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                  <text>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.·

�3-The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

SVAC champs meet. North Gallia Friday

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

In Washington
By Robert Walters
WASl:I)NGTON (NEA) - It's the
third larg~st, fastest growing
political party in the United States.
Its leaders are thoughUul, articulate, enthusiastic people determined to make their mark on this
year's presidential election.
Its fundamental philosophy is, at
first glance, nothing less than seductive to million of alienated voters:
"Get the govenunent out of our
pocketbooks, out of our bedrooms
and out of our lives."
It's the Libertarian party, a yeasty and young organization that has
successfully shorn itself of an earlier
image as a refuge for anarchists,

Libertari8ns
•
garn
support

Ayn Rand zealots, utopians and
assorted political malcontents.
Backpacks and beards were far
outnwnbered by three-piece suits
and blow-dry hairdos when the
Libertarians recently held a reception at their national headquarters
here for their 1980 presidential candidate, 4!i-year-&lt;lld Los Angeles corporate attorney Edward E. Clark.
Party leaders, refreshingly candid
and sincere, admit it wasn't always
that way. "In the beginning," explained one Libertarian official at
the reception, "we had our share of
people who, ah, didn't have both
oars in the water."
The party remains a haven for

-------------------------------Bush to
big leaguer

Today's commentary
By Don Graff
Now comes the tough part.
On the momentum of the Iowa
caucuses, George Bush has taken
over the leading role in the
Republican presidential scramble. ·
Not the front-runner yet, he occupies what can be an even better
position. He's the contender all the
others know they have to beat - including faltering front-runner
Ronald Reagan.
This means a lot of things. A quantum jump in media exposure, helped
not a little by his tivals' shift from
scattershot campaigning against
._. each other to concentrating fire on
him.
.
There has been a surge in campaign contributions and in the
crowds turning out for his appearances.
.•
Also a surge in problems, some of
which are actually welcome. Such as
the emergency occasioned by the

of an entourage as he sweeps on to
the New Hampshire - ah, yes,
always New Hampshire- primary.
But for him it is no longer a first
testing. He has already passed that.
From being a candidate, George
Bush has become the candidate. But
''also running··
that also has its disadvantages. He
(Such are the welcome human must now choose his issues and state
touches in America's frenetic his positions with greater care in the
politics. Can you imagine a rising quest for ever broader support.
member of the Soviet heirarchy fly- Larger crowds and more media exing around in an Ilyushin named posure mean not only more votes to
''Non-person''?)
be won by aneffective performance
All this in the few weeks since but also more to be lost by an an unsome hundred-thousand Iowans popular stand or a blooper.
gathered in living rooms and comRecent political history is studded
munity halls to pass judgment on the with victims of early success. Surely
you recall presidents George
important outsiders seeking their
Romney
and Ed Muskic?
approval. Who says ordinary ·
Gaining
momentum in a presidencitizens can't influence the political
tial race isn't easy. But even on the
process?
Bush, who was traveling the next uphill grade it can be easier than
thing to solo in the long months what follows once acquired - mainleading up to Iowa, is now the center taining it throughout a campaign.
Right, Teddy•
proliferating press corps assigned to
his campaign. A new plane has been
acquired to accommodate them, ·
nicknamed "Asterisk I" in recollection of the not-s()-Jong-ago days when
Bush was listed below the leading
candidates in the polis, among the

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASIHNGTON (AP) - Jimmy
Carter's decision to travel no farther
than his weekend retreat at Camp
David, Md., while Americans are
held hostage in Iran has left the
White House military office over:- . staffed.
_ There was a time when presidents
- surrounded themselves with four
: aides from the armed services : .•one officet each from the Army,
Navy, Air Force and Marines.
But the frugal Carter managed to
pare the nwnber to two, an airman
and, most recently, an Army officer.
With the approach of the election
year, however, second thoughts
were giv~n to this bare-bones approach to staffing because at least
one uniformed aide normally travels
with the president at aU times.
Could two men keep up with the
wide-ranging campaign travels Carter envisioned at the time •
A decision was made that a third
officer would be needed to share the
burden. Orders were cut for a
Marine major, Jeff Zorn, to report to
the White House from the Marine
; base at nearby Quantico, Va.
:
By the time Zorn arrived, in
.- December, Carter had canceled aU
travel plans because of deveiOJr
ments in Iran - and the stay-athome situation prevails to this day.
Zorn is remaining on assignment
at the White House, however. The
theory is that, eventually, Carter
will participate in the campaign.
If carter has stuck close to

Washington, many of his relatives,
friends and associates have been
turning up regularly in such important caucus-primary states as
Iowa, Maine and New Hampshire.
J ody Powell, the White House

press secretary, was so anxious to
persuade former Carter aide Greg
Schneiders to visit Maine last week
that Powell took over a Schneidersconducted evening course in contemporary affairs at Georgetown
University here.
Powell's lecture was a one-night·
only event.
Stuart Eizenstat, the president's
domestic policy adviser, is a seriousminded fellow, as befits his position.
Jokes aren't really his bag.
But when Eizenstat was asked if
federal computers would distinguish
men from women if unisex
registration for the military draft
begins, the White House assistant
replied: "If the computers don't,
there are others who do."
When Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter's national security adviser,
visited Pakistan's Khyber Pass
leading to Afghanistan, an
automatic weapon accidently was
fired, spraying bullets in the general
direction of the presidential aide and
some reporters.
Joking that more reporters should
have accompanied him to Pakistan,
Brzezinski said this week that had
the press been on hand in greater
numbers, "maybe we would have hit
a few."

The White House correspondent of
Scripps-Howard newspapers has a
White House parking slot for which
his pffice is billed each month. The
bills are addressed to Mr. Howard
Scripps.
In fairness to the White House
staff, the handling of parking bills
has been fanned out to a computer
operated by a local bank.

A last hurrah
Campaign funds are a problem for
aU politicians, with the occasional
exception of a John Connally.
And they are frequently the reason
for dropping out of a race. Which is
the case with veteran Ohio congressman, Charles A. Vanik, who is
choosing not to run again this yeaf.
The 13-term Cleveland-area
Democrat gives campaign funds as
a major reason. Not that he could
not raise a sufficiency- he has been
regarded as a shoo-in for years and
in 1978 was returned with 66 percent
of the vote. But he simply prefers not
to make the effort since they represent obligations he would prefer not
to be a party to.
Also, there is his age - 66. In the
course of his career having defeated
two opponents who had reached ages
in public office of diminishing
returns to the public, he feels he is
not exempt.

TilE DAILY SENTINEL
I USPS 1&amp;5-110)

a&lt;b

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

.....

,_

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
· CllyEdltor
Publlobc&lt;l dolly acepiSalllnllly by 'l1le Oblo
Valley PubUJblq C.mpuy- Maltlmedlo, Ia&lt;,
Ill Court SL, Pomeroy, Otuo &amp;57•• llu.l&amp;aeu
Office Pbooe ,._ 2151. EdJklrial Pllocae

m-zm.

S«oacc clua polialt paid at PDIDtny, Ollie.
NatioDAladvertklq: repraeat.Uve, LudGI
Auoclatel, 3101 Euclid Ave., C\en~ Obi•

:.a

t.tllS.

SGbotrlpUoe ralet' lle\IV&lt;red by
'lfhtre avai.Jable II ceDtl per week. B:r Molo
Rou&amp;t wltere cai'T'Ier aervitt aot anU.ble,
moalb,ts.NI.
Tile DaUy Seatiael, by maJJ ID Oldo ud WaJ
VlrcJ&gt;la, o"' year IIUI; 8lz ..,_ 117.10)
tlfte IIIOII.tbl tJ.0.5G. Ellewbere . . . . j 111
mea1bJ ...GOi tbree •oatba fll.OO.
ne Alaocll&amp;ed Prell II utlutnly eoUtled
rto tiM: ue for pubUcatloa ef all Dn'1 dUpatebet
cred.lled to tbr aeWJ~per ud abo tbe IDeal
news publllbed berei.IL
·

Sentinel
Editorial

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

Washington today
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Sen. Edabout 15 percent of the state's
ward M. Kennedy, twice a loser to
Democrats.
President Carter, claims the lead in
Brown said Maine was the place
the battle of expectations.
where his campaign took off, since
It is waged by claiming victory in ' he got 13 percent of the vote. He said
defeat on grounds that the other canhe'd done much better than anyone
didate didn't do as well as expected.
expected. Brown campaigned non·
It works best when the loser is able
stop for more than a week before the
to set the expectations of the winner
caucuses.
- and make some people believe
That may do for a while.
him.
But neither Kennedy nor Brown is
And that seldom has been done as
going to unseat an incumbent
adroitly as the Kennedy camp did it
president
. by running against exwhen Carter beat the Massachusetts
pectations.
senator in Maine's Democratic town
meetings last Sunday.
Kennedy's campaigners claimed
to have gained momentum, and a
new lease on the challenge for the
Democratic
presidential
nominatio"J by running second.
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Every
The expectation, it turned out aftime it rains in Cleveland, George
ter the fact, was that the president Mazarro gets 15 phone calls from
would gain at least 50 percent of the
city school janitors complaining of
Maine vote in a· three-way "CCntest flooding irl their buildings.
with Kennedy and California Gov.
"I'd say 85 percent of our
Edmund G. Brown Jr.
•
buildings have problems with their
He got 46 percent to Kennedy's 40
roofs," says Mazarro, the Cleveland
and Brown's 13.
School District's business manager.
That's no landslide, hut neither is
Not juat minor problemsieither. He
it grounds for a recount. Carter
estimates it would cost $18 million to
gained that victory in the first of
repair aU the roofs.
four New England contests in which,
But Mazarro isil't alone. David
not long ago, Kennedy had appeared
Cox, the system's head of
invincible.
curricuilun and instruction, talks
It is not clear who gave birth to the
about the problems of no new books
50 percent expectation by expecting
in the city's 146 schools.
it in the first place. The Carter
School Board President John
people, who can play the numbers
Gallagher Jr. bemoans the fact that
game as weD as anyone, carefully
junior high schools in the city have
avoided setting a target and said
no athletic programs. He also ex·
they'd be satisfied to get one more
plains that when the last ball of the
vote than Kennedy.
high school baseball season is
Kennedy's spokesmen said their
thrown out this spring that all city
goal was to do better in Maine than
high school athletics might go with
they did in Iowa. They could hardly
II.
have done much worse, since the
Currently, the school system
president won those initial caucuses
budgets $178,000 for athletics. Voters
59.1 percent to 31.2 percent.
have not passed a levy to raise their
That also is part of the extaxes for school support for 10 yeari.
pectations game: set your own
Foreign lliDguage programs have
target so low it will be hard to miss,
been cut in secondary schools, 32
set your opponent's as high as
schools have been closed in the last
possible, and then try to make those
18 months and there are prospects
the rules of the contest.
for ·shutting down 25 more this fall.
There are people who say that the
M011t media center and special
candidate with the most votes is the
education programs have been
winner.
eliminated.
Maine Gov. Joseph E. Brennan, a
"We've cut from the bottom of the
Kennedy supporter, was not among
ladder to the top," says Gallagher,
them after Carter's victory.
whose school board appeared before
"President Carter has lost," he
the state Board of Education in
claimed. "Carter has failed to win a
Colwnbws last Sunday.
majority of either the popular vote
or the delegate vote."
.
There are a couple problems with
that. One is that his Maine campaign
manager, Peter Meade, said he
didn't believe the poll. Another is
that polls mean little in a caucus
state. Even with the record turnout
in Maine, it still amO\Uited to only

ser·:ous political actiyists from the
far right and the far left - those
disenchanted with both Young
Americans for Freedom and
Students for a Democratic Society but it also numbers among its
followers previously apolitical
iawyers,
engineers
and
businessmen.
Although it was founded oniy eight
years ago, the party's 1976 presidential nominee, Roger McBride,
received more than 173,000 votes nationally and attracted significant
support in Alaska, Hawaii, California, Idaho, Arizona and Nevada.
When Clark ran as an independent
in California's 1978 gubernatorial
race, he received ahnost 378,000
votes or 5.5 per cent of aU ballots
cast. In the same year, more than
200 Libertarian candidates ran for
office in 32 states and attracted
more than 1.2 million votes.
That's hardly a nationwide landslide, but it qualifies as the fastest
growth rate of any political party
-including the Republicans and
Democrats- in r~ntyears and has
propelled the Libertarians ahead of
all other minor parties.
The Libertarians' basic credo of
maximizing personal freedom and
liberty while virtually abolishing
government offers an' appeal that
spans the entire political spectrum.
For liberals, there is the vision of a
golden era of civil liberties,
unhampered by the then-disbanded
FBI ayd CIA. For conservatives,
there l)eckons the promise of untrammeled free enterprise, foUowing the abolition of OSHA, EPA, FTC
and SEC.
In fact, the Libertarians'
weakness is a comprehensive pr(}gram of restructuring society so
radical that it offers more laissez
faire permissiveness and ·less
government. involvement than most
people can swaUow in a single sit·
ting.

Ohio Perspective
"We're talking about a schoolclosing program in 2'hyears in excess of 50 schools. That's probably
the largest ever undetaken by a
school system in the history of the
United States.
"We've cut our staff fran 12,470
employees in January of 1978 to
about 10,054 two years later. We've '
overcome a $36 million defi9it in two
years.
"We're trying. For the first time
in .seven or eight years, the
Cleveland schools are living within
their revenue. If the Cleveland
School District were a business, it
probably would have closed...
Cox, a deputy superintendent, said
the system's goal "is to return to excellence ... in relation to what we
have.
"We can't allow our people to
throw up their hands and give up
because we don't have the staffing
orfunding we used to," Cox says. ·
"The Cleveland School District
faces the same problems businesses
face today. They've got to meet inflation pressures and employee
demands," said Roger Lulow, the
assistant to state Superintendent of
Public Instruction Franklin Walter.
"But th~y 'Cail•t raise their
prices," Lulow says.
"How close they are to balancing
their budget, they're probably close
to 100 percent," Lulow explains.
"They finish paying off their state
loan May 9. How close they are to
where they want to be in terms of
educating their children, well, that's
a different story."

By Scott Wolfe
Friday night a· notorious gang of
sklUed Southern sharpshooters will
ride into Northern GaUia County for
a big showdown against a very
dangerous crew of pirates. The
Southern gang will be'led into battle
by Carl Wolfe while the GaUia Countians will be led by Pirate skipper
Ted Lehew.
Over the years a mild case of

PLACID, N.Y. (AP)- The
color-coordinated Olympics are ·under way, opened in a spectacular
splash of rainbow patterns that lit up
a dismal winter's day in this sleepy,
picturesque little town. A crowd of 23,000 spectators,
creating a massive traffic tangle,
huddled together in frigid - temperatures under overcast skies Wednesday and watched the pomp and
pageantry of the opening
ceremonies highlighted by the spectacular parade of athletes.
Teams from 'SI nations signaUed
the start of the Games by marching
proudly through a small stadium on
the outskirts of town. Their colorful
winter gear, ranging from the bright
red ~ of the Australians to the
tan Texas rancher outfits of the U.S.
team, seemed culled from a painter's palate.
Now the sea of colors that enveloped the opening of the Games
turns into the pursuit of gold, silver
and bronze - a medal chase that
could be every bit as memorable as
those colorful ceremonies for the
United States.
· It started today with American
Beth Heiden a clear threat in the
women's 1,500-meter speed skating
and skier Bill Koch, who stunned the
world by winning a silver medal at
lnnsbruck four years ago, shooting
for more metal ·in- the men's ~
kilometer cross counlry race.
But ~ glamor event on today's
schedule was the men's downhill
skiing - a duel with Whiteface
Mountain's 3,009-meter Alpine cour·
se. Italian Herbert Plank, bronze
medalist at lnnshruck in 1976, had
Wednesday's fastest training timeI minute, 43.91 seconds - a full
second better than any other 'llblnpetitor. Peter, Mueller of Swit·
zerland, defending World Cup
downhill champion, and1 Canada's
" Ken Read, winner of two of the last
three World Cup downhills, shared
the favorite's role in the event.
First runs of men's and women's
luge cOmpetition were held Wednesday night, a few hours after the
colorful opening ceremonies.
Veteran East German Dettlef Gunther set a course record to take the
men's lead, while Vera Zlrl;ulya of
the Soviet Unloo led the women.
The second of the four luge runs
were scheduled for today along with
six more hockey games, including
the United States against
Czechosrovakia. The young
Americans rallied for a 2-2 tie with
Sweden in their hockey opener
Tuesday, while Czechoslovakia ripLAKE

NATIONAL BASXETBALL AI80CIATION

AT AGlANCE

-

By'l'lle Allodotedl'reoo

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New Jersey

H....ton

IJidlaoa
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Detroit

-

lAIIAngeleo

~·

Golden Slate

.\

ped Norway 11-0.
The carefully orchestrated
opening ceremonies went off without
a hitch - unless you count the
monwnental traffic jam that left
many of the spectators and even
some of the atnletes walking the It
miles from the stadium back into
town. It was faster than waiting out
the hopeless tangle of cars and
buses.
.
Vice President Walter F. Mondale
was in the reviewing stand with Lord
Killanin, president of the International Olympic Conunittee,
and other dignitaries. Mondale officially opened the Games with one
simple sentence that stuck strictly to
Olympic protocol.
"On ·behalf of the president of the
United States, and the American
people," the vice president said, "I
am pleased to declare officiaUy the
opening of the XIII Winter Olympics
held this year at Lake Placid."
There was no trace of the political
turmoil that has overshadowed the
Olympics for the last month, except
fQr the presence of a few lonely
demonstrators outside the arena
who protested the IOC's treatment
of Taiwan.
But Taiwan's athletes were ab-

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sent, seeking to be officially excused
from these Games rather than to
compete under regulations set down
by the IOC. Those regulations
stipulated the name, flag and
national anthem under which they
would be allowed to participate - a
move that cleared the way for the inclusion of athletes from Mainland
China in these Games.
Taiwan sued over the issue, lost
two appeals on the case, and then announced its decision to return home
rather than participate on the IOC' s .
terms. But a spokesman made it
clear that his country was not withdrawing, but seeking to be excused.
The differenCe seems semantic but
is important in the IOC lexicon.
"The IOC rule says i( you don't
compete after you enter, you're subject to severe penalties and we have
done nothing wrong," said Thomas
Hsueh. "We will be here until the
(IOC) board excuses us."
Outside the stadium where
opening ceremonies were held,
demonstrators who said they were
Taiwan citizens living in the United
States carried banners denouncing
the IOC position on the issue. There
were no incidents.

Mondale pinchhits for Carter
LAKE PLACID, N. Y. (AP) · pressively attired in knee-length fur
President Carter snubbed it. The coa'ts and fur hats.
ll,ussians got a cold shollider. All the
One had to strain to see who.£l!!lle
Yanks loved tJie Yanks, naturally.
between Taipei and the U"SSR.
Parachutists parachuted. Balloons Would Taiwan show? No, a void. The
by the thousands drifted skyward. empty space reflected lh~ scars of
They lit the torch and unleashed the international politics and utter intraditional doves of peace.
. sensitivity of the IOC.
So off we go - another Olympics,
The crowd of 23,000, sitting in
dedicated to sportsmanship and freezing weather, sat on its hands
good will among nations. The en- and failed to ·applaud until the Star
dless flame burns on.
Spangled Banner sprang out of the
Too bad it has to be a quadrennial chute · ahead of the parade of
salute to hypocrisy.
smiling, hat-waving Americans.
There is something very moving
Vice 'Pre,&lt;lident Mondale, dispat·
about an opening Olympic ched by the President to sub for him
ceremony, - with its pagan pomp in formally opening the xm Winter
_woven majestically into modem ar- Games, turned his ~d and chatted
tistry - whirling ballerinas on
with the Rev. Bernard Fell; chairskates, marching athletes attired in man of the Lake Placid Organizing
colors of the rainbow, recitation of Coi!Uilittee, as the Russians mar·
the athlete's Olympic oath.
ched past the presidential box.
Greece, as home of the Ancient
Games, led the parade, as always,
and the United States, as the host
nation, brought up the tail~nd, its
athletes looking like Old West cattle
With four players hitting double
drivers in their white !().gallon hats,
figures,
visiting Ironton St. Joe
blue jeans and Shee!}-lined SUede
rambled
to
an easy, 47-39 non-league
jackets.
victory
over
Hannan Trace WednesOnly Yugoslavia separated the
day
evening.
cowboy-clad Yanks .from their chief
Cronce led the way with 17 points,
rivals, the Soviet Union,. im-

Cllcago

St. Louis
EdmOilloo

Vancouver
'Colorado
Winnipeg

-

Buffalo

Booton

Toronto

Quebec

Montreal

LATONIA RESULTS
FWRENCE, Ky. (AP) - Cyclin
Cissy, a longshot with James McCullar aboard, won by a neck in 1:00
1-5 in the featured 51'.lfurlong sprint
Wednesday night at Latonia.
The winner paid $23.40, $13.40 and
$5.60; second-place Lovely Angle
returned S2Q and $13, and Princess
Fool was thif!l and paid$6.20.
The 4-3 combination of J .R.'s
Angel and B.B. 's Pride won the dai!l
double and returned $150.40.
The crowd of 2,9110 wagered
$342,133.

··alter

'I''

ted a dilemma to the nation's life insurers. They want Congress to allow
workers to invest additional funds in
their pension plans - and get a tax
break for doing so. The industry has
its reasons: it administers many
pensions plans.
Many plans have been badly
eroded by inflation, and need
beefing up. If workers could defer
taxes by investing up to 10 percent of
incomes in supplementary plans, the
situation might ~ improved, and
the declining savings rate might be
raised some.
If such a plan were implemented,
it might deprive the government of
funds. Deprivation is no safeguard
against excessive spending - the
government spends anyway, running up deficits.
Deficits, especially when they
follow a decade of deficits, are
widely considered to be inflationary.

Inflation last year was 13.3 percent,
The median sale .price of the
as measured by the Consumer Price
existing home - based on actual
Index.
sales thrt!ughout (Jie 1:9untry - was
The industry has therefore com$56,500 In December. '11hat represenpromi.sed:
ted a gain of 11 per cent or $000. Or
It will pus~ for tax breaks to those
did it? It did in currept doU.rs, hut
who contribute · to supplementary
adjuated for infiatillt was a
pension plans, an industry
decllneofmorethan percent.
spokesman said, but only when the
That seeming gain ut actlialio81
federal government gets its deficits
led Jack Carlson, . ecutive vice
under control.
president and chief economist to
"And when will that be?" he was
"stress that the~ Industry 18
askect. There was a long pause.
bearing more than ItS share of the inAs the insurance industry conflation-flghting l&gt;urdeb."
sidered the question, the people at
Other seemingly -pfofitable inthe National Association of Realtors
dustries have the same beef. While
found it difficult to decide whether
reporting record-high profits, in terexisting home prices
or fell in
ms·of CliiTentdollars,JtheY are sbow
December. lnflatloo again.
big l0118es when~ !\ lollari are adIf you have followed houaing
justed for inflation..
· .
· So bad has the dlstdrtion become
prices you might be .aware that the)
grew enonnousl:t: during th~ 19708,
that corporations this year must incausing analysts to say it wasU!the
!ll,...~~e:;the&lt;adjuated fJ.gures in their
best investment of the decade.annual reports.
\
it is ''burdened.''
I

rose

...

lRONTON ST. JOE (57» -

·•

-DRESS SLACKS, IN POlY-GAB.
-SUMMER TOPS
-DENIM SKIRTS
-DENIM 'JACKETS.
CHECK OUR SElECTION

Gagal, 4-3-11;

HANNAN TRACE lSI) -

Be.sver, 5-0-10;

JOI'leS, ~; . Webb, 1~2: Pack, .._...12;
Waugh, ~7; Petrte,l~2. Totals 1&amp;-7-39.

B.

Tools

Transactions
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8EATiM6
INfLATION
BY· J,.1Vt~6 ...
14. M~ ,,.
&amp;MP'LE u .r ,.

OLYMPIC SKI JUMPING is being held on the new 7~ and !)().meter
sites at Lake Placid's Intervale Hill. Massive concrete and steel towers
were built at a cost of $6.5 million.

Ptlt8bllreh

Qevellnd 10'1, Delroillo:I

HCIUIIOn 121, New Yorit 117
I'Malllllll,lloltooiM
8eollle 113, Allonla II
' WulllnjJion Ill, S..lltqolll!
lAil Anplet IJI, Portlani!I03
Tlllnlly'l GuiMI

Gagai and Wagoner had 11 points
each while Kinney added 10.
Pacing Coach Donnie Saunders'
Wildcats were junior forward
Rodney Pack and senior Tim Beaver
with 12 and 10 points respectively.
Hannan Trace connected on 16 of
45 floor attempts with 36 percent and
seven of 13 free thorws. Hannan
Trace collected 33 rebounds with
Bruce Waugh getting 10.
Ironton St. Joe also won the
preliminary contest, 36-34. Wagoner
had eight for the winners. M. Waugh
dumped in 11 for the Wildcats.
Hannan Trace, 1-7 hosts Kyger
Creek Friday.
Box Score:

For North Gallia IHl center Dan
Berry will try to control the boards,
along with Mark Miller, teammates.
Joe Peck, Scott Howell and Tim
Howell.
-.
The reserve tilt will determine this
year 's Reserve championshiJI.
Coach Howie Caldwell's young, but
hustling Tornado team is now 14-3
overall and like -North Gallia is 8-1
within the league.
Coach Lehew's younger team is
13-5 overall.
·
Their only league loss came at the
hands of Southen while Coach
Caldell's team suffered its first
league loss last week against
Eastern in a real heartbreaker.
They lost in four overtimes!
Last year the two reserve squads
were c&lt;rSV AC champions.
The reserve tilt starts at 6:30 while
the varsity game is scheduled for B.
p.m.
In other games, Eastern hosts
Southwestern and Kyger Creek
visits Hannan Trace. SVAC clubs
close out their 1979-80 campaigns
this weekend and next week.
On Feb. 25 the Class A Sectional
Tournament will begin at Meigs
High School.

llelrolt
lllrlford

w-r'•Gameo

Mllwaukeelll, Clllcqo 101

Inside, the athletes from Mainland
China paraded behind their five-star
flag, smartiy attired in dark blue
uniforms manufactured, ironically,
in Japan.
·
Many of the delegations marched
to careful cadence but others adopted a ca refree flare, waving merrily
to the crowd. There was a muffled
sound about the applause that ac-companied the parade, probably
because of the gloves worn by nearly
all the spectators.
The largest welcomes were reserved, understandably, for the U. S.
team, the last delegation to enter the
stadium, an~ Canada. Both teams
responded wannly.
Speed skater Eric Heiden, who
could win five gold medals in these
Games, took the Olympic oath on
behalf of aU the athletes, and Terry
McDermott, a former speed skating
medalist, did the same for the officials and judges.
Leaving the stadium where the
ceremorues were held was an adventure. Spectators milled about,
searching for transportation. aut
truffle was simply not moving and
many shrugged their shoulders and
simply began walking. It was a
festive crowd and there were few
complaints even in the cold, unpleasant temperatures.
The dramatic ceremonies
provided a pleasant interlude from
the political climate that has
surrounded the Games ever since
President Carter requested that the
IOC move, postpone or cancel the
Moscow Summer Games because of
Russian
intervention
in
Afghanistan.
The IOC has rejected that request
and is moving ahead with plans for
the 1980 Summer Games. The United
States Olympic Coi!Uilittee said it
would have a statement today con·
cerning the president's caD for "a
prompt". withdrawal from the
Moscow Games. Officially, the
USOC has until May 24 to accept or
reject the invitation to the Summer
Olympics and Taiwan has already
proven that withdrawal from competition isn't always prompt.

class "AAA" Point Pleasant, one
wih over a very tough Wa hama
squad , and two wins over
Southwestern to name just a few .
Coach Carl Wolfe's powerful Tornadoes are currently ranked in the
State of Ohio. They have errupted
for 70 points or more on II different
occasions.
The North Gallia Pirates have put
together a respectable 1().8 record
overall and are 6-3 in the league.
They have brought home victories
over tough opponents such as
Southwestern, Eastern, and Miller.
Coach Lehew's squad has poured
in 70 or more points four different
times and always exhibits a potentially dangerous offensive attack.
They are currently tied with
Southwestern for second in the
league standings.
Controlling the boards combined
with continuous hustle, will play a
big part in keeping the game close at
the end, according to Coach Lehew.
Probable starters are Southern's
hot handed forward Jack Duffy,
followed by two very tough big men;
Dale Teaford and Dave "Big Red"
Foreman, along with guards Kent
Wolfe and Johnny Davis.

L&lt;loAngelea

l'lllloclelpbla 10'1, Ullllll6

NEW YORK (AP) - When you
have inflation of the sort we've been
experiencing, it's difficult to make
ends meet or to have things add up to
the answers your arithmetic teacher
taught you.
The distortions spread. Financial
theories that once were solid hold no
more water than a strainer, and
long-established standards of
behavior either change or show
themselves to be badly dated.
There persists the notion that U.S.
Savings Bonds are to be purchased
as a wise investment and patriotic
duty, even when the 7 percent yield
11 years means an almost cer: tain·netloss.
. There is no mystery to the
· mathematics involved. A taxable
; return of 7 per cent or less, depen: ding UJIC1n how long tl¥l bonds are
: held, is a poor return at a time when
• lnflatioo Is aim(llt double that nte.
• Meanwhile, inflation has presen-

opponents this year and on occasion
· the Pirates have been equally tough.
This year's edition of the cham·
pion Southern Torandoes has compiled an outstanding 16-1 record
overall and a perfect ~ slate within
the league. Their only loss came
very early in the season to a very
tough Ross-southeastern team.
Their record includes.two wins over

Flyers dump Wildcats

Pro standings

8eollle

Inflation changing simple situations

Ohio.
Ever since that time the two gangs
have been battling for territorial
rights, giving it everything they had
as they rode into battle.
Over the years, games between
these two teams have been highly
competitive and proved a lot of excitement, especially on te offensive
end of things. The Tornadoes have
been literally devastating tn th•ir

Olympics open with spectacular splash

Atlonto
S..Antonlo

Berry's World

rivalry has developed between the
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mid-seventies when the "James
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chased by many during this time
and was seldom overtaken.
Then the quick and sure handed
Southerners starteil making a name
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·

�3-The Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

SVAC champs meet. North Gallia Friday

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

In Washington
By Robert Walters
WASl:I)NGTON (NEA) - It's the
third larg~st, fastest growing
political party in the United States.
Its leaders are thoughUul, articulate, enthusiastic people determined to make their mark on this
year's presidential election.
Its fundamental philosophy is, at
first glance, nothing less than seductive to million of alienated voters:
"Get the govenunent out of our
pocketbooks, out of our bedrooms
and out of our lives."
It's the Libertarian party, a yeasty and young organization that has
successfully shorn itself of an earlier
image as a refuge for anarchists,

Libertari8ns
•
garn
support

Ayn Rand zealots, utopians and
assorted political malcontents.
Backpacks and beards were far
outnwnbered by three-piece suits
and blow-dry hairdos when the
Libertarians recently held a reception at their national headquarters
here for their 1980 presidential candidate, 4!i-year-&lt;lld Los Angeles corporate attorney Edward E. Clark.
Party leaders, refreshingly candid
and sincere, admit it wasn't always
that way. "In the beginning," explained one Libertarian official at
the reception, "we had our share of
people who, ah, didn't have both
oars in the water."
The party remains a haven for

-------------------------------Bush to
big leaguer

Today's commentary
By Don Graff
Now comes the tough part.
On the momentum of the Iowa
caucuses, George Bush has taken
over the leading role in the
Republican presidential scramble. ·
Not the front-runner yet, he occupies what can be an even better
position. He's the contender all the
others know they have to beat - including faltering front-runner
Ronald Reagan.
This means a lot of things. A quantum jump in media exposure, helped
not a little by his tivals' shift from
scattershot campaigning against
._. each other to concentrating fire on
him.
.
There has been a surge in campaign contributions and in the
crowds turning out for his appearances.
.•
Also a surge in problems, some of
which are actually welcome. Such as
the emergency occasioned by the

of an entourage as he sweeps on to
the New Hampshire - ah, yes,
always New Hampshire- primary.
But for him it is no longer a first
testing. He has already passed that.
From being a candidate, George
Bush has become the candidate. But
''also running··
that also has its disadvantages. He
(Such are the welcome human must now choose his issues and state
touches in America's frenetic his positions with greater care in the
politics. Can you imagine a rising quest for ever broader support.
member of the Soviet heirarchy fly- Larger crowds and more media exing around in an Ilyushin named posure mean not only more votes to
''Non-person''?)
be won by aneffective performance
All this in the few weeks since but also more to be lost by an an unsome hundred-thousand Iowans popular stand or a blooper.
gathered in living rooms and comRecent political history is studded
munity halls to pass judgment on the with victims of early success. Surely
you recall presidents George
important outsiders seeking their
Romney
and Ed Muskic?
approval. Who says ordinary ·
Gaining
momentum in a presidencitizens can't influence the political
tial race isn't easy. But even on the
process?
Bush, who was traveling the next uphill grade it can be easier than
thing to solo in the long months what follows once acquired - mainleading up to Iowa, is now the center taining it throughout a campaign.
Right, Teddy•
proliferating press corps assigned to
his campaign. A new plane has been
acquired to accommodate them, ·
nicknamed "Asterisk I" in recollection of the not-s()-Jong-ago days when
Bush was listed below the leading
candidates in the polis, among the

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASIHNGTON (AP) - Jimmy
Carter's decision to travel no farther
than his weekend retreat at Camp
David, Md., while Americans are
held hostage in Iran has left the
White House military office over:- . staffed.
_ There was a time when presidents
- surrounded themselves with four
: aides from the armed services : .•one officet each from the Army,
Navy, Air Force and Marines.
But the frugal Carter managed to
pare the nwnber to two, an airman
and, most recently, an Army officer.
With the approach of the election
year, however, second thoughts
were giv~n to this bare-bones approach to staffing because at least
one uniformed aide normally travels
with the president at aU times.
Could two men keep up with the
wide-ranging campaign travels Carter envisioned at the time •
A decision was made that a third
officer would be needed to share the
burden. Orders were cut for a
Marine major, Jeff Zorn, to report to
the White House from the Marine
; base at nearby Quantico, Va.
:
By the time Zorn arrived, in
.- December, Carter had canceled aU
travel plans because of deveiOJr
ments in Iran - and the stay-athome situation prevails to this day.
Zorn is remaining on assignment
at the White House, however. The
theory is that, eventually, Carter
will participate in the campaign.
If carter has stuck close to

Washington, many of his relatives,
friends and associates have been
turning up regularly in such important caucus-primary states as
Iowa, Maine and New Hampshire.
J ody Powell, the White House

press secretary, was so anxious to
persuade former Carter aide Greg
Schneiders to visit Maine last week
that Powell took over a Schneidersconducted evening course in contemporary affairs at Georgetown
University here.
Powell's lecture was a one-night·
only event.
Stuart Eizenstat, the president's
domestic policy adviser, is a seriousminded fellow, as befits his position.
Jokes aren't really his bag.
But when Eizenstat was asked if
federal computers would distinguish
men from women if unisex
registration for the military draft
begins, the White House assistant
replied: "If the computers don't,
there are others who do."
When Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter's national security adviser,
visited Pakistan's Khyber Pass
leading to Afghanistan, an
automatic weapon accidently was
fired, spraying bullets in the general
direction of the presidential aide and
some reporters.
Joking that more reporters should
have accompanied him to Pakistan,
Brzezinski said this week that had
the press been on hand in greater
numbers, "maybe we would have hit
a few."

The White House correspondent of
Scripps-Howard newspapers has a
White House parking slot for which
his pffice is billed each month. The
bills are addressed to Mr. Howard
Scripps.
In fairness to the White House
staff, the handling of parking bills
has been fanned out to a computer
operated by a local bank.

A last hurrah
Campaign funds are a problem for
aU politicians, with the occasional
exception of a John Connally.
And they are frequently the reason
for dropping out of a race. Which is
the case with veteran Ohio congressman, Charles A. Vanik, who is
choosing not to run again this yeaf.
The 13-term Cleveland-area
Democrat gives campaign funds as
a major reason. Not that he could
not raise a sufficiency- he has been
regarded as a shoo-in for years and
in 1978 was returned with 66 percent
of the vote. But he simply prefers not
to make the effort since they represent obligations he would prefer not
to be a party to.
Also, there is his age - 66. In the
course of his career having defeated
two opponents who had reached ages
in public office of diminishing
returns to the public, he feels he is
not exempt.

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Office Pbooe ,._ 2151. EdJklrial Pllocae

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moalb,ts.NI.
Tile DaUy Seatiael, by maJJ ID Oldo ud WaJ
VlrcJ&gt;la, o"' year IIUI; 8lz ..,_ 117.10)
tlfte IIIOII.tbl tJ.0.5G. Ellewbere . . . . j 111
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news publllbed berei.IL
·

Sentinel
Editorial

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

Washington today
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Sen. Edabout 15 percent of the state's
ward M. Kennedy, twice a loser to
Democrats.
President Carter, claims the lead in
Brown said Maine was the place
the battle of expectations.
where his campaign took off, since
It is waged by claiming victory in ' he got 13 percent of the vote. He said
defeat on grounds that the other canhe'd done much better than anyone
didate didn't do as well as expected.
expected. Brown campaigned non·
It works best when the loser is able
stop for more than a week before the
to set the expectations of the winner
caucuses.
- and make some people believe
That may do for a while.
him.
But neither Kennedy nor Brown is
And that seldom has been done as
going to unseat an incumbent
adroitly as the Kennedy camp did it
president
. by running against exwhen Carter beat the Massachusetts
pectations.
senator in Maine's Democratic town
meetings last Sunday.
Kennedy's campaigners claimed
to have gained momentum, and a
new lease on the challenge for the
Democratic
presidential
nominatio"J by running second.
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Every
The expectation, it turned out aftime it rains in Cleveland, George
ter the fact, was that the president Mazarro gets 15 phone calls from
would gain at least 50 percent of the
city school janitors complaining of
Maine vote in a· three-way "CCntest flooding irl their buildings.
with Kennedy and California Gov.
"I'd say 85 percent of our
Edmund G. Brown Jr.
•
buildings have problems with their
He got 46 percent to Kennedy's 40
roofs," says Mazarro, the Cleveland
and Brown's 13.
School District's business manager.
That's no landslide, hut neither is
Not juat minor problemsieither. He
it grounds for a recount. Carter
estimates it would cost $18 million to
gained that victory in the first of
repair aU the roofs.
four New England contests in which,
But Mazarro isil't alone. David
not long ago, Kennedy had appeared
Cox, the system's head of
invincible.
curricuilun and instruction, talks
It is not clear who gave birth to the
about the problems of no new books
50 percent expectation by expecting
in the city's 146 schools.
it in the first place. The Carter
School Board President John
people, who can play the numbers
Gallagher Jr. bemoans the fact that
game as weD as anyone, carefully
junior high schools in the city have
avoided setting a target and said
no athletic programs. He also ex·
they'd be satisfied to get one more
plains that when the last ball of the
vote than Kennedy.
high school baseball season is
Kennedy's spokesmen said their
thrown out this spring that all city
goal was to do better in Maine than
high school athletics might go with
they did in Iowa. They could hardly
II.
have done much worse, since the
Currently, the school system
president won those initial caucuses
budgets $178,000 for athletics. Voters
59.1 percent to 31.2 percent.
have not passed a levy to raise their
That also is part of the extaxes for school support for 10 yeari.
pectations game: set your own
Foreign lliDguage programs have
target so low it will be hard to miss,
been cut in secondary schools, 32
set your opponent's as high as
schools have been closed in the last
possible, and then try to make those
18 months and there are prospects
the rules of the contest.
for ·shutting down 25 more this fall.
There are people who say that the
M011t media center and special
candidate with the most votes is the
education programs have been
winner.
eliminated.
Maine Gov. Joseph E. Brennan, a
"We've cut from the bottom of the
Kennedy supporter, was not among
ladder to the top," says Gallagher,
them after Carter's victory.
whose school board appeared before
"President Carter has lost," he
the state Board of Education in
claimed. "Carter has failed to win a
Colwnbws last Sunday.
majority of either the popular vote
or the delegate vote."
.
There are a couple problems with
that. One is that his Maine campaign
manager, Peter Meade, said he
didn't believe the poll. Another is
that polls mean little in a caucus
state. Even with the record turnout
in Maine, it still amO\Uited to only

ser·:ous political actiyists from the
far right and the far left - those
disenchanted with both Young
Americans for Freedom and
Students for a Democratic Society but it also numbers among its
followers previously apolitical
iawyers,
engineers
and
businessmen.
Although it was founded oniy eight
years ago, the party's 1976 presidential nominee, Roger McBride,
received more than 173,000 votes nationally and attracted significant
support in Alaska, Hawaii, California, Idaho, Arizona and Nevada.
When Clark ran as an independent
in California's 1978 gubernatorial
race, he received ahnost 378,000
votes or 5.5 per cent of aU ballots
cast. In the same year, more than
200 Libertarian candidates ran for
office in 32 states and attracted
more than 1.2 million votes.
That's hardly a nationwide landslide, but it qualifies as the fastest
growth rate of any political party
-including the Republicans and
Democrats- in r~ntyears and has
propelled the Libertarians ahead of
all other minor parties.
The Libertarians' basic credo of
maximizing personal freedom and
liberty while virtually abolishing
government offers an' appeal that
spans the entire political spectrum.
For liberals, there is the vision of a
golden era of civil liberties,
unhampered by the then-disbanded
FBI ayd CIA. For conservatives,
there l)eckons the promise of untrammeled free enterprise, foUowing the abolition of OSHA, EPA, FTC
and SEC.
In fact, the Libertarians'
weakness is a comprehensive pr(}gram of restructuring society so
radical that it offers more laissez
faire permissiveness and ·less
government. involvement than most
people can swaUow in a single sit·
ting.

Ohio Perspective
"We're talking about a schoolclosing program in 2'hyears in excess of 50 schools. That's probably
the largest ever undetaken by a
school system in the history of the
United States.
"We've cut our staff fran 12,470
employees in January of 1978 to
about 10,054 two years later. We've '
overcome a $36 million defi9it in two
years.
"We're trying. For the first time
in .seven or eight years, the
Cleveland schools are living within
their revenue. If the Cleveland
School District were a business, it
probably would have closed...
Cox, a deputy superintendent, said
the system's goal "is to return to excellence ... in relation to what we
have.
"We can't allow our people to
throw up their hands and give up
because we don't have the staffing
orfunding we used to," Cox says. ·
"The Cleveland School District
faces the same problems businesses
face today. They've got to meet inflation pressures and employee
demands," said Roger Lulow, the
assistant to state Superintendent of
Public Instruction Franklin Walter.
"But th~y 'Cail•t raise their
prices," Lulow says.
"How close they are to balancing
their budget, they're probably close
to 100 percent," Lulow explains.
"They finish paying off their state
loan May 9. How close they are to
where they want to be in terms of
educating their children, well, that's
a different story."

By Scott Wolfe
Friday night a· notorious gang of
sklUed Southern sharpshooters will
ride into Northern GaUia County for
a big showdown against a very
dangerous crew of pirates. The
Southern gang will be'led into battle
by Carl Wolfe while the GaUia Countians will be led by Pirate skipper
Ted Lehew.
Over the years a mild case of

PLACID, N.Y. (AP)- The
color-coordinated Olympics are ·under way, opened in a spectacular
splash of rainbow patterns that lit up
a dismal winter's day in this sleepy,
picturesque little town. A crowd of 23,000 spectators,
creating a massive traffic tangle,
huddled together in frigid - temperatures under overcast skies Wednesday and watched the pomp and
pageantry of the opening
ceremonies highlighted by the spectacular parade of athletes.
Teams from 'SI nations signaUed
the start of the Games by marching
proudly through a small stadium on
the outskirts of town. Their colorful
winter gear, ranging from the bright
red ~ of the Australians to the
tan Texas rancher outfits of the U.S.
team, seemed culled from a painter's palate.
Now the sea of colors that enveloped the opening of the Games
turns into the pursuit of gold, silver
and bronze - a medal chase that
could be every bit as memorable as
those colorful ceremonies for the
United States.
· It started today with American
Beth Heiden a clear threat in the
women's 1,500-meter speed skating
and skier Bill Koch, who stunned the
world by winning a silver medal at
lnnsbruck four years ago, shooting
for more metal ·in- the men's ~
kilometer cross counlry race.
But ~ glamor event on today's
schedule was the men's downhill
skiing - a duel with Whiteface
Mountain's 3,009-meter Alpine cour·
se. Italian Herbert Plank, bronze
medalist at lnnshruck in 1976, had
Wednesday's fastest training timeI minute, 43.91 seconds - a full
second better than any other 'llblnpetitor. Peter, Mueller of Swit·
zerland, defending World Cup
downhill champion, and1 Canada's
" Ken Read, winner of two of the last
three World Cup downhills, shared
the favorite's role in the event.
First runs of men's and women's
luge cOmpetition were held Wednesday night, a few hours after the
colorful opening ceremonies.
Veteran East German Dettlef Gunther set a course record to take the
men's lead, while Vera Zlrl;ulya of
the Soviet Unloo led the women.
The second of the four luge runs
were scheduled for today along with
six more hockey games, including
the United States against
Czechosrovakia. The young
Americans rallied for a 2-2 tie with
Sweden in their hockey opener
Tuesday, while Czechoslovakia ripLAKE

NATIONAL BASXETBALL AI80CIATION

AT AGlANCE

-

By'l'lle Allodotedl'reoo

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New Jersey

H....ton

IJidlaoa
aeveland
Detroit

-

lAIIAngeleo

~·

Golden Slate

.\

ped Norway 11-0.
The carefully orchestrated
opening ceremonies went off without
a hitch - unless you count the
monwnental traffic jam that left
many of the spectators and even
some of the atnletes walking the It
miles from the stadium back into
town. It was faster than waiting out
the hopeless tangle of cars and
buses.
.
Vice President Walter F. Mondale
was in the reviewing stand with Lord
Killanin, president of the International Olympic Conunittee,
and other dignitaries. Mondale officially opened the Games with one
simple sentence that stuck strictly to
Olympic protocol.
"On ·behalf of the president of the
United States, and the American
people," the vice president said, "I
am pleased to declare officiaUy the
opening of the XIII Winter Olympics
held this year at Lake Placid."
There was no trace of the political
turmoil that has overshadowed the
Olympics for the last month, except
fQr the presence of a few lonely
demonstrators outside the arena
who protested the IOC's treatment
of Taiwan.
But Taiwan's athletes were ab-

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sent, seeking to be officially excused
from these Games rather than to
compete under regulations set down
by the IOC. Those regulations
stipulated the name, flag and
national anthem under which they
would be allowed to participate - a
move that cleared the way for the inclusion of athletes from Mainland
China in these Games.
Taiwan sued over the issue, lost
two appeals on the case, and then announced its decision to return home
rather than participate on the IOC' s .
terms. But a spokesman made it
clear that his country was not withdrawing, but seeking to be excused.
The differenCe seems semantic but
is important in the IOC lexicon.
"The IOC rule says i( you don't
compete after you enter, you're subject to severe penalties and we have
done nothing wrong," said Thomas
Hsueh. "We will be here until the
(IOC) board excuses us."
Outside the stadium where
opening ceremonies were held,
demonstrators who said they were
Taiwan citizens living in the United
States carried banners denouncing
the IOC position on the issue. There
were no incidents.

Mondale pinchhits for Carter
LAKE PLACID, N. Y. (AP) · pressively attired in knee-length fur
President Carter snubbed it. The coa'ts and fur hats.
ll,ussians got a cold shollider. All the
One had to strain to see who.£l!!lle
Yanks loved tJie Yanks, naturally.
between Taipei and the U"SSR.
Parachutists parachuted. Balloons Would Taiwan show? No, a void. The
by the thousands drifted skyward. empty space reflected lh~ scars of
They lit the torch and unleashed the international politics and utter intraditional doves of peace.
. sensitivity of the IOC.
So off we go - another Olympics,
The crowd of 23,000, sitting in
dedicated to sportsmanship and freezing weather, sat on its hands
good will among nations. The en- and failed to ·applaud until the Star
dless flame burns on.
Spangled Banner sprang out of the
Too bad it has to be a quadrennial chute · ahead of the parade of
salute to hypocrisy.
smiling, hat-waving Americans.
There is something very moving
Vice 'Pre,&lt;lident Mondale, dispat·
about an opening Olympic ched by the President to sub for him
ceremony, - with its pagan pomp in formally opening the xm Winter
_woven majestically into modem ar- Games, turned his ~d and chatted
tistry - whirling ballerinas on
with the Rev. Bernard Fell; chairskates, marching athletes attired in man of the Lake Placid Organizing
colors of the rainbow, recitation of Coi!Uilittee, as the Russians mar·
the athlete's Olympic oath.
ched past the presidential box.
Greece, as home of the Ancient
Games, led the parade, as always,
and the United States, as the host
nation, brought up the tail~nd, its
athletes looking like Old West cattle
With four players hitting double
drivers in their white !().gallon hats,
figures,
visiting Ironton St. Joe
blue jeans and Shee!}-lined SUede
rambled
to
an easy, 47-39 non-league
jackets.
victory
over
Hannan Trace WednesOnly Yugoslavia separated the
day
evening.
cowboy-clad Yanks .from their chief
Cronce led the way with 17 points,
rivals, the Soviet Union,. im-

Cllcago

St. Louis
EdmOilloo

Vancouver
'Colorado
Winnipeg

-

Buffalo

Booton

Toronto

Quebec

Montreal

LATONIA RESULTS
FWRENCE, Ky. (AP) - Cyclin
Cissy, a longshot with James McCullar aboard, won by a neck in 1:00
1-5 in the featured 51'.lfurlong sprint
Wednesday night at Latonia.
The winner paid $23.40, $13.40 and
$5.60; second-place Lovely Angle
returned S2Q and $13, and Princess
Fool was thif!l and paid$6.20.
The 4-3 combination of J .R.'s
Angel and B.B. 's Pride won the dai!l
double and returned $150.40.
The crowd of 2,9110 wagered
$342,133.

··alter

'I''

ted a dilemma to the nation's life insurers. They want Congress to allow
workers to invest additional funds in
their pension plans - and get a tax
break for doing so. The industry has
its reasons: it administers many
pensions plans.
Many plans have been badly
eroded by inflation, and need
beefing up. If workers could defer
taxes by investing up to 10 percent of
incomes in supplementary plans, the
situation might ~ improved, and
the declining savings rate might be
raised some.
If such a plan were implemented,
it might deprive the government of
funds. Deprivation is no safeguard
against excessive spending - the
government spends anyway, running up deficits.
Deficits, especially when they
follow a decade of deficits, are
widely considered to be inflationary.

Inflation last year was 13.3 percent,
The median sale .price of the
as measured by the Consumer Price
existing home - based on actual
Index.
sales thrt!ughout (Jie 1:9untry - was
The industry has therefore com$56,500 In December. '11hat represenpromi.sed:
ted a gain of 11 per cent or $000. Or
It will pus~ for tax breaks to those
did it? It did in currept doU.rs, hut
who contribute · to supplementary
adjuated for infiatillt was a
pension plans, an industry
decllneofmorethan percent.
spokesman said, but only when the
That seeming gain ut actlialio81
federal government gets its deficits
led Jack Carlson, . ecutive vice
under control.
president and chief economist to
"And when will that be?" he was
"stress that the~ Industry 18
askect. There was a long pause.
bearing more than ItS share of the inAs the insurance industry conflation-flghting l&gt;urdeb."
sidered the question, the people at
Other seemingly -pfofitable inthe National Association of Realtors
dustries have the same beef. While
found it difficult to decide whether
reporting record-high profits, in terexisting home prices
or fell in
ms·of CliiTentdollars,JtheY are sbow
December. lnflatloo again.
big l0118es when~ !\ lollari are adIf you have followed houaing
justed for inflation..
· .
· So bad has the dlstdrtion become
prices you might be .aware that the)
grew enonnousl:t: during th~ 19708,
that corporations this year must incausing analysts to say it wasU!the
!ll,...~~e:;the&lt;adjuated fJ.gures in their
best investment of the decade.annual reports.
\
it is ''burdened.''
I

rose

...

lRONTON ST. JOE (57» -

·•

-DRESS SLACKS, IN POlY-GAB.
-SUMMER TOPS
-DENIM SKIRTS
-DENIM 'JACKETS.
CHECK OUR SElECTION

Gagal, 4-3-11;

HANNAN TRACE lSI) -

Be.sver, 5-0-10;

JOI'leS, ~; . Webb, 1~2: Pack, .._...12;
Waugh, ~7; Petrte,l~2. Totals 1&amp;-7-39.

B.

Tools

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WRANGLER

Wagooer, 4-3-11; Lutz. (1.().0; H'Ctlmet~, 142;
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8EATiM6
INfLATION
BY· J,.1Vt~6 ...
14. M~ ,,.
&amp;MP'LE u .r ,.

OLYMPIC SKI JUMPING is being held on the new 7~ and !)().meter
sites at Lake Placid's Intervale Hill. Massive concrete and steel towers
were built at a cost of $6.5 million.

Ptlt8bllreh

Qevellnd 10'1, Delroillo:I

HCIUIIOn 121, New Yorit 117
I'Malllllll,lloltooiM
8eollle 113, Allonla II
' WulllnjJion Ill, S..lltqolll!
lAil Anplet IJI, Portlani!I03
Tlllnlly'l GuiMI

Gagai and Wagoner had 11 points
each while Kinney added 10.
Pacing Coach Donnie Saunders'
Wildcats were junior forward
Rodney Pack and senior Tim Beaver
with 12 and 10 points respectively.
Hannan Trace connected on 16 of
45 floor attempts with 36 percent and
seven of 13 free thorws. Hannan
Trace collected 33 rebounds with
Bruce Waugh getting 10.
Ironton St. Joe also won the
preliminary contest, 36-34. Wagoner
had eight for the winners. M. Waugh
dumped in 11 for the Wildcats.
Hannan Trace, 1-7 hosts Kyger
Creek Friday.
Box Score:

For North Gallia IHl center Dan
Berry will try to control the boards,
along with Mark Miller, teammates.
Joe Peck, Scott Howell and Tim
Howell.
-.
The reserve tilt will determine this
year 's Reserve championshiJI.
Coach Howie Caldwell's young, but
hustling Tornado team is now 14-3
overall and like -North Gallia is 8-1
within the league.
Coach Lehew's younger team is
13-5 overall.
·
Their only league loss came at the
hands of Southen while Coach
Caldell's team suffered its first
league loss last week against
Eastern in a real heartbreaker.
They lost in four overtimes!
Last year the two reserve squads
were c&lt;rSV AC champions.
The reserve tilt starts at 6:30 while
the varsity game is scheduled for B.
p.m.
In other games, Eastern hosts
Southwestern and Kyger Creek
visits Hannan Trace. SVAC clubs
close out their 1979-80 campaigns
this weekend and next week.
On Feb. 25 the Class A Sectional
Tournament will begin at Meigs
High School.

llelrolt
lllrlford

w-r'•Gameo

Mllwaukeelll, Clllcqo 101

Inside, the athletes from Mainland
China paraded behind their five-star
flag, smartiy attired in dark blue
uniforms manufactured, ironically,
in Japan.
·
Many of the delegations marched
to careful cadence but others adopted a ca refree flare, waving merrily
to the crowd. There was a muffled
sound about the applause that ac-companied the parade, probably
because of the gloves worn by nearly
all the spectators.
The largest welcomes were reserved, understandably, for the U. S.
team, the last delegation to enter the
stadium, an~ Canada. Both teams
responded wannly.
Speed skater Eric Heiden, who
could win five gold medals in these
Games, took the Olympic oath on
behalf of aU the athletes, and Terry
McDermott, a former speed skating
medalist, did the same for the officials and judges.
Leaving the stadium where the
ceremorues were held was an adventure. Spectators milled about,
searching for transportation. aut
truffle was simply not moving and
many shrugged their shoulders and
simply began walking. It was a
festive crowd and there were few
complaints even in the cold, unpleasant temperatures.
The dramatic ceremonies
provided a pleasant interlude from
the political climate that has
surrounded the Games ever since
President Carter requested that the
IOC move, postpone or cancel the
Moscow Summer Games because of
Russian
intervention
in
Afghanistan.
The IOC has rejected that request
and is moving ahead with plans for
the 1980 Summer Games. The United
States Olympic Coi!Uilittee said it
would have a statement today con·
cerning the president's caD for "a
prompt". withdrawal from the
Moscow Games. Officially, the
USOC has until May 24 to accept or
reject the invitation to the Summer
Olympics and Taiwan has already
proven that withdrawal from competition isn't always prompt.

class "AAA" Point Pleasant, one
wih over a very tough Wa hama
squad , and two wins over
Southwestern to name just a few .
Coach Carl Wolfe's powerful Tornadoes are currently ranked in the
State of Ohio. They have errupted
for 70 points or more on II different
occasions.
The North Gallia Pirates have put
together a respectable 1().8 record
overall and are 6-3 in the league.
They have brought home victories
over tough opponents such as
Southwestern, Eastern, and Miller.
Coach Lehew's squad has poured
in 70 or more points four different
times and always exhibits a potentially dangerous offensive attack.
They are currently tied with
Southwestern for second in the
league standings.
Controlling the boards combined
with continuous hustle, will play a
big part in keeping the game close at
the end, according to Coach Lehew.
Probable starters are Southern's
hot handed forward Jack Duffy,
followed by two very tough big men;
Dale Teaford and Dave "Big Red"
Foreman, along with guards Kent
Wolfe and Johnny Davis.

L&lt;loAngelea

l'lllloclelpbla 10'1, Ullllll6

NEW YORK (AP) - When you
have inflation of the sort we've been
experiencing, it's difficult to make
ends meet or to have things add up to
the answers your arithmetic teacher
taught you.
The distortions spread. Financial
theories that once were solid hold no
more water than a strainer, and
long-established standards of
behavior either change or show
themselves to be badly dated.
There persists the notion that U.S.
Savings Bonds are to be purchased
as a wise investment and patriotic
duty, even when the 7 percent yield
11 years means an almost cer: tain·netloss.
. There is no mystery to the
· mathematics involved. A taxable
; return of 7 per cent or less, depen: ding UJIC1n how long tl¥l bonds are
: held, is a poor return at a time when
• lnflatioo Is aim(llt double that nte.
• Meanwhile, inflation has presen-

opponents this year and on occasion
· the Pirates have been equally tough.
This year's edition of the cham·
pion Southern Torandoes has compiled an outstanding 16-1 record
overall and a perfect ~ slate within
the league. Their only loss came
very early in the season to a very
tough Ross-southeastern team.
Their record includes.two wins over

Flyers dump Wildcats

Pro standings

8eollle

Inflation changing simple situations

Ohio.
Ever since that time the two gangs
have been battling for territorial
rights, giving it everything they had
as they rode into battle.
Over the years, games between
these two teams have been highly
competitive and proved a lot of excitement, especially on te offensive
end of things. The Tornadoes have
been literally devastating tn th•ir

Olympics open with spectacular splash

Atlonto
S..Antonlo

Berry's World

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mid-seventies when the "James
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County. The James Gang led by
talented shooter Greg James was
chased by many during this time
and was seldom overtaken.
Then the quick and sure handed
Southerners starteil making a name
for themselves in rur•l ~nuth•astem

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�~-The Daily SentiDel, Middleport-Pomero), 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14,19110

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thlll'llday, Feb. 14, 1980

Meigs County honor rolls announced

OSU, Purdue on road tonight
By Associated Press
Ohio State and Purdue, sharing a
shaky lead over five other clubs in
the torrid Big Ten basketball race,
hit the hazardous road tonight and if
both suffer losses as bas been the
case much of this season there will
be another four-way tie for the
league lead:
Ohio Stale; ranked No. 9
nationally, and !5th-ranked Purdue
both have 8-1 records and are one
game ahead of Minnesota, Iowa and
Indiana which are tied at 7..'i.
Michigan and Illinois are tied at 6-6
and only two games off the pace.
Purdue invades Northwestern
tonight while Ohio State journeys to
Minnesota. Indiana will be at Iowa,
lllinois at Michigan and Michigan
State at Wisconsin.
If Purdue and Ohio State both lose,

they will drop into a lie' with Minnesota and either Indiana or Iowa.
The winner of the Illinois-Mtchigan .
game will remain in the running but
the loser will be alf but
mathematically eliminated with
seven.defeats.
" The Big Ten race is Uke &lt;he stock
market," said Purdue Coach Lee
Rose. "One day you're up, and one
day you're down. You never know
where you're going to be."
Another round of games is
scheduled Saturday with Minnesota
at Indiana, lllinois at Ohio State,
Wisconsin at Purdue, Iowa at Northwestern and Michigan at Michigan
State.
When those results are in, only
four games will reniain in the race
and there should be a better in·
dication of the flnal outcome. Unless

a team can break through and start
winning on the road , a tie lor the title
mvolving two or mot'e teams is quite
likely.
So far , 60 conference games have
been played and visitors have been
able to turn in only 14 victories. Since the teams reached the haHway
mark in the race, only Iowa has been
able to win on the road and that was
at Minnesota.
Indiana has a tough test at Iowa.
But the Hoosiers are hoping to
regain the services of scoring ace
Mike Woodson, sidelined since
December after undergoing back
surgery.
"He's done everything a basketball player is required to do," Coach
Bobby Knight said Saturday. " The
doctors haven'i seen him practice
but still won't give him the okay."
Meanwhile, with onlv six games to

Honor rolls for the second silt
weeka grading period In the Meigs
Local School Disirict bave been announced by_.DaYicLL. Glea11011,
supei'intendent.
To be named to the rolls students
must make a grade ol "B" or above
In aU their subjects. Named to the
rolls ol the respective schools were:
BRADBURY ELEMENTARY Donald Hanning, p~pal.
Grad~ 5 - Stanley Brocme, Tim
Durst, Shannon Hlndy, Julie H~ll,
Dawn Keesee, Eddie Kitchen, Judy
Mees, Jeff Nelson, Cindy Riffle,
Mark Smith; Kim Stewart and
Michelle Zirkle.
Grade 6 - Carole Bailey, Pollie
Chadwell, Mellssij Downing, John
Epple, Gina Follrod, Sheila Pullins,
Laura Smith and Regina Walls.
HARRISONVILLE ELEMENT.ARY - Greg McCail, principal.
(Students in capltalletters received
aU A's).
First Grade - Gina Arnett, Tina
Arnett&amp;, Jenny Barrett, Burt Ken- ·
nedy , Perry Leavy, Amanda
Molden, Kim Osborne., Lisa Morgan,
Becky Shamblin, · Aaron . Sheets,
Tracy Smith; Ricky White.
Second Grade - Steve Bass, Rlld·
ney Butcher, Kim Chapman,
DEREK CREMEANS, KELLY
HAMILTON, DANNY KENNEDY,
ROBERTA NAPPER, 'REBECCA
NAPPER, KIM PARSONS, Wendy
· PhiDips, DEBBIE SIX, CHRIS
WANDLING.
Third Grade - Christine Bass,
STACY DALTON, Stacey Gibbs,
Wesley Howard, VanCilBII Jay, Tlllllmy Kauff, Bobby Sbamlin, Jared
Sheela, Richljrd Vancy, Missy
White.
Fourth Grade - Shirlena Six.
Fifth Grade - JEFF ARNOLD,
Marty Cline, Willy Molden.
'Six Grade- Kenda Donohue, Amy
Molden, Lisa Riggs, Rlchelle White. ·
RtJTi.AliiD ElEMENTARY Eric Hart, prlnclpal. (Studenta in
capital letters received all A's) .
First Grade - DANNY ROBIN·
SON, KEVIN TAYLOR, Angela
Elliott, April Grover, Bill Hysell,
Jim Kingery, Tracee Leark, Ryan
Lemley, Derek Miller, Ronnie
Riggs, Stephanie Walker.
Second Grade - JiiiL DOCZI,
KIMBERLY EaLIN, Nicole Hartwell, TERRA SCHOONOVER,
BECKY STILTNER, Natalie
Tromm, Kelley Wood, Carl
Williams.
Third Grade - Laurie Black,
Chad Carson, Shawn Fetty, Abby
Fry, Rhonda Gomez, Joe HaD,
Traey MUchael, Martha Nelson,
Melissa Pettry, J. R. Walker,

Randy Coral, Tracy Eblin, David
Frymyer, Steven Gibbs, Melissa
Leach, Terry Reuter, Amy Roush,
Kristen Slawte•, Jennifer Taylor,
Amy Warth, Pam Whaley.
Second Grade - Kelly Douglas,
Heida Caruthers, Deanna Norris,
Krilltin King, Wally HaUield, Marsha King, Aaron Whaley, Traci B&amp;r·
tels, Mike Parker, Jay Humphreys,
MelanleBeegle.
'
Thlrd Grade - Mary Butcher,
Metoda Carl, Marc Corsi, Tracy Ann
Donaldson, Billy Gilkey, Christie
Sauters, Joan Simpson, Jody Taylor,
Mi~lle Taylor, Wesley Young.
Fourih - David Beegle, Bill
Brothers, Michele Folmer, Lisa
Frymyer, Charlotte H!lrt, ~udra
Houdaahelt, Artie Runnel, Kevin D.
King, Kevin V. Kin~, Shannon
Slavin, Angela Sloan, Tamra Vance,
Darren Warth.
Fifth Grade - April Clark, Phil
King, Brenda Sinclair.
Sixth Grade - Mary K. Cunningham, Jodi Harrison, Rod
Hanison, Scott Pullins, Tim Sloan,
Anita Smith, Darren Hayes.
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH - John
Mora, principal.
Seventh Grade' - l.Jsa Ashley,
Maria Averlon, Steve Crow, Brenda
Cunningham, Sean Doidge, Katrena
Donohue, Lorena Donohue, Amy Erwin, David Fisber, Rhonda HaddoE,
Gayla Haning, Cindy Hazelton,
Frances Hoffman, Lias Hoffman,
Sandy Hoyt, Randy Jewell, Shawn
Jolmson, Cathy Jonea, Bret Korn,
Tim LeMaBter, Carol Moodispallgh,
Vicky Peavley, Rodney Roush,
Wayne Shrimplin, Jackie Welker,
Dabble Werry, Retba Yost.
. Eighth Grade - Sherry Arnold,
Chris Burdette, Patty Duffy, Jimmy
Farley, David Follrod, Tim Frazier,
Franklin Howard, Paul Janey,
Rhonda Jeffers, Mike Kennedy,
Vicki· Lamp, Mike Mourning, Mae
Nakamoto, Jon Perrin, .ugle Pratt,
Cheryl Riffle, Nick Riggs, Len
Sayre, Craig Sinclair,' Anthony
Smith, Vaughan Spencer, Randy
Stewart, Paula Swindell, Terri
Thoma, Melvin V~r. Zandra
Vaughan, Sam Wamsley.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL - James
Diehl, principal.
Freshmen - Jamie Acree,
1\owena Averion, Robin Barrett,
Anita Basham, Jeffrey Baughman,
Robert Boring, Karla Brown, Robin
Buffington, Brett Carl, Rick Chancey, Cindy Crooks, Karla DeMoss,
Faith Dickens, Angela Farley, Brent
Finlaw, Barbara Grueaer, Becky
Handley, Karl Harder, William Harmon, Scott Harriaon, Paula Horton,
Stephanie Houchins, Jim Hoyt,
SABRINA~N.
Natalie Jo Lambert, Cheryl Lauder· Fourth Grade - Joe Tillis,
mllt, Mary Lee, suzan Lightfoot,
PATRICIA McGEE, David Pettry,
Shirley McDonald, Betty Murphy,
Michliel Bartrum, USA MILLER,
Scott Pickens, Henry Rider, BerKim Laudennllt, P. J. Smallwood,
nard Romine, John Smith, Krill
Jodi Brown, John Sisson, Cathy · Snowden, Paula Swisher, Greg
Blessl,ng, Pam Stj)tner.
Taylor, Angle Van Cooney, Deanna
Fifth Grade - . JWg1na Eblin,
Van Meter, Renee Willis.
Maria Musser, r.of'etta ·Novak,
Sopbomores - Kristin Anderson,
MICHELLE PETERsoN, Ruth PorTeresa Basham, Kim Birchfield,
ter, Denny Welsh, Diana \Villfam.
Teresa Carroll, Mark Cline, Jeanetson.
te Cook, Pam Crooks, Mike CunSixth Grade - Sherry Wilson,
ningham, Suaan Danner, Phyllis
Charles Gilkerson, D. R. Smith,
Davis, Kim DeMoss, Melanie
Rebecca Birc!ifield, Deroo Stafford,
Dillard, Tammy Eichinger, Brenda
Ryan Mohr, CiJrtstina McGee,
Fry, David Hoffman, Robert
Crystal Bumem, Todd Qoczl.
Houdashelt, Robin Kitchen, Keith
Prim. Sp. Ed. - Peggy Estep,
Unkous, Mark McGuire, Lynn
Tina Romine, Angela White.
Oliver, Kathy Parker, Sheila
Int. Sp. Ed. -David Dunkle, Ivy
Powell, Opal Paugh, Helen Slack,
Frederick, David ~1,1dennilt, Nicky
Alfred Smith, Laura Smith, Roberta
McKnight, Charlotte Patteraon, Tim
Smith, Gregg Thomas, Dennis ThorMullins, Missy Riggs.
nton, Tim Tillis, Fred Young.
L.ri. - Jimmy Cleland, Charles
Jwliors- Tllllllllfh Adkins, Connie
Harmon, Donald Nickels, Robert
Bailey, Rick Baker, Ruth Blake,
Speanl.
Kenda Braun, Bruce Brlckles,
SALISBURY ElEMENTARY Denise Brickles, Kelly Brown,
John Usle, prlnclpal.
Richard Brown, Stephen Carson,
First Grade - Liaa Capehart,
Andy Crolls, Becky Dorst, Shari

go, Mike McGee of Michigan
remains the individual scoring
leader with a 22.5 average and an 18point lead over Jay Vincent of
Michigan State who has a 21.0
average.

Wes Matthews of Wisconsin is next
at 19.5 and Herb Williams, who had
two outstanding games last week
and was named Big Ten Player of
the Week, has a 19.3 average.
Purdue's Joe Barry Carroll, who
bas hit a scoring slump, is tied for
fifth with Wisconsin's Claude
Gregory, both at 18.3 points a game.
Kevin McHale of Minnesota is the
rebounding leader with a 9.3
average followed by Williams at 8.8
and Gregory at 8.6 and Kelvin Ransey of Ohio State is the assists leader
with a 6.6 average, a shade ahead of
Indiana's Isiah Thomas at 6.4.

DOWNTOWN LAKE PLACID is the hub of the 1980 Winter Garnes.
Figure skating and ice hocking will take place in the new Olympic ice
arena. Next to it is the speed-skating oval. Other events will occur in
nearby areas.

North Carolina State defeats lOth ranked Blue Devils
By Associated Press
Norm Sloan fdund some answers.
On the other hand, Bill Foster was
faced with a big question.
In short, that was the difference
between winning and losing as North
Carolina State upset lOth-ranked
Duke 76-59 in college basketball
Wednesday night.
· "That certainly answered a lot of
queations for me," said Sloan,
alluding to his team's first-baH rally
without the services of leading

scorer Hawkeye Whitney.
"We cut the lead with Hawkeye on
the bench," added Sloan, in reference to Whitney's foul trouble which
kept him out for the last 14 minutes
of the first half. "That showed me
something about this team.
Hawkeye's a great scorer and
naturally, ·he's our scoring leader
when he's nut there."
The Blue Devils hit on 13 of their
first 21 shots to take a big early lead

after Whitney was forced to the bench with three fouls. But then Clyde
Austin and Kenny Matthews led a 1().
point burst to shoot North Carolina
State back into the game, helping to
cut Duke's lead at the ball to three
points, at 37-34.
With the foul-troubled Whitney
contributing only 14 points, Austin
took over the scoring burden for the
Wolfpack with 20.
In other Top Twenty games, No. I

DePaul routed Valparaiso9f&gt;.71; No.
5 Kentucky hammered Florida 9570; No. 6 Louisiana State trimmed
Auburn 50-44; No. 8 Maryland whipped East Carolinaa:&gt;-72 ; Virginia upset No. 10 Clemson 89-87 and Iowa
State stunned No. 19 Kansas State
66-!i!l.

Mark Aguirre scored 23 points and
Skip Dillard added 20 to lead
DePaul's 21st straight victory this
season and 22 over two years. The

OU topples Broncos, 56-50
KALAMAZoo, Mich. (AP)- Kirk
Lelunan pumped in 17 points as Ohio

~ednesday 's

University shut out Western
Michigan in the final five minutes,

college basketball scores

By Tlte Auocialed. P'n!u
EAST
Bridgeport, Conn. 1111, Fatrletgh Dickinson 62
ConnecUcul7%, 8ootoo U . ll$
Delaware 58, RJder 52
n.trolt 72, St. Franct., 1'11. 71
FairfleldSZ, Army 51
Harvard 7t,St. Anaetm's 68
llmcford 83, Jolmiii&lt;Jpk!rus 59
lAfayette 12, Lehich 76
P,&lt;nnSt. 66, PillllburRh$3
Rhode Island 74, Providence 58
St. Joseph·a, Pa. $16, Hofstra 74
Wag..• 02, Merchant Marine62
W. Connecticut st. 69, Coast Guard oo
Widene r81 , Waahingtonll

soum

Cilo del 6l. Baptlol i2
!'lorida So. 104, Flortdl Tech ~1
Flurman 67, Tenn ..Qaattanooga 65
Otcrgia St. 96, Georgia So. 61

Pembroke St. 88, Coker 65
Tennessee 86, Mississippi St. 73
Towson St. 74, Baltimore 69
Virginia 89, Clemson87
Virginia Tech 66, James Madison 40
Wake Forest 61, Davidson 53
W. Carolinalt2,E. Term~ St. 80$
MIDWEST
Butler n ,Indiana Cent. 71
Dakota St. 81 , Dakota Wesl. 79, CYT
Dayton 79, Drexel67
DePaul95, Valparailw 71
E. Michigan 79, Bowling Green 67
lowa St. 66, Kansaa St. 58
Kansas 69, Oklahoma 66
Kent St. 96, Robert Morris &amp;l
Moorhead St. 67, Northern St., S.D. 62
OhioU. 56, W. Michigan 50
Oklahoma St. &amp;1, Nebra.Ua 68
SW Oklahoma 68, NW Oklahoma 61

~L&amp;na.Sl.~ .

Taylor69, Bluffton 54'
Toledo 75, Miami, Ohio 72
SOV'lliWEST

Mis:lissippl89, Vanderbilt 18
Mt. St. Mary's 101, GatholicU. 13
Norfolk State llli, Morris Brown 78
N. Carolina St. 7&amp;. Duke 59

ArkamasSt. 77, Wis.-Milwaukee 73
TeJ:·Arlington 71, McNeese St. 69
FAR WEST
Missouri 83, Colorado 68
Nevada-Las Vesas 66, Wyoming 64
New Mex.iCG St. 79. Drake 78

~ntucky 95, Florida 70

Auburn 44
!Ui'yland 15, E. Carolina 72
Ntm:r &amp;I , Houston Baptist 7:1

beating the Broncos 56-50 in a Mid·
American Conference basketball
game Wednesday.
Spindle Graves added 12 points for
Ohio. Harold Triche had 14 and Mike
Seberger II for the Broncos, who
remain tied with Ball State and
Miami of Ohio for fourth in the MidAmerican Conference.
Western dominated scoring in the
last nine minutes of the first haH scoring 20 points to Ohio's 8 - and
ended the baH with a 3!-24lead.
In the second baH, Western led 5().
46 with just over five minutes
remaining. But it was all Ohio from
that point on as the Bobcats took the
lead at 4:19 with a short jumper
from Andre Adams.
Western shot only 38 percent from
the floor, 57 percent from the free
throw line. The Broncos shot 78 per·
cent from the line and 44 percent
from the floor.

The victory raises Ohio to 7-16
overall and 4-9 in the conference.
Western dropped to &amp;-7 in the conference, 11-12 overall.

Young Reds' hurlers
seekbig.hncreases
CINCINNATI (AP) - Young pitchers Mike I.,aCoss and Frank
Pastore may not have enough
seniority to seek arbitration, but
they are still not satisfied with the
salary offers of the Cincinnati Reds.
Earlier this week, the 22-year-old
Pastore, who hasn't even spent a
whole season in the big leagues, told
a reporter, "I'm asking for an unprecendented amount for a player of
my length of service, because in
looking around the league it seems
that would be my value on the open

~iller

counting on bench -tonight
Buckeyes battle Gopher cagers

'

~s

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
;COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -Ninthrltnked Ohio State will dig deep into
ills bench again tonight when the Big
T~n Conference c&lt;rleaders visit Minnesota.
: "We are going to k&lt;;_Cp using a .1~
a! people," promised Buckeye
Coach Eldon Miller. "We have to.
~ can't play pressure man-t&lt;&gt;-rnan
~ense for 40 minutes. We'll give
our regulars rest In each half so they
play only about 36 minutes."
;Miller used 10 players in avenging
8!1 earlier loss against Michigan
Saturday night. The Buckeyes won
7l..'i9 to climb back into a first-place
tte with Purdue at 8-1.
·"We played our best defensive
blisketball of the season in the last
tWo games. But we have to keep it
up," said Miller, eyeing a Big Ten
s~h run that sends the Buckeyes

against all four of the other first
division contenders.
·Meanwhile, Purdue must play
only Ohio State among the current
top five teams in its last six games.
And the Boilennakers will be entertaining the Buckeyes on Feb. 28.
"Our depth is vital," said Miller of
the league's most diffjcult finishing
schedule. "I now feel we have II
players who can make a contribution when the game is still in
doubt. Up until recently, we have
bad just eight. ..
Miller's late-season bench finds
are 6-foot-9 sophomore forwardcenter Cliff Kirchner and a pair of
freshmen, 6-11 center Granville
Waiters and 1&gt;3 guard Nate Sims.
Jim Dutcher, Minnesota's coach,
maintains the league is,so balanced
that many outcomes will hinge on
foul shooting. Just two games
separates the first seven. Michigan

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State, Wisconsin and Northwestern
are the only teams out of the race.
"I think everybody's close enough
that it usually comes down to which
team makes its one and ones at the
end," said Dutcher.
"Look at.the Ohio State-Wisconsin
game. (Wisconsin's Larry ) Petty
makes his one and one and (the
Buckeyes') Jim Smith doesn't. It's
the ball ,game," he said of Ohio
State's 70-67 road loss to the
Badgers.
Minnesota, 7-5 and tied for third
place with Indiana and Iowa, bowed
at Ohio State 7:&gt;-74 in overtime in the
first round. The Gophers are 14-7
overall to the Buckeyes' 16-5 mark
for all games.

Blue Demons broke the game open
with a 14-2 spurt at the start of the
second baH.
"We played about 25 minutes +
the first five minutes and the last
20," said DePaul Coach Ray Meyer.
"We had about 20 minutes of going
through the motions. I don 't think
you could affect this team if you
threw a bomb in among them. When
they bave to play, they play. When
they don't have to play, they coast.
They've certainly given me some
anxious moments.''
Sam Bowie scored 19 points and
Derrick Hord contributed 18 as Kentucky crushed Florida. Bowie scored
12 of his points as the Wildcats rolled
to a 43-25 lead and the Gators never
seriously threatened thereafter.
Ethan Martin drilled in six
straight free throws in the final 42
seconds and Willie Sims added a

market.''

Pastore, whose 1979 major league
contract called for the minimum
$21,000, wouldn't disclose the salary
package he wanted , but he was more 1
optimistic about signing a contract
following tallcs with Reds officials
Tuesday. ·
" Nothing was settled, but we're
much closer," Pastore said from
California. ''I think I'll be signing
within a week. We've come down
quit~ a bit and they've come up."
· Pastore won four of his last five
decisions to finish 6-7 with a 4.26 earned run average. Included in those
victories was one complete game, a
7-1 victory over Hoilston which gave
the Reds conunand in the National
League's Western Division entering
the final week of the baseball
season.
Chief Bender, the Reds' vice
president for player peNonnel, was'
not so openly optimistic about the

negotiations process with Pastore
and LaCoss.
"In both cases, I think we made a
little progress, but very little," Bender said.
LaCoss, who last year was 14-8
with a 3.50 earned run average in his
first full big league season, appeared to be the tougher of the pair
to sign.
The 23-year-old LaCoss won a spot
on the National League All Star
team by compiling an IHl record by
the middle of June.
" We're not close," Bender said of
negotiations with LaCoss. " It's
tough when a guy's asking for what
he is."
Meanwhile, arbitration hearings
have been set up for Monday in
Chicago for Rl'd.s third b8seman
Ray Knight and ouUielder Dave
Collins.
The two are among the almost 690
major leaguers who have filed to
have their salary disputes settled by
arbitration. ·

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slam dunk on a breakaway as I..SU
defeated Auburn. Dutch Morley
scored !8 points to pace Maryland
past East Carolina.
Jeff Lamp hit a pair of free throws
with four seconds remaiiting to lift
Virginia over Clemson. Buzzy
Williams' layup with 50 seconds left
had tied the game at~ for Clemson.
Dean Uthoff scored 19 points and
Guy Minnifield added 16 to pace
Iowa State's upset of Kansas State.
Uthoff scored five of his points in a~
0 second-baH spurt that put Iowa
State in control.
Elsewhere, Greg Webb's basket
with six seconds remaining led New
Mexico State over Drake 7~78; Corny Thompson hit for 17 points to
power Connecticut over Boston
University 72-lili; Kirk Lehman's 17
points led Ohio past Western
Michigan 56-50; Darnell Valentine
and Ricky Ross combined for 38
points to pace Kansas over
Oklahoma 69-&amp;i; John Stroud's 34
points led Mississippi to an 89-78
decision over Vanderbilt; Frank
Brickowskl's 16 points trig Penn
State over Pitt 66-53; and Horace
Owens had 17 points as Rhode Island
defeated Providence 74-58.

Di'ehel, Linda . Eason, Tina El!St,
Sbeila Fetty, Teresa Fetty, Jerry
Fields, James Gheen, Kim Glass,
Katrina Hale, Floyd Holiday, Robin
Harder, Robin Herald, Sandra Herdmah, Cathy Hess, Sheila Horky,
Jean Horton, Angela Houchins, June
Hutton, Sberri Hysell, Joyee Janey,
Cheryl Johnson, Thoma.s Kelly, Randy Kennedy, April King, Brian King,
Unda Kovalchik, Anita Lee, Edward Lester, Rebekah Long, Joy
Hudson, Terry Mayes, Chris McKinney, Michael S. Miller, Nelson
Morrison, Deena Neece, Steven
Ohlinger, Angela Payne, Beth
Perrin, Mary Ridgway, Andrea
Riggs, Lori Rupe, Tony Scott, ·
Angela Sinclair, Mike Smith,
Charles Stewart, Brian Swann,
Camille Swindell, Barbara Tanner, ·
Barbara Thomas, Richard Van
Meter, Jena Welker, Darla Wilcox,
David Wilkes, Linda Williams,
Darla Williamson.
Seniors - Tonia Ash, Beth Bartrum, Julie Biron, Brynda Black, .
Medina Bryan, Saundra Burnem,
John Byer, Melissa Cale, Dan Car·
man, Betty Carsey, Kenneth Cook,
Yvonne Core, Alan Cummings,
Larry Cundiff. Kay Cunningham,
Debbie Davidson, Linda Donohue,
Christine Ebersbach, Tim 'Faulk,
Kevin Ferrell, Andrea Grover, Edward Holter, Janet Horky, Bruce
Hy~ell, Mary Hysell, Penny Jacka,
Gary Jones, Lisa Jones, Jennell
Kelly, Clifford Kennedy, Brian
McKinney, William McMillion,
Tammy McDaniel, Joyce Lambert,
Rens LeFebre, David Lewis, Cherie
Lightfoot, Paul Matson, Michael
Continued on Page 9

1

J
I•

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"

�~-The Daily SentiDel, Middleport-Pomero), 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14,19110

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thlll'llday, Feb. 14, 1980

Meigs County honor rolls announced

OSU, Purdue on road tonight
By Associated Press
Ohio State and Purdue, sharing a
shaky lead over five other clubs in
the torrid Big Ten basketball race,
hit the hazardous road tonight and if
both suffer losses as bas been the
case much of this season there will
be another four-way tie for the
league lead:
Ohio Stale; ranked No. 9
nationally, and !5th-ranked Purdue
both have 8-1 records and are one
game ahead of Minnesota, Iowa and
Indiana which are tied at 7..'i.
Michigan and Illinois are tied at 6-6
and only two games off the pace.
Purdue invades Northwestern
tonight while Ohio State journeys to
Minnesota. Indiana will be at Iowa,
lllinois at Michigan and Michigan
State at Wisconsin.
If Purdue and Ohio State both lose,

they will drop into a lie' with Minnesota and either Indiana or Iowa.
The winner of the Illinois-Mtchigan .
game will remain in the running but
the loser will be alf but
mathematically eliminated with
seven.defeats.
" The Big Ten race is Uke &lt;he stock
market," said Purdue Coach Lee
Rose. "One day you're up, and one
day you're down. You never know
where you're going to be."
Another round of games is
scheduled Saturday with Minnesota
at Indiana, lllinois at Ohio State,
Wisconsin at Purdue, Iowa at Northwestern and Michigan at Michigan
State.
When those results are in, only
four games will reniain in the race
and there should be a better in·
dication of the flnal outcome. Unless

a team can break through and start
winning on the road , a tie lor the title
mvolving two or mot'e teams is quite
likely.
So far , 60 conference games have
been played and visitors have been
able to turn in only 14 victories. Since the teams reached the haHway
mark in the race, only Iowa has been
able to win on the road and that was
at Minnesota.
Indiana has a tough test at Iowa.
But the Hoosiers are hoping to
regain the services of scoring ace
Mike Woodson, sidelined since
December after undergoing back
surgery.
"He's done everything a basketball player is required to do," Coach
Bobby Knight said Saturday. " The
doctors haven'i seen him practice
but still won't give him the okay."
Meanwhile, with onlv six games to

Honor rolls for the second silt
weeka grading period In the Meigs
Local School Disirict bave been announced by_.DaYicLL. Glea11011,
supei'intendent.
To be named to the rolls students
must make a grade ol "B" or above
In aU their subjects. Named to the
rolls ol the respective schools were:
BRADBURY ELEMENTARY Donald Hanning, p~pal.
Grad~ 5 - Stanley Brocme, Tim
Durst, Shannon Hlndy, Julie H~ll,
Dawn Keesee, Eddie Kitchen, Judy
Mees, Jeff Nelson, Cindy Riffle,
Mark Smith; Kim Stewart and
Michelle Zirkle.
Grade 6 - Carole Bailey, Pollie
Chadwell, Mellssij Downing, John
Epple, Gina Follrod, Sheila Pullins,
Laura Smith and Regina Walls.
HARRISONVILLE ELEMENT.ARY - Greg McCail, principal.
(Students in capltalletters received
aU A's).
First Grade - Gina Arnett, Tina
Arnett&amp;, Jenny Barrett, Burt Ken- ·
nedy , Perry Leavy, Amanda
Molden, Kim Osborne., Lisa Morgan,
Becky Shamblin, · Aaron . Sheets,
Tracy Smith; Ricky White.
Second Grade - Steve Bass, Rlld·
ney Butcher, Kim Chapman,
DEREK CREMEANS, KELLY
HAMILTON, DANNY KENNEDY,
ROBERTA NAPPER, 'REBECCA
NAPPER, KIM PARSONS, Wendy
· PhiDips, DEBBIE SIX, CHRIS
WANDLING.
Third Grade - Christine Bass,
STACY DALTON, Stacey Gibbs,
Wesley Howard, VanCilBII Jay, Tlllllmy Kauff, Bobby Sbamlin, Jared
Sheela, Richljrd Vancy, Missy
White.
Fourth Grade - Shirlena Six.
Fifth Grade - JEFF ARNOLD,
Marty Cline, Willy Molden.
'Six Grade- Kenda Donohue, Amy
Molden, Lisa Riggs, Rlchelle White. ·
RtJTi.AliiD ElEMENTARY Eric Hart, prlnclpal. (Studenta in
capital letters received all A's) .
First Grade - DANNY ROBIN·
SON, KEVIN TAYLOR, Angela
Elliott, April Grover, Bill Hysell,
Jim Kingery, Tracee Leark, Ryan
Lemley, Derek Miller, Ronnie
Riggs, Stephanie Walker.
Second Grade - JiiiL DOCZI,
KIMBERLY EaLIN, Nicole Hartwell, TERRA SCHOONOVER,
BECKY STILTNER, Natalie
Tromm, Kelley Wood, Carl
Williams.
Third Grade - Laurie Black,
Chad Carson, Shawn Fetty, Abby
Fry, Rhonda Gomez, Joe HaD,
Traey MUchael, Martha Nelson,
Melissa Pettry, J. R. Walker,

Randy Coral, Tracy Eblin, David
Frymyer, Steven Gibbs, Melissa
Leach, Terry Reuter, Amy Roush,
Kristen Slawte•, Jennifer Taylor,
Amy Warth, Pam Whaley.
Second Grade - Kelly Douglas,
Heida Caruthers, Deanna Norris,
Krilltin King, Wally HaUield, Marsha King, Aaron Whaley, Traci B&amp;r·
tels, Mike Parker, Jay Humphreys,
MelanleBeegle.
'
Thlrd Grade - Mary Butcher,
Metoda Carl, Marc Corsi, Tracy Ann
Donaldson, Billy Gilkey, Christie
Sauters, Joan Simpson, Jody Taylor,
Mi~lle Taylor, Wesley Young.
Fourih - David Beegle, Bill
Brothers, Michele Folmer, Lisa
Frymyer, Charlotte H!lrt, ~udra
Houdaahelt, Artie Runnel, Kevin D.
King, Kevin V. Kin~, Shannon
Slavin, Angela Sloan, Tamra Vance,
Darren Warth.
Fifth Grade - April Clark, Phil
King, Brenda Sinclair.
Sixth Grade - Mary K. Cunningham, Jodi Harrison, Rod
Hanison, Scott Pullins, Tim Sloan,
Anita Smith, Darren Hayes.
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH - John
Mora, principal.
Seventh Grade' - l.Jsa Ashley,
Maria Averlon, Steve Crow, Brenda
Cunningham, Sean Doidge, Katrena
Donohue, Lorena Donohue, Amy Erwin, David Fisber, Rhonda HaddoE,
Gayla Haning, Cindy Hazelton,
Frances Hoffman, Lias Hoffman,
Sandy Hoyt, Randy Jewell, Shawn
Jolmson, Cathy Jonea, Bret Korn,
Tim LeMaBter, Carol Moodispallgh,
Vicky Peavley, Rodney Roush,
Wayne Shrimplin, Jackie Welker,
Dabble Werry, Retba Yost.
. Eighth Grade - Sherry Arnold,
Chris Burdette, Patty Duffy, Jimmy
Farley, David Follrod, Tim Frazier,
Franklin Howard, Paul Janey,
Rhonda Jeffers, Mike Kennedy,
Vicki· Lamp, Mike Mourning, Mae
Nakamoto, Jon Perrin, .ugle Pratt,
Cheryl Riffle, Nick Riggs, Len
Sayre, Craig Sinclair,' Anthony
Smith, Vaughan Spencer, Randy
Stewart, Paula Swindell, Terri
Thoma, Melvin V~r. Zandra
Vaughan, Sam Wamsley.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL - James
Diehl, principal.
Freshmen - Jamie Acree,
1\owena Averion, Robin Barrett,
Anita Basham, Jeffrey Baughman,
Robert Boring, Karla Brown, Robin
Buffington, Brett Carl, Rick Chancey, Cindy Crooks, Karla DeMoss,
Faith Dickens, Angela Farley, Brent
Finlaw, Barbara Grueaer, Becky
Handley, Karl Harder, William Harmon, Scott Harriaon, Paula Horton,
Stephanie Houchins, Jim Hoyt,
SABRINA~N.
Natalie Jo Lambert, Cheryl Lauder· Fourth Grade - Joe Tillis,
mllt, Mary Lee, suzan Lightfoot,
PATRICIA McGEE, David Pettry,
Shirley McDonald, Betty Murphy,
Michliel Bartrum, USA MILLER,
Scott Pickens, Henry Rider, BerKim Laudennllt, P. J. Smallwood,
nard Romine, John Smith, Krill
Jodi Brown, John Sisson, Cathy · Snowden, Paula Swisher, Greg
Blessl,ng, Pam Stj)tner.
Taylor, Angle Van Cooney, Deanna
Fifth Grade - . JWg1na Eblin,
Van Meter, Renee Willis.
Maria Musser, r.of'etta ·Novak,
Sopbomores - Kristin Anderson,
MICHELLE PETERsoN, Ruth PorTeresa Basham, Kim Birchfield,
ter, Denny Welsh, Diana \Villfam.
Teresa Carroll, Mark Cline, Jeanetson.
te Cook, Pam Crooks, Mike CunSixth Grade - Sherry Wilson,
ningham, Suaan Danner, Phyllis
Charles Gilkerson, D. R. Smith,
Davis, Kim DeMoss, Melanie
Rebecca Birc!ifield, Deroo Stafford,
Dillard, Tammy Eichinger, Brenda
Ryan Mohr, CiJrtstina McGee,
Fry, David Hoffman, Robert
Crystal Bumem, Todd Qoczl.
Houdashelt, Robin Kitchen, Keith
Prim. Sp. Ed. - Peggy Estep,
Unkous, Mark McGuire, Lynn
Tina Romine, Angela White.
Oliver, Kathy Parker, Sheila
Int. Sp. Ed. -David Dunkle, Ivy
Powell, Opal Paugh, Helen Slack,
Frederick, David ~1,1dennilt, Nicky
Alfred Smith, Laura Smith, Roberta
McKnight, Charlotte Patteraon, Tim
Smith, Gregg Thomas, Dennis ThorMullins, Missy Riggs.
nton, Tim Tillis, Fred Young.
L.ri. - Jimmy Cleland, Charles
Jwliors- Tllllllllfh Adkins, Connie
Harmon, Donald Nickels, Robert
Bailey, Rick Baker, Ruth Blake,
Speanl.
Kenda Braun, Bruce Brlckles,
SALISBURY ElEMENTARY Denise Brickles, Kelly Brown,
John Usle, prlnclpal.
Richard Brown, Stephen Carson,
First Grade - Liaa Capehart,
Andy Crolls, Becky Dorst, Shari

go, Mike McGee of Michigan
remains the individual scoring
leader with a 22.5 average and an 18point lead over Jay Vincent of
Michigan State who has a 21.0
average.

Wes Matthews of Wisconsin is next
at 19.5 and Herb Williams, who had
two outstanding games last week
and was named Big Ten Player of
the Week, has a 19.3 average.
Purdue's Joe Barry Carroll, who
bas hit a scoring slump, is tied for
fifth with Wisconsin's Claude
Gregory, both at 18.3 points a game.
Kevin McHale of Minnesota is the
rebounding leader with a 9.3
average followed by Williams at 8.8
and Gregory at 8.6 and Kelvin Ransey of Ohio State is the assists leader
with a 6.6 average, a shade ahead of
Indiana's Isiah Thomas at 6.4.

DOWNTOWN LAKE PLACID is the hub of the 1980 Winter Garnes.
Figure skating and ice hocking will take place in the new Olympic ice
arena. Next to it is the speed-skating oval. Other events will occur in
nearby areas.

North Carolina State defeats lOth ranked Blue Devils
By Associated Press
Norm Sloan fdund some answers.
On the other hand, Bill Foster was
faced with a big question.
In short, that was the difference
between winning and losing as North
Carolina State upset lOth-ranked
Duke 76-59 in college basketball
Wednesday night.
· "That certainly answered a lot of
queations for me," said Sloan,
alluding to his team's first-baH rally
without the services of leading

scorer Hawkeye Whitney.
"We cut the lead with Hawkeye on
the bench," added Sloan, in reference to Whitney's foul trouble which
kept him out for the last 14 minutes
of the first half. "That showed me
something about this team.
Hawkeye's a great scorer and
naturally, ·he's our scoring leader
when he's nut there."
The Blue Devils hit on 13 of their
first 21 shots to take a big early lead

after Whitney was forced to the bench with three fouls. But then Clyde
Austin and Kenny Matthews led a 1().
point burst to shoot North Carolina
State back into the game, helping to
cut Duke's lead at the ball to three
points, at 37-34.
With the foul-troubled Whitney
contributing only 14 points, Austin
took over the scoring burden for the
Wolfpack with 20.
In other Top Twenty games, No. I

DePaul routed Valparaiso9f&gt;.71; No.
5 Kentucky hammered Florida 9570; No. 6 Louisiana State trimmed
Auburn 50-44; No. 8 Maryland whipped East Carolinaa:&gt;-72 ; Virginia upset No. 10 Clemson 89-87 and Iowa
State stunned No. 19 Kansas State
66-!i!l.

Mark Aguirre scored 23 points and
Skip Dillard added 20 to lead
DePaul's 21st straight victory this
season and 22 over two years. The

OU topples Broncos, 56-50
KALAMAZoo, Mich. (AP)- Kirk
Lelunan pumped in 17 points as Ohio

~ednesday 's

University shut out Western
Michigan in the final five minutes,

college basketball scores

By Tlte Auocialed. P'n!u
EAST
Bridgeport, Conn. 1111, Fatrletgh Dickinson 62
ConnecUcul7%, 8ootoo U . ll$
Delaware 58, RJder 52
n.trolt 72, St. Franct., 1'11. 71
FairfleldSZ, Army 51
Harvard 7t,St. Anaetm's 68
llmcford 83, Jolmiii&lt;Jpk!rus 59
lAfayette 12, Lehich 76
P,&lt;nnSt. 66, PillllburRh$3
Rhode Island 74, Providence 58
St. Joseph·a, Pa. $16, Hofstra 74
Wag..• 02, Merchant Marine62
W. Connecticut st. 69, Coast Guard oo
Widene r81 , Waahingtonll

soum

Cilo del 6l. Baptlol i2
!'lorida So. 104, Flortdl Tech ~1
Flurman 67, Tenn ..Qaattanooga 65
Otcrgia St. 96, Georgia So. 61

Pembroke St. 88, Coker 65
Tennessee 86, Mississippi St. 73
Towson St. 74, Baltimore 69
Virginia 89, Clemson87
Virginia Tech 66, James Madison 40
Wake Forest 61, Davidson 53
W. Carolinalt2,E. Term~ St. 80$
MIDWEST
Butler n ,Indiana Cent. 71
Dakota St. 81 , Dakota Wesl. 79, CYT
Dayton 79, Drexel67
DePaul95, Valparailw 71
E. Michigan 79, Bowling Green 67
lowa St. 66, Kansaa St. 58
Kansas 69, Oklahoma 66
Kent St. 96, Robert Morris &amp;l
Moorhead St. 67, Northern St., S.D. 62
OhioU. 56, W. Michigan 50
Oklahoma St. &amp;1, Nebra.Ua 68
SW Oklahoma 68, NW Oklahoma 61

~L&amp;na.Sl.~ .

Taylor69, Bluffton 54'
Toledo 75, Miami, Ohio 72
SOV'lliWEST

Mis:lissippl89, Vanderbilt 18
Mt. St. Mary's 101, GatholicU. 13
Norfolk State llli, Morris Brown 78
N. Carolina St. 7&amp;. Duke 59

ArkamasSt. 77, Wis.-Milwaukee 73
TeJ:·Arlington 71, McNeese St. 69
FAR WEST
Missouri 83, Colorado 68
Nevada-Las Vesas 66, Wyoming 64
New Mex.iCG St. 79. Drake 78

~ntucky 95, Florida 70

Auburn 44
!Ui'yland 15, E. Carolina 72
Ntm:r &amp;I , Houston Baptist 7:1

beating the Broncos 56-50 in a Mid·
American Conference basketball
game Wednesday.
Spindle Graves added 12 points for
Ohio. Harold Triche had 14 and Mike
Seberger II for the Broncos, who
remain tied with Ball State and
Miami of Ohio for fourth in the MidAmerican Conference.
Western dominated scoring in the
last nine minutes of the first haH scoring 20 points to Ohio's 8 - and
ended the baH with a 3!-24lead.
In the second baH, Western led 5().
46 with just over five minutes
remaining. But it was all Ohio from
that point on as the Bobcats took the
lead at 4:19 with a short jumper
from Andre Adams.
Western shot only 38 percent from
the floor, 57 percent from the free
throw line. The Broncos shot 78 per·
cent from the line and 44 percent
from the floor.

The victory raises Ohio to 7-16
overall and 4-9 in the conference.
Western dropped to &amp;-7 in the conference, 11-12 overall.

Young Reds' hurlers
seekbig.hncreases
CINCINNATI (AP) - Young pitchers Mike I.,aCoss and Frank
Pastore may not have enough
seniority to seek arbitration, but
they are still not satisfied with the
salary offers of the Cincinnati Reds.
Earlier this week, the 22-year-old
Pastore, who hasn't even spent a
whole season in the big leagues, told
a reporter, "I'm asking for an unprecendented amount for a player of
my length of service, because in
looking around the league it seems
that would be my value on the open

~iller

counting on bench -tonight
Buckeyes battle Gopher cagers

'

~s

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
;COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -Ninthrltnked Ohio State will dig deep into
ills bench again tonight when the Big
T~n Conference c&lt;rleaders visit Minnesota.
: "We are going to k&lt;;_Cp using a .1~
a! people," promised Buckeye
Coach Eldon Miller. "We have to.
~ can't play pressure man-t&lt;&gt;-rnan
~ense for 40 minutes. We'll give
our regulars rest In each half so they
play only about 36 minutes."
;Miller used 10 players in avenging
8!1 earlier loss against Michigan
Saturday night. The Buckeyes won
7l..'i9 to climb back into a first-place
tte with Purdue at 8-1.
·"We played our best defensive
blisketball of the season in the last
tWo games. But we have to keep it
up," said Miller, eyeing a Big Ten
s~h run that sends the Buckeyes

against all four of the other first
division contenders.
·Meanwhile, Purdue must play
only Ohio State among the current
top five teams in its last six games.
And the Boilennakers will be entertaining the Buckeyes on Feb. 28.
"Our depth is vital," said Miller of
the league's most diffjcult finishing
schedule. "I now feel we have II
players who can make a contribution when the game is still in
doubt. Up until recently, we have
bad just eight. ..
Miller's late-season bench finds
are 6-foot-9 sophomore forwardcenter Cliff Kirchner and a pair of
freshmen, 6-11 center Granville
Waiters and 1&gt;3 guard Nate Sims.
Jim Dutcher, Minnesota's coach,
maintains the league is,so balanced
that many outcomes will hinge on
foul shooting. Just two games
separates the first seven. Michigan

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State, Wisconsin and Northwestern
are the only teams out of the race.
"I think everybody's close enough
that it usually comes down to which
team makes its one and ones at the
end," said Dutcher.
"Look at.the Ohio State-Wisconsin
game. (Wisconsin's Larry ) Petty
makes his one and one and (the
Buckeyes') Jim Smith doesn't. It's
the ball ,game," he said of Ohio
State's 70-67 road loss to the
Badgers.
Minnesota, 7-5 and tied for third
place with Indiana and Iowa, bowed
at Ohio State 7:&gt;-74 in overtime in the
first round. The Gophers are 14-7
overall to the Buckeyes' 16-5 mark
for all games.

Blue Demons broke the game open
with a 14-2 spurt at the start of the
second baH.
"We played about 25 minutes +
the first five minutes and the last
20," said DePaul Coach Ray Meyer.
"We had about 20 minutes of going
through the motions. I don 't think
you could affect this team if you
threw a bomb in among them. When
they bave to play, they play. When
they don't have to play, they coast.
They've certainly given me some
anxious moments.''
Sam Bowie scored 19 points and
Derrick Hord contributed 18 as Kentucky crushed Florida. Bowie scored
12 of his points as the Wildcats rolled
to a 43-25 lead and the Gators never
seriously threatened thereafter.
Ethan Martin drilled in six
straight free throws in the final 42
seconds and Willie Sims added a

market.''

Pastore, whose 1979 major league
contract called for the minimum
$21,000, wouldn't disclose the salary
package he wanted , but he was more 1
optimistic about signing a contract
following tallcs with Reds officials
Tuesday. ·
" Nothing was settled, but we're
much closer," Pastore said from
California. ''I think I'll be signing
within a week. We've come down
quit~ a bit and they've come up."
· Pastore won four of his last five
decisions to finish 6-7 with a 4.26 earned run average. Included in those
victories was one complete game, a
7-1 victory over Hoilston which gave
the Reds conunand in the National
League's Western Division entering
the final week of the baseball
season.
Chief Bender, the Reds' vice
president for player peNonnel, was'
not so openly optimistic about the

negotiations process with Pastore
and LaCoss.
"In both cases, I think we made a
little progress, but very little," Bender said.
LaCoss, who last year was 14-8
with a 3.50 earned run average in his
first full big league season, appeared to be the tougher of the pair
to sign.
The 23-year-old LaCoss won a spot
on the National League All Star
team by compiling an IHl record by
the middle of June.
" We're not close," Bender said of
negotiations with LaCoss. " It's
tough when a guy's asking for what
he is."
Meanwhile, arbitration hearings
have been set up for Monday in
Chicago for Rl'd.s third b8seman
Ray Knight and ouUielder Dave
Collins.
The two are among the almost 690
major leaguers who have filed to
have their salary disputes settled by
arbitration. ·

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slam dunk on a breakaway as I..SU
defeated Auburn. Dutch Morley
scored !8 points to pace Maryland
past East Carolina.
Jeff Lamp hit a pair of free throws
with four seconds remaiiting to lift
Virginia over Clemson. Buzzy
Williams' layup with 50 seconds left
had tied the game at~ for Clemson.
Dean Uthoff scored 19 points and
Guy Minnifield added 16 to pace
Iowa State's upset of Kansas State.
Uthoff scored five of his points in a~
0 second-baH spurt that put Iowa
State in control.
Elsewhere, Greg Webb's basket
with six seconds remaining led New
Mexico State over Drake 7~78; Corny Thompson hit for 17 points to
power Connecticut over Boston
University 72-lili; Kirk Lehman's 17
points led Ohio past Western
Michigan 56-50; Darnell Valentine
and Ricky Ross combined for 38
points to pace Kansas over
Oklahoma 69-&amp;i; John Stroud's 34
points led Mississippi to an 89-78
decision over Vanderbilt; Frank
Brickowskl's 16 points trig Penn
State over Pitt 66-53; and Horace
Owens had 17 points as Rhode Island
defeated Providence 74-58.

Di'ehel, Linda . Eason, Tina El!St,
Sbeila Fetty, Teresa Fetty, Jerry
Fields, James Gheen, Kim Glass,
Katrina Hale, Floyd Holiday, Robin
Harder, Robin Herald, Sandra Herdmah, Cathy Hess, Sheila Horky,
Jean Horton, Angela Houchins, June
Hutton, Sberri Hysell, Joyee Janey,
Cheryl Johnson, Thoma.s Kelly, Randy Kennedy, April King, Brian King,
Unda Kovalchik, Anita Lee, Edward Lester, Rebekah Long, Joy
Hudson, Terry Mayes, Chris McKinney, Michael S. Miller, Nelson
Morrison, Deena Neece, Steven
Ohlinger, Angela Payne, Beth
Perrin, Mary Ridgway, Andrea
Riggs, Lori Rupe, Tony Scott, ·
Angela Sinclair, Mike Smith,
Charles Stewart, Brian Swann,
Camille Swindell, Barbara Tanner, ·
Barbara Thomas, Richard Van
Meter, Jena Welker, Darla Wilcox,
David Wilkes, Linda Williams,
Darla Williamson.
Seniors - Tonia Ash, Beth Bartrum, Julie Biron, Brynda Black, .
Medina Bryan, Saundra Burnem,
John Byer, Melissa Cale, Dan Car·
man, Betty Carsey, Kenneth Cook,
Yvonne Core, Alan Cummings,
Larry Cundiff. Kay Cunningham,
Debbie Davidson, Linda Donohue,
Christine Ebersbach, Tim 'Faulk,
Kevin Ferrell, Andrea Grover, Edward Holter, Janet Horky, Bruce
Hy~ell, Mary Hysell, Penny Jacka,
Gary Jones, Lisa Jones, Jennell
Kelly, Clifford Kennedy, Brian
McKinney, William McMillion,
Tammy McDaniel, Joyce Lambert,
Rens LeFebre, David Lewis, Cherie
Lightfoot, Paul Matson, Michael
Continued on Page 9

1

J
I•

!'

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"

�6-TheOaUySenttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., lbursday,Feb.l4, 1980
LEI'I"fEN BREAKFAST SLATED

The ·traditional Lenten breakfast
of the Trinity · Congregational
Church will be held on Feb. 20at 7:45
a.m. in the church social room. lbe
breakfast will be served'by ladies of.
the church. Wg_men of otl)er
churches will be invited to attend.

Valentine's Day

A series of earthquakes struck the
New Madrid, Mo., area In 1811·12
and sent shock. tremors oVer more
than a million square miles .of the
conttnenLal United States. No other
earthquake In U.s•.history affected
so extensive an a rea, according to
National (iqraphic.

NEW OWNERSHIP

CONTINUES THRU THE . 16th

Join the Celebration.
Many Items are Marked Down.

Happy Valentine's Day,
Grandma,
Grandpa,
Rlchafa. Sharon, Mark Jr .,
Buffy and Joe, too I
Love, James

PWS: Register for FREE GIFTS

Steve,
are a wonderful
and DaddY, 1love
much.
Love Brenda

To Grnadma and Glen,

To My Darling Daughter
Amber, I love you
Happy Valenllne·s Day.
Love Stephanie much. You iiont up
and Brad

We love you very much,

and the Bicycle Guessing Game.
WE'RE NOT GOING OUT OF BUSIN.ESS!!!

Grand·
Mike, after 5 years I'm still
Nan·
much In love with pa,
Happy Valentine's nle, Pet, Grandpa
Nona and Papaw, MaPPl' ·l
Shari Valentine's Dav.
Amber

the Light
Side of Love
ID Seanlh Of Love

SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - Ralph
Habennan, a San Diego bachelor,
: bas this thing about bearts and
: nowers.
: All. a fifth grader, be sent his
· favojite girl 1,000 valentines. Last
swmner, be sent a young lady he
was dating 113 dozen roses.
"lbe roses didn't work," he said,
but be remains undaunted, an in·
· curable romantic still searching for
:the "perfect valentine."
: He plans to spend Valentine's Day
·randomly bancllng out Valentines at
San Diego's main airport + Lindbergh Field - and at the campus of
San Diego State University. Inside
each V&amp;Ientine will be a personal
note: "l'dlike to get to know you."
say u wttll- Plaa?
EMPO~ Pa. (AP) - A slate
pollee trooper from aortbwesteru
Peiiiiii)'IVllllla Bald It wldl a tree. A
JocaJ,cbef said It wltlla bearHhaped
plaa.
Aud about 175 other U.teom of
CameroD

COIIIdy

radio

ltaUOD

· WLEM showed lhetr llffeeU• for
the slaUoD's slx disc jockeys wltb
bomemade valeiiiiDes, some made
from teabage 8lld caiBup boUles.

Tbe staUon awarded prizes ln Z9 .
categories Wednesday after boldlDg
a two-week contest.
Tbe wiDner ln tbe "most original''
category wu a valeatlne seal to LoU
Braden, wbo received U otben u
wen. Ms. Bradt!l!.,got an &amp;-foot taU
beech tree froiD Trooper RoD
LuckellbW - complete wltb a heart
carved ln the tnmlt.
Red-Letter Day 1D ValeoUne
VALENTINE, Texas (AP)
1bere are only 180 boxes to tend ln
the little post office, . but as you
might expect Valentine Postmaster
Doris Kelley gets a lot busier about
this time of year.
Mrs. Kelley, postmaster in this
West Texas town for the past 25
years, says each year the load of
valentines get a little beavler. Last
year, she received more than 2,000
from people wbo wanted her to post·
mark them and Send them on. This
year, she hasn't had time to get an
exact count - but it's a little higher
than last year.
Some of the valentines have come
from as far as Australia and Saudi
Atabla, she said. "Quite often they
even put one in for me."

HO~E§TTO .

'12 PRICE
. .

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20% OFF

You mean the world to us,
we love you very much.
Sheri, BIHY,
Timmy and Amber

To My Granddaughter,
Misty, You're the apple of
my eye, the sunshine of my
life, you're my very special
Valentine.
MomMaHaye

Barry,
ThiS Is our first year as
husballd and wife, you'll
always be my Valentine all
my life.
Judy

To Ralph,
You are the ·only one ln. my
life end I'll always lOve
you.
.
Sarah

To My . Future Husband
Frank,
We' II be together one dey
just you and 1.
Love Jean

I love Vou, Mary,

Chrlsand Brenda,
Happy Vl!llentlne's Day and
Happy First Anniversary.
Love Always
Mom and Terrl

To Angela,
To my d~rllng llnle girl
that I love and cherish very
much.
Love Mel

Debbl,
.
The greatest sister any girl
ever had . GOOd luck with
the baby.
Love You, Tawn

Smokey,
Thank you for stepping Into
my world. I Love You more
each day .

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Gleason speaks to Council
David Gleason, superintendent of · school In the district to get better acthe Meigs Local School District, was qualilted with students and parents.
guest speaker at the Salisbury Com- Following his talk, a question and
munications CouncU held Monday answer period was held for the coonnight at the Salisbury Elementary en members.
Attending were Mrs. Jennie
School.
Warth,
the Rev. Floyd Shook, Mrs.
Introduced by John Llsle, prinPaulette
Harrison, Mrs. Barbara
cipal, Gleason talked about the job
Fry,
Mrs.
Yvonne YOWJ8, Mrs. Judy
responsibilities of the superintendent and the problems involved ln ~. Mrs. Margaret Parker, Mr;
the position of superintendent. He and Mrs. Arland King, Mrs. Barbara
Beegle, Mrs. Susie Pullins, Mrs.
expressed a desire to hl!ve an open
Martha Hoover, and Mrs. Karen
door policy between parents and the
superintendent's office, and an- Sloan.
noWlced plans for visitations to each

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I can't wait 'Ill our big day.
I Love You .
Babe

'

love you very much. Happy
Valentine's Day.
. Barry, Judy,
Randy and Chris
To My Adopted Fam il y,
The Dorsts,
·Just to wish you a happy
Valentlne•s Day .
Love Lori

Snuggles,
Thank you just for being
you and one terrific year. 1
Love You, Darling.
B.W.

~.m and Dad Pickens,
You bOth make every day
sometlng special.
Love YOIJ,
Greg and VIcki

Mom ·and Dad Smith,
Happy va Ientine' s Day,
Love and miss you very
much.
Greg a"!! VIcki

Greg,

Honey, you're the best
think that's ever happened
to me. 1 Love You .
VIcki

we love you .

To My Husband, Larry,
1 love you more today than
yesterday but less than I
will tomorrow.
·
Love, Maxine

To My Husband, Greg,
I Love You buShel and a
peck and a big bunch more. .
Love Lori

ToKevln,
.
Thank you for all the happy
tl mes we've
shared
together . I Love You.
Cathy

Dad and Mom Barton,
You are the best parents
ever, Happy Valentine's
Day.
Bob, Betty and Judy

To Art,
My one and only. I Love
You . Have a Happy Valen·

You are the best Mom and
Dad, Happy Valentine's
Day . I'll Love you bOth

sweethearts that mean so

forever .

tine' s Day.

To Faith,
We need and love you now
much more thlln tills time
last year. Hugs and klaea.
From Dan and Tamara

To the . world's greatest
Nannleand Papa, Love you·
both very much .
Jessica, oawn&amp;J.R.

Grandpa Bar·
To the world's greatest
Grandma and Poppy,
Love you bOth very much.
Jessica and Dawn

just as nice as you
can be. SO please be Valen·
lines with me.

Scotty,
Happy Valentine's Day, to
my favorite person. You're
the best. I love you. Sur·
prise!
Sissy

To Mama and Papa,
We think yhou are the
TOPS. Happy Valentine's
Day. Brian and Danlelle.

To Charlie,
1 love you and I miss you so
mych when you're away.
Penny

Sweelthlng,
Remember I' m thinking ot
you always. I love
very
much . Hugs and ",~..,.,

To My Mom, Goldie,
No one's luckier than me to
have someone.llkeyou.
Love Jeff

Danny,
Almost eight months! I've
loved you every minute!
HapPy Valentine's Day.
LoveJ.Z.

To Jean,
1 love you very much. All
my life.
Harry

To My Dad, Harold,
Just a line to say I love you .
·
Love, Jeff

Happy Valentine's Day to a
special Dad, like you. We
love you!
Slick and Baby Love

Happy Valentine's Day
Aunt Gert and Uncle Jim .
Happy annlversry, tool We
love you.
James and Adam

t love you a whOle lot.
From your son, Jason

Dear Mom ,
We love you very much .
Will you be our Valentine ~
Shane, Lori and Jamie

To all iiw children, Lanny ,
Jeanie, Chuck, Sandra,
Deldra, Melissa. 1 love you

all very much.

ToChuckM.,
To the best guy I know.
Remember In July, 1 loved
you from
Pomeroy to
Letart.
Kellle R.

To Mom &amp; Grandmother,
God gave us the best Mom
and Grandmother In the
world. How lucky we are.
The Roughts.

Aunt Jan,
To the best sister and ount
that anyone could have. we
are lucl&lt;v to have you.
E. R. and Girls

To the world's greatest
Mom and Grandma. .No
words can express our
love.
Brenda, Jamie, and
Shannon

To (:harley, Andrea, and
Holly.
There's no bener way to
say lt. 11 1Love You" I
Mom

To Doug,
The sweetest guy In the
w~ld . Happy Valentine's
Day. llove you 4·ever.
Rhonda

To carla R.
A real nice girl who 1 like
being with, a lot. Happy
Valentine's Day!
Guess Who!

To Mom and Dad,
With all my love and
gratitude, Happy Valen·
tine's Day to the both of
you .
From : Jennifer Grover

My world begins and ends
with you. If love had a face,
II would be yours. Happy
Valentine's Day.

Jo, John, Althea. MOm and
Daddy, Happy Valentine's
Day. I love you.
Aunt Alma Riggs

TOAIJnt Shirley,
WIShing yilu the very best
on . Valentine' s Day and
every day of the.year.
Love, Larry

To Dwayne,
I really love thOSe spark·
ling blue eyes · of yciurslll
Happy Valentine's Day.
An Unknown Admirer

To Ronnie,
.
I could not have picked a
nicer guy, Happy Valen·
tine's Day.
Love you, Polly

To Keith,
Married 15 years ago this
Valentine's Day and I love
you more today than ever. 1
love you .

Valentine,
How much you brighten my
days.
B.R.

To Kathy,
I love you very much .and
miss you . Happy Valentine's Day.
·
J.A.B.

Old,
Thanks for always being
there ... Happy Valentine's
Day.
Love Mary, Marie

Greg a,nd VIcki,
Happy Valentine's Day. We
lova and mlu you. Alwava,
Mom, Dad, Rick and
Tracy.

you are the
greatest. Happy Valen·
tine's Day.

Keith Aelker,
You are my yesterdays. to-

John, the greatest guy 1
know. Happy Valentine's
Day. 1 love you. Your's
Forever.
·
Love Anita

Roberta. the best Mom In
the world. I'll love you
always. Happy Valentine's
Day.
' Anile

and Dad
Is a 11n1e ~methlng to
say we love you .. l ltnowhave 011r tau Ill. · ·

To Alan,
You're still the only one I
want and Love always and
forever.

KlmandJe,anna

To my Wife Barb,
After 13 great years of
marrlege, you are still my
Valentine Sweetheart.
Love, Robert, Todd,
·
Jody and Adam

$2695
,r • •

Suzy and a-ge,
Enjoy your rides through
Rutland. Stay Happy. We

Nathlln HyMII.

Corvette,
I love you, After two years
vou're still the 0!18. You
always will be. ·
Sunshine
Keith Hoffhlhes,

Happy
my Wife
you very
band,

,

.,

Love,

I

Dear·Mom,

.....,..,,

Beck

Love,

c•re. Love,

Pam

Mitzi and Frank

Grandpa Harris.
Y011're !opal Greall Super I
Fantaatlcl Glad vou·re
ml,.. Love you,
SwtetieTrlna

adorable, &amp; sweet! But I
love you anyway I
Trine

Betty,
The limes I have Shared
with vou been the happiest
otmy life.
Llorry

Cork,
Ablence makes the heart
gi"OW fonder. I miss yay.
·
Love, Paige

TO Mom,
To tl)t ma.t wonderful
mom In the whole ·world .
Happy Valentine's D•Y·
Diane, Tine and Sharon

To GrandP,.rents,
To lilt ""*' wonder!~!
grandparents In the world.
Happy Valentine'' Day. I
Tracy &amp; Wind I

You ' r•

cute,

sexy ,

day, and tomorrows, and I

love you .
Mother .Leona Roach

TO MOm,
I lust want to say I love
vou. Happy Valentine's
Day.
Your Daughter, Pam H."

You~re

the best !

Lots of Love,
Tawn and Jason

tine's Dav.

Love me.

•_•;

.

..

'*

STOR

12150
-

To Mother,

Happy Valentine's Day and
78th birthday, to you. we
love you.
Phil and Jim
Daddy,

we love you for the things

you've given us. Especially
the love.
Love, Kr'-IY &amp;Amy

To my Hubby s·.
I love you more than words
could ever say.
Always yours, s .

Frank,
A very spacial person.
· Thanks for walking qeslde
me. Miss you and care.
Love, MitZI

Cherry Boy,
You're my 1omeone
IPOCial. Not lust this Valen·
tine's oav1 ev~ryday . 1
.
· love you.

. Hay·"Big Wheels" ...
t've missed you! Have you
lost my phone number?
Happy Valentine's Day.
Alicia

Dale,
May you never forget me
and my love tor you . Happy
Valentine's Day.
·
Love, Rut!\

To MaMa,
We love you with all our
hearts. Have a Happy
Valentine's Day.
,
Kendi, Ronald, Trine,
Shawn, Amy, Tracy end
Wend I

'

Wl

To Mum , Dad and Pappy,
Just to let you-know that we
love you.
Mel and Lori

You are wonderful and we

for becoming the
loving, thoughtful, kind arid
helpful husband that you
are.
Love You, Tonya ·

· '

$2goo

'73

Kevin,

I hope YOIJ 'II be my Valen·
tine because I'm yours. I' ll
love YOIJ forever .
Ted

Janis Davis,
Thanks for caring enough
to listen to us, and for
babysitfing, too.
Love, Jason and Tawn

To Mama and Papa,
You are very special to us.
Stephanie and Brad

Tamara

To My Sister Clarice,
You're really shaping up,

.you look terrific, Happy
Valentine's Day.
Love, Jason

Happy Valentine's Day ,
Mommy,
I Love You very much.

Lena
Dan and Tamara, My two

much to me. Happy ValenFaith

·..

. KNIT SHIRTS

Reduced

Trenton,

To Kris,

The very special boy who is
a miracle to our family . We
love you.
Mommy, Dadd~ and stacy

Love, Anne

Reduced 30% .

1

D.H.W.

Mom ,

I Love You Baby with all
my heart and always will.
Love PeeWee

To Both the Parents who
never stop giving or loving .

REDUCED

BLAZERS

Nannie and Pampaw,
and Amber

Elkle,
You are still the one after
our 26 years together. HapPY Valentine's Day.
Love Judy

Nennle,

~on

Mom and Dad, We Love
You, Shari, Billy, Timmy.
We love you, too.

TO RObbie,
To a guy that I like very
much. Happy Valentine's
Day.
Love Always
Happy Valentine's Day! To
the nicest Mom and Dad In
the world!

Mom,

Dicky,
Your love makes me very

happy . Keep It com in'.
Love, Chlcky

You are. the greatest
mother anyone COiliq ever
have. We all love you .
.
Doe· Babe&amp; Pee·Wee

HOb and Gob :
Remember good limes and
loving friends. Keep II cool .

Love,

J&gt;uzy and George

·Nancy,

To Mom, Dad &amp; Tile Faml·
ly,

.

Thank you for the beaiJfiful
way you've accepted me
and made me feel loved. .
Lovingly, Nancy
We love you MOmmy
VIcki! Happy Valentine's
Dayl
·
·
Love, l.uke, Rex, Margo,
Tom, Bebs, Frosty ·and
Fuzzle.

'Happy Valentine's Day ... ·
The Dally Sentinel

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2 br. ·

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�6-TheOaUySenttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., lbursday,Feb.l4, 1980
LEI'I"fEN BREAKFAST SLATED

The ·traditional Lenten breakfast
of the Trinity · Congregational
Church will be held on Feb. 20at 7:45
a.m. in the church social room. lbe
breakfast will be served'by ladies of.
the church. Wg_men of otl)er
churches will be invited to attend.

Valentine's Day

A series of earthquakes struck the
New Madrid, Mo., area In 1811·12
and sent shock. tremors oVer more
than a million square miles .of the
conttnenLal United States. No other
earthquake In U.s•.history affected
so extensive an a rea, according to
National (iqraphic.

NEW OWNERSHIP

CONTINUES THRU THE . 16th

Join the Celebration.
Many Items are Marked Down.

Happy Valentine's Day,
Grandma,
Grandpa,
Rlchafa. Sharon, Mark Jr .,
Buffy and Joe, too I
Love, James

PWS: Register for FREE GIFTS

Steve,
are a wonderful
and DaddY, 1love
much.
Love Brenda

To Grnadma and Glen,

To My Darling Daughter
Amber, I love you
Happy Valenllne·s Day.
Love Stephanie much. You iiont up
and Brad

We love you very much,

and the Bicycle Guessing Game.
WE'RE NOT GOING OUT OF BUSIN.ESS!!!

Grand·
Mike, after 5 years I'm still
Nan·
much In love with pa,
Happy Valentine's nle, Pet, Grandpa
Nona and Papaw, MaPPl' ·l
Shari Valentine's Dav.
Amber

the Light
Side of Love
ID Seanlh Of Love

SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - Ralph
Habennan, a San Diego bachelor,
: bas this thing about bearts and
: nowers.
: All. a fifth grader, be sent his
· favojite girl 1,000 valentines. Last
swmner, be sent a young lady he
was dating 113 dozen roses.
"lbe roses didn't work," he said,
but be remains undaunted, an in·
· curable romantic still searching for
:the "perfect valentine."
: He plans to spend Valentine's Day
·randomly bancllng out Valentines at
San Diego's main airport + Lindbergh Field - and at the campus of
San Diego State University. Inside
each V&amp;Ientine will be a personal
note: "l'dlike to get to know you."
say u wttll- Plaa?
EMPO~ Pa. (AP) - A slate
pollee trooper from aortbwesteru
Peiiiiii)'IVllllla Bald It wldl a tree. A
JocaJ,cbef said It wltlla bearHhaped
plaa.
Aud about 175 other U.teom of
CameroD

COIIIdy

radio

ltaUOD

· WLEM showed lhetr llffeeU• for
the slaUoD's slx disc jockeys wltb
bomemade valeiiiiDes, some made
from teabage 8lld caiBup boUles.

Tbe staUon awarded prizes ln Z9 .
categories Wednesday after boldlDg
a two-week contest.
Tbe wiDner ln tbe "most original''
category wu a valeatlne seal to LoU
Braden, wbo received U otben u
wen. Ms. Bradt!l!.,got an &amp;-foot taU
beech tree froiD Trooper RoD
LuckellbW - complete wltb a heart
carved ln the tnmlt.
Red-Letter Day 1D ValeoUne
VALENTINE, Texas (AP)
1bere are only 180 boxes to tend ln
the little post office, . but as you
might expect Valentine Postmaster
Doris Kelley gets a lot busier about
this time of year.
Mrs. Kelley, postmaster in this
West Texas town for the past 25
years, says each year the load of
valentines get a little beavler. Last
year, she received more than 2,000
from people wbo wanted her to post·
mark them and Send them on. This
year, she hasn't had time to get an
exact count - but it's a little higher
than last year.
Some of the valentines have come
from as far as Australia and Saudi
Atabla, she said. "Quite often they
even put one in for me."

HO~E§TTO .

'12 PRICE
. .

40%
20% OFF

You mean the world to us,
we love you very much.
Sheri, BIHY,
Timmy and Amber

To My Granddaughter,
Misty, You're the apple of
my eye, the sunshine of my
life, you're my very special
Valentine.
MomMaHaye

Barry,
ThiS Is our first year as
husballd and wife, you'll
always be my Valentine all
my life.
Judy

To Ralph,
You are the ·only one ln. my
life end I'll always lOve
you.
.
Sarah

To My . Future Husband
Frank,
We' II be together one dey
just you and 1.
Love Jean

I love Vou, Mary,

Chrlsand Brenda,
Happy Vl!llentlne's Day and
Happy First Anniversary.
Love Always
Mom and Terrl

To Angela,
To my d~rllng llnle girl
that I love and cherish very
much.
Love Mel

Debbl,
.
The greatest sister any girl
ever had . GOOd luck with
the baby.
Love You, Tawn

Smokey,
Thank you for stepping Into
my world. I Love You more
each day .

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Gleason speaks to Council
David Gleason, superintendent of · school In the district to get better acthe Meigs Local School District, was qualilted with students and parents.
guest speaker at the Salisbury Com- Following his talk, a question and
munications CouncU held Monday answer period was held for the coonnight at the Salisbury Elementary en members.
Attending were Mrs. Jennie
School.
Warth,
the Rev. Floyd Shook, Mrs.
Introduced by John Llsle, prinPaulette
Harrison, Mrs. Barbara
cipal, Gleason talked about the job
Fry,
Mrs.
Yvonne YOWJ8, Mrs. Judy
responsibilities of the superintendent and the problems involved ln ~. Mrs. Margaret Parker, Mr;
the position of superintendent. He and Mrs. Arland King, Mrs. Barbara
Beegle, Mrs. Susie Pullins, Mrs.
expressed a desire to hl!ve an open
Martha Hoover, and Mrs. Karen
door policy between parents and the
superintendent's office, and an- Sloan.
noWlced plans for visitations to each

1979 ' ( 1978
COUGAR.·xR- 7 FAIRMONT

4 dr., 6 cyl.,

sharp

$3995

$5895
1977

1978 CHEVROLET MONZA

ONTE CARLO ·

auto., V-6

auto., p.s., p.b.,
am-fm, air

1977 .
T-BIRD
auto., air, p.s,
p.b., am-fm

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CUTI.ASS SUPREME

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p.s., p.b, , air

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loaded

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2bedroom.
.
.

•
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'

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I

......

.

'

. ,,'•.

....

~

I can't wait 'Ill our big day.
I Love You .
Babe

'

love you very much. Happy
Valentine's Day.
. Barry, Judy,
Randy and Chris
To My Adopted Fam il y,
The Dorsts,
·Just to wish you a happy
Valentlne•s Day .
Love Lori

Snuggles,
Thank you just for being
you and one terrific year. 1
Love You, Darling.
B.W.

~.m and Dad Pickens,
You bOth make every day
sometlng special.
Love YOIJ,
Greg and VIcki

Mom ·and Dad Smith,
Happy va Ientine' s Day,
Love and miss you very
much.
Greg a"!! VIcki

Greg,

Honey, you're the best
think that's ever happened
to me. 1 Love You .
VIcki

we love you .

To My Husband, Larry,
1 love you more today than
yesterday but less than I
will tomorrow.
·
Love, Maxine

To My Husband, Greg,
I Love You buShel and a
peck and a big bunch more. .
Love Lori

ToKevln,
.
Thank you for all the happy
tl mes we've
shared
together . I Love You.
Cathy

Dad and Mom Barton,
You are the best parents
ever, Happy Valentine's
Day.
Bob, Betty and Judy

To Art,
My one and only. I Love
You . Have a Happy Valen·

You are the best Mom and
Dad, Happy Valentine's
Day . I'll Love you bOth

sweethearts that mean so

forever .

tine' s Day.

To Faith,
We need and love you now
much more thlln tills time
last year. Hugs and klaea.
From Dan and Tamara

To the . world's greatest
Nannleand Papa, Love you·
both very much .
Jessica, oawn&amp;J.R.

Grandpa Bar·
To the world's greatest
Grandma and Poppy,
Love you bOth very much.
Jessica and Dawn

just as nice as you
can be. SO please be Valen·
lines with me.

Scotty,
Happy Valentine's Day, to
my favorite person. You're
the best. I love you. Sur·
prise!
Sissy

To Mama and Papa,
We think yhou are the
TOPS. Happy Valentine's
Day. Brian and Danlelle.

To Charlie,
1 love you and I miss you so
mych when you're away.
Penny

Sweelthlng,
Remember I' m thinking ot
you always. I love
very
much . Hugs and ",~..,.,

To My Mom, Goldie,
No one's luckier than me to
have someone.llkeyou.
Love Jeff

Danny,
Almost eight months! I've
loved you every minute!
HapPy Valentine's Day.
LoveJ.Z.

To Jean,
1 love you very much. All
my life.
Harry

To My Dad, Harold,
Just a line to say I love you .
·
Love, Jeff

Happy Valentine's Day to a
special Dad, like you. We
love you!
Slick and Baby Love

Happy Valentine's Day
Aunt Gert and Uncle Jim .
Happy annlversry, tool We
love you.
James and Adam

t love you a whOle lot.
From your son, Jason

Dear Mom ,
We love you very much .
Will you be our Valentine ~
Shane, Lori and Jamie

To all iiw children, Lanny ,
Jeanie, Chuck, Sandra,
Deldra, Melissa. 1 love you

all very much.

ToChuckM.,
To the best guy I know.
Remember In July, 1 loved
you from
Pomeroy to
Letart.
Kellle R.

To Mom &amp; Grandmother,
God gave us the best Mom
and Grandmother In the
world. How lucky we are.
The Roughts.

Aunt Jan,
To the best sister and ount
that anyone could have. we
are lucl&lt;v to have you.
E. R. and Girls

To the world's greatest
Mom and Grandma. .No
words can express our
love.
Brenda, Jamie, and
Shannon

To (:harley, Andrea, and
Holly.
There's no bener way to
say lt. 11 1Love You" I
Mom

To Doug,
The sweetest guy In the
w~ld . Happy Valentine's
Day. llove you 4·ever.
Rhonda

To carla R.
A real nice girl who 1 like
being with, a lot. Happy
Valentine's Day!
Guess Who!

To Mom and Dad,
With all my love and
gratitude, Happy Valen·
tine's Day to the both of
you .
From : Jennifer Grover

My world begins and ends
with you. If love had a face,
II would be yours. Happy
Valentine's Day.

Jo, John, Althea. MOm and
Daddy, Happy Valentine's
Day. I love you.
Aunt Alma Riggs

TOAIJnt Shirley,
WIShing yilu the very best
on . Valentine' s Day and
every day of the.year.
Love, Larry

To Dwayne,
I really love thOSe spark·
ling blue eyes · of yciurslll
Happy Valentine's Day.
An Unknown Admirer

To Ronnie,
.
I could not have picked a
nicer guy, Happy Valen·
tine's Day.
Love you, Polly

To Keith,
Married 15 years ago this
Valentine's Day and I love
you more today than ever. 1
love you .

Valentine,
How much you brighten my
days.
B.R.

To Kathy,
I love you very much .and
miss you . Happy Valentine's Day.
·
J.A.B.

Old,
Thanks for always being
there ... Happy Valentine's
Day.
Love Mary, Marie

Greg a,nd VIcki,
Happy Valentine's Day. We
lova and mlu you. Alwava,
Mom, Dad, Rick and
Tracy.

you are the
greatest. Happy Valen·
tine's Day.

Keith Aelker,
You are my yesterdays. to-

John, the greatest guy 1
know. Happy Valentine's
Day. 1 love you. Your's
Forever.
·
Love Anita

Roberta. the best Mom In
the world. I'll love you
always. Happy Valentine's
Day.
' Anile

and Dad
Is a 11n1e ~methlng to
say we love you .. l ltnowhave 011r tau Ill. · ·

To Alan,
You're still the only one I
want and Love always and
forever.

KlmandJe,anna

To my Wife Barb,
After 13 great years of
marrlege, you are still my
Valentine Sweetheart.
Love, Robert, Todd,
·
Jody and Adam

$2695
,r • •

Suzy and a-ge,
Enjoy your rides through
Rutland. Stay Happy. We

Nathlln HyMII.

Corvette,
I love you, After two years
vou're still the 0!18. You
always will be. ·
Sunshine
Keith Hoffhlhes,

Happy
my Wife
you very
band,

,

.,

Love,

I

Dear·Mom,

.....,..,,

Beck

Love,

c•re. Love,

Pam

Mitzi and Frank

Grandpa Harris.
Y011're !opal Greall Super I
Fantaatlcl Glad vou·re
ml,.. Love you,
SwtetieTrlna

adorable, &amp; sweet! But I
love you anyway I
Trine

Betty,
The limes I have Shared
with vou been the happiest
otmy life.
Llorry

Cork,
Ablence makes the heart
gi"OW fonder. I miss yay.
·
Love, Paige

TO Mom,
To tl)t ma.t wonderful
mom In the whole ·world .
Happy Valentine's D•Y·
Diane, Tine and Sharon

To GrandP,.rents,
To lilt ""*' wonder!~!
grandparents In the world.
Happy Valentine'' Day. I
Tracy &amp; Wind I

You ' r•

cute,

sexy ,

day, and tomorrows, and I

love you .
Mother .Leona Roach

TO MOm,
I lust want to say I love
vou. Happy Valentine's
Day.
Your Daughter, Pam H."

You~re

the best !

Lots of Love,
Tawn and Jason

tine's Dav.

Love me.

•_•;

.

..

'*

STOR

12150
-

To Mother,

Happy Valentine's Day and
78th birthday, to you. we
love you.
Phil and Jim
Daddy,

we love you for the things

you've given us. Especially
the love.
Love, Kr'-IY &amp;Amy

To my Hubby s·.
I love you more than words
could ever say.
Always yours, s .

Frank,
A very spacial person.
· Thanks for walking qeslde
me. Miss you and care.
Love, MitZI

Cherry Boy,
You're my 1omeone
IPOCial. Not lust this Valen·
tine's oav1 ev~ryday . 1
.
· love you.

. Hay·"Big Wheels" ...
t've missed you! Have you
lost my phone number?
Happy Valentine's Day.
Alicia

Dale,
May you never forget me
and my love tor you . Happy
Valentine's Day.
·
Love, Rut!\

To MaMa,
We love you with all our
hearts. Have a Happy
Valentine's Day.
,
Kendi, Ronald, Trine,
Shawn, Amy, Tracy end
Wend I

'

Wl

To Mum , Dad and Pappy,
Just to let you-know that we
love you.
Mel and Lori

You are wonderful and we

for becoming the
loving, thoughtful, kind arid
helpful husband that you
are.
Love You, Tonya ·

· '

$2goo

'73

Kevin,

I hope YOIJ 'II be my Valen·
tine because I'm yours. I' ll
love YOIJ forever .
Ted

Janis Davis,
Thanks for caring enough
to listen to us, and for
babysitfing, too.
Love, Jason and Tawn

To Mama and Papa,
You are very special to us.
Stephanie and Brad

Tamara

To My Sister Clarice,
You're really shaping up,

.you look terrific, Happy
Valentine's Day.
Love, Jason

Happy Valentine's Day ,
Mommy,
I Love You very much.

Lena
Dan and Tamara, My two

much to me. Happy ValenFaith

·..

. KNIT SHIRTS

Reduced

Trenton,

To Kris,

The very special boy who is
a miracle to our family . We
love you.
Mommy, Dadd~ and stacy

Love, Anne

Reduced 30% .

1

D.H.W.

Mom ,

I Love You Baby with all
my heart and always will.
Love PeeWee

To Both the Parents who
never stop giving or loving .

REDUCED

BLAZERS

Nannie and Pampaw,
and Amber

Elkle,
You are still the one after
our 26 years together. HapPY Valentine's Day.
Love Judy

Nennle,

~on

Mom and Dad, We Love
You, Shari, Billy, Timmy.
We love you, too.

TO RObbie,
To a guy that I like very
much. Happy Valentine's
Day.
Love Always
Happy Valentine's Day! To
the nicest Mom and Dad In
the world!

Mom,

Dicky,
Your love makes me very

happy . Keep It com in'.
Love, Chlcky

You are. the greatest
mother anyone COiliq ever
have. We all love you .
.
Doe· Babe&amp; Pee·Wee

HOb and Gob :
Remember good limes and
loving friends. Keep II cool .

Love,

J&gt;uzy and George

·Nancy,

To Mom, Dad &amp; Tile Faml·
ly,

.

Thank you for the beaiJfiful
way you've accepted me
and made me feel loved. .
Lovingly, Nancy
We love you MOmmy
VIcki! Happy Valentine's
Dayl
·
·
Love, l.uke, Rex, Margo,
Tom, Bebs, Frosty ·and
Fuzzle.

'Happy Valentine's Day ... ·
The Dally Sentinel

'

.

••

2 br. ·

..

BAKER FURNITURE

-""

I'

. I

LN ' "

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
••'

.•,

•t.. '

,;,_. Il l

2NO &amp; VIAND $TRER
'.

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1

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1900

February named Heart ·month

Mayor's eourt
FOW' defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Don Lovett, Middleport, $50 and costs on two
disorderly manner charges, and 30
days in'jail on a charge of resisting
arest ; Gail E. Thoma, Long Bottom,
$10 and costs, no exhaust; George
McDaniel, Middleport, $50 and
costs, disorderly manner, and David
B. Dillard, Gallipolis, $225 and costs
and three days in jail, driving while
intoxicated, and $100 and costs,
possession of marijuana.
Forfeiting bonds were Clifford R.
Howaid, Ashland, Ky., $350, posted
on a driving while intoxicated
charge, and $25, illegal plates; Ivan
Salzhauer, Staten Island, N.Y., $29,
speeding; Michat• D. Banks,
Kenova, W. Va., $29, speeding.
Five defendants forfeited bonds
and a sixth was fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Glarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Duane Siders,
Middleport, $20, posted on a
speeding charge; Thomas E. Smith,
Syracuse, $350, driving while intox·
icated; Deanna Dowler, Athens, $30,
failure to yield the right of way; Herman D. Sowarda, Albany, $20,
speeding, and Artie Reuter,
Pomeroy, $30, failure to yield the
right of way. Fined was Virgil
Jacks, Rutland, $50 and costs, no
operator's license, and $50 and costs,
running a red light.

TOP OFFICERS - Kathy Parker received first place for secretary
records and Jeff Moore received second place for reporters scrapbook.
Both wUI receive trophies at the district banquet.

Governor J ame" Rhodes recentl y
issued a proclamation designating
' February as American Heart Month
and urging area residents to support
the 1960 campaign to he conducted
nationwide.
In the proclamation, Governor
Rhodes asked for support of the Central Ohio Heart Chapter 's campaign
against the nation's No. I killer, cardiovascular diseases.
"Tbese diseases accounted for
' nearly 1,000,000 ri the nation's
I deaths last yea(," reported Stephen
F. Schaal, M. D., president of the
heart chapter, headquartered in
Columbus. "That 's over one-half of
the deaths from all causes."
Volunteers nationwide will
distribute heart-saving information
and collect contributions for heart
research, education and community
service projects. These programs
are aimed at reducing premature
death and disability from heart

OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS want to, 1-r, Kathy Parker, BUI Dyer, Jeff Mm, Bill Kautz, Ed
Holter, Blair Windon and Mike Bowles.·

Meigs FFA takes 18 District awards
The Meigs Chapter, Future Farmers of America, doubled its out-

standing achievements of jUBt a year
ago by receiving 18 first place
proficiency awards at the District 17
evaluation meeting held at Southern
High School.
FFA members from Gallia,
Jackson, Vinton, Lawrence and
Meigs Counties competed in 26 area
of agriculture proficiency for the
right to go nn to state competition in
their speci&amp;J.i.zed areas.
Patty Dyer, a 1979 graduate, earned five first place awards. She was
last year's Outstanding Senior FFA
Twenty defendants were fined and
member
and is cWTently attending
12 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
Ohio State University where she
County Court Friday.
plans to major in · Agriculture
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
Education. She was first in the areas
were Charles Canter, Pomeroy, 30
. of Production HorticuiiW'e, Outdoor
days confinement, suspended, two
Recreation, Turf and Landscape
year probation, physical harm;
Management, Fish and Wildlife
John A. Byer, Middleport, Harrj L.
Management,
and Accounting.
Parker, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Sharon L.
Her
third
place
was in Forestry.
Sturbois, Athens, Roy E. Showalter,
No
other
Meigs
FFA
member has
Pomeroy, Linda Walls, Middleport,
won
this
many
first
places
(5) at one
Nancy Neutzling, Syracuse, Randall
time.
She
is the daughter of Mrs.
L. Hornsby, Coolville, $15 and costs
Maxine Dyer, Jesse Creek Road .
each speeding; Bobby I. Stanley,
Bill Kautz, another 1979 graduate
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, stop sign;
is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
James R. Kiser, Jr., Rt. 2, Racine,
Kautz, Pomeroy. Bill received two
$25 and costs, unsafe vehicle;
first place awards in Crop ProducNamon W. Joseph, Albany, costs ontion and Soil and Water Conly, fictitious plates; Everett L.
servation.
Crow, III, Rt. !,.Reedsville, $35 and
BUI is currently farming in partcosts, no muffler, $10 and costs unnership
with his father on their crop
safe vehicle; Unda E. W. StW'geon,
and
dairy
operation. BUI plans to
Coal Grove, $150 and costs, three
grow 125 acres of corn as a cash crop
days confinement, license SUBpendin 1980.
ed 30 days, fine suspended, two
Contour farming on a 3-year
years probation, DWI; Donald
rotation basis and proper ferFolmer, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $10 and
tilization of cropland through lime
costs, speeding; Gregory R.
Sheerer, Athens, $20 and costs,
assured clear distance; Mark A.
Casto, Pomeroy, $35 and costs,
speeding; Rodney E. Pierce, Long
The General Enrollment Period
Bottom, $150 and costs, thrl!e days
for obtaining coverage under part
confinement, license suspended 30
"B" (medical insurance) Medicare
days, fine suspended, one year's proruns from Jan. ! throughMarch31.
bation, DWI; John G. Hayes, MidAU persons 65 or over and certain
dleport, $100 and costs, reckless
operation; Mark A. Clay, Rutland,
$25 and coots, failure to yield; Ricky
Pridemore, Rutland, 60 days conRUNS LISTED
finement and costs, confinement
TUPPERS PLAINS - Recent
suspended, two years probation,
runs by the Tuppers Plains
driving under suspension, 15 days
Emergeocy Squad were reported t~r
confinement, assault.
day. They include: Feb. 8, 9:45a.m.,
Forfeiting bonds were Michael R.
a child taken to Holzer Medical
Cashbaugh, Warren, Timothy P.
Center; Feb. 8, 6:20 p.m., a
Gillilan, Coolville, Austin Wolfe,
Reedsville man to Camden Clark
Racine, David Young, Columbus,
Hospital, ParkersbW'g, and Feb. 9,
Ronald Cheuvront, ParkersbW"g,
11:45 p.m. a Tuppers Plains man to
Terry L. Coan, Bowling Green, and
Holzer Medical Center.
James M. Arnett, Lu~'IISville, $35.50
each, speeding; Phillip L. Bullington, Rt. I, RuUand, $35.50, failure
Syracuse, and Harry A. Miller,
to yield; Timothy Chaffee,
Pomeroy, $360.50 each, DWI; James
Reedsville, $62.55, leaving scene of
D. Council, Langsville, $35.50,
accident; David M. Huston,
following too close.

COURT NEWS

Business Sales and Service.
Agricultural Electrification award.
and soil testing are his primary soil
· Billy Dyer, son of Mrs. Maxine
Jeff worked a total of 1.24 boW's in
conservation activities which won
electricity • related activities as a Dyer, Jesse Creek Road, won the
him top honors. He is a 1900 can·part of his occupational experienee Production Specialty Award. HiS
didate for the State Farmer Degree.
progi-am. He has now won second Vocational AgricuiiW'al program
Ed Holter, son of Mr. and ~:
place honors for his Reporter's has included rabbit raising, where
Roy Holter, Pomeroy, won first
Scrapbook
two straight years in he sold over 50 'litters of rabbits as a
place awards in Dairy Production
District
17.
Jeff
Is another candidate cash project. He is Treasurer for the
and Home and Farmstead Imchapter and anotht!r of the eight
for the State.Farmer Degree.
provement. Ed has 15 percent
Kathy Parker, daughter of Mr. Meigs candidates for the State Far·
ownership in the 717 acre famlly
and Mrs. Leland Parker, Pomeroy, mer Degree.
dairy operation, which centers
Meigs won Chapter awarda in fOW'
won a first-place proficiency award
around 77 head of Holstein cows.
Efficiency factors for the herd inin poultry production and a second areas. The chapter was first in
Safety, second in Cooperatives, and
place in the area of Floriculture.
clude a yearly average of 14,200
Kathy is the dynamic Secretary of third in Building OW' American
pounds of milk per cow. Since the
the Meigs Chapter and was named Communities (BOAC). Meigs Is a
family expanded the diary s::stem
finalist for the title of "Gold Medal
"Number One Secretary" for
one year ago, farmstead imChapter". This is awarded to the top
District 17. Her secretary's book
provements have been the major acwas evaluated by a panel of judges 50 FFA chapters in the state of Ohio.
tivity for Ed in . his vocational
FFA activities coming up include:
and forwarded to Columbus for
agriculture program. Ed is a canelection
of the 1980-81 FFA officers,
possible State recognition. She Is the
didate for Southeast Section, Star
and
National
FFA Week February
first Meigs FFA member ever to win
Farmer of Ohio since receiving his
!6-23.
The
chapter
is also making
first place bonors in his or her office
State Fll!'lller Degree one year ago
duties.
·
pl.ruis for the 8th annual Parentas a junior.
Member Banquet to the held 6:30
Mike Bowles, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Blair Windon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bowles, Pomeroy, won first
Virgil Windon, Pomeroy, is
place in the Horse Production
President of the Meigs FFA ChapLIMITS VISITORS
Award. Mike's projects have
ter. He has won 3 first place awards
Veterans
Memorial Hospital of·
cnetered around two toHuality
in Beef Production, Swine Producficials
&amp;Mounce
that due to the near
Quarter Horses and a total of 241
tion, and Diversified Livestock for
epidemic
·
proportions
of influenza
hours as a stable manager. He has
the second year in a row. Blair's farthat visiting at the hospital be
been very busy in 4-H and Comming program consists of 50 market
restricted to members of the immunity activities dealing with horhogs and 20 head of feeder steers.
mediate famlly only.
ses and belongs to numerous horse
Diversified Livestock is one of the
toughest areas to win since the • clubs.
Mike is CW'l"eDUy an employee at
student is required to have two II'
Modern Supply Company and Is one
more · livestock projects with a
of two candidates for the State Farbalance
of
60
mer Degree in the area of Agrior less income from any one of the
projects. Blair is another candidate
for the State Farmer Degree.
Jeff Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Freddie Moore, Cheshire,· won the
FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported . tbe February
distribution of $7,893,837.92 in local
govenunent money to Ohio's. 88
social security disability
COWJties and 409 cities and villa~f:
beneficiaries who did not enroll in
levying local income taxes. M
·part "B" Medicare )!hen it was first
County's portion was $12,500.
offered to them dutlng their Initial.
enrollment period, should sign up for
part "B" dW'ing this time if they
want the protection.
Persons not yet 65 may sign up for
Medicare at anytime during the
seven months of their lniUal enrollment period which covers the three
months before age 65, the 'month of
attalnilig age 65, and the three
following months.
People wishing to enroll In
Medicare or to apply for social
security benefits can do so by calling
the Athens Social &amp;!curity Office.
Considering the high price ci
gasoline and the convenience and
privacy of telepbone, there's really
Salad Bar
no better way to conduct your social
security business. Athens County
8 oz. New York Slrip
residents call 592-4448. Meigs County
residents call 99U622.
Baked Potato

STAGE HOLIDAY AT HEAL Til CENTER- This
is the first Meigs County group to stage a holiday event
for residents of the new Pomeroy Health Care Center.
The group presented a program, " Love Is", in keeping
with Valentine Day and served valentine refreshments
to residents of the center. Making up the group - ihe
Asbury United Methodist Church Women, Syracuse are front, I to r, Nora Houdashelt, Anna Hilldore,

p.m., Wednesday, March 26, in the
high school cafeteria. Successful
candidates of the eight trying for the
State Farmer Degree and any ~te
FFA "Top 3" Proficiency Award
finalists will he announced then.

Pollv 's Pointers:

Wedding
What do you do with
fading corduroy suit plans made

By Polly Cramer

Newspaper Enterprise Ass~~;
suit can be kept moving about in the
DEAR POLLY - Last year I PW'· dye bath and covered with the water
chased a brown cordW"oy three- and dye all the time.
piece suit for my husband that looks
Remember that the suit will look
as if it had been in the store window dsrker when wet, so be sure dyeing
-parts of It have faded terribly. It
process continues long enough to get
was bought on sale at a very good
the suit as dark as you would like.
discount so It cannot be returned. • Rinse thoroughly. f think I would dry
My husband would like to wear this
it in the dryer on low heat so as to
suit but when in the direct light the
Ruff up the corduroy and then would
faded parts are quite obvious.
take it to the cleaners for a profesI hope you can
sional pressing. I am only sughelp me find a
gesting this dyeing because the suit
solution for OW'
is already a loss.
problem. We
Before starting the dye job be sure
thought of exposto remove any buttons on the suit
ing the dark parts
and the lining. Good luck- POLLY
to the direct
DEAR POLL·; - Readers consunlight thinking
tinue to have trouble removing
they might fade to
misplaced embroidery transfer patllll!teh · the rest of ~uit. Then we
terns from their finished work. I do a
ttJ~ught of dyeing it. Hope youcanlot of machine embroidery and use a
ttlin\&lt; of something as it is just hang- transfer pencil, too. I apply a preil!g in the closet doing no one any
wash spot remover spray around
gOoct:-MRS~M:&amp;.o
·· •
and on ·the dye pattern&gt;let it· stand
''DEAR MRS. M.G. -As the suit is
for 15 minutes and then wash as
a" complete loss the way it is you
UBual, sometimes even In warm
could take some chances and experiwater. This UBually removes tne pat;
ment a bit. Dyeing seem.i the most
tern. Sometimes it ha~ been
IQgical thirig to me. Since the suit is
necessary to respray and rewash but
ffi!lde of corduroy it is probably
not UBually. I have UBed it on cotton
washable, which would make the
and polyester-cotton fabrics. dyeing less of.a chance.
JUDY
In any case the directions on the
Polly will send you one of her signdye package mUBt be followed exact- ed thank-you newspaper-coupon
ly. Select a shade of brown that is a clippers if she UBes one of your
bit darker then it is now and he sure
favorite Pointers, Peeves or Proto:use as much as the pa~kage sugblems in her column. Write Polly's
g~ts . The container for the dyeing
Pointers in care of this newspaper.
II)USt be sufficiently lar&amp;e that the

CaleyKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS I
8 til Noon

Enrollment ends March 31st

Weekend At Meigs ·Inn

:Senior band night planned

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Vegetable

Roll,,
Tea,

4'feigs County
~

ODD LOT OF MEN'S

MEN'S

OUTER WEAR

SUITS

1h PRICE
SWEATERS.

lh· PRICE·

· Plus Tax

ENTERTAI,.MENT
.
FRIDAY·&amp; SAtURDAY
NIGHT

/z PRICE

1

9\\\l

ME.N'S

MEN'S

$625 ..

ConUnlied from Page 5
•
McGuire, Tina Moore, Tammy
Miller, Randy Mitchell, Barbara
r.fw-phy, Jolm Nicinsky, Randy
Oliver, Patricia Parker, Robert
Parker, Linda Partlow, Ray Patbltson, · Laura Province, Kathie
Qblvey, Marvin Randolph, Mark
Rjggs, Kellie Rought, Shelly Rough, .
Floyd Rupe, John Russell, Vicky .
saliaefer, Tina Smith, Donald
Sli,der, Amy Souder, Robin
S®thern, Myrna Swearingen, Cloist
TCllford, · Diullel Thomas, David
'fllbrnton, Greg Walker, Kim War~. Matthew Weaver, Sean Will,
Rkhard Willlamslln, Blair Windon,
•• Yeauger,SusanZirkle. •
Tli'essa
•

}1~-. LfGAl.
BEVERAGES S(JlD

fi.ANNEL -SHIRTS

h PHI

1

MIDNIGHT

.,
{

··DUES .

4 PIECE GROUP FROM
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

~

'

(

'

.

.' ~

\

YOU CAN REALLY SEE I
RENT NEW,
PROFESSIONAL

RIIISEWVA~

Co mbmes
VIBRATIN G BR USH
AGITATION and
powe rful
STEAM EXT RACTION
/,
CLEANIN G

5:1
rliitting.
\'

.

.

'

~

1{J)r~it~\

to loosen. d1sso1ve

a nd extract

'"- ,\

deep -seated d1rt and , .!
'"
'OSidues .
( /1/L~
Ge ts carpets
~
c leaner Faster ! And
J
......,.
1
if' s easy to operate
- "'.:::_
too.
NO LIFT IN G '
ClEAN ING W AND
EQUIPPED WHH
WHEELS
HAN DLE S LIK[
A VACUU M
SWEEPER
::.-----

)r '"-'

~

0'

Eighty-six shutin calls were
reported by members at the recent
meeting .of the Asbury United
Methodist Women held at the home
" of Mrs. Irene·ParkiH' With Mrs·. Nora
Houdashelt ctrhostess.
Mrs. April Harmon had devotions.
Blessing boxes were taken by those
present and plans completed for a
·valentine party at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
The program, "Commitment to
Missions", was given by Mrs. Anna
Hilldore assisted by Mrs. Margaret
Eichinger and Mrs. Helen Teaford.
The spiritus! life closing by Mrs.
. Opa!Kloeswasentitled, "My Jesus I

STAR SUPPLY

SHOP

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions-Velma WinebreMer,
Pomeroy; Everett Ranson, Racine;
Juanita Chapflllm, Clifton; Edna
FergUBon, Middleport; Donna Ross,
Racine; James Blake, Hartford;
Jack Ginther, Chester; Vinas Lee,
Racine; Marcia Terry, Middleport;
Nancy Collins, Reedsville.
Discharges--Everett Huffman,
Judith Holter, Michael Beliveau,
Mary Eblen, ArtbW' Price, John
Harrison, Shelly Sinclair, Penny
Middleswarth.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursda·y till12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
Mason, W. Ya.

773-5592

,..------------l~::::~:::~::::~:::~::::~~:::::::~:::::::::~~~=~~

Love~."

lltlfreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Betty Koch
who gave grace, Mrs. Linda Ferrell,
Mrs. Mary Lisle, and Mrs. Christena

ANSWER 42 CALUI
In January the Middleport Fire
Department answered a total of 42
calls - 11 fires and 31 rescue calls Jeff Darst, assi$ant fire chief reports.
Of the 31 emergency calls, 19 were
out of town and 12, in town. Two involved motor vehicle accidents. All·
vehicles were driven a total of 1073.8
miles during the m~th.

PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY ]
BAYER
WHITMAN'S

VICKS FORMULA 44

COUGH
MIXTURE

CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

6 OI .

36 Tablets

$2

Reg . 53.73

29

Only
Reg . 69C

CWSTERS

40 Tablets

10'12 OI.

39¢

Reg. $2.05

. $2.90

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

lO's
Only

week.

$} 09

0

40%:

1 Carton Per Coupon
Coupon Expires Feb. 18, 1980
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

PER~r~ENE

TYLENOL'DOTa:l::y

$189

MEHtU~t~--~--------~

34¢

For Sore
Thl'oat
Pain

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

CAPSUL£

SWISHER LOHSE

PlAN

Clalrlts' Rlfl!e, R .Ph.

Roneld H•nlns. R. Ph.

PRESCRIPTIONS

PH . "2 ·29!5

Friendly Service

I

E . M•in

'-----HourS:

t:30 to 5:00
Mon. thru Sat.
t:30 to •:oo
Frlda,y

""

.

, CHLORASEPTIC

1

Pharmacy
Kenneth MCCIIIIOUih, R.Ph .

st.

$}93

Only

OFF OF A CARTON OF CIGARETTES

Only
Reg . 69c

Reductions of 40% to 50%

2nd
POMEROY, 0,;

24 oz.

THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 40'

FILM

'

$}19

Only

$}99

Only

CONTAC

SUBSTITUTE WARDEN
Richard Blessing wUI be filling in
as dog warden in Meigs County for
the next
Anyone needing his
services is to call 992-3238.

•

EFFERDENT
DENTURE
CLEANSER

PEcf:~~~~MEL

Mon . lhru I.Jt. t :OOa .m. totp .m .

·Z'7 ATI'END CLINIC
~· Twenty-seven persons attended
tfle blood pressure clinic. held
1\lesday at the Harrlsonyllle Senior
c)itlzens Center and 12 pel'S9ns 'were .
siti'ved dinner.
,
next blood pressw-e cllnlc \'rill
~ · held oo March 11 at . the
from 10 a. m. until noOn.
urse will he Ferndora Story. The
c wUI he held weather per'-

.

Carpe t C lean1ng
Effectiveness

Sunct•v 1• ~ JO to 12: 30 end sto t .m .

:l'he

.

86 shut-in
calls made

•
•
•

Pomeroy, 0." ' ·

'

TO SPEAK
The Rev. Bud Hatfield will be the
guest speaker at the Long Bottom
United Methodist ChW'ch Sunday,
Feb. 17, at 7 p. m. The public is
welcome to attend.

~

,.

Mrs. Grace Pratt and Mrs. Linda
Stobart are c~hairmen for the annual Heart Fund Drive in Middleport to be conducted on Sunday,
Feb. 24. Plans for the drive will he
made at the Monday night meeting
of the Middleport BUBiness and Prtr
fessional Women 's Club which has
f~r more than 30 years handled the
house-to-house soliciation in the
village.

SCOUTS MEET
At a meeting of Pomeroy Scout
Troop 249 several upcoming events
were discussed.
Discussed were plans for summer
camp, Scout-A-Rama, selling of
light bulbs and placing a display in
the window at Elherfelds.
Sunday the scouts met at the
Trinity Church in full uniform.
Attending were Melvin VanMeter,
Ray Tryall, Terry Smith, Jack
Braley, Billy Weaver, John Morris,
Craig Bolin, Billy Colmer, Tinuny
Colmer, Mike Stone, Tim Ohlinger,
Jinunyh Parker, James Snyder,
Randy MW"ray, Greg Thomas, Mike
Edwards and John Bacon.
Adults attending were Bob Workman, Bob Arms, Ray Lauderrnilt,
and Hank Cleland.

~

'

t•hone ·992-3629.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
The desperate need for volunteers
to work on Heart Sunday, Feb. 24,'
was discussed when the Meigs Heart
AssoCiation met recently.
On Heart Sunday, volunteers will
go door-to-door collecting funds for
the association. Any willing to help
is asked to call Lois Kelly, 985-4270,
or Roberta O'Brien, 992·3589, at their
earliest convenience.
It was reported that the local
association Feceived $200 from the
proceeds of the Dave Diles Celebrity
Golf Tournament held the past summer. The group discussed gifts
donated by local merchants to be
awarded to the door-to-door workers
via a drawing.
Attending the meeting were Dr.
James Wetherell, Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Rhonda Dailey, Lois Kelly,
Walter Grueser, Kermit Walton,
JoaM Tewksbary, Rachel Lefebre,
Scott Lucas and Debra Rantanen,
representative of the Central Ohio
Heart Assn., Columbus.
·

"Now, therefore , I, James A.
Rhodes, Governor of the State ol
Ohio, do hereby proclaim February,
1980, as Heart Month m the State of
Ohio, and urge all Ohioans to ·s upport the Central Ohio Heart Chapter
in their efforts to speed greater advances in the conquest of our State's
leading killer and disabler .''

TO MEET
Meigs County ChW'ches of Christ
Men's Fellowship wUI meet at Zion
Racine, 0 .
ChW'ch Monday, Feb. 18, at 7:30
p.m.
..---------------------~----------------------

.•

Coffee Qr Milk

1
LEATHER COATS /zPRIC

Martha Jones, daughter of
Charles Jones, Sr., Middleport, and
Dennis Hart, son of Gilbert Hart,
Racine, will be married on Feb. 23 in
a private &lt;;Jlremony at the Hart
home in Racine.
Miss Jones is a 1979 graduate of
Meigs High School. Her fiance
graduated from Southern High
School in 1971 and is employed at the
Royal Crown Bottling Co.
Following their marriage, the cou·
pie wUI reside in Middleport.

Area goings-on.

programs of research , education
ant! conununity serviee :

Grimn\.

"
:::Plans for the observance of senior tatively set for Aug. 17 through 23rd
tiimd night were made when the at Rio Grande College. It was decidMeigs Band Boosters ·Association . ed that due, to the spring school
'l)et recently at the high schOOL
schedule, there will he no flag and
:,lleniors of the band wUI be honored riffle camp this year.
Officers reports were given and it
l!!ltW'day during half-time of the
Meigs-Vinton basketball game. was noted that workers are needed
IZeceding the game the senior band for the remaining basketball games
members will go to Crows. Steak and the Class A tournament, Feb. 25,
lt'ouse for a dinner.
'!/and 29. Those willing to help are
asked to contact either Mrs. Maxine
~e Boosters voted to sponsor a
ji!Zz band festival and competition in Goegleln, president, or Randy Hunt,
band director. Hunt reported on the
~ril. Committees-will lle organized
recent band directors' clinic which
!~. handle the detail of the festival.
he attended in Cincinnati.
~Swmner band camp was ten-

MENU

ODD LOT OF MEN'S

Christina Grinun, Helen Teaford; second, I tor, Opal
Kloes, chainnan; Mary Cundiff, Mary Lisle, Margaret
Eichinger, April Harmon; back;-1 to r, Rev. Harvey
Koch, Betty Koch, Beulah Ward, Irene Parker. Other
organizations are encoW"aged to stage sucll holiday
events for residents of the center and should make
arrangements by contacting, Mrs. Helene Zidian, center social director, at 99U606.

medicine through Heart Association

disease and stroke. Here in central
Ohio, volunteers will canvass their
neighborhoods during February for
donati ons to support Hea rt
Association programs. The door-t~&gt;­
door canvassing will culminate on
Heart Sunday, Feb. 24.
Governor Rhodes' proclamation
reads: "Whereas, heart and blood
vessel diseases are responsible for
52 percent of deaths in Ohio, a total
which exceeds all other causes of
death combined ; and
" Whereas, more than one of every
two of these victims die of heart attack or stroke ; and
" Whereas, heart and blood vessel
diseases cause ~erious economic
hardship and emotional distress in
OW' homes, families and bUBinesses ;
and
"Whereas, public contributions to
the Heart Fund over the past 31
years have accounted for nearly
every advance in cardiovascular

II

Open Nlghh till t

18'5

~

1I

·- ------J
Pom eroy, 0 .

LOZENGES
ONLY

89¢

Reg. $1.53

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1900

February named Heart ·month

Mayor's eourt
FOW' defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Don Lovett, Middleport, $50 and costs on two
disorderly manner charges, and 30
days in'jail on a charge of resisting
arest ; Gail E. Thoma, Long Bottom,
$10 and costs, no exhaust; George
McDaniel, Middleport, $50 and
costs, disorderly manner, and David
B. Dillard, Gallipolis, $225 and costs
and three days in jail, driving while
intoxicated, and $100 and costs,
possession of marijuana.
Forfeiting bonds were Clifford R.
Howaid, Ashland, Ky., $350, posted
on a driving while intoxicated
charge, and $25, illegal plates; Ivan
Salzhauer, Staten Island, N.Y., $29,
speeding; Michat• D. Banks,
Kenova, W. Va., $29, speeding.
Five defendants forfeited bonds
and a sixth was fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Glarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Duane Siders,
Middleport, $20, posted on a
speeding charge; Thomas E. Smith,
Syracuse, $350, driving while intox·
icated; Deanna Dowler, Athens, $30,
failure to yield the right of way; Herman D. Sowarda, Albany, $20,
speeding, and Artie Reuter,
Pomeroy, $30, failure to yield the
right of way. Fined was Virgil
Jacks, Rutland, $50 and costs, no
operator's license, and $50 and costs,
running a red light.

TOP OFFICERS - Kathy Parker received first place for secretary
records and Jeff Moore received second place for reporters scrapbook.
Both wUI receive trophies at the district banquet.

Governor J ame" Rhodes recentl y
issued a proclamation designating
' February as American Heart Month
and urging area residents to support
the 1960 campaign to he conducted
nationwide.
In the proclamation, Governor
Rhodes asked for support of the Central Ohio Heart Chapter 's campaign
against the nation's No. I killer, cardiovascular diseases.
"Tbese diseases accounted for
' nearly 1,000,000 ri the nation's
I deaths last yea(," reported Stephen
F. Schaal, M. D., president of the
heart chapter, headquartered in
Columbus. "That 's over one-half of
the deaths from all causes."
Volunteers nationwide will
distribute heart-saving information
and collect contributions for heart
research, education and community
service projects. These programs
are aimed at reducing premature
death and disability from heart

OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS want to, 1-r, Kathy Parker, BUI Dyer, Jeff Mm, Bill Kautz, Ed
Holter, Blair Windon and Mike Bowles.·

Meigs FFA takes 18 District awards
The Meigs Chapter, Future Farmers of America, doubled its out-

standing achievements of jUBt a year
ago by receiving 18 first place
proficiency awards at the District 17
evaluation meeting held at Southern
High School.
FFA members from Gallia,
Jackson, Vinton, Lawrence and
Meigs Counties competed in 26 area
of agriculture proficiency for the
right to go nn to state competition in
their speci&amp;J.i.zed areas.
Patty Dyer, a 1979 graduate, earned five first place awards. She was
last year's Outstanding Senior FFA
Twenty defendants were fined and
member
and is cWTently attending
12 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
Ohio State University where she
County Court Friday.
plans to major in · Agriculture
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
Education. She was first in the areas
were Charles Canter, Pomeroy, 30
. of Production HorticuiiW'e, Outdoor
days confinement, suspended, two
Recreation, Turf and Landscape
year probation, physical harm;
Management, Fish and Wildlife
John A. Byer, Middleport, Harrj L.
Management,
and Accounting.
Parker, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Sharon L.
Her
third
place
was in Forestry.
Sturbois, Athens, Roy E. Showalter,
No
other
Meigs
FFA
member has
Pomeroy, Linda Walls, Middleport,
won
this
many
first
places
(5) at one
Nancy Neutzling, Syracuse, Randall
time.
She
is the daughter of Mrs.
L. Hornsby, Coolville, $15 and costs
Maxine Dyer, Jesse Creek Road .
each speeding; Bobby I. Stanley,
Bill Kautz, another 1979 graduate
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, stop sign;
is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
James R. Kiser, Jr., Rt. 2, Racine,
Kautz, Pomeroy. Bill received two
$25 and costs, unsafe vehicle;
first place awards in Crop ProducNamon W. Joseph, Albany, costs ontion and Soil and Water Conly, fictitious plates; Everett L.
servation.
Crow, III, Rt. !,.Reedsville, $35 and
BUI is currently farming in partcosts, no muffler, $10 and costs unnership
with his father on their crop
safe vehicle; Unda E. W. StW'geon,
and
dairy
operation. BUI plans to
Coal Grove, $150 and costs, three
grow 125 acres of corn as a cash crop
days confinement, license SUBpendin 1980.
ed 30 days, fine suspended, two
Contour farming on a 3-year
years probation, DWI; Donald
rotation basis and proper ferFolmer, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $10 and
tilization of cropland through lime
costs, speeding; Gregory R.
Sheerer, Athens, $20 and costs,
assured clear distance; Mark A.
Casto, Pomeroy, $35 and costs,
speeding; Rodney E. Pierce, Long
The General Enrollment Period
Bottom, $150 and costs, thrl!e days
for obtaining coverage under part
confinement, license suspended 30
"B" (medical insurance) Medicare
days, fine suspended, one year's proruns from Jan. ! throughMarch31.
bation, DWI; John G. Hayes, MidAU persons 65 or over and certain
dleport, $100 and costs, reckless
operation; Mark A. Clay, Rutland,
$25 and coots, failure to yield; Ricky
Pridemore, Rutland, 60 days conRUNS LISTED
finement and costs, confinement
TUPPERS PLAINS - Recent
suspended, two years probation,
runs by the Tuppers Plains
driving under suspension, 15 days
Emergeocy Squad were reported t~r
confinement, assault.
day. They include: Feb. 8, 9:45a.m.,
Forfeiting bonds were Michael R.
a child taken to Holzer Medical
Cashbaugh, Warren, Timothy P.
Center; Feb. 8, 6:20 p.m., a
Gillilan, Coolville, Austin Wolfe,
Reedsville man to Camden Clark
Racine, David Young, Columbus,
Hospital, ParkersbW'g, and Feb. 9,
Ronald Cheuvront, ParkersbW"g,
11:45 p.m. a Tuppers Plains man to
Terry L. Coan, Bowling Green, and
Holzer Medical Center.
James M. Arnett, Lu~'IISville, $35.50
each, speeding; Phillip L. Bullington, Rt. I, RuUand, $35.50, failure
Syracuse, and Harry A. Miller,
to yield; Timothy Chaffee,
Pomeroy, $360.50 each, DWI; James
Reedsville, $62.55, leaving scene of
D. Council, Langsville, $35.50,
accident; David M. Huston,
following too close.

COURT NEWS

Business Sales and Service.
Agricultural Electrification award.
and soil testing are his primary soil
· Billy Dyer, son of Mrs. Maxine
Jeff worked a total of 1.24 boW's in
conservation activities which won
electricity • related activities as a Dyer, Jesse Creek Road, won the
him top honors. He is a 1900 can·part of his occupational experienee Production Specialty Award. HiS
didate for the State Farmer Degree.
progi-am. He has now won second Vocational AgricuiiW'al program
Ed Holter, son of Mr. and ~:
place honors for his Reporter's has included rabbit raising, where
Roy Holter, Pomeroy, won first
Scrapbook
two straight years in he sold over 50 'litters of rabbits as a
place awards in Dairy Production
District
17.
Jeff
Is another candidate cash project. He is Treasurer for the
and Home and Farmstead Imchapter and anotht!r of the eight
for the State.Farmer Degree.
provement. Ed has 15 percent
Kathy Parker, daughter of Mr. Meigs candidates for the State Far·
ownership in the 717 acre famlly
and Mrs. Leland Parker, Pomeroy, mer Degree.
dairy operation, which centers
Meigs won Chapter awarda in fOW'
won a first-place proficiency award
around 77 head of Holstein cows.
Efficiency factors for the herd inin poultry production and a second areas. The chapter was first in
Safety, second in Cooperatives, and
place in the area of Floriculture.
clude a yearly average of 14,200
Kathy is the dynamic Secretary of third in Building OW' American
pounds of milk per cow. Since the
the Meigs Chapter and was named Communities (BOAC). Meigs Is a
family expanded the diary s::stem
finalist for the title of "Gold Medal
"Number One Secretary" for
one year ago, farmstead imChapter". This is awarded to the top
District 17. Her secretary's book
provements have been the major acwas evaluated by a panel of judges 50 FFA chapters in the state of Ohio.
tivity for Ed in . his vocational
FFA activities coming up include:
and forwarded to Columbus for
agriculture program. Ed is a canelection
of the 1980-81 FFA officers,
possible State recognition. She Is the
didate for Southeast Section, Star
and
National
FFA Week February
first Meigs FFA member ever to win
Farmer of Ohio since receiving his
!6-23.
The
chapter
is also making
first place bonors in his or her office
State Fll!'lller Degree one year ago
duties.
·
pl.ruis for the 8th annual Parentas a junior.
Member Banquet to the held 6:30
Mike Bowles, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Blair Windon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bowles, Pomeroy, won first
Virgil Windon, Pomeroy, is
place in the Horse Production
President of the Meigs FFA ChapLIMITS VISITORS
Award. Mike's projects have
ter. He has won 3 first place awards
Veterans
Memorial Hospital of·
cnetered around two toHuality
in Beef Production, Swine Producficials
&amp;Mounce
that due to the near
Quarter Horses and a total of 241
tion, and Diversified Livestock for
epidemic
·
proportions
of influenza
hours as a stable manager. He has
the second year in a row. Blair's farthat visiting at the hospital be
been very busy in 4-H and Comming program consists of 50 market
restricted to members of the immunity activities dealing with horhogs and 20 head of feeder steers.
mediate famlly only.
ses and belongs to numerous horse
Diversified Livestock is one of the
toughest areas to win since the • clubs.
Mike is CW'l"eDUy an employee at
student is required to have two II'
Modern Supply Company and Is one
more · livestock projects with a
of two candidates for the State Farbalance
of
60
mer Degree in the area of Agrior less income from any one of the
projects. Blair is another candidate
for the State Farmer Degree.
Jeff Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Freddie Moore, Cheshire,· won the
FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported . tbe February
distribution of $7,893,837.92 in local
govenunent money to Ohio's. 88
social security disability
COWJties and 409 cities and villa~f:
beneficiaries who did not enroll in
levying local income taxes. M
·part "B" Medicare )!hen it was first
County's portion was $12,500.
offered to them dutlng their Initial.
enrollment period, should sign up for
part "B" dW'ing this time if they
want the protection.
Persons not yet 65 may sign up for
Medicare at anytime during the
seven months of their lniUal enrollment period which covers the three
months before age 65, the 'month of
attalnilig age 65, and the three
following months.
People wishing to enroll In
Medicare or to apply for social
security benefits can do so by calling
the Athens Social &amp;!curity Office.
Considering the high price ci
gasoline and the convenience and
privacy of telepbone, there's really
Salad Bar
no better way to conduct your social
security business. Athens County
8 oz. New York Slrip
residents call 592-4448. Meigs County
residents call 99U622.
Baked Potato

STAGE HOLIDAY AT HEAL Til CENTER- This
is the first Meigs County group to stage a holiday event
for residents of the new Pomeroy Health Care Center.
The group presented a program, " Love Is", in keeping
with Valentine Day and served valentine refreshments
to residents of the center. Making up the group - ihe
Asbury United Methodist Church Women, Syracuse are front, I to r, Nora Houdashelt, Anna Hilldore,

p.m., Wednesday, March 26, in the
high school cafeteria. Successful
candidates of the eight trying for the
State Farmer Degree and any ~te
FFA "Top 3" Proficiency Award
finalists will he announced then.

Pollv 's Pointers:

Wedding
What do you do with
fading corduroy suit plans made

By Polly Cramer

Newspaper Enterprise Ass~~;
suit can be kept moving about in the
DEAR POLLY - Last year I PW'· dye bath and covered with the water
chased a brown cordW"oy three- and dye all the time.
piece suit for my husband that looks
Remember that the suit will look
as if it had been in the store window dsrker when wet, so be sure dyeing
-parts of It have faded terribly. It
process continues long enough to get
was bought on sale at a very good
the suit as dark as you would like.
discount so It cannot be returned. • Rinse thoroughly. f think I would dry
My husband would like to wear this
it in the dryer on low heat so as to
suit but when in the direct light the
Ruff up the corduroy and then would
faded parts are quite obvious.
take it to the cleaners for a profesI hope you can
sional pressing. I am only sughelp me find a
gesting this dyeing because the suit
solution for OW'
is already a loss.
problem. We
Before starting the dye job be sure
thought of exposto remove any buttons on the suit
ing the dark parts
and the lining. Good luck- POLLY
to the direct
DEAR POLL·; - Readers consunlight thinking
tinue to have trouble removing
they might fade to
misplaced embroidery transfer patllll!teh · the rest of ~uit. Then we
terns from their finished work. I do a
ttJ~ught of dyeing it. Hope youcanlot of machine embroidery and use a
ttlin\&lt; of something as it is just hang- transfer pencil, too. I apply a preil!g in the closet doing no one any
wash spot remover spray around
gOoct:-MRS~M:&amp;.o
·· •
and on ·the dye pattern&gt;let it· stand
''DEAR MRS. M.G. -As the suit is
for 15 minutes and then wash as
a" complete loss the way it is you
UBual, sometimes even In warm
could take some chances and experiwater. This UBually removes tne pat;
ment a bit. Dyeing seem.i the most
tern. Sometimes it ha~ been
IQgical thirig to me. Since the suit is
necessary to respray and rewash but
ffi!lde of corduroy it is probably
not UBually. I have UBed it on cotton
washable, which would make the
and polyester-cotton fabrics. dyeing less of.a chance.
JUDY
In any case the directions on the
Polly will send you one of her signdye package mUBt be followed exact- ed thank-you newspaper-coupon
ly. Select a shade of brown that is a clippers if she UBes one of your
bit darker then it is now and he sure
favorite Pointers, Peeves or Proto:use as much as the pa~kage sugblems in her column. Write Polly's
g~ts . The container for the dyeing
Pointers in care of this newspaper.
II)USt be sufficiently lar&amp;e that the

CaleyKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS I
8 til Noon

Enrollment ends March 31st

Weekend At Meigs ·Inn

:Senior band night planned

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Vegetable

Roll,,
Tea,

4'feigs County
~

ODD LOT OF MEN'S

MEN'S

OUTER WEAR

SUITS

1h PRICE
SWEATERS.

lh· PRICE·

· Plus Tax

ENTERTAI,.MENT
.
FRIDAY·&amp; SAtURDAY
NIGHT

/z PRICE

1

9\\\l

ME.N'S

MEN'S

$625 ..

ConUnlied from Page 5
•
McGuire, Tina Moore, Tammy
Miller, Randy Mitchell, Barbara
r.fw-phy, Jolm Nicinsky, Randy
Oliver, Patricia Parker, Robert
Parker, Linda Partlow, Ray Patbltson, · Laura Province, Kathie
Qblvey, Marvin Randolph, Mark
Rjggs, Kellie Rought, Shelly Rough, .
Floyd Rupe, John Russell, Vicky .
saliaefer, Tina Smith, Donald
Sli,der, Amy Souder, Robin
S®thern, Myrna Swearingen, Cloist
TCllford, · Diullel Thomas, David
'fllbrnton, Greg Walker, Kim War~. Matthew Weaver, Sean Will,
Rkhard Willlamslln, Blair Windon,
•• Yeauger,SusanZirkle. •
Tli'essa
•

}1~-. LfGAl.
BEVERAGES S(JlD

fi.ANNEL -SHIRTS

h PHI

1

MIDNIGHT

.,
{

··DUES .

4 PIECE GROUP FROM
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

~

'

(

'

.

.' ~

\

YOU CAN REALLY SEE I
RENT NEW,
PROFESSIONAL

RIIISEWVA~

Co mbmes
VIBRATIN G BR USH
AGITATION and
powe rful
STEAM EXT RACTION
/,
CLEANIN G

5:1
rliitting.
\'

.

.

'

~

1{J)r~it~\

to loosen. d1sso1ve

a nd extract

'"- ,\

deep -seated d1rt and , .!
'"
'OSidues .
( /1/L~
Ge ts carpets
~
c leaner Faster ! And
J
......,.
1
if' s easy to operate
- "'.:::_
too.
NO LIFT IN G '
ClEAN ING W AND
EQUIPPED WHH
WHEELS
HAN DLE S LIK[
A VACUU M
SWEEPER
::.-----

)r '"-'

~

0'

Eighty-six shutin calls were
reported by members at the recent
meeting .of the Asbury United
Methodist Women held at the home
" of Mrs. Irene·ParkiH' With Mrs·. Nora
Houdashelt ctrhostess.
Mrs. April Harmon had devotions.
Blessing boxes were taken by those
present and plans completed for a
·valentine party at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
The program, "Commitment to
Missions", was given by Mrs. Anna
Hilldore assisted by Mrs. Margaret
Eichinger and Mrs. Helen Teaford.
The spiritus! life closing by Mrs.
. Opa!Kloeswasentitled, "My Jesus I

STAR SUPPLY

SHOP

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions-Velma WinebreMer,
Pomeroy; Everett Ranson, Racine;
Juanita Chapflllm, Clifton; Edna
FergUBon, Middleport; Donna Ross,
Racine; James Blake, Hartford;
Jack Ginther, Chester; Vinas Lee,
Racine; Marcia Terry, Middleport;
Nancy Collins, Reedsville.
Discharges--Everett Huffman,
Judith Holter, Michael Beliveau,
Mary Eblen, ArtbW' Price, John
Harrison, Shelly Sinclair, Penny
Middleswarth.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursda·y till12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
Mason, W. Ya.

773-5592

,..------------l~::::~:::~::::~:::~::::~~:::::::~:::::::::~~~=~~

Love~."

lltlfreshments were served to
those named and Mrs. Betty Koch
who gave grace, Mrs. Linda Ferrell,
Mrs. Mary Lisle, and Mrs. Christena

ANSWER 42 CALUI
In January the Middleport Fire
Department answered a total of 42
calls - 11 fires and 31 rescue calls Jeff Darst, assi$ant fire chief reports.
Of the 31 emergency calls, 19 were
out of town and 12, in town. Two involved motor vehicle accidents. All·
vehicles were driven a total of 1073.8
miles during the m~th.

PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY ]
BAYER
WHITMAN'S

VICKS FORMULA 44

COUGH
MIXTURE

CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

6 OI .

36 Tablets

$2

Reg . 53.73

29

Only
Reg . 69C

CWSTERS

40 Tablets

10'12 OI.

39¢

Reg. $2.05

. $2.90

LISTERINE
ANTISEPTIC

lO's
Only

week.

$} 09

0

40%:

1 Carton Per Coupon
Coupon Expires Feb. 18, 1980
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

PER~r~ENE

TYLENOL'DOTa:l::y

$189

MEHtU~t~--~--------~

34¢

For Sore
Thl'oat
Pain

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

CAPSUL£

SWISHER LOHSE

PlAN

Clalrlts' Rlfl!e, R .Ph.

Roneld H•nlns. R. Ph.

PRESCRIPTIONS

PH . "2 ·29!5

Friendly Service

I

E . M•in

'-----HourS:

t:30 to 5:00
Mon. thru Sat.
t:30 to •:oo
Frlda,y

""

.

, CHLORASEPTIC

1

Pharmacy
Kenneth MCCIIIIOUih, R.Ph .

st.

$}93

Only

OFF OF A CARTON OF CIGARETTES

Only
Reg . 69c

Reductions of 40% to 50%

2nd
POMEROY, 0,;

24 oz.

THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 40'

FILM

'

$}19

Only

$}99

Only

CONTAC

SUBSTITUTE WARDEN
Richard Blessing wUI be filling in
as dog warden in Meigs County for
the next
Anyone needing his
services is to call 992-3238.

•

EFFERDENT
DENTURE
CLEANSER

PEcf:~~~~MEL

Mon . lhru I.Jt. t :OOa .m. totp .m .

·Z'7 ATI'END CLINIC
~· Twenty-seven persons attended
tfle blood pressure clinic. held
1\lesday at the Harrlsonyllle Senior
c)itlzens Center and 12 pel'S9ns 'were .
siti'ved dinner.
,
next blood pressw-e cllnlc \'rill
~ · held oo March 11 at . the
from 10 a. m. until noOn.
urse will he Ferndora Story. The
c wUI he held weather per'-

.

Carpe t C lean1ng
Effectiveness

Sunct•v 1• ~ JO to 12: 30 end sto t .m .

:l'he

.

86 shut-in
calls made

•
•
•

Pomeroy, 0." ' ·

'

TO SPEAK
The Rev. Bud Hatfield will be the
guest speaker at the Long Bottom
United Methodist ChW'ch Sunday,
Feb. 17, at 7 p. m. The public is
welcome to attend.

~

,.

Mrs. Grace Pratt and Mrs. Linda
Stobart are c~hairmen for the annual Heart Fund Drive in Middleport to be conducted on Sunday,
Feb. 24. Plans for the drive will he
made at the Monday night meeting
of the Middleport BUBiness and Prtr
fessional Women 's Club which has
f~r more than 30 years handled the
house-to-house soliciation in the
village.

SCOUTS MEET
At a meeting of Pomeroy Scout
Troop 249 several upcoming events
were discussed.
Discussed were plans for summer
camp, Scout-A-Rama, selling of
light bulbs and placing a display in
the window at Elherfelds.
Sunday the scouts met at the
Trinity Church in full uniform.
Attending were Melvin VanMeter,
Ray Tryall, Terry Smith, Jack
Braley, Billy Weaver, John Morris,
Craig Bolin, Billy Colmer, Tinuny
Colmer, Mike Stone, Tim Ohlinger,
Jinunyh Parker, James Snyder,
Randy MW"ray, Greg Thomas, Mike
Edwards and John Bacon.
Adults attending were Bob Workman, Bob Arms, Ray Lauderrnilt,
and Hank Cleland.

~

'

t•hone ·992-3629.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
The desperate need for volunteers
to work on Heart Sunday, Feb. 24,'
was discussed when the Meigs Heart
AssoCiation met recently.
On Heart Sunday, volunteers will
go door-to-door collecting funds for
the association. Any willing to help
is asked to call Lois Kelly, 985-4270,
or Roberta O'Brien, 992·3589, at their
earliest convenience.
It was reported that the local
association Feceived $200 from the
proceeds of the Dave Diles Celebrity
Golf Tournament held the past summer. The group discussed gifts
donated by local merchants to be
awarded to the door-to-door workers
via a drawing.
Attending the meeting were Dr.
James Wetherell, Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Rhonda Dailey, Lois Kelly,
Walter Grueser, Kermit Walton,
JoaM Tewksbary, Rachel Lefebre,
Scott Lucas and Debra Rantanen,
representative of the Central Ohio
Heart Assn., Columbus.
·

"Now, therefore , I, James A.
Rhodes, Governor of the State ol
Ohio, do hereby proclaim February,
1980, as Heart Month m the State of
Ohio, and urge all Ohioans to ·s upport the Central Ohio Heart Chapter
in their efforts to speed greater advances in the conquest of our State's
leading killer and disabler .''

TO MEET
Meigs County ChW'ches of Christ
Men's Fellowship wUI meet at Zion
Racine, 0 .
ChW'ch Monday, Feb. 18, at 7:30
p.m.
..---------------------~----------------------

.•

Coffee Qr Milk

1
LEATHER COATS /zPRIC

Martha Jones, daughter of
Charles Jones, Sr., Middleport, and
Dennis Hart, son of Gilbert Hart,
Racine, will be married on Feb. 23 in
a private &lt;;Jlremony at the Hart
home in Racine.
Miss Jones is a 1979 graduate of
Meigs High School. Her fiance
graduated from Southern High
School in 1971 and is employed at the
Royal Crown Bottling Co.
Following their marriage, the cou·
pie wUI reside in Middleport.

Area goings-on.

programs of research , education
ant! conununity serviee :

Grimn\.

"
:::Plans for the observance of senior tatively set for Aug. 17 through 23rd
tiimd night were made when the at Rio Grande College. It was decidMeigs Band Boosters ·Association . ed that due, to the spring school
'l)et recently at the high schOOL
schedule, there will he no flag and
:,lleniors of the band wUI be honored riffle camp this year.
Officers reports were given and it
l!!ltW'day during half-time of the
Meigs-Vinton basketball game. was noted that workers are needed
IZeceding the game the senior band for the remaining basketball games
members will go to Crows. Steak and the Class A tournament, Feb. 25,
lt'ouse for a dinner.
'!/and 29. Those willing to help are
asked to contact either Mrs. Maxine
~e Boosters voted to sponsor a
ji!Zz band festival and competition in Goegleln, president, or Randy Hunt,
band director. Hunt reported on the
~ril. Committees-will lle organized
recent band directors' clinic which
!~. handle the detail of the festival.
he attended in Cincinnati.
~Swmner band camp was ten-

MENU

ODD LOT OF MEN'S

Christina Grinun, Helen Teaford; second, I tor, Opal
Kloes, chainnan; Mary Cundiff, Mary Lisle, Margaret
Eichinger, April Harmon; back;-1 to r, Rev. Harvey
Koch, Betty Koch, Beulah Ward, Irene Parker. Other
organizations are encoW"aged to stage sucll holiday
events for residents of the center and should make
arrangements by contacting, Mrs. Helene Zidian, center social director, at 99U606.

medicine through Heart Association

disease and stroke. Here in central
Ohio, volunteers will canvass their
neighborhoods during February for
donati ons to support Hea rt
Association programs. The door-t~&gt;­
door canvassing will culminate on
Heart Sunday, Feb. 24.
Governor Rhodes' proclamation
reads: "Whereas, heart and blood
vessel diseases are responsible for
52 percent of deaths in Ohio, a total
which exceeds all other causes of
death combined ; and
" Whereas, more than one of every
two of these victims die of heart attack or stroke ; and
" Whereas, heart and blood vessel
diseases cause ~erious economic
hardship and emotional distress in
OW' homes, families and bUBinesses ;
and
"Whereas, public contributions to
the Heart Fund over the past 31
years have accounted for nearly
every advance in cardiovascular

II

Open Nlghh till t

18'5

~

1I

·- ------J
Pom eroy, 0 .

LOZENGES
ONLY

89¢

Reg. $1.53

�--- -------

-··- ---- -

-----·~----·--

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

11 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

Your 8es~ Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Notice=s ~~

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~

G UN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY IPM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACI NE
G UN CLUB .

Words or Umlt•r

Charge

Cash

I day
2days
3days
6 day:J

100
150
I 80

125
100
2.25

3 00

3.75

GUN
SH OOT . Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Dept
E very Saturday . 6 :30p .m
At their buildingin Bashan
F actory choke guns onl y

Ea ch word over lhe l llilllfllliiTI
15 wonts l.S 4 cents per word per
dHy Ad'! ruruung other than CUfl·
secutive &lt;U6y s will be charged at
lhP l dH y r14le
In memory ,

C'~rd

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 00 Factory chok e on ly
corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .

of Thllnks

and Obituary · 6 cents per word,

$3 00 nunun11m. Cash m ad -

vanee.

ATTE N TIO N
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU! Will

Mobile Home Stiles arxl Yard
sales are accepted only with
cash with order . 25 cent charge
for ads carryiJ1g Box Number f n

pay cash or cert ified check
for antique s and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin co llections . Call 614767 3167 or 557 3411

C.aro ufThe Sentinel

1'114! PubliSher reserves the
r 1ght to rd.it or rej ect any ad&lt;!

dL-emed

ob)cctwna l.

The

Publisher will not be responsi ble
lor more than one incorrec t in·

-·------·-~~~

BUYING U 5 SIL VER
CO IN S DATE D 1964 OR
EARLIER
!ANY
AMOUNT) DON ' T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP TH E PHONE AND
DIAL
614 992 5113,
BROWN'S.
.

sertwn

Phone 992--2 156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

1 PAY h 1ghest prices
poss ibl e for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc
contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport .

Monday
un Sa turdlly

NOOJl

INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
Russe ll , Bradbury . 992 ·

Tuesday

lhru Fn d.a .11
4 P.M

7228.

thl' day hefore pubbcat10n
Sunda y

HEARING AID USERS:

Friday afternoon

save used batteries, mer·
cury and silver oxide,
redeem for cas h. Diles
Hearing
Aid
Center,

&lt;p M

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

At hens Tel. 614·590571.

The fo llowing described
itemls) will be offered for
public sale on the premises
of The Pomer oy National
Bank, Court and Second
Sts., Pomeroy , Oh10, on the
27th day of February, 1980

at 10:00 AM, EST.

1978 Dodge Van Motor

Home, SNB21BE8X 105187

Terms of sa le : cash.
Items may be sold 1n
units or parcels and the
seller reser ves the right to
re1 ec t any and all bid s. Can
be seen at Smith Nelson
Motors, 500 E . Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, d ur ing
regular bus1 ness ~lours.
(.2 )

14, l!c

GOLD, 51 LVE R o·R
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS . ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURN ITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY IOSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992 6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
WILL the party who took
the clothes by mistake
from Fife' s Laundromat in
Middleport last Tuesday,

me

5th, please call 992··

LEGAL NOTICE
80·90-GE -U NC

5083 . Reward, no Quest ions
asked.

Case No . 80·90·GE ·UNC to

LADY needs ride to Mac·
Donald ' s,
Gallipo li s,
Tuesday
Saturday .
Willing to share expenses

The Public Utilities com mission
of Ohio ha s
scheduled a hearing in

consider the a~counting
and ratema~ing treatmenl
of costs and char9es
associated with the 1m·'
ptementation
of
the
Residential Conservation
Service Program, which
program is manoated by
the National Energy Conserva tion Policy Act. Par·
ticipating utilities shal l
and any_ interested partieS
may, f1l e comments by
February 27, 1980, as
outlined in the Com ·
mission's
Entry
of
February 6, 1980. The
public hearing will be held
commencing March 11
1980, at 9:30a .m . in the of~
fices of The Public UtilitieS
Commission of Ohio, 180
East Broad Street, Colum ·
bus, Ohio 43215. All in·
terested parties will be af·
forded an oppor tunity to
present evidence material
to the issues in the
proceeding . Copies of the
Commissi on's Entry of
February 6, 1980, may be
obta i ned
from
the
Docketing Division, the
Pub l ic Utilities
Com ·
mission of Ohio, lBO East
Br oad Str ee t, Columbus,
Ohio 43215

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OH IO

BY : D avid
Secretary
(2)

M.

Polk

'

14 . l!c

MATCH

Rutland Gun Clu b, behind
Stewart's Gun Shop, Smith
Run Rd . . 22 r ifles, open
sights. Also, big bore
pistol s off hand, 25 yards
Muzzle loaders and rifles,
50 yards . . 22 rifle bench
rest,
100
yards.
No
alcoholic
beverages
a llowed . Every Friday
night . 8 p.m. except last
Friday ot each month
Shooter will furnish own
ammunition.

~CBirthday

wanted . $500
possible. No

per week
experience

A.S.D . ,

PO

GEl

VALUABLE training
as young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992
2156or 992 -2157 .

RN OR LPN, lull time. 3·
11:30 and 11 to 7:30. P&lt;trf

time RN or LPN , 11101 :30
Your perspec. I!IIP.S and honzons

w•ll be greatly e)l,panded thi s

day through firiday, 9·5.

comi ng year through a desne t o
ga1n ne w knnwledge and
8)(PCrllse . W11at

you learn

w 11l be

used wisely
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Fab. 19)
There·s a p o~s 1bility you could
d u something today contrary to
your be tt er Jud g ment and
depnve yoursetl of a reward that
is within your grasp. H ~ed pa st
experiences

Find out more ot

what lies ahead tor you 1n the

following your birthday b)'
send1ng for your copy of AstraGraph Letter Mall $1 tor each to
Astra-Graph, Bmc 489 , Radto
City Stat ton. N.Y 10019 Be sure
to speci fy birth dat e.
year

PISCES

(Feb. 20-M.rch

20)

Someone who has great respect
for yoo may take you into hi s or
her confidence today. Suppress
temptations to reveal to others
what you are told .
ARIES (MMch 21-April tt) Be
prepared for some unexpected

contingencies in an important
relationship today. Your ally
might do something surprising to
throw things off balance.
•1
TAURUS (APfil :IG-Moy 20) Be
prepared to go it alone today
Persons you can normally count
on may not be able to assist you
Fear not, yOu'll manage by your·
self.

GEMINI (M1y 21-June 20) For
things to work ou t as YQL(d like
today, it will be neessary ·to pay
auentlon to every detail. Don't
let your con cent~atlon .1tray trorn
the task at hand.

· CANCER (June 21·July :12)
Springing unexpected changes

on others today. could create a
.raft ot needless problemt.
Bftfore making alterations you
should notify everyone.
LEO '{July 23-Aug. 22) Normally
vou 're your own person, but

SALES TRAINEE. Salary
plus commissions. No experience necessary . Phone

PERMANENT FULL
TIME POSITION
DOe to company upansion Olan Mills Portrait
Studio has an im mediate open1ng tor a
telephone .advertising
manager .
Mature female or male,
25 years or older, high
school
graduate
minimum, prefer some
college. Must be able to
travel extensivel y in the
tri ·state area, must
have your own car, ex ·
perience in sa l es helpful
but not necessary . Com ·
ptete training with pay
starting at $150 and up
per week plus expenses,
paid holidays, group insurance, and company
ret1rement program .
A verge annual earnings
$15,000 per year and up .
Fantastic , opportunity
for advancement for a
career
minded
in dividual.
Call Collect for Glenda
Robertson at Area Code

15131 323-5528 Thursday,
February 14, or Friday,
February 15 between 9
A.M. and 4 P.M .

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

FURNITURE,

ice

call9'12 7760.
ANT IQU ES,
NITURE. glass,

FUR ·
china,

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

2nd, Middleport, OH. 9'12·
3161.
OLD COl NS, pocket

wat ~

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

GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN CO IN S, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
51 LVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANT IQU E FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY IDSSI E) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6310. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
-GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD,
RINGS,
JEWE L RY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS . PAYING
RECORD HIGH , HONEST,
UP · TO DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
9'12·3476.
BUYING SILVER coins
S.S .• gold class rings, gold
rings, 14 K, IOK, 18K.
Highest prices paid . Mid ·

lown Market , 675·3010. 11
a.m. ·5P.m.

9'12 ·2460 .
TI TLE Abstractor. Oil and
gas company needs person
to check records for oil and
gas leases. Must be free to
travel if necessary . Send
brief resume to Box 729-A,
c·o · the Daily Sentine l,

Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
APPLICATIONS will be
accep ted Friday, Feb. 15
and Friday, Feb. 22,9 a.m.·
5 p.m . for equipment
operators, laborers, and
foremen familiar with
water and sewer work . Ex·
perienced on tv. Apply at
Pullins Excavating office,
US 33, Pomeroy, OH .

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 61.4·

698 ·3290.

Bording

and

Riding Lessons. and Horse
Care products . Western

boots. Children's
.Adu Its S29 .00.

$15.50.

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367-0292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 61067·7220.
HILLCREST

KENNELS.

Boarding, all breeds. C lean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
A.is.o
AKC
registered
ioday you may be too easily
Influenced by o•Jtside opinions.
Stand by Ideas you. believe to be

good.

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Bopl. :12) Your
possibilities lor gains are very

gOOd today. but you may not
exploit them fully. This could be
a mistake. Your OPPortunllies
may be lleetlng ones .
LIBRA (S.pt. 23-0cl. 22) Moll
things you're able to manage
with considerable skill, but again
today you may be e shade too
ca~efess or extravagant In han dling your resources

FM . $3100 . 247 3594.

.

1973
GMC
van,
lo w
mileage, 6 cyl., std . 992-

Dobermans. 614-446-77'15.
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a nome less pet.
Healtny, snots, wormed.
Qonalions required . 992·
6260, noon·7 p.m.
Auto Sales
1975 Bronco 4x4, V·8, AT,
P,S,, posi ·tractlon front
and rear. 5 new tires. 4 new

shocks. 992·2619.

•

For Sale
COAL,
LIME STONE ,

AM B·tra ck radio. Reese

3785.

5:30p .m.

APPLES - ROME beauty

1978

apple bu!!er. Call 669 ·3785,

apples at $-4 per bu. Best for

B·210. $3450,

949·2754 after 5.

trol $1100 . 992·1762.
1973 Pinto Hatchback,
auto.-, A . C. , good condit ion
$900. 4.46 -1830 or 446 --4572.

1977 Pontiac Grand p.rix,
Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windows, door locks,
extra padded landau tap·,
special paint and interior,
24,000 actual, local owner,

best of care. $430. Call 992·
6249 after 5 p.m .
1978 Ford lh ton Club cab
with topper . V ·8, auto ., low

mileage. $4200.

1972

In·

ternational backhoe, com·
mercia! type, $8,000. 949·

2042.
HAPPY VALENTINE'S to
a wonderful husband and
father . We lave you. Susie,
Michael, Michelle, Shan·

telle and JD .
Buick

Fitzpatrick

Orchard,

SR

Regal

auto.,

EMERGENCY

power

9'12 ·6342 or 992·2583 .
CONDITIONED

GOOD

hay , clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.

Phone 992 ·7201 or 992·3309.
1970 Mark Twain V·hull, 16

fool with 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call alter 5 p.m ., 992 ·2526.
F IREWOOD . Phone 9'12·
5240 .

'I'

PRICE
SALE.
WOMEN'S
AND
CHILDREN'S
DRESS
SHOES. NO EXCHANGES
REFUNDS.
ALL
OR
SALES FINAL. SHOES
WILL BE DISPLAYED ON
METAL SELF·SERVICE
RACKS .
BAILEY'S
SHOES, Ml DDLEPORT.
FOR

THE

month

of

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

p m . 99B620. 21,00 miles.

Roger Hysell
Garage

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Reule 33, north of

panda, 2 bedr.
1910 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1913 Skyline 12x55 2

Pomeroy. Large lots .Call

992-7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.
RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village

Manor apts. Call992-1181.
THREE BEDROOM house
with bath in Rutland. 992·
5858.

HALF

DOUBLE

2

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

peg• Deposit. 992·2749.
BOARD! NG rooms for rent
in Middleport . For more in ·
formation, phone 446·1788.

Giveaway
THREE PUPS, males.
Part German Shepherd. 8

weeks old. 949·2431 .
FEMALE BEAGLE. Call
742 2545.

bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
WV . 304-675·4424.
1971 Freedom mobile home
14x64. 3 bedroom including
full length awning, central
air, located on spacious lot
which can be rented. S7900.
contact Kingsbury Mobile

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmis~ion
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30·1fc

veterans Admin. Loans.

male

puppies,

terrier and beagle mi)(ed .

992-7115.
For Sale

DIS~OUNT­

PRICES

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992·2181
COAL and wood healer
with blower, $.400. Buy a

heater and get 20 Pet.
discount on

safety

all

pipe .

purpose

10

Pet .

discount on other
mats and fixtures .

pipe,

JOHN Deere Skidder 440.

Hours 9·1 M ••

Other times by appoint·
101 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0.

1 1'ftl 11 11m

::ysL

WJY

608E.
IV\AIN _
..
POMEROY,O.
NEW

LISTING -

3

bedroom ranch, approx.
1 4 vrs. old, large modern
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,
separae utility, wood·
burner, one acre. Good
condition. Should sell

fa5t . $34,900.00 .
NE!N LISTING Letart - 12x60 mobile
home on a large lot. 3
bedrooms, 1V:~ baths,
also an 8x10 utility
building. Near river lan-

jing, Hydro plant &amp; the
new bridge. Priced at

s 16,000.00.
NEW LISTING- This6
room house has had extensive remOdeling done
and is in very gOOd con-

dition . It nas 3
bedrooms. equipped kit·
chen, family room, living room, front &amp; back

porch,

and

bu/l ~ ings,

Business· Farms
Partnerships &amp;
Corporations
Payrolls, profll &amp; loss
statements, all federal

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

Office Location

WANTING to trade a 1974
Datsun 210 car lor small

2

utility

Rea I Estate for Sale

COUNTRY

HOME

Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.
FARM FOR SALE. Barn
and building. Good land .
Mineral rights. 36 ctcres.

Racine,

0.
2·11 mo.

Steam
clea ned .
Free
estimat e.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard . 992·

6309 or 742·2211.

TUNING.

and
Lane

Daniels. New phone number, 742-2951. Service to
schools and home since

1965.
CARPENTER WORK comp lete remodeling by AI
742 ~ 2328 .

Releren·

ces.

to appreciate. Just
$20,900.00. .
EASTERN DISTRICT
-3 bedroom collage on
11fo acres. Equipped kit·
chen, dining room with
w.b.f .p., washer, dryer,

lull basement, enclosed
living

garden space. Country
for

only

$30,000.00.
PRtCE REDUCED COAL furnace, sso. Console
New home, about 1'12
stereo, S100. Phone 992·
years old. Built-I n kit·
6069.
, chen with bar, dining
room, 3 bedrooms, 2
1914 Toyota Hilux pickup .
baths, living roorri with
one owner, low mileage,
w.b.l.p. and heatllator.
excellent shape, AM·FM
All carpeted and many
stereo radio, new topper,
more features. Now
22·28 mpg. $2500. Call 992·
$39,900.00.
6149 alter 5 p.m .
VACANT LAND - Ap·
prmc. l2lf2 acres nellr
CHI PWOOD to cut . Phone
Rutland on Happy
949·2622.
hfollow
Rd.
All
minerals. $25,375.00.
RENTAL INVEST·
ANTIQUE walnut single
MENT - 3 bedrooms,
bed complete witn springs.
bath, kitchen, llvlno
Winchester rille 21BB with
room. .Owner wants
a Weaver scope and leather
U.500.00.
.
case. Mrs. Wm . Matlack,
BUYING OR SELLING ,
985·3370 ,
- CALL US - THEN
STARTP~CKING. ,

REALTOR
,Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
"2-61t1 .
'
ASSOCIA'l'ES
Roger &amp; Dollie 1'urner
742·2474
Jean Trussell949·2•6o
OFFICE PHONE
9t2·2259

East

Soulh

Pass
Pass

4: •

Pass
Pass

6¥

Inc.

HOUSE lor sale or trade:
ranch style home with 2

private home. Reasonable

rates, 992·6022.
Will do odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling

tile.

Call

Fred

Miller, 99~·6338.

garage, lots of carpet. Will
consider mobile home as

Real Estate for Sale

REAL ESTATE

.3'h YR. OLO RANCHHOME - Just 4 miles from

Pomeroy. Quiet country living In this beautiful ·3
bedroom, two balh with central heat and air condl· .
lion. over 3 acres ·of flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop, Just $«,900,00.
'

MIDDLEPORT- Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot. 1 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1'12 bath, garage.
$27,000.
ROCK SPR1NG5-2bedroom andbalh,lully equipped kitChen, near Meigs High School, fully furnish·
ed. $25,000.
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom, bath, large:
living room, fuU basement, new furnace, $17,500.
MIDDLEPflRT.- Two bedroom brick only .! block
from center of IOVjn, LOw ulllltles. A bargain al
$12,500.
'
..
RUTLAND - One bedroom dowrt, two upstairs, on·
large corner lot. Just needs a llnle paint &amp; paper,
1

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nlce·lol. $11.600.
5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot, $7,000,
,
,,
MIDOLIPO!tT- Building lot oh S. Second, 63'&gt;&lt;$1' ,

$4,500.

'

CAL&amp;. 992-2342B~l
.

..

Childs, Brant~' .Mgr., Home 99~;2449
. ..· .
Rodnev Downint Broker, Home 992·37'31
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

- feet

~5 Having

5 Low seat

flanks

10 Pungent

6 "High - "

12 Old Greek

1 Burden

tncks.

(NEWSPAPER EN.Tl'.:RPRISE ASSN .)

(For a

coA

of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge,'' care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y.
10019.)

setting

21• E. SOc:ond 51reel
FAMILY PLACE - •or
WCJK.YOU GUYS,A .JOKE'&amp; A
I INVITED MY MOM

5 bedrooms, 1112 baths,

YEAH, WE

NOW WHO

YOU MI6HT
APPREC IATE:
SOME

15THATAT
MY DOOR?

CVMPANY!

%7 Made of
28 Church

WHAT'S ALl "THE
COMMOTION
OUT HERE?

ON EAIZTH

Lion"
portrayer
11 Slain
14 Gennan song
18 Trapshooting
19 Collar
gadgets
20 Drag
wood 21 Exclamation
22 Just
make out,

official
29 Joyous
shout
30 Chaplin film
31 "-on My

with "out"

Yesterday's Answer

24 Connective
25 Brown
kiwi
26 In degree
28 Editor's
marks
30 Chessman
32 Primeval
33 Sultanate
of Arabia

34 Desolate
35 Take the
- off

37 Sharif

,.....,.,.....,~..--llr"'1

b-++-+-

b-+--+--+--

b+-+-t-+how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

?

I

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's1 X for the two O's,- etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hiots. Each day the code letters are dilferent.

•

f

.. . ZM
ZSLD

CRYPTOQUOTES

FIW'D
ZM

WMMF
ZLWD

BIIF
LVM

GICMVC .
BVLURIJC

'

ZRWWMVC. TLEMC
U, .
SJWF
· Yesterday's Cryptoejuole: THERE ~RE FEW SORROWS,
HOWEVER POIGNANT, IN WlUCH A GOOD INCOME IS OF
NO AVAIL.-LOGAN P . SMITH

Housmq

Headq
. uatlets

®

••

,,

T im e 10; Green Acres 17 .

10:oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Jelfersons 8: Joker's
Wi l d 10; Morning Maga zi ne 13;
Movie "Thai Man 1n I stanbu l"
II

10 : 30- Hollywaod Squares 3. 15;

$20,000 Pyramid 13, Whew 1 8,10 ;
Andy Griffith 6.
10· 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :()()-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Sh~r l ey

6, 13 ; Price is Right 8, 10;

E lee. Co. 20.
11 : 30-Wheel

of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesa me :t.
20,33 .

12 : 00- Newscenter

3:

News

6,8,10,13; Health Fie ld 15.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Password
Plus 15, Movie "The Great Sioux
Massacre " 17; Elec. Co 33

1:oo-Daysof0ur Lives3,15 ; All My
Children

6, 13;

Young

&amp;

the

Reslless 8,10 .
2:oo-Doctors 3.15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;

2: 25-News 17 .
2: 3D- Another
World
Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .

3, 15;

17.
5:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8: Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers

20.33.
5:3Q-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8;

Elec . Co. 20;
Doctor

Who 33.
6:oo-News 3.8, 10, 13,15 : ABC News
6; Carol Burnetl17; 3·2· 1 Contact
20,33.
6:3o-NBC News 3,15: ABC News 13;
CBS News 8,10; Carol Bur flett 6;
Bob Newhart 17 : Villa Ale.gre 20;

15; Sanford &amp; . Son 17; Dick
Caveft 20.
7:3o-Prlce Is Right 3; 3's A Crowd
o, Joker's Wild 8; Family Feud
, 10; ; Pop Goes The Country 13,15;
Al l In "{he Family 17; MacNeil .
Lehr-er Report 20.
8:00- Doug Henning 3,15; XIII
Winter Olympic Games 6, 13;
Hulk
a, 10;
I ncredlble
Washington Week in Review
20,33; Movie " House of Usher "
17.
8:Jo-Wall Street Week 20,33 : 9:Q(}-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

COME HERE

10; Lucy Show 17.
9:3o- Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A

Wild Wild World of An ima ls 33 .
7:0(}-Cross.Wils 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13;
MacNeii · Lehrer Report 33:

3 On the bouse L-..L-..J.....t...-1--

i

Beverly Hillbillies 8;Jeffersons

Movie "Valentine Magic on Love

1 Strip of
2 Reverberate

Wl-lAT'5 I{OUR SIGN,
PIG·PEN? DO ~OU

To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.

8:3Q-Romper Room 17.
9:oo-Bob Braun 3: Big Valley 6;

Dream of Jeannie 17;

DOWN

MUST ADMIT HE
DANCE, Tl-lOUGH

Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17. ·'"
7:3Q-Family Affair 10; 7:55-C huck
White Reporls 10.
8:QO-- Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave II

out
39 Cruising
41 Moslem
Easter
42 Peruvian
city

Firpo

0

America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;

Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I

«Climb
t5 Poor
411 Space

, PEANUTS ·

Report 3; 6:55- News 13.
7:oo-Today 3,15: Good Morning

38Cross

43 Luis-

FISH ARE
l EATIN'OLiT
: THESE
' DAYS ,

6.3Q--Kidsworld 10; News 17 ; 6:45A .M
Weather 33; Morning

Real McCoys 13: Little Rascals

- Bull

,

FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 1S,1980
5·45-Farm Report 13: 5:5Q-PTL
Club 13
6:Q(}-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15,
6: 1o-World at Large 17.

News 10; Love American Sty le

38 Make
reverent
37 Seraglio
chamber
40 Chaplin film

! BALLS 0' FIRe!!
j MORE AN'MOR~

" And Now M iguel" 17; 5: 10Maverick 17 .

15; Spectr:eman 17 .
4 ·3D--Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jer ry
13 -'. Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.

33 VioJi$t,

:,..;;;.;.=

11: 45- ABC News · Spe c ial 6,13 :

4 :00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8;

Pillow":
1958 song

I

"The Birds " 10 ; Movie " The St .
Valentine's Day Massacre" 17 .

33.
3:3o-Fiintstones 17: Over Easy 33.

9 "Cowardly

15 Fanning
implement
16 Never: Ger.
17 Pulpit
homily: abbr.
IS Genns
20 Chaplin film
%3 "GWTW"

. ; WINNIE

&amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin 33 .
11 30-Tonight 3, 15; X III Wint er
Olympic Games , Update 6, 13;

J:QO-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17; Upstairs, Downstairs
20; Personal Time Managem ent

8 French river

13 Chaplin film

~.~~RD~

,

South would not have jumped
to six if he would Jose two

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 Drinking
1 Have two
vessel

GASOUNE ALLEY

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
.

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,
1'1:1 baths, gas furnace,
nice carpeting, 2 car
garage, and utility
building. $17,500 .
STORAGE - 1 story
qulonset hut building
out ol all flood water,
electric, natural gas.
concrete floor, loading
dock, and parking,
80 ACRES- All cleared
and nice laying land.
Good 10 room house and
many
outbuildings,
About 1h lenced .'$80,000 . .
BRICK RANCH - 3
lovely bedrooms, 2 full
baths, large living, for·
mal dining, glass doors
to cover patio. 2 car
garage and 4 lots. River
selling. Just $45,000,
1 ACRii . PLUS - A
family home with 11
:rooms and 2 baths, has
central healing and city
water.3cargaragewlth '
nice rental apt. over, ,
also . small business
building on 3 slate
routes. Ail this going for
$30,000,
RETIREE HOME - A
nice 1· bedroom home
with like new WOOdWork
l~lde, Utility room,
nalur.a l ga.s central , ·
heat; city ·water and •
. ' over.2 acres of privacy• .
Only $20,000.
· ·
BUY IIOW BEFORE
SPRING . INFLATION, .
WE HAVE 95% 1'1NAN·
CINO. CALL "2-1325 or
992-3176.
.
.

one d1amond and three clubs.

~

BOWERS
Sweepers,

992·J;2~R. ·" •IIO'

spades, six hearts, either no

diamonds and lour clubs or

Either way, the slam would
not make. South might avoid a
diamond loss, but he would
still have to Jose a club and if
South was void of diamonds
he could only get one discard
on a diamond honor.

The Professor was a trifle
surprised by the bidding, but
did not even consider a
double. He had too much
strength. Also. he didn't know
what to lead.
Most players would just
open the ace of diamonds, but

toasters, Irons, a ll small
appliances. Lawn mower.

WILL DO babysitting
evenings. 992-6312.

I.,

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag

Ohio, Critt Bradford.

Services Offered
ROOM, board andlaundry.
Elderly handicapped or
working men. 99H022.

The Professor's computer
mind had printed out the
South hand as with three

North

Pass

diamond~

quick diamond

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2481 or 949·2000. racine,
ELWOOD
REPAIR -

Looking at all the cards you
can see that a spade lead, a
club lead or the ace of dia·
monds lead are all fatal.
The Professor worked th1s
all oul which finally Jed him
to find the killing defense. He

Opening lead:+ I 0

Real Estate for Sale

WILL CARE for e lderly
and handicapped In my

$9,900.

Sales,

spades at trick one, had made
three spJde discards.

led a low

West

colony

7559.

trade-in. Ca11 742·3119.

.

992 ·5724.

WALL PAPERING
p.a inting. 742·2328.

Tromm,

'

•' -

pool kits. Do·it·yoursell or
let us install lor you. D.
Bumgardner

trump. West was back on lead
and faced with a really hard
problem . Meanwhile East,
who had played the deuce of

Vulnerable: Both
Deale"" South

all

11 DO-News 3, 6,8,10,13, 11 : Lasl ol
lhe Wild 17; Dick Cave!t 20: Fall

1: 35-News 17.

out the ace, k.ing and a small

+A J 10 9

delivery: various sires of

Pomeroy area. Phone 992·

level acres, 3 bedrooms,
Ph baths, extra large kit·
chen
with
oven,
refrigerator, large dining
room, extra large family
room with fireplace . 1 car

.....

and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off

.,+

MACHINE
service,

2·1&lt;-BO

"J954
+KQJ64
+Q6 3
EAST
WEST
• Q 10 9 7
.86432
....
., Q 10 6
t A 10 7 3
9 8 52
+8 74 2
+K5
SOUTH
• AJ 5
"AK87!!

... AHD L.UCKIL...,.. SHE KN!T
IT T'FIT HERSEL.F/ YUM!
I COUL.DH'T &amp;e BefTeR
OFF IN A TEI'H!

makes. 992·2284, The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales

949·2320

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

.K

NORTH

ANNIE

Close Up 33.
IO :oo-Qumcy 3, 15; Knots Landing
8; Polil ica l Talk 17; News 20,
Aus tin C1ty Limits 33; 10 :3oOver Easy 20.

:4D-Movle "Wings of Chance" 17;
2·20-News 13 , 3:10- M ov ie

the Professor finally settled
on the 10 of spades. South won
m dummy and propmtly Jed

l L---~~----~~~~

6.13
9 QO-Steve Martin 3, 15 ; Barnaby
Jones 8; Sneak Pr eviews 20,33;
Coll ege Basketball 10.
9 30- Camera Three 20 : Spor t s

12 ·0(}-Police Woman 6,13 .
1:0(}-Tomorrow 3, 1: ID-Baretta
6,13 ; Black Sheep Squadron 8:

' /&gt;.LA'%1&gt;-!

!

Moyers ' Jour nal 20,33 ; Movie.
" Blue Hawaii " 17 .
8 :30- XIII Winter OlympiC Games

ABC Captioned News 33; Movie

Canny defense dumps slam

IJOM~,

1·18-(pd.)

Repairs,

in the

same price range. Call 742 ·
2303.

.'

"Don't CUSS·Call US"

SEWING

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning.

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

ZOI&lt;~!

"i

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates

Menor Women
by Diann .J ewell
at

618 E, Main
Pomeroy
t92·379S
1·30·1 mo.

laclory gal - CANNED

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2-4.15.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt.

DRIVEL AMAZON

BRIDGE

_.,....

HAIR STYUNG

and Slate forms.
H&amp;R Block

VISlT
HIM IIJ

~MO

Automotive Repair

RACINE,O,
949·2741 or
t92·7314
12·28·Pd.

TRI-COU NTY
fi!gBOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

{1, .

FRQI.A M'i
OW~Al),

Open 11-6 Mon, thru Sal.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

Must be seen

Army 6x6 truck . 9'12·6319.

farm or wood hauling
truck . $200. Paul Sayre, R~.
338, Portland, OH. Great
Bend Rd . Phone 843·4591.

-

I

~10

Middleport, 0,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ment.

COCOA

Answer : What I he incompetent employee at the bean

~~T?

IJALarm•~

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

w., F.

truck somewhere

rear porch. Fruit trees,

racks,
4·speed
fran ·
smlsslon, V ·8, heater and
radio, S good tires. Gou~ ·'

Call Howard
949·2862
1·22-tfc

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways.

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

12x60. Furnished or un·
furnished. Washer and

John Deere Knuckleboom
loader, mounted on GMC

International '12 ton pickup
truck. Heavy duty side

Free Estimates
Prices

1917 2 bedroom Hillcrest

992-:;t,:)Y

THREE

IT'S A

~Reasonable

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

I

Jumbles BANDY

Thursday, Feb. 14

BORN LOSER

r-------~~--------~----~·-REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

I

.Jumble BOOk No. 14, contalnlne 110puz.zles,tatYIIIIbltlor$1.75~tp.kt
from Jumble, cJo thlanew•p•per, Bo• :W, Norwood, N.J. 07~ . 1ncludl; your
name, lddrett, zip codt and make chtcltl ptytblt to Newaptpelbookl.

All work guaranteed.

IN STOCK for immediate

__/-- -~

I I III XI J'

cleaning and painting.

Home Sales a1992·7034.

Real Estate for Sale

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, ·as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

IJ

mer: "ITJ(
Yesterday's

All types root work, new
or repair Vl:'tters and
downspouts,
gutter

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SU RANCE been can·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 ·2143.

dryer can be Included . 992·
6140alter4:30.

UP SOMEWHERE
FOR THE NII&gt;HT!

__....

r

I I

PLAI\IS T'KEEP

MOVl~G-OR HO~E

A Iter 5 P.M. "2·5547
12·13·2 mo . pd .

extensive remodel·
ing
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
1·17-1 mo.

11 mile off Rt. 7 by-pass ..
on St. Rt. 124 toward;
Rutland.

Mobile Homes· Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3

For Rent

ITOFFES±

D!!PelJD5 ON
WHETHER CHR15

.-----:R=ou=SH::-:---,.
H. L WRITESEL
CONSTRUCTION
ROOFING
•New homes -

CALL 992·7544

bedroom
1970 Vinda le 12x63 with ex·

HOW DR. FRANKENSTE IN
MANA6ED TO KEEP
HI~ MON!&gt;TER' ,

(Ahswers tomorrow)

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

EVERYTHI~G

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates

1·JO·pd.

2·14-tlc

788·2589.

Mindy 6.13 ; Waltons 8,10; Bill

RECI&lt;Ot&gt;l

concrete Finisttint

t49-2422

r

II

l ri

CAPfAIN EASY

Brick Work
Block work

Rt. 3, Racine/ SR 124

388·9759

alternators - own the best
- · buy Win power. Call 513·

SINEAb

I GANFICb

Siding

I 1115 Mon. thru Fri.

1978 Ford F ·150 4·wheel
drive stepside. 14.35 Gum·
bos with aluminum wheels.
Extras. 55995. Call after 5

I

Remodeling

Additions

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Free Estimates·

February,
Drehel 's
Ceramics - greenware 30

AM· FM, A.C., $3900. Call
992·1491 after 5:30p.m

~..:...."':::.!..-·

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

ll89.

1974 Ford LTD. Red with
white v inyl top, good con·
dition . No rust, runs good .
AM ·FM, air, cruise con·

1977

~

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built·up
roof
and
home
repair,

JO- Hollywood Sq uares 3. In
5earch Of 6 ; Joker's W ild 8;
SlOO,OOO Name That Tune 10 ;
Nashville on the Road 13 ;
Countrv Roads 15; All In The
Fami l y 17 , Ma c N eil -Lehrer
Report 20 .
8:Q(}-Buck Rogers 3, 15; Mark &amp;

I. I K- - ...tJ

N. L CONSTRUCTION

BILl'S AUTO
REPAIR

GEORGE'S ·
ROOFING

CIDER "

HON-E Y . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, 669-

hitch, trailer brakes, new
tires . $)'600. 992 ·2467 after

.
Datson

'

3891.
APPLES

1975 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4,
350. Auto. !rims., PS, P.B.,

SHE'S ABOUT TO
COME OUT OJ:=
HER SHEL-L--

Business Services

sand , gravel, calci um
chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of sa lt.
Excel sior Salt Works,· Inc .,
E. M at n St .. Pomeroy, 992·

5051 .

P.B., topper, posi ·
tra ction front and rear. 9854339.
.

Lost and Found

Help Wanted
HOME
ADDRESSERS

P s _, P B, A .C 1 r ad•al
t1res. rec11ning sea t s. AM

P.S..

Wanted to Buy : Four foot
S·curve rolltop desk . Call
742 ·2316, evenings.

Call992·5335 .

Auto Sa,.l,-::es.__~
THUNDERBIRD .

1979 Ford 150 4x4 auto.,

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 5926462.

Call Mr . Zidian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Mon ·

February 15, 1980

perienced or trainee to call
on and sign up rural land
owners for oil and gas
dr il ling and exploration.
Must have good tran ·
sport at ion and be will ing to
work locally and away
from home . Se nd brief
resume to Box 729·C, c·o
th e
Daily
Sentinel ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 .

Debbie, thank you for the
most wonderful years of
my life. Remember. 1 love
you. Roger.

FOUND:
light
brown
shepherd type female dog

1977

---~-

SHOOTING

'

~
:((;'}(!~\) q'our

-

$400·5800 weekly. Oil and
gas lease person, ex -

boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M .D .
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or

75214.

Bernie~ Bede Osol

We have an open1ng tor a
person capabl e ol doing
payroll, qu ar ter ly payroll
taxes, subsidiary iournal s,
general ledger and mon th ly fi na ncia l statements.
This IS .=t one pers on office
so all sundry other cl er ica l
and office duties wil be part
of th is position Please send
resume
and
salary
requirements to : PO Bo x
15 , Pomeroy, OH. 45769 . An
equal opportun 1ty em ·
player .

OLD

Drawer 140069, Dallas, TX

ASTRO·GRAPH

1

992·2576 afler 5.

required .

Fud11y, Feb. 15

: ----:---c-cc--c---

Help Wanted

Television
Viewing

DICKTRA~;y

lMOICtng F1eturt1 Synclltl'-• Inc.

Island " 3,15; Dukes ol Hazzard
8,10; Capitol Beat 33; Free lo
Choose 20 .
9:3o-NBA Basketball11: American
Short STory 33 .
10 :QO-Oallas 8, 10; News 20.
10: 3o--&lt;lver Easy 20; Murder Most
English 33.
11 : OQ-News 3,6,8,10,13, 15 ; Die&gt;.
Cavett 20.
11 :30-Tonlght 3,15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games Update 6, 13;
Movie "Anatomy of Terr.or" 8;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Psycho" 10.

11 :45-Movle "Earth vs. lhe Flying
Saucers" 17; 12 :oo-ABC News
Special 6,13; David Susskind 33. .
12 : 15-Charlle's Angels 6; Movie
"The Invasion of Johnson
County" 13.
I :QO-Midnlght Special 3,15; Movie
"The Little Shop of Horrors" 10.
1:25-FBI 6; 1::f:s..:.News17 ; 1:55NBA Basketball 17.
2:15-News 13; 2:3o-News3; 4:1o-.
Maverick
17 ;
5:10-Love·,"
American Style 11 .

�--- -------

-··- ---- -

-----·~----·--

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

11 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980

Your 8es~ Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Notice=s ~~

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~

G UN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY IPM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACI NE
G UN CLUB .

Words or Umlt•r

Charge

Cash

I day
2days
3days
6 day:J

100
150
I 80

125
100
2.25

3 00

3.75

GUN
SH OOT . Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Dept
E very Saturday . 6 :30p .m
At their buildingin Bashan
F actory choke guns onl y

Ea ch word over lhe l llilllfllliiTI
15 wonts l.S 4 cents per word per
dHy Ad'! ruruung other than CUfl·
secutive &lt;U6y s will be charged at
lhP l dH y r14le
In memory ,

C'~rd

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 00 Factory chok e on ly
corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .

of Thllnks

and Obituary · 6 cents per word,

$3 00 nunun11m. Cash m ad -

vanee.

ATTE N TIO N
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU! Will

Mobile Home Stiles arxl Yard
sales are accepted only with
cash with order . 25 cent charge
for ads carryiJ1g Box Number f n

pay cash or cert ified check
for antique s and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin co llections . Call 614767 3167 or 557 3411

C.aro ufThe Sentinel

1'114! PubliSher reserves the
r 1ght to rd.it or rej ect any ad&lt;!

dL-emed

ob)cctwna l.

The

Publisher will not be responsi ble
lor more than one incorrec t in·

-·------·-~~~

BUYING U 5 SIL VER
CO IN S DATE D 1964 OR
EARLIER
!ANY
AMOUNT) DON ' T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP TH E PHONE AND
DIAL
614 992 5113,
BROWN'S.
.

sertwn

Phone 992--2 156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

1 PAY h 1ghest prices
poss ibl e for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc
contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport .

Monday
un Sa turdlly

NOOJl

INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
Russe ll , Bradbury . 992 ·

Tuesday

lhru Fn d.a .11
4 P.M

7228.

thl' day hefore pubbcat10n
Sunda y

HEARING AID USERS:

Friday afternoon

save used batteries, mer·
cury and silver oxide,
redeem for cas h. Diles
Hearing
Aid
Center,

&lt;p M

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

At hens Tel. 614·590571.

The fo llowing described
itemls) will be offered for
public sale on the premises
of The Pomer oy National
Bank, Court and Second
Sts., Pomeroy , Oh10, on the
27th day of February, 1980

at 10:00 AM, EST.

1978 Dodge Van Motor

Home, SNB21BE8X 105187

Terms of sa le : cash.
Items may be sold 1n
units or parcels and the
seller reser ves the right to
re1 ec t any and all bid s. Can
be seen at Smith Nelson
Motors, 500 E . Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, d ur ing
regular bus1 ness ~lours.
(.2 )

14, l!c

GOLD, 51 LVE R o·R
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS . ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURN ITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY IOSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992 6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
WILL the party who took
the clothes by mistake
from Fife' s Laundromat in
Middleport last Tuesday,

me

5th, please call 992··

LEGAL NOTICE
80·90-GE -U NC

5083 . Reward, no Quest ions
asked.

Case No . 80·90·GE ·UNC to

LADY needs ride to Mac·
Donald ' s,
Gallipo li s,
Tuesday
Saturday .
Willing to share expenses

The Public Utilities com mission
of Ohio ha s
scheduled a hearing in

consider the a~counting
and ratema~ing treatmenl
of costs and char9es
associated with the 1m·'
ptementation
of
the
Residential Conservation
Service Program, which
program is manoated by
the National Energy Conserva tion Policy Act. Par·
ticipating utilities shal l
and any_ interested partieS
may, f1l e comments by
February 27, 1980, as
outlined in the Com ·
mission's
Entry
of
February 6, 1980. The
public hearing will be held
commencing March 11
1980, at 9:30a .m . in the of~
fices of The Public UtilitieS
Commission of Ohio, 180
East Broad Street, Colum ·
bus, Ohio 43215. All in·
terested parties will be af·
forded an oppor tunity to
present evidence material
to the issues in the
proceeding . Copies of the
Commissi on's Entry of
February 6, 1980, may be
obta i ned
from
the
Docketing Division, the
Pub l ic Utilities
Com ·
mission of Ohio, lBO East
Br oad Str ee t, Columbus,
Ohio 43215

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OH IO

BY : D avid
Secretary
(2)

M.

Polk

'

14 . l!c

MATCH

Rutland Gun Clu b, behind
Stewart's Gun Shop, Smith
Run Rd . . 22 r ifles, open
sights. Also, big bore
pistol s off hand, 25 yards
Muzzle loaders and rifles,
50 yards . . 22 rifle bench
rest,
100
yards.
No
alcoholic
beverages
a llowed . Every Friday
night . 8 p.m. except last
Friday ot each month
Shooter will furnish own
ammunition.

~CBirthday

wanted . $500
possible. No

per week
experience

A.S.D . ,

PO

GEl

VALUABLE training
as young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992
2156or 992 -2157 .

RN OR LPN, lull time. 3·
11:30 and 11 to 7:30. P&lt;trf

time RN or LPN , 11101 :30
Your perspec. I!IIP.S and honzons

w•ll be greatly e)l,panded thi s

day through firiday, 9·5.

comi ng year through a desne t o
ga1n ne w knnwledge and
8)(PCrllse . W11at

you learn

w 11l be

used wisely
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Fab. 19)
There·s a p o~s 1bility you could
d u something today contrary to
your be tt er Jud g ment and
depnve yoursetl of a reward that
is within your grasp. H ~ed pa st
experiences

Find out more ot

what lies ahead tor you 1n the

following your birthday b)'
send1ng for your copy of AstraGraph Letter Mall $1 tor each to
Astra-Graph, Bmc 489 , Radto
City Stat ton. N.Y 10019 Be sure
to speci fy birth dat e.
year

PISCES

(Feb. 20-M.rch

20)

Someone who has great respect
for yoo may take you into hi s or
her confidence today. Suppress
temptations to reveal to others
what you are told .
ARIES (MMch 21-April tt) Be
prepared for some unexpected

contingencies in an important
relationship today. Your ally
might do something surprising to
throw things off balance.
•1
TAURUS (APfil :IG-Moy 20) Be
prepared to go it alone today
Persons you can normally count
on may not be able to assist you
Fear not, yOu'll manage by your·
self.

GEMINI (M1y 21-June 20) For
things to work ou t as YQL(d like
today, it will be neessary ·to pay
auentlon to every detail. Don't
let your con cent~atlon .1tray trorn
the task at hand.

· CANCER (June 21·July :12)
Springing unexpected changes

on others today. could create a
.raft ot needless problemt.
Bftfore making alterations you
should notify everyone.
LEO '{July 23-Aug. 22) Normally
vou 're your own person, but

SALES TRAINEE. Salary
plus commissions. No experience necessary . Phone

PERMANENT FULL
TIME POSITION
DOe to company upansion Olan Mills Portrait
Studio has an im mediate open1ng tor a
telephone .advertising
manager .
Mature female or male,
25 years or older, high
school
graduate
minimum, prefer some
college. Must be able to
travel extensivel y in the
tri ·state area, must
have your own car, ex ·
perience in sa l es helpful
but not necessary . Com ·
ptete training with pay
starting at $150 and up
per week plus expenses,
paid holidays, group insurance, and company
ret1rement program .
A verge annual earnings
$15,000 per year and up .
Fantastic , opportunity
for advancement for a
career
minded
in dividual.
Call Collect for Glenda
Robertson at Area Code

15131 323-5528 Thursday,
February 14, or Friday,
February 15 between 9
A.M. and 4 P.M .

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

FURNITURE,

ice

call9'12 7760.
ANT IQU ES,
NITURE. glass,

FUR ·
china,

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

2nd, Middleport, OH. 9'12·
3161.
OLD COl NS, pocket

wat ~

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

GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN CO IN S, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
51 LVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANT IQU E FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY IDSSI E) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6310. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
-GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD,
RINGS,
JEWE L RY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS . PAYING
RECORD HIGH , HONEST,
UP · TO DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
9'12·3476.
BUYING SILVER coins
S.S .• gold class rings, gold
rings, 14 K, IOK, 18K.
Highest prices paid . Mid ·

lown Market , 675·3010. 11
a.m. ·5P.m.

9'12 ·2460 .
TI TLE Abstractor. Oil and
gas company needs person
to check records for oil and
gas leases. Must be free to
travel if necessary . Send
brief resume to Box 729-A,
c·o · the Daily Sentine l,

Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
APPLICATIONS will be
accep ted Friday, Feb. 15
and Friday, Feb. 22,9 a.m.·
5 p.m . for equipment
operators, laborers, and
foremen familiar with
water and sewer work . Ex·
perienced on tv. Apply at
Pullins Excavating office,
US 33, Pomeroy, OH .

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 61.4·

698 ·3290.

Bording

and

Riding Lessons. and Horse
Care products . Western

boots. Children's
.Adu Its S29 .00.

$15.50.

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367-0292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 61067·7220.
HILLCREST

KENNELS.

Boarding, all breeds. C lean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
A.is.o
AKC
registered
ioday you may be too easily
Influenced by o•Jtside opinions.
Stand by Ideas you. believe to be

good.

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Bopl. :12) Your
possibilities lor gains are very

gOOd today. but you may not
exploit them fully. This could be
a mistake. Your OPPortunllies
may be lleetlng ones .
LIBRA (S.pt. 23-0cl. 22) Moll
things you're able to manage
with considerable skill, but again
today you may be e shade too
ca~efess or extravagant In han dling your resources

FM . $3100 . 247 3594.

.

1973
GMC
van,
lo w
mileage, 6 cyl., std . 992-

Dobermans. 614-446-77'15.
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a nome less pet.
Healtny, snots, wormed.
Qonalions required . 992·
6260, noon·7 p.m.
Auto Sales
1975 Bronco 4x4, V·8, AT,
P,S,, posi ·tractlon front
and rear. 5 new tires. 4 new

shocks. 992·2619.

•

For Sale
COAL,
LIME STONE ,

AM B·tra ck radio. Reese

3785.

5:30p .m.

APPLES - ROME beauty

1978

apple bu!!er. Call 669 ·3785,

apples at $-4 per bu. Best for

B·210. $3450,

949·2754 after 5.

trol $1100 . 992·1762.
1973 Pinto Hatchback,
auto.-, A . C. , good condit ion
$900. 4.46 -1830 or 446 --4572.

1977 Pontiac Grand p.rix,
Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windows, door locks,
extra padded landau tap·,
special paint and interior,
24,000 actual, local owner,

best of care. $430. Call 992·
6249 after 5 p.m .
1978 Ford lh ton Club cab
with topper . V ·8, auto ., low

mileage. $4200.

1972

In·

ternational backhoe, com·
mercia! type, $8,000. 949·

2042.
HAPPY VALENTINE'S to
a wonderful husband and
father . We lave you. Susie,
Michael, Michelle, Shan·

telle and JD .
Buick

Fitzpatrick

Orchard,

SR

Regal

auto.,

EMERGENCY

power

9'12 ·6342 or 992·2583 .
CONDITIONED

GOOD

hay , clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.

Phone 992 ·7201 or 992·3309.
1970 Mark Twain V·hull, 16

fool with 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call alter 5 p.m ., 992 ·2526.
F IREWOOD . Phone 9'12·
5240 .

'I'

PRICE
SALE.
WOMEN'S
AND
CHILDREN'S
DRESS
SHOES. NO EXCHANGES
REFUNDS.
ALL
OR
SALES FINAL. SHOES
WILL BE DISPLAYED ON
METAL SELF·SERVICE
RACKS .
BAILEY'S
SHOES, Ml DDLEPORT.
FOR

THE

month

of

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

p m . 99B620. 21,00 miles.

Roger Hysell
Garage

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Reule 33, north of

panda, 2 bedr.
1910 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1913 Skyline 12x55 2

Pomeroy. Large lots .Call

992-7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.
RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village

Manor apts. Call992-1181.
THREE BEDROOM house
with bath in Rutland. 992·
5858.

HALF

DOUBLE

2

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

peg• Deposit. 992·2749.
BOARD! NG rooms for rent
in Middleport . For more in ·
formation, phone 446·1788.

Giveaway
THREE PUPS, males.
Part German Shepherd. 8

weeks old. 949·2431 .
FEMALE BEAGLE. Call
742 2545.

bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
WV . 304-675·4424.
1971 Freedom mobile home
14x64. 3 bedroom including
full length awning, central
air, located on spacious lot
which can be rented. S7900.
contact Kingsbury Mobile

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmis~ion
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30·1fc

veterans Admin. Loans.

male

puppies,

terrier and beagle mi)(ed .

992-7115.
For Sale

DIS~OUNT­

PRICES

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992·2181
COAL and wood healer
with blower, $.400. Buy a

heater and get 20 Pet.
discount on

safety

all

pipe .

purpose

10

Pet .

discount on other
mats and fixtures .

pipe,

JOHN Deere Skidder 440.

Hours 9·1 M ••

Other times by appoint·
101 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0.

1 1'ftl 11 11m

::ysL

WJY

608E.
IV\AIN _
..
POMEROY,O.
NEW

LISTING -

3

bedroom ranch, approx.
1 4 vrs. old, large modern
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,
separae utility, wood·
burner, one acre. Good
condition. Should sell

fa5t . $34,900.00 .
NE!N LISTING Letart - 12x60 mobile
home on a large lot. 3
bedrooms, 1V:~ baths,
also an 8x10 utility
building. Near river lan-

jing, Hydro plant &amp; the
new bridge. Priced at

s 16,000.00.
NEW LISTING- This6
room house has had extensive remOdeling done
and is in very gOOd con-

dition . It nas 3
bedrooms. equipped kit·
chen, family room, living room, front &amp; back

porch,

and

bu/l ~ ings,

Business· Farms
Partnerships &amp;
Corporations
Payrolls, profll &amp; loss
statements, all federal

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

Office Location

WANTING to trade a 1974
Datsun 210 car lor small

2

utility

Rea I Estate for Sale

COUNTRY

HOME

Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.
FARM FOR SALE. Barn
and building. Good land .
Mineral rights. 36 ctcres.

Racine,

0.
2·11 mo.

Steam
clea ned .
Free
estimat e.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard . 992·

6309 or 742·2211.

TUNING.

and
Lane

Daniels. New phone number, 742-2951. Service to
schools and home since

1965.
CARPENTER WORK comp lete remodeling by AI
742 ~ 2328 .

Releren·

ces.

to appreciate. Just
$20,900.00. .
EASTERN DISTRICT
-3 bedroom collage on
11fo acres. Equipped kit·
chen, dining room with
w.b.f .p., washer, dryer,

lull basement, enclosed
living

garden space. Country
for

only

$30,000.00.
PRtCE REDUCED COAL furnace, sso. Console
New home, about 1'12
stereo, S100. Phone 992·
years old. Built-I n kit·
6069.
, chen with bar, dining
room, 3 bedrooms, 2
1914 Toyota Hilux pickup .
baths, living roorri with
one owner, low mileage,
w.b.l.p. and heatllator.
excellent shape, AM·FM
All carpeted and many
stereo radio, new topper,
more features. Now
22·28 mpg. $2500. Call 992·
$39,900.00.
6149 alter 5 p.m .
VACANT LAND - Ap·
prmc. l2lf2 acres nellr
CHI PWOOD to cut . Phone
Rutland on Happy
949·2622.
hfollow
Rd.
All
minerals. $25,375.00.
RENTAL INVEST·
ANTIQUE walnut single
MENT - 3 bedrooms,
bed complete witn springs.
bath, kitchen, llvlno
Winchester rille 21BB with
room. .Owner wants
a Weaver scope and leather
U.500.00.
.
case. Mrs. Wm . Matlack,
BUYING OR SELLING ,
985·3370 ,
- CALL US - THEN
STARTP~CKING. ,

REALTOR
,Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
"2-61t1 .
'
ASSOCIA'l'ES
Roger &amp; Dollie 1'urner
742·2474
Jean Trussell949·2•6o
OFFICE PHONE
9t2·2259

East

Soulh

Pass
Pass

4: •

Pass
Pass

6¥

Inc.

HOUSE lor sale or trade:
ranch style home with 2

private home. Reasonable

rates, 992·6022.
Will do odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling

tile.

Call

Fred

Miller, 99~·6338.

garage, lots of carpet. Will
consider mobile home as

Real Estate for Sale

REAL ESTATE

.3'h YR. OLO RANCHHOME - Just 4 miles from

Pomeroy. Quiet country living In this beautiful ·3
bedroom, two balh with central heat and air condl· .
lion. over 3 acres ·of flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop, Just $«,900,00.
'

MIDDLEPORT- Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot. 1 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1'12 bath, garage.
$27,000.
ROCK SPR1NG5-2bedroom andbalh,lully equipped kitChen, near Meigs High School, fully furnish·
ed. $25,000.
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom, bath, large:
living room, fuU basement, new furnace, $17,500.
MIDDLEPflRT.- Two bedroom brick only .! block
from center of IOVjn, LOw ulllltles. A bargain al
$12,500.
'
..
RUTLAND - One bedroom dowrt, two upstairs, on·
large corner lot. Just needs a llnle paint &amp; paper,
1

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nlce·lol. $11.600.
5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot, $7,000,
,
,,
MIDOLIPO!tT- Building lot oh S. Second, 63'&gt;&lt;$1' ,

$4,500.

'

CAL&amp;. 992-2342B~l
.

..

Childs, Brant~' .Mgr., Home 99~;2449
. ..· .
Rodnev Downint Broker, Home 992·37'31
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

- feet

~5 Having

5 Low seat

flanks

10 Pungent

6 "High - "

12 Old Greek

1 Burden

tncks.

(NEWSPAPER EN.Tl'.:RPRISE ASSN .)

(For a

coA

of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge,'' care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y.
10019.)

setting

21• E. SOc:ond 51reel
FAMILY PLACE - •or
WCJK.YOU GUYS,A .JOKE'&amp; A
I INVITED MY MOM

5 bedrooms, 1112 baths,

YEAH, WE

NOW WHO

YOU MI6HT
APPREC IATE:
SOME

15THATAT
MY DOOR?

CVMPANY!

%7 Made of
28 Church

WHAT'S ALl "THE
COMMOTION
OUT HERE?

ON EAIZTH

Lion"
portrayer
11 Slain
14 Gennan song
18 Trapshooting
19 Collar
gadgets
20 Drag
wood 21 Exclamation
22 Just
make out,

official
29 Joyous
shout
30 Chaplin film
31 "-on My

with "out"

Yesterday's Answer

24 Connective
25 Brown
kiwi
26 In degree
28 Editor's
marks
30 Chessman
32 Primeval
33 Sultanate
of Arabia

34 Desolate
35 Take the
- off

37 Sharif

,.....,.,.....,~..--llr"'1

b-++-+-

b-+--+--+--

b+-+-t-+how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

?

I

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's1 X for the two O's,- etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hiots. Each day the code letters are dilferent.

•

f

.. . ZM
ZSLD

CRYPTOQUOTES

FIW'D
ZM

WMMF
ZLWD

BIIF
LVM

GICMVC .
BVLURIJC

'

ZRWWMVC. TLEMC
U, .
SJWF
· Yesterday's Cryptoejuole: THERE ~RE FEW SORROWS,
HOWEVER POIGNANT, IN WlUCH A GOOD INCOME IS OF
NO AVAIL.-LOGAN P . SMITH

Housmq

Headq
. uatlets

®

••

,,

T im e 10; Green Acres 17 .

10:oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Jelfersons 8: Joker's
Wi l d 10; Morning Maga zi ne 13;
Movie "Thai Man 1n I stanbu l"
II

10 : 30- Hollywaod Squares 3. 15;

$20,000 Pyramid 13, Whew 1 8,10 ;
Andy Griffith 6.
10· 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :()()-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Sh~r l ey

6, 13 ; Price is Right 8, 10;

E lee. Co. 20.
11 : 30-Wheel

of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesa me :t.
20,33 .

12 : 00- Newscenter

3:

News

6,8,10,13; Health Fie ld 15.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Password
Plus 15, Movie "The Great Sioux
Massacre " 17; Elec. Co 33

1:oo-Daysof0ur Lives3,15 ; All My
Children

6, 13;

Young

&amp;

the

Reslless 8,10 .
2:oo-Doctors 3.15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;

2: 25-News 17 .
2: 3D- Another
World
Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .

3, 15;

17.
5:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8: Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers

20.33.
5:3Q-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8;

Elec . Co. 20;
Doctor

Who 33.
6:oo-News 3.8, 10, 13,15 : ABC News
6; Carol Burnetl17; 3·2· 1 Contact
20,33.
6:3o-NBC News 3,15: ABC News 13;
CBS News 8,10; Carol Bur flett 6;
Bob Newhart 17 : Villa Ale.gre 20;

15; Sanford &amp; . Son 17; Dick
Caveft 20.
7:3o-Prlce Is Right 3; 3's A Crowd
o, Joker's Wild 8; Family Feud
, 10; ; Pop Goes The Country 13,15;
Al l In "{he Family 17; MacNeil .
Lehr-er Report 20.
8:00- Doug Henning 3,15; XIII
Winter Olympic Games 6, 13;
Hulk
a, 10;
I ncredlble
Washington Week in Review
20,33; Movie " House of Usher "
17.
8:Jo-Wall Street Week 20,33 : 9:Q(}-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

COME HERE

10; Lucy Show 17.
9:3o- Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A

Wild Wild World of An ima ls 33 .
7:0(}-Cross.Wils 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13;
MacNeii · Lehrer Report 33:

3 On the bouse L-..L-..J.....t...-1--

i

Beverly Hillbillies 8;Jeffersons

Movie "Valentine Magic on Love

1 Strip of
2 Reverberate

Wl-lAT'5 I{OUR SIGN,
PIG·PEN? DO ~OU

To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.

8:3Q-Romper Room 17.
9:oo-Bob Braun 3: Big Valley 6;

Dream of Jeannie 17;

DOWN

MUST ADMIT HE
DANCE, Tl-lOUGH

Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17. ·'"
7:3Q-Family Affair 10; 7:55-C huck
White Reporls 10.
8:QO-- Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave II

out
39 Cruising
41 Moslem
Easter
42 Peruvian
city

Firpo

0

America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;

Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I

«Climb
t5 Poor
411 Space

, PEANUTS ·

Report 3; 6:55- News 13.
7:oo-Today 3,15: Good Morning

38Cross

43 Luis-

FISH ARE
l EATIN'OLiT
: THESE
' DAYS ,

6.3Q--Kidsworld 10; News 17 ; 6:45A .M
Weather 33; Morning

Real McCoys 13: Little Rascals

- Bull

,

FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 1S,1980
5·45-Farm Report 13: 5:5Q-PTL
Club 13
6:Q(}-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15,
6: 1o-World at Large 17.

News 10; Love American Sty le

38 Make
reverent
37 Seraglio
chamber
40 Chaplin film

! BALLS 0' FIRe!!
j MORE AN'MOR~

" And Now M iguel" 17; 5: 10Maverick 17 .

15; Spectr:eman 17 .
4 ·3D--Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jer ry
13 -'. Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.

33 VioJi$t,

:,..;;;.;.=

11: 45- ABC News · Spe c ial 6,13 :

4 :00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8;

Pillow":
1958 song

I

"The Birds " 10 ; Movie " The St .
Valentine's Day Massacre" 17 .

33.
3:3o-Fiintstones 17: Over Easy 33.

9 "Cowardly

15 Fanning
implement
16 Never: Ger.
17 Pulpit
homily: abbr.
IS Genns
20 Chaplin film
%3 "GWTW"

. ; WINNIE

&amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin 33 .
11 30-Tonight 3, 15; X III Wint er
Olympic Games , Update 6, 13;

J:QO-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17; Upstairs, Downstairs
20; Personal Time Managem ent

8 French river

13 Chaplin film

~.~~RD~

,

South would not have jumped
to six if he would Jose two

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 Drinking
1 Have two
vessel

GASOUNE ALLEY

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
.

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,
1'1:1 baths, gas furnace,
nice carpeting, 2 car
garage, and utility
building. $17,500 .
STORAGE - 1 story
qulonset hut building
out ol all flood water,
electric, natural gas.
concrete floor, loading
dock, and parking,
80 ACRES- All cleared
and nice laying land.
Good 10 room house and
many
outbuildings,
About 1h lenced .'$80,000 . .
BRICK RANCH - 3
lovely bedrooms, 2 full
baths, large living, for·
mal dining, glass doors
to cover patio. 2 car
garage and 4 lots. River
selling. Just $45,000,
1 ACRii . PLUS - A
family home with 11
:rooms and 2 baths, has
central healing and city
water.3cargaragewlth '
nice rental apt. over, ,
also . small business
building on 3 slate
routes. Ail this going for
$30,000,
RETIREE HOME - A
nice 1· bedroom home
with like new WOOdWork
l~lde, Utility room,
nalur.a l ga.s central , ·
heat; city ·water and •
. ' over.2 acres of privacy• .
Only $20,000.
· ·
BUY IIOW BEFORE
SPRING . INFLATION, .
WE HAVE 95% 1'1NAN·
CINO. CALL "2-1325 or
992-3176.
.
.

one d1amond and three clubs.

~

BOWERS
Sweepers,

992·J;2~R. ·" •IIO'

spades, six hearts, either no

diamonds and lour clubs or

Either way, the slam would
not make. South might avoid a
diamond loss, but he would
still have to Jose a club and if
South was void of diamonds
he could only get one discard
on a diamond honor.

The Professor was a trifle
surprised by the bidding, but
did not even consider a
double. He had too much
strength. Also. he didn't know
what to lead.
Most players would just
open the ace of diamonds, but

toasters, Irons, a ll small
appliances. Lawn mower.

WILL DO babysitting
evenings. 992-6312.

I.,

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag

Ohio, Critt Bradford.

Services Offered
ROOM, board andlaundry.
Elderly handicapped or
working men. 99H022.

The Professor's computer
mind had printed out the
South hand as with three

North

Pass

diamond~

quick diamond

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2481 or 949·2000. racine,
ELWOOD
REPAIR -

Looking at all the cards you
can see that a spade lead, a
club lead or the ace of dia·
monds lead are all fatal.
The Professor worked th1s
all oul which finally Jed him
to find the killing defense. He

Opening lead:+ I 0

Real Estate for Sale

WILL CARE for e lderly
and handicapped In my

$9,900.

Sales,

spades at trick one, had made
three spJde discards.

led a low

West

colony

7559.

trade-in. Ca11 742·3119.

.

992 ·5724.

WALL PAPERING
p.a inting. 742·2328.

Tromm,

'

•' -

pool kits. Do·it·yoursell or
let us install lor you. D.
Bumgardner

trump. West was back on lead
and faced with a really hard
problem . Meanwhile East,
who had played the deuce of

Vulnerable: Both
Deale"" South

all

11 DO-News 3, 6,8,10,13, 11 : Lasl ol
lhe Wild 17; Dick Cave!t 20: Fall

1: 35-News 17.

out the ace, k.ing and a small

+A J 10 9

delivery: various sires of

Pomeroy area. Phone 992·

level acres, 3 bedrooms,
Ph baths, extra large kit·
chen
with
oven,
refrigerator, large dining
room, extra large family
room with fireplace . 1 car

.....

and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off

.,+

MACHINE
service,

2·1&lt;-BO

"J954
+KQJ64
+Q6 3
EAST
WEST
• Q 10 9 7
.86432
....
., Q 10 6
t A 10 7 3
9 8 52
+8 74 2
+K5
SOUTH
• AJ 5
"AK87!!

... AHD L.UCKIL...,.. SHE KN!T
IT T'FIT HERSEL.F/ YUM!
I COUL.DH'T &amp;e BefTeR
OFF IN A TEI'H!

makes. 992·2284, The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales

949·2320

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

.K

NORTH

ANNIE

Close Up 33.
IO :oo-Qumcy 3, 15; Knots Landing
8; Polil ica l Talk 17; News 20,
Aus tin C1ty Limits 33; 10 :3oOver Easy 20.

:4D-Movle "Wings of Chance" 17;
2·20-News 13 , 3:10- M ov ie

the Professor finally settled
on the 10 of spades. South won
m dummy and propmtly Jed

l L---~~----~~~~

6.13
9 QO-Steve Martin 3, 15 ; Barnaby
Jones 8; Sneak Pr eviews 20,33;
Coll ege Basketball 10.
9 30- Camera Three 20 : Spor t s

12 ·0(}-Police Woman 6,13 .
1:0(}-Tomorrow 3, 1: ID-Baretta
6,13 ; Black Sheep Squadron 8:

' /&gt;.LA'%1&gt;-!

!

Moyers ' Jour nal 20,33 ; Movie.
" Blue Hawaii " 17 .
8 :30- XIII Winter OlympiC Games

ABC Captioned News 33; Movie

Canny defense dumps slam

IJOM~,

1·18-(pd.)

Repairs,

in the

same price range. Call 742 ·
2303.

.'

"Don't CUSS·Call US"

SEWING

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning.

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

ZOI&lt;~!

"i

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates

Menor Women
by Diann .J ewell
at

618 E, Main
Pomeroy
t92·379S
1·30·1 mo.

laclory gal - CANNED

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2-4.15.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt.

DRIVEL AMAZON

BRIDGE

_.,....

HAIR STYUNG

and Slate forms.
H&amp;R Block

VISlT
HIM IIJ

~MO

Automotive Repair

RACINE,O,
949·2741 or
t92·7314
12·28·Pd.

TRI-COU NTY
fi!gBOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

{1, .

FRQI.A M'i
OW~Al),

Open 11-6 Mon, thru Sal.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

Must be seen

Army 6x6 truck . 9'12·6319.

farm or wood hauling
truck . $200. Paul Sayre, R~.
338, Portland, OH. Great
Bend Rd . Phone 843·4591.

-

I

~10

Middleport, 0,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ment.

COCOA

Answer : What I he incompetent employee at the bean

~~T?

IJALarm•~

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

w., F.

truck somewhere

rear porch. Fruit trees,

racks,
4·speed
fran ·
smlsslon, V ·8, heater and
radio, S good tires. Gou~ ·'

Call Howard
949·2862
1·22-tfc

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways.

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

12x60. Furnished or un·
furnished. Washer and

John Deere Knuckleboom
loader, mounted on GMC

International '12 ton pickup
truck. Heavy duty side

Free Estimates
Prices

1917 2 bedroom Hillcrest

992-:;t,:)Y

THREE

IT'S A

~Reasonable

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

I

Jumbles BANDY

Thursday, Feb. 14

BORN LOSER

r-------~~--------~----~·-REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

I

.Jumble BOOk No. 14, contalnlne 110puz.zles,tatYIIIIbltlor$1.75~tp.kt
from Jumble, cJo thlanew•p•per, Bo• :W, Norwood, N.J. 07~ . 1ncludl; your
name, lddrett, zip codt and make chtcltl ptytblt to Newaptpelbookl.

All work guaranteed.

IN STOCK for immediate

__/-- -~

I I III XI J'

cleaning and painting.

Home Sales a1992·7034.

Real Estate for Sale

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, ·as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

IJ

mer: "ITJ(
Yesterday's

All types root work, new
or repair Vl:'tters and
downspouts,
gutter

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SU RANCE been can·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 ·2143.

dryer can be Included . 992·
6140alter4:30.

UP SOMEWHERE
FOR THE NII&gt;HT!

__....

r

I I

PLAI\IS T'KEEP

MOVl~G-OR HO~E

A Iter 5 P.M. "2·5547
12·13·2 mo . pd .

extensive remodel·
ing
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
1·17-1 mo.

11 mile off Rt. 7 by-pass ..
on St. Rt. 124 toward;
Rutland.

Mobile Homes· Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3

For Rent

ITOFFES±

D!!PelJD5 ON
WHETHER CHR15

.-----:R=ou=SH::-:---,.
H. L WRITESEL
CONSTRUCTION
ROOFING
•New homes -

CALL 992·7544

bedroom
1970 Vinda le 12x63 with ex·

HOW DR. FRANKENSTE IN
MANA6ED TO KEEP
HI~ MON!&gt;TER' ,

(Ahswers tomorrow)

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

EVERYTHI~G

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates

1·JO·pd.

2·14-tlc

788·2589.

Mindy 6.13 ; Waltons 8,10; Bill

RECI&lt;Ot&gt;l

concrete Finisttint

t49-2422

r

II

l ri

CAPfAIN EASY

Brick Work
Block work

Rt. 3, Racine/ SR 124

388·9759

alternators - own the best
- · buy Win power. Call 513·

SINEAb

I GANFICb

Siding

I 1115 Mon. thru Fri.

1978 Ford F ·150 4·wheel
drive stepside. 14.35 Gum·
bos with aluminum wheels.
Extras. 55995. Call after 5

I

Remodeling

Additions

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Free Estimates·

February,
Drehel 's
Ceramics - greenware 30

AM· FM, A.C., $3900. Call
992·1491 after 5:30p.m

~..:...."':::.!..-·

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

ll89.

1974 Ford LTD. Red with
white v inyl top, good con·
dition . No rust, runs good .
AM ·FM, air, cruise con·

1977

~

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built·up
roof
and
home
repair,

JO- Hollywood Sq uares 3. In
5earch Of 6 ; Joker's W ild 8;
SlOO,OOO Name That Tune 10 ;
Nashville on the Road 13 ;
Countrv Roads 15; All In The
Fami l y 17 , Ma c N eil -Lehrer
Report 20 .
8:Q(}-Buck Rogers 3, 15; Mark &amp;

I. I K- - ...tJ

N. L CONSTRUCTION

BILl'S AUTO
REPAIR

GEORGE'S ·
ROOFING

CIDER "

HON-E Y . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, 669-

hitch, trailer brakes, new
tires . $)'600. 992 ·2467 after

.
Datson

'

3891.
APPLES

1975 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4,
350. Auto. !rims., PS, P.B.,

SHE'S ABOUT TO
COME OUT OJ:=
HER SHEL-L--

Business Services

sand , gravel, calci um
chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of sa lt.
Excel sior Salt Works,· Inc .,
E. M at n St .. Pomeroy, 992·

5051 .

P.B., topper, posi ·
tra ction front and rear. 9854339.
.

Lost and Found

Help Wanted
HOME
ADDRESSERS

P s _, P B, A .C 1 r ad•al
t1res. rec11ning sea t s. AM

P.S..

Wanted to Buy : Four foot
S·curve rolltop desk . Call
742 ·2316, evenings.

Call992·5335 .

Auto Sa,.l,-::es.__~
THUNDERBIRD .

1979 Ford 150 4x4 auto.,

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 5926462.

Call Mr . Zidian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Mon ·

February 15, 1980

perienced or trainee to call
on and sign up rural land
owners for oil and gas
dr il ling and exploration.
Must have good tran ·
sport at ion and be will ing to
work locally and away
from home . Se nd brief
resume to Box 729·C, c·o
th e
Daily
Sentinel ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 .

Debbie, thank you for the
most wonderful years of
my life. Remember. 1 love
you. Roger.

FOUND:
light
brown
shepherd type female dog

1977

---~-

SHOOTING

'

~
:((;'}(!~\) q'our

-

$400·5800 weekly. Oil and
gas lease person, ex -

boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M .D .
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or

75214.

Bernie~ Bede Osol

We have an open1ng tor a
person capabl e ol doing
payroll, qu ar ter ly payroll
taxes, subsidiary iournal s,
general ledger and mon th ly fi na ncia l statements.
This IS .=t one pers on office
so all sundry other cl er ica l
and office duties wil be part
of th is position Please send
resume
and
salary
requirements to : PO Bo x
15 , Pomeroy, OH. 45769 . An
equal opportun 1ty em ·
player .

OLD

Drawer 140069, Dallas, TX

ASTRO·GRAPH

1

992·2576 afler 5.

required .

Fud11y, Feb. 15

: ----:---c-cc--c---

Help Wanted

Television
Viewing

DICKTRA~;y

lMOICtng F1eturt1 Synclltl'-• Inc.

Island " 3,15; Dukes ol Hazzard
8,10; Capitol Beat 33; Free lo
Choose 20 .
9:3o-NBA Basketball11: American
Short STory 33 .
10 :QO-Oallas 8, 10; News 20.
10: 3o--&lt;lver Easy 20; Murder Most
English 33.
11 : OQ-News 3,6,8,10,13, 15 ; Die&gt;.
Cavett 20.
11 :30-Tonlght 3,15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games Update 6, 13;
Movie "Anatomy of Terr.or" 8;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Psycho" 10.

11 :45-Movle "Earth vs. lhe Flying
Saucers" 17; 12 :oo-ABC News
Special 6,13; David Susskind 33. .
12 : 15-Charlle's Angels 6; Movie
"The Invasion of Johnson
County" 13.
I :QO-Midnlght Special 3,15; Movie
"The Little Shop of Horrors" 10.
1:25-FBI 6; 1::f:s..:.News17 ; 1:55NBA Basketball 17.
2:15-News 13; 2:3o-News3; 4:1o-.
Maverick
17 ;
5:10-Love·,"
American Style 11 .

�12 - The uauy :sentmel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb: 14, 1980

Wholesale prices take big jump in January

Soviet tank rumble causing
perplexing problem for U.S.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Louis E.
(Johnny ) Johnson , subject of the
following article, is a Middleport
native who now resides in Little
Switzerland, N. C.
If you are convinced the rumble of
Soviet tanks.at the Yugoslav border,
and brazen invasion in Afghanistan,
has U.S. political leaders scratching
their heads - then you' re right.
The

" open

season''

upon

the globe.
Projections mclude: What is going
to happen if President Tito dies•
Will the Russians intervent• Will the
Yugoslavs yield to Moscow• Will
there be another Soviet takeover in
the Balkan•
All are powerful , but logical
questions, in today's changii\g atmosphere.
In many sections of the country,
the answers to these and other
questions are met with mixed
emotions.
Most expect "political mutiny"
while others forecast a wellorganized Russian-sponsored 5th
colwnn maneuvering for power
positions in that Balkan nation.
But not all people predict "gloom

American embassies and its personnel has provoked .•nd inflamed
public opinion to the breaking point.
A more puzzling quest ion,
however, revolves about the surgery
and critical illness of Yugoslavia's
President Tito.
. Today, the 87 year-old leader is
plagued by a series of medical setbacks and the same U. S. government offices are burning lights into
the night in quest for answers to the
encroachments and tensions about

One of the persons speaking with a
somewhat optimistic tone is Louis E.
(Johrmy) Johnson, a 66 year-old exserviceman and former newsman,

Tags available
for C&amp;D name
residents

TRUSTEES MEET
The Boa rd of Trustees of Planned
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio met
recently at the agency's Administrative Office in Athens. Five
of the se ·en counties in the

and doom."

who resides in Little Switzerland, N.

c.

Johnson, who does not claim to be
an authority on Balkan affairs, but
who does know the score about the
tiny European nation better than
most people, had been in Yugosla"ia
only recently.
"Frankly," Johnson said, "I don't
see any drastic change in store for
Yugoslavia as long as the veteransthat's the members of the Partisan
Federa tion - have a hand iii the
nomination of President Tito's successor. ''
While in Yugoslavia, Johnson was
given the red-&lt;:arpet treatment and
his photograph and an article about
him, appeared in all of that country's major newspapers.
The wire story about Johnson in
the Yugoslavia press was to the effect that an American commando
had returned to the country after 35
years.
As an American scout and raider

WASffiNGTON (AP ) - Wholesale
prices surged 1.6 percent in
January, the biggest monthly jump
since November 1974, the Labor
Department reported today.
The steep increase was propelled
by sharply higher gasolil\e and home
healing oil prices, which wiped out a
substantial decline in food prices,
the department said.
Changes in wholesale or producer
prices often show up within weeks at
retail outlets, thus affecting conswnerpocketbooks.
January's 1.6 percent jump nearly

during ww n, Johnson had been
assigned to units that fought
alongside the partisans in several
operations. He felt close to them and
praised their courage and abilities.
He pointed out that many American
airmen, like Vice President Moodale, are alive t:&gt;day because of the
work of the Yugoslavs.
Johnson, as well as other exservicemen from the U. S., were
hosted in the European country by
members of the Federation of
Yugoslav War VeteranS.
Recognition is not unique to Johnson. He has enjoyed the thrill of
being first in doing things time after
time. He was the first man ashore
during the invasion of Southern
France.
He was the first naval instructor to
train air combat teams for survival
behind the enemy lines and one of
the first naval officers qua!Hied as a
parachutist for behind-the-lines activities.

PAY RESPECTS - Ivo Kllunovic, Middleport native Louis E.
Johnson, now of Little Switzerland, N. C.; C. Morkl and Forllo Gevi, vice
president of Croatia, pi&lt;;tured tn foreground, are shown paying their
respects to the Yugoslav war dead at one of the hundreds of monuments
about the country. Johnson and the other Freedom Fighters were hosted
in the European country recently by members of the Federation of
Yugoslav War Veterans. The two men in the background are security personnel. The Croation executive was said to have been Tito's top security
man for about 25 years.

I

Sarah Gibbs, motor vehi cle deputy
registrar for Meigs County, announces that owners whose last
name starts with a C or D are to apply for their 1980 car plates during
the month of February.
Owners must take with them their
title and last year's registration
card. The fees for licenses are $21.50
for passenger cars; $36.50 for nonconunerical; $11.50 for motorcycles; $11.50 for house vehif:'les,
and $36.50 for motor homes.
The license bureau will be open on
Friday evenings from 5:30 to 8 p.m .
and is located in the former Gibbs
Grocery building, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHffiiT
AT RIO GRANDE
RIO GRANDE - A traveling
photography .exhibit will be on
display throughout the month of
February on the Rio Grande College
and Conununity College campus.
The exhibit, put together by Ohio
University faculty and students, will
be on display in the Jeanette Albiez
Davis Library during normal
operating hours.
The library will be open from 8
a.m. to 10 .m. Monda y through
Thursday ; 8 am. to 5 p.m. on Friday; 12 to 4 p.m. on Saturday ; and 4
to 10 p.m. on Sunday through
February 22. From Feb. 22 until the
remainder ol. the month the library
will be open from8a .m. to4 :30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
There is no charge to view the exhibit.

orga ni~ tion 's

service area were

represented. The main topic on the
agenda was discussion of pressing
financial matters. The business
meeting was preceded by an orientation program for newly elected
trustees and by meetings of the
Executive, Nominating, and Planning Committee.
MINE ACCIDENT
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Mine 1 of the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. at 2:25a.m. Thursday
for Fred Wooten, Jr., Albany, who
had neck and back injuries. He was
taken to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
Swimming events in the 1896
Olympics in Greece were held in the
Bay of Zea, an arm of the MedittaneanSea.

Court actions filed
Tami L . Rinehart filed for support
under the Reciprocal Agreement
Act in Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court against Michael Eugene
Rinehart.
Richard R. Cramlet and Sarah E.
Cramiet, Parkersburg, filed suit to
quiet title against J . D. DeWitt, address unknow, et al.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
were Robert William Caruthers and
Diane Caruthers; Mark Elliott Johnson, and Kathleen Sue Johnson;
Walter D. Roush and Lillian L.
Roush .
John W. Yates, Cheshire, field suit
for divorce against Draina C. Yates,
Hurricane, W. Va. ''

I

Area Deaths !
I

FAYE REESE
Faye Merele Reese, 83, a resident
of Rt. I, Cheshire (Little Kyger Rd. )
died at II : 30 p.m. Tusday in Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Reese and her late husband,
Willard L. Reese, operated a farm in
Cheshire Twp. for several years.
She was born Oct. 10, 1896, in Addison Twp., daughter of the late Or·
ren Roush and Susan Warner Roush.
She married Willard L. Reese on
March 8, 1915, at Pt. Pleasant, W.
Va. He preceded her in death on
Dec. 14, 1969.
The following children survive:
Willard, Watertown, N.Y.; Emerson
and Herman, both of Cheshire;
Marilyn Reese, Cheshire; one son,
Luther, preceded her in death.
Nine grand and 12 greatgrandchildren survive. One grand·
son, Ed Reese, preceded her in
death.
The following brothers and sisters
survive : Mrs. Mary Miller ,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Roscoe (Sarah)
Fowler, Middleport; Mrs. Grace
Fadely, Gallipolis; Tom Medcalf,
Uticia, N.Y. One brother and one
sister preceded her in death.
She was a member of Little Kyger
Congregational Church a nd a
member of the Ladies Aide at that
church.
She graduated from the Cheshire
Academy in 1915. She and her husband also operated a grocery store
at the comer of Fourth Ave. and
Pine St. in Gallipolis for a number of
years.
Funeral services will b&lt;. held 2
p.m. Saturday at the church with
Rev. Jolvl Davis and Rev. Daphne
Resch officiating. Burial ·will bein
Gravel Hlll Cemetery.
Friends may call at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. on Friday. The body
Win lie in state at the church one
hour prior to services.
.
Pallbearers will be Michael
Reese, Timothy Reese, Thomas
Reese, Glen Smith, Marvin Cre.
means, James Harris, John
Shaw.CJ'I)SS 8nd Orren Miller.

•

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Samuel
Ralrden,
Coolville; Ivor Logan, Racine ; Tammy Ferguson, Middleport ; Mildred
Meredith, Pomeroy ; Paul Lewis,
Jr., Racine.
Discharged-Richard Dean, Jr.,
Pamela Smarr, James Taylor.

11111111111111111111 11111111 1 11111111111111111 11

Presidents' .... ale
~

ASKTQWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Timothy Alan Jenkins, 22, Ft.
Bragg, N. C., and Teresa Ann
Ferrell, 19, Syracuse ; Lawrence Edwin Halfhill, 30, Rutland, and San·
dra Fay Brown, 28, Rutland.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15 - SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16 - MON AY, FEBRUARY 18
'
SPECIAL REDUCTIONS AND CLEANUP SALE_PRICES ON
MANY llEMS FOR THIS SPECIAL SALE EVENT

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM
SELECTED FROM REGULAR STOCK

MEN'S DRESS JEANS
Corduroy jeans, denim jeans and cotton
twill jeans. Broken sizes 29 to 42 waist.
Good selection . Regular priced up to
$18.95

CURRENT
SAVING
RATES

1/2

PRICE

DISCONTINUED

CHAIR SPECIAL
One group of rock-o-lounges, wall -aways
and heater/ vibrator recliners in assorted
.covers and styles.
Reg. $249.00 and $259.00

(USPS 145-960)

PASSBOOK

Compounded Daily

5114 %

90 DAY CERTIFICATE.. ..... ~.i~!~~~ -'. :~~--~·-- · 51f2%
1

1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~.i~:~~:r:.'::~~-~....... 6%

4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~:~:~~~~~ :~~~-~-- ... 7%%

6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... :':':~~~-·-~-~~·.0.~:~ .. .. . 71fz%
Minimum 51,000.00

8 YEAR CERTIFI CATE ............................
30 MONTH

Jll%
14

~ERTIFICATE

10.4001..

Min . S1 ,000

Paper table covers - cups - centerpieces plates - napkins . Values to $2.50.

Winter dresses &amp; pantsuits.
Regular and half sizes.

lh PRICE

MEN'S AND BOYS'

SAVE 50%

s1 39 TUBE SOCKS

WINTER

White with colored tops. Our popular
Springfoot brand . Men' s sizes 9 to 15.
Boys sizes 7 to 11. Stock up now.

99~

PAIR

minimum . l.nter est rate equal to the rate of 112 day treasul"t(
b1ll rate. A s d eterm1ned at weekly auction.

Current rate 12.256% effective February 14-20, 1980.
Substantial penalty required for early withdrawal.
New 30 month certificate (21!2 vrs .)
we will not lie
$1,000 minimum 10.40%
open Monday,
February 18, 1980
to observe

.c~~~~~~~ffemP

Presidents· Day .

A Home Bank
For

Meigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
...

BANK
Racine, Ohio

1f2 PRICE
·sPECIALI

HANDBAGS

BOYS' JEANS
Denims - cotton twills - corduroys. Select

Clutches, organizers &amp; purses.

112 PRICE

S~O, OOO

we still have a nice selection of winter
coats, sweaters, shirts, sleepwear, sportswear and dresses. Something for
everyone in your family!

WOMEN'S WINTER

CLEARANCE

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

CLOTHING CLEARANCE

from regular stock.
Regular prices to $11 .95.

. 1/2

Broken

sizes.

PRICE

Group ot'Boys' $2,50 Beln ••••••• Sale S1.D4

MEN'S "5.49

DISCONTINUED STYLES AND COLORS

HANES THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

TABLE COVERS
1f2 PRICE

Sizes S, M, Land XL in Hanes $5.49 thermal tops and $5.49thermal bottoms.

'419
WOMEN'S

KNIT ACCESSORIES

Home Fur'nishings Dept. ·1st floor.
Limited quantity of various sizes. Vinyls
and cloth table covers. Hurry In for best
selection.

JEWELRY CLEARANC.E

MITTENS, SCARFS, HATS. AND .SETS

Special group of necklaces,.
pins, watches, bracelets and.

WHILE THEY LAST

~arrlngs

PRICE

50% OFF

.

.

OPEN SATURDAY AND MONDAY, 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

ELBERFELDS .IN POMER

NO . 214

Wholesa le prices for tobacco,
cosmetics, soaps, detergen ts, textile
house furnishings, tires and bicycles
also advanced above December's inflation rate, the department said.
The decline in finished food
products was attributed primarily to
price reductions in beef, veal, pork,
eggs and fresh fruit. Prices for
vegetables, roasted coffee and
processed poultry also fell.
However, dairy and bakery
products ready for sale to retailers
rose in January as did prices for
fish, refined sugar in tiny packets

and milled rice, the department
sa1d.
Prices rose 12.5 percent at
whol esa le from December 1978 to
December 1979, helping to push
retatl prices up at the fastest rate in
more than 30 years.
Although the Cart er administration is predicting some
moderation of the trend this yejlr of·
ficials admit that a surge in' oil
prices could upset their projections.
Saudi Arabia, the largest foreign
oil supplier for the United States,
(Continued on page 10)

•

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

nouncement but I am waiting to see
By The Associated Press
Iranian President Abdolhassan if the U.S. will accept our con·
ditions. "
Bani-Sadr said the American
He reiterated his three demands
hostages could be freed "in a matter
of 48 hours" if President Carter ac- on the United States for release of
cepts his conditions. But Carter said the hostages: acknowledgement of
alleged U.S. crimes against the
he doesn't expect the issue to be
Iranian people during the shah's
resolved before the New Hampshire
reign; a pledge not to meddle in
primary Feb. 26.
Iranian
affairs; and agreement not
U.S. officials asked Iran to clarify
to
block
efforts to return the shah
its conditions.
and
his
wealth
to Iran.
Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign
But
Bani-8adr,
who this week told
Minister Sadegh Ghotbzljdeh said he
the French newspaper Le Monde
expected a U.N. panel to be set up
that Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
this week to investigate the regime 's
Iran's revolutionary leader, had
charges against Shah Mohammad
agreed to the plan, hedged that comReza Pahlavi as a step toward
ment. "Earlier I was asked if the
freeing the approximately 50
imam (Khomeini) agrees with the
hostages in the U.S. Embassy in
proposal
and I answered I think he
Tehran, who began their 104th day in
will
agree."
captivity today.
Carter has said the United States
"I woUld say as soon as the
will
not take the blame for a CIAprocess (setting up the commission)
backed
coup that restored the shah
takes place that the problem of the
to power in 1953, and the State
hostages would be resolved," GhotbDepartment has said it will not
zadeh told reporters, adding he ex"profess guilt" for any subsequent
pected the conunission would be
Iranian developments.
established within two days.
On Wednesday, Carter raised
Bani-8adr, asked if the U.N. panel would convene in Iran, told reporters in Tehran Thursday, 'They are
, .• waiting for me to make that an-

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1980

hopes that a U.N. probe of the ousted
shah could lead to the release of the
hostages, telling a news conference,
"an appropriate conunission, with a
carefully defined purpose, would be
a step toward resolution of the
crisis."

Dismissing speculation the
hostages could be freed by the
weekend, Carter said he did not expect their release before the New
Hampshire primary Feb. 26. In an
interview with the Boston Herald
American, Carter said:
" I don't have any indication at all
tbat we will have a resolution of the
hostage issue that soon."
He called the hostage-holding a
"burning issue," and said, " ... it is

impossible for me to revert to
business as usual as an active campaigner as long as the hostages are
being held."
Carter's chief rival for the
Democratic
presidential
nomination, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, accused administration officials of misusing
their offi ces in the campaign.

SINGING VALENTINES - Members of the Meigs
High School Choral group presented "singing valentines" to many students and teachers at the high school
on Thursday. The valentine was purchased for fifty
cents and then the singing message was delivered. Pictured here are some of the members of the Choral
group presented a singing valentine, first row 1 to r,

Teresa Barret, Carla Smith, JeB!' Horton, Sheila
Horky, Deena Neece, Linda Eason. Second row, Cindy
Parker, Wendy Tillis, Lori Maynard, Lori Faulkner,
Connie Murphy, Kathy Quivey, Betty Murphy. Third
row, Roxanne McDaniels, Vicki Morrison, Anna Wiles,
Eric Scites, and Robert Evans.

Carter delays start
of draft registration

~

LITTLE GIRLS

DRESS CLEARANCE

•

caused by a substantial 54.6 percent
increase in household flatware, and
a 22.5 percent jump in precious
metal jewelry, a reflect~o n of the
rece nt gold and silver rush.
Despite a falJ -()ff in auto sales,
wholesale car prices rose 2 percent
last month, compared with only a 0.6perccnt increase in December, the
department sa id.
Gasoline prices rose 5. 7 percent
last month, 2.5 percent more than in
December; while home heating oil
prices rose 2 percent, following a 0.1
percent rise in December.

Hostages could be released
if Carter okays conditions

,.

HALLMARK PARTY ITEMS
lh PRICE

VOL. XXVIII

$18800

SPEl:IAL

three levels: fi ni shed goods ,
processed and ready for sa le to
retailers; intermediate goods, which
are semi -fini shed , and crude
materials, which have yet to be
processed, and include such items as
livestock , grain, raw cotton or steel
scrap.
The Labor Department reported
that consumer durables ready for
retail advanced 3.2 percent in
January, following 1.6 percent and I
percent increases in December and
November, respectively.
Much of this -acceleration was

e

4'

i------------------------1

SERVICES SUNDAY
Evangelistic services will be conducted at Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport from Sunday,
Feb. 17, through Sunday, Feb. 24, at
7:30 each evening. Bible study will
be held from 6:30 to 7:30 each
evening preceding the services.
Speak~rs at the seA-ices will be
members of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish.

SQUAD RUN
The Rutland Emergency Squad
answered a call to the scene of an
auto iiCCident in Rutland at 7:18p.m.
Tuesday. Vickie Rowe, Charlotte M.
Patterson, Charlene A. Patterson,
Davis Wilkes, all of the Rutland
area, and Jeanette L. Freeman,
Pomeroy, were taken to Veterans
Hospital.

doubled December:s revised 0.9 percent increase, worsening the
nation's inflation.
During all of last year, wholesale
prices rose an average of 1 percent a
month.
The huge increase in January was
particularly impressiye b&lt;.cause of
the 0.8 percent fall-off in the price of
finished food products ready to be
sold to retailers. These prices had
risen in five of the preceding six
montbs, the Labor Department said.
The Producer Price Index
measures the prices of items at

-r&lt;'\. .n,

. ·''

.,. .

Titans charged
WASmNGTON (AP) - Three
alleged titans of the nation's $4
billion hardcore pornography
market are fighting federal
charges today as a result of yet
another FBI undercover "sting."
The three, along with a fourth
man who dropped dead only
moments before FBI agents
arrived to arrest him, allegedly
dominated a burgeoning market
for magazines and films with
such titles as "Three in a Tub,"
"Debbie Does Dallas," and "Hot
and Saucy Pizza Girls."

Hunger strike
CH!LUCOTHE, Ohio (¥') Officials say they have transferred to other institutions four
persons they have identified as
being ringleaders of a hunger
strike at the Chillicothe Correctional Institute.
But the strike, to call attention
to a list of grievances, continued
Thursday with more than half of
the prison's 1,800 irunates taking
part.
AI Abercrombie of the
Rehabilitation and Correction
Department sald only about 700
inmates went through the food
· lines on Thursday. However,
prisoners were continuing to
report to their work assigrunents,
he said.
. '

Returning home
SLEDGE, Miss. (AP) - Hundre&lt;IB of ~dents returned . to
· ·. their homes and shops in this
small farming co!11111unity Thursday after a huge fire, caused
when derailed freight cars stru,Ck
fuel tanks, died down to the size
of a bonfire.
.
W.T. Hunt, trainmaster . for
Illinois Central GuH RailrOad,
salil _the ilaniBge to tracks caused
by the deralbnent of i7 of the
train's 73 cars would be repaired
by Thursday night.
. ~.

.•

Valentine's Day

WASHINGTON (AP) - President the wartime mobil ization
Carter is delaying initiation of draft requirements of the Pentagon.
registration untU this surruner out of
They said a plan drafted by the
concern that an immediate start-up Selective Service early this year would ignite campus protests, op- but never released publicly ponents of his plan said Thuraday.
proposes a mobilization program
By delaying until the sununer, the that would fulfill manpower
president hopes to make it more dif- requirements without registration.
ficult for student groups to mobilize · Lynn said he talked with Selective
.Service Director Bernard Rotsker
demonstrations, opponents said.
"They're very concerned about about the plan in January and that
the campuses," said Barry Lynn, Rotsker told him, " I would like
spokesma'l for the Conunittee
what's in the final report."
Against Registration and the Draft,
Lynn said the report apparently
was a refined version of a plan
a coalition of peace, religious, civil
rights and other groups. "They don't proposed by Selective Service last
warit to stir up the campuses."
year.
Lynn and David Landau, staff atThat plan, which was criticized on
torney of the American Civil UberCapitol Hill and at the Pentagon as
overly optimistic, said draftees
ties Union, also argued that
registration is ?ot necessary to meet
could be delivered to boot camp in 30
days without registering anyone un·
til after a mobilization announcement by the president.
Lynn and Landau said they have
filed a Freedom &lt;i Information
request to obtain copies of the
revised Selective Service plan.
The president already has
authority to register men, but is
asking Congress for $45 million to
expand Selective Service operations
and renew registration.
A special meeting to discuss the
organization and operation of a
talepted and gifted program in
Meigs Local Schools will be held
Feb. 28 in the Meigs High School
Ubrary.
The meeting is open to all interested persons. It is hoped that
persons attending might represent
A driver was arrested on two
all of the school attendance areas
charges,
a utility pole was broken off
served by Meigs Local.
and
a
traffic
light heavily damaged
Talented and Gifted programs are
in
an
accident
at the Pearl and
a new venture in the district and
Locust
St.
intersection
at 9:55 p.m.
conununity involvement is vital to
Thursday.
potential program success.
Middleport Pollice sald a -car
Paris Roland, Talented and Gifted
driven
by Roger L. Rowland,
Programs Coordinator for the
Cheshire,
went off of the right &lt;i
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
J..ucust St. and hit the pole and then
• Education Cooperative, will present
crossed
the road before coming to a
a portion of the program on TAG
stop.
·
Model programs and his role in the
The
traffic
light at the indevelopment of local programs.
tersection,
only
recently repaired,
Dan Morris, Director of
was
torn
down
and extensively
Curriculum and Instruction and
The
traffic
light is condamaged.
Federal Programs, haa been named
sidered
of
major
importance
by
Talented and Gifted Coordinator for
some
village
officials
because
of
the
Meigs Local and will discuss
number of school students crossing
program !108sibilities in \ MeigS
the
intersection during the day.
Local.
.
The Middlewn Emergency Squad
Those who have an interest 'or con11118Wered
a call to the scene but
. cern for the el'ceptlonill child, please
Rowland
refused
~tment. He was
plan to attend this .meeting. Resldencharged
with
driving
while in~ havtng questlona regarding this
toxicated
and
leaving
the
scene
of an
matter, please call Dan Morris at
accident.
992-2153.

Talented
program.
planned

Cheshire man
cited for DWI

. _191

Many valentines were exchanged by students in
schools throughout the coWlty on Thursday. Shown here
exchanging valentines at
Salisbury Elementary are ,
Kristen Slawter, first grade
student, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Slawter, Rutland,
and Terry Reuter, first
grade, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Reuter, Pomeroy.

i.

Friend says Gacy confessed
ClllCAGO (AP) - A cement contractor who said he was John W.
Gacy Jr.'s best friend testified Thursday that Gacy put an ann on his
shoulder, said "I've been a bad boy"
artd confesstd to killing more than :10
people.
Ron Rohde, 47, said he first met
Gacy, a remodeling contractor, on a
job in 1973, and that several years
later they had become such friends
that they went to Las Vegas together
with their wives.
Gacy, 37, is charged with murder
in the slayings .of 33 young inen and
boys. The bodies of 29 victims were
found on his suburban Norwood
Park Township property. Four additional bodies linked to Gacy were
found in Chicago area rivers .
Rohde told the Circuit Court jury
of seven men and five women that
tension started to build in Gacy
when he was being followed around
the clock by policemen, starling on
Dec. 14, 1978.
At the time, Gacy was staked out
as a suspect in the disappearance of

Squad mak~s two runs
The Rutland Emergency Squad
11118wered two calls early Friday
morning. At 12!40 a.ni. the squad
went to Mine 2 of the Southern Ohio
Coal Co. for ll:rnest E. Gilland who
was ill. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 6:02 a.m. the
unit we!lt to Mine I for David W. Cunningham, Mi!Hield, who had a back
injury. He was taken to O'Bieness
M~morial Hospital in Athens.

Robert Pies!, 15, who had been
missing for three days.
On Dec. 21, the day Gacy was
arrested and charged in the sexslaying of Piest, Rohde said Gacy
came to his house in the morning
and asked for a scotch and water. He
was upset and looked ragged, Rohde
said.
..

'•... I really just can't say goodbye
to my best friend for the last time,"
Rohde said Gacy told him. " Tllclse
SOBs rut there (referring to
policemen trailing him) are going to
getme. '
Rohde said be told Gacy they
weren't going to get him, that he had
1

~

Ga11ia judge delay~ matters
in Cincinnati stampede suit
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Lawyers
representing Riverfront Coliseum,
Electri c Factory Concerts, "The
Who" rock group, the city of Cincinnati and several other defendants
ha9e asked Hamilton County Common Pleas Court to consolidate eight
civil suits against their clients into a
single trial.
They also asked for a delay in
Friday's scheduled deposition from
Brian Heekin, president of Riverfront Collsewn, where 11 people died
in a stampede prior to a Dec. 3 concert by the British rock group.
Visiting Judge Ronald Calhoun of
Gallia County delayed all matters
fat 10 days imlil Judge .William
Mathews returns from a judicial
meeting.
Calhoun said neither Heekin nor
. any other witnesses -could be interviewed during the 1D-day abeyan-ce.
,
No date was set for Heekin's

deposition, m wrucn he is to be in- :
terrogated by lawyers for victims :
who have filed suit.
(Continued on page 10)

.:

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numbel'!l drawu Thanday nfcld . :
in the Oblo Lottery's dally pme , :
"The number" and hi " - !"f . • .~
181Del are:
&lt;
The lllllllber- B«
Pyiamld-27, 158,3&amp;11
Jlonam• - 17, .-r, -. 711,11,
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·
.

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