7:30
•p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrit.
. ,Her~ Rou.llbl potluck refresh- .

.

Butte[.-;:2~...

Peanut

·hostess.
: MEIGS cOUNTY Humane Society
.Thursday 7:30p.m. at ThrUt Shop in

/

JENO'S FROZEN

wu.on

.,· )! '

VILLAGE PHARMACY

WHITE OR PINK

GRAP EFR UIT......:.L!·.

THURSDAY
PAST Officers Club, Racine
Chapter, 7:30 ·Thursday at the
Masonic Temple. A potluck supper
will ·be served. Program by Mrs.
Carpenter and' Mrs. Bert

Grlnun.

PRICE

OR WHOLE

Meigs Inn.

PRICE

1/2

$ •g

SUf'ERIOR E-Z-CARVE BONELESS

Lions Club Wednesday at noon at

PERFRUME

'

••

$}59

CENTER CUT LOIN

Sam.-H.
DEAR HELEN.
I received a card from a fellow
career woman-wife. It showed a
married female in fur coat and
shoulder bag standing before a
sinkful of dirty dishes. The capt\on :
"!clawed my way to the middle! "
How true! Many of us have raised
our sights to expect rewarding
careers rather than little "boost
family income" jobs, but we're still
housewives at heart, and maybe
always will be. Even u'our husbands
and children are willing to help out,
we can't let go. We rush home to
cook ; we spend weekends cleaning ;
throw a load in the washer before we
leave for work. We redecorate and
shop and nurse sick children
(schools always can the mother!).
We're the ones who must call the
plumber or rep&amp;irman, then beg
time off at the office to await their

$}49

_

PORK CHOPS .........L~-

POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT

SELECTED GROUP

RINGS, STICKPINS, BRACELETS, EARRINGS,
NECKlACES AND CHAINS

••

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 16TH, 1980

r---Social Calendar

TIMEX
WATCHES
15% OFF
·Nt:JEVELRY

N. 2ND AVE. ·

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

WEDNESDAY
APPLE GROVE United Methodist
Women Wednesday 7 p.m. at the
church.

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S JEWELRY

27i

My husband and I are halfseriously considering divorce so we
can become happy roommates.
,Why? Because society is pressuring
·· us to do so.
· We have equal careers in the same
·large company, and neither wishes
to change jobs. But the powers
·disapprove of married people work·ing in the same office, so or.e us may
be moved to a different area.
·· It's been well-publicized that a
husband and wife in our joint earning bracket must pay hundreds of
dollars more income tax than do two
similarly employed singles.
Society's laws are behind the
times for career couples and until
they change, the only logical way tq
go is the unmarried way.
To stay together, solvently, it may
be necessary for us to legally part!
-SAD BUT TRUE
DEAR READBRS:
Should anyone doubt "S but T's "
tax complaint, here are sample
figures :
Two singles with equal taxable
earnings of $18,200, each paid $3,565
income tax for 197ll, or $7,130 com·
blned. U they were married and had
the same taxable income of $36,400,
their joint federal bite would have
been ~,678 . "Living in sin" could
therefore have whacked $1548 from
their annual contribution to Uncle

H.

KODAK PR-10
INSTANT PRINT
FILM
REG. '8.50
ONLY

Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm

'

the World Is Jesus" was sung by the
group, scripture II Cor. 4:f&gt;.6 was
read. She had a reading "Love." The
offerings of the Circles were presented by Mildred Hart and Doris Hen·
sler which was $210. Gretta gave the
Dedication Prayer. A skit entitled ·
"Reflections" followed with Martha
Lou Beegle, Mary K. Yost, Phyllis
David Pitts and Pamela Gerlach
Bailey, Marjorie Grirrun, Barbara
Gheen, taking parts and using a worship center with an open Bible in
front of a mirror. After singing,
"Just a Closer Walk With Thee," the
Clyde and Geraldine Gerlach, Rt. 2, Letart, are announcing the
meeting closed with a unison prayer.
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Pamela Jo, to
David W. Pitts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn D. Pitts, Canton, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace, Mrs .
The bride-&lt;!lect is employed by the Lowndes Bank, Clarksburg, W.Va . Her
Pearl Adams and Helen Simpson
fian ce is employed by the Rish Equipment Co., Bridgeport, W.Va.
spent a day recently shopping in
A Feb. 14 wedding is being planned.
Dunbar and St. Albans, W. Va. and
visited Merle and Bill Call and
Myron Leadman at Winfield , W.Va.

lf2

Store Hours:

-~ sense.

VALENTINE GIFT IDEAS

VALENTINE
CARDS

Huth-1

,
TAXES!TAXES!TAXES!
' 1HEV PENALIZE MARRIAGE
DEAR HELEN :
Your reader controversy over
marriage vs. living-together has
omitted one important point; the lat. ter often makes better ecooomic

FELLOWSHIP DINNER SUNDAY
The aMual fellowship dinner of
the Trinity Congregational Church
wiU be held Sunday irrunediately
following the morning worship service . Members are to take a covered
dish.

heai~:::~~;~i~m~i:ents

By Mn. Francis Morris
The Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society was hosted by the Ruth Circle with a six o'clock dinner served
in the fellowship room at the First
Baptist Church Friday evening,
Feb. I. The tables were beautiful
with Valentine decorations. Twentytwo members were present. Martha
Lou Beegle, president, presided over
the meeting which followed. " More
About Jesus" was sung with LiUian
Hayman at the piano. There was
prayer by Marjorie Grtmm. Scripture was from I John 4:17 and Numbers '!l:f~7 . Mrs. Beegle gave a
meditation on American Baptist
Women of Ohio Leadership development. After a business session Gret·
ta Simpson, president of Christian
Service, presented the Love Gift
program. The hymn, "The Light of

_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomejrfo~y,~o~.,~W~edn~esda~~Y~·~F~
eb~-~~3~,=19110:'::=~~~~~~~~~~~~r!!

Helen Help

Nielsen says llhat means of all the
TV-equippe&lt;! homes in the country,
31.1 percent SI!W at least part of the
show.
NBC spotted " Little House on the
Prairie" as high as No. 3 for the
week, and "CHiPs" was sixth, But
the third-place network fell nat after
that.
NBC; in addition, had three Jlf the
week 's five lowest-rated progrartlB,
including No. 64 "Prime Time Satur·
day, " a special, "Elvis Remembered," 65th, and " Best of Saturday
Night Live" 67th. An ABC movie,
"Swan Song," was No. 66, and ABC's
"Stone" 68th.
Here are the week's Top !O shows:
"Dallas," with a rating of 31.1
representing 23.7 million homes, and
"Dukes of Hazzard," 30.4 or 23.2
million, both CBS; " Little House on
the Prairie," 28.9 or 22.1 million,
NBC; "Three's Company," 'l/ ,7 or
21.1 million, ABC; "60 Minutes,"
27.4 or 20. ~ million, CBS; " CHiPs,"
25.6 or 19.5 million, NBC; "Archie
Bunker's Place, CBS, ·and "Ten·
speed and Brown Shoe," ABC, both
25.4 or 19.4 million; "Alice," 25 or
19.1 million, CBS, and Movie-" The
Deep," Part I, 2-4 .6 or 18.8 million,
ABC.
The next 10 shows:
" M·A-8-H," CBS; " Eight is
Enough" and "Taxi, " both ABC;
" The Jeffersons" and "One Day at a
Time," both CBS, and "Hart to
Hart," " Barney Miller," "Fantasy
Island, " "Happy Days" and "Love
Boat," aU ABC .

NEW YORK lAP / - CBS and
ABC swapped ftrst place in the net·
works' prime-lime ratings race lor
the third time in a row in the week
ending Feb. 10, figures from the A.C.
Nielsen Co. show, and victory in the
weekly contest pushed CBS ahead of
the opposition for the season so far.
CBS, after a slow start in September, has finished ahead of ABC
and NBC 10 times in the last 13
weeks. ABC· is likel y to regain command over the next two week.• with
broadcasts of the Winter Olympics.
ABC won the previous week 's
race, but CBS took first again in the
most recent survey with five of the
top 10 shows, including No. I
" Dallas" and " Dukes of Hazzard" in
second place .
CBS' rating for the week was 20.4
to 19.8 for ABC and 18.6 for NBC. The
networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 20.4 per cent of the homes
in the country with television were
tuned to CBS.
CBS' rating for the season to date
is 19.6 to 19.5 for ABC and 18.6 for
NBC. ABC, which began the season
a week ahead of the competition,
continues to claim first place by a
tenth of a point.
CBS' success has been with continuing series , like "Dallas" and
"Dukes of Hazzard" rather than
with movies and specials. In ad·
dition to the two series already
named, CBS placed "60 Minutes,"
"Archie Bunker's P lace" and
"Alice" among the 10 highest-rated.
The rating for "Dallas" w•.• 31 I.
'

11

5404

'

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good On tv at Powell.' s
Off1~r !Expires
1980

~~II

,;~!

.

'

LIBBY'S

HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
10 oz. .
59

$4

BANQUET

TOMATO .JUICE
460Z.

2/$100

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only al Powell's .
Feb. 16, 1980
Offer

.

''

.
'

I'

FRIED CHICKEN
32

oz.

$179

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
res Feb. 16, 1910 ·

...

�12 - TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomenw. O., Wednesd")', f' rb l:i.i •l/111

Aspirin hailed as wonder druR .

()

J

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f

GRANDE CHORALE OF RIO GRANDE COLLEGECOMMUNITY COLLEGE composed of Paula
Boldman, McDennott, alto; Dave Cauley, Dayton,
tenor; Rita Colley, Piketon, soprano; Jim Dixon,
Gallipolis, tenor; Scott Franklin, Porter, bass; Beth
Fuller, Wellston, alto; Jo McKinney, Middleport, alto
(fifth from left, front: Matt Mueller, Elkton.

Maryland, bass ; Dee Penn, Piketon, soprano; Terri
Poynter, Chesapeake, soprano; Stephanie Purcell,
Gallipolis, soprano; Margaret Queen. Jackson,
soprano: Diane Showalter. Chesterhill, light and sound
technician ; George Thompson, Cheshire, bass; Jack
Trainer, Waverly, tenor ; Kris Widder, Sugarcreek,
alto; and Don Wothe, Cincinnati. bass.

Grande Chorale to present program
The Grande Chorale, directed by
.. Merlyn Ross, will present a program
SWiday afternoon at 2 p.m. at the
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium.
The Chorale is composed of 17
singers and accompanists, each
from different backgrounds with different goals, joining together and
contributing creative talents to
make an enjoyable show.
The Chorale tries to utilize the individual talents of each member by ·
using solos, 'specialty dances, and
·.·..·

.·.

}

"The Puppins", a muppet type show
geared to reach both yoWig and old .
The students write their own scripts.
SWiday's presentation is being
sponsored by the Middleport PTA.
Only one member of the Chorale is
from Meigs County, Jo McKinney of
Middleport. Members of the Chorale
are selected on the basis of an audition, doing a prepared solo, sight
singing and are required by contract
to rehearse a minimum of three
times a week lor two hours each.
The Chorale has toured edensively
.. :-:· ·:·

Load birthdays observed

.
'

Christopher &amp;
Stephanie Hojjman
Christopher and Stephanie
Hoffman, son and daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hoffman,
St. Charles, Missouri, celebrated
tbelr blrtbdays recently at the
home of tbelr grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dana E. Hoffman, Jr.,
Rutland. A clown cake was served to tbe Immediate fam.IIJes.
Stephanie was one year old on
Feb. 5, and Christopher was two
yean old on Feb. 6.

j essica Radford
Charles and J eanette Radford
entertained recently with a party in
celebration of the third birthday of
their daughter, Jessica Leigh. Cake,
coffee, ice cream and pop were served. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Larch, Sammy and John, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Miller, Jennifer and
Scott, Miss Lynn Miller, Helen
Sayre, Josephine Miller and
Jessica's brother, Nathan. Sending
gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Stewart, Kim and Kelly.

Evangelism week planned
Heath Church, Middleport, is planning to observe Evangelism Week
with a special' series of evangelistic
services, Feb. 17-24. The speakers
each evening will be minlsters of the
Meigs Cooperative Parish.
The schedule is as follows: Youth,
Sunday, Feb. 17, Rev. Harvey Koch,
Syracuse Cluster; Men, Monday ,
Feb. 18, Rev . Richard Thomas, Northeast Cluster; Choir, Tuesday, Feb.
19, Rev. David Harris, Southern
Cluster I; Ladies, Wednesday, Feb.
20, Rev. Florence Smith, Mor·

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..-"
",

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VISIT IN COLUMBUS
Mrs. Paul Andrews and daughter,
Barbara, Long Bottom, were in Col·
umbus Thursday and Friday to at·
tend the funeral of Mrs. Nora Curtis
McCrery who died unexpectedlylast
week. Mrs. McCrery is a sister of
Mrs. Andrews: Also attending from
here were Mr. and Mrs. Larry Collins,. cousins of Mrs. McCrery.

.,•
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•'

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,•

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SALE FRIDAY
A rununage sale will be held
Friday, Feb. 15, from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. at the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Portland-Racine Road. All r.lean
clothing priced reasonably.

;

ningstar Church; Fill-A-Pew, Thur·
sday, Feb. 21, Rev. Robert McGee,
Pomeroy Church; Preachers,
Friday, Feb. 22, Rev. Mark Flynn,
Southern Cluster II; Family, Satur·
day, Feb. 23, Rev. Robert Robinson,
Heath Church; Recognition, SWIday, Feb. 24, Rev . James Corbitt,
Enterprise, Rock Springs Chg.
The public is cordially invited to
attend. There will he Bible Study
before worship. Activities will begin
at 6:30 p.m. with Bible Study and
Prayer Time,led by the pastor.
POMEROY PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. John Andrews of Col·
umbus visited over tbe weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Andrews, Long Bottom. .

13 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980

in Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia,
Tennessee and Florida, including
appearance at Disney World, and do
a wide range of music including
religious and popular.
Tickets for ~Widay's program are
available from Vaughans Cardinal
and Western Auto, as well as from
Mrs. Peggy Wood, president of the
sponsoring group. They are $2 lor
adults. $1 for high school students,
and $1.50 for senior citizens.
Children through the eighth gra de
are admitted free. Tickets will be
sold at the door.

Room
visitation
held

EDITOR'S NOTE - When a~pirin
was introduced in 1899. it was hailed
as the answer to fever and pain. But
doctors now wonder if this old standby of the medi cine chest may he a
n~w " wonder drug." This is first of a
·
three-part sen es.
By KEVIN McKEAN
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Eighty ears
. .
y
alter 1ts mtroductlon
.
.as a " wonder
drug," plam old asplrm remains full
of surprises.
The " pa 1n re 1·lever doc tors recommend most " appears to help prevent
strokes In some people, may give
.
some protection against heart at·
·
tacks and could even a1d
In diabetes.
.
f
d
Th1s common ever r,e u?er and
antl·lnflammatory drug IS now
known to lessen the redness of sunburn and has become part of therapy
lor a rare and once-fatal disease.
· In
One study suggests asp Ino,
d
regular oses. may avert_ migraloe
headaches. It 1s even bemg tested
for possible use against cancer, In
bt'rth eon troI or In preven tinn~ the
rejection of transplanted organl.
"Aspirin Is a remarkable drug. It
has been around for 86 years and It's
••~
0 nl y wIt,...,
the last two or three
years tbat we've really understood
how It works " says Dr. William
' o1 neuro1ogy at th e
. Ids , cha1rman
F1e
Unl vers lty of Texas at Housto n a nd
one of the pioneers In using aspirin
topreventstroke.
"With the new understanding, we
. ding new lndl ca ti ons for
now are fm
d drug,
Its ue....
S
I think II' sawoner
no question about It," be says.
While few of the new uses are
established yet, tbe rebirth of
aspirin Is being watched closely by
u.s. manufacturers, who grind out
25 million pounds of aspirin a year,
and by Individual Americans, who
swallow the equivalent of 100 aspirin
tablets each per year.
•
Aspirin Is getting so much good
press lately. tbat many people have
begun taking half a tablet a day tbe

1

ma?
Wbo will calm her many fears?
Wbo will care for ailing Grandpa?
After he is old and gray?
Will he find a cozy corner,
And good care both night and day?

I~~ITS
1 Group Assorted

FABRIC

I: WOOLS
&amp;
WOOL BLENDS

Y2
Y2
Y2

WASIDNGTON (AP)- Defen·
ding the Abscam probe, FBI
Director William H. Webster
says it would be "absolutely
foolish" for undercover agents to
jeopardize such investigations by
Juring suspects into taking bribes
against their will.
Webster said the Abscam investigation, which has implicated
eight members of Congress, was
" the most carefully monitored,
the most carefully controlled"
probe in the bureau's 5&amp;-year
history.
The director made his first
detailed public defense of the
operation in a half·hour television
interview Tuesday with Carl
Rowan, a syndicated columnist
and television commentator.
Noting that Wldercover agents
secretly videotaPed the alleged
bribery transactions, Webster
said, "The filming of those scenes
were for court purposes. It would
be absolutely foolish for a special
agent of the FBI to go beyond the
legal provisions and jeopardize
the integrity of the investigation.
"He knows it's going to be in
court, and it's his obligation to
make that a good case."
Some members of Congress, in·
eluding several who were never

OFF
OFF
OFF

LAST WEEK ~

McCalls

PATTERNS

1

sportation outlook ."
Although the report did not identify those nations, the department
has said China has been a big U.S.
cotton buyer this season, so far pur:
chas~g about 2.1 million bales. '
Officiais said export sales for the
1979-80 cotton marketing year that
will end on July 31 actually call for
8.9 million bales and may reach 9.5
million by the end of the season.
"However, about 15 percent of this
cotton may not be delivered until
early next season," the report said.
Cotton farmers harvested 14.9
million bales of cotton last fall, a
sharp increase from the 10.9 million
produced in 1978.
The report said that, based on the .
new export figures, the cotton reserve by the time the new marketing
year begins on Aug. I will be about
4.5 million bales, only 500,000 more
tban were on hand last Aug. I.
Domestic use of cotton was projected at about 6.4 million bales, the
same as in 19711-79.
The big export year has been
developing for some lime, and tbe

FBI director defends probe

©lt~l@~ [ill~ ~~~~(GJ$

~

NURSING HOMES
ARE A BLESSING
Older folks have been a problem
Thru the passing of the years,
Wbo will take and care for Grand·

WASHIJIIGTON l AP) - The
biggest cotton expert boom in nearly
half a century' is helping push total
U.S. use of cotton to within 500,000
bales of last year's bumper harvesl.
According to new Agriculture
Departmet;~t projections announced
Tuesday, exports in 1979-80 are expected to totalS million bales, up by
29 percent from 6.2 million shipped
overseas last season.
The new estimate of total use was
raised 500,000 bales from a projection made a mo!Jth ago, the department's outlook board said in a "suJ&gt;ply and demand" report.
According to department records,
an export volume of 8 million bales
would be the most since 8.9 million
were shipped overseas in 1932-33.
Cotton exports last season totaled
6.2 million bales. Officials said the
prospective 29 percent increase this
year is due in part to ' 'exceptionally
strong foreign demand for U.S. cotton, particularly by some Far
Eastern and European countries,
lagging export sales by the Soviet
Union and an improved tran-

u!

(

Room visitation was held when the
Pomeroy PTA met Monday night at
•
the Pomeroy Elementary School.
YoW!ger folks keep very busy,
Teachers were in {heir respective
And it's hard for them to find
rooms to meet the parents and work · Time to take and keep tbe aged,
of the children was on display. The
But they want to treat them kind.
meeting opened with the flag salute
They work hard to make a living,
led by Pomeroy webelos whose
And to keep expelJSes paid,
leader is George Wri ght. Robert
Problems, problems and expenses,
Morris gave the devotions and
Is there hope for future aid?
reports of the various officers were
hearsd.
Yes, there's hope, and many places
Margaret Johnson reported on the
Where the older folks can stay,
highly successful spaghetti dinner
And receive good care as needed,
during the meeting conducted by
In nice rooms, both night and day.
Mrs. Judy Werry. Distribution of
YoWig folks care about the aged,
menus was discussed and proposals
And their love for them is true,
made as to how to handle tbe in·
So we aU should give them praises
formation.
For the things tbey say and do.
George Wright and Mrs. Johnson
, who attended the January meeting
All my children love me dearly,
of the Meigs Local Board of Educa·
And each one will do their best
tion commented on the meeting and
To give me good care when needed,
stressed the importance of the
If, and when there comes a test.
public attending. Wright, Johnson, If I'm taken toaRestHome,
and Barbara Fields volWiteered to
They will come to give their love,
attend the meeting this month.
So, I do not dread the future,
Morris discussed briefly five
I have faith in God above.
topics- emergency school closings,
parents need for being aware of the
Nursing Homes are sure a blessing,
child's progress, keeping in touch
They are scattered far and near,
';.nth the child's teacher, safety,
And this New One in Meigs County,
before, during and after school, in·
Is now bringing hotie and cheer.
eluding bus behaviour, and health
May God bless and save each per·
problems.
son,
The fourth grade parents served
Who has labored from the start,
refreshments. The room award went
Arid each one throughout the future,
to the special education class.
Wlto will have a loving part.
Composed Jan. 31 and Feb. I, 1980,
by Mrs. Riley Piggott, age 87 yea~
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

VISIT IN FLORIDA
Homer Radford artd his daughter·
in-law,' Louise Radford, returned
SWiday from a visit in Fort Lauder·
dale, Fla. with his brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rich.
While there they also visited M(. and
Mrs. Harold Martin. Mr. Martin is
recuperating from his recent
surgery and has resumed his law
practice on a part-time basis. He
plans a visit to Meigs CoWity in the
spring.

!%

')

The Poet's
·• Corner

Export boom helping natiQn's cotton crop

same way some people take
enzyme knowna~prastaglandln~
vltamius. This is a development that
~.:,tase odsr ~~c o-oxygena:e. k:
worries some doctors.
uuuY nee
s enzyme 0 rna ·
Critics point out that the largest · ~rpcursors
~os:;f the ~lf~~en
and latest study of aspirin and heart
_ ~ow~ prosb ~an ns a U a ew
disease - released last week +
ulAm
ler ey suth s ncestaaslwedi. that
h ed
be 1
ong epros gan ns
s ow
no
ne it of aspirin to
. bl ked are those that
ke it
people who had suffered at least one
are_ ";'
lis t
rna .
heart attack.
easler or nerve ce
o pass pam
But others respond tbat the study
Signals from one. to another: those
be f1a
that ra1se fever m the body's !hermay have en wed, and another
. · and those that
mos tat .m th e bram
large study due lor release next
th
Ir'
f infl
d
week will show more positive
promo1e e swe mg 0
arne
t1ssue.
resuIts .
But the ke to man of as irin's
Regardless of the outcome, most
t
~
t~
doctors agree that aspirin or drugs
newes useds ISdsotsme _ngdr bawaks
once cons1 ere 1 mam aw c
like It will be Important weapons In
·ts b'l't t ·
bleedin
h
f
h
1 a. .11dy o wcrease
t e pharmaceut1cal arsenal o t e . - As
thi b '-~'b ' ting. tb
·p1r1n oes s y uuu 1 g e
19805 .
blood cells called platelets from
This probably wonld have surmaking a prostaglandin derivative
prlsed Felix Hofmann, tbe German
ca lled thromboxane which allows
research chemist who set out In 1893
the platelets to clump together when
to find a remedy lor his lather' s
blood
. . . ed
1IS IOJur .
a
rheuma told a rthri.:~
''"·
Thesevesse
c1wnps of p!ate1ets 1ay the
H of mann dug tbroug h Pharfoundation for a more substantial
macopoelas looking for other salicin
blood clot formed of fibrin fibers and
relatives until he came on
d d h't blood · !Is Th
tyl
II
II
id
tb
1
ed
b
re
an initiate
w 1 e blood clotiin
ce ·
us,
ace sa ey c ac ' syn es z
y
I· telets
but
anotber German chemist lo 1853 but
Pa .
.
g,
unappreciated at that time. Hof·
clottwg can still proce~:he~teth e~
mann found a cheaper and simpler
ISseriOus InJUry • even 1 e P
e
are
way to make acetylsalicylic acid,
S.sblled.th
b d
f
aad It gave his father the first relief
mce
e 0 Y con mua 11 Y
he'd had In 10 vears.
replaces platelets, repeated doses of
Hofmann wanted to call his new
asplfln
U f rtare needed.
t 1 if th d
f
drug "a-salicin." But his employers
n o una e Y,
e ose o
· · 18
· t00 hi h ·t 'll Is 1'nhib't
1
at the pharmaceutical firm Bayer X
asplrtlhn
g •; WI! a d~
Co. overruledhim,andthedrugwas
ano er . pros ag an In
christened " Aspirin" when it was
prostacychn - made by the blood
launched in 1899.
·
vessel· walls. Prostacyclin
f
thr bohas the
It remained for John Vane and hi s
opposite
effect
rom
omtltk
XP.ae. di
Its
colleagues in 1971 to discover how
It sso1ves c o •apparen Y o eep
aspirin works.
the platele ts from clumpmg
Vane, of the Royal College of
dangerously on healthy blood vessel
Surgeons in London, showed that
walls.
aspirin inhibits the production of
. Now a number of researchers are
prostaglandins, ubiquitous hormve~hgab~g whether this . anh·
mone-like substances that are inclottmg acll?n can be usedaga1nst a
volved in body mechanisms ranging
range of diseases m which blood
from fever to inducing labor.
vessels are damaged - mcluding
Aspirin does this by blocking an
strokes, heart attacks and diabetes.

2 PRICE

NEW SHIPMENT STRETCH VELOUR

THE

touched by the investigation, con·
tend that the undercover agents
were trying to lure Wlwitting
politicians into a bribery trap.
Perhaps the strongest denWI·
elation came from Rep. John
Seiberling, D-Ohio, whO said tbe
continued use of undercover in·
vestigations means that "the FBI
can target anyone ... find anyone's

weakness.''
"I don't buy that argument, "
Webster asserted.
" We are not permitted, and
would not, target anyone simply
to get them. We are interested in
criminality. What we are trying
to do is identify the people who
betray their trust, and betray the
trust of the American people, by
the use of their office to enhance
the pocketbooks of the whitecollar criminal and the organized
crime member who uses them."
That mission, he continued, "is
a legitimate purpose which
perhaps only tbe FBI in the
United States can do successfully ."
Webster said a committee of
high-level FBI and Justice
Department officials monitored
Abscam and other undercover
probes to assure that in·
vestigators did not encroach upon .
individual rights.

FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy, 0. 992· 2284 115 W. 2nd

January court fines released
I

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Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
reports receipts of $2,928 for his office, collected in fines and fees ,
during the month of January.
In conjWiction with the receipts is
tbe report of Middleport Police Chief
J . J . Cremeans for January.
According to the report, police
made 52 arrests during the month
with speeding topping the list with 19
offenders.
There were four arrests each for
driving while intoxicated; issuing
bad checks, disorderly manner and
destruction of property . Three per·

PRICED
JUST RITE

'21 00
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1-1®1:::::1•
•

k!:t

sons were arreste!f on assault
charges and two each on improper
backing, fWIOing a stop sign, and
stolen property charges. There was
one arrest each for passing in a nopassing zone, following too closely,
fleeing an officer, criminal mischief,
driving under suspension and
issuing menacing threats.
·
The police cruiser was driven 3,667
miles during the month and 425
parking meter tickets were issued.
Among the arrests, three cases were.
dismissed and one case was transferred to coW!ty court.

administration Dec. 14 announced
that cotton farmers will not have to
set aside part of their land from
production to qualify flit- federal SUJ&gt;ports on their 1900 crop.
A survey in early January in·
dicated producers intend to plant
about 14 million acres of cotton this
year, virtually the same as for the
big 1979 harvest.
In a recent newsletter to
producers, the department said if

ment experts say retail beef prices
may rise another 10 to }2 percent
this year, a steeper increase than
had been prt:dicted.
After four years of reducing their
herds, cattle producers have "aJ&gt;parently ended" the cutback, the
Agriculture Department said
Tuesday .
"Cattle nwnbers bave leveled off,
but the expansion will not begin Wltil
increased nwnbers of replacement

On the farm .scene
heifers (for breeding) enter the cow
herd,' ' the report said.
Meanwhile, it said, retail beef
prices "are expected to increase
another 10 to 12 percent, about onehalf the 1979 increase."
Two months ago, in a similar
report, officials predicted retail beef
prices would go up an average of 7 to
10 percent from 1979 levels.
Food prices overall have been
forecast by' USDA experts to rise by
7 to 11 percent this year, with a
" most likely" increase of 8 or 9 per·

cotton prices continue to strengthen
in relation to soybeans, ,many far·
mers may switch more acreage to
cotton in southern areas this spring.
"Likewise, while producers in the
Southwest and West revealed plans
in January to trim their ·cotton
acreage slightly from last year's
level, current price trends ·- if
maintained - could lead them to
change their minds by planting
time," it said.
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Govern·

'.:~!!~~,s~~r!~~ -~~s~~~ ~~~.o~,money
year-old boy has uncovered part of a
ransom missing since the only unsolved hijacking in U.S. history but officials say the whereabouts of
the legendary sky pirate D.B.
Cooper are still a matter of con·
jecture.
The three bundles of weathered
$20 bills foWid along the Columbia
River are the first evidence uncovered since Thanksgiving eve,
1971 , when Cooper bailed out of a jet
over southwestern Washington witb
$200,000tiedtohiswaist.
It was tbe first case of a hijacking
for money.
The FBI on Tuesday identified .the
cash through serial numbers. Bill
Baker,specialagentinchargeofthe
Porlland FBI office, said the money

possible to determine how much WI!S
there, but he said it came to
"several thousand dollars."
"I think we can only presume at
Ibis time that because the money
was foWid clumped together tightly
in what we believe was the manner
in which it was originally packed, it
lends credence to the theqry tbat at
least the money did not make it out."
he said. "And from there, I would
really leave it to conjecture."
Baker said agents wonld now
renew their search. "Of course, we
will generate increased interest now
in trying to locate D.B. Cooper or
any remains that might be in the
area," he said.
The money was discovered Sunday by young Brian Ingram beneath

nicked along the Columbia, five
miles northwest of Vancouver,
Wash.
Harold Ingram of Vancouver, told
reporters Tuesday he was preparing
a fire when his son ''ran up and said
'Wait a minute , Daddy.' He raked a
place out in the sand and there it
was."
Ingram said he didn't think about
the cash being part of the Cooper
loot. But he called the FBI because
"I figured if anybody knew wbat to
doitwouldbethem."
Baker said he presumed the
money washed downstream,
possibly fr001 a Columbia River
tributary in the rugged southwestern Washington mountains,
where Cooper is believed to have

Additional funding recommended
The Ohio Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation has
recommended an additlonal$253,748
for the combined training center and
adult workshop of the Meigs COWity
Board of Mental Retardation.
This was annoWiced during a
recent board session at the Meigs
CoWity Courthouse.
The additional fWiding increases
the state's conurJtment for the new
facility to $1,146,111&lt;:. The building
will be constructed on the site for·
merly known as'Carleton College.
Supt. Chris Layh reported on tbe
site transaction recently completed
with trustees of Carleton College.
The architect bas been notified of
Ibis increase in project costs and is

in the process of making Maxine Goeglein, and Nora Rice.
modifications.
A discussion on bus routes and insurance was held and it was recom·
mended that the insurance be
reviewed and revised, if necessary. ·
New policy manuals were
distributed to the members present.
The superintendent was authorized
to attend two conferences to be held
in Columb.us during February. A
motion to purchase a new typewriter
for the board office was passed and
the 1980-81 school year was
discussed.
Members present included ManEckrich 1 lb. Vacuum
ning Webater, chairperson; W. L.
Carr, vice-chairperson; Wilma
Parker, secretary; Grace Weber,

Eckrich

Say "hello~' to
Kero-Sun heaters!
Say "goodbye"
to woodstoves!

JUMBO BOLOGNA•••••••••••••~~}1.59
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1 lb. Teen Queen

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CHEESE.. .......~-~~:

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32 oz. Sunlight

outdoor recreation.
New, lmpqrted Kero-Sun keroSene heaters beat woodstoves every way! No
logs to cut, haul, split and stack. No Smoke. soot. ashes. No wasted heat up
the flue - Kero-Sun heaters need no chimney. Fuel cost averages .only
3·5¢ an hour. Absolutely no installation cost or mess (compare that with
woodstoves!). Burns with no kerosene od9r; tested lor pollution sale~; Au·
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the warm where vnu want it!"

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$

When you bring your baby to us. our trained children's shoe special·
isis will help you select the right shoes for. your baby. Stride Rite has ·
Progression Fitting•• designed to provide the combin~tion of proper fi!
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Intermediate and Advanced Walkers, we have 1ust the nght shoe for
your baby's developing feet.

Stride
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CHAPMAN
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to f.lberfelds·
Next

in ·Pomeroy
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15'12 oz. Joan of Arc

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32 oz. Trpicat

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16 oz. Cello Pack

6 oz. Kraft American or
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Individual Sliced
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BAKER FURNITURE

FBI agent Ralph Himmelsbach,
due to retire in 17 days after being in
charge of the Cooper investigation
since the hijacking, said he still
believes there is less than a li0-50
chance Cooper survived.
One theory had Cooper falling to
his death in Lake Merwin on the
Lewis River near Ariel, Wash. But
the Lewis River enters the Columbia
downstream from where the money
was foWid.
·
The nine-year-old mystery began
Nov. 24, 1971, when a man calling
himself Dan Cooper purchased a
one-way ticket and boarded the Nortbwest Orient Airlines jet at Portland International Airport.
After takeoff, Cooper displayed
what an attendant said looked like
dynamite. Ordertng the pilo~ to head
for Seattle, Cooper demanded four
parachutes and $200,000 from the
airline.

PACKED BACON •••••••••••••• ~~~.$1.49

I

195 Upper River Road

cent, depending on weather and
before dropping sharply during the
economic factors. They gained
suuun er. Feedlot steer prices
about 11 percent in 1979.
averaged $66.86 in the fourth quarter
As it has before, the department
of 1979, the report said.
said abundant supplies of pork and
Hog prices, which skidded sharply
poultry will help dampen this year's
last year as production rose, are ex·
increase in beef prices .
peeled to average $37 to $39 per 100
Hog slaughter was up 26 percent
pounds through the lirst half of this
from a year earlier in the first six
year. A year ago they were $51.98
weeks of 1900, the report said.
per 100 pounds in the first quarter,
Altbough it may decline slightly in
on the average, before dropping to
the second quarter, hog slaughter
$36.39 in the fourth.
still is expected to he 8 to I 0 percent
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Turner
larger than a year ago.
Oyloe, a native of Brookings, S.D.,
Broiler chicken output, already at
has been named U.S. agricultural
record levels, is expected to con- . counselor in Paris.
tinue rising, averaging about 6 perAgriculture Secretary Bob
cent above a year ago in the first
Bergland announced the ap·
three months of 1980 and about 3 per·
pointment on Tuesday. Oyloe, who
cent more in the second quarter.
11rrived in Paris last month to begin
Prices for feectlot cattle + U.S.
his duties ai the U.S. Embassy, sucChoice-grade steers + are expected
ceeded Wayne W. Sharp, who was
to average $66 to $68 per 100 poWids
reassigned to the U.S. mission at the
of live weight in the first quarter and
European Communities in Brussels,
then rise to a range of $71 to $75 in
Belgium.
the second, the report said.
Oyloe, a .career employee of the
department, most recently was an
In the April-June period of last
year, !bose prices rose to a record
assistant administrator of the
average of $72.51 per 100 pounds
Foreign Agricultural Service.

'

2 lb. I"ODSrite

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YELLOW POPCORN ............ ~:.9•• 69e
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PEANUT BUTTER cups ....... ~:~~. 994
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�12 - TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomenw. O., Wednesd")', f' rb l:i.i •l/111

Aspirin hailed as wonder druR .

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GRANDE CHORALE OF RIO GRANDE COLLEGECOMMUNITY COLLEGE composed of Paula
Boldman, McDennott, alto; Dave Cauley, Dayton,
tenor; Rita Colley, Piketon, soprano; Jim Dixon,
Gallipolis, tenor; Scott Franklin, Porter, bass; Beth
Fuller, Wellston, alto; Jo McKinney, Middleport, alto
(fifth from left, front: Matt Mueller, Elkton.

Maryland, bass ; Dee Penn, Piketon, soprano; Terri
Poynter, Chesapeake, soprano; Stephanie Purcell,
Gallipolis, soprano; Margaret Queen. Jackson,
soprano: Diane Showalter. Chesterhill, light and sound
technician ; George Thompson, Cheshire, bass; Jack
Trainer, Waverly, tenor ; Kris Widder, Sugarcreek,
alto; and Don Wothe, Cincinnati. bass.

Grande Chorale to present program
The Grande Chorale, directed by
.. Merlyn Ross, will present a program
SWiday afternoon at 2 p.m. at the
Meigs Junior High School
auditorium.
The Chorale is composed of 17
singers and accompanists, each
from different backgrounds with different goals, joining together and
contributing creative talents to
make an enjoyable show.
The Chorale tries to utilize the individual talents of each member by ·
using solos, 'specialty dances, and
·.·..·

.·.

}

"The Puppins", a muppet type show
geared to reach both yoWig and old .
The students write their own scripts.
SWiday's presentation is being
sponsored by the Middleport PTA.
Only one member of the Chorale is
from Meigs County, Jo McKinney of
Middleport. Members of the Chorale
are selected on the basis of an audition, doing a prepared solo, sight
singing and are required by contract
to rehearse a minimum of three
times a week lor two hours each.
The Chorale has toured edensively
.. :-:· ·:·

Load birthdays observed

.
'

Christopher &amp;
Stephanie Hojjman
Christopher and Stephanie
Hoffman, son and daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hoffman,
St. Charles, Missouri, celebrated
tbelr blrtbdays recently at the
home of tbelr grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dana E. Hoffman, Jr.,
Rutland. A clown cake was served to tbe Immediate fam.IIJes.
Stephanie was one year old on
Feb. 5, and Christopher was two
yean old on Feb. 6.

j essica Radford
Charles and J eanette Radford
entertained recently with a party in
celebration of the third birthday of
their daughter, Jessica Leigh. Cake,
coffee, ice cream and pop were served. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Larch, Sammy and John, Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Miller, Jennifer and
Scott, Miss Lynn Miller, Helen
Sayre, Josephine Miller and
Jessica's brother, Nathan. Sending
gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Stewart, Kim and Kelly.

Evangelism week planned
Heath Church, Middleport, is planning to observe Evangelism Week
with a special' series of evangelistic
services, Feb. 17-24. The speakers
each evening will be minlsters of the
Meigs Cooperative Parish.
The schedule is as follows: Youth,
Sunday, Feb. 17, Rev. Harvey Koch,
Syracuse Cluster; Men, Monday ,
Feb. 18, Rev . Richard Thomas, Northeast Cluster; Choir, Tuesday, Feb.
19, Rev. David Harris, Southern
Cluster I; Ladies, Wednesday, Feb.
20, Rev. Florence Smith, Mor·

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VISIT IN COLUMBUS
Mrs. Paul Andrews and daughter,
Barbara, Long Bottom, were in Col·
umbus Thursday and Friday to at·
tend the funeral of Mrs. Nora Curtis
McCrery who died unexpectedlylast
week. Mrs. McCrery is a sister of
Mrs. Andrews: Also attending from
here were Mr. and Mrs. Larry Collins,. cousins of Mrs. McCrery.

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SALE FRIDAY
A rununage sale will be held
Friday, Feb. 15, from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. at the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Portland-Racine Road. All r.lean
clothing priced reasonably.

;

ningstar Church; Fill-A-Pew, Thur·
sday, Feb. 21, Rev. Robert McGee,
Pomeroy Church; Preachers,
Friday, Feb. 22, Rev. Mark Flynn,
Southern Cluster II; Family, Satur·
day, Feb. 23, Rev. Robert Robinson,
Heath Church; Recognition, SWIday, Feb. 24, Rev . James Corbitt,
Enterprise, Rock Springs Chg.
The public is cordially invited to
attend. There will he Bible Study
before worship. Activities will begin
at 6:30 p.m. with Bible Study and
Prayer Time,led by the pastor.
POMEROY PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. John Andrews of Col·
umbus visited over tbe weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Andrews, Long Bottom. .

13 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980

in Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia,
Tennessee and Florida, including
appearance at Disney World, and do
a wide range of music including
religious and popular.
Tickets for ~Widay's program are
available from Vaughans Cardinal
and Western Auto, as well as from
Mrs. Peggy Wood, president of the
sponsoring group. They are $2 lor
adults. $1 for high school students,
and $1.50 for senior citizens.
Children through the eighth gra de
are admitted free. Tickets will be
sold at the door.

Room
visitation
held

EDITOR'S NOTE - When a~pirin
was introduced in 1899. it was hailed
as the answer to fever and pain. But
doctors now wonder if this old standby of the medi cine chest may he a
n~w " wonder drug." This is first of a
·
three-part sen es.
By KEVIN McKEAN
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Eighty ears
. .
y
alter 1ts mtroductlon
.
.as a " wonder
drug," plam old asplrm remains full
of surprises.
The " pa 1n re 1·lever doc tors recommend most " appears to help prevent
strokes In some people, may give
.
some protection against heart at·
·
tacks and could even a1d
In diabetes.
.
f
d
Th1s common ever r,e u?er and
antl·lnflammatory drug IS now
known to lessen the redness of sunburn and has become part of therapy
lor a rare and once-fatal disease.
· In
One study suggests asp Ino,
d
regular oses. may avert_ migraloe
headaches. It 1s even bemg tested
for possible use against cancer, In
bt'rth eon troI or In preven tinn~ the
rejection of transplanted organl.
"Aspirin Is a remarkable drug. It
has been around for 86 years and It's
••~
0 nl y wIt,...,
the last two or three
years tbat we've really understood
how It works " says Dr. William
' o1 neuro1ogy at th e
. Ids , cha1rman
F1e
Unl vers lty of Texas at Housto n a nd
one of the pioneers In using aspirin
topreventstroke.
"With the new understanding, we
. ding new lndl ca ti ons for
now are fm
d drug,
Its ue....
S
I think II' sawoner
no question about It," be says.
While few of the new uses are
established yet, tbe rebirth of
aspirin Is being watched closely by
u.s. manufacturers, who grind out
25 million pounds of aspirin a year,
and by Individual Americans, who
swallow the equivalent of 100 aspirin
tablets each per year.
•
Aspirin Is getting so much good
press lately. tbat many people have
begun taking half a tablet a day tbe

1

ma?
Wbo will calm her many fears?
Wbo will care for ailing Grandpa?
After he is old and gray?
Will he find a cozy corner,
And good care both night and day?

I~~ITS
1 Group Assorted

FABRIC

I: WOOLS
&amp;
WOOL BLENDS

Y2
Y2
Y2

WASIDNGTON (AP)- Defen·
ding the Abscam probe, FBI
Director William H. Webster
says it would be "absolutely
foolish" for undercover agents to
jeopardize such investigations by
Juring suspects into taking bribes
against their will.
Webster said the Abscam investigation, which has implicated
eight members of Congress, was
" the most carefully monitored,
the most carefully controlled"
probe in the bureau's 5&amp;-year
history.
The director made his first
detailed public defense of the
operation in a half·hour television
interview Tuesday with Carl
Rowan, a syndicated columnist
and television commentator.
Noting that Wldercover agents
secretly videotaPed the alleged
bribery transactions, Webster
said, "The filming of those scenes
were for court purposes. It would
be absolutely foolish for a special
agent of the FBI to go beyond the
legal provisions and jeopardize
the integrity of the investigation.
"He knows it's going to be in
court, and it's his obligation to
make that a good case."
Some members of Congress, in·
eluding several who were never

OFF
OFF
OFF

LAST WEEK ~

McCalls

PATTERNS

1

sportation outlook ."
Although the report did not identify those nations, the department
has said China has been a big U.S.
cotton buyer this season, so far pur:
chas~g about 2.1 million bales. '
Officiais said export sales for the
1979-80 cotton marketing year that
will end on July 31 actually call for
8.9 million bales and may reach 9.5
million by the end of the season.
"However, about 15 percent of this
cotton may not be delivered until
early next season," the report said.
Cotton farmers harvested 14.9
million bales of cotton last fall, a
sharp increase from the 10.9 million
produced in 1978.
The report said that, based on the .
new export figures, the cotton reserve by the time the new marketing
year begins on Aug. I will be about
4.5 million bales, only 500,000 more
tban were on hand last Aug. I.
Domestic use of cotton was projected at about 6.4 million bales, the
same as in 19711-79.
The big export year has been
developing for some lime, and tbe

FBI director defends probe

©lt~l@~ [ill~ ~~~~(GJ$

~

NURSING HOMES
ARE A BLESSING
Older folks have been a problem
Thru the passing of the years,
Wbo will take and care for Grand·

WASHIJIIGTON l AP) - The
biggest cotton expert boom in nearly
half a century' is helping push total
U.S. use of cotton to within 500,000
bales of last year's bumper harvesl.
According to new Agriculture
Departmet;~t projections announced
Tuesday, exports in 1979-80 are expected to totalS million bales, up by
29 percent from 6.2 million shipped
overseas last season.
The new estimate of total use was
raised 500,000 bales from a projection made a mo!Jth ago, the department's outlook board said in a "suJ&gt;ply and demand" report.
According to department records,
an export volume of 8 million bales
would be the most since 8.9 million
were shipped overseas in 1932-33.
Cotton exports last season totaled
6.2 million bales. Officials said the
prospective 29 percent increase this
year is due in part to ' 'exceptionally
strong foreign demand for U.S. cotton, particularly by some Far
Eastern and European countries,
lagging export sales by the Soviet
Union and an improved tran-

u!

(

Room visitation was held when the
Pomeroy PTA met Monday night at
•
the Pomeroy Elementary School.
YoW!ger folks keep very busy,
Teachers were in {heir respective
And it's hard for them to find
rooms to meet the parents and work · Time to take and keep tbe aged,
of the children was on display. The
But they want to treat them kind.
meeting opened with the flag salute
They work hard to make a living,
led by Pomeroy webelos whose
And to keep expelJSes paid,
leader is George Wri ght. Robert
Problems, problems and expenses,
Morris gave the devotions and
Is there hope for future aid?
reports of the various officers were
hearsd.
Yes, there's hope, and many places
Margaret Johnson reported on the
Where the older folks can stay,
highly successful spaghetti dinner
And receive good care as needed,
during the meeting conducted by
In nice rooms, both night and day.
Mrs. Judy Werry. Distribution of
YoWig folks care about the aged,
menus was discussed and proposals
And their love for them is true,
made as to how to handle tbe in·
So we aU should give them praises
formation.
For the things tbey say and do.
George Wright and Mrs. Johnson
, who attended the January meeting
All my children love me dearly,
of the Meigs Local Board of Educa·
And each one will do their best
tion commented on the meeting and
To give me good care when needed,
stressed the importance of the
If, and when there comes a test.
public attending. Wright, Johnson, If I'm taken toaRestHome,
and Barbara Fields volWiteered to
They will come to give their love,
attend the meeting this month.
So, I do not dread the future,
Morris discussed briefly five
I have faith in God above.
topics- emergency school closings,
parents need for being aware of the
Nursing Homes are sure a blessing,
child's progress, keeping in touch
They are scattered far and near,
';.nth the child's teacher, safety,
And this New One in Meigs County,
before, during and after school, in·
Is now bringing hotie and cheer.
eluding bus behaviour, and health
May God bless and save each per·
problems.
son,
The fourth grade parents served
Who has labored from the start,
refreshments. The room award went
Arid each one throughout the future,
to the special education class.
Wlto will have a loving part.
Composed Jan. 31 and Feb. I, 1980,
by Mrs. Riley Piggott, age 87 yea~
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

VISIT IN FLORIDA
Homer Radford artd his daughter·
in-law,' Louise Radford, returned
SWiday from a visit in Fort Lauder·
dale, Fla. with his brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rich.
While there they also visited M(. and
Mrs. Harold Martin. Mr. Martin is
recuperating from his recent
surgery and has resumed his law
practice on a part-time basis. He
plans a visit to Meigs CoWity in the
spring.

!%

')

The Poet's
·• Corner

Export boom helping natiQn's cotton crop

same way some people take
enzyme knowna~prastaglandln~
vltamius. This is a development that
~.:,tase odsr ~~c o-oxygena:e. k:
worries some doctors.
uuuY nee
s enzyme 0 rna ·
Critics point out that the largest · ~rpcursors
~os:;f the ~lf~~en
and latest study of aspirin and heart
_ ~ow~ prosb ~an ns a U a ew
disease - released last week +
ulAm
ler ey suth s ncestaaslwedi. that
h ed
be 1
ong epros gan ns
s ow
no
ne it of aspirin to
. bl ked are those that
ke it
people who had suffered at least one
are_ ";'
lis t
rna .
heart attack.
easler or nerve ce
o pass pam
But others respond tbat the study
Signals from one. to another: those
be f1a
that ra1se fever m the body's !hermay have en wed, and another
. · and those that
mos tat .m th e bram
large study due lor release next
th
Ir'
f infl
d
week will show more positive
promo1e e swe mg 0
arne
t1ssue.
resuIts .
But the ke to man of as irin's
Regardless of the outcome, most
t
~
t~
doctors agree that aspirin or drugs
newes useds ISdsotsme _ngdr bawaks
once cons1 ere 1 mam aw c
like It will be Important weapons In
·ts b'l't t ·
bleedin
h
f
h
1 a. .11dy o wcrease
t e pharmaceut1cal arsenal o t e . - As
thi b '-~'b ' ting. tb
·p1r1n oes s y uuu 1 g e
19805 .
blood cells called platelets from
This probably wonld have surmaking a prostaglandin derivative
prlsed Felix Hofmann, tbe German
ca lled thromboxane which allows
research chemist who set out In 1893
the platelets to clump together when
to find a remedy lor his lather' s
blood
. . . ed
1IS IOJur .
a
rheuma told a rthri.:~
''"·
Thesevesse
c1wnps of p!ate1ets 1ay the
H of mann dug tbroug h Pharfoundation for a more substantial
macopoelas looking for other salicin
blood clot formed of fibrin fibers and
relatives until he came on
d d h't blood · !Is Th
tyl
II
II
id
tb
1
ed
b
re
an initiate
w 1 e blood clotiin
ce ·
us,
ace sa ey c ac ' syn es z
y
I· telets
but
anotber German chemist lo 1853 but
Pa .
.
g,
unappreciated at that time. Hof·
clottwg can still proce~:he~teth e~
mann found a cheaper and simpler
ISseriOus InJUry • even 1 e P
e
are
way to make acetylsalicylic acid,
S.sblled.th
b d
f
aad It gave his father the first relief
mce
e 0 Y con mua 11 Y
he'd had In 10 vears.
replaces platelets, repeated doses of
Hofmann wanted to call his new
asplfln
U f rtare needed.
t 1 if th d
f
drug "a-salicin." But his employers
n o una e Y,
e ose o
· · 18
· t00 hi h ·t 'll Is 1'nhib't
1
at the pharmaceutical firm Bayer X
asplrtlhn
g •; WI! a d~
Co. overruledhim,andthedrugwas
ano er . pros ag an In
christened " Aspirin" when it was
prostacychn - made by the blood
launched in 1899.
·
vessel· walls. Prostacyclin
f
thr bohas the
It remained for John Vane and hi s
opposite
effect
rom
omtltk
XP.ae. di
Its
colleagues in 1971 to discover how
It sso1ves c o •apparen Y o eep
aspirin works.
the platele ts from clumpmg
Vane, of the Royal College of
dangerously on healthy blood vessel
Surgeons in London, showed that
walls.
aspirin inhibits the production of
. Now a number of researchers are
prostaglandins, ubiquitous hormve~hgab~g whether this . anh·
mone-like substances that are inclottmg acll?n can be usedaga1nst a
volved in body mechanisms ranging
range of diseases m which blood
from fever to inducing labor.
vessels are damaged - mcluding
Aspirin does this by blocking an
strokes, heart attacks and diabetes.

2 PRICE

NEW SHIPMENT STRETCH VELOUR

THE

touched by the investigation, con·
tend that the undercover agents
were trying to lure Wlwitting
politicians into a bribery trap.
Perhaps the strongest denWI·
elation came from Rep. John
Seiberling, D-Ohio, whO said tbe
continued use of undercover in·
vestigations means that "the FBI
can target anyone ... find anyone's

weakness.''
"I don't buy that argument, "
Webster asserted.
" We are not permitted, and
would not, target anyone simply
to get them. We are interested in
criminality. What we are trying
to do is identify the people who
betray their trust, and betray the
trust of the American people, by
the use of their office to enhance
the pocketbooks of the whitecollar criminal and the organized
crime member who uses them."
That mission, he continued, "is
a legitimate purpose which
perhaps only tbe FBI in the
United States can do successfully ."
Webster said a committee of
high-level FBI and Justice
Department officials monitored
Abscam and other undercover
probes to assure that in·
vestigators did not encroach upon .
individual rights.

FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy, 0. 992· 2284 115 W. 2nd

January court fines released
I

'

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
reports receipts of $2,928 for his office, collected in fines and fees ,
during the month of January.
In conjWiction with the receipts is
tbe report of Middleport Police Chief
J . J . Cremeans for January.
According to the report, police
made 52 arrests during the month
with speeding topping the list with 19
offenders.
There were four arrests each for
driving while intoxicated; issuing
bad checks, disorderly manner and
destruction of property . Three per·

PRICED
JUST RITE

'21 00
..
1-1®1:::::1•
•

k!:t

sons were arreste!f on assault
charges and two each on improper
backing, fWIOing a stop sign, and
stolen property charges. There was
one arrest each for passing in a nopassing zone, following too closely,
fleeing an officer, criminal mischief,
driving under suspension and
issuing menacing threats.
·
The police cruiser was driven 3,667
miles during the month and 425
parking meter tickets were issued.
Among the arrests, three cases were.
dismissed and one case was transferred to coW!ty court.

administration Dec. 14 announced
that cotton farmers will not have to
set aside part of their land from
production to qualify flit- federal SUJ&gt;ports on their 1900 crop.
A survey in early January in·
dicated producers intend to plant
about 14 million acres of cotton this
year, virtually the same as for the
big 1979 harvest.
In a recent newsletter to
producers, the department said if

ment experts say retail beef prices
may rise another 10 to }2 percent
this year, a steeper increase than
had been prt:dicted.
After four years of reducing their
herds, cattle producers have "aJ&gt;parently ended" the cutback, the
Agriculture Department said
Tuesday .
"Cattle nwnbers bave leveled off,
but the expansion will not begin Wltil
increased nwnbers of replacement

On the farm .scene
heifers (for breeding) enter the cow
herd,' ' the report said.
Meanwhile, it said, retail beef
prices "are expected to increase
another 10 to 12 percent, about onehalf the 1979 increase."
Two months ago, in a similar
report, officials predicted retail beef
prices would go up an average of 7 to
10 percent from 1979 levels.
Food prices overall have been
forecast by' USDA experts to rise by
7 to 11 percent this year, with a
" most likely" increase of 8 or 9 per·

cotton prices continue to strengthen
in relation to soybeans, ,many far·
mers may switch more acreage to
cotton in southern areas this spring.
"Likewise, while producers in the
Southwest and West revealed plans
in January to trim their ·cotton
acreage slightly from last year's
level, current price trends ·- if
maintained - could lead them to
change their minds by planting
time," it said.
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Govern·

'.:~!!~~,s~~r!~~ -~~s~~~ ~~~.o~,money
year-old boy has uncovered part of a
ransom missing since the only unsolved hijacking in U.S. history but officials say the whereabouts of
the legendary sky pirate D.B.
Cooper are still a matter of con·
jecture.
The three bundles of weathered
$20 bills foWid along the Columbia
River are the first evidence uncovered since Thanksgiving eve,
1971 , when Cooper bailed out of a jet
over southwestern Washington witb
$200,000tiedtohiswaist.
It was tbe first case of a hijacking
for money.
The FBI on Tuesday identified .the
cash through serial numbers. Bill
Baker,specialagentinchargeofthe
Porlland FBI office, said the money

possible to determine how much WI!S
there, but he said it came to
"several thousand dollars."
"I think we can only presume at
Ibis time that because the money
was foWid clumped together tightly
in what we believe was the manner
in which it was originally packed, it
lends credence to the theqry tbat at
least the money did not make it out."
he said. "And from there, I would
really leave it to conjecture."
Baker said agents wonld now
renew their search. "Of course, we
will generate increased interest now
in trying to locate D.B. Cooper or
any remains that might be in the
area," he said.
The money was discovered Sunday by young Brian Ingram beneath

nicked along the Columbia, five
miles northwest of Vancouver,
Wash.
Harold Ingram of Vancouver, told
reporters Tuesday he was preparing
a fire when his son ''ran up and said
'Wait a minute , Daddy.' He raked a
place out in the sand and there it
was."
Ingram said he didn't think about
the cash being part of the Cooper
loot. But he called the FBI because
"I figured if anybody knew wbat to
doitwouldbethem."
Baker said he presumed the
money washed downstream,
possibly fr001 a Columbia River
tributary in the rugged southwestern Washington mountains,
where Cooper is believed to have

Additional funding recommended
The Ohio Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation has
recommended an additlonal$253,748
for the combined training center and
adult workshop of the Meigs COWity
Board of Mental Retardation.
This was annoWiced during a
recent board session at the Meigs
CoWity Courthouse.
The additional fWiding increases
the state's conurJtment for the new
facility to $1,146,111&lt;:. The building
will be constructed on the site for·
merly known as'Carleton College.
Supt. Chris Layh reported on tbe
site transaction recently completed
with trustees of Carleton College.
The architect bas been notified of
Ibis increase in project costs and is

in the process of making Maxine Goeglein, and Nora Rice.
modifications.
A discussion on bus routes and insurance was held and it was recom·
mended that the insurance be
reviewed and revised, if necessary. ·
New policy manuals were
distributed to the members present.
The superintendent was authorized
to attend two conferences to be held
in Columb.us during February. A
motion to purchase a new typewriter
for the board office was passed and
the 1980-81 school year was
discussed.
Members present included ManEckrich 1 lb. Vacuum
ning Webater, chairperson; W. L.
Carr, vice-chairperson; Wilma
Parker, secretary; Grace Weber,

Eckrich

Say "hello~' to
Kero-Sun heaters!
Say "goodbye"
to woodstoves!

JUMBO BOLOGNA•••••••••••••~~}1.59
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••• :•••••••••~~~. $1.19
DAIRY

PRODUCE
10 lb. Idaho Baking

1 lb. Teen Queen

Quarters

MARGARINE

2

/99~

~~occco~ccccccccQQ~~~~~

CHEESE.. .......~-~~:

Progression Fitting™.
for IJaby's first steps. ~
'

ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••••••••• 2/$1.49

"Radiant" models

32 oz. Sunlight

outdoor recreation.
New, lmpqrted Kero-Sun keroSene heaters beat woodstoves every way! No
logs to cut, haul, split and stack. No Smoke. soot. ashes. No wasted heat up
the flue - Kero-Sun heaters need no chimney. Fuel cost averages .only
3·5¢ an hour. Absolutely no installation cost or mess (compare that with
woodstoves!). Burns with no kerosene od9r; tested lor pollution sale~; Au·
tomatlc igniter, automatic tip-over shutort . Every Kero-Sun heater Puts
the warm where vnu want it!"

FEBRUARY SERVICE
SPECIAL$
.
.
.
GOOD NOW THRU FE~RUARY 29, 7980

.--·---------,

_, ...

J

..--..., .

RIVERSIDE VOLKSWAGEN

446·9800

'

.

'

'

'

Gallipolis; Ohio , ·

$

When you bring your baby to us. our trained children's shoe special·
isis will help you select the right shoes for. your baby. Stride Rite has ·
Progression Fitting•• designed to provide the combin~tion of proper fi!
and support your growing baby needs. From the FirstJe_through the
Intermediate and Advanced Walkers, we have 1ust the nght shoe for
your baby's developing feet.

Stride
Rite®Anything else Is something less .
'
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'

CHAPMAN
SHOES
to f.lberfelds·
Next

in ·Pomeroy
1

·-· ' ~.r.o.....,.,-.-:&gt;&lt;&gt;e&lt;&gt;..-..o&lt;:)OCO:&gt;CIOCOcociOOC:~--;:.MI
.
l\1

COOKING OIL •••••••••••••••••••••• $1.89
15'12 oz. Joan of Arc

RED KIDNEY BEANS••••••••••••. 2/79e
a oz. IC!ahoari

.

INSTANT POTATOES •••••••••••~~~ •• 39e
15 oz.

.PINE SOL DISINFECTANT. •••• ~:!~: 93t.

A
PORTABLE HEATERS

.

.

CELERY....... -~~~~-~ .39'

32 oz. Trpicat

Portable heat for contractors, ~··
smell butiineSHS,. workshops, gar~gM, ·

..

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OIL CHANGE SPECIAL\ I
TUNE UP SPECIAL . \
I CHANGE
Oil AND · 1 l.cHANGE PLUGs .eR_EPLACE ro1r.tsl
11
1
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I
RE-PLACE OIL FILTER
I leADJUST CO% •DWELL SETTING I
I $955 Plus Tax •
'I ~ - c.
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~32
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i\
All V.W. Models
1 \ AU Filters At Additional Cost
,
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30 Count California

CARIBOU CATFISH •••••••••••• ~~"- ·$1.98
"Omni" models ·

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CARROTS .......~~~:. 19'

FROZEN

Stride Rite"
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

POTATOES.... ~~~ . $1.49
16 oz. Cello Pack

6 oz. Kraft American or
Sharp's
Individual Sliced
89~

flOOR &amp; CARPfT SWffPfR

BAKER FURNITURE

FBI agent Ralph Himmelsbach,
due to retire in 17 days after being in
charge of the Cooper investigation
since the hijacking, said he still
believes there is less than a li0-50
chance Cooper survived.
One theory had Cooper falling to
his death in Lake Merwin on the
Lewis River near Ariel, Wash. But
the Lewis River enters the Columbia
downstream from where the money
was foWid.
·
The nine-year-old mystery began
Nov. 24, 1971, when a man calling
himself Dan Cooper purchased a
one-way ticket and boarded the Nortbwest Orient Airlines jet at Portland International Airport.
After takeoff, Cooper displayed
what an attendant said looked like
dynamite. Ordertng the pilo~ to head
for Seattle, Cooper demanded four
parachutes and $200,000 from the
airline.

PACKED BACON •••••••••••••• ~~~.$1.49

I

195 Upper River Road

cent, depending on weather and
before dropping sharply during the
economic factors. They gained
suuun er. Feedlot steer prices
about 11 percent in 1979.
averaged $66.86 in the fourth quarter
As it has before, the department
of 1979, the report said.
said abundant supplies of pork and
Hog prices, which skidded sharply
poultry will help dampen this year's
last year as production rose, are ex·
increase in beef prices .
peeled to average $37 to $39 per 100
Hog slaughter was up 26 percent
pounds through the lirst half of this
from a year earlier in the first six
year. A year ago they were $51.98
weeks of 1900, the report said.
per 100 pounds in the first quarter,
Altbough it may decline slightly in
on the average, before dropping to
the second quarter, hog slaughter
$36.39 in the fourth.
still is expected to he 8 to I 0 percent
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Turner
larger than a year ago.
Oyloe, a native of Brookings, S.D.,
Broiler chicken output, already at
has been named U.S. agricultural
record levels, is expected to con- . counselor in Paris.
tinue rising, averaging about 6 perAgriculture Secretary Bob
cent above a year ago in the first
Bergland announced the ap·
three months of 1980 and about 3 per·
pointment on Tuesday. Oyloe, who
cent more in the second quarter.
11rrived in Paris last month to begin
Prices for feectlot cattle + U.S.
his duties ai the U.S. Embassy, sucChoice-grade steers + are expected
ceeded Wayne W. Sharp, who was
to average $66 to $68 per 100 poWids
reassigned to the U.S. mission at the
of live weight in the first quarter and
European Communities in Brussels,
then rise to a range of $71 to $75 in
Belgium.
the second, the report said.
Oyloe, a .career employee of the
department, most recently was an
In the April-June period of last
year, !bose prices rose to a record
assistant administrator of the
average of $72.51 per 100 pounds
Foreign Agricultural Service.

'

2 lb. I"ODSrite

v ·
E

PICKENS' HARDWARE

YELLOW POPCORN ............ ~:.9•• 69e
5 Pack Boyer

PEANUT BUTTER cups ....... ~:~~. 994
29 oz. Stokely
PEACH HALVES ••••• ~ ••••••••••••:a.~. 79e

· 12 oz. Planters
i

'

MASON, W. VA.

~.c:.~. $1.99
MIXED .NUTS
- •••••••••••••••••
.

�15- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980
DICK TRACY

14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday , F eb. 13, 1980

Your Best Buys .Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
-----

~-

_HeiJ' WaiJiecl__
ADDRE SS ER s
HOME
want ed . $500 per wee k
possib le. No ex per1en c e
p0
r equir ed
A. S. D ..

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wmls or Under

2daya

3.00

- ----------GET VALUABLE trainin g
as a young bu siness perso n
and earn good money plu s
some great gifts as a Sen
tinel route carrier . Phon e
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992
2156 or 992 ·2157.

Elch word ()Ver the minimllll
1~ words i.s 4 cen~r word per
dly , Ada runninf.

r than con--

aeculive days Will be clulrged at
the 1 day rate.

rr word,

In memory, Card of Thanks

and Obituary : 6 cents
13.00 minimum. Ca

In ad-

RN OR LPN. full time . 3

Mobilt: H001e sales and Y11rd
sales are attept.ed mly with
cash with order. 25 cent charye
for ads carrying Box Nwnber n
Care of The Sentinel.

time RN or LPN, 11to7 : 30
Cal l Mr . Zidian at Pomero y

vance.

trol. $1100.992-7762 .
1973 Pinto
Hatchback ,
auto .• A.C, good condition .

$900. 446·1830 or 446~ 4572.

4339 .

MOTORIST IN SURANC E
Companies have an op
portunity waiting for yho u
in the insurance market, a
chance to build and OW N
your business . Establ ish
your agency on a part t im e
or full time basis. No prio r
experience required. w e
training,
yo u
provide
provide ambition. Call, or
write,
Don
Weidner

Tuesday
thru Friday
I P.M.
lhe day before publico~~tion
SWlday
tP.M.
Friday afternoon

Notices

Park, Route 33, north of

Pomeroy. Large lots.Call
992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 per ton . Bundled
slab. $.10 per ton, Delivered

to Ohio Pallet co., Rt. 2

'

Pomeroy 992·2689.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts . Call992·7787.

THREE BEDROOM house
with bath in Rutland. 992-

5858.
HALF

to Boy Scout Troop 249.

ATTENTION
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques a no col lee·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,

guns, pocket watches and
coin co tlecHons. Call 614·

FURNITURE. ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desk s, etc., complete
household!!-. Write M.D
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca ll9'12·7760.
ANTIQUES,
NITURE, glass,

FUR ~

ch ina ,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques. 26 N.

2nd, MiOdleport, OH. 992·
3161.

or 557·3411.
OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
I ANY
AMOUNT). DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
614 ~99251 13 ,
DIAL
BROWN'S .

ches, class r ings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

silver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,
742·2331. Treasur e Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462 .

Shop, MidOieport.
INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
992 ~

7228 .
AID USERS :

save used batteries, m er cury and silver oxide,
redeem for cash. Diles
Hearing.
Aid
Cen ter ,

Athens. Tel. 614-594-3571.
GOLD,
SIL VER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY IOSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992 ~ 6370. ALSO DO
APPRAI SING .
WILL the party who took
the clothes by m istake
from F ife's Laundromat in

Middleport last Tuesday,
the Sth, please call 992··

5083. Reward, no Questions

742·2316, evenings .
GOLD,
SILVER DR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE .FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY lOSS IE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELL ING .
PHONE 992 ·6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
GOLD
AND
SILVER
CO IN S OF THE WORLD,
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVE R AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD HIGH, HONEST,
UP·TO ·DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . DR CALL
992·3476.
Pets for Sale
HOOF HO LLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ~ 3290.
Bording and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.

asked.

Adults $29.00.

LADY needs ride to Mac·
Donald 's,
Ga llipoli s,
Tuesday
Saturday.

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367 ~0292.

Wi lling to share expenses.

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 61067·7220 .

992·2576 after 5.
SHOOTING
MATCH .
Rutland Gun Club, behind
Stewart's Gun Shop, Smith

Run Rd . . 22 rifles, open
bore

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614 ~ 446 ·7795 .

pistols off hand , 25 yards.
Muzzle loillders and rifles,

50 yards . .22 rifle bench
rest,
100 yards.
No

alcoholic
beverages
allowed . Every Friday
night. 8 p.m . e)(cept last
Friday of eac h month .
Shooter will furnish own
ammunition .
Hel~ Wanted

EMMONS,

fashion accessory com pany, now hiring In this
area. Full and part time
positions open . Car and
telephone necessary1 t n·
terviews Thurs., Fe'b . 14,

10 :30 a.m. 3:00p.m. at Pt .
Pleasant Dept of Em·
ployment Security, 225 6th
St., Pt. Plea&amp;ant, wv . 675·
2770.
SALES TRAINEE . Salary
plus commissions. No ex·

perience necesS&lt;lry. Phone
m·2.et~ .

BLUE TARTAN, Mid ~
dleport . taking oppllcatlons tor waitresses,
no '.xperlence necessary .

Apply In person.

2

bedroom, semi -furnished.
Adults only . No children or

For Sale
COAL,
LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
ch loride, terti lizer, dog

f ood, and all types of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992-

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, · 669 ·
3785.
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at 54 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 6693785,
Fitzpatrick
689.

Orchard,

SR

HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a homeless pet .
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. '192·
626(), noon ~ 7 p.m .
Auto Sales
1977 GMC 1 ton dump,
24,000 miles, radio, P.S.,
P.B., $4950. 7 p.m . until
midnight or before 10 a.m.
742 ·2395 .
1975 Bronco 4X4, V·8, AT,
P.S., posi-traction front
and rear . 5 new tires. 4 new
shocks. 992·2679.

.

1977
P.S.,

THUNDERBIRD,
P.B .. A.C., radio!

tires, reclining seats. AM·

FM . $3100. 247·3594.
1973 GMC van, low
mileage, 6 cyl., std. 992·
5057 .
, 1975 CHEVY BLAZER 4x4,
350. Auto. trans. , PS, P.B.,
· AM 8 ~ track radio. Reese
hitch, tr ailer brt;Jk.es, new

tires. $1600 . 9'12·2467 after
5.30p.m .

-·-·-

-· ·-

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

FAMILY PLACE - 4 or
5 bedrooms, 11/2 baths,

HOUSE tor sa le or trade ·
ranch sty le home with 2
leve l acres, 3 bedrooms,
1'12 baths, extra large kif chen
with
oven ,
refrigerator, large dining
room, ex tra l arge family
room with fireplace. 1 car
garage, lots of carpet . Will
consider mobile home as
trade; in . Call 742· 3119.

HOME

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
avai lable. Located approx.
7 m iles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

formal dining, equipped
kitchen, basement, 2
business rooms or hob·
by shop, and 2 car

garage. only $35,000.
ROOMY - Large frame
home near school and
stores. Has 5 bedrooms,
11/2 baths, gas furnace,
nice carPeting, 2 car
garage, and utility

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
tNVEST -

2 homes on

Beech Grove Road.
Jloth in excellent condi ·
tion. Live in one and

rent the other. Situated
on 10 acres across from
Legion Hall.
RUTLAND Extra
nice 4 bedroom home.

All carpet and drapes
included. This home has

peen well ·kept and see·

1ng it IS believing in it!!

Selling price $35,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS Cozy 2 bedroom starter
home. Only $23,000.00.
NEW HOME - Total
electric, 3 bedrooms .
Quality
throughout .
Situated on a little over
one acre, Sells for

$45,600.00.
NEW LISTING --, Want

give location and price.

DECORATED CAKES for
a II occasions. Character
cakes and sheet cakes . Call
992 ·6342 or 992·2583 .

utility and full

1970 Ma rk Twain V ~ hull, 16
f oot with 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call after 5 p.m ., 992·2528.

PRICE
SALE.
'
WOMEN'S
AND
CHILDREN'S
DRESS
s HOES. NO EXCHANGES
OR
REFUNDS.
ALL
s ALES FINAL. SHOES
WILL BE DISPLAYED ON
METAL SELF·SERVICE
RACKS.
BAILEY'S
sHOES, MIDDLEPORT
F OR THE
F ebruary,

dining room, family
room, modern kitchen,

base ·

ment. Good location in

family

11

home with

centra l heating and city
water. 3 ca r garage w ith
nice rental apt. over,
also small business
building on 3 state
routes. All this going for

$30,000.
RETIREE HOME - A
nic e 1 bedroom home
with like new woodwork
inside
Utility room,
natural gas central
heat, city water and
over 2 acres of privacy . .

Only $20,000.
BUY NOW BEFORE
SPRING tNFLATtON .
WE HAVE 9S% FINAN·
Cl NG. CALL 992 ~ 3325 or
992-3876.

Housing
Head! uarters

month

of

Drehel ' s
greenware 30

Phone 742~2003
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .

mats and fixtures .

F IRE WOOD , dry har ·
d wood, SJO lead . Tire
c hains, l Sin., top condition,
$25. M ixed hay, square
bales, 7c . 742 ~ 2359 .

mile oft Rt. 7 by-pass

on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland .

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4

30 ·ffc

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

Other times by appoint107 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate for Sale

NEW

LISTING

-

bedroom ranch, approx.
4 yrs. old, large modern
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,
separae utility, wood burner, one acre. Good

Jing, Hydro plant &amp; the
new bridge. Priced at
$16,000.00.
NEW LtSTtNG - This 6
room house has had ex·
tensive remodeling done
and is In very good con-

dition . It has 3
bedrooms, equipped kit·

full basement, enclosed
, rear porch. F rult trees,

1971 Freedom mobile home
14x64. 3 bedroom Including
f ull length awning, central
al r, located on spacious lot
w hich can be rented. S7900.
contact Kingsbury Mobile
H orne Sales at 992·7034,

·------ - ·- · - -

I 977 2 bedrQOm Hillcrest
12x60. Furnished or un·
f urni~hed. washer and
dryer &lt;an be Included. 992·
61 AO after 4:30.

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI

Trom,

Referen·

742 ~ 2328.

bedroom, two bath with central heat and air condi·
tion. over J acres of flat land with a split rail fence,

WILL DO babysitting
evenings. 992 ~6372.

garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·

MIDDLEPORT .$4,500.

garden space. Country
living
tor
only
$30,000.00.
PRICE REDUCED New home, about 111:2
years old. Built·i n kit·
chen with bar, dining
room. J bedrooms, 2

baths, living room with
w .b .f .p. and heatllator,
All carpeted and many
more features . Now
$39,900.00.
VACANT LAND - Ap·
prox. 12112 acres near

Rutland on
Happy
Hollow
Rd.
All
minerals. $25,375.00,
RENTAL INVE;ST MENT - 3 bedrooms,
bath, kitchen, living
room .

Owner

wants

$6,500,00,
BUYING OR SELLING
- CALL US - THEN
START PACKING.
R·EALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr,
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
74Z·2474
Jean Trusseii"94P-2660
OFFICE PHONE
99H259

Jumbles TYING

I Answer :

;BORN LOSER

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters and

~WJ~e;JJ ORB\!:&gt; ~D ME:, we; C.4i ~
AllSWER..-:&gt;.-. A~ $~5 QIET\0\.l

downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

WHO WAS ~6ALL'S LAST

-

~~c:roMJ~~

What ~he audience began to do when the
ham magician put on h 1s "disappearing

BRIDGE

- = - - - -=-==:=
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Calt Howard
949·2862
1·22·ttc

DILLON
REALTY
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedroom home, new
vinyl siding, Insulated,
new FA gas furnace,

TWO BEDROOM home

downtown.
'

located

on one acre,

Middleport area, trailer
hookup for additional in·
come. $11,000.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

MIDDLEPORT AREA
2 bedroom home,
paneling and carpet,
eat·in kitchen. $10,500.

"WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN.

WANTED- Nice home with 4 or 5 bedrooms, faiiu-

JUST OFF SR 7, 2
bedroom home, hard· ·

ly room &amp; garage. Six to ten yrs. old. Five to 10
minutes from Pomeroy . We have a buyer for the

wood floors, new ·paneling, on tour acres of

land, barn, in Mid ~
dleport area, will sell on
land contract, $12,500.

•'

INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Well
established business In
the heart of Middleport,
on corner lot, plus 4
opartments all present~
ly rented. Sell all or
part,

DILLON
REAL ESTATE
Hobart Dllloh, Broker
Fay Manley,
BranchMgr.
Phone 992-2598

From 1 to 7S acres, bordering

,.uo•••

THAT SAND"(

00E5N'T WIGH
US TO CAMP
FOR THE
NIG~T YET...

1

EASY, OCD
FELLOW ... WE'll
N EVE~ FINO

.974
t AQ 9 5

WE'RE F'RESH
FO~ EACH DAY'$

+K

JOIJRNE'! ...

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

1·18-(po.)

TRI-COUNTY

Q~[BOOKKEEPING

Bac~ed

Partnerships &amp;

~

~·

•

-.

j

•

2+
3'1•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

3t
4+

t+

MACHINE
service,

makes.
Fabri c

Shop,

Authorized

The

Pomeroy .

Singer

entry to take a diamond
finesse . It was suocessful and
South made his game.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR1SE ASSN)

{For a copy of JACOBY
. MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489. Radio City
S tatiOn , New York. N . Y.
10019.)

~~~~

all

992 ·2284.

Fore~ight and reasoning are
vito l at trick one. Many hands
are lost at t hi s early juncture
by carel ess play or lack of
thought.
The bidding ' was simple
North scraped up a two-spade
response and South ostensibly
made a game try of three
diamonds. North rejected this
inv ilation and South, who had
visions of slam , carried on to
game.
The opening lead was the
jack of clubs. Declarer paused
before pl aying to the first
trick. It was tempting to win
the king of clubs in the closed
hand and hope to later discard
a heart loser on the ace. But
there was no immediate entrv
to dummy If South wins the
club king, draws trump and
leads a small diamond to
dummy, eit her defender
would then come to one diamond trick and three heart
tricks before the club ace
could be utilized.
Therefore, South won the
opemng club lead with the
ace, cannibalizing his king, in ·

order to make use of dummy's

opposing kings. Second hand
should play low.
' Today's declarer was no
slavish follower of si mple
rules. He realized that eve ry
hand has its own character
and that general rules, no
matter how sound in principle. don 't always a~ply.

Trucking. Phone 742 ·2455.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Sales

ACROSS

Scissors.

2 Cancel, as a

1Mijitary

space shot
headquarters· 3 You're
5 Verdi's
darn tootin
"Den-~~
4 French
11 Touch on
season
12 Lustrous
5 Trig
13 Achy
function
14 Islamic
6 Coffeetribesman
brewing
giveaway
of Africa
15 Anger
7 Wheel part
16 Take a S--Sure thing :
view of
slang
17 Dolores - Rio 9 Away
18 Vigor
from camp
20 Mrs. Nixon 10 Pompous
21 Economize
16 Bistro of
22 Split
ill-repute
23 Adhesive
25 Dawdled
26 Pale
with rage
27 Marceau's
26 River: Sp.

IN ·
can·

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

'192·2143.
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery : various sizes of

pool kits. Do · it ~ yourselt or
let us install for you. D.
Bumgardner

Sales,

Inc.

992~ 5724 .

BRADFORD,

Auctioneer,

Complete Service . Phone

949·24117 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford .

WINNIE

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ~
3825 .

• "10U GUYS SCARED

~ E LIVING fJAY'LIGH15 OUTOF
ME. HDN'D YOU

GET IN ?

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
steam cleaned . Free
estimate,
Reasonable
rates, Scotchguard. 992"··
6309 or 742 ~2211 .
,)
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742 ~ 2328.

Yesterday's Answer
19 Bombay
servant
22 Georgia

city
Z3 N.J. city
24 Stupid
25 Noon,
in

Nantes

29 COCktail

.·'

32 Upward:
prefix

and;

33 Man's name

34-Jima
35 Hand warmer·m--t--t--+In 1896, Bernhard Bang,
a Danish veterinarian,

37 Problem
38Eastem

discovered the causative

Christian
port

agent of brucellosis in cattle. This dlsease-calllling

38 Israeli

40 Almost a

organism- known today as
Brucella abortus -

grad
41 Strop

has

been eradicated in Denmark but still causes•
problems for U, S. cattle
producers ,
Bovini
brucell06ls iB sometimes .

DOWN

BEDROQM&amp;
. Li\IIJtQJi_QQM

•'

·I'
·~\

.'

'

I WONDER WHO IT'S
A 601( LIKE5 TO kNOW
GOIN6To
13E ..I HOPE HE'S
.A GIRL IS INTERESTED
ENOlJ6H BE READV . A600D [7ANCER ... IT'LL

ro

29 Look after
30 Cognizant
31 Thesaurus
compiler

36 Bangkok
native: var.
37Maxim

33.

11 . 30-College Basketball 3; ABC
News Special 6, 13; Mary Hart.
man, Mary. Hartman 8; aBC
Captioned News 33.
11 :45-Love Boat6,13; 12:30-Movle
"Overboard" .·8; News l7.
12 :35-Movie "The Lusty Men " 17;
12 :55-Baretta 6,13.
1:DO-News 15; 1:30-Tomorrow 3;
2 :05-News 13.
3:00- Movle "Tension at Table
Rock" 17 ; 5:DO-Lovet American
Style 17.
"'THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; World at .
Large 17; 5:50--PTL Club 13.
6 :D0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6 30-For You ... Biack Woman 10; ·
News 17; 6:45-Morning Report :
3; A.M. Weather 133; 6:50--Good '
Morning WeVVirglnla 13; 6:55-:
News 13.
•.·
7: DO-Today 3;!5;· GOOd Morning
America 6,·l3;

Thu~sday

Mar.

11ing 8 ; Batman 10 : WTBS
F unhouse 17.
7:30-Family Affair 10; i:55-Chuc~
White Repor.ts 10.
8:DO-Capioln KangarooB;lO; Leave
It To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8: 30-Romper Room 17.
'
9:DO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Lucy Show 17 .
9: 30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day at a
Time 10; Green Acres 17 .
IO:DO-Card Sharks 3, 15; Jeffersons.
8: Joker's Wild 10; Morning·
Magazine
Fury" 17.

13 ;

Movie

"Young

10 :30- Hollywood Squares 3,15; .
$20,0110 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-C BS News 8; House Call 10.·
11 :DO-High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price is Right ;, ~ 0. ·
11 :30- Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud.- 6, 13; Sesame St.
20; 11 : 55-N'IWS 17 .
12 : 00-Newsclli\fer
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Heillih Field 15; Love.
American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10 ; Password Plus
15; Movie "You're Never Too
Young" 17; Elec. Co. 20,33.
·
1:DO-Days of Our Llv~'s 3, 15 ; All My
Children 6,13 ; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2 :DO-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8,10i
2:25-News 17 .
2: 30- Another
World
3, 15;
Gigglesnort Hotel 17,
3: 00-General
Hospital
6, 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Masterpiece Theatre 20.
3: 30-F lints tones 17.
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; Brady Bunch
10; Tom &amp; JetTy 13 ; Merv Griffin
15; 'Gilllgan's-ls. 17.
5:DO-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers .
' 20,33.
-::.
5:~0-Mash 3; Jolews 6; Play lhe .
Percentageli,lf,J; E lee. Co. 20; ·
Mash 10; Happy· pays Again 13; I
Dream of ~.eannle 17; Doctor ·
Who 33.
6:DO-News 3,8,1i!-J3,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett17 ; 3·2-1 Contact
20.33.
'
.
6:30-NBC News~,15; ABC News 13; ·
Carol Burnetr6; CBS. New~ 8,10; :
Bob Newharl17: ·VIIIa Alegre 20; .
Wild Wild World of Animals 33 . ·
7:DO-Cross·Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil · Lehi er Report 33 ;
Love, American Style 15; Sanlord &amp; Son 17; 0 lck Cavell 20. ·
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; In
Search Of ~; Joker's. Wild 8;
$100,000 Niitlie That tune 10; ·
Nashville cin· the ·Road 13; :
Country Roaqs 15; ,O.tl In The
Family 17 ; . )~\ac~eii . Lehrer
Report 20, · ·.', .
'
8 :DO-Buck R~l· 3, 1~1·· Mork &amp;
Mindy 6,13; :·~p ltons: ~,10; Bill
Moyers' J ~'1 20,33; Movie ·
" Blue Haw
.~)7.
••.·
·
8:30-X III Win ~~bly~( Games :
6,13.

~

'

.

'

'

u!l-lEN HE CALLS...

b•v

ALSO HELP IF HE'S A
.-REAL SHARP PRE55ER ...

wo

·

.

star

FEBRUARY 13,1980
'
7 . ~ Country · Roads 3;: Match
Game PM k Joker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavett 33; The Judge 10; :
Fam ily Feud 13; Wild Kingdom '
15; NHL H&lt;&gt;&lt;:i&lt;ey 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Reporl 20.
B DO-Real People 3, 15; Eight is '
Enough 13; Bugs Bunny 8, 10; '
Edward &amp; Mrs. Simpsoo 6;
Great Perfor-mances 20,33.
8 : 30-Popeye 8, 10. .
9 :DO-Difl'rent Slrokes 3,15; XIII
Winter Olympic Games 6, 13;
Movie "lhorc l st II : The
Heretic" 8,10; 9:30-Hello, Larry
3, 15 .
.. .
9 :45- Ral Patrot.17 ; 10 :DO-Best of
Saturday Nigh!· live 3,15 ; Ritual
33; News 20,: ..
10 : 15- Love, American Style 17.
10 : 30-China : t,.nd of My Father :
33 ; NBA B_.ketball 17 ; Over
Easy 20 .
·
11 : 00- News ~,6;8, 10 , 13, 15; Dick
Ca•etf 20; Wodehouse Playhouse •

9:DO-Steve Martin 3,15; Barnaby :
Jones 8; Snea~ Previews 20,33;
College Basketball 10, ,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
9
:
30-Camera
T(\ree 24; Sports
AXYDLBAAXR
Close Up 33. .
·
Is LONGFELLOW
10:()0-..{;)ulncy 3,151 Knots Landing
8; J&gt;olltlcal Talk 17; News 20; ·
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Austin City ·(l"rnlfs 33; ·10 :30- :
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
Over
Easy 20; '
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
11:DO-News 3.6,8,10,13,15; Last of :
hints. Each day the code letters are dilleren t.
the Wild 17; Dl~l(Cav~tt :io; Fall ,
CRYPTOQUOTES
&amp; Rise of Reglriald ·P...rln 33.
,
11 :30-Tonight 3;15; x'jj1 Winter ,
Olympic Gii'jlo!ti Updatw 6, 13; :
U YK
EKM
J VK Y K
OPYYPMO,
ABC C~ptlolljd !'fewt 33 ; Movie •
" Th~ ~lrds' ' ~q; ·Movijt·"The Sl. '
VPMKH~Y
NPWXBUBJ,
WB
MVWLV
Valentine's
Massacre" 17.
11 : 45-ABC News' Special ~. 13; •
WBLPQK
PE
u XPPC
Bli'
12:DO-Pollce' Wo'.man 6,l3.
' '
1:DO-Tomorrow . ~~ 1:1o.;.:.Barella ~
U H U W A . A P X U B
N .
0 QW J V
6, t3; Black ~h-·p S~!iladron 8; '
1:35-News '1), ,,,
· :,
·
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IF ONE CONSIDERED LIFE AS A ··
1
SIMPLE LOAI'i; ONE WOULD PERHAPS BE LESS EXAC- . · 1:40-Mo
. vll! . . ~.
ot Cfiio~cle~' .17; '
TiNG,-EUGENE DELACROIX
2:2o-Newt·
g~ J; lhMavle
" And No~ .· ~
: 1". ~ 11:~ .5· :\1~ . :

Free

FURNiTUiE
:
14:H211 ~

27 "Adam-12"

Television
VieWing

1 Justification

called Bang's Disea.se.

'/
•

Pass
Pass
Pass

Aces are mea nt to capture

~======l=·JO=·=·l=m=o~.·

---· ;-~ -

•'

South

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

YEZZIR, THAT'S
WHAT T~ 1 LOOKOUT SAID!

Payrolls, profit &amp; loss
statements, all federal
and state forms.
H&amp;R Block
Office Location
618 E. Main · Pomeroy
992·3795

Padding &amp; CarJIIiet Installed
· •
wlth.Purchase
.

Main St;

East

:ALIEYOOP

Sq. Ft.

~UlLAND

North

Business-Farms

CARPET

$895

West

Opening lead :"' J

SERVICE

'

Rubber

t K87
+Q964 2

ANNIE UNL...E55

"Dol't't cuss-Cat! Us"··

"Drive A LIHie Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

KITCHEN cARPET

• 76
• AQ2

SOUTH
+AKQJ 10

cAR~•trstiO~

Pomeroy .

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATES 949-2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2654 .o r 949-25~1

=~-""'"\ IT APPEARS

+JIO 5

woodburning fireplace ,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WANT TO SELL? - .GIVE US A CALL-

l

Reasonable Rates

Repairs,

equipped kitchen, l'h
baths, mostly carpeted,
two blocks from

WELL K~P·T - 4 BR home, lg . L.R ., tam. room,
eat·in kitchen, attached, garage, hardwOOd floors,
plenty of yard, fr~lt trees &amp; garden space. $411,900.
NEWLY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum . .sided home
wetcomes you with Its spilt entry halt . carpeted
throughout, 3 BR, utility area, sliding glass door to
redwOOd deck. only 4 yrs, old, lmmed. Poss,
$47,500.
.
MUST SELL - 3 BR modular In nice development.
· Includes built·on fa mil\' room, set up tor wOOd burn·
lng stove . .All carpeted, oarllall• closed In carjlort,
storage. Priced to sell $39,000.
PRIVACY - Close to town, 2 BR home. Good size
lot. Needs atlentlo~ . City water. $6,000.

I

Phone 992-2390

AUTOMDBI LE
SURANCE been

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

'I• acre, Crp~ted in beautiful taste. 544,900.

Automotive Repair

Open 9-6 Mon. thru Sat.
Additional Hours
BY Appointment

SEWING

FEMALE BEAGLE . Call
742 2545.

EAST

• K 10 8 5
• 632

and Service. We sharpen

at

chen w-d ishwasher, D . R . w ·sliding glass doors to

WEST
• 9 83

WILL HAUL limestone and

THREE PUPS, males.
Part German Shepherd. 8
weeks old. 949~ 2437.

Two bedroom brick only 1 block

•Jio 1

+A 8 7 3

Middleport, o.

- -

21380

• J63

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris

Giveaway

(Answers romorrow)
SAVOR PAUNCH OBTUSE

Cannibalize winning card

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

,-,,

J XI I X)

Wednesday, Feb . 13

ROOFING

WILL CARE for elderly

Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992-3731

LOTS OF LOTS -

Yesterday's

H. L WRITESEL

and handicapped in my
private home . Reasonable

rates . 992.6() 22 .

CALL 992-2342

patio,

gested by lha abolle cartoon.

act"-VAN ISH

Corporations

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

JV1 YR. OLD RANCH HOME- Just 4 miles from
Pomeroy. Quiet country living in this beautiful 3

chen, -dining room with
w.b. t.p:, washer, dryer,

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
sALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675-4•424,

1965.

S ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot. $7,000.

3

No'l(.,arrange the clrded letters to
answer, as sug-

lo~¥ rne . surprise

Prlntanswerl!ere: (

Lane

Dan iels. New phone num ber, 742 ·2951. Service to
schools and home si nce

REAL ESTATE

c OAL furnace, $50. Console
stereo, $100. Phone 9'12·
6069.

bedroom

TUNING .

Services Offered

JUST LISTED - One of the finest established
residential homes In Racine. This two story with
finished basement boasts of an "up to dale" eat-In
kitchen, formal dining area, family room, 3 to 5
bedrooms, 1'1&gt; baths, thermo windows, (heavily Insulated), carpeted on all31evels, most drapes stay
The exterior is Reilll. Perma Stone, has 2 large in:
vlting porches and a two car garage. All of this and
more for $57.500.
J!JSTLISTED - Good 3 bedrm. house with kitchen,
d1nong &amp; bath. City water and septic. Nice vinyl
siding. Located In Pomeroy Corp, Prlcedat$14,900,
LOTS ON LINCOLN HILL FOR SALE.
BUSINESS &amp; BUILDING FOR SALE IN
POMEROY.
511,000 - Traileer &amp; lot, 3 BR ; all carpeted front
porch, woop underpinning, includes pool. Anxious to
_sell .
WO.N' T LAST - 4 yrs. old, 3 BR, bath &amp; utilities, kllr

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 J bdr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2

PIANO

FINANCING·VA ·FHA LO·
ANS. I:.OW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
DR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614 592-3051.

JOHN Deere Skidder 440t
John Deere Knuckleboom
Ioader, mounted on GMC
Army 6x6 truck . 992·6319.

Mobile Homes- Sale

RACINE, 0.
949-2748 or
992·7314
12 ·28·pd.

CALL 992 -7544

porch, and 2 utll ity
buildings. Must be seen
to appreciate . Just
$20,900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT
- 3 bedroom collage on
1'1&gt; acres. Equipped kit·

excellent shape, AM·FM
stereo radio, new topper,
22 ~ 28 mpg. $2500. Call 992·
6 149 after 5 p.m .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ment .

right house. s7S,OOO.OO price range.

1974 Toyota Hilux pickup.

Reduced Winter Rates

Hours9·1 M., W., F.

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.

992·22S9

rJ

I

PRI,.,TS
FADED OUT, ..

12~ 13 · 2mo.pd.

down

work,
walks
and
driveways.
!FREE ESTIMATES)

$9,900 .

MA~tt,MEROY, O .

Free Estimates

After S P.M. 992-SS47

spouts,, some concrete

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

chen, family room, liv·
ing room, front &amp; back

One owner, low mileage,

work,

Gutter

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

TY

Guaranteed Work

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

$12,500.

608 E.

WOODS FROM
THE POINT
WHE!RE! THE
TISEI'i~ PAW

YUPL .. TAWNY HAIRS._.THE
SAMe COLOR Ali' CLAUDIA!

NORTH
• 512

from center of town. Low utilitie5. A bargain

building. Near river lan·

heater and get 20 Pet.
d iscount on all purpose
satety pipe . 10 Pet.
d iscount on other pipe,

31

•New homes
extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
1· 17· 1 mo.

ces.

MtDDLEPPRT -

heater

c OAL and wood

CONSTRUCTION

Garage

POMEROY- Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom, bath, large
living room, full basement, new furnace. $17,500.

Phone 742-3092
George S. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker 992·S739

with blower, $400. Buy a

Pet. off. Glazes 20 Pet . off .
59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,
OH. 992·2751.

ROUSH

Roger Hysell

ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath, fully equip·
ped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fully furnish·
ed. $25,000.

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

THROLII!iH THE

IF 1 KNOW
ANVTHit.tl!i ABOUT
READit.JG Sl5to.J,
THAT PATCH OF
UNDERE!RUSH WAS
CR!J5HED DOWN
LESoli' THAN AN
HOUR AGO!

UNL.Il!P5 THII:Y STLICI&lt;.
T'THE SEATEN PATH,THEY
MU5T' YE LEFT 50ME
KIND OF TRAIL-!

J

$27,000.

condition. Should sell
fast . $34,900.00.
NEW LISTING
Letart - 12x60 mobile
home on a large tot. 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
also an 8x10 utility

ceramics -

A

EiA5Y'9 BEE"'
ZI--ZAGSIIoJEI

concrete Finishing

WHAi IHE INCOMF"ETENI EMPLOYEE
AI IHE !!lEAN
FAC.IOFn' 601.

II I

·cAPrAIN EASY

Remodeling
Additions

Block Work

8 titS Mon. thru FrL
Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949-2422
1·30·pd.

r

I

VRILED

Siding
Brick Work

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or A bedrooms, 1112 bath, garage.

Middleport.
,We are selling our
homes. May we help you
sen yours?

Phone 992 ·

h

3

setting . Just S45,000.
1 ACRE PLUS -

to invest in a business
building? We hve one!!
Must show genuine in·

QUALITY AND VALUE
- 5 bedroom home, 2
full baths, living room,

GOOD CONDITIONED
hay , clover and orchard
g rass . Delivery available.
Phone 992 7201 or 992 ~ 3309 .

-

rooms and 2 baths, has

EMERGENCY
power
a lternators - own the best
- · buy Winpower. Call 513788 ~ 2589.

FIREWOOD .
5240.

RANCH

loveI y bedroom s, 2 full
baths, large living, formal dining, glass doors
to cover patio. 2 car
garage and 4 lots. River

. N. L ·CONSTRUCTION;
Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

Wed, &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt.
949-2320
Racine, 0.
2·11 mo.

building . $17,500 .
STORAGE - 1 story
quionset hut building
out of a ll fl ood water,
electric, natural gas,
concrete floor, loading
dock, and parking.
80 ACRES - All cleared
and ni ce laying land .
GoOd 10 room house and
many
outbuildings.
About lh fenced. $80,000.

REPAIR

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

216 E. Second Str eet

Real Estate for Sale

B1ll'S AUTO

Menor women
by Diann Jewell
at

terest before we will

Wanted to Buy : Four foot
S·curve ro lltop desk. Call

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewe lry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barbe r

DOUBLE

I DABNtb
I I . .
I

HAIR SmiNG

PHONE 742-2003

3891.

OLD

and buildino . Good la nd .
Mi nera l r ights. 36 acres .
Pom eroy ar ea Phone 99 27559 .

Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

COUNTRY

one letter to eadl square. lo form
four ordinary words.

Business Services

F ARM FO R SALE . Barn

BRICK

'

Volunteer
Fire Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30p .m.
At their bui ldingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only.

CAROLYN

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

pegs . Deposit. 992·2749.

Wanted to Buy

Racine

big

For Rent

15, Pom eroy, OH. 45769. A n
em

- --

Also,

6249 after 5 p.m.

equal opportunity
player.

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

sights .

specia l paint and interior,
24,000 actual, local owner,
best of care. $.430. Ca ll 992·

We have an opening for a
person capable of do in g
payroll, quarterly payrol I
ta&gt;ees, subsid iary journals
'
general ledger and mon
thly financial statements
This is a one person offic e
so all su ndry other c ler ica I
and office duties wil be par t
of this position. Please sen d
resume
and
sa lar y
req uirements to : PO Box

M""day

HEARING

extra padded landau top,

592·5748 .

Noon oo Saturday

Bradbury.

Pontiac Grand Prix,
Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windows, door locks,
1~77

District
Market in g'
Manager, PO Box 416
Athens, OH 45701. Phon e'

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Russell ,

1979 Ford 150 4x~ auto.,
P.S ., P.B .. topper, posi ·
traction front and rear . 985

Health Care Center. Mon

NOTICE

767 ~ 3167

DISCOUNT
PRICES

1974 Ford LTD . Red with

day through Friday, 9·5.

Tbe Publisher reserves Lhe
richt to edit or rtjed any ads
deemed objectional. The
Publlaher will not be re3pomible
for more than one incorrect tnsertion.
Phone 992-2156

SHOOT .

Low mileage. See at 110
Condor iSL Pomeroy, OH .

white vinyl . top, good con ·
dition . No rust, runs good .
AM -FM, air., cru i se con ·

11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Par t

GUN

Auto Sales
1·"9"'
"75:-::
D-"od":'g"'e'"'o art S1ant s i x

~-~

COLOR AND A vETS!;;TTER WARDROBE
SHOULD TAKE
CARE OF THAT.

Unscramble ~~~- four Jumbles,

YEAH - YOU'RE GONNA
BE A BOTTLE BLONDE
AGAIN-.JUST LIKE
TIMES.

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

1978 Datson B ~ 210 . $3450 .
949·2754 after 5.'

75214 .

1.25
1.90
2.25
3.75

l.:iO
l.IID

3dlya
I days

Drawer 140069 , Da llas, T X

Charge

Cash
1.00

ldof

A .CI-IAI'j6E OF HAIR

'i}ft\}~~1} ~THATSCFIAMBLEDWOfiDGAME
~ ~~ ..
byHanriArnoklandlloblae

f!!)

© 1910 Kina Ftatur11 svncucete. tnc.

'.'

. ..
~

.

Maverlcfc: 17.

'·t;

--··

,

u/ ~"-

J,

••

�15- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980
DICK TRACY

14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday , F eb. 13, 1980

Your Best Buys .Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
-----

~-

_HeiJ' WaiJiecl__
ADDRE SS ER s
HOME
want ed . $500 per wee k
possib le. No ex per1en c e
p0
r equir ed
A. S. D ..

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wmls or Under

2daya

3.00

- ----------GET VALUABLE trainin g
as a young bu siness perso n
and earn good money plu s
some great gifts as a Sen
tinel route carrier . Phon e
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992
2156 or 992 ·2157.

Elch word ()Ver the minimllll
1~ words i.s 4 cen~r word per
dly , Ada runninf.

r than con--

aeculive days Will be clulrged at
the 1 day rate.

rr word,

In memory, Card of Thanks

and Obituary : 6 cents
13.00 minimum. Ca

In ad-

RN OR LPN. full time . 3

Mobilt: H001e sales and Y11rd
sales are attept.ed mly with
cash with order. 25 cent charye
for ads carrying Box Nwnber n
Care of The Sentinel.

time RN or LPN, 11to7 : 30
Cal l Mr . Zidian at Pomero y

vance.

trol. $1100.992-7762 .
1973 Pinto
Hatchback ,
auto .• A.C, good condition .

$900. 446·1830 or 446~ 4572.

4339 .

MOTORIST IN SURANC E
Companies have an op
portunity waiting for yho u
in the insurance market, a
chance to build and OW N
your business . Establ ish
your agency on a part t im e
or full time basis. No prio r
experience required. w e
training,
yo u
provide
provide ambition. Call, or
write,
Don
Weidner

Tuesday
thru Friday
I P.M.
lhe day before publico~~tion
SWlday
tP.M.
Friday afternoon

Notices

Park, Route 33, north of

Pomeroy. Large lots.Call
992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 per ton . Bundled
slab. $.10 per ton, Delivered

to Ohio Pallet co., Rt. 2

'

Pomeroy 992·2689.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts . Call992·7787.

THREE BEDROOM house
with bath in Rutland. 992-

5858.
HALF

to Boy Scout Troop 249.

ATTENTION
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques a no col lee·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,

guns, pocket watches and
coin co tlecHons. Call 614·

FURNITURE. ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desk s, etc., complete
household!!-. Write M.D
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca ll9'12·7760.
ANTIQUES,
NITURE, glass,

FUR ~

ch ina ,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques. 26 N.

2nd, MiOdleport, OH. 992·
3161.

or 557·3411.
OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
I ANY
AMOUNT). DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
614 ~99251 13 ,
DIAL
BROWN'S .

ches, class r ings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

silver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,
742·2331. Treasur e Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462 .

Shop, MidOieport.
INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
992 ~

7228 .
AID USERS :

save used batteries, m er cury and silver oxide,
redeem for cash. Diles
Hearing.
Aid
Cen ter ,

Athens. Tel. 614-594-3571.
GOLD,
SIL VER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY IOSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992 ~ 6370. ALSO DO
APPRAI SING .
WILL the party who took
the clothes by m istake
from F ife's Laundromat in

Middleport last Tuesday,
the Sth, please call 992··

5083. Reward, no Questions

742·2316, evenings .
GOLD,
SILVER DR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE .FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY lOSS IE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELL ING .
PHONE 992 ·6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
GOLD
AND
SILVER
CO IN S OF THE WORLD,
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVE R AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD HIGH, HONEST,
UP·TO ·DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . DR CALL
992·3476.
Pets for Sale
HOOF HO LLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ~ 3290.
Bording and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.

asked.

Adults $29.00.

LADY needs ride to Mac·
Donald 's,
Ga llipoli s,
Tuesday
Saturday.

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367 ~0292.

Wi lling to share expenses.

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 61067·7220 .

992·2576 after 5.
SHOOTING
MATCH .
Rutland Gun Club, behind
Stewart's Gun Shop, Smith

Run Rd . . 22 rifles, open
bore

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614 ~ 446 ·7795 .

pistols off hand , 25 yards.
Muzzle loillders and rifles,

50 yards . .22 rifle bench
rest,
100 yards.
No

alcoholic
beverages
allowed . Every Friday
night. 8 p.m . e)(cept last
Friday of eac h month .
Shooter will furnish own
ammunition .
Hel~ Wanted

EMMONS,

fashion accessory com pany, now hiring In this
area. Full and part time
positions open . Car and
telephone necessary1 t n·
terviews Thurs., Fe'b . 14,

10 :30 a.m. 3:00p.m. at Pt .
Pleasant Dept of Em·
ployment Security, 225 6th
St., Pt. Plea&amp;ant, wv . 675·
2770.
SALES TRAINEE . Salary
plus commissions. No ex·

perience necesS&lt;lry. Phone
m·2.et~ .

BLUE TARTAN, Mid ~
dleport . taking oppllcatlons tor waitresses,
no '.xperlence necessary .

Apply In person.

2

bedroom, semi -furnished.
Adults only . No children or

For Sale
COAL,
LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
ch loride, terti lizer, dog

f ood, and all types of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992-

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, · 669 ·
3785.
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at 54 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 6693785,
Fitzpatrick
689.

Orchard,

SR

HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a homeless pet .
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. '192·
626(), noon ~ 7 p.m .
Auto Sales
1977 GMC 1 ton dump,
24,000 miles, radio, P.S.,
P.B., $4950. 7 p.m . until
midnight or before 10 a.m.
742 ·2395 .
1975 Bronco 4X4, V·8, AT,
P.S., posi-traction front
and rear . 5 new tires. 4 new
shocks. 992·2679.

.

1977
P.S.,

THUNDERBIRD,
P.B .. A.C., radio!

tires, reclining seats. AM·

FM . $3100. 247·3594.
1973 GMC van, low
mileage, 6 cyl., std. 992·
5057 .
, 1975 CHEVY BLAZER 4x4,
350. Auto. trans. , PS, P.B.,
· AM 8 ~ track radio. Reese
hitch, tr ailer brt;Jk.es, new

tires. $1600 . 9'12·2467 after
5.30p.m .

-·-·-

-· ·-

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

FAMILY PLACE - 4 or
5 bedrooms, 11/2 baths,

HOUSE tor sa le or trade ·
ranch sty le home with 2
leve l acres, 3 bedrooms,
1'12 baths, extra large kif chen
with
oven ,
refrigerator, large dining
room, ex tra l arge family
room with fireplace. 1 car
garage, lots of carpet . Will
consider mobile home as
trade; in . Call 742· 3119.

HOME

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
avai lable. Located approx.
7 m iles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

formal dining, equipped
kitchen, basement, 2
business rooms or hob·
by shop, and 2 car

garage. only $35,000.
ROOMY - Large frame
home near school and
stores. Has 5 bedrooms,
11/2 baths, gas furnace,
nice carPeting, 2 car
garage, and utility

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
tNVEST -

2 homes on

Beech Grove Road.
Jloth in excellent condi ·
tion. Live in one and

rent the other. Situated
on 10 acres across from
Legion Hall.
RUTLAND Extra
nice 4 bedroom home.

All carpet and drapes
included. This home has

peen well ·kept and see·

1ng it IS believing in it!!

Selling price $35,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS Cozy 2 bedroom starter
home. Only $23,000.00.
NEW HOME - Total
electric, 3 bedrooms .
Quality
throughout .
Situated on a little over
one acre, Sells for

$45,600.00.
NEW LISTING --, Want

give location and price.

DECORATED CAKES for
a II occasions. Character
cakes and sheet cakes . Call
992 ·6342 or 992·2583 .

utility and full

1970 Ma rk Twain V ~ hull, 16
f oot with 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call after 5 p.m ., 992·2528.

PRICE
SALE.
'
WOMEN'S
AND
CHILDREN'S
DRESS
s HOES. NO EXCHANGES
OR
REFUNDS.
ALL
s ALES FINAL. SHOES
WILL BE DISPLAYED ON
METAL SELF·SERVICE
RACKS.
BAILEY'S
sHOES, MIDDLEPORT
F OR THE
F ebruary,

dining room, family
room, modern kitchen,

base ·

ment. Good location in

family

11

home with

centra l heating and city
water. 3 ca r garage w ith
nice rental apt. over,
also small business
building on 3 state
routes. All this going for

$30,000.
RETIREE HOME - A
nic e 1 bedroom home
with like new woodwork
inside
Utility room,
natural gas central
heat, city water and
over 2 acres of privacy . .

Only $20,000.
BUY NOW BEFORE
SPRING tNFLATtON .
WE HAVE 9S% FINAN·
Cl NG. CALL 992 ~ 3325 or
992-3876.

Housing
Head! uarters

month

of

Drehel ' s
greenware 30

Phone 742~2003
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .

mats and fixtures .

F IRE WOOD , dry har ·
d wood, SJO lead . Tire
c hains, l Sin., top condition,
$25. M ixed hay, square
bales, 7c . 742 ~ 2359 .

mile oft Rt. 7 by-pass

on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland .

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4

30 ·ffc

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

Other times by appoint107 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy, 0.

Real Estate for Sale

NEW

LISTING

-

bedroom ranch, approx.
4 yrs. old, large modern
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,
separae utility, wood burner, one acre. Good

Jing, Hydro plant &amp; the
new bridge. Priced at
$16,000.00.
NEW LtSTtNG - This 6
room house has had ex·
tensive remodeling done
and is In very good con-

dition . It has 3
bedrooms, equipped kit·

full basement, enclosed
, rear porch. F rult trees,

1971 Freedom mobile home
14x64. 3 bedroom Including
f ull length awning, central
al r, located on spacious lot
w hich can be rented. S7900.
contact Kingsbury Mobile
H orne Sales at 992·7034,

·------ - ·- · - -

I 977 2 bedrQOm Hillcrest
12x60. Furnished or un·
f urni~hed. washer and
dryer &lt;an be Included. 992·
61 AO after 4:30.

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI

Trom,

Referen·

742 ~ 2328.

bedroom, two bath with central heat and air condi·
tion. over J acres of flat land with a split rail fence,

WILL DO babysitting
evenings. 992 ~6372.

garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·

MIDDLEPORT .$4,500.

garden space. Country
living
tor
only
$30,000.00.
PRICE REDUCED New home, about 111:2
years old. Built·i n kit·
chen with bar, dining
room. J bedrooms, 2

baths, living room with
w .b .f .p. and heatllator,
All carpeted and many
more features . Now
$39,900.00.
VACANT LAND - Ap·
prox. 12112 acres near

Rutland on
Happy
Hollow
Rd.
All
minerals. $25,375.00,
RENTAL INVE;ST MENT - 3 bedrooms,
bath, kitchen, living
room .

Owner

wants

$6,500,00,
BUYING OR SELLING
- CALL US - THEN
START PACKING.
R·EALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr,
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
74Z·2474
Jean Trusseii"94P-2660
OFFICE PHONE
99H259

Jumbles TYING

I Answer :

;BORN LOSER

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters and

~WJ~e;JJ ORB\!:&gt; ~D ME:, we; C.4i ~
AllSWER..-:&gt;.-. A~ $~5 QIET\0\.l

downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

WHO WAS ~6ALL'S LAST

-

~~c:roMJ~~

What ~he audience began to do when the
ham magician put on h 1s "disappearing

BRIDGE

- = - - - -=-==:=
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Calt Howard
949·2862
1·22·ttc

DILLON
REALTY
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedroom home, new
vinyl siding, Insulated,
new FA gas furnace,

TWO BEDROOM home

downtown.
'

located

on one acre,

Middleport area, trailer
hookup for additional in·
come. $11,000.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

MIDDLEPORT AREA
2 bedroom home,
paneling and carpet,
eat·in kitchen. $10,500.

"WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN.

WANTED- Nice home with 4 or 5 bedrooms, faiiu-

JUST OFF SR 7, 2
bedroom home, hard· ·

ly room &amp; garage. Six to ten yrs. old. Five to 10
minutes from Pomeroy . We have a buyer for the

wood floors, new ·paneling, on tour acres of

land, barn, in Mid ~
dleport area, will sell on
land contract, $12,500.

•'

INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Well
established business In
the heart of Middleport,
on corner lot, plus 4
opartments all present~
ly rented. Sell all or
part,

DILLON
REAL ESTATE
Hobart Dllloh, Broker
Fay Manley,
BranchMgr.
Phone 992-2598

From 1 to 7S acres, bordering

,.uo•••

THAT SAND"(

00E5N'T WIGH
US TO CAMP
FOR THE
NIG~T YET...

1

EASY, OCD
FELLOW ... WE'll
N EVE~ FINO

.974
t AQ 9 5

WE'RE F'RESH
FO~ EACH DAY'$

+K

JOIJRNE'! ...

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

1·18-(po.)

TRI-COUNTY

Q~[BOOKKEEPING

Bac~ed

Partnerships &amp;

~

~·

•

-.

j

•

2+
3'1•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

3t
4+

t+

MACHINE
service,

makes.
Fabri c

Shop,

Authorized

The

Pomeroy .

Singer

entry to take a diamond
finesse . It was suocessful and
South made his game.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR1SE ASSN)

{For a copy of JACOBY
. MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489. Radio City
S tatiOn , New York. N . Y.
10019.)

~~~~

all

992 ·2284.

Fore~ight and reasoning are
vito l at trick one. Many hands
are lost at t hi s early juncture
by carel ess play or lack of
thought.
The bidding ' was simple
North scraped up a two-spade
response and South ostensibly
made a game try of three
diamonds. North rejected this
inv ilation and South, who had
visions of slam , carried on to
game.
The opening lead was the
jack of clubs. Declarer paused
before pl aying to the first
trick. It was tempting to win
the king of clubs in the closed
hand and hope to later discard
a heart loser on the ace. But
there was no immediate entrv
to dummy If South wins the
club king, draws trump and
leads a small diamond to
dummy, eit her defender
would then come to one diamond trick and three heart
tricks before the club ace
could be utilized.
Therefore, South won the
opemng club lead with the
ace, cannibalizing his king, in ·

order to make use of dummy's

opposing kings. Second hand
should play low.
' Today's declarer was no
slavish follower of si mple
rules. He realized that eve ry
hand has its own character
and that general rules, no
matter how sound in principle. don 't always a~ply.

Trucking. Phone 742 ·2455.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Sales

ACROSS

Scissors.

2 Cancel, as a

1Mijitary

space shot
headquarters· 3 You're
5 Verdi's
darn tootin
"Den-~~
4 French
11 Touch on
season
12 Lustrous
5 Trig
13 Achy
function
14 Islamic
6 Coffeetribesman
brewing
giveaway
of Africa
15 Anger
7 Wheel part
16 Take a S--Sure thing :
view of
slang
17 Dolores - Rio 9 Away
18 Vigor
from camp
20 Mrs. Nixon 10 Pompous
21 Economize
16 Bistro of
22 Split
ill-repute
23 Adhesive
25 Dawdled
26 Pale
with rage
27 Marceau's
26 River: Sp.

IN ·
can·

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

'192·2143.
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery : various sizes of

pool kits. Do · it ~ yourselt or
let us install for you. D.
Bumgardner

Sales,

Inc.

992~ 5724 .

BRADFORD,

Auctioneer,

Complete Service . Phone

949·24117 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford .

WINNIE

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ~
3825 .

• "10U GUYS SCARED

~ E LIVING fJAY'LIGH15 OUTOF
ME. HDN'D YOU

GET IN ?

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
steam cleaned . Free
estimate,
Reasonable
rates, Scotchguard. 992"··
6309 or 742 ~2211 .
,)
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742 ~ 2328.

Yesterday's Answer
19 Bombay
servant
22 Georgia

city
Z3 N.J. city
24 Stupid
25 Noon,
in

Nantes

29 COCktail

.·'

32 Upward:
prefix

and;

33 Man's name

34-Jima
35 Hand warmer·m--t--t--+In 1896, Bernhard Bang,
a Danish veterinarian,

37 Problem
38Eastem

discovered the causative

Christian
port

agent of brucellosis in cattle. This dlsease-calllling

38 Israeli

40 Almost a

organism- known today as
Brucella abortus -

grad
41 Strop

has

been eradicated in Denmark but still causes•
problems for U, S. cattle
producers ,
Bovini
brucell06ls iB sometimes .

DOWN

BEDROQM&amp;
. Li\IIJtQJi_QQM

•'

·I'
·~\

.'

'

I WONDER WHO IT'S
A 601( LIKE5 TO kNOW
GOIN6To
13E ..I HOPE HE'S
.A GIRL IS INTERESTED
ENOlJ6H BE READV . A600D [7ANCER ... IT'LL

ro

29 Look after
30 Cognizant
31 Thesaurus
compiler

36 Bangkok
native: var.
37Maxim

33.

11 . 30-College Basketball 3; ABC
News Special 6, 13; Mary Hart.
man, Mary. Hartman 8; aBC
Captioned News 33.
11 :45-Love Boat6,13; 12:30-Movle
"Overboard" .·8; News l7.
12 :35-Movie "The Lusty Men " 17;
12 :55-Baretta 6,13.
1:DO-News 15; 1:30-Tomorrow 3;
2 :05-News 13.
3:00- Movle "Tension at Table
Rock" 17 ; 5:DO-Lovet American
Style 17.
"'THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; World at .
Large 17; 5:50--PTL Club 13.
6 :D0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6 30-For You ... Biack Woman 10; ·
News 17; 6:45-Morning Report :
3; A.M. Weather 133; 6:50--Good '
Morning WeVVirglnla 13; 6:55-:
News 13.
•.·
7: DO-Today 3;!5;· GOOd Morning
America 6,·l3;

Thu~sday

Mar.

11ing 8 ; Batman 10 : WTBS
F unhouse 17.
7:30-Family Affair 10; i:55-Chuc~
White Repor.ts 10.
8:DO-Capioln KangarooB;lO; Leave
It To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8: 30-Romper Room 17.
'
9:DO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Lucy Show 17 .
9: 30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day at a
Time 10; Green Acres 17 .
IO:DO-Card Sharks 3, 15; Jeffersons.
8: Joker's Wild 10; Morning·
Magazine
Fury" 17.

13 ;

Movie

"Young

10 :30- Hollywood Squares 3,15; .
$20,0110 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-C BS News 8; House Call 10.·
11 :DO-High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price is Right ;, ~ 0. ·
11 :30- Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud.- 6, 13; Sesame St.
20; 11 : 55-N'IWS 17 .
12 : 00-Newsclli\fer
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Heillih Field 15; Love.
American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10 ; Password Plus
15; Movie "You're Never Too
Young" 17; Elec. Co. 20,33.
·
1:DO-Days of Our Llv~'s 3, 15 ; All My
Children 6,13 ; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2 :DO-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8,10i
2:25-News 17 .
2: 30- Another
World
3, 15;
Gigglesnort Hotel 17,
3: 00-General
Hospital
6, 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Masterpiece Theatre 20.
3: 30-F lints tones 17.
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; Brady Bunch
10; Tom &amp; JetTy 13 ; Merv Griffin
15; 'Gilllgan's-ls. 17.
5:DO-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers .
' 20,33.
-::.
5:~0-Mash 3; Jolews 6; Play lhe .
Percentageli,lf,J; E lee. Co. 20; ·
Mash 10; Happy· pays Again 13; I
Dream of ~.eannle 17; Doctor ·
Who 33.
6:DO-News 3,8,1i!-J3,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett17 ; 3·2-1 Contact
20.33.
'
.
6:30-NBC News~,15; ABC News 13; ·
Carol Burnetr6; CBS. New~ 8,10; :
Bob Newharl17: ·VIIIa Alegre 20; .
Wild Wild World of Animals 33 . ·
7:DO-Cross·Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil · Lehi er Report 33 ;
Love, American Style 15; Sanlord &amp; Son 17; 0 lck Cavell 20. ·
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; In
Search Of ~; Joker's. Wild 8;
$100,000 Niitlie That tune 10; ·
Nashville cin· the ·Road 13; :
Country Roaqs 15; ,O.tl In The
Family 17 ; . )~\ac~eii . Lehrer
Report 20, · ·.', .
'
8 :DO-Buck R~l· 3, 1~1·· Mork &amp;
Mindy 6,13; :·~p ltons: ~,10; Bill
Moyers' J ~'1 20,33; Movie ·
" Blue Haw
.~)7.
••.·
·
8:30-X III Win ~~bly~( Games :
6,13.

~

'

.

'

'

u!l-lEN HE CALLS...

b•v

ALSO HELP IF HE'S A
.-REAL SHARP PRE55ER ...

wo

·

.

star

FEBRUARY 13,1980
'
7 . ~ Country · Roads 3;: Match
Game PM k Joker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavett 33; The Judge 10; :
Fam ily Feud 13; Wild Kingdom '
15; NHL H&lt;&gt;&lt;:i&lt;ey 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Reporl 20.
B DO-Real People 3, 15; Eight is '
Enough 13; Bugs Bunny 8, 10; '
Edward &amp; Mrs. Simpsoo 6;
Great Perfor-mances 20,33.
8 : 30-Popeye 8, 10. .
9 :DO-Difl'rent Slrokes 3,15; XIII
Winter Olympic Games 6, 13;
Movie "lhorc l st II : The
Heretic" 8,10; 9:30-Hello, Larry
3, 15 .
.. .
9 :45- Ral Patrot.17 ; 10 :DO-Best of
Saturday Nigh!· live 3,15 ; Ritual
33; News 20,: ..
10 : 15- Love, American Style 17.
10 : 30-China : t,.nd of My Father :
33 ; NBA B_.ketball 17 ; Over
Easy 20 .
·
11 : 00- News ~,6;8, 10 , 13, 15; Dick
Ca•etf 20; Wodehouse Playhouse •

9:DO-Steve Martin 3,15; Barnaby :
Jones 8; Snea~ Previews 20,33;
College Basketball 10, ,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
9
:
30-Camera
T(\ree 24; Sports
AXYDLBAAXR
Close Up 33. .
·
Is LONGFELLOW
10:()0-..{;)ulncy 3,151 Knots Landing
8; J&gt;olltlcal Talk 17; News 20; ·
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Austin City ·(l"rnlfs 33; ·10 :30- :
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
Over
Easy 20; '
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
11:DO-News 3.6,8,10,13,15; Last of :
hints. Each day the code letters are dilleren t.
the Wild 17; Dl~l(Cav~tt :io; Fall ,
CRYPTOQUOTES
&amp; Rise of Reglriald ·P...rln 33.
,
11 :30-Tonight 3;15; x'jj1 Winter ,
Olympic Gii'jlo!ti Updatw 6, 13; :
U YK
EKM
J VK Y K
OPYYPMO,
ABC C~ptlolljd !'fewt 33 ; Movie •
" Th~ ~lrds' ' ~q; ·Movijt·"The Sl. '
VPMKH~Y
NPWXBUBJ,
WB
MVWLV
Valentine's
Massacre" 17.
11 : 45-ABC News' Special ~. 13; •
WBLPQK
PE
u XPPC
Bli'
12:DO-Pollce' Wo'.man 6,l3.
' '
1:DO-Tomorrow . ~~ 1:1o.;.:.Barella ~
U H U W A . A P X U B
N .
0 QW J V
6, t3; Black ~h-·p S~!iladron 8; '
1:35-News '1), ,,,
· :,
·
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IF ONE CONSIDERED LIFE AS A ··
1
SIMPLE LOAI'i; ONE WOULD PERHAPS BE LESS EXAC- . · 1:40-Mo
. vll! . . ~.
ot Cfiio~cle~' .17; '
TiNG,-EUGENE DELACROIX
2:2o-Newt·
g~ J; lhMavle
" And No~ .· ~
: 1". ~ 11:~ .5· :\1~ . :

Free

FURNiTUiE
:
14:H211 ~

27 "Adam-12"

Television
VieWing

1 Justification

called Bang's Disea.se.

'/
•

Pass
Pass
Pass

Aces are mea nt to capture

~======l=·JO=·=·l=m=o~.·

---· ;-~ -

•'

South

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

YEZZIR, THAT'S
WHAT T~ 1 LOOKOUT SAID!

Payrolls, profit &amp; loss
statements, all federal
and state forms.
H&amp;R Block
Office Location
618 E. Main · Pomeroy
992·3795

Padding &amp; CarJIIiet Installed
· •
wlth.Purchase
.

Main St;

East

:ALIEYOOP

Sq. Ft.

~UlLAND

North

Business-Farms

CARPET

$895

West

Opening lead :"' J

SERVICE

'

Rubber

t K87
+Q964 2

ANNIE UNL...E55

"Dol't't cuss-Cat! Us"··

"Drive A LIHie Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

KITCHEN cARPET

• 76
• AQ2

SOUTH
+AKQJ 10

cAR~•trstiO~

Pomeroy .

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATES 949-2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2654 .o r 949-25~1

=~-""'"\ IT APPEARS

+JIO 5

woodburning fireplace ,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WANT TO SELL? - .GIVE US A CALL-

l

Reasonable Rates

Repairs,

equipped kitchen, l'h
baths, mostly carpeted,
two blocks from

WELL K~P·T - 4 BR home, lg . L.R ., tam. room,
eat·in kitchen, attached, garage, hardwOOd floors,
plenty of yard, fr~lt trees &amp; garden space. $411,900.
NEWLY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum . .sided home
wetcomes you with Its spilt entry halt . carpeted
throughout, 3 BR, utility area, sliding glass door to
redwOOd deck. only 4 yrs, old, lmmed. Poss,
$47,500.
.
MUST SELL - 3 BR modular In nice development.
· Includes built·on fa mil\' room, set up tor wOOd burn·
lng stove . .All carpeted, oarllall• closed In carjlort,
storage. Priced to sell $39,000.
PRIVACY - Close to town, 2 BR home. Good size
lot. Needs atlentlo~ . City water. $6,000.

I

Phone 992-2390

AUTOMDBI LE
SURANCE been

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

'I• acre, Crp~ted in beautiful taste. 544,900.

Automotive Repair

Open 9-6 Mon. thru Sat.
Additional Hours
BY Appointment

SEWING

FEMALE BEAGLE . Call
742 2545.

EAST

• K 10 8 5
• 632

and Service. We sharpen

at

chen w-d ishwasher, D . R . w ·sliding glass doors to

WEST
• 9 83

WILL HAUL limestone and

THREE PUPS, males.
Part German Shepherd. 8
weeks old. 949~ 2437.

Two bedroom brick only 1 block

•Jio 1

+A 8 7 3

Middleport, o.

- -

21380

• J63

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris

Giveaway

(Answers romorrow)
SAVOR PAUNCH OBTUSE

Cannibalize winning card

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

,-,,

J XI I X)

Wednesday, Feb . 13

ROOFING

WILL CARE for elderly

Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992-3731

LOTS OF LOTS -

Yesterday's

H. L WRITESEL

and handicapped in my
private home . Reasonable

rates . 992.6() 22 .

CALL 992-2342

patio,

gested by lha abolle cartoon.

act"-VAN ISH

Corporations

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

JV1 YR. OLD RANCH HOME- Just 4 miles from
Pomeroy. Quiet country living in this beautiful 3

chen, -dining room with
w.b. t.p:, washer, dryer,

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
sALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675-4•424,

1965.

S ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot. $7,000.

3

No'l(.,arrange the clrded letters to
answer, as sug-

lo~¥ rne . surprise

Prlntanswerl!ere: (

Lane

Dan iels. New phone num ber, 742 ·2951. Service to
schools and home si nce

REAL ESTATE

c OAL furnace, $50. Console
stereo, $100. Phone 9'12·
6069.

bedroom

TUNING .

Services Offered

JUST LISTED - One of the finest established
residential homes In Racine. This two story with
finished basement boasts of an "up to dale" eat-In
kitchen, formal dining area, family room, 3 to 5
bedrooms, 1'1&gt; baths, thermo windows, (heavily Insulated), carpeted on all31evels, most drapes stay
The exterior is Reilll. Perma Stone, has 2 large in:
vlting porches and a two car garage. All of this and
more for $57.500.
J!JSTLISTED - Good 3 bedrm. house with kitchen,
d1nong &amp; bath. City water and septic. Nice vinyl
siding. Located In Pomeroy Corp, Prlcedat$14,900,
LOTS ON LINCOLN HILL FOR SALE.
BUSINESS &amp; BUILDING FOR SALE IN
POMEROY.
511,000 - Traileer &amp; lot, 3 BR ; all carpeted front
porch, woop underpinning, includes pool. Anxious to
_sell .
WO.N' T LAST - 4 yrs. old, 3 BR, bath &amp; utilities, kllr

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 J bdr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2

PIANO

FINANCING·VA ·FHA LO·
ANS. I:.OW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
DR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614 592-3051.

JOHN Deere Skidder 440t
John Deere Knuckleboom
Ioader, mounted on GMC
Army 6x6 truck . 992·6319.

Mobile Homes- Sale

RACINE, 0.
949-2748 or
992·7314
12 ·28·pd.

CALL 992 -7544

porch, and 2 utll ity
buildings. Must be seen
to appreciate . Just
$20,900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT
- 3 bedroom collage on
1'1&gt; acres. Equipped kit·

excellent shape, AM·FM
stereo radio, new topper,
22 ~ 28 mpg. $2500. Call 992·
6 149 after 5 p.m .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ment .

right house. s7S,OOO.OO price range.

1974 Toyota Hilux pickup.

Reduced Winter Rates

Hours9·1 M., W., F.

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.

992·22S9

rJ

I

PRI,.,TS
FADED OUT, ..

12~ 13 · 2mo.pd.

down

work,
walks
and
driveways.
!FREE ESTIMATES)

$9,900 .

MA~tt,MEROY, O .

Free Estimates

After S P.M. 992-SS47

spouts,, some concrete

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

chen, family room, liv·
ing room, front &amp; back

One owner, low mileage,

work,

Gutter

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

TY

Guaranteed Work

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

$12,500.

608 E.

WOODS FROM
THE POINT
WHE!RE! THE
TISEI'i~ PAW

YUPL .. TAWNY HAIRS._.THE
SAMe COLOR Ali' CLAUDIA!

NORTH
• 512

from center of town. Low utilitie5. A bargain

building. Near river lan·

heater and get 20 Pet.
d iscount on all purpose
satety pipe . 10 Pet.
d iscount on other pipe,

31

•New homes
extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
1· 17· 1 mo.

ces.

MtDDLEPPRT -

heater

c OAL and wood

CONSTRUCTION

Garage

POMEROY- Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom, bath, large
living room, full basement, new furnace. $17,500.

Phone 742-3092
George S. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker 992·S739

with blower, $400. Buy a

Pet. off. Glazes 20 Pet . off .
59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,
OH. 992·2751.

ROUSH

Roger Hysell

ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath, fully equip·
ped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fully furnish·
ed. $25,000.

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

THROLII!iH THE

IF 1 KNOW
ANVTHit.tl!i ABOUT
READit.JG Sl5to.J,
THAT PATCH OF
UNDERE!RUSH WAS
CR!J5HED DOWN
LESoli' THAN AN
HOUR AGO!

UNL.Il!P5 THII:Y STLICI&lt;.
T'THE SEATEN PATH,THEY
MU5T' YE LEFT 50ME
KIND OF TRAIL-!

J

$27,000.

condition. Should sell
fast . $34,900.00.
NEW LISTING
Letart - 12x60 mobile
home on a large tot. 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
also an 8x10 utility

ceramics -

A

EiA5Y'9 BEE"'
ZI--ZAGSIIoJEI

concrete Finishing

WHAi IHE INCOMF"ETENI EMPLOYEE
AI IHE !!lEAN
FAC.IOFn' 601.

II I

·cAPrAIN EASY

Remodeling
Additions

Block Work

8 titS Mon. thru FrL
Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949-2422
1·30·pd.

r

I

VRILED

Siding
Brick Work

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or A bedrooms, 1112 bath, garage.

Middleport.
,We are selling our
homes. May we help you
sen yours?

Phone 992 ·

h

3

setting . Just S45,000.
1 ACRE PLUS -

to invest in a business
building? We hve one!!
Must show genuine in·

QUALITY AND VALUE
- 5 bedroom home, 2
full baths, living room,

GOOD CONDITIONED
hay , clover and orchard
g rass . Delivery available.
Phone 992 7201 or 992 ~ 3309 .

-

rooms and 2 baths, has

EMERGENCY
power
a lternators - own the best
- · buy Winpower. Call 513788 ~ 2589.

FIREWOOD .
5240.

RANCH

loveI y bedroom s, 2 full
baths, large living, formal dining, glass doors
to cover patio. 2 car
garage and 4 lots. River

. N. L ·CONSTRUCTION;
Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

Wed, &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt.
949-2320
Racine, 0.
2·11 mo.

building . $17,500 .
STORAGE - 1 story
quionset hut building
out of a ll fl ood water,
electric, natural gas,
concrete floor, loading
dock, and parking.
80 ACRES - All cleared
and ni ce laying land .
GoOd 10 room house and
many
outbuildings.
About lh fenced. $80,000.

REPAIR

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

216 E. Second Str eet

Real Estate for Sale

B1ll'S AUTO

Menor women
by Diann Jewell
at

terest before we will

Wanted to Buy : Four foot
S·curve ro lltop desk. Call

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewe lry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barbe r

DOUBLE

I DABNtb
I I . .
I

HAIR SmiNG

PHONE 742-2003

3891.

OLD

and buildino . Good la nd .
Mi nera l r ights. 36 acres .
Pom eroy ar ea Phone 99 27559 .

Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

COUNTRY

one letter to eadl square. lo form
four ordinary words.

Business Services

F ARM FO R SALE . Barn

BRICK

'

Volunteer
Fire Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30p .m.
At their bui ldingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only.

CAROLYN

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

pegs . Deposit. 992·2749.

Wanted to Buy

Racine

big

For Rent

15, Pom eroy, OH. 45769. A n
em

- --

Also,

6249 after 5 p.m.

equal opportunity
player.

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

sights .

specia l paint and interior,
24,000 actual, local owner,
best of care. $.430. Ca ll 992·

We have an opening for a
person capable of do in g
payroll, quarterly payrol I
ta&gt;ees, subsid iary journals
'
general ledger and mon
thly financial statements
This is a one person offic e
so all su ndry other c ler ica I
and office duties wil be par t
of this position. Please sen d
resume
and
sa lar y
req uirements to : PO Box

M""day

HEARING

extra padded landau top,

592·5748 .

Noon oo Saturday

Bradbury.

Pontiac Grand Prix,
Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windows, door locks,
1~77

District
Market in g'
Manager, PO Box 416
Athens, OH 45701. Phon e'

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Russell ,

1979 Ford 150 4x~ auto.,
P.S ., P.B .. topper, posi ·
traction front and rear . 985

Health Care Center. Mon

NOTICE

767 ~ 3167

DISCOUNT
PRICES

1974 Ford LTD . Red with

day through Friday, 9·5.

Tbe Publisher reserves Lhe
richt to edit or rtjed any ads
deemed objectional. The
Publlaher will not be re3pomible
for more than one incorrect tnsertion.
Phone 992-2156

SHOOT .

Low mileage. See at 110
Condor iSL Pomeroy, OH .

white vinyl . top, good con ·
dition . No rust, runs good .
AM -FM, air., cru i se con ·

11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Par t

GUN

Auto Sales
1·"9"'
"75:-::
D-"od":'g"'e'"'o art S1ant s i x

~-~

COLOR AND A vETS!;;TTER WARDROBE
SHOULD TAKE
CARE OF THAT.

Unscramble ~~~- four Jumbles,

YEAH - YOU'RE GONNA
BE A BOTTLE BLONDE
AGAIN-.JUST LIKE
TIMES.

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

1978 Datson B ~ 210 . $3450 .
949·2754 after 5.'

75214 .

1.25
1.90
2.25
3.75

l.:iO
l.IID

3dlya
I days

Drawer 140069 , Da llas, T X

Charge

Cash
1.00

ldof

A .CI-IAI'j6E OF HAIR

'i}ft\}~~1} ~THATSCFIAMBLEDWOfiDGAME
~ ~~ ..
byHanriArnoklandlloblae

f!!)

© 1910 Kina Ftatur11 svncucete. tnc.

'.'

. ..
~

.

Maverlcfc: 17.

'·t;

--··

,

u/ ~"-

J,

••

�16- The Daily Sentinel, r.tiddleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, Feb. 13, 198()

Stud;.~,!!.~., drinking
197 ~ .

Swpt. Gleason proposed that the board vote $2,241 for the high school band
fund to pay outstanding bills including majorette and flag advisor fees. The
band boosters would still owe a $J,a00 note at The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., Gleason reported.
Mrs. Maxine Goeglein, booster president, outlined expenditures in excess of
$10,000 during the year. Mrs. Goeglein indicated the note probably would have
been paid off had the football season taken place.
Gleason said the bank reported that only the mterest on the note had been
paid since December, 1978. He said the $2,241 was about the same percentage
given the athletic boosters.
Snowden noted there are many students in band. He urged full payment of
bills so seniors could have a ba~d trip this spring.
_
Board members Dick Vaughan and Carol Pierce indicated that they felt the
band boosters could pay off the $3,:&gt;00 note without the board's help.
Vaughan said that he does feel that students have been penalized by the iack
of activities during the strike period.
Gleason sa id that if the board picks up the note it would establish a precedent.
One patron said band morale was very low and urged the board to pay off the
note so that the band boosters and band co uld get a good start for next year.
Snowden moved pay off the entire indebtedness, $5,741. He and Vaughan supported the motion with Dr. Keith Riggs, Larry Powell and Pierce voting against
it.
Dr. Riggs said later he would change his vote and support payment of all of
the boosters' bills. He was changing his vote "to create harmony which a lvt of
people in this room aren't interested in," he said. His changed vote passed the
motion.
Again, a 3-2 vote developed on the employment of McDowall and -Whalen of
Cuyahoga Falls to serve as legal consultants for the board.
Snowden said that he had checked with Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow
about handling the legal work. He said Crow told him that he handled the work
of the Southern and Eastern Districts and could do the same for Meigs Local.
Snowden said that the Cuyahoga Falls firm was paid $3:&gt;,000 last year during
the strike.
Dr. Riggs said that he felt legal consultants are necessary since the Ohio
Education Association sends in a staff of personnel during strike to assist
teachers.
Supt. Gleason said that Crow had been ve ry helpful.
Vaughan said that we "old country boys" could probably work out problems
better than outside attorneys.
Phil Ohlinger, one who attended the meeting, said the teachers strike could
have been settled originally for less than was pa1d out in attorney fees and for
guards.
Snowden said he is securing strike cost figures from Treasurer Wagner.
Voting to hire the legal firm were Riggs, Powell and Pierce, board members
at the time of the strike. Vaughan and Snowden voted against the hiring.
A group of substitute employes appeared before the board to ask for more
pay, Leta Hall, who spoke for the group, asked for $18 a day for substitute bus
drivers and $3.30 an hour for other substitute personnel.
Treasurer Wagner will fi gure the additional costs fur the next meeting. Any
pay increase for the substitutes will be retroactive, the group was told.
Due to the Southeast Regional Spring Conference in Athens March 11 the
board meeting was changed to Ma rch 20.
'
A contract was given Stephen Carrier for revision on the procedural guide
used in a funded Title IV-C project underway in the district.
Mrs. Robert Snowden, wife of the board member, told the board that Supt.
Gleason had indicated that he had called her to advise her husband of a board
meeting in December. Mrs. Snowden said that she did not receive such a call at
her home nor did any of her fami ly. She did indicate upon questioning that
Gleason had telephoned her this month.
Board member 'Snowden said that he had tried to return the call but was
unable to get Gleason. Mrs. Snowden said that she wanted the December
situation clarified.
Supt. Gleason reported on the work deU!il program which he had ca rri ed out
recently lor four Meigs High students who were drinking at a school event.
Board MellJ.ber Snowden said that board policy provides that such students be
expelled for the remamder of the semester and that Gleason had violated that
policy.
Gleason reportedly had checked by telephone with four of the board members
before putting the work detail into effect. He said he had expelled the students
but reinstated them after they carried out the work detail program with the
help of a number of community volunteers.
High school teacher Mike Gerlach said it was wrong to reduce the expulsion
period. The change of policy by Gleason, he said, created a double standard and
creates a problem for teachers on how to deal with such student behavior.
Gerlach said the four students actually were on the work detail for only four
da ys.
"Anyone can act good for four days," he said.
Gerlach said a work program would be good during expulsion, but that expulston should have been kept in ccordance with policy' to the end of the
semester . He asked that teachers be polled on the issue.
Vaughan said that he felt the present policy should be revised.
"We all have a·double standard, so to speak," Vaughan said. He said he hoped
that some good kids would be helped.
" Mr. Pierce, I'm about to explode," Gleason said. He took the floor to defen d
the work detail program.
"The kids are the most important thing. All kids are food ," Gleason said. He
again stressed points of his program set up for the four students ca ught
drinking at the school event.
Gleason commended the community voluntee rs who assisted with the work
and told of a visit by the four offenders to the Ohio Youth Conunission camp
near Toledo where they talked to an offender in solitary confinement.
Snowden satd that policy had been violated and that he would check into
litigation. He told other board members that they could not change policy by a
telephonecaII .
Referring to Gleason, Snowden charged that it is senseless to have policies as
long as "he" can break them.
" If he can tear it apart, you don 't have a school board," Snowden said. The
board took, no action to change the expulsion policy.
REQUEST DISCUSSED
The board discussed a request from the Village of Rutland for the use of

issue highly

the Rutland Gytru;~astwn as a village hall. The village would maintain the
bulld~ng and tl would revert to the district if it were not used by the village.
Several board members indicated that they would be in favor of such an
action since Pomeroy Village was given the same privilege with the
Pomeroy Semor Htgh butldmg several years ago. However, no vote was
taken on the matter.
A request was also received from Chris Layh, superintendent for the
Meigs CoWtty Board of Mental Retardation, for use of the former Pomeroy
Junior High as a school for the retarded when it is vacated by the senior
ctttzens. The butlding would be used for one year. No action was taken on
that matter either with Gleason named to secure mo~e details on the matter.
Rtggs pomted out that operatmg costs at the jumor high now run about
$_25,000 a year and there is only one class held there. Snowden said he would
ltkc a report on whether students attending the mining class held in that

John L. Greer frmeral
servi·ces set Thursday
'

JOHN L. GREER
Funeral services will be held
Thursday in the Mark Funeral
Home, Knoxville, Tenn. , for John L.
Greer, 82, prominent businessman
in Knoxville and Miami , Fla.
Mr. Greer died Monday in the
Miami Hea rt lnsitute in Miami.
He is survived by his wife, Esther
Bradbury Allen Greer, formerly of
Middleport; two sons, two daughters
and several grandchildren.
In 1977, Mr. Greer received an
honora ry degree (Doctor of
Humanities) from Rio Grande
College-Community College during
spring conunencement ceremonies.
Rio Grande President Paul Hayes
said today, "Rio Grande Colle£e-

Community College has lost a great
friend and benefactor in the death of
John L. Greer."
Area residents will remember Mr.
Greer for his deep interest in horse
racing, particularly the feats of
million dollar Kentucky Derby win·
ner, Foolish Pleasure.
In addition to his interest in
colleges and universities, Mr. Greer
was a firm believer in the free enterprise system, and was a patron of
the performing arts in New York,
Miami and Knoxville.
He was a deacon in the First Saplist Church of Knoxville and was an
active member in the Church by the
Sea in Miami.

Area deaths
son, Gary Ray.
Mrs. Pickens was a member of the
Bradford Church of Christ.
Friends may call at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. Thursday and until 12: 30
p.m. Friday when the body will be
taken to the church.

VERNON A. HYSELL
Vernon A. Hysell,. 49, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, died Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Hysell was born Sept. I, 1930.
He was preceded in death by his
father, Joseph E. Hysell, one
brother and one sister.
He was a member of Rutland
American Legion, Fraternal Order
of Eagles, Carpenters Local 650 and
served in the Korean conflict.
He is survived by his mother,
Mary Ann Hysell, Pqmeroy ; one
brother, Dale A. Hysell, Middleport ;
one sister, Mrs. John (Roberta) Jeffers, Minersville; nephews, Billy
and Bobby Hysell ; nlece, Debbie
Young, great niece, Amy Young.
· Funeral services will be held
Friday at 3 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Cecil Wise officiating.
Burial will be in Rock Springs
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. on Wednesday.

BONNIE SUE PICKENS
Funeral services for Mrs. Bonnie
Sue Wilt Pickens, 39, who died
Tuesday morning, have been set for
2 p.m. Friday at the Bradford Church of Christ with Mr. Eugene Underwood offi ciating.
Mrs. Pickens, a resident of Route
4, Pomeroy, was born JWte 22, 1940,
in Middleport, a daughter of Richard
and Marjorte Hysell Wilt, Pomeroy.
She is also survived by her husband,
Sammy Larry Pickens ; a daughter,
Mrs. Greg (Vicki Dawn) Smith,
Pomeroy; three sons, Terry Lee,
Zanesville; Larry Steven, Pomeroy,
and Scott Matthew• at home; two
brothers, Ronnie and Roger Wilt,
both of La ncaster; a grandson,
Terry Lee Pickens II, and a granddaughter, Tamela Jill Pickens, both
of Zanesville; her father-in-law and
mother-in-law, Samuel G. and
Emily Pickens, Route 4, Pomeroy,
and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by a

JESS PICKENS
Jess Pickens, 78, Rt. 3, Racine,
died Tuesday at the Pomeroy Hea lth
Care Center.
Mr. Pickens was born Aug. 10, 1901
the son of the late Carleton and
Caroline McLain Pickens. He was
also preceded in death by his wife,
Celesta, one ·sister, Daisey Beaver,
one brother, Sidney Pickens, grandson, David Starcher.
He is survived by one son,
Williamk N. Pickens, Racine ; one
daughter, Carrie Bolin ..Aibany, two

siSters,
Thome,
East
Uverpool,
and RillaAda
Jovens,
New
Brighton,
Pa.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Freeland Norris officiating. Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home Thursday at
anytime.

th e Com p r ehensive Em ploymen t and Trai ning Act

of 1978 (CE T AI. The pur
pose of compiling and
maintai ning th 1s lventory
Is to ident ify potential

program

ope r ators

tor

Fi scal Year f 981 .
Non-profi t a9enc ies andor commun 1ty
Based
Or ganizations whic h ar e

not

current

o ~rators

K . C. Hal e, Office o f Man power Development, 30 E .

Broad Streel, Columbus,
Oh io 43215 . Additiona l in
for mation reg arding th is
I nventory m ay b€ ob t ained
by c ontactin9 Douglas B.
Martin, Spec1.a1 Pl an ner at
1 BOO 282 1050
121

13, lie

Thursday, Feb. 14

ASTRO·GRAPH
Berntce Bede Osol

~ 'Your

~ 'Birthday

pr ogram

fo r the Ohio
Bala·nce of St ate Prime

Sponsor, and who are in-

t erested In operat ing em ployment and tra ining
programs dur ing the next
fi sca l year, should subm i t
the following inform ation
in wrlling to the Off ice of
Manpower Development no
later than March 10, 1980 :
I) Agency Name
2) Agenc y Contact Per -

son

31 Types of services and

activities which the a ~ency
Is Interested In providt n~
4) The types of servt ces
and aclivlt1es whi ch the
agency has provided In the
past; the number and types
ill ~rsons served; and supportive decumentalion of
the eflectl veness of these
services.
such statements ill in·
_teres! should be directed to

February 14, 1980
11 wltl be d1!1icul t tor you to take a
back seat In any ot your endeavors this coming year, because
power1ul leadershi p qualities will
be awakened. Things you personally manage should prove
successful

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fe b.

19)

Some might tell you about a
gretu opportunity o~n of the
kindness ot his or her heart.
Don 't impulsively jump into it
until you 're sure II is all this person thmks it is. Roma'nce . travel.
luck, resources . possible pitfalls
and career tor the coming
months are all discussed In your
As tr o~Graph Letter which begms
with your birthday . Mail $ 1 lor
each to Astra-G raph, Box 489,
RadiO City St alion, N.V. t0019. Be
SIJre to speci fy bi rth date.
PISCES ( Feb. 20~ M a r c h 20)
Chances are you 'll gel the sup port of others toda y, but make

certa in you have every detai l
worked out betore presenting
anything. so ~ou don't wind up
lookmg foolish.
ARIES (March 21 ~Aprll 19) H
may be unwise to get involved in
a rnend's &lt;,~ fl ai r s, bu t if you do,
get all the facts and keep a cool
head . T hings could get l e.r more
compl1cated than you realize.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
makmg agreements toQay you' ll
get much fart her 1f you set tht1
e,.;amRie with
a r e l axed
demeanor. You could out smart
you rself by entering into heavy
debate.
GEMINI (May 21 ~ Jun a 20) Keep
a close eye on coworkers today,
partiCularly the ones who are
1mpulsive or careless. This is
especially important it you·re
doing anything risky together.
CANCER (June 21 -JUI, ZZ) Just
beca use an Indi vidua l does
something spec ial for you today
doesn't mea n you're lucky at
everyt hing. II you gam ble, ChancB!P are you' ll come up with the
lemons.
LEO {July 23~ Aug . 22) Favors or
assistance you might receive
today cou ld suddenly be withdra wn . Sho w ot h er s your
moti\les are un selfish or they' ll
feel you expect ioo much.
VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. Z2) lhe
obvious could be O\lertooked
today unless you really give your
full attention to what you are
doing a t all times. Stop and
think .

LIBRA (Sapl. 23-0cl. 23) The
one .area In which you are weak
today is In handling your material
affairs . Try not to get Involved In
anythi ng of this nature. If you
make a mistake It'll be a lulu.

SCORPIO (Del. 24•Nov. 22) To

accomplish anyt hing today, you .
alone are going to have 10 put
·IOrth all the effort. Promised
assistance w il l n ot co m e
throug h.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21) ,

Intuitive fee lings that are usually
dependable could give you fal se
sign als t oday. Don't count on
hunches. Bank onl~ on reality.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. It)
Be extremely careful if you get
involved m another's problems
today. The whole mess might be
dumped into your lap.

Middleport.

sion Olan Mill s Portrait
Stud i o has an im ·
mediate opening for a
telephone adverti sing
manager.
M ature fe m ale or ma le,
25 years or ol der , hi gh
sc ho ol
g raduate
minimUm , pr efer some
col lege. Must be able to
tr avel extensively in th e
tri -sta te are a, must
have your own car , experi ence in sal es helpful
but not necessary. c om·
pte te tra ini ng with pay
star ting at $150 and up
per week plu s expenses,
paid holidays, group in·
surance, and compan y
r eti r em ent progra m .
Averge annual earnings
$15,000 per year and up.
Fanrasttc opporlun it y
for advancemen t for a
car ee r
m i nd ed
i n·

Hallmark Valentines e xpress your
love ... perfectly. Hallmark When you care
enough to send the very best.

See our selection of Hallmark
Valentine cards on the 1st floorAlso Fanny Farmer and
BrachsBoxed Valentine Candy.

~~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY FEB. 14th

SALE RUNS THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATU.RDAYI
WORK

WOMEN'S &amp;

SHOES

Selected Group!

SHOES
And

SINGLE PAIR ONLY 3.99
1

BOOTS

'15'.!tR
GROUP

SELECTED
lGROUP

ONE GROUP

WINTER
BOOTS

di v i d ~L

Call C::ollect tor GlendA
Robertson al Ar ea C()(lc
(513 ) 32 3 · 55 2 ~ Thu rsda y,
Februarv.J4, or F r iday ,
February 11 5 between 9
A.M . and 4 P.M.

..

eritage

MEN~S
PR.

SHOES

PURSES

$399

POMEROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

U.S. agrees
on condition
By The Alisoclated Pre!is
President Carter agreed to one of
Iranian President Abolhassan BaniSadr's conditions for the release of
the American hostages but was
silent on the others, citing the
"delicacy" of the situation.
Meanwhile, Bani-8adr said his
proposals had won the approval of
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the
leader of the Iranian revolutionary
_
regime.
As the apl!roxhhatel y 50
Americans began their 103rd day of
captivity in the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran, Carter told a news conference the United States would
agree to a commission appointed by
U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim to go to Iran and in·
vestigate the revolutionary regime's
charges against the ousted shah.
It was the first time since young
Iranian militants seized the em·
bassy that Carter did not insist that
the release of the captive Americans
be the first step in any deal to end
the crisis.
Carter had no conunent on the
other two demands by Bani-8adr,
made public Monday in an interview
with the French newspaper Le Mande: that the United States admit its
" crimes" in Iran over the past 25
years and promise not to interfere in
Iranian affairs, and that it
acknowledge the right of Iran to extradite the shah and his wealth.
"I cannot" afford at this delicate
time to discuss or to commen,t further upon any specific efforts that
may be underway or any proposals
that may be liSeful in ending this

crisis," said the president.
However , State Department
spokesman Hodding Carter said
earlier dhis week the United States
would not "profesS guilt." And he
said Wednesday that the extradition
question would become a matter to
be decided by Iran and Panama,
which has given the shah asylwn,
once the hostages were released.
ABC News reported that the
hostages would be freed after the in·
ternational conunission was set up.
Presidential press secretary Jody
Powell refused to comment on the
report, but Carter told his news conference: "Recently there have been
some positive signs although experience has taught us to guard
against excessive optimism.''
Waldheim refused to conunent on
the prospects for the release of the
captives, saying negotiations were
at " a very delicate stage" and that
he was in " constant" touch with U.S.
and Iranian officials.
Bani-Sadr told the French radio
station France-Inter that Khomeini,
the 79-year-old leader of the
revolutionary regime, had approved
"new proposals" which he and the
ruling Revolutionary Council submitted.
Although he would not go into
detail, the proposals apparently
. were the same three demands he
·outlined toLe Monde. But there was
no indication whether Khomeini also
approved another proposal revealed
by Bani-8a4r last Monday: that control of the hostages be transferred in
a few days from the young militants
to a third party.
The Iranian president in another
interview with a group of French TV
reporters said his goverrunent no
longer demanded the return of the
deposed shah before the hostages
were released and reiterated tbat
the fate of the hostages and of the
shah "were not-linked."

KING, QUEEN OF HEARTS- Dave Demosky and Sheila Fetty,
juniors, who were crowned King and Queen of Hearts of Meigs High
School at the Sweetheart Ball Friday, Feb. 8, at shown above. On the left
is the first runner-up couple, Laruty Longstreth and Rene Lefebre,

CHICAGO (AP)- Firefighters
went oo xtrike against the
nation's second-largest city today
to press demands for a written
contract, and city .officials Implemented emergency plans to
cope with the situation.
Chicago Firefighters Union
pickets. were reported in front of
fire stations around the city shortly after5: 15 a.m., the time set by
union officials for the start of the
firefighters' first-ever walkout.

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
- Doctors reported today that
President Josip Broz Tito was in
"critical" condition despite "intensive measures" to save the 87year-i&gt;ld Yugoslav leader's life.
There was no word on details of
Tito's treatment, but a usually
reliable Yugoelav source said the
president was stlll conscious and
aware of his condition.

Block leveled
ESSEX, Ontario (AP) - A
natural gas explosion leveled a
city block in this small Canadian
town early today, demolishing
seven businesses and shattering
windows in a blast that was heard
lOmilesaway.
Two men were hospitalized - a
gas company worker who tried to
disconnect a leaking gas meter
before the explosion, and an
unidentified man who was pulled
from the rubble of his upstairs
apartment. The man was found
"up to his armpits" In debris, a
firefighter said.
Pollee said the explosi9n was
touched off about 2:10 a.m. when
a drlver1ost control of his car and
slammed into a gliB meter behind
a hardware store.

By Associated Press
Soviet tanks and at least one MiG23 fighter fought a sharp battle with
Afghan dissidents this week 12 miles
from Kabul and there were an undetermined number of casualties, a
delayed report from Kabul said
today.
In Geneva, Switzerland, The
United. States told a meetjng ¢ the
U.N. Hwnan Righta Comm!ss.lon
that "substantial numbers of
prisoners" had been flown to the
Soviet Union from Afghanistan, according to a session transcript
released by the U.S. Mission in
No ruling his been officially made Geneva. The U. S. delegate asked
on the cause of death of Bonnie Sue
whether the Red Cross had been in·
Pickens, 39, Rt.4, Pomeroy, who was
vited to visit them.
found Tuesday morning in the
A dispatch from Afghanistan by
bathroom of her home with a gunAssociated Press Correspondent
shot wound to the head.
Michael Goldsmith quoted witnesses
Mrs. Pickens died enroute to St. as saying the Soyiets fought an hourJoseph's Hospital at Parkersburg. · long battle with the rebels Monday
Meigs County sheriff's deputies and
in the village of Cargha north of
Meigs County Coroner Dr_ R. R.
Kabul, the capital. West~rn
Pickens have not listed the results
diplomats in the vicinity said they
of an autopsy nor has Dr. Pickens saw Soviet infantry and tanks going
ruled on the exact cause of death.
into action against an army
Meanwhile, the Meigs County barracks in the vlllage. .
Sh~riff's
Departmept is in·
The M!G-23 was seen dropping a
vestlgatlng a hit-fikip accident that
occurred sometime Tuesday on the
parking lot at Meigs High School.
According to the report, Melinda
Demosky, 18, Middleport informed
deputies that she parked her car on
the parking lot and Tuesday evening
Cloudy tonight with a chance of
she discovered that someone · had
snow or rain late tonight. I.Alws from
struck the left front fender.
the upper 20s to the lower 30s. Occa·
Wednesday evening a deer was
sional rain Friday. Highs from the
killed when it ran into the path of a
upper 30s to the lower -lOs. The
vehicle driven by Clayton Johnson,
chance of precipitation is ;ill percent
40, Curtis Hollow Road, Reedsville,
tonight and 80 percent Friday.
as he was traveling north on county
road 28. There was severe damage
to the right front_pl the vehicle.
EXTENDEDOmO FORECAST
Saturday tbruugb Monday:
S110w likely over mncb of the
state Sabtnlay. sn- elldiDg Sunday. Jllrlly cloudy Mollllay.
Hlgba dlroagh the period Ia the
308. Lows ill the zta;

Weather ·

••

.,
.,

'.

cluster of small bombs, followed.by
a cloud of black smoke rising from
the ground, they said. The witoesses
said they believed the bombs were
napalm incendiary devices. Am·
bulances were seen removing an
unknown number of casualties,
some to the military hospital in
Kabul.
Meanwhile, Egyptian Defense
Mlnlstei- Kamal Hassan Ali said
Egypt is training Afghan rebels , as
claimed by the Soviet Union, and
will arm them before sending them
home to fight Soviet intervention in
their nation.
He did not disclose the size or
location of the camps or how many
Afghans were involved, but told
reporters In Cairo on Wednesday
President Anwar Ssdat had approved the project last month.
Diplomatic sources in London,
meanwhile, 'said Moscow had ad·
vised key Asian European and
African nations that it will start
pulling some of its estimated 90,000
troops out of Afghanistan and open
talks with Pakistan as soon as the
situation stabilizes along the
Afghan-Pakistan border . The
Soviets have been in Afghanistan

since late December.
However, Indian officials said
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A.
Gromyko had given them little or no
hope for an early troop withdrawal
from the landlocked Central Asian
country on the Soviet j]nion's
southern flank.
Gromyko, attending a New Delhi
banquet to honor •his Indian counterpart, warned Pakistan it must
end "intrusions into the territory of
Afghanistan'' if it wants peace along
the border. He returned to Moscow
today after a 4G-minute meeting with
Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
Indian spokesman J .N. Dixit said
the two nations had different interpretations of the Soviet intervention, but that Gromyko had
"taken note" of the Indian position
"that there should be noninterference in the internal affairs of
sovereign countries and that frontiers should be invioable."
However, their joint conununique
made no reference to Soviet action
in Afghanistan. It said only that
Russia and India had "reviewed the
international situation including the
developments in tbe region and

around it. The two sides expressed
their agreement to maintain the exchange of opinions between the two
countries on issues of mutual interest on a continuing basis."
An indian envoy sent to
Afghanistan as part of Mrs. Ga"'d!U's efforts to avoid further super·
power confrontation in the region
said Afghan officials told him they
would "invite" the Soviets to withdraw when they received assuran·
ces there would be no "outside
agression." .
Previously the Kremlin has
charged that Aghan rebels, aided by
the United Sl;ltes, Egypt, China and
Britain, were launching attacks
from Pakistan into Afghanistan.
Before Ali's disclosure, the governments of those countries had denied
the Soviet charges.
President Carter, at a Washington
press conference, reiterated his call
for a U.S. boycott of the Moscow
Olympics this summer if Soviet forces do not leave Mghanistan.
The International Olympic Committee this week overrode the U.S.
protest and voted to hold the Olympics in Moscow as planned.

Husband of former resident killed
Officer Arthur P. Snyder, 29, a
member of the Metropolitan
Washington, D. C., Police Department, died Tuesday from a gunshot
wound suffered while attempting to
make a drug arrest.
Officer Synder was the husband of
the former Stella Sue Neutzling of
Pomeroy and over the years had
visited here a number of times.
According to a report on the death,
Officer Snyder and his partner had
an alleged drug sale under surveillance and as they moved in to
make an arrest the suspect pulled a
gun and shot officer Snyder. He was
taken to the Washington Hospital
where he died at 3 a.m. Tuesday.

Snyder was struck first by a bullet
in the chest which was deflected by a

bullet proof vest. The fatal bullet
struck him in the neck.
Snyder was a graduate of Buffalo
State University holding a
bachelor's degree in criminal
justice.
Following graduation, he was employed by the FBI for two years
before joining the Metropolitan
Police Department in June, 1975.
Mr. and Mrs. Snyder resided at
Silver Springs, Md. Mrs. Snyder
has been joined there by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Neutzling,
Middleport and her sister, Dorothy

Neutzling of Bidwell, as well as
other members of the Neutzling
family , all formerly of Pomeroy but
now living in other parts of the country.
In additon to his wife, he is survived
by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
D. Snyder of Oakfield,N.Y. and a
sister, Grace, at home.
Funeral services will be held at
11 a.m. Friday at tbe Faith Pente costal Holiness Church at
Wheaton, Md. The body is at the
Collins Funeral Home in Silver
Springs and burial will be in the
Gate of Heaven Cemetery, also in
Silver Springs.

•

•

C&amp;SOE sale approved by commission

Hwnan torch
INDIAN HILL, Ohio (APJ - · A
17-year-old Indian Hill High
School student who apparently
douled hlmal!lf with gasoline on
Tue8day and set himself afire
~ the school gymnaaiwn
. died Wem-Jay, pollee said.
. 1'her!! we~ rio witnesiles to the .
tmmolatiop' : but .a _person who
ht!anl screams called· ~ rescue
· aqlll!d: Police said the routh,
whol4i ·name was not released,
left a aulcide note.
·

seniors. The other couple is Paula Swisher and Rick Chancey, freshmen.
Absent due to lllpess were sophomores Susan Swarut and escort Brent
Sisson, third runnersup. The dance was sponsored by the junior class.

Soviet-Afghan battle leaves casualties

No ruling made
in woman's death

Tito 'critical'

A SWEETHEART OF A SALE~
'

e~epan ·

· VOL. XXVIII NO. 213

Precious
Words of Love

I----------:-----1------------ ---------------

PERMANENT FULL
TIME POSITION

(USPS 145-960)

en tine

at

e

Ir;=========================~

••

(Continued from page I )
$45,627.01 with disbursements
totaling $28,925.75.
The Village CoWtcil obligated funds for the month in general bond
r-etirement remained at $18,160.39
with no receipts or disbursements
during the mnth.
The Middleport Board of Public
Mfairs ollligated funds balance at
the end of January totaled
$237,867.76 with receipts during the
month totaling $15,061.07 and disbur·
••
sements , $19,186 .....
The receipts, disbursements and
balance in each of the ·categories
making up the obligated funds of the
board include : sanitary sewer,
$5,045.44, $8,092.53, $16,868.72 ;
sanitary sewer escrow, · $945, no
disbursements, $186,Jl6.09; water,
$8,898.53, $10,943.89, $27,139.32;
water meter" trusts, $172.10, $150,
$7,732.~.

(NEWSPAPER ENlEfiPAISE ASSN)

Due to company

building are finding employment.
Gleason will also study the establishment of a special school which would
provided regular classes for students who are under suspension.
Morris, the director of curriculum, arutounced a meeting will be held Feb.
28 at the Meigs High School Library to discuss a talented and gifted student
program. The meeting is open to the public and an advisory collUllittee will
be formed. ·
,
Morris will outline directions in which such a program can go. Morris said
that hehopesall schools willberepesented.
Early in the meeting, the board moved into an executive session to discUBS
with David Frye of the Athens County Prosecutor's Office, possible litigation·
regarding problems at Meigs High School.
Goins reported on a mine reclamation project to be undertaken 1n the area
of the Pomeroy Elementa ry School to correct problems caused by drainage
from an old mine. The work is to be completed by the end of March, Goins
reported.
A resolution conunending the Farmers Bank and savings Co. for its contribution of a new football scoreboard and to be presented to the bank at a
Feb. 22 basketball game was exhibited and Treasurer Wagner arutounced
that bids for interior work at the high school will be opened at noon nextMonday.
SNOWDEN'S AGENDA
Snowden then discussed at length a number of matters which he had
requested be put on the agenda. Snowden also lodged a complaint that the
hour was after midnight before he was pennltted to discuss the items.
However , most of the patrons and teachers on hand stayed until adjournment.
Snowden questioned board policy on suspension of students and said he
would check with the prosecuting attorney on the matter. He asked for
minutes of past meetings and the agenda for the next meeting for board
members not later than the first Friday before the board meeting. He asked
that only agenda items be considered, except items of an emergency nature
tabling other items or any agenda item that any board ·member bas not had : ·
ample time to prepare for. He again referred to tbe December meeting ·
~hen pay raises were given administrators and charged that the agenda
listed an executive session which discouraged those attending from waiting
until the end of the meeting. He requested meetings with principals
coaches. band.directors. non-teachers and teachers.
'·.
Snowden sa1d that he had requested all administrators be present for last: ·
night's meeting but, he stated, they apparently had not been notified. he said:
that President Carter had reconunended an eight and one-half percent incr~ase in salaries this year. He referred to Gleason's new $35,000 salary
bemg over that reconunended percentage. He did say, however, that he was
magreement With paymg it if the superintendent proved he was worth it.
·
He brought ~P the salaries of principals and assistants to the superin- ·
tendent and sa1d that they were not in proportion to the salary paid for the .
top job. He cited Eric Hart, Rutland Elementary Principal, who was
present, saymg that Hart had been given less money for being principal than
he was last year. He asked board members to study the situation before the
next meeting.
Snowden asked that the complete cost of the strike be detennined and
stressed the need for the phone number of the superintendent.
Gleason stated that his phone number was included in the letter sent to all
board members prior to the meeting. Snowden questioned why Gleason's
nwnber was not readily available to the public as the number of other ad- :
ITUrustrators had been. Gleason indicated that he had received intimidating ·
calls.
·
Snowden asked for more detailed trip tickets for driving within the ticket
and asked for a meetmg to evaluate the superintendent.
There was no action and practically no conunent from any of the other
four board members during the remarks of Snowden.
I~ closing Gleason recommended a review of policies of the board, a few at
a tune and asked any board member wishing to serye on an athletic committeetolethimknow.
A teacher w~s given professional leave to attend a seminar at Bowling
Green Uruvers1ty and Treasuer Wagner gave her routine financial reports.
Before adJournment, Vaughan indicated there was tOQ much business
brought before the board last night and Indicated that he would rather attend
more meetings and one of such length.

,c , 1980 Hal lmark Cards. Inc

_________T _______::____r - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - ----.
INVENTOflY OF
POT E NTIAL
SERVIC E
DELIVERERS
COMPREHENSIVE
EMPLOYMENT
AND TRAINING
•
ACT OF 1978
OHIO DEPAR TM ENT
OF
ADMINI ST RA TIVE
SE RVIC ES
Th e Off ice of Manpower
D e v e lop me n t
is
an nouncing the compilation
of an l nven tor y of Poten tia l
Ser vice Del iver ers, pur·
suant t o Sec t ion 676.23 of

e~plosive

•

NEW SIGN ERECrEO - The
Sbade River Jayeeea .bave
erecied a "Welcome" alp wlllch
Ia located aeJr Cbelter 011 8R 7.
Ally OfP.n!•aUOII wlablnC to affix
tbelr aame to tile •lcn may do ao
.by ctatacllq Vic Ganlat IIHIZI
or write to Sbade River Jayeee~,
p.·,o. Bolt: 31, Cheater, Oblci 457ZO.
Jaycees atead tltaaks lo .tboft
who made the proJect poulble.
Colleemed ciUzeDI made the
Jaycees a beaeflclal part of tile .
comaninlt)'.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Securities and Exchange Commission haS approved the 12-yearold prlposal by American Electric
Power Co. to acquire Columbus
&amp;Southern Ohio Electric Co.
American Electric is among the
largest inve81or-owned utlllties in
the nation, operating in seven Midwestern and Southern states. C&amp;OE
serves 450,000 customers in central
and southern Ohio.
The SF.C approyal, granted on
Wednesday, authorizes . tbe
Change of 1.3 American Electric
shares of conunon stock for each
share of Colwnbus &amp;Southern Ohio. '
The commission, ·which must ,ruJe
on mergers of utlllty holding companies, BPI!~ the acquisition !u
pl,inciple in 1 19'18, but ~ught addltion~~llnforinatlon from American
Eleetric about the stock exchange

ex-

and plans for supplying power to
Ohio customers.
AEP reaffirmed the exchange
ratio proposed In 1968 and flied supplemental data supporting the ratio
which SEC 11pproved.
In addition, AEP and Ohio
municipal electric systems agreed
on a plan to aid municipal systems to
acquire a central power-generating
source. The agreement helps Ohio's
&amp;'I munidpBI electric systems create
the Ohio Municipal Wholesale Electric Authority, a statewide agency to
acquire and operate generating
facilities to provide electric power
for their respective systeiTIII.
Financing of the authority depends on approval of an amendment to
the Ohio Constitution by voters at a
special election next June.
In addition, the state legislature
would .have to pass ena bllng

legislation.
W.S. White Jr., AEP board chairman and chief executive officer,
said in New York the firm can now
proceed with a stock swap offer. If
stockholders of both flnns approve,
it will conclude lin acquisition that
was initiated in 1968.
AEP said some years ago that if It
did acquire the Ohio finn it would ·
move major elements of ita New
York headquarters to Colwnbus.
The move was begun late last year
even thougll SEC had not then given
its final approval for the acquisition.
White said details of the tender offer involving ail exchange of AEP
conunon stock for conunon shares of
c x SOE, will be avallable when
necessary legal and other
preparations are complete.
AEP. has operating companies in
seven states, including the Ohio

Power Co., headquartered at Canton. C&amp;OE would become its eighth
operating company. Others are
located in VIrginia, Michigan, Weal
Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, and
Indiana.
AEP serves about two million
customers, equating to about 6.5
mllllon people. In 1979, it genrated
95.5 billion kilowatt hours of electricity, the most generation l)f any
electric utility.
SPENCER FILFil
Larry Spencer, Republican, · has
filed his petition for the Republican
nomination to nm for Meigs County
Clerk of Courts with the Meigs County Board of Elections. Incumbent
Spencer ill the third person to file for
a major collnty post .nomination in
the June prnMries. Deadline for
filing petitions is.4 p.m. on Mareh 20.·

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