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~The

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Feb. 18. 1980

Bush campaign gets added momentum
SAN JUAN , Puerto Rtco iAP l George Bush says winning all 14
delegates in Puerto Rico's first-ever
. prestdentia l primary will give his
presidential bid continued momentum for the New Hamps hi re

the voting plal'cs to seck donations.
The Puerto Rico victory will
illustrate "the national aspect of our
candidacy, Bush said Sunday while
campaigning in Nashua , N.H. " It is
not just a one-or tw&lt;&gt;-state cam-

primary next week .

paign."

Bush defeated Sen. Howard Baker
of Tennessee by a 3-2 margin in the
Republican balloting Sunday in
1980's first presidential primary.
Former California Gov. Ronald
Reagan, not on the ballot here,
received a handful of write-in votes.
The voting was held without the
privacy of voting booths because
there wasn't time to set them up
when a judge ruled that the Caribbean island commonwealth could
not spend public funds for a party
primary. To offset the cost of the
primary, coffee cans were set up at

The form er CIA director and ambassador said the victory "will lift
up our workers and continue our
momentum. It will help us in New
Hampshire and set off some of the
attacks on me."
Actually, the 3.3 million Puerto
Ricans are U.S. citizens but have no
vote in the November presidential
election because the island is not a
state. They also pay no federal income tax.
The victory gave Bush a total of 17
committed delegates on the first
ballot at the Republican National

4

Two U11knowns on the ballot, Bedo
convention this July in Detroit.
Reagan has nine delegates; Baker, Istvan Karoly of Washington, D.C.,
five. It takes 998 to cinch the got 87 votes and Gerald de Felice of
Hamden, Conn., got48.
nomination.
Reagan, who was not on the ballot,
Bush built a 2-1 margin in early
received
about 50 write-in votes.
returns, mostly from the cities, and
Oreste Ramos, a member of the
saw it shrink only marginally when
the rural vote came in.
Puerto Rico Senate and the n:um in
charge of running the r-irnar" for
When the party stopped counting
the GOP said eight rural .vting
votes early today, with tabulation
places remained uncounted.
99.7 percent complete, Bush had
Ramos said returns from all other
123,217 for 59 percent to !laker's
. 3, 422 polling places showed more
,80,782 for 38 percent.
than 209,000 people cast ballots in the
Of the other candidates in the
island's first presidential primary.
primary, former Texas Gov. John
Voters here are not registered by
Connally got 1,934 votes; California
party, and all the more than 2
businessman Benjamin Fernandez,
million registered were eligible to
1,912; former Minnesota Gov,
cast ballots in either Sunday's
Harold Stassen, 631; and Sen. Bob
Republican primary or the u~
Dole of Kansas, 513.
coming
Democratic primary.
Dole had asked his supporters to
vote for Baker.

people injured in weekend

Two drivers were cited and four
people injured as the result of six
weekend accidents investigated by
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
A Gallipolis man, David Mayher,
22, was cited on charges of DWl and
hit-skip following two separate ac·
cidents early Sunday on U.S. 35.
Called to the scene at 1:10 a.m.,
the patrol reports an east bound auto
operated by Mayher went off the left
side of 35, at milepost 10, crossed the
medium and struck a west bound
vehicle driven by Dennis Okal, 25,

Bidwell.
The Mayher vehicle then, reportedly, left the scene, traveled approximately one mile east on 35, and
passed off the right side of the roadway into a private yard at I: 12a.m.
Four people were injured during
four accidents investigated Saturday.
Officers were called to the scene of
a three-vehicle mishap on SR 180,
tw&lt;&gt;-tenths of a mile north of CR 3, at
8a.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Everett McDaniel,

HO~J•JT\L .'\E\\~

35, Gallipolis, had stopped in traffic,
A south bound vehicle driven by
John Fuller, 37, Kerr, had slowed
behind McDaniel.
A south bound auto driven by
Laura McCully, 17, Vinton, was
unable to stop on the ice covered
roadway and struck the Fuller
vehicle, which had attempted to pull
off the roadway to avoid collision, in
the rear. The McCully auto continued and struck the McDaniel
vehicle in the rear.
McCully displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment.

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Saturday Admission-David McMillan, Racine.
Saturday Discharges--Bonnie
Allen, Marcia Terry, Ralph Durst.
Sunday Admissions--Michael
Layne, Reedsville; John Banks,
Thurman, Mary Alice Wayland,
Pomeroy ; Mitdred Mankin ,
Pomeroy ; Herbert Gilkey, Mid·
dleport.
Sunday Discharges-Leah Swat·
zel , Sherry Indestad, Velma
Winebrenner, Mary Qualls.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES FEB. 15
Harold Adams, Ray Arrowood,
Angela Baker, Teresa Barcus,
Claude Blazer, Geraldine Burcham,
Justin Clark, Mary Calrk, Woodrow
Glassburn, Connie Hagan, Gala
Hammack, Heather Harrison, Mala
Lee, Leon Leggett, Willary
Luckeydoo, Tina Massie, Beverly
Matney, Unda McGowan, Mica he!
Morgan, Jessica Murray, Janet Northup, Rebecca Oiler, Shannon Pierce, Jo Ann Reed, Mrs. Granville
Smith and daughter, Leah Van
Maire, Cathleen Wade, Eugene
Wess.
DISCHARGES FEB.I6
Anastasia Adkins, Ricky Bailey,
Olga Beckley, Gloria Bickle, Luther
Boles, Betty Brenson, Jeremy
Browning, Tollison Burleson, Mrs.
Calvin Carter and daughter, Vera
Clark, Nathan Cremeans, Wallace
Damewood, Mrs. Robert Davis and
daughter, Charles Exline, Ricky
Exline, David Fields, William
Gibeau!, Genieve Guthrie, Carl Had·
dox, Dencie Hatfield, Ebner Hill,
Jeremy Hupp, Tabitha Jarvis, Ribcard Jeffers, Marlene Johnson,
Loren King, Cheryl Knight, Mary
Layne, Mrs. John Lewis and son,
Nora McKeen, Amanda Mercer,
Gilbert Miller, Samuel Morris, Ruth
Nichols, Ann Packer, Mrs. Billy
Petrie and son, Nancy Pierce,
Suzanne Rupert, Leanna Sanders,
Charles Stevens, Jessica Thomas,
Mrs, Danny Thompson and son,
Gary Watson, Jason Wells, Mark
White, Gertrude Wickline,
Frede rice Zuspan.
DISCHARGES FEB. 17
Goldie Crace, Ethel Candee, Gary
Fenderbosch, Joseph Games, Ed·
ward Jackson, Anna Keller, Brian
Knotts, William Maynard, Mary
Walburn.
BffiTHS
Mr. and Mrs, Kim Bates, son,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. James
Fridenmaker, son, Wellston.

Tobacco
(Continued from page I)
cent from last year.
-If approved by the necessary
two-thlrs majority, quotas will be in
effect on 1980, 1981 and 1982 crops.
-If not approved there would be
unlimlted production and no price
supports.
County ASCS offices will send out
Individual farm quo notices .lor the
1!1110 crop and b8Uots to all known
producers. Ballots should be returned to all eounty offices on or before
~ebruary 29.
SQUAD CALLED
'The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to 128 Ebenezer St., at
4:,44) p.m. Sunday for Bill White, a
medical patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 7:26 ,
a.m. Monday, the !!Quad went to
Co\tnty ~d 18 for Asa Hoskins, a
mediad patient.· He was also taken
tD Veterans Memorial Hospital.
l

Area deaths
LESS IE G. SLEETH
Miss Lessie G. Sleeth, 84,
Charleston, W.Va., formerly of
Mason, died Sunday morning in the
Charleston General Hospital.
Born Jan. 27, .1896 at Spencer,
W.Va., Miss Sleeth was a retired
school teacher, having taught for 44
years in the Mason and Roane Coun·
ty School Systems. She was a
graduate of Marshall University.
Preceding her in death were her
parents, Henry and Nora Riddle
Sleeth.
Surviving are three sisters, Mrs.
Lucy Harrison, Clifton, Miss Ivy
Sleeth, Charleston, and Mrs, Thelma
McCoy, Belpre, Ohio; and two
brothers, 0. Forest Sleeth,
Charleston, and Virgil L. Sleeth,
Huntington.
Funeral services will be Tuesday
at 1:30 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason with Dr.
John Wildman officiating, Burial
will follow in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 4-7 p.m. today.
MARY K. BRITrAIN
Mrs. Mary K. Brittain, 93, Colum·
bus, formerly of the Coolville area,
died Monday morning at the Whet-'
stone Convalescent Center in Colum·
bus following a lengthy illness.

Special '79 extension service report in today's edition

Mrs. Brittain was born in Athens
County, a daughter of the late James
and Elizabeth Fairbanks Chute. She
had been a resident of Columbus for
the past 20 years and was a member
of the Oakwood United Methodist
Church in Columbus.
Surviving are three sons, Arthur
Kibble, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Andrew
Kibble, Rock Bridge, and Charles
Struckman, Phoenix, Ariz.; a
daughter, Mrs. Donald (Ethel)
Bope, Columbus; two sisters, Lura
Bond, Lancaster, and Allie Burke,
Reynoldsburg, 15 grandchildren and
several great- grandchildren.
Mrs. Brittain was preceded in
death by three husbands, Herbert
Kibble, Charles Struckman and
Jack Brittain, and a son, Francis
Kibble.
FWieral services will be held at I
p.m. Thursday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with the Rev.
Lester B. Woosley officiating.
Burial will be in the We¥therby
Cemetery near Coolville. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime after noon on Wednesday.

/;•

e
(USPS 1~5 -960)

Iranian •.•
(Continued from page I)
later in the week for Tehran.
Waldheim preswnably will brief the
panel before it leaves.
White House spokesmen have
refused to comment on the reported
makeup of the U.N. commission, but
they said the administration felt
some positive developments had occurred.
U.N. diplomats had said earlier
the commission would consist of five
lawyers, from Bangladesh, .Algeria,
France, Syria and Venezuela. But
the chosen member from
Bangladesh, fonner President Abu
Sayeed Chowdhury, was Ill and
Waldheim had to find a substitute,
the sources said.
He chose a lawyer from Sri Lanka,
H.W. Jayewardene, 63, Sri Lanka's
Foreign Ministry reported !allay.
J ayewardene is the younger brot:1er
of Sri Lanka's president, Juni,IS
Richard Jayewardene.
The other commission membel'll
have been identified by diplomats as
Algerian U.N .. . Amba~ador
Mohamed Bedjaoui, former Pans
Bar Association President Edmond
· Lo~ Pettit!, Syrian presidential
aide Adib Daoudy and former
Venezuelan Justice Minister Andres
Aguilar.
In another development, the
lawyer representing the Iranian·
regime In its effort to extradite the
shah fro'm Panama said he e~pected
the ex-monarch to be arrested shortly and predicted that formal
proceedings against him eould begin
within twQ weeks.

at

A resolution providing for levying for the store in Pomeroy by the
a charge for businesses and residen- police ·department.
ts receiving special services from
Dr. Harold Brown, councilman,
the Pomeroy Police Department reported on a safety meeting held
was passed when Pomeroy Village · recently . He stressed the imCouncil met in regular session Mon- portance that pay for police officers
be placed at a level to be competitive
day night.
According to the resolution, with other positions.
businesses and homes having
Council agreed to purchase safety
burglar alann hookup systems with equipment for the police department
the police department wUJ be at an approximate cost of $56().
charged $100 a year for the services
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Anwhich are required from the police drews was authorized to seek plans
department as a result of the and a cost estimate on a new village
hall which would be constructed at
systems.
It was also agreed that the Kroger the site of the present village hall. It
Co. will be assessed a charge of $100 was reported that Mayor Andrews
a year for special services provided has one estimate for $120,000 at the

I!

REACHING FOR VICTORY in the New Hampshire primary, George
Bush takes part in a YMCA class in aerobic exercise. Such events are
common in the Bush campaign, although the 5S-year-old candidate insists
he is not trying to draw a comparison between himseH and &amp;~year-old
Ronald Reagan.

I

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

present time but the figure does not
include tearing down of the present
building.
Harry Evans, who is serving as investment advisor for the village, advised council to invest $40,000 of
inactive funds in money market certificates and $50,000 of inactive funds
in treasury bills. Evans will advise
the council on investments each
month.
A contract was entered into with
Tower Electronics for the repair of
all village owned radio equipment.
Acting Police Chief Harry Lyo!lll
was requested to secure a new
listing of motor vehicle license num·
bers.

Chief Lyons thanked residents for
their cooperating in clearing
unlicensed and unregistered motor
vehicles from village streets,
Chief Lyons commended officers
who have worked overtime while
other officers have been ill . Council
approved the January report of
Mayor Clarenoe Andrews showing
receipts of $301l.25 in fines and fees.
Attending the session were Mayor
Andrews, Clerk-Treasurer Jane
Walton, council members, Betty
Baronick, Dr. Brown, Bill Young,
Rod Karr, Larry Wehrung, Chief
Lyons, Henry Werry, Tom Werry
and Pam Ganen of the police department.

45 units collected Monday

ELBERFELD$

Vaughan becomes 14 gallon donor

New Shipment#

Forty-i!lght persona reported to an
American Red Cross Bloodmobile at
the Pomeroy Elementary School
Monday to contribute 45 pints of
blood to the Meigs Blood Program.
Dr. L. D. Telle and Dr. E. S.
VIllanueva were medical super·
visors and Ferndora Story was the
nurse. American Legion Post 128,
Middleport, was in charge of the
canteen with Mrs. Albert Roush as

CHILDREN'S
JEANS
-Fashion jeans, straight
legs and flairs
-Oiue denim and fashion
colors
-Slims and regulars
-Little boys' sizes Toddler
thru 7
-Girls' st~es Toddler thru
14

chainnan,

Clerical workers included Mary
Nease, Jean Nease, Martha Lou
Beegle, Joyce Hohack, Beulah

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

\)

RED, WHITE AND BWE - Pomeroy was red, white and blue Monday when PreSident's Day was ·obllerved in the community. Pomeroy
Chamber of. CommerCe· President Paul Simon is )lictyred at one of the
mAny locations In the business section where flags were placed in observance of the holiday by the Pomeroy-Middleport Uons Club. Public of·
flees, hanks and post offices were closed for the day.

Hundreds protesting lines
·'

Get a tax break
·-.
for 1979·
,):.."

GORHAM, N.H. (AP) - . With a week to go to the' Democratic
presidential primary election in New Hampshire, the White House and
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy agree on two points - President Carter Is
ahead, but Kennedy is gaining. .
·
Beyond that, there is little agreement as both sides maneuver In an
apparent effort to lower public expectations in hopes of avoidlpg an
embarrassment when the votes are counted.

~

Open an I.R.A.
at the Farmers Ba:Dk.
' •

~

' If

Skyride will be closed
KINGS MIW, Ohio (AP)- Officials at Kings Island have decided

to close the skyride on which 45 persons were stranded above the
amUsement park In 1977.
Tile fide, wboee 47 gondolas traveled 95 feet above the park, will be

•

diBmantied before the park reopeiiS on April 12, park offlclala said.
They said the closing was Caused by the need for costly and hard-toobtain parts.
.
Park General Manager William Price said the high cost of the parts
wasn't worth the-expense.
·

An Individual Retirement A~count lets you
'
.'
· save for your future, while getting a tax break
now.
· ·1/ .. ·
, ' . I •'

Federal ReJulations require a IU.blbin\iiJ ·
in\ere1t penalty for eub wlthdrawal un
aavinP cerUfkatea.

Farmers
'

MIDDLEFIELD, Ohio (AP) -Hundreds of Geauga County fanners
and homeowners have flocked to public hearings to protest plans foc
345,®volt power tralli!Diisslon lines on lands including areas where
Amlah fainllies reside.
'The Ohio Power Siting Commislon conducted two public hearings
Mond!ly in Middlefield and listened to many emotional arguments
against plamed construction of a 52-mile line that would link the
Cleveland Eleetrlc ,ruwntnating Co.'s Perry nuclear plant In North
Perry with an Ohio Edison substation In Rootstown Township.
A l~foot-wide corridor of towers would pass through parts of six
townships, including aboullOO Amish fanns, in eastern Geauga County.

President ahead, Kennedy gaining

.• '01rit·

/'f:~

Revelers flocking for last day ·
. '
.

Bank·
Pomeroy, o.
Member FDIC

Strauss, Emma K. Clatworthy, Lura
Swiger, · Lulabelle Hampton,
Virginia Buchanan and. Vernon
Nease. Retired Senior Citizens
Volunteers working included Dick
Karr, Grace. Turner, Bernadine
Meier, Clarence struble and Alice
Struble.
Of the 48 reporting to give blood, 13
gave replacement blood and six
were first time donors.
George L, Harris, Jr., Middleport,
became a one gallon donor and Leo
L. Vaughan of Pomeroy became a 14
gallon donor.

Beeferendum vote underway

..'

'

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1980

Special services fee levied

SQUAD CAJ.J..ED
The Syracuse ER Squad was
called Sunday at midnight to
Maplewood Lake for Danny Dodson.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through Friday: A
chance of showers eacb day,
possibly cbanglng lo anow
fiurrfes In llle north Friday.
Highs from tbe upper tGe to tbe
upper 50s Wedll,esday aJid Thursday and li'olil'th\l iiCiit In tbe north
and west to tile tGe In tM
soutbeaal Friday. Lows from the
30s Wedaetday aa4 . Thw'lday
monlup lo the Z8e Friday.

enttne

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WICHITA, Kan. (AP)- U.S. cattiemen, some saying they want to
build a war chest to fight those who
would "remon.meat from the table
of the American consumer," begin
voting today on a program to raise
an estimated $40 mlllion to promote
the virtues of beef.
"We have a delicious, nutritious
product to brag about, promote,
research and defend,' says Bill Amstein, a ~on, Kan., rancher. "If
this program is adopted, the money
will be available to do all this and

more."

fiscal year during the organization's
monthly m~eting at Holzer Medical
Center were Luther Tucker, vice
president and Lester Plymale,
secretary-treasurer.
Committee assignments were:
Membership, Luther Tucker;
public relations, Mary Jane Ten·
nant; security and traffic, Curt
Miller ; communications, Fred
Edelmann; material assistance,
Gary Moyler; risk evaluation, Herman Lynch; special service Jerry
Well and medical care, Scott Lucas,
Plans were made to hold a joint
spring disaster drill with the local
hospitals, Holzer Hospital, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Veterans Hospital,
and Gallipolis' Development Center.
'The disaster area will be a
simulated chemical explosion at the
Ohio Electric Co.'s Gavin Plant,
Cheshire, on Ml!y 15, at 2:30p.m.
Charles Adkins hosted the
meeting. Attending were:
Silas J, Hamilton, Philip Ball;
Luther Tucker, Wayne Dutton, Steve
Schumacher, Ray Wedemeyer, Eddie Fisher, Charlie Huber, Charles
Adkins, Lester Plymale, Jerry Well,
Jerry Thompson, Dave Martin, Inez
Howes, Mary Jane Tennant,
Eleanor Strange, Angela Me·
Causland, Scott Lucas and H. P.
Kirkel.

•

In Pomeroy Village

Ball to head Mid Ohio Valley group
Phil Ball was recently elected
president of the Mid-Ohio Valley Industrial Emergency Planning Council.
Other officers elected for the 1980

VOL. XXVIII NO. 216

wre~ks

There was heavy damage to the
McCully auto, slight damage to the
McDaniel and Fuller vehicles. No
citation was issued.
The patrol was called to the scene
of a tw&lt;&gt;-vehicle accident on SR 554,
at SR 160, at 10 a.m.
Officers report an east bound auto
driven by Frank Mullins, 57, Bidwell, had stopped at the intersection.
An east bound vehicle operated by
Collis Adkins, 48, Vinton, was unable
to stop and struck the Mullins auto in
the rear.
Mullins claimed injury and was
transported to HMC for treatment.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage.
The patrol investigated a twovehicle collision on Lincoln Pike, at
CR38,at2:10p.m.
Officers report a north bound auto
operated by Florence Hardesty, 3!,
Gallipolis, and a south bound vehicle
driven by Bradley Harder, 47,
Ewington, collided. Harder was
cited on a charge of left of center.
Hardesty claimed Injury and was
transported to HMC for treatment.
There was heavy damage to the Har·
desty auto, moderate damage to the
Harder vehicle.
The patrol was called to the scene
of a one-vehicle accident on U.S. 35,
lw&lt;&gt;-tenths of a mile east of SR 325, at
8:51p.m.
Officers report a west bound auto
operated by Seaman Jenkins, 24,
Rodney, ran off the roadway and
struck a tree.
Jenkins displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported to HMC
for treatment. There was heavy
damage to the vehicle.

•

NEW ORLEANs (AP) - Mardi Gras revelers are flocking to the
f~bled Frencll Quarter today to celebrate the last. day before the
Christian Lentiln ~ with a street !liiiW as Indulgent as it's name
lmpllee-P'atTuelday.
. ·
,
·
Authorities ilesl8ned the day's celebration to accomodate an
estimated i Jiillliqn pet'IIOill.
.
:Forthli ·last two weekS~ It hu been Cai-olv81 in'thls' Old river toWn, as
the."kre1Jes" - , baltl0118 of both High Society hautlneaa and nouveau
rlche presumptlQII -r biV!! geared'~ for the big night. · ,
The matrons and 'patroos of New Orleans soelety have been cJam.
bmng 8boenl Jll!rade floats to toss Hong Kong plastic beada and
aluminum·
doub'loons
to ' the
hoi
·polloi.

The program initially would permit catUe ranchers to contribute 20
cents per $100 of beef sold, and the
U.S. Agriculture Department
estimates about $40 mlllion would be
raised.
'The money would go for beef
research, promotion and foreign
market development. Advocates say
a principle objective is to promote
the nutritional virtues of beef and
combat "anti-meat propaganda."
Since the assessment amounts to
only two tenths of a percent of the
catUeman's reven!Je for beef sales,
the direct impact on consumer

prices would be minuscule.
However, success in building
demand for more red meat eould
drive up the price otbeef even flJI'o
ther. Govenunent ·experts expect
prices to rise 10 percent to 12 percent
this year.
The Agriculture Department said
last week that cattle producers, who
trimmed herds severely for four
years, have finally begun to rebuild
their herds, but It will be several
years before beef supplies gain
signlficanUy.
Cattlemen in all 50 states voted in
a so-called "beeferendum" in 19'77.
Fifty-six percent favored an
assessment to fund a promotional
program, but that was short of the
two-thirds vote required for
passage, This year, only a simple
majority is needed.
About 287,000 of the nation's
nearly two mlllion cattlemen have
registered for this week's voting,
begiMing today and continuing
through Friday at Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Service offices. Anyone owning one
animal in 1979 WI)S eligible to
register.

Donors by community Included:
James R. Couch, Lewis Harper,
Raymond Reuter, Mary L. Starcher,
Lura R. Swiger, Robert Vaughan,
Mary K. Spencer, Billy J. Spencer,
Dorothy J Oliver, Rowena Vaughan,
Virgil K. Windon, William L.
Buckley, Marvin Taylor, William
Radford, Ann Lambert, Leo
Vaughan, Pomeroy; William David·
son, Phyllis Edwards, Dorothy
Sayre, Racine; Alberta Hubbard,
Willard L, Roush, Robert Rhodes,
Syracuse; Stacie Arnold, Doris M.
Grueser, Carolyn Charles, Miner·

sville; Martha Hanel, Joyce V. Bartrum, Faye Wallace, Debra J. Carder, Timothy King, Judith K. Hunter, Robert V. King, Freda Durham,
Martha Nicholson, George Harris,
Jr., Sandra Taylor, Middleport;
Kathy D. Stone, Long Bottom;
Cletus Harder, Donna Davidson,
Rutland; Joseph White, Cheshire;
Richard Barton, ReedsviJle;
William Myers, Langsville ; Mary
Haning, Albany; Sharon Welker,
George Nicinsky, Hemlock Grove;
Clovie Brown, Paul Brown,
Ewington.

Flu epidemic closes
Mason Schools
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. Mason County schools will be
closed the remainder of the week
because more than 20 percent of
the county's students were absent
yesterday.
Similar action was taken in
Hampshire County, and other
West Virginia counties were wat·
ching the number of students and
staff who are suffering from in·
fluenza .
"That's better than a fifth of
our total school population. It
seems pretty well spread through
all our schools,'' Brewster said.
County health officer Richard
Slack had to agree to close the
schools. After exammmg
Friday's and Monday's absentee
counts, he agreed to let the
superintendent close the schools,

Brewster said.
Flu epidemics had previously
closed two other area districts,
Athens and VInton County.
"We're going to be shut down
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thur·
sday. Friday's our bond election,
so we'd be shut down anyway,"
Superintendent Jerry Brewster
said by telephone yesterday.
Monday's absentee count
showed 1,133 students, 44
teachers and seven auxiliary employees absent, Brewster 'f&amp;id, up
from Friday's count •c:l 982
students and 30 staff.
The school closing has also led
to the cancellation of tonight's
Wahama-North Gallia basketball
game and Friday's non-league
clash against SVAC champion
Southern,

Khomeini transfers power to Bani-Sadr
The Carter administration has
The Associated Press
been
anxious .to resolve the crisis,
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was
and
the
Parl&amp;-based station Radio
reported today to have transferred
Luxembourg
reported today that
his post as commander In chief of
Iranian
Foreign
Minister Sadegh
Iran's · anned forces to President
Ghotbzadeh
was
believed
to have
Abohassan Bani-&amp;ldr. The move
met
with
Carter's
chief
of
staff,
stirred speculation Bani-&amp;ldr might
in
Paris
on
MonHamilton
Jordsn,
move troops to the u.S. Embassy in
day
,
Tehran to replace the mllltanta who
Jordan has been reported actively
took some 50 Americans hostage 108
involved in the negotiations to try to
days ago.
free the hostageil. However, U.S.
The increase in Banl-&amp;ldr's
Embassy officials in Paris declined
authority was reported by Tehran
to confirm or deny the report. "We
Radio, which quOted the ailing, 7~
have been put under strict Inyear-old ayatollah as staling the' apstructions
not to discuss anything
pointment was aimed at "con·
about
the
negotiations at this
solldaling power in Iran at this
delicate
stage,"
one official said.
critical moment." This was an apThe
Iranian
Embassy
also would
parent reference to the militants
not
give
any
details
of
G))otbzadeh's
who have rejected the latest plan to
meetll!gs in Paris saying he was on a
ease the hostage crisis as a "U.S.
"private vislt" and would return to
plot."
Tehran tonight. However, French
Banl-&amp;ldr's escalation to the chief
lawyer Edmond Pettit! Is on~ of the
of Irlill's anned forces gave blm the
members of the U.N. commission,
muscle not only to end the embassy
and
there was sp4!CIIiation he was
Crisis, but to put down ethnic unrest
among
those Ghotbzadeh conferred
In Iran, particularly in northwest
.
with.
Kurdestan, where Kurdish rebels
A . well·inf&lt;lfllled IIOUI'ce at the
have been hatuing the central goverUnited
Nations said members of the
nment for more autonom,y,
commission will arrive in :rehran .
'The 1ncreilse In hi8 authority came
Wednesday .. 'The source, who
aa a U.N. eomrnls8lon prepared to
decilned to be Identified, said
fly to :rehran to investigate the
regime's charges ·against Shah hopefully freedmp would come for
the Americaps within a week after
''Mo~ R.era Pahlavl, the
the live-member commlsaion's
monarch ousted by Khomeinl's
arrival.
Islamic forces 13 months ago:' Bott
The source ·said two of the comsides have agreed to the'members·of
mission
members, Mohllmmed Bedthe commission, whose Inquiry
jaoui,
the
U.N. ambassador from
presuma!&gt;ly will speed the release of
Algeria,
and·
Andres Aguilar,
the Americans.

Venezuela's former ambassador to proved the commission. The Post
Washington, were leaving New York also said Khomeini, convalescing in
aboard a Concorde supersonic a Tehran hospital from a heart atjeUiner this afternoon to fly to Paris, tack, would address his nation taler
this week, possibly Friday.
where they would be met by ~ettiti.
The Islarnlc militants who seized
'The source said the threll would fly
the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran Nov, 4
Wedneday ·to Geneva, where they
have
said repeatedly they would
would meet with the two other membl!rs, Hector W!lfnid Jayewardene, release the Americans only under
one of Sri Lanka's leading lawyers, orders from Khomeini, who has not
and Syrian career diplomat Adib publicly discussed the hostage crWs
Deoudy. The group would board a fora month.
Aspokesman for the militants told
charter plane to Tehran and arrive
the
Tehran correspondent of the
there later Wednesday, the source
Japanese
newspaper Yomluri that
said,
Khomeini
"and the Iranian Peo!lle
U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
are
sun
demanding
the extradition
Waldheim received Iran's acof
the
shah
and
the
return of his
ceptance of the commlsslon mem- ·
bers by telephone from Tehran Mon- assets" before the hostages are
day. He was sUll awaiting telexed released.
He then toughened the position by
~lrmation from · the Iranian
capital. When be gets It he Is to for- declaring there was "no need for the
U.N. to investigate the crimes of the
mally announce the names of comformer
shah" becauae "the United
mission members and its mandate.
Nations'
efforts to break the lmThe W&amp;hington Post quoted U.N.
)l888e
by
appointing
a five-member
diplomatic SO'!l'CfS as saying Banicommission
to
probe
lran's grievtmSadr was believed to have assured
(Continued on jlage 12)
Waldheim that Khomeini has a~

Woman's death self-inflicted
br. R. R. flckens, Meigs County
Coroner, following a week long
sheriff's department investigation,
haa ruled the death of Bonnie
Pickens, ·Middleport; was a result of
a self-Inflicted gunshot wound to the
head.
.
The Middleport Emergency SqlUJd
waa called ~ the Pickens home on

Route 124 at 7:16a.m. Tuesday,
Mrs. Pickens was taken to
Veterans Memorial ~osp.lla) and
waa being taken .to Parkersburg
when she died.
Dr. R. R. Pickens was witb the
squad Wben ·the attempt tO take ll(rL
Pickens to st. Joseph HOjfllltalmade. -,i .
,
.
1

�'

\

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1980

2- Th&lt;

€'TfA

Dally Senllncl , Mlddlcpurt ·l'nntl'rov , 0 , Tuesday. Feb. 19, 1980
ft:Jiil' ~ '&gt;~TEtEG~A'"'- N .(.R C:..

In Washington

1-\lllME

"I'd like to quit, but it's one of the few pleasures I have left."

Today"s commentary:
By Don Graff
Whatever became of detente
would appear to be an eaSily enough
an!iwc red

qu es tion,

po s t

Afghanistan.
It went thataway. But surprisingly, a few pockets of East-West
di sengagement appear to be surviv·
! II ~ .

One is in Vi enna, where representatives of NATO and the Sov1et·bloc
Warsaw Pact recently met as
scheduled for another g&lt;&gt;-around on
mutual reduction of forces in Cen·
· tral Europe.
Nothing came of it, of course. But
the mere fact that it took place at all
could be considered an accomplish·
ment in the present chilly at·
mosphere.

For the record, the Soviets and
their satellites continue to balk at
NATO's proposal for Initial
Withdrawal 30,000 Russians and
13,000 Americans. The discrepancy
IS jl1, tified, I'ATO argues, because
the Amencan forces have to ·
withdraw a much greater distance.
Besides, it is suspected that the
Soviets actua lly have more troops in
the area than they acknowledge.
So much for Vienna. Next
meeting, same place, later this year
- may be .
Meanwhile, in neutral Switzerland
there has been an even more interesti ng development. After
boycotting the Geneva Disarma·
ment Conference for 18 years , the
Ctunese suddenly showed up.

~ime

They di d not, however, merely slip
into the seats long reserved for
them. Deputy Foreign Minister
Zhang Wenjin took the opportunity
to deliver a rhetorical haymaker to
the Sov1et Union, accusing it of
" fraudulent" exploitation of detente
to further an aggressive, expan·
sionist policy.
None of this is new, of course. The
Chinese have been publicly accusing
the Soviets of this and much worse
for years. But tough talk is not the
way of the Geneva negotiations,
which have taken on somewhat the
character of an old-boys club. Direct
political attacks, as the affronted
Soviet delegate responded, are not
according to the rules · presumably
along with such other behavior as
whispering during speeches and
passing notes.
If it was any consolation, the
Soviets were not the only target. The
Chinese critique also impUed U.S.
c-ollusion in blocking real progress in
arms reductiOn and put Peking on
record as rejecting any agreement
that might be worked out between
Wastungton and Moscow rather than
negotiated by the entire conference.
Well!
The Geneva conferees have been
trying to coax the Chinese into their
discussions for almost two decades.
Now that they have them, there may
be reason to question exactly what it
is they've got.
Among other lhmgs, it could be a
new approach to all the American

Dealing
Peking In
and Soviet dithering of late over the
playing of Chinesee cards. That may
all turn out to be beside the pi&gt;int
since the Chinese seem to prefer br·
inging their own deck when they join
a game.

Are you ready for this?
Or to make the question more to
the point, are Russians ready for it?
It is pizza. A Soviet newspaper has
disclosed , that two establishinenls
devoted to the delicacy that swept
out of Italy to conquet the West are
about to open in Moscow.
Breaking the news was easy
enough. But informing Russians ex·
actly what pizza is proved the really
tough part - at least until Soviet
customers bite into their first crusts.
Translated into readily
understood local tenn.s, a pizza
emerges as a cake covered with
sauce,

greens,

cheese

similar to sharp varieties from the
Caucasus and pieces of ham or fish,
all baked for a few minutes in a
super-hot oven - of Yugoslav
manufacture in the case of those being installed in Moscow's new pe&lt;&gt;ple's pizza parlors.
Well, given a decent \\'arm-up
peMod and the Soviet public's in·
satiable interest in things Western,
detente or not, it may catch on.
But meanwhile, please change
that order to one borsht, please.

issue touchy situation ·

; WASIUNGTON (AP) - Nothing
4fouses congressional fury like
~ggestions that lawmakers spend
loo much lime in recess, except
P&lt;&gt;ssi bly efforts to cut back some of
C1a t time off.
' The decision by House leaders to
;,ork most of last week, while the
Senate was off, generated con·
Siderable grumbling in the House.
; Rep. Bill Frenzel, R·Minn., even
!!aged a protest on the House noor,
obj ecting to routine motions and
~emandin g roll-call votes on non·
~ontroversial bills to dramatize his
. anger with House leaders.
: Working last week, when he had
expected to be back in his district,
!lad messed up his schedule, he
asserted .
Frenzel said that, while "I do not
qbjcct to meeting · when it is
·necessary," he felt the HollSe was
meeting jllSt for cosmetic purposes
tl&gt; make it appear busier than it was.
:"Everything the House does has
~me importance but last week's

schedule had no urgency and no
great importance," Frenzel said.
"This week's schedule has even less
urgency and I understand that next
week's schedule is pretty thin, too."
By now, most of the House has
gone along with HollSe Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill's banishment of
the word "recess" from the
congressional lexicon. "District
work period" is the preferred
description.
Sen. Bob Packwood, R.{)re., the
speaker at a recent GOP dinner, had
difficulty getting his audience's attention. Clearing his throat a few
times didn 't do it.
So he tMed a different approach.
"And that's why both Ronald
Reagan and George Bush dropped
out of the Republican presidential
race today," he said in a loud, clear
voice.
And instantly he had a captive
audience.

.M edals race two-way affair

Confounding
Carter tactics

nuclear weapons, stressing human
Mghts and reducing foreign military
sales.
All three considerations were
crucial elements in the Carter ad·
ministration's mid-1977 decision to
abandon the proposed sale of 110 A-7
attack planes sought by Pakistan.
1be president last year cut off all
military a)ISistance to Pakistan
because that nation refused to allow
international inspection of a nuclear
research program suspected of being designed to produce nuclear
weaponry.
··
The Carter administration also
has been critical of the hwnan rights
policies of Pakistani President
Mohammed Zia uHJaq, an army
general wbo seized power in a 1977
military coup, now rules under mar·
tialla w and repeatedly has postponed promised parliamentary elections to instal! a civilian govern·
ment.
Similarly, Carter earlier pledged
to reduce tbe United States' role as
the world's leading anns merchant
because "competition in arms sales
is inimical to peace."
But Pakistan isn't the only country
to benefit from a resurgence in
munitions trade. During the past
year, the Carter administration has
expanded its sale of everything from
small arms to jet fighters
throughout the Middle East -the
one region of the world where Carter
earlier str\l5Sed the need for political
I
stabilization.

Beneficiaries of a vastly expanded
military aid program have included
not only the powerful nations of the
region - Israel, Egypt and Saudi
Arabia - but also lesser-developed
countries such as Oman and North
Yemen.
• Other examples abound. Demil·
itarization of the Indian Ocean was a
goal propounded in Carter's State of
the Union message only two years
ago. Today, approximately two
d&lt;nen United States warships and an
equal number of Soviet military
vessels are stationed in the Indian
Ocean or the adjoining Persian Gulf.
During the 1976 presidential cam·
paign, Carter proposed a $15 billion
cut in defense spending, then scaled
that down to a reduction of $5 billion
to $10 billion. He has just offered a
1981 federal budget calling for an increase of more than $15 billion in
military appropriations.
Finally, there's the central issue
of relations with the Soviet Union.
1be man who four·years ago said we
should "continue our friendly relationships with Russia" now says that
nation's invasion of Afghanistan
"could pose the most seMollS threat
to peace sine~ the Second World

War."
One thing, however, has remained
constant - tbe validity of an observation Carter offered in a March
1976 speech, during the last
presidential campaign : " Our
foreign policy today is in greater
disarray than at any time in recent
history."

Fi11ing station lines disappearing

And now a note on
cultinary detente

tomato

By Ro.,..rt Wallen
WASIUNGTON (NEA)- Will the
real President Carter please stand
up?
Is he t_he "dove" on tbe left side of
tbe table wbo for years has been
shaping a foreign policy emphasiz·
ing detente, human rights, nuclear
nonproliferation; reduced defense
budgets and global demilitaMzalion ]
Or is. he the "hawk" on tbe Mght
side of the table who now is issuing
ultimatwns to the Soviet Union,
shipping arms around the globe,
calling for renewed draft registration and proposing massive increases in defense spending?
In the wake of the crises in Iran
and Afghanistan, Carter has con·
founded fliend and foe alike by sud·
denly deemphasizing - if not swn·
maMly abandoning - virtually all of
the principles he finnly articulated
and aggressively promoted as the
foundation of his foreign policy dur·
ing his first three years in the White
House.
One of the most striking examples
of the president's sudden policy
reversal is his administration's deci·
sion to offer $400 million worth of
military and economic aid to the
government of Pakistan during the
next two years.
The Soviet invasion of Mghani.stan
provided the geopolitical rationale
for that action, but Carter's move
meant ignoring three touchstones of
his earlier foreign policy ••
discouraging the proliferation of

The FBI's "Abscam" bribery
scandal has spawned some in·
leresting statements from members
of Congress, including Rep. Paul
Simon, D-Ill., who says
congressional ethics aren't as bad as
they seem.
To bolster his argument, he dug
deep into history to note that Daniel
Webster, who served in the Senate in
the 1830s and 1840s, once "openly
wrote to a railroad company that if it
did not send him his check, he would
not introduce their bill."
"Today he probably would be
thrown out of the Senate for that, or
at least censured," Simon observed.
And while he conceded that "the
public may have a hard time
believing" that ethical standards
are improving, Simon quoted the
late Sen. Paul Douglas of filinois as
once telling him: ":rile Senate today
is a much better body ethically than
when I served there.''

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - 1be
long lines at Ohio filling stations
have disappeared, but the state
agency charged with tracking fuel
supplies and filling hardship
requests for more gasoline has found
it is an expensiv_e process.
Administration of the state's
gasoline set-aside program, created
by federal law in 1973 after the Arab
oil boycott, wound up in the stale
Energy Department in December,
1977.
It had originally been a child of the
old Energy Emergency Commission
befor.e creation of the cabinet-level
energy department, communications chief Charles D. Morris
said.
Five percent of the state's monthly gasoline allocation is set aside
by suppliers for allocation during
periods of shortages to avoid har·
dships.
Distribution of the fuel on a "fair
and equitable" basis is the agency's
responsibility.
After detennlning supplies are
adequate for essential services, such
as fire, police and ambulance, the
remaining amount can be allocated
fo~ the motoring public which buys
through 19,000 service stations.
Only one person was needed to
handle the relatively low volwne of

hardshjp requests when the energy
department took over the program.
"But beginning about December,
1978, we began getting pretty sizable
increases in the nwnber of applications to the set aside," Morris
said.
The work was spread among
existing personnel for the first month, but then a deluge of "thousands
of applications a month" hit and the
department started hiring extra
help.
Seven full time staffers are now
employed to act on 1,200 to 1,500
requests a month.
"We seldom bave eough to give
everybody aU they 115ked for,"
Morris said.
"We look at the amount of gasoline
available by supplier and make the
judgment call on how much we can
give ... and still mainta:" the fair
and equitable mandate we have in
the law," he said.
Originally, the department was
able to pay for the operation out of
its general revenue fund. "But it was
never anticipated that we would
have those kinds of expenses,"
Morris said.
The agency recently won state
Controlling Board approval to . llSe
$192,822 in emergency funds to cover
costs of operating the allocation of-

lice durtng 1979 and for the first six
months of this year.
Almost all prime suppliers are
still allocating dealers less than
their previous ~ear's gasoline supply, but there has been no shortage
for motorists.
"Drivers in Ohio have reduced
consumption/' Morris said. "The
demand levels are ruruting right at
the supply levels. r,

said it was a fractional decline.
In other marked increases, sales
in the Akron and Canton areas were
up. Greater Canton retail sales increased 9 percent for the year while
sales in greater Akron rose 7 percent.
In other . metropolitan areas,
Hamilton-Middletown sales increased 4 percent, Portsmouth 6,
Cincinnati 3, Cleveland 3,
Youngstown 3, Colwnbus 2 and
Toledo fractionally.
Another yearly economic indicator showed inflation's effects.
Conswners in the state used Master

•

trols, and probably gained strength
by doing so. And there is the temptation of controls: Some wi.U view
them as evidence of fimmess and
decisiveness.
The campllS community, which
originates many campaign ideas,
may be adding to pressures. In the
past few weeks, several academic
economists almost apologetically
have advocated controls, while
saying they find them personally
distasteful and not to be continued
long.
The American experience with
controls is widely thought to be. adverse, even by Gardner ACkley;who
adniinistered ~m under President
Richard .Nixon.
But influential professors such as
,Robert Solow of Massachusetts In•atltute of Tedmology and Francis
Bator of HarVard are among those
who feel temporary controll mig!(
be needed and could be effective,
The decision is up to Cuter IIIII
Congress. 'Ehe\ ~·
adapt

t

'fled

By AlJsoclated Press
H anything, LaSalle basketball

I

Ervin made his remarks from fir·
st-hand observation Monday night
after watching the DePaul forward
score 40 points and grab 11 rebounds

Charge cards to spend $'1Tl million in
1979, an increase of 12.1 percent over
1978, according to statistics released
by the Cleveland-based processing
center BancSystems Association.
Retail sales volwne was up 16.6
percent in the first half of the year
over a COIDP11!'8ble 1978 tenn. But
the growth fell to 7.7 percent in the
third quarter and 9.3 in the fourth.
"Figures suggest that Ohio bank
card use is moderating in line with
the slowdown in the nation's overall
economy," Bane Systems President
Robert Golitz said.

Rio Grande College will end its
197M hardwood campaign at Lyne
Center tonight as Cedarville visits
Lyne Center for a Mid.{)hlo Conference battle.
Tipoff time will be 7:30p.m.
For the first time in many years,
the Redmen, 9-16 oo the y+ar and 5-7
In the conference, will not participate In the Mid.{)hio Conference

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Third
baseman Ray Knight and outfielder
Dave Collins are awaiting a decision
on their pay demands after
becoming the first players to _seek
arbitration with the Cincinnati Reds.
"I feel confident or I wouldn't
have gone to Ghlcago" for the
preaentatlQn before the arbritrator,
Knight said after returning late
Monday night.
I
.Neither Collins nor the 11\!gotiator
fer the two playeni, attorney Barry
Axelrod, waa available for coinmen!.
· l!oth playen became regulars last
season aa the Reds came from
behind to win the Natio'nai League
West title.
Knight rep~ced Pete Rose last

aeuon.

..

Stenmark knew that, too. He
rejected interviews after the first
race, saying simply, "I will talk with
you tomorrow."
Ullich Wehling of East Germany
also expected to hi! meeting with
reporters today. He was in good
position to win his third straight
Olympic gold medal in the Nordic
Combined, leading after the ski jwnping half of the competition.
That, too, would be a bit of Olympic history. No man has ever won
·thn!e Winter golds. Legendary
woman figure skater Sonja Henle of
Norway won golds in 1928, 1932 and
1936.
Wehling totaled 'l:J:/.2 points, but
the day belonged to Walter
Malmquist of the United States, who
finished second with 221.8. The
crowd of 20,000 at the Intervale
Mountain ski jwnp site rooted hlm
on with chants of "Wal-ter, Wal-ter,
Wal-ter." West Germany's Hubert
Schwarz was third with 219.6.
Despite his high standing,
Malmquist didn't figure to win ~ny
medals today because he is not as
strong in cross country skiing, the
second portion of the Nordic combined.
An American forejwnper, Mark
Johnson, broke three small bones in
his back when he took a spectacular
spill while testing the 70-meter ski
jwnp run. Johnson was taken to
Placid Memorial Hospital where he

Sa t , 2/1 6/80

team. Coach Gary Sheffield had at·
tempted to re-shuffle the makeup of
America's No. I sled team four days
before the start of competition but
was rebuffed by driver BQb Hickey .
'' Bob Hickey wanted to keep the
guys he had trained with all winter ,"
said Sheffield . "There's really no
dissension on the team. We wanted
to make sure we had the best people
in the start."
However, there was reported
resentment against Davenport by
other members of the team because
the ex-hurdler, a black man, had
gone home just be!ore the start of
the Games, preventing the
American No. I sled from working
out together, and because he
referred to bobsledders as "rich and
white" in a newspaper interview.
"That 'rich and white' stuff, that
really fried everybody's mind," said
Howard Siler, driver of America's
No.2 lour-man sled. "That fried my
mind. It's not true. It wasn't the
thing to say. We're not rich and we
have no racial problems here."

in the Blue Demons' 92-75 victory
over his team.
The supertor sophomore helped
the nation's top-ranked college
basketball team pull away with
some torrid second-half shooting
that included 12 straight points at
one stage. The explosive perfonnance built DePaul's lead from
one point to 70-57late in the game.
"The six-point play in the second
half (when Aguirre got a basket and
four free throws, including two
techriical ·shots) turned the , game
around," said DePaul Coach Ray
Meyer.
Added Meyer: "LaSalle's mat·
chup zone in the first half had us
standing around. So in the second
half I went back to the man-to-man
offense which freed Aguirre. While
Aguirre got a lot of shots, LaSalle
was trapped op defense because

they jllSt_couldn't cover our guar·
ds.''
Aguirre's great performance
overshadowed another fine game for
Brooks which earned him a special
niche in the LaSalle record books.
His 24 points helped hlm establish a
new school scoring record with 2,477
career points. That eclipsed the 2,462
of Gala, who led LaSalle to the
NCM championship in 1954.
In other games involving the
nation's ranked teams, No. 2
Louisviille defeated Virginia Tech
77-72 and 18th-ranked Arizona State
defeated UCLA !JUO.
Darrell Griffith scored 23 points,
including 15 in the second half, to
rally Louisville to its 18th straight
victory.
"I don't think we've played any
better," said Virginia Tech Coach
Charlie Moir of Louisville's 6-foot-5

,

Colllns, who bad been .a reserve
With the Reda &lt;for •t years, broke Into the starting lineup after the AllStar Game break following surgery
to veteran Ken Giifley.
Knl&amp;l!t waa voted the ~·s Moet
Valuabfe Player by the Cincinnati
~ of the . Baseball Wrltel'il
Allbclatlm ol America:
,

· Redl m.n.gement bad, no eomment Monday night conemung the
twoplayen' demands.
\

tournament.
Only the top four teams play for
the right to represent the conference
in the .NAIA district 22 tournament.
Rio, last year's regular season and
tournament champions are currently fifth in the standings.
Also, unlike last season when six
seniors played their last game on the
Rio tarten surface, the Cedarville
contest sees a Redmen team with no
graduating seniors.
Taking part in their last game
with the ~en, however, will be
four-year veteran manager Lawrence HugheS, of Cincinnati and
cheerleader Lynlta Newberry.
Cedarville has the conference's
leading scorer in Eric Mounts, who
is averaging 23.3 points per game.
All a team, Cedarville is second in
the conference in scoring, averaging
87.3 points per game.
Going Into the final home game
the Redmen are led In scoring by
sophomore Phil Washlrigton and
junior Tom Dorsey. Both are
averaging more than 13 points per

Top twenty
The

Ill' Tile Aloodat..t ......
Top Twenty teams In The AMociatod

Preoo collere bubtboll poll, with lint-place
vote. In porenu-, I'OCOI'CII and total polnll.
J'oYIIIbuedlin •·11·11·17 · 11 · 16·14 • 13·11·

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SYRACUSE

iiAR!U::;OJ..V I i.Li
Sun .
2/17
7o 00

BASEBALL

American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Signed Ron Pruitt,
ca..tcher, to a two-year contract, and Rick Waits,
Mike Paxton, Dan Spillner, Steve Narleski Rick.
Borchers, Todd Heimer and Lam McDtil pitd~ers, SHI Rende, in£ielder, and Del Alston.' outfielder , to one-year contracts.
TORONTO BLUE JA 't'S - Signed otto Velez,
outfielder, to a muJti-year contract.
BASKETBALL

LETART

2/17

Mouday'a Sports Tranu.ctiou
By The Auodated Prell !I

POll a. JiV ILS

SYRACUSE

Sat , 2/16/80
2 o00
POM.DEVILS

PORTLA ND

Wed.

Nat:Jonal Baaketblll Aasoclatloa

SAN DIEGO CUPPERS -

2/20
8115

Waived Steve

Malovic, center.
FOOTBALL
CID&amp;d.iaa Fooiball League
MONTREAL ALOUEITES - Named Art
Asselta, special team.s.t.·uach and ~iver coach,
and Joe Galat, defensive co-&lt;&gt;rdinator. An·
nounced the resignation of Nick Nicolau, backfield coach.

HOCKEY
National Hockey Leagut:

.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS - Traded Da\'e

SALISBURY
Sa t, 2jl6/80
J o15

11JPPERS PLAINS

TUF-l-ERS PLAINS

Consolation Game

'' Tlger' ' Wllliams and Jerry Butler, forwards, to
the Vancouver Canudts for Rick Vai\'e and Bill
Derlago, forw ards .

Thurs. 2/21 7o00

COLLF.GE
CORNELL - Named Tom Miller he8d bu.sket·
balleooeh.

guard who was playing his last
regular season home game at
Freedom Hall.
Seven-foot Alton Uster scored 21
po'ints, grabbed 15 rebounds and
blocked five shots, while freshman
guard Byron Scott hit 21 points to
lead Arizona State over UCLA.
Elsewhere, Bradley edged
Creighton 76-75; Cincinnati was a 7f&gt;.
70 winner over Loyola of Chicago;
Georgia Tech nipped Georgia 4().38;
Oral Roberst outscored Tulsa 88-86;
Davidson ended a six-game losing
streak by beating North CarolinaCharlotte 73-70; Marshall defeated
The Citadel 711-74 in overtime; South
Carolina turned back Boston University 83-76; SMU upset Arkansas 6258; Wichita State beat Drake 117104; Furman routed VMI 107·75 and
Florida stopped Jacksonville 60-55.

GAMES CANCELLED
Due to tbe flu epidemic In the
Mason County School District,
· loolgbt's Wabama-Nortb Gallia
basketball game and Friday's
Wabama at Southern game bave
been cancelled.

Jaycee tournament continues
double figures: K. Grueser led all
scorers with 14, M. Chancey and T.
Adams chipped in with 12 apiece.
Houdashelt led the Devils with six.
Jim Adams' boys JIOW play Tuppers Plains in the semi-finals Wednesday nigbtat8: 15.
In the first game, Letart Falls
moved into the semi-finals by
defeating the Pomeroy Cyclones, 2212. Wickline led all scorers with 7 for
Letart; Buffington paced the
Cyclones with 5.
Letart faces Racine at 7 Wednesday evening. 1be championship
game will be played Thursday at
8:15, and will be preceded by the
consolation tilt.

Syracuse Elementary continues to
roll along in the Meigs County
Jaycees Elementary basketball
tournament. Sunday night, they
knocked off the Pomeroy Devils, 4&amp;13.
Syracuse placed three men in
LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Boone
Tucky Buddy, after being pushed in·
to a stretch drive by jockey Marton
Calderon, won the $3,900 featured
eighth race at Latonia by a nose on
Monday night, covering the 5t
furlongs in I :07.
The winner paid $5.20, $3.60 and
$2.80. Double Gleam finished second
and returned $3.40 and $2.40, while
third-place Rose Empress paid
$3.80.
The 3-8 combination of Birthday
Queen and Triceps returned $126 in
the double and the crowd of 3,859
wagered $478,685.

PAR WEST
Arizona St. 92, UCLA 80
Ca!Homla 94, U.S. lnt'lllO
Montala Ill, Portland State 70
s. Colorado 74, Western St. 52

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AIJ...G~

TEAM

,_

I~

run.''

was reported .in good condition after
breaking the first, second and third
vertebrae at the base of his spine.
Petzold's gold in the women 's 10.
· ~ilometer cross country was
something of a surprise. The 24year-old medical student was timed
in 30:31.54 seconds to beat a pair of
Finns, Hilkka RiihivuoM and Helena
Takalo, who were timed in 30:3:i.05
and 30:45.25.
In figure skating, East German
Jan Hoffman held the lead over a
pair of Americans, Charlie Tickner
and David Santee, following the
compulsory portion of the men's
singles competition. World champion Vladimir Kovalev of the Soviet
Union withdrew and Russian team
officials said he had the nu.
The compulsories are worth 30
percent of the final score. The men's
singles event continued with the
short program today and will be
completed Thursday night.
Russia, the United States and
Sweden all remained undefeated in
the Olympic hockey tournament, but
the Soviets had quite a scare.
Trailing 2·1 with 5:01 to play, they
rallied on goals by Vladirnir Krutov,
Alexander Maitsev and Boris
Mikbailov in 1: 19 to defeat Finland
4-2. That averted what would have
been the first Soviet Olympic hockey
defeat in 12 years.
Buzz Schneider scored two goal as
the United States routed Romania 7·
2, while Sweden got three goals and
an assist from Mats Ahlberg to wipe
out winless Norway 7-1.
In Monday's other hockey games,
Canada shut out Japan (H), Holland
topped Poland 5-3 and
Czechoslovakia defeated West Ger·
manyll-3.
Meanwhile, a controversy cen·
tering around former hurdling
champion Willie Davenport sur·
fa~ed on the American bobsled

Cedarville
·at Rio
.
tonight in finale

Knight, Collins
await decision ·

Berry's World

position to reach for the Olympic
gold, one of the few Afpine prizes
that has escaped the three-time
World Cup champion.
Wenzel knew Stenmark wasn 't
finished .
"I think l can be a little faster
tomorrow," Wenzel said. ··I think I
can ski a little better, but it will be
hard to win. Stenmark is in a good
position to attack on his seco11d

Top ranked DePaul rips LaSalle,92-75

him. "

Price control pressure mounting
• NE W YORK (AP I - As prices
Cise and economic expansion fades
i)lto stagnation, the pressure on
~es iclenl Ca rter to impose wage,
~ri ce and credit controls grows
l!ronger.
"
; The president says he does .not
'ant them. His advisers say they do
II()( work. His anti-inflation coun!(elor, Alfred Kahn, says he will quit
?Jther than administer controls. No
t!i"ller, the pressure grows.
• The Producer Price Index rose 1.6
!ll!rcent in January, a leap that is
~und to raise the level of conwner
ill,flation. Credit 11!!8ge continues to
expand, even though some analysts
~d thought the limit was reached.
'The discount rate increase by the
&amp;¢era! Reserve Board, to 13 per$nt from 12 percent, is seen as anti"
~tlonary. But before It reduces
b)lslness activity it might actually
alld to price pressures.
::Political pressure also exists. Sen.
¥ward Kennedy, seeking to Wllleat .
" president, has advocar con-

LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP) - The
medals race has turned into a lw&lt;&gt;nation tug of war between East Germany and the Soviet Union, but tiny
Liechtenstein, a dot on the world
globe, had a chance to write some
Winter Olympic history of its own
today.
When -Andreas Wenzel, leader af·
ter the first heat of the men's giant
slalom, went after his medal today,
it gave Liechtenstein, a Western
European country with a population
of 20,000, a shot at its second medal
of these Games. The first, a silver in
the women's downhill, belongs to
Andreas' older sister, Hanni.
Never before in Olympic history
have a brother and sister both taken
Alpine medals borne.
Barbara Petzold's victory in Monday'sonlymedalevent, the women's
IO.kilometer cross country ski race,
gave East Germany its 12th medal
of these Games, one more than the
Soviet Union. The Russians lead in
gold 6-3. Austria, the United States
and Finlnnd are next in the medal
standings with four each.
Two of the American medals are
golds, both won by speed skater Eric
Heiden. He went after No. 3 of what
could develop into a five-medal
sweep today In the l,IJOO.meter race.
Heiden and his sister, Beth, were
supposed to be the top family act in
these Games, but Beth has finished
no better than fifth in her three races
so far, so the brother-sister spotlight
belongs instead to the skiing Wenzels·of little Liechtenstein.
Andreas was fastest in the first
beat of the giant slalom-Monday,
timed in I minute, 20.17 seconds
through the 56 ·gates of the frigid
1,354-meter Whiteface Mountain
course. Second was Hans Enn of
Austria, 1:20.31, but Sweden's
fabulous Ingemar Sterunark was
third at 1:20.49 and clearly in

Coach Lefty ErVin knows his lorwards. He's vitally aware of Tom
Gola's exploits at LaSalle in the
early 1950s. And for four years, he's
been coaching a pretty good one in
Michael Brooks.
So you have to listen when he talks
about DePaul's Mark Aguirre:
"He's sim· · y unstoppable and
does !hinge I have never seen any
other player do. When Aguirre gets
the ball, he is able to use his body to
push off and he·frees himself to shoot
those 15-foot jwnpers. And there's
no way we or anyone else can stop

Retail sales establish new record

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Retail
sales for 1979 and the month of
December both set state higlls, but
the records were expected by Ohio
State University officials who compiled the survey.
December sales were up 1 percent
over December 1978 levels, while a
full-year increase of 4 percent set
the annual high, according to
statistics from Ohio State's Center
for BllSiness and Economic Research.
"I think part of the increase could
be attributed to increased prices';'•
said Martha Stratton, the associate
editor of Ohio State's buJietln of
business research.
"They (the records) are not unexpected. This bas been a continuing
trend from year to year for sales,"
Ms. Stratton said.
The Center for Business and
Economic Research compiles moO:
thly an\1 annual lists of the percentage change in retail sales by
sending questionnaires to retailers
throughout Ohio. The center does not
keep dollar statistics.
economic controls is in the bands of
Adominant factor in holding down
the president under the Credit Con·
the 1979 sales total was the decline in
trol Act of 1969. For wage-price consales by automobile dealers, the cen.trols be would need authority from
ter reported. Auto and truck sales
Congress, which is under the same
. were down 14 percent In Decemberpressures as the president.
to-December comparisons and 6 perSerious political losses also could
cent for thll year.
occur. Business and labor are· opSubstantial yearly gains were
posed to controls, considering them
made by beating, plwnblng and ·
arbitrary, unfair and eventually
electrical supply stores (up 'l1 perineffective. Experience shows that
cent), general stOI'e8 (up 17 percent)
even if they tolerate them at first,
and
restaurants and lounges (up 15
they challenge and even ignore them
percent),
in the long run.
Impressive December gains were
But why be concerned when, after
posted by feed, garden and farm
all, the . president repeatedly has
stor.es (up 70 percent over December·
said he will not seek the power to
1978) and heating, plwnblng and ,
control. Why? Because pressures of
electrical
supply stores (up 63 perboth prices and politics might force
cent).
.
..
hlm into doing so.
"People
may
be
changing
With an election coming up, and
methods of heating qtelr homes and
'with no existing administration
g,attlng.
new appliances," ·1\fs. Strat.
policYii~ely to reduce prices or In ·
ton
!IBid
of the rise in hardware- ·
terest rates very much, controls
supply stores.
could conceivably provide the
Only the greater Chillicothe area
l,llualon of a f10o110118enae economic
pollrJ.
a loss for the year. The ~enter

Meigs Jaycees basketball tournament

game.
Findlay College was originally
scheduled Feb. 28 at Lyne Center,
but both the Findlay coach and Rio's
coach Art Lanham cancelled the
contest and rescheduled it for Nov.
22,1980.
I..anqam said that the game was
originally scheduled to fill the gap
between the Mid.{)hio Conference
tournament and the NAJA District
Tournament. Since neither Rio or
Findlay will participate in post·
season play, the game was cancelled.

Southern
North Gallia
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ft:Jiil' ~ '&gt;~TEtEG~A'"'- N .(.R C:..

In Washington

1-\lllME

"I'd like to quit, but it's one of the few pleasures I have left."

Today"s commentary:
By Don Graff
Whatever became of detente
would appear to be an eaSily enough
an!iwc red

qu es tion,

po s t

Afghanistan.
It went thataway. But surprisingly, a few pockets of East-West
di sengagement appear to be surviv·
! II ~ .

One is in Vi enna, where representatives of NATO and the Sov1et·bloc
Warsaw Pact recently met as
scheduled for another g&lt;&gt;-around on
mutual reduction of forces in Cen·
· tral Europe.
Nothing came of it, of course. But
the mere fact that it took place at all
could be considered an accomplish·
ment in the present chilly at·
mosphere.

For the record, the Soviets and
their satellites continue to balk at
NATO's proposal for Initial
Withdrawal 30,000 Russians and
13,000 Americans. The discrepancy
IS jl1, tified, I'ATO argues, because
the Amencan forces have to ·
withdraw a much greater distance.
Besides, it is suspected that the
Soviets actua lly have more troops in
the area than they acknowledge.
So much for Vienna. Next
meeting, same place, later this year
- may be .
Meanwhile, in neutral Switzerland
there has been an even more interesti ng development. After
boycotting the Geneva Disarma·
ment Conference for 18 years , the
Ctunese suddenly showed up.

~ime

They di d not, however, merely slip
into the seats long reserved for
them. Deputy Foreign Minister
Zhang Wenjin took the opportunity
to deliver a rhetorical haymaker to
the Sov1et Union, accusing it of
" fraudulent" exploitation of detente
to further an aggressive, expan·
sionist policy.
None of this is new, of course. The
Chinese have been publicly accusing
the Soviets of this and much worse
for years. But tough talk is not the
way of the Geneva negotiations,
which have taken on somewhat the
character of an old-boys club. Direct
political attacks, as the affronted
Soviet delegate responded, are not
according to the rules · presumably
along with such other behavior as
whispering during speeches and
passing notes.
If it was any consolation, the
Soviets were not the only target. The
Chinese critique also impUed U.S.
c-ollusion in blocking real progress in
arms reductiOn and put Peking on
record as rejecting any agreement
that might be worked out between
Wastungton and Moscow rather than
negotiated by the entire conference.
Well!
The Geneva conferees have been
trying to coax the Chinese into their
discussions for almost two decades.
Now that they have them, there may
be reason to question exactly what it
is they've got.
Among other lhmgs, it could be a
new approach to all the American

Dealing
Peking In
and Soviet dithering of late over the
playing of Chinesee cards. That may
all turn out to be beside the pi&gt;int
since the Chinese seem to prefer br·
inging their own deck when they join
a game.

Are you ready for this?
Or to make the question more to
the point, are Russians ready for it?
It is pizza. A Soviet newspaper has
disclosed , that two establishinenls
devoted to the delicacy that swept
out of Italy to conquet the West are
about to open in Moscow.
Breaking the news was easy
enough. But informing Russians ex·
actly what pizza is proved the really
tough part - at least until Soviet
customers bite into their first crusts.
Translated into readily
understood local tenn.s, a pizza
emerges as a cake covered with
sauce,

greens,

cheese

similar to sharp varieties from the
Caucasus and pieces of ham or fish,
all baked for a few minutes in a
super-hot oven - of Yugoslav
manufacture in the case of those being installed in Moscow's new pe&lt;&gt;ple's pizza parlors.
Well, given a decent \\'arm-up
peMod and the Soviet public's in·
satiable interest in things Western,
detente or not, it may catch on.
But meanwhile, please change
that order to one borsht, please.

issue touchy situation ·

; WASIUNGTON (AP) - Nothing
4fouses congressional fury like
~ggestions that lawmakers spend
loo much lime in recess, except
P&lt;&gt;ssi bly efforts to cut back some of
C1a t time off.
' The decision by House leaders to
;,ork most of last week, while the
Senate was off, generated con·
Siderable grumbling in the House.
; Rep. Bill Frenzel, R·Minn., even
!!aged a protest on the House noor,
obj ecting to routine motions and
~emandin g roll-call votes on non·
~ontroversial bills to dramatize his
. anger with House leaders.
: Working last week, when he had
expected to be back in his district,
!lad messed up his schedule, he
asserted .
Frenzel said that, while "I do not
qbjcct to meeting · when it is
·necessary," he felt the HollSe was
meeting jllSt for cosmetic purposes
tl&gt; make it appear busier than it was.
:"Everything the House does has
~me importance but last week's

schedule had no urgency and no
great importance," Frenzel said.
"This week's schedule has even less
urgency and I understand that next
week's schedule is pretty thin, too."
By now, most of the House has
gone along with HollSe Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill's banishment of
the word "recess" from the
congressional lexicon. "District
work period" is the preferred
description.
Sen. Bob Packwood, R.{)re., the
speaker at a recent GOP dinner, had
difficulty getting his audience's attention. Clearing his throat a few
times didn 't do it.
So he tMed a different approach.
"And that's why both Ronald
Reagan and George Bush dropped
out of the Republican presidential
race today," he said in a loud, clear
voice.
And instantly he had a captive
audience.

.M edals race two-way affair

Confounding
Carter tactics

nuclear weapons, stressing human
Mghts and reducing foreign military
sales.
All three considerations were
crucial elements in the Carter ad·
ministration's mid-1977 decision to
abandon the proposed sale of 110 A-7
attack planes sought by Pakistan.
1be president last year cut off all
military a)ISistance to Pakistan
because that nation refused to allow
international inspection of a nuclear
research program suspected of being designed to produce nuclear
weaponry.
··
The Carter administration also
has been critical of the hwnan rights
policies of Pakistani President
Mohammed Zia uHJaq, an army
general wbo seized power in a 1977
military coup, now rules under mar·
tialla w and repeatedly has postponed promised parliamentary elections to instal! a civilian govern·
ment.
Similarly, Carter earlier pledged
to reduce tbe United States' role as
the world's leading anns merchant
because "competition in arms sales
is inimical to peace."
But Pakistan isn't the only country
to benefit from a resurgence in
munitions trade. During the past
year, the Carter administration has
expanded its sale of everything from
small arms to jet fighters
throughout the Middle East -the
one region of the world where Carter
earlier str\l5Sed the need for political
I
stabilization.

Beneficiaries of a vastly expanded
military aid program have included
not only the powerful nations of the
region - Israel, Egypt and Saudi
Arabia - but also lesser-developed
countries such as Oman and North
Yemen.
• Other examples abound. Demil·
itarization of the Indian Ocean was a
goal propounded in Carter's State of
the Union message only two years
ago. Today, approximately two
d&lt;nen United States warships and an
equal number of Soviet military
vessels are stationed in the Indian
Ocean or the adjoining Persian Gulf.
During the 1976 presidential cam·
paign, Carter proposed a $15 billion
cut in defense spending, then scaled
that down to a reduction of $5 billion
to $10 billion. He has just offered a
1981 federal budget calling for an increase of more than $15 billion in
military appropriations.
Finally, there's the central issue
of relations with the Soviet Union.
1be man who four·years ago said we
should "continue our friendly relationships with Russia" now says that
nation's invasion of Afghanistan
"could pose the most seMollS threat
to peace sine~ the Second World

War."
One thing, however, has remained
constant - tbe validity of an observation Carter offered in a March
1976 speech, during the last
presidential campaign : " Our
foreign policy today is in greater
disarray than at any time in recent
history."

Fi11ing station lines disappearing

And now a note on
cultinary detente

tomato

By Ro.,..rt Wallen
WASIUNGTON (NEA)- Will the
real President Carter please stand
up?
Is he t_he "dove" on tbe left side of
tbe table wbo for years has been
shaping a foreign policy emphasiz·
ing detente, human rights, nuclear
nonproliferation; reduced defense
budgets and global demilitaMzalion ]
Or is. he the "hawk" on tbe Mght
side of the table who now is issuing
ultimatwns to the Soviet Union,
shipping arms around the globe,
calling for renewed draft registration and proposing massive increases in defense spending?
In the wake of the crises in Iran
and Afghanistan, Carter has con·
founded fliend and foe alike by sud·
denly deemphasizing - if not swn·
maMly abandoning - virtually all of
the principles he finnly articulated
and aggressively promoted as the
foundation of his foreign policy dur·
ing his first three years in the White
House.
One of the most striking examples
of the president's sudden policy
reversal is his administration's deci·
sion to offer $400 million worth of
military and economic aid to the
government of Pakistan during the
next two years.
The Soviet invasion of Mghani.stan
provided the geopolitical rationale
for that action, but Carter's move
meant ignoring three touchstones of
his earlier foreign policy ••
discouraging the proliferation of

The FBI's "Abscam" bribery
scandal has spawned some in·
leresting statements from members
of Congress, including Rep. Paul
Simon, D-Ill., who says
congressional ethics aren't as bad as
they seem.
To bolster his argument, he dug
deep into history to note that Daniel
Webster, who served in the Senate in
the 1830s and 1840s, once "openly
wrote to a railroad company that if it
did not send him his check, he would
not introduce their bill."
"Today he probably would be
thrown out of the Senate for that, or
at least censured," Simon observed.
And while he conceded that "the
public may have a hard time
believing" that ethical standards
are improving, Simon quoted the
late Sen. Paul Douglas of filinois as
once telling him: ":rile Senate today
is a much better body ethically than
when I served there.''

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - 1be
long lines at Ohio filling stations
have disappeared, but the state
agency charged with tracking fuel
supplies and filling hardship
requests for more gasoline has found
it is an expensiv_e process.
Administration of the state's
gasoline set-aside program, created
by federal law in 1973 after the Arab
oil boycott, wound up in the stale
Energy Department in December,
1977.
It had originally been a child of the
old Energy Emergency Commission
befor.e creation of the cabinet-level
energy department, communications chief Charles D. Morris
said.
Five percent of the state's monthly gasoline allocation is set aside
by suppliers for allocation during
periods of shortages to avoid har·
dships.
Distribution of the fuel on a "fair
and equitable" basis is the agency's
responsibility.
After detennlning supplies are
adequate for essential services, such
as fire, police and ambulance, the
remaining amount can be allocated
fo~ the motoring public which buys
through 19,000 service stations.
Only one person was needed to
handle the relatively low volwne of

hardshjp requests when the energy
department took over the program.
"But beginning about December,
1978, we began getting pretty sizable
increases in the nwnber of applications to the set aside," Morris
said.
The work was spread among
existing personnel for the first month, but then a deluge of "thousands
of applications a month" hit and the
department started hiring extra
help.
Seven full time staffers are now
employed to act on 1,200 to 1,500
requests a month.
"We seldom bave eough to give
everybody aU they 115ked for,"
Morris said.
"We look at the amount of gasoline
available by supplier and make the
judgment call on how much we can
give ... and still mainta:" the fair
and equitable mandate we have in
the law," he said.
Originally, the department was
able to pay for the operation out of
its general revenue fund. "But it was
never anticipated that we would
have those kinds of expenses,"
Morris said.
The agency recently won state
Controlling Board approval to . llSe
$192,822 in emergency funds to cover
costs of operating the allocation of-

lice durtng 1979 and for the first six
months of this year.
Almost all prime suppliers are
still allocating dealers less than
their previous ~ear's gasoline supply, but there has been no shortage
for motorists.
"Drivers in Ohio have reduced
consumption/' Morris said. "The
demand levels are ruruting right at
the supply levels. r,

said it was a fractional decline.
In other marked increases, sales
in the Akron and Canton areas were
up. Greater Canton retail sales increased 9 percent for the year while
sales in greater Akron rose 7 percent.
In other . metropolitan areas,
Hamilton-Middletown sales increased 4 percent, Portsmouth 6,
Cincinnati 3, Cleveland 3,
Youngstown 3, Colwnbus 2 and
Toledo fractionally.
Another yearly economic indicator showed inflation's effects.
Conswners in the state used Master

•

trols, and probably gained strength
by doing so. And there is the temptation of controls: Some wi.U view
them as evidence of fimmess and
decisiveness.
The campllS community, which
originates many campaign ideas,
may be adding to pressures. In the
past few weeks, several academic
economists almost apologetically
have advocated controls, while
saying they find them personally
distasteful and not to be continued
long.
The American experience with
controls is widely thought to be. adverse, even by Gardner ACkley;who
adniinistered ~m under President
Richard .Nixon.
But influential professors such as
,Robert Solow of Massachusetts In•atltute of Tedmology and Francis
Bator of HarVard are among those
who feel temporary controll mig!(
be needed and could be effective,
The decision is up to Cuter IIIII
Congress. 'Ehe\ ~·
adapt

t

'fled

By AlJsoclated Press
H anything, LaSalle basketball

I

Ervin made his remarks from fir·
st-hand observation Monday night
after watching the DePaul forward
score 40 points and grab 11 rebounds

Charge cards to spend $'1Tl million in
1979, an increase of 12.1 percent over
1978, according to statistics released
by the Cleveland-based processing
center BancSystems Association.
Retail sales volwne was up 16.6
percent in the first half of the year
over a COIDP11!'8ble 1978 tenn. But
the growth fell to 7.7 percent in the
third quarter and 9.3 in the fourth.
"Figures suggest that Ohio bank
card use is moderating in line with
the slowdown in the nation's overall
economy," Bane Systems President
Robert Golitz said.

Rio Grande College will end its
197M hardwood campaign at Lyne
Center tonight as Cedarville visits
Lyne Center for a Mid.{)hlo Conference battle.
Tipoff time will be 7:30p.m.
For the first time in many years,
the Redmen, 9-16 oo the y+ar and 5-7
In the conference, will not participate In the Mid.{)hio Conference

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Third
baseman Ray Knight and outfielder
Dave Collins are awaiting a decision
on their pay demands after
becoming the first players to _seek
arbitration with the Cincinnati Reds.
"I feel confident or I wouldn't
have gone to Ghlcago" for the
preaentatlQn before the arbritrator,
Knight said after returning late
Monday night.
I
.Neither Collins nor the 11\!gotiator
fer the two playeni, attorney Barry
Axelrod, waa available for coinmen!.
· l!oth playen became regulars last
season aa the Reds came from
behind to win the Natio'nai League
West title.
Knight rep~ced Pete Rose last

aeuon.

..

Stenmark knew that, too. He
rejected interviews after the first
race, saying simply, "I will talk with
you tomorrow."
Ullich Wehling of East Germany
also expected to hi! meeting with
reporters today. He was in good
position to win his third straight
Olympic gold medal in the Nordic
Combined, leading after the ski jwnping half of the competition.
That, too, would be a bit of Olympic history. No man has ever won
·thn!e Winter golds. Legendary
woman figure skater Sonja Henle of
Norway won golds in 1928, 1932 and
1936.
Wehling totaled 'l:J:/.2 points, but
the day belonged to Walter
Malmquist of the United States, who
finished second with 221.8. The
crowd of 20,000 at the Intervale
Mountain ski jwnp site rooted hlm
on with chants of "Wal-ter, Wal-ter,
Wal-ter." West Germany's Hubert
Schwarz was third with 219.6.
Despite his high standing,
Malmquist didn't figure to win ~ny
medals today because he is not as
strong in cross country skiing, the
second portion of the Nordic combined.
An American forejwnper, Mark
Johnson, broke three small bones in
his back when he took a spectacular
spill while testing the 70-meter ski
jwnp run. Johnson was taken to
Placid Memorial Hospital where he

Sa t , 2/1 6/80

team. Coach Gary Sheffield had at·
tempted to re-shuffle the makeup of
America's No. I sled team four days
before the start of competition but
was rebuffed by driver BQb Hickey .
'' Bob Hickey wanted to keep the
guys he had trained with all winter ,"
said Sheffield . "There's really no
dissension on the team. We wanted
to make sure we had the best people
in the start."
However, there was reported
resentment against Davenport by
other members of the team because
the ex-hurdler, a black man, had
gone home just be!ore the start of
the Games, preventing the
American No. I sled from working
out together, and because he
referred to bobsledders as "rich and
white" in a newspaper interview.
"That 'rich and white' stuff, that
really fried everybody's mind," said
Howard Siler, driver of America's
No.2 lour-man sled. "That fried my
mind. It's not true. It wasn't the
thing to say. We're not rich and we
have no racial problems here."

in the Blue Demons' 92-75 victory
over his team.
The supertor sophomore helped
the nation's top-ranked college
basketball team pull away with
some torrid second-half shooting
that included 12 straight points at
one stage. The explosive perfonnance built DePaul's lead from
one point to 70-57late in the game.
"The six-point play in the second
half (when Aguirre got a basket and
four free throws, including two
techriical ·shots) turned the , game
around," said DePaul Coach Ray
Meyer.
Added Meyer: "LaSalle's mat·
chup zone in the first half had us
standing around. So in the second
half I went back to the man-to-man
offense which freed Aguirre. While
Aguirre got a lot of shots, LaSalle
was trapped op defense because

they jllSt_couldn't cover our guar·
ds.''
Aguirre's great performance
overshadowed another fine game for
Brooks which earned him a special
niche in the LaSalle record books.
His 24 points helped hlm establish a
new school scoring record with 2,477
career points. That eclipsed the 2,462
of Gala, who led LaSalle to the
NCM championship in 1954.
In other games involving the
nation's ranked teams, No. 2
Louisviille defeated Virginia Tech
77-72 and 18th-ranked Arizona State
defeated UCLA !JUO.
Darrell Griffith scored 23 points,
including 15 in the second half, to
rally Louisville to its 18th straight
victory.
"I don't think we've played any
better," said Virginia Tech Coach
Charlie Moir of Louisville's 6-foot-5

,

Colllns, who bad been .a reserve
With the Reda &lt;for •t years, broke Into the starting lineup after the AllStar Game break following surgery
to veteran Ken Giifley.
Knl&amp;l!t waa voted the ~·s Moet
Valuabfe Player by the Cincinnati
~ of the . Baseball Wrltel'il
Allbclatlm ol America:
,

· Redl m.n.gement bad, no eomment Monday night conemung the
twoplayen' demands.
\

tournament.
Only the top four teams play for
the right to represent the conference
in the .NAIA district 22 tournament.
Rio, last year's regular season and
tournament champions are currently fifth in the standings.
Also, unlike last season when six
seniors played their last game on the
Rio tarten surface, the Cedarville
contest sees a Redmen team with no
graduating seniors.
Taking part in their last game
with the ~en, however, will be
four-year veteran manager Lawrence HugheS, of Cincinnati and
cheerleader Lynlta Newberry.
Cedarville has the conference's
leading scorer in Eric Mounts, who
is averaging 23.3 points per game.
All a team, Cedarville is second in
the conference in scoring, averaging
87.3 points per game.
Going Into the final home game
the Redmen are led In scoring by
sophomore Phil Washlrigton and
junior Tom Dorsey. Both are
averaging more than 13 points per

Top twenty
The

Ill' Tile Aloodat..t ......
Top Twenty teams In The AMociatod

Preoo collere bubtboll poll, with lint-place
vote. In porenu-, I'OCOI'CII and total polnll.
J'oYIIIbuedlin •·11·11·17 · 11 · 16·14 • 13·11·

11·10·1·1·7 -1-S-f.I.Z.I:
I. DePoul
'
2. LooliYIIIe
3.K~

(54)(~)

(ll&gt;-2

1,1110
111

(:IJI.t)

ill

t. s -

122-z) 102

I. Onion St.

(10-1)

&amp;12

(IW)

122

7.St1ohn'o,N,Y.

lll-11).
IN)
(IN)
(I._.)

11111

s. LoulolanoSt
I. N.Corollna
9. Maryland

10. NotnDame
II.OhloSt.

12.-

',

•(10-1)

149
II»
tlll
119

(lf.7)
IIH)

Ill
Ill

(11-7)

1U

(17-8)
(!U)

II. Milooort

If. Brilhom Y0111111
li. .Pwilue
II. W-St:
17, !lob

(,._.)

II. -St:

113
1111

(IN)

•

Ill
(16-7). !It
(!._.I 1211

"· lnillonl

ID. Wuhinctoo St.
,j

lETART

9&amp; . ;r. .

Sun .
5 a)O

Ri tiDSV l LLi
Sat . 2/1 6/80
10 t1 5

POM. CYCLONES

·.l ed .

2/20
7 1 o·o
RA CIN :.::

Sa t. 2/16/80

RAONE

1\. I )0

BRJ..JBURY

SYi!i-.CU5i
Thurs.~---

Sat . 2/1r6/80
1 2 t 45pSf.'.

2/21
8 115

SYRACUSE

iiAR!U::;OJ..V I i.Li
Sun .
2/17
7o 00

BASEBALL

American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Signed Ron Pruitt,
ca..tcher, to a two-year contract, and Rick Waits,
Mike Paxton, Dan Spillner, Steve Narleski Rick.
Borchers, Todd Heimer and Lam McDtil pitd~ers, SHI Rende, in£ielder, and Del Alston.' outfielder , to one-year contracts.
TORONTO BLUE JA 't'S - Signed otto Velez,
outfielder, to a muJti-year contract.
BASKETBALL

LETART

2/17

Mouday'a Sports Tranu.ctiou
By The Auodated Prell !I

POll a. JiV ILS

SYRACUSE

Sat , 2/16/80
2 o00
POM.DEVILS

PORTLA ND

Wed.

Nat:Jonal Baaketblll Aasoclatloa

SAN DIEGO CUPPERS -

2/20
8115

Waived Steve

Malovic, center.
FOOTBALL
CID&amp;d.iaa Fooiball League
MONTREAL ALOUEITES - Named Art
Asselta, special team.s.t.·uach and ~iver coach,
and Joe Galat, defensive co-&lt;&gt;rdinator. An·
nounced the resignation of Nick Nicolau, backfield coach.

HOCKEY
National Hockey Leagut:

.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS - Traded Da\'e

SALISBURY
Sa t, 2jl6/80
J o15

11JPPERS PLAINS

TUF-l-ERS PLAINS

Consolation Game

'' Tlger' ' Wllliams and Jerry Butler, forwards, to
the Vancouver Canudts for Rick Vai\'e and Bill
Derlago, forw ards .

Thurs. 2/21 7o00

COLLF.GE
CORNELL - Named Tom Miller he8d bu.sket·
balleooeh.

guard who was playing his last
regular season home game at
Freedom Hall.
Seven-foot Alton Uster scored 21
po'ints, grabbed 15 rebounds and
blocked five shots, while freshman
guard Byron Scott hit 21 points to
lead Arizona State over UCLA.
Elsewhere, Bradley edged
Creighton 76-75; Cincinnati was a 7f&gt;.
70 winner over Loyola of Chicago;
Georgia Tech nipped Georgia 4().38;
Oral Roberst outscored Tulsa 88-86;
Davidson ended a six-game losing
streak by beating North CarolinaCharlotte 73-70; Marshall defeated
The Citadel 711-74 in overtime; South
Carolina turned back Boston University 83-76; SMU upset Arkansas 6258; Wichita State beat Drake 117104; Furman routed VMI 107·75 and
Florida stopped Jacksonville 60-55.

GAMES CANCELLED
Due to tbe flu epidemic In the
Mason County School District,
· loolgbt's Wabama-Nortb Gallia
basketball game and Friday's
Wabama at Southern game bave
been cancelled.

Jaycee tournament continues
double figures: K. Grueser led all
scorers with 14, M. Chancey and T.
Adams chipped in with 12 apiece.
Houdashelt led the Devils with six.
Jim Adams' boys JIOW play Tuppers Plains in the semi-finals Wednesday nigbtat8: 15.
In the first game, Letart Falls
moved into the semi-finals by
defeating the Pomeroy Cyclones, 2212. Wickline led all scorers with 7 for
Letart; Buffington paced the
Cyclones with 5.
Letart faces Racine at 7 Wednesday evening. 1be championship
game will be played Thursday at
8:15, and will be preceded by the
consolation tilt.

Syracuse Elementary continues to
roll along in the Meigs County
Jaycees Elementary basketball
tournament. Sunday night, they
knocked off the Pomeroy Devils, 4&amp;13.
Syracuse placed three men in
LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Boone
Tucky Buddy, after being pushed in·
to a stretch drive by jockey Marton
Calderon, won the $3,900 featured
eighth race at Latonia by a nose on
Monday night, covering the 5t
furlongs in I :07.
The winner paid $5.20, $3.60 and
$2.80. Double Gleam finished second
and returned $3.40 and $2.40, while
third-place Rose Empress paid
$3.80.
The 3-8 combination of Birthday
Queen and Triceps returned $126 in
the double and the crowd of 3,859
wagered $478,685.

PAR WEST
Arizona St. 92, UCLA 80
Ca!Homla 94, U.S. lnt'lllO
Montala Ill, Portland State 70
s. Colorado 74, Western St. 52

NOW ONE INSURANCE PLAN CAN COVER
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~.11~_::~::;:2;-1
Ptr10n0l Comprthemivt Pr•
te&lt;tion planr PCP.

S VA C standings

If'• .o compr.Mnlivt, you ton
• ......, odd ho't)ilol, dtsoltilily

AIJ...G~

TEAM

,_

I~

run.''

was reported .in good condition after
breaking the first, second and third
vertebrae at the base of his spine.
Petzold's gold in the women 's 10.
· ~ilometer cross country was
something of a surprise. The 24year-old medical student was timed
in 30:31.54 seconds to beat a pair of
Finns, Hilkka RiihivuoM and Helena
Takalo, who were timed in 30:3:i.05
and 30:45.25.
In figure skating, East German
Jan Hoffman held the lead over a
pair of Americans, Charlie Tickner
and David Santee, following the
compulsory portion of the men's
singles competition. World champion Vladimir Kovalev of the Soviet
Union withdrew and Russian team
officials said he had the nu.
The compulsories are worth 30
percent of the final score. The men's
singles event continued with the
short program today and will be
completed Thursday night.
Russia, the United States and
Sweden all remained undefeated in
the Olympic hockey tournament, but
the Soviets had quite a scare.
Trailing 2·1 with 5:01 to play, they
rallied on goals by Vladirnir Krutov,
Alexander Maitsev and Boris
Mikbailov in 1: 19 to defeat Finland
4-2. That averted what would have
been the first Soviet Olympic hockey
defeat in 12 years.
Buzz Schneider scored two goal as
the United States routed Romania 7·
2, while Sweden got three goals and
an assist from Mats Ahlberg to wipe
out winless Norway 7-1.
In Monday's other hockey games,
Canada shut out Japan (H), Holland
topped Poland 5-3 and
Czechoslovakia defeated West Ger·
manyll-3.
Meanwhile, a controversy cen·
tering around former hurdling
champion Willie Davenport sur·
fa~ed on the American bobsled

Cedarville
·at Rio
.
tonight in finale

Knight, Collins
await decision ·

Berry's World

position to reach for the Olympic
gold, one of the few Afpine prizes
that has escaped the three-time
World Cup champion.
Wenzel knew Stenmark wasn 't
finished .
"I think l can be a little faster
tomorrow," Wenzel said. ··I think I
can ski a little better, but it will be
hard to win. Stenmark is in a good
position to attack on his seco11d

Top ranked DePaul rips LaSalle,92-75

him. "

Price control pressure mounting
• NE W YORK (AP I - As prices
Cise and economic expansion fades
i)lto stagnation, the pressure on
~es iclenl Ca rter to impose wage,
~ri ce and credit controls grows
l!ronger.
"
; The president says he does .not
'ant them. His advisers say they do
II()( work. His anti-inflation coun!(elor, Alfred Kahn, says he will quit
?Jther than administer controls. No
t!i"ller, the pressure grows.
• The Producer Price Index rose 1.6
!ll!rcent in January, a leap that is
~und to raise the level of conwner
ill,flation. Credit 11!!8ge continues to
expand, even though some analysts
~d thought the limit was reached.
'The discount rate increase by the
&amp;¢era! Reserve Board, to 13 per$nt from 12 percent, is seen as anti"
~tlonary. But before It reduces
b)lslness activity it might actually
alld to price pressures.
::Political pressure also exists. Sen.
¥ward Kennedy, seeking to Wllleat .
" president, has advocar con-

LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP) - The
medals race has turned into a lw&lt;&gt;nation tug of war between East Germany and the Soviet Union, but tiny
Liechtenstein, a dot on the world
globe, had a chance to write some
Winter Olympic history of its own
today.
When -Andreas Wenzel, leader af·
ter the first heat of the men's giant
slalom, went after his medal today,
it gave Liechtenstein, a Western
European country with a population
of 20,000, a shot at its second medal
of these Games. The first, a silver in
the women's downhill, belongs to
Andreas' older sister, Hanni.
Never before in Olympic history
have a brother and sister both taken
Alpine medals borne.
Barbara Petzold's victory in Monday'sonlymedalevent, the women's
IO.kilometer cross country ski race,
gave East Germany its 12th medal
of these Games, one more than the
Soviet Union. The Russians lead in
gold 6-3. Austria, the United States
and Finlnnd are next in the medal
standings with four each.
Two of the American medals are
golds, both won by speed skater Eric
Heiden. He went after No. 3 of what
could develop into a five-medal
sweep today In the l,IJOO.meter race.
Heiden and his sister, Beth, were
supposed to be the top family act in
these Games, but Beth has finished
no better than fifth in her three races
so far, so the brother-sister spotlight
belongs instead to the skiing Wenzels·of little Liechtenstein.
Andreas was fastest in the first
beat of the giant slalom-Monday,
timed in I minute, 20.17 seconds
through the 56 ·gates of the frigid
1,354-meter Whiteface Mountain
course. Second was Hans Enn of
Austria, 1:20.31, but Sweden's
fabulous Ingemar Sterunark was
third at 1:20.49 and clearly in

Coach Lefty ErVin knows his lorwards. He's vitally aware of Tom
Gola's exploits at LaSalle in the
early 1950s. And for four years, he's
been coaching a pretty good one in
Michael Brooks.
So you have to listen when he talks
about DePaul's Mark Aguirre:
"He's sim· · y unstoppable and
does !hinge I have never seen any
other player do. When Aguirre gets
the ball, he is able to use his body to
push off and he·frees himself to shoot
those 15-foot jwnpers. And there's
no way we or anyone else can stop

Retail sales establish new record

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Retail
sales for 1979 and the month of
December both set state higlls, but
the records were expected by Ohio
State University officials who compiled the survey.
December sales were up 1 percent
over December 1978 levels, while a
full-year increase of 4 percent set
the annual high, according to
statistics from Ohio State's Center
for BllSiness and Economic Research.
"I think part of the increase could
be attributed to increased prices';'•
said Martha Stratton, the associate
editor of Ohio State's buJietln of
business research.
"They (the records) are not unexpected. This bas been a continuing
trend from year to year for sales,"
Ms. Stratton said.
The Center for Business and
Economic Research compiles moO:
thly an\1 annual lists of the percentage change in retail sales by
sending questionnaires to retailers
throughout Ohio. The center does not
keep dollar statistics.
economic controls is in the bands of
Adominant factor in holding down
the president under the Credit Con·
the 1979 sales total was the decline in
trol Act of 1969. For wage-price consales by automobile dealers, the cen.trols be would need authority from
ter reported. Auto and truck sales
Congress, which is under the same
. were down 14 percent In Decemberpressures as the president.
to-December comparisons and 6 perSerious political losses also could
cent for thll year.
occur. Business and labor are· opSubstantial yearly gains were
posed to controls, considering them
made by beating, plwnblng and ·
arbitrary, unfair and eventually
electrical supply stores (up 'l1 perineffective. Experience shows that
cent), general stOI'e8 (up 17 percent)
even if they tolerate them at first,
and
restaurants and lounges (up 15
they challenge and even ignore them
percent),
in the long run.
Impressive December gains were
But why be concerned when, after
posted by feed, garden and farm
all, the . president repeatedly has
stor.es (up 70 percent over December·
said he will not seek the power to
1978) and heating, plwnblng and ,
control. Why? Because pressures of
electrical
supply stores (up 63 perboth prices and politics might force
cent).
.
..
hlm into doing so.
"People
may
be
changing
With an election coming up, and
methods of heating qtelr homes and
'with no existing administration
g,attlng.
new appliances," ·1\fs. Strat.
policYii~ely to reduce prices or In ·
ton
!IBid
of the rise in hardware- ·
terest rates very much, controls
supply stores.
could conceivably provide the
Only the greater Chillicothe area
l,llualon of a f10o110118enae economic
pollrJ.
a loss for the year. The ~enter

Meigs Jaycees basketball tournament

game.
Findlay College was originally
scheduled Feb. 28 at Lyne Center,
but both the Findlay coach and Rio's
coach Art Lanham cancelled the
contest and rescheduled it for Nov.
22,1980.
I..anqam said that the game was
originally scheduled to fill the gap
between the Mid.{)hio Conference
tournament and the NAJA District
Tournament. Since neither Rio or
Findlay will participate in post·
season play, the game was cancelled.

Southern
North Gallia
Southwestern
Eutem
Kyger Creek

ly combifting MVtfOI polic;e.,
it GCtuolly giw• you more
intur'CJI\CI COVI'I"Gfe for · your

8 12 1140 1228

7 13 9111 1095

2 17 95:i 1276

SVACONLY

ond. m~ogt lilt

intur~.

10 9 1261 1331
9 Jl 117t 1997

Hannan Trace

X.SOUthern
North Gallia

inc:om1,

W L P IF
17 I 1347 11103

·

~:

in11Kohct doiiOI'".

LARRY BROGAN

10 0 752 529

'66

Eutem
Southwestern
Kyger Creek

4 624 628
4 6911 632
t 628 610

Reuter-Broqan lnsuranc;e
101 Sycamore
Pomeroy ·

...

I 9
6911
I 9 &gt;12 648

Hanrutn Trace
SVACRESERVES

X.S,..Ihem

NorthGallia
EMienl
Kyger Creek
HBnrum TrBce
Southwestern
X-DenGtes ctwnpion

9 I 682 401
8 2 433 401
7 3 400 381
4 6 376
I 9 380 457
I· 9 303 478

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Tonight - Miller at Southern and Hannan ··•
Trace at Ironton St. Joe.

Farrners ...
Let H&amp;R Block

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Our carefully trained tax pre parers are up-to-date on all the tax
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want you tp pay the lowest legitimate tax.

.

-Power House ~llERV
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SAVE '10.004.
Was '62.95 -+:.'iJ'.

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OPEN TUES.
THVR"S. &amp; SAT.
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Appointment Available But Not Necessary

12 Volt with Exctian\e
Group PH22F

Other
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MEIGS TIRe.·.
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INC.
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618 E. MAIN ST.
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OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P ,M. WEEI&lt;DAYS,
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PHONE ?U-3795

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.

'

··.

•'

Jon~;~ F.

992·2101

Pomeroy,, 0.

�{
$-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1980

4- The Datly Sentinel, Muldleport-Pomeroy. U., Tuesday. Feb. 19. 1900

Pomeroy UMW review yearly goals
The Pomeroy Umted Methodi.St
Women meeting recently in the
church social room reviewed goals
for the year and lllStituted a Christian reading program and a churchwide membership drive.
Mrs. Robert McGee, president.
welcomed the members mcluding
one new member, Mrs. George

Wright, and gave two meditations on
the valentine theme; "What is
Love?" and "Love's Aim." It was
noted that the pledge for the yea r is
$420. A total of 49 shutin visits were
reported.
It was noted that Mrs. McGee had
met with the officers for a brunch at
the parsonage to discuss goals for
the year. The membership list was
reviewed and cards wlll be sent inviting all women of the church to attend. It was decided that the
members will divide into two teams
to solicit new members with the los,,:' ing team to host a dinner for the win&lt;( • ning team .
·
.
~ • The reading program will suggest
• that each member read at least four
f. , books during the year. The selected
t. . bookll will be from the categories of
~: Christian personhood, supporative

i'

corrunumty . Chnstian social

UJ-

volvemen t and Christian ~l obal concerns . Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
secretary or program resources, will
order the books.
A letter was read from the district
secretary stating that she hoped all
units in the district would be able to
have "Response" and " New World
Outlook" in their churches since information regarding
United
Methodist Women programs,
resources and missions is contained

in the magazines.
Mrs. Dorothy Downie and Mrs.
Polly Eichinger read letters setting
forth information regarding dates,
number of days and cost or programs, including a day apart in
March, a retreat in May at Camp Otterbein, and the School of Missions
at Ohio University.
Also discussed was doing
something for senior citizens,
shutins and residents of the new nursing home, sunshine boxes for
shutins, and birthday remembrances.
It was noted that a Bible study will
begin later. Plans were made to
chose prayer partners and form a

prayer circle. An tnvttation to the
Lenten Breakfast at Trinity Church
Wednesday morning was read. Ar·
rangements were made to have an
Old World cleaning su pplies
demonstration soon.
Mrs. . Downie Used a Lenten
meditation for the program. After
prayer and group singing of a hymn ,
she read material written by Irene
Elder, a missionary for 29 years now
teaching in the States and scripture
from Matthew 26. "Lent, What is
It'" was the meditation topic. She
described Lent as a time or preparation, a time to meet the challenge of
doing better for self and others, a
time to examine one's life, to look to
the church, and to face the cross.
To close her program, Mrs.
Downie presented a large heart
holding smaller hearts. Verses were
written on each of small hearts and
inside was written the name of a
shutin or elderly person. Members
selected one of the smaller hearts,
read the verse, and were asked to
remember the shutin. Prayer closed
the program.
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth and Mrs.
Virginia Edwards were hostesses.

.
:tAddalou Lewis discusses .super bugs
::at
Winding
Trail
Garden
Club
meet
..
••.

• Super bugs and their threat to the
.• Amencan way of life was discussed
: by Mrs. Addalou Lewis at the recent
·; meeting of the Winding Trail Garden
· • Club held at the Meigs Museum.
' : Mrs. Lewis, using material from
: Mrs. Aaron Kelton, a former
: member now living in Virginia,
·• noted that insects which have been
.: . controled by insecticides have gain.; ed immunity to the chemicals and
.&lt; are moving full speed ahead to
, : destroy food and fiber.
_; . It was pointed out that as the im; munities to the poisons have
; . developed, the insects multiplied at
~: a fantasllc pace. Cited as an exam• pie of the destruction was the cotton
fields in Texas where insects
~;· devoured the plants, then moved in:: .to other states, including Louisianna

.

•
•

-; r-----------.

:I

Social Calendar

TUESDAY
• SALISBURY PTO Tuesday 7:30
•· p.m. Fathers night will be observed.
: Program on natural resources.
:Amended by-laws will be read.
: Refreshments.
: EASTEI' N Band Boosters
; meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in band
. room at high school; plans for tool
! sale to be made .
•
•
WEDNESDAY
; POMEROY Chapter 80 Royal Ar·
; ch Masons Wednesday. Annual in: spection. Dinner at 6:30p.m. Royal
1 Archdegreeworkat7 :30p.m.

where they ate one-fourth of the cotton crop, and California where they
attacked vegetables. Mrs. Lewis
noted that the global insect army is
in constant combat for food and fiber
supplies, bringing death and disease
to millions.
She said of the 364 "super bugs",
223 are agriculture pests attacking
products in the fields and after the
harvest, and that the remainder
spread disease to livestock and
humans. The grasshopper, caterpillar, mosquito, beetle, and locust
population explosion and their
resistance to insecticides was also
discussed along with the chemical
industry 's concern with synthetic insecticides.
Mrs. Margaret Parker presided at
the meeting whichopened with
Psalm 100 and the club prayer. For
roll call members displayed seed
catalogs. Mrs. Jackie Brickles gave
the garden calendar repording that
now is the time to do winter pruning
of shade and fruit trees, hedges,
evergreens, and grapevines. She

PENNIES-FROM
HEAVIN

s;1t1.1:

Auto

Insurance

.....
A~ .

Let's talk value.

Re111111 .2t

CRACKER
JACK .

AQUA

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yo u as much as 1 5% o n you r
auto insurance.

TOOTHPASTE

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tube

A s an independenl

msurance agency, we ca n
hel p you find the best va lue
ior your in surance dol lars.

Rag . Reta!IS1 .51

Reg . Retell S2.84

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$

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09

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INSURANCE AGENCY

Reg . Rei ail $1 .98
JOHNSON' S

Re~ .

POOl

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992-6677

WAIIMIIRS

$115

FEDERAL
KEMPER

Rttul1r Aeltll s2:49

DI·GIL LIQUID
LEMON ORANGE
OR MINT

1 _;'

'1288
KNOTT'S

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PUNCH

s1· 41
CONCEHTFIATE

Connlekl.ter,26'105MileHillRd., Raclne Oh.lo

~

I

When cooking a roast, save energy
by turning off the heat in the oven
about 30 minutes before it is
finished. The remaining heat should ·
be enough to finish the job.

lb.

CHICKENS..

COCA
COLA

12

oz..,,.

~----

19 FRANKIES ...89

Lll.._tYs
DEODORANT ,ANTII.INERI

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•1 09

VIT. D MILK
GALLON

REG. SIZE BAR

;: GUEST SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
~ Mrs. Florence Richards, past
;~ Americanism chairman ror the ·
~ Department of Ohio, American '
~ Legion Auxiliary, will be. gues
.t
~ speaker at the Feb. 26 meeting of the
~ American Legion Auxiliary, Drew
fe Webster Post 38, juniors and seniors,
p.m: Mlaa .Enna Smith is
caniBm chalnnan for the unit
and ammged the program.

WEDS., FEB. 20TH THRU FEB. 24TH
7:30 NIGHTLY
Saturday, Feb. 23rd-Youth Banquet
6:30 P.M. - Church Basement

fVfRYONf WELCOME

TOilET SOAP

•

Middleport, Ohio

From
Middleport, Ohio

KOIEX

~

~

South Third Ave .

Reg. Ret11t $2.32

~ Thtll'lday in the Riverboat Room of

.

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

"The Uvely Stones"

•

89

A

DIAL

...
-,.

At The

&amp;

8 PACK 16 OZ.

TQMEETTIIURSDAY
The Middleport Child Conserva-

...
••

YOUTH REVIVAL

SPECIAL SINGING
Youth of Local Church

8 PACK

the AtheiiB County Savings and Loan
~ Co. Dr. Nan Mykle of the Communi~ ty Mental Health Center will be the
i! speaker. Mrs. SUBie Abbott will give
~ devotions and Mrs. Abbott and Mrs.
:• SUBle Soulsby wlll be.hostesses .

1.

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swisher, Hysell
St., Middleport, observed their $2nd
wedding anniversary on Feb. 11.

Speaker-Rev. Mark Friend-18 Years Old
From Hamilton, Ohio

· Cretm ol Mushroom or C1'15ctcen Noodle

- --------·--

son.
Cupids and heart decorated the
social room and following the dinner
the group enjoyed gospel singing by
Matthew Gillian of St. Albans.
Attending besides the advisors
were Joy Hudson, Robert Shepherd,
Lori Kloes, Kim Browning, Vicky
Boyles, Randy Osborne, Lynn Kloos,
Jolm Jacobs, Angie Farley, Craig
Darst, Anoie Houchins, Stephanie
Houchins, Mary Matson, Joan
Hayes, Randy Hayes, the Rev. and
Mfs. Mark McClung, Gillian and
Ron Pierce.

Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser and
'Larry Grueser were in South
Charleston recently to visit Mr. and
· Mrs. Robert Grueser and children.
The Grueser's daughter, Kimberly
observed her sixth birthday during
their visit.

lb.

~ lion League will meet at 7:30 p.m.

.

conunitted to primary care are
projected to double within the next
20 years, according to Gerald A.
Faverman, Ph.D., project director
of a W. K. Kellogg Foundation grant
to study the osteopathic profession.
The study also found that 91.4 percent of osteopathic physicians are
involved in primary care to some
degree.
My next two columns will deal
with readers' questions about
osteopathic theory and manipulative
therapy.

Mrs. Helen Teaford presided with
Mrs. Wanda Rizer giving the devotions. Scripture was taken from
First Corinthians with love as the
theme and several poems were read.

RECENT VISITORS

BUCKET

I.

:~

A sweetheart dinner was held on
Valentine's Day at the Middleport
First Baptist Church for members of
the Baptist Youth Fellowship and
their guests. Hosting the dinner
were the advisors, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Riggs and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hud-

Kloes.

gess.

Sweethqart dinner successful

•••n• .
SGUMIMI

., Isn't thatenouah (or you?

;t Solet'stryaga1n.

"...
•

"t

FIRE &amp; SMOKE
Dm(TOR

32-oz.
. cont .

:... 4:1711 ,

·~-~
5
'.
12-oz.

• ,j ~A~~~

to. ·You know I tuecl!anceoln Ufe
·,. So I love you

SPARE
CUT UP OR WHOLE

-----=':::~~.

:: Jtllt give me 011e mort chance. ·

ANSWER: The D.O. degree,
which means doctor of osteopathy, is
now conferred by 14 osteopathic
colleges around the nation. The Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, of which I am a faculty
member, will graduate its first class
of osteopathic p!1ysiclans this June.
Osteopathic physicians are licensed to practice all phases of
medicine in all 50 states. Of the
17,000 doctors of osteopathic
medicine in the United States, more
than 2,000 are licensed to practice in
Ohio. In this state, both M.D.s and
D.O.s take the same test to be licensed to practice.
QUESTION: What kind of training
does a D.O. receive?
•
ANSWER: In most cases, students
must complete a four-year baccalaureate degree before they can
be coiiBidered for admission to an
osteopathic college. This work must
include training in biology,
chemistry·, physics and other areas
decided liy each ooteopathic coUege.
Figures from a recent study show
that '11 percent or the students entering osteopathic colleges have at
least a bachelor's degree, while only
about 90 percent of the students starting at M.D. schools have completed
an undergraduate school.
Some D.O.s, such as Dr. Robert
stockmal, a guest writer for this
column several weeks ago, complete
advanced degrees before entering
an osteopathic college. Stockmal
received a Ph.D. in microbiology. inununology before entering the
Philadelphia College of Osteopathic
Medicine.
During the first two years of the

., ·

FROM MANUFACTURER

;. lwishwecouldat.rtmerapln
~· I know we can mate It this time

,,

4-or.

cont.

SS .OOCONSUMER REBATE

·

mean?

four-year Ohio University program,
training includes medical · biology
foundation courses and simulated
clinical practice in a classroom setting. Students devote their time to
hospital rotations during the third
year, and spend their fourth year
working in ambulatory care
facilities to obtain family medicine
experience.
After receiving the D.O. degree,
the osteopathic physician will
usually complete a one year internship. Most states, in fact,
require M.D.'s and D.O.s to have a
one-year hospital based internship
before they can be licensed to practice. If the physician chooses to be a
specialist, one to five years of additional training is necessary after
the internship is completed. In most
cases, these ooteopathic physicians
who decide to specialize train in
osteopathic or military hospitals.
However, they can also receive their
post-graduate training in an M.D.
hospital. Many institutions, such as
the Cleveland Clinic, train D.O. and
M.D. residents in the same
programs. There is currently some
debate within the profession as to
tlie advisability of having D.O.'s
take post-graduate training in M.D.
hospitals, but I personally don't
believe this poses a threat to the
profession's continued existence as
a distinct and separate entity.
QUESTION: What makes
osteopathic medicine different •
ANSWER: While both D.O.s and
M.D.s use all traditional methods of
treatment - including drugs,
surgery and radiation, the
osteopathic physician has had ad·
ditional training in osteopathic
manipulative therapy. This approach includes the skiUful use of
the hands to examine patients and
treat physical ailments.
Osteopathic physicians are also
more likely to be family physicians,
a fact brought out in a recent survey .
While the number of M.D.s entering
primary care has been shrinking
each year, osteopathic physicians

tanker fund.
Mrs. Enuna Lyons, vice president, presided at the meeting with
Mae Cleland leading in the pledge to
the flag, and Maxine Rose , the
Lord's Prayer.
Oretha Snider won the door prize.
The birthdays or Mrs. Rose and
Beverly Cwrunins were observed.
Mrs. Rose and Mrs. Cununins served refreshments to those named and
Beulah Autherson and Agnes Bog-

The treasurer's report was given
by Mrs. Vera Van Meter. Mrs.
Beulah Ward will host the March
meeting. Attending were the Rev.
and Mrs. Harvey Koch, Mr. and
Mrs. William Winebrenner, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hoback, Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Rizer, Mr. and Mrs. Carol
Norris , Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Millard Van Meter,
Emogene . Holstein, Beulah Ward,
Mrs. Teaford, and Mrs. Eleanor
Robson, with Mrs. Gladys Robson
and Benny Ewing and Michael
Kloes, son of the hosts, as a guests.

cont.

ou

CLIP 'N SAVE

•'*

By Lamar C. Mmer, D.O.
Clluleal Associate Professor
Ill Famlly Medlcllle
Oblo UDivenlty CoUege
ol Osteopatblc Medicine
WHAT ISA D.O.?
QUESTION: I have seen the letters D.O. after your name when the
column appears in the Columbus
Dlap&amp;tch. What do these letters

Plans for a baked ham ·and
chicken dinner to be held Sunday at
the firehouse in Racine were made
when the Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met there recently .
Firemen Doug Rees and Hank
Jolmson met with the Auxiliary
members to discuss the dinner. Serving will begin at II a.m. and the
menu will consist of baked chicken,
ham, mashed potatoes, noodles,
green beans, slaw, coffee and punch.
All proceeds will go into the Racine

Items for the kitchen at the
Asbury United Methodist Church
were taken to the Tuesday night
meeting of the Eagles Class held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul

IYIDitOPa

100'a690

Burger Chef is offering you 4 delicious fish coupons during
the Lenten season 1 Bnng the whole family and save.

~•

Health Review

•

'

Eagles Class meets

·-····
!11-~

MR.COFRE
FILTERS
I

.•

Ham and chicken dinner
planned by fire auxiliary

Reo. Ret1ll S1.85

Reg. Rttlll $1 .28

INSURANCE
COMPANY

RelaiiS1 .04

KLIINIX
' FACIAL
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ODOR EATER$

~~

The Poet's
Corner

,• But It didn't lutlong.

greaseless.
I mentioned my little trick to a
cosmetics saleslady and ~he was disdainful , to say the least, andlnfonned me I would clog my pores
because lipstick contains wax.
However this has not happened to
me. My skin is clear and clean and I
do not~ have to invest in separate
blushers. - JEAN
DEAR POLLY- Before I had an
automatic dishwasher my daughter
suggested that I put some
dishwasher detergent and hot water
in any pans or casserole dishes that
had baked-on food. I let this eland
for a while and find it works like a
charm.- J. C.

m

••'••'r-------------------,

IWANT\'OVBACK
Wl1ll ME AGAIN
, \ I want you back with me again
I need you to hold me Jn your anna
~ And your .soft volcewb.lapertngin my ear.
:,. Our love Will something you don't get every day

stabilizer can be made by cutting a
one and three-quarter, inch circle
from a used dryer bric softener
sheet. This holds the candle firm and
upright and 111e size fits all
candelstickll. - MARY
DEAR POLLY - I read the
Pointer where reader suggested using one's lipstick instead of afn expensive blusher. I have been doing
this for years but instead ofpplying
dots of lipstick directly on my cheek
I use my left hand as a palepte. In it I
moisten the dots of lipstick with
warm water, or a bit of moisturizer,
and blend on my hand and then ap~
ly it to my face. Perfect and matched results every time, and it is

LentenSpecials

"THE CARRIERS" from
• Belmont, W. Va., will hold a sacred
.~ concert and ministry Wednesday 7
:p.m. at the Pentecostal Assembly,
: 124, Racine. They will also be
: featured on Feb. '!I at 7 p.m.
• THIRD
WEDNESDAy
: Homemakers Club, Syracuse, Wed; nesday at 10 a.m. at Municipal
-~ Building . Project on cushions.
·: RUTLAND Ladies Firemen
: Auxiliary Wednesday 7:30p.m. at
; fire house. Those interested invited
:: to attend.

'•' •

By PoUy Cramer
Newspaper Enterprise Aasoc.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I tend to get indelible ink on my hands, as I work
around it all the time. I have tried to
get it off with many things but the
only way I have found is to let it
wear off. Do you know of anything
that will remove this ink quicker? T.C.
DEAR T.C. Try dampening
the stained areas
and then rub with
the sulphur end of
a match. Other
possibilities are
dry cleaning fluid,
petroleum jelly or
a paste made of lemon juice and
detergent. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - A great candle

•Ofl 'l'

•

;;

Hints given on removing ink on hands

·••••" 'SHIAMPo~o
..

~

"'~
.••

said that plants should be sprayed
while they are still dormant and
when the temperature is above 41l.
Suggestions were given on products to use to kill crabgrass and insects in lawns; as well as fertilizer to
improve the quality of established
lawns. She suggested getting the
hand tools ready by cleaning and
polishing along with making a list of
plants and seeds needed for spring.
Now is the time to sow petunias in
flats, she reported.
Aletter was read from the Central
Heart Association, Meigs Chapter.,
asking for contributions. An arrangement, uLove. Me, Love Me
" Not" , by Mrs. Pat Thoma won a blue
ribbon. She used red silk roses, live
materials in a white compote. Mrs.
Lewis judged the arrangements.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Parker and Kathy Parker.
Others attending were Mrs. Ruth
Moore, Mrs. Marianna Mitchell,
Patty Parker, and Linda Mayer.
Mrs. Thoma will host the March
meeting.

Polly's Pointers:

CRACKERS
LB. BOX

WEEK

29

�{
$-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1980

4- The Datly Sentinel, Muldleport-Pomeroy. U., Tuesday. Feb. 19. 1900

Pomeroy UMW review yearly goals
The Pomeroy Umted Methodi.St
Women meeting recently in the
church social room reviewed goals
for the year and lllStituted a Christian reading program and a churchwide membership drive.
Mrs. Robert McGee, president.
welcomed the members mcluding
one new member, Mrs. George

Wright, and gave two meditations on
the valentine theme; "What is
Love?" and "Love's Aim." It was
noted that the pledge for the yea r is
$420. A total of 49 shutin visits were
reported.
It was noted that Mrs. McGee had
met with the officers for a brunch at
the parsonage to discuss goals for
the year. The membership list was
reviewed and cards wlll be sent inviting all women of the church to attend. It was decided that the
members will divide into two teams
to solicit new members with the los,,:' ing team to host a dinner for the win&lt;( • ning team .
·
.
~ • The reading program will suggest
• that each member read at least four
f. , books during the year. The selected
t. . bookll will be from the categories of
~: Christian personhood, supporative

i'

corrunumty . Chnstian social

UJ-

volvemen t and Christian ~l obal concerns . Mrs. Charles Goeglein,
secretary or program resources, will
order the books.
A letter was read from the district
secretary stating that she hoped all
units in the district would be able to
have "Response" and " New World
Outlook" in their churches since information regarding
United
Methodist Women programs,
resources and missions is contained

in the magazines.
Mrs. Dorothy Downie and Mrs.
Polly Eichinger read letters setting
forth information regarding dates,
number of days and cost or programs, including a day apart in
March, a retreat in May at Camp Otterbein, and the School of Missions
at Ohio University.
Also discussed was doing
something for senior citizens,
shutins and residents of the new nursing home, sunshine boxes for
shutins, and birthday remembrances.
It was noted that a Bible study will
begin later. Plans were made to
chose prayer partners and form a

prayer circle. An tnvttation to the
Lenten Breakfast at Trinity Church
Wednesday morning was read. Ar·
rangements were made to have an
Old World cleaning su pplies
demonstration soon.
Mrs. . Downie Used a Lenten
meditation for the program. After
prayer and group singing of a hymn ,
she read material written by Irene
Elder, a missionary for 29 years now
teaching in the States and scripture
from Matthew 26. "Lent, What is
It'" was the meditation topic. She
described Lent as a time or preparation, a time to meet the challenge of
doing better for self and others, a
time to examine one's life, to look to
the church, and to face the cross.
To close her program, Mrs.
Downie presented a large heart
holding smaller hearts. Verses were
written on each of small hearts and
inside was written the name of a
shutin or elderly person. Members
selected one of the smaller hearts,
read the verse, and were asked to
remember the shutin. Prayer closed
the program.
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth and Mrs.
Virginia Edwards were hostesses.

.
:tAddalou Lewis discusses .super bugs
::at
Winding
Trail
Garden
Club
meet
..
••.

• Super bugs and their threat to the
.• Amencan way of life was discussed
: by Mrs. Addalou Lewis at the recent
·; meeting of the Winding Trail Garden
· • Club held at the Meigs Museum.
' : Mrs. Lewis, using material from
: Mrs. Aaron Kelton, a former
: member now living in Virginia,
·• noted that insects which have been
.: . controled by insecticides have gain.; ed immunity to the chemicals and
.&lt; are moving full speed ahead to
, : destroy food and fiber.
_; . It was pointed out that as the im; munities to the poisons have
; . developed, the insects multiplied at
~: a fantasllc pace. Cited as an exam• pie of the destruction was the cotton
fields in Texas where insects
~;· devoured the plants, then moved in:: .to other states, including Louisianna

.

•
•

-; r-----------.

:I

Social Calendar

TUESDAY
• SALISBURY PTO Tuesday 7:30
•· p.m. Fathers night will be observed.
: Program on natural resources.
:Amended by-laws will be read.
: Refreshments.
: EASTEI' N Band Boosters
; meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in band
. room at high school; plans for tool
! sale to be made .
•
•
WEDNESDAY
; POMEROY Chapter 80 Royal Ar·
; ch Masons Wednesday. Annual in: spection. Dinner at 6:30p.m. Royal
1 Archdegreeworkat7 :30p.m.

where they ate one-fourth of the cotton crop, and California where they
attacked vegetables. Mrs. Lewis
noted that the global insect army is
in constant combat for food and fiber
supplies, bringing death and disease
to millions.
She said of the 364 "super bugs",
223 are agriculture pests attacking
products in the fields and after the
harvest, and that the remainder
spread disease to livestock and
humans. The grasshopper, caterpillar, mosquito, beetle, and locust
population explosion and their
resistance to insecticides was also
discussed along with the chemical
industry 's concern with synthetic insecticides.
Mrs. Margaret Parker presided at
the meeting whichopened with
Psalm 100 and the club prayer. For
roll call members displayed seed
catalogs. Mrs. Jackie Brickles gave
the garden calendar repording that
now is the time to do winter pruning
of shade and fruit trees, hedges,
evergreens, and grapevines. She

PENNIES-FROM
HEAVIN

s;1t1.1:

Auto

Insurance

.....
A~ .

Let's talk value.

Re111111 .2t

CRACKER
JACK .

AQUA

Mu lt1 pie ca r and other
av aila ble di scou nts can save
yo u as much as 1 5% o n you r
auto insurance.

TOOTHPASTE

,~}~~··79°
tube

A s an independenl

msurance agency, we ca n
hel p you find the best va lue
ior your in surance dol lars.

Rag . Reta!IS1 .51

Reg . Retell S2.84

4-Wt.~:~SAL

CHIIR
25 '

. ., • • •,

$

,~;~,

DAVIS-QUICKEL

09

8-4-oz .
bo•

INSURANCE AGENCY

Reg . Rei ail $1 .98
JOHNSON' S

Re~ .

POOl

Bill Quickel
"Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy"
992-6677

WAIIMIIRS

$115

FEDERAL
KEMPER

Rttul1r Aeltll s2:49

DI·GIL LIQUID
LEMON ORANGE
OR MINT

1 _;'

'1288
KNOTT'S

nu11

PUNCH

s1· 41
CONCEHTFIATE

Connlekl.ter,26'105MileHillRd., Raclne Oh.lo

~

I

When cooking a roast, save energy
by turning off the heat in the oven
about 30 minutes before it is
finished. The remaining heat should ·
be enough to finish the job.

lb.

CHICKENS..

COCA
COLA

12

oz..,,.

~----

19 FRANKIES ...89

Lll.._tYs
DEODORANT ,ANTII.INERI

'I',

9~ SAUSAGE!~~

MARGARINE

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FRIDAY
24 OZ. CTN.

&amp;

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THURS. ONLY

STOIIA. .

DR. PEPPER

BlT

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2 LB. TUB

ONLY

ar:~t89e

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POLISH

PEPSI
COLA
8 PACK 16 OZ.
ALL

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lNOTTf..... WOOO GIIWN

12 oz.

SUPERIOR

BEEF
LIVER ••••••••••l~~.

•1 09

VIT. D MILK
GALLON

REG. SIZE BAR

;: GUEST SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
~ Mrs. Florence Richards, past
;~ Americanism chairman ror the ·
~ Department of Ohio, American '
~ Legion Auxiliary, will be. gues
.t
~ speaker at the Feb. 26 meeting of the
~ American Legion Auxiliary, Drew
fe Webster Post 38, juniors and seniors,
p.m: Mlaa .Enna Smith is
caniBm chalnnan for the unit
and ammged the program.

WEDS., FEB. 20TH THRU FEB. 24TH
7:30 NIGHTLY
Saturday, Feb. 23rd-Youth Banquet
6:30 P.M. - Church Basement

fVfRYONf WELCOME

TOilET SOAP

•

Middleport, Ohio

From
Middleport, Ohio

KOIEX

~

~

South Third Ave .

Reg. Ret11t $2.32

~ Thtll'lday in the Riverboat Room of

.

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

"The Uvely Stones"

•

89

A

DIAL

...
-,.

At The

&amp;

8 PACK 16 OZ.

TQMEETTIIURSDAY
The Middleport Child Conserva-

...
••

YOUTH REVIVAL

SPECIAL SINGING
Youth of Local Church

8 PACK

the AtheiiB County Savings and Loan
~ Co. Dr. Nan Mykle of the Communi~ ty Mental Health Center will be the
i! speaker. Mrs. SUBie Abbott will give
~ devotions and Mrs. Abbott and Mrs.
:• SUBle Soulsby wlll be.hostesses .

1.

OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swisher, Hysell
St., Middleport, observed their $2nd
wedding anniversary on Feb. 11.

Speaker-Rev. Mark Friend-18 Years Old
From Hamilton, Ohio

· Cretm ol Mushroom or C1'15ctcen Noodle

- --------·--

son.
Cupids and heart decorated the
social room and following the dinner
the group enjoyed gospel singing by
Matthew Gillian of St. Albans.
Attending besides the advisors
were Joy Hudson, Robert Shepherd,
Lori Kloes, Kim Browning, Vicky
Boyles, Randy Osborne, Lynn Kloos,
Jolm Jacobs, Angie Farley, Craig
Darst, Anoie Houchins, Stephanie
Houchins, Mary Matson, Joan
Hayes, Randy Hayes, the Rev. and
Mfs. Mark McClung, Gillian and
Ron Pierce.

Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser and
'Larry Grueser were in South
Charleston recently to visit Mr. and
· Mrs. Robert Grueser and children.
The Grueser's daughter, Kimberly
observed her sixth birthday during
their visit.

lb.

~ lion League will meet at 7:30 p.m.

.

conunitted to primary care are
projected to double within the next
20 years, according to Gerald A.
Faverman, Ph.D., project director
of a W. K. Kellogg Foundation grant
to study the osteopathic profession.
The study also found that 91.4 percent of osteopathic physicians are
involved in primary care to some
degree.
My next two columns will deal
with readers' questions about
osteopathic theory and manipulative
therapy.

Mrs. Helen Teaford presided with
Mrs. Wanda Rizer giving the devotions. Scripture was taken from
First Corinthians with love as the
theme and several poems were read.

RECENT VISITORS

BUCKET

I.

:~

A sweetheart dinner was held on
Valentine's Day at the Middleport
First Baptist Church for members of
the Baptist Youth Fellowship and
their guests. Hosting the dinner
were the advisors, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Riggs and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hud-

Kloes.

gess.

Sweethqart dinner successful

•••n• .
SGUMIMI

., Isn't thatenouah (or you?

;t Solet'stryaga1n.

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FIRE &amp; SMOKE
Dm(TOR

32-oz.
. cont .

:... 4:1711 ,

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5
'.
12-oz.

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to. ·You know I tuecl!anceoln Ufe
·,. So I love you

SPARE
CUT UP OR WHOLE

-----=':::~~.

:: Jtllt give me 011e mort chance. ·

ANSWER: The D.O. degree,
which means doctor of osteopathy, is
now conferred by 14 osteopathic
colleges around the nation. The Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, of which I am a faculty
member, will graduate its first class
of osteopathic p!1ysiclans this June.
Osteopathic physicians are licensed to practice all phases of
medicine in all 50 states. Of the
17,000 doctors of osteopathic
medicine in the United States, more
than 2,000 are licensed to practice in
Ohio. In this state, both M.D.s and
D.O.s take the same test to be licensed to practice.
QUESTION: What kind of training
does a D.O. receive?
•
ANSWER: In most cases, students
must complete a four-year baccalaureate degree before they can
be coiiBidered for admission to an
osteopathic college. This work must
include training in biology,
chemistry·, physics and other areas
decided liy each ooteopathic coUege.
Figures from a recent study show
that '11 percent or the students entering osteopathic colleges have at
least a bachelor's degree, while only
about 90 percent of the students starting at M.D. schools have completed
an undergraduate school.
Some D.O.s, such as Dr. Robert
stockmal, a guest writer for this
column several weeks ago, complete
advanced degrees before entering
an osteopathic college. Stockmal
received a Ph.D. in microbiology. inununology before entering the
Philadelphia College of Osteopathic
Medicine.
During the first two years of the

., ·

FROM MANUFACTURER

;. lwishwecouldat.rtmerapln
~· I know we can mate It this time

,,

4-or.

cont.

SS .OOCONSUMER REBATE

·

mean?

four-year Ohio University program,
training includes medical · biology
foundation courses and simulated
clinical practice in a classroom setting. Students devote their time to
hospital rotations during the third
year, and spend their fourth year
working in ambulatory care
facilities to obtain family medicine
experience.
After receiving the D.O. degree,
the osteopathic physician will
usually complete a one year internship. Most states, in fact,
require M.D.'s and D.O.s to have a
one-year hospital based internship
before they can be licensed to practice. If the physician chooses to be a
specialist, one to five years of additional training is necessary after
the internship is completed. In most
cases, these ooteopathic physicians
who decide to specialize train in
osteopathic or military hospitals.
However, they can also receive their
post-graduate training in an M.D.
hospital. Many institutions, such as
the Cleveland Clinic, train D.O. and
M.D. residents in the same
programs. There is currently some
debate within the profession as to
tlie advisability of having D.O.'s
take post-graduate training in M.D.
hospitals, but I personally don't
believe this poses a threat to the
profession's continued existence as
a distinct and separate entity.
QUESTION: What makes
osteopathic medicine different •
ANSWER: While both D.O.s and
M.D.s use all traditional methods of
treatment - including drugs,
surgery and radiation, the
osteopathic physician has had ad·
ditional training in osteopathic
manipulative therapy. This approach includes the skiUful use of
the hands to examine patients and
treat physical ailments.
Osteopathic physicians are also
more likely to be family physicians,
a fact brought out in a recent survey .
While the number of M.D.s entering
primary care has been shrinking
each year, osteopathic physicians

tanker fund.
Mrs. Enuna Lyons, vice president, presided at the meeting with
Mae Cleland leading in the pledge to
the flag, and Maxine Rose , the
Lord's Prayer.
Oretha Snider won the door prize.
The birthdays or Mrs. Rose and
Beverly Cwrunins were observed.
Mrs. Rose and Mrs. Cununins served refreshments to those named and
Beulah Autherson and Agnes Bog-

The treasurer's report was given
by Mrs. Vera Van Meter. Mrs.
Beulah Ward will host the March
meeting. Attending were the Rev.
and Mrs. Harvey Koch, Mr. and
Mrs. William Winebrenner, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hoback, Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Rizer, Mr. and Mrs. Carol
Norris , Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Millard Van Meter,
Emogene . Holstein, Beulah Ward,
Mrs. Teaford, and Mrs. Eleanor
Robson, with Mrs. Gladys Robson
and Benny Ewing and Michael
Kloes, son of the hosts, as a guests.

cont.

ou

CLIP 'N SAVE

•'*

By Lamar C. Mmer, D.O.
Clluleal Associate Professor
Ill Famlly Medlcllle
Oblo UDivenlty CoUege
ol Osteopatblc Medicine
WHAT ISA D.O.?
QUESTION: I have seen the letters D.O. after your name when the
column appears in the Columbus
Dlap&amp;tch. What do these letters

Plans for a baked ham ·and
chicken dinner to be held Sunday at
the firehouse in Racine were made
when the Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met there recently .
Firemen Doug Rees and Hank
Jolmson met with the Auxiliary
members to discuss the dinner. Serving will begin at II a.m. and the
menu will consist of baked chicken,
ham, mashed potatoes, noodles,
green beans, slaw, coffee and punch.
All proceeds will go into the Racine

Items for the kitchen at the
Asbury United Methodist Church
were taken to the Tuesday night
meeting of the Eagles Class held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul

IYIDitOPa

100'a690

Burger Chef is offering you 4 delicious fish coupons during
the Lenten season 1 Bnng the whole family and save.

~•

Health Review

•

'

Eagles Class meets

·-····
!11-~

MR.COFRE
FILTERS
I

.•

Ham and chicken dinner
planned by fire auxiliary

Reo. Ret1ll S1.85

Reg. Rttlll $1 .28

INSURANCE
COMPANY

RelaiiS1 .04

KLIINIX
' FACIAL
TISSUIS

ODOR EATER$

~~

The Poet's
Corner

,• But It didn't lutlong.

greaseless.
I mentioned my little trick to a
cosmetics saleslady and ~he was disdainful , to say the least, andlnfonned me I would clog my pores
because lipstick contains wax.
However this has not happened to
me. My skin is clear and clean and I
do not~ have to invest in separate
blushers. - JEAN
DEAR POLLY- Before I had an
automatic dishwasher my daughter
suggested that I put some
dishwasher detergent and hot water
in any pans or casserole dishes that
had baked-on food. I let this eland
for a while and find it works like a
charm.- J. C.

m

••'••'r-------------------,

IWANT\'OVBACK
Wl1ll ME AGAIN
, \ I want you back with me again
I need you to hold me Jn your anna
~ And your .soft volcewb.lapertngin my ear.
:,. Our love Will something you don't get every day

stabilizer can be made by cutting a
one and three-quarter, inch circle
from a used dryer bric softener
sheet. This holds the candle firm and
upright and 111e size fits all
candelstickll. - MARY
DEAR POLLY - I read the
Pointer where reader suggested using one's lipstick instead of afn expensive blusher. I have been doing
this for years but instead ofpplying
dots of lipstick directly on my cheek
I use my left hand as a palepte. In it I
moisten the dots of lipstick with
warm water, or a bit of moisturizer,
and blend on my hand and then ap~
ly it to my face. Perfect and matched results every time, and it is

LentenSpecials

"THE CARRIERS" from
• Belmont, W. Va., will hold a sacred
.~ concert and ministry Wednesday 7
:p.m. at the Pentecostal Assembly,
: 124, Racine. They will also be
: featured on Feb. '!I at 7 p.m.
• THIRD
WEDNESDAy
: Homemakers Club, Syracuse, Wed; nesday at 10 a.m. at Municipal
-~ Building . Project on cushions.
·: RUTLAND Ladies Firemen
: Auxiliary Wednesday 7:30p.m. at
; fire house. Those interested invited
:: to attend.

'•' •

By PoUy Cramer
Newspaper Enterprise Aasoc.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I tend to get indelible ink on my hands, as I work
around it all the time. I have tried to
get it off with many things but the
only way I have found is to let it
wear off. Do you know of anything
that will remove this ink quicker? T.C.
DEAR T.C. Try dampening
the stained areas
and then rub with
the sulphur end of
a match. Other
possibilities are
dry cleaning fluid,
petroleum jelly or
a paste made of lemon juice and
detergent. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - A great candle

•Ofl 'l'

•

;;

Hints given on removing ink on hands

·••••" 'SHIAMPo~o
..

~

"'~
.••

said that plants should be sprayed
while they are still dormant and
when the temperature is above 41l.
Suggestions were given on products to use to kill crabgrass and insects in lawns; as well as fertilizer to
improve the quality of established
lawns. She suggested getting the
hand tools ready by cleaning and
polishing along with making a list of
plants and seeds needed for spring.
Now is the time to sow petunias in
flats, she reported.
Aletter was read from the Central
Heart Association, Meigs Chapter.,
asking for contributions. An arrangement, uLove. Me, Love Me
" Not" , by Mrs. Pat Thoma won a blue
ribbon. She used red silk roses, live
materials in a white compote. Mrs.
Lewis judged the arrangements.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Parker and Kathy Parker.
Others attending were Mrs. Ruth
Moore, Mrs. Marianna Mitchell,
Patty Parker, and Linda Mayer.
Mrs. Thoma will host the March
meeting.

Polly's Pointers:

CRACKERS
LB. BOX

WEEK

29

�...
•
•

.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Feb. 19. 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Feb. 19, 1980

•
•

•..

Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service
Report of 1979 Activities
HELPING PEOPLE
TO LIVE WITH

'How
To
Reach

'

YOUR

EXTENSION SERVICE

Call, write or stop
by our office:
MEIGS COUNTY
COOPERATIVE
EXTENSION SERVICE
BOX32
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

The Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service is the
vital link between Meigs County residents and the Ohio State
University. It is a branch of the Ohio State University's
College of Agriculture and Home Economics, and it serves as
the educational arm of the U. S. Departmenf of Agriculture.
The Cooperative Extension Service was established by
the Smith-Lever Act on May 8, 1914 .. . " to aid in diffusing
among the people ofthe United States, useful and practical
information on subjects relating to agriculture and home
economics, and to encourage application of the same." It is
the world's largest informal educational and developmental
organization.

(Office located in basement of
County
Home Building on
Mulberry Heights }

TELEPHONE NUMBER992-6696

Education comes by way of workshops, meetings, field
days, tours, office calls, telephone calls, farm and home
visits, newspaper releases, radio broadcasts, publications,
and newsletters. The office maintains a library of current,
unbiased literature to provide Meigs County residents with
informatio~. Extension offices are maintained in each of
Ohio's 88 counties.
All educational programs and activities conducted by the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service are available to
all potential clientele on a non-discriminatory basis without
regard to race, color, sex, national origin or religious affiliation .

4-H Youth

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(EXTENSION)

OOPER.~

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JJ79STAFF
L\L\LUUl
Jolm.Rice, Agricultural Agent
Diana Eberts,
.
Home Economics Agent
Pansy Jordan, 4-H Assistant
Jean Spencer, 4-H ASsistant
Myrtle Clark, EFNEP
Nutrition Aide
Annie Moon, EFNEP
Nutrition Aide
Joyce Bowen, Secretary
Phyllis Dugan, Assistant Secreta!')
Cindy Pitzer, Sununer Assistant
Jill Smith, Swruner Assilltant
1980 STAFF CHANGES
Phyllis Dugan, 4-H Aasistant
\, Janet Marcum, AaslstantSec...,.

Highlights
... Mulligan Stew, Bicycle Safety, and Chick Embryology programs were
presented in eight schools with a total enrollment of 6:!() pupils .
.. . A Plan-0-Rama program was held in April to "kick off" the 4-H
program in the county with 109 4-H members, advisors, and parents atlending.

·-~

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--- Several me~bers represented Meigs County. at Ohio Club C:ongress,
Junior Leadership Camp, Conservation Camp, Citizenship Short Course, the
Ohio State Fair and 4-H camp at Jackson.
... Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale results ... sold were 19lambs, ·
II hogs , and 29,Bteers for a total of $38,855.50.
...Advisors newsletters sent ·monthly during the sununer keeping the advisors up to date. on all the latest in the 4-H program.
... A Rabbit Fitting and Showing Workshop was held for 21 members
taking the 4-H rabbit project.
...Training sessions were held for 4-H members filling out the National
Report Fonn.
... Several advisors from Meigs County attended the 4-H Advisors
Recognition Luncheon held in Colwnbus.
·
... " It's A Family A' Fair" was the theme for the Youth Night Parade at the
Meigs.County Fair. It was the first parade to be held in five years.
... Over 500 youth were assisted in "Learning by Doing" at the county fair.
Grand Champions are chosen after the members have finished requirements in their 4-H project book and had an individual interview with a judge.
Grand and Reserve Champions also represent Meigs County at the Ohio
State Fair.

0
.

'

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~E6~L,E
. - - --- ·

BUILDINC

Finished Projects Displayed

'

Kings and Queens

Members display their finished projects in booths put up by the 4-H
members in the Junior Fair Buildiilg. Members have over 200 projects to
choose from.

Meigs County 4-H members
represent their club and county as
Junior Fair King and Queen and fir·
st and second runners-up. Members
also serve on the Junior Fair Board
and the 4-H Club Conunittee. Pictured are members who have been
in club work for 10 and 11 years.

"Exte~ion is ,people

Ju?lpins people"

Meigs County Coll1DliBsloners, I to r, Henry Wells, Richard Jones and
Chesler Welb.
«"

The Cooperative Extension Service works in cooperation with the Coun·
ty Conunissioners, Ohio State University, and the U. S. Department of
Agriculture. Support provided by the Meigs County Commissioners, Richard
Jonl!ll, Henry Welb, and Chester Wells, has enabled us to provide
educational services which are vital to Meigs County residents.

The Cooperative Extension
Service assists the public through
four main program areas of emphasis .. . Agriculture, Home
Economics, 4-H Youth, and Community and Natural Resource
Development.
Various conunittees of local
people help to determine specific
educational programs in these
broad program areas. Many
people also assist in the final
planning and presentation of
programs. Thanks to the
numerous volunteers who have
helped!

Leaders of
Tomorrow

..

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It takes a great deal of energy to
put in a field of com. Any tillage
operations we can leave out without
hurting production should be considered. Demonstrations and
schools have been conducted on no
tillage corn and forage seedings.
The Soil Conservation Service now

.More Beef!
The "Fertlbull" project has now
completed Its fifth and fihal year.
·Weaning weights were Increased
from 300 pounds to 500 pi:lunds. Better pastures and better forages to
produce more beef was the goal. In
1975 approximately 4,000 pounds of

beef was produced on eo acrC!I. In
1978 and 1979 more than 12,000 poun·
ds of beef was produced on these 60
acres. Dave Gloeckner &lt;1. Country
Roads Fann near Letart was the
cooperator.

Extension programs in Meigs
County are planned by the people of
Meigs County with the IIS.'Iistance of
Extension staff. Many 11gencies and
many conunittees get involved In
planning, assisting, and conducting
programs. Successful agricultural

The aftemoon and evening
program attracted "' female and!'. five 11)81e participants.
••

:

The Most,Serious :Pest

..•••
.•....•
' .

••

'•

has a no-till forage seeder to rent. ·
More and more tillage operations
are, being left out. Plowing the
biggest energy· user in tillage, is
being discontinued more and more.
Tom Theiss is shown here pulling
disc and sprayer, eliminating one
trip over the field.

programs involve such people as
those shown above: Jolm Rice,
County Agricultural Agent; Henry
Wells, Meigs County Conunissioner;
and Boyd Ruth, Soil Conservation
Service.

The proper use of chemicals has
been receiving a great deal of attention. Some chemicals are restricted and cannot be purchased unles.s
a producer has a license. To obtain a
license you must Pll88 tests on the
use or pesticides. Over 125 private
applicators in Meigs County have
been h'ained and received licenses.
Every three years they must receive
three hours of reh'alntng. This
training . is conducted by the
CooperatlveExtenslon Service.

•

•"•

..

-·-

The Saft- Use of Pesticides

Connie Black and Becky Drennel"
,_re pictlq'ed ~ a delnclll!
~~rauoh oo beating water ciJDcluctecr.
by Diana E:berta, Me181 County EJ:.:

\ v

-..... -.-.

Success Involves Many People

-.Ions rl this IDicrowave cookerl(..

tension Agent, Home Economics.

, ....

-

Energy •••Energy.••Energy

The Mysteries of Microwaves.-

attractive meals
- planning, maktng and caring
for clothing
- making your home an at·
. tractive place In which to live
- managing money, time, and
skills to help your family
- Improving personal and community relationshiP$ .
INTERESTED? Call, write, or
stop by the MeigS County Ex·
tension Office for moredet:llls.

. '•

.•

Other demonstration topics included dough ornaments, time
management, cookie decorating,
miCfiiWave Cooking, making jute
flowers and wreaths, cheese balls,
and candy making.
Displays on energy saving
clothing, gifts, and Christmas
decorations were also provided for
viewing.

Topics dlacus8ect and deman. lllrated Included hotir a microwave
oven operates, advantages 8nd
·~tages &lt;I. its UBe, features to
look for when buying a microwave
oven and prope.r cooking~uea.

,.t. .

..

_tree.

.

...

*

This is a big question to all of us. To assist farmers in keeping good
records a fann record school is scheduled each year. Couples or in. dividuals can enroll in the school. Good records are a must to evaluate
our businesses, borrow,money, or make out our income tax:

The annual "Hints for the
Holidays" program, sponsored by
the Meigs County Extension
Homemaker Clubs, featured
educational demonstrations and
displays with a Christmas theme.
The daytime and evening sessions
were attended by over 100 individuals.
Barbara Hackett displayed a
variety of homemade Christmas
decorations and then worked with
Linda and Lisa Riggs, pictured here,
on patchwork ornaments for the

:~ Need Help With Being A Homem~er?
JOIN AN EXTENSION
HOMEMAKERS CLUB! Anyone
can Join, and you and your friends can get together to start a
group that will J~~eet at a time and
place that will suit your schedule.
Your group can decide what
you want to. learn in yollr group
meetings. You can learn more
about •••
-managing a home
- proridlna nutritiOWJ, safe and

,("
·-II .

~-

This wardrobe planning program featured a style revue of fall fashions
designed by a major pattern company. Local residents who volunteered
to model the ouUita included 15 women, two men, and one child.
Mike Jackson and Bill Blount are shown here wearing the casual ouUits
that they modeled.
Guidelines for wardrobe planning and energy saving clOthing were
oresented in addition to displays of fabrics and sewing acces.Soril!ll
provided by local businesses.

The Junior Leadership Club
enrollment is 10 members.

Where Did My Money Go?

Hints For
The Holidays

Fall Fashion Trends and Techniques

with approximately 30 children attending.

Agriculture and .CNRD

EXTENSION
HOME
ECONOMICS

Try EFNEP!
EFNEP is the F;xpanded Food and
Nutrition Education Program. It is
one part of the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service
Home Economics Program.
Myrtle Clark and Annie Moon,
Meigs County EFNEP nutrition
aides, are trained to teach food and
nutrition lnfonnation to low-income
families. They meet with individual
homemakers in their homes or in
small neighborhood groups.
The aides and homemakers
discUliS such topics as nutrition, fqod
preparation, food buying, menu and
meal planning, budgeting, food
preservation, storage, and
sanitation . Food preparation
techniques are also demonstrated
and practiced using a variety of
nutritious recipes.
4-H EFNEP airnll toward involving low-income youth in 4-H
· nutrition projects, The first 4-H EFNEP Club in Meigs County was
organized this year by Annie Moon
with the assistance of an adult EFNEP program homemaker who
volunteered to serve as the club advisor.
If you know of anyone who might ·
like to participate in these free
programs, please contact the Meigs
County Extension Office at ~96 .

County-wide Junior Leadership
meetings were held once a month.
The members · held a twelve-hour
rock-a-thon, attended an Area
Junior Leadership Round-Up at
Shawnee State Park Lodge, a trip to
Kings Island, and planned and
carried out a Christmas party for
low-income children in the county

Some of the staff of the Meigs County Extension Service include front I to r,
Jean Spencer, Annie Moon, Janet Marcum; back, 1tor, Diana Eberts, John Rice
and Joyce Bowen.

Home Economics·

...

Exhibits have tripled in the 4-H Flower Show in the past two years.
Members grow the flowers in the flower gardening project and enter the
flowers in the flower show at the fair for the public to view.
other shows for the public are : the 4-H Style Revue, the Sheep, Beef,
Dairy, Swine, Rabbit, Poultry and Horse Shows, and the Demonstration
Contest.

i

~ ~\~-,

Flowers, Flowers and More Flowers

earth.

roae

.

It seems at tinlt!S that multi-fl~ra
)Vill inherit the
Meigs
County residents have been WOfliln&amp; ·dllllently to control this wild rose.
Over 100 people in Meigs COunty have been trained in the use'of TordOn ·
lOK'to oontrol multi-flora
rose.
-

,.

.

,.

,.

Meigs County Has A 'Fo,-age

etuh

For the most part, Meigs County was approximalelf 5 tons per acre,
land IB more suitable to forages than with WUiiam Kennedy, Bill Killdz,
row crops. With this in mind, · a and Roy J;:lolter all having over 7 tons
Forage Club Wll4 started if\ 1978. The . per acre:
average yielcV per acre in Meigs
Collnty in 1978 for all producers was
Shown in the picture are Dave
2.3 . tons per acre. In 1978, the
Koblentz and county agent John
average yield in the Forage Club
Rice inspecting an alfalfa field.
1 •

�...
•
•

.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Feb. 19. 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Feb. 19, 1980

•
•

•..

Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service
Report of 1979 Activities
HELPING PEOPLE
TO LIVE WITH

'How
To
Reach

'

YOUR

EXTENSION SERVICE

Call, write or stop
by our office:
MEIGS COUNTY
COOPERATIVE
EXTENSION SERVICE
BOX32
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

The Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service is the
vital link between Meigs County residents and the Ohio State
University. It is a branch of the Ohio State University's
College of Agriculture and Home Economics, and it serves as
the educational arm of the U. S. Departmenf of Agriculture.
The Cooperative Extension Service was established by
the Smith-Lever Act on May 8, 1914 .. . " to aid in diffusing
among the people ofthe United States, useful and practical
information on subjects relating to agriculture and home
economics, and to encourage application of the same." It is
the world's largest informal educational and developmental
organization.

(Office located in basement of
County
Home Building on
Mulberry Heights }

TELEPHONE NUMBER992-6696

Education comes by way of workshops, meetings, field
days, tours, office calls, telephone calls, farm and home
visits, newspaper releases, radio broadcasts, publications,
and newsletters. The office maintains a library of current,
unbiased literature to provide Meigs County residents with
informatio~. Extension offices are maintained in each of
Ohio's 88 counties.
All educational programs and activities conducted by the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service are available to
all potential clientele on a non-discriminatory basis without
regard to race, color, sex, national origin or religious affiliation .

4-H Youth

(,

\

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•

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~

..-z:.._ _ ....

l '"
~

;

II +
~I

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The .

,

I II

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-

(EXTENSION)

OOPER.~

,~j

I '"' 88'
\_ \ \ ~ &gt;

JJ79STAFF
L\L\LUUl
Jolm.Rice, Agricultural Agent
Diana Eberts,
.
Home Economics Agent
Pansy Jordan, 4-H Assistant
Jean Spencer, 4-H ASsistant
Myrtle Clark, EFNEP
Nutrition Aide
Annie Moon, EFNEP
Nutrition Aide
Joyce Bowen, Secretary
Phyllis Dugan, Assistant Secreta!')
Cindy Pitzer, Sununer Assistant
Jill Smith, Swruner Assilltant
1980 STAFF CHANGES
Phyllis Dugan, 4-H Aasistant
\, Janet Marcum, AaslstantSec...,.

Highlights
... Mulligan Stew, Bicycle Safety, and Chick Embryology programs were
presented in eight schools with a total enrollment of 6:!() pupils .
.. . A Plan-0-Rama program was held in April to "kick off" the 4-H
program in the county with 109 4-H members, advisors, and parents atlending.

·-~

•

!~

l'fOP!t

Us .•.

' 'I

~

\

"'

--- Several me~bers represented Meigs County. at Ohio Club C:ongress,
Junior Leadership Camp, Conservation Camp, Citizenship Short Course, the
Ohio State Fair and 4-H camp at Jackson.
... Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale results ... sold were 19lambs, ·
II hogs , and 29,Bteers for a total of $38,855.50.
...Advisors newsletters sent ·monthly during the sununer keeping the advisors up to date. on all the latest in the 4-H program.
... A Rabbit Fitting and Showing Workshop was held for 21 members
taking the 4-H rabbit project.
...Training sessions were held for 4-H members filling out the National
Report Fonn.
... Several advisors from Meigs County attended the 4-H Advisors
Recognition Luncheon held in Colwnbus.
·
... " It's A Family A' Fair" was the theme for the Youth Night Parade at the
Meigs.County Fair. It was the first parade to be held in five years.
... Over 500 youth were assisted in "Learning by Doing" at the county fair.
Grand Champions are chosen after the members have finished requirements in their 4-H project book and had an individual interview with a judge.
Grand and Reserve Champions also represent Meigs County at the Ohio
State Fair.

0
.

'

\

- -""-

•A
f.!#

~E6~L,E
. - - --- ·

BUILDINC

Finished Projects Displayed

'

Kings and Queens

Members display their finished projects in booths put up by the 4-H
members in the Junior Fair Buildiilg. Members have over 200 projects to
choose from.

Meigs County 4-H members
represent their club and county as
Junior Fair King and Queen and fir·
st and second runners-up. Members
also serve on the Junior Fair Board
and the 4-H Club Conunittee. Pictured are members who have been
in club work for 10 and 11 years.

"Exte~ion is ,people

Ju?lpins people"

Meigs County Coll1DliBsloners, I to r, Henry Wells, Richard Jones and
Chesler Welb.
«"

The Cooperative Extension Service works in cooperation with the Coun·
ty Conunissioners, Ohio State University, and the U. S. Department of
Agriculture. Support provided by the Meigs County Commissioners, Richard
Jonl!ll, Henry Welb, and Chester Wells, has enabled us to provide
educational services which are vital to Meigs County residents.

The Cooperative Extension
Service assists the public through
four main program areas of emphasis .. . Agriculture, Home
Economics, 4-H Youth, and Community and Natural Resource
Development.
Various conunittees of local
people help to determine specific
educational programs in these
broad program areas. Many
people also assist in the final
planning and presentation of
programs. Thanks to the
numerous volunteers who have
helped!

Leaders of
Tomorrow

..

,·

••

..•

.

" o

•'

.• •

1

·-.'t.J~.&gt;

·.~~.#· ..

..... :·.~

. .

f

' ;. ~o.t&lt;!i"''t~'A ;':"

"

.

.. . ..
. - .~-.,....).

It takes a great deal of energy to
put in a field of com. Any tillage
operations we can leave out without
hurting production should be considered. Demonstrations and
schools have been conducted on no
tillage corn and forage seedings.
The Soil Conservation Service now

.More Beef!
The "Fertlbull" project has now
completed Its fifth and fihal year.
·Weaning weights were Increased
from 300 pounds to 500 pi:lunds. Better pastures and better forages to
produce more beef was the goal. In
1975 approximately 4,000 pounds of

beef was produced on eo acrC!I. In
1978 and 1979 more than 12,000 poun·
ds of beef was produced on these 60
acres. Dave Gloeckner &lt;1. Country
Roads Fann near Letart was the
cooperator.

Extension programs in Meigs
County are planned by the people of
Meigs County with the IIS.'Iistance of
Extension staff. Many 11gencies and
many conunittees get involved In
planning, assisting, and conducting
programs. Successful agricultural

The aftemoon and evening
program attracted "' female and!'. five 11)81e participants.
••

:

The Most,Serious :Pest

..•••
.•....•
' .

••

'•

has a no-till forage seeder to rent. ·
More and more tillage operations
are, being left out. Plowing the
biggest energy· user in tillage, is
being discontinued more and more.
Tom Theiss is shown here pulling
disc and sprayer, eliminating one
trip over the field.

programs involve such people as
those shown above: Jolm Rice,
County Agricultural Agent; Henry
Wells, Meigs County Conunissioner;
and Boyd Ruth, Soil Conservation
Service.

The proper use of chemicals has
been receiving a great deal of attention. Some chemicals are restricted and cannot be purchased unles.s
a producer has a license. To obtain a
license you must Pll88 tests on the
use or pesticides. Over 125 private
applicators in Meigs County have
been h'ained and received licenses.
Every three years they must receive
three hours of reh'alntng. This
training . is conducted by the
CooperatlveExtenslon Service.

•

•"•

..

-·-

The Saft- Use of Pesticides

Connie Black and Becky Drennel"
,_re pictlq'ed ~ a delnclll!
~~rauoh oo beating water ciJDcluctecr.
by Diana E:berta, Me181 County EJ:.:

\ v

-..... -.-.

Success Involves Many People

-.Ions rl this IDicrowave cookerl(..

tension Agent, Home Economics.

, ....

-

Energy •••Energy.••Energy

The Mysteries of Microwaves.-

attractive meals
- planning, maktng and caring
for clothing
- making your home an at·
. tractive place In which to live
- managing money, time, and
skills to help your family
- Improving personal and community relationshiP$ .
INTERESTED? Call, write, or
stop by the MeigS County Ex·
tension Office for moredet:llls.

. '•

.•

Other demonstration topics included dough ornaments, time
management, cookie decorating,
miCfiiWave Cooking, making jute
flowers and wreaths, cheese balls,
and candy making.
Displays on energy saving
clothing, gifts, and Christmas
decorations were also provided for
viewing.

Topics dlacus8ect and deman. lllrated Included hotir a microwave
oven operates, advantages 8nd
·~tages &lt;I. its UBe, features to
look for when buying a microwave
oven and prope.r cooking~uea.

,.t. .

..

_tree.

.

...

*

This is a big question to all of us. To assist farmers in keeping good
records a fann record school is scheduled each year. Couples or in. dividuals can enroll in the school. Good records are a must to evaluate
our businesses, borrow,money, or make out our income tax:

The annual "Hints for the
Holidays" program, sponsored by
the Meigs County Extension
Homemaker Clubs, featured
educational demonstrations and
displays with a Christmas theme.
The daytime and evening sessions
were attended by over 100 individuals.
Barbara Hackett displayed a
variety of homemade Christmas
decorations and then worked with
Linda and Lisa Riggs, pictured here,
on patchwork ornaments for the

:~ Need Help With Being A Homem~er?
JOIN AN EXTENSION
HOMEMAKERS CLUB! Anyone
can Join, and you and your friends can get together to start a
group that will J~~eet at a time and
place that will suit your schedule.
Your group can decide what
you want to. learn in yollr group
meetings. You can learn more
about •••
-managing a home
- proridlna nutritiOWJ, safe and

,("
·-II .

~-

This wardrobe planning program featured a style revue of fall fashions
designed by a major pattern company. Local residents who volunteered
to model the ouUita included 15 women, two men, and one child.
Mike Jackson and Bill Blount are shown here wearing the casual ouUits
that they modeled.
Guidelines for wardrobe planning and energy saving clOthing were
oresented in addition to displays of fabrics and sewing acces.Soril!ll
provided by local businesses.

The Junior Leadership Club
enrollment is 10 members.

Where Did My Money Go?

Hints For
The Holidays

Fall Fashion Trends and Techniques

with approximately 30 children attending.

Agriculture and .CNRD

EXTENSION
HOME
ECONOMICS

Try EFNEP!
EFNEP is the F;xpanded Food and
Nutrition Education Program. It is
one part of the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service
Home Economics Program.
Myrtle Clark and Annie Moon,
Meigs County EFNEP nutrition
aides, are trained to teach food and
nutrition lnfonnation to low-income
families. They meet with individual
homemakers in their homes or in
small neighborhood groups.
The aides and homemakers
discUliS such topics as nutrition, fqod
preparation, food buying, menu and
meal planning, budgeting, food
preservation, storage, and
sanitation . Food preparation
techniques are also demonstrated
and practiced using a variety of
nutritious recipes.
4-H EFNEP airnll toward involving low-income youth in 4-H
· nutrition projects, The first 4-H EFNEP Club in Meigs County was
organized this year by Annie Moon
with the assistance of an adult EFNEP program homemaker who
volunteered to serve as the club advisor.
If you know of anyone who might ·
like to participate in these free
programs, please contact the Meigs
County Extension Office at ~96 .

County-wide Junior Leadership
meetings were held once a month.
The members · held a twelve-hour
rock-a-thon, attended an Area
Junior Leadership Round-Up at
Shawnee State Park Lodge, a trip to
Kings Island, and planned and
carried out a Christmas party for
low-income children in the county

Some of the staff of the Meigs County Extension Service include front I to r,
Jean Spencer, Annie Moon, Janet Marcum; back, 1tor, Diana Eberts, John Rice
and Joyce Bowen.

Home Economics·

...

Exhibits have tripled in the 4-H Flower Show in the past two years.
Members grow the flowers in the flower gardening project and enter the
flowers in the flower show at the fair for the public to view.
other shows for the public are : the 4-H Style Revue, the Sheep, Beef,
Dairy, Swine, Rabbit, Poultry and Horse Shows, and the Demonstration
Contest.

i

~ ~\~-,

Flowers, Flowers and More Flowers

earth.

roae

.

It seems at tinlt!S that multi-fl~ra
)Vill inherit the
Meigs
County residents have been WOfliln&amp; ·dllllently to control this wild rose.
Over 100 people in Meigs COunty have been trained in the use'of TordOn ·
lOK'to oontrol multi-flora
rose.
-

,.

.

,.

,.

Meigs County Has A 'Fo,-age

etuh

For the most part, Meigs County was approximalelf 5 tons per acre,
land IB more suitable to forages than with WUiiam Kennedy, Bill Killdz,
row crops. With this in mind, · a and Roy J;:lolter all having over 7 tons
Forage Club Wll4 started if\ 1978. The . per acre:
average yielcV per acre in Meigs
Collnty in 1978 for all producers was
Shown in the picture are Dave
2.3 . tons per acre. In 1978, the
Koblentz and county agent John
average yield in the Forage Club
Rice inspecting an alfalfa field.
1 •

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1980

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Feb. 19, 1980

View from the Statehouse
BY: STATE REPRESENTATIVE
RON .J.\MES
H&gt;·PROCTORVILLE, ..

92ND HOUSE I)ISTRil:;:l')
On December 7, 1979, House
Speaker Vern Riffe created the Ohio

House Steel Task Force to discern
what the causes of the steel crisis
are and what legislative action
might offer real solutions.
Chai red by Representative
Thomas Carney (D-Boardman), the
l!l·member Task Force is made up
of the entire House State Government Committee and Representatives Thomas Gilmartin and
Joseph Vukovich of Youngstown.
Serving as a forum for open
debate on .the economic impact of
recent steel industry actions in Ohio,
the Task Force hears arguments
from both sides of the issue.
Industry spokesmen already
testifying before the Task Force
have emphasized that substantial
changes in the environment in which
steel does business are needed to
stem the erotion of the steel industry's ability to serve Its markets
and the country. They cite four
major circumstances which contribute to the present economic

••

DONATES FLAG - The New Haven American Legion, represented here on the left by chaplain Richard
Danbury, recently donated a United States nag to the New Haven Volunteer Fire Departme0 t. Shown at right accepting the nag is Fire Chief Bill James. The Legion also has given $200 to Union Cemetery on Route 33 for upgrading
of facilities.
·

h
•
l
,
l
Gasoh o maJOr t eme 1or agrzcu ture

TO THE MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION SERVICE,
MULBERRY HEIGHTS, FOR THE MANY SERVICES
RENDERED TO OUR PEOPLE IN THE FIELDS OF
AGRICULTURE, 4-H CLUB WORK, HOME
ECONOMICS AND COMMUNITY RESOURCES AND
NATURAL DEVELOPMENT.

e

'

WASHINGTON '&lt;AP)
The
namely Carter administration farm
American Agriculture Movement
policies the organization:• lead~rs
plaMed to officially qJllil) 'its fi~ .~· ,}lii,Ve hercely cntictzed m .~eartier
national convention hefe:tOi)ay, witlf" tW~~Shington appearances.
t
gasohol a major theme. · '
· A year ago, for example, long lines
But that does not mean the AAM is
of tractors and thousands of angry
overlooking ether basic issues,
fanners tried in vain to convince the

MEIGS INN

:•

•

EWING FUNERAL HOME

i• RACINE HOME NATIONAL' BANK

SIMMONS OLDS.CADILLAC

••
RACINE, OHIO
••
••..••..•..••..•••••.•.••.•..•..•................. ···················································-'··················································
•
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

WAID CROSS &amp; SON STORE

••

i

•
i•
•

THE FARMERS BANK

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEROY, OHIO
i
...............................•.................. ........................•...............•...........: ............................ ~ .................... .
RACINE, OHIO

,•

POMEROY, OHIO

••

•

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

~

~

THE CENTRAL TRUST CO.

CRAFTY LADIES HANDICRAFT

•
•
:
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
:
POMEROY, OHIO
•
•
··················································:····················································~·················································
POMEROY, OHIO

.•
ERWIN'S GULF SERVICE
:• MIDDLEPORT, BEN FRANKLIN
:
MARK V
..
•...••................................••.••••..•..•••.••...•.•..•••••
........•.........•.........•......, .......•.................................•........
.•
•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:

'

••
:

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

~·

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

•

i•
:•

POMEROY, OHIO

•

~

G &amp; J AUTO PARTS

•:•

POMEROY, OHIO

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
POMEROY, OHIO

•

•

!

,

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

•

CHESTER, OHIO

:

••..•....••...................................... .........•.................•.......•....••.••...... ~ .......................................••.•......
•

THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, OHIO

i•
••
:

y

FRANCIS FLORIST
POMEROY, OHIO

-

i•

MARGUERITE SHOES

:

POMEROY, OHIO

••

•
•
·················································~·····················~························••,•··•·················································~
•
•
EBERSBACH HARDWARE
:•
ROYAL CROWN HOmiNG CO. :•
BAUM TRUE VAWE STORE
•
•
•

i

CHESTER, OHIO
•••••• •• •.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••• t• ................................................... ...... .... •••.•• •••••••••••• ••·•••••• p••• •••••• ~ •••••••••
'
.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MEIGS AUTO PARTS .
I

POMEROY, OHIO

~
•

:•

POMEROY, OHIO

KINGSBURY HOME SALES, INC.
'

. . POMEROY, OHIO

. :

.
.!•
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THE FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY,
OHIO
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heritage house.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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SMitH NELSON 'MOTORS
POMEROY, OH,IO

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.. K. &amp;CJEWELERS .
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POMEROY, OHIO

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Mr. and Mrs. Max Wolfe of San·
Recent dinner guests of Mr. and
dusky spent a week with his sister,
Mrs. Gerald Simpson and children
Mrs. Helen Simpson. They were din·
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stemple
and daughter, Stephanie, of San Berner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beegle at Dorcas on Monday
nardino, California and Mr. and
evening and Mrs. GJ:ll~ Siip'*Oti
Mrs. Russell Stemple of ParkerTuesday evening.
'· • . : . ~ sburg: W. Va.
;
..,.. Mr. ~d Mrs. CJ:itt Bra~ord ~-.of •.. - M.!'· l\l'd Mrs. Rohert Sf:e!liPle ~d •
"" Worlhington spent 6verrught Friday
daughter returned to their home m
.t and Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. California.
~ Critt Bradford, Sr.
BUl McKenzie of Gallipolis visited
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Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace visited
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Donna Brace at Parkersburg Satur•• ... ,
I
day

J KI" ngsbury

i News Notes

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~ Recent ' gu~"J/ Mi an'd'"M'i!s: ' . A '... 1· "G
~~ Virgil
were Miss Judy King,
pp e rove
i, Bourbonnais, fll., Mrs. Geneva N
NOtes
I. M~y and son, Richard, of Zion,
ews
,
Mrs. llah Hoffman, Anderson,
King

m~,

~· Inc., and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Felts

By Mn. Herbertllowlb
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Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
'" of~a
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t ' Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons Sunday afternoon
:" John Dean were Mr. and Ml'!l, ~visited their cousin, Lee Otis Hussen
.11, neth Markins, Racme, Mr. and
. , '"'Mhad a stroke and is a patient at
~ Garold Gilkey, Tammy and Amber,
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
j. 'Atfu!riS,' ' lirld'
"te'rfe"l!' • ck'' 'Pleasant.
~ Patasi\:!IJB, J~m~ta.~e.fl)mJ ,and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart,
• James De,4 .. ~~-.. ~Mt~ni ';tertl ' chi\cpn Brice and Beth Ann of
~· Gary King,
heth "w'ray, Mr. Racme visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
~· and .Mrs. Homer Bailey and
Hayman and Keith Saturday. Brice,
•; Yoho.
L),:l,'
A~nt at Ohio State University,'
f•· . Mrs. Neva~ has received word Columbus, spent the weekend with.'
.\ of ille death. her, sisfe'r:iD-law, his parents.
,, Mrs. E~;~~est i~"lte.) Hle)Jnan of
Mrs. Doris Adams entered
';' Pitisbw'gh, F:aU • [. ; o ,
'.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Mon~· Mrs. EUZa~tlt'' JtfU?ray had as
day for a check-up.
,
't recent visitors Mrs. Karen 1'4urray,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell visited Mr.
••Greg and Tina of Sandyvllle;:tV: va., &lt;&amp;nd ·Mi-S. Harold RoUSh at Racine,
/. also Mr. and Mrs Rill M"""'Y and
and also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
~ ofReynOt~'biJ[.• " ,.., ~- '
Nonna'n Roush of Charleston and
• Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal had as "•Rq~f1 (Robbie) Roush of Morgan':' recent visitors Mr. and Mrs. 'Rick' j ~ ·w. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Larry
~· Chevalier and Jessica Chester ' l'Wier at the Roush home Sunday af. '
"' Mrs Karen Murray SandY.Ville w' ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fisher
~. Va.,' Mr. and Mrs.' Roge';: l ~~g; ' . ~lailt~:ati ' their household fujrniture
WesJe?,l\fld Yye~. ,,
. .
when their home was destroyed by
t Mr. and Mrs. Gene lake of New fire Saturday at RockSprings.
J Haven, W. Va, went SupcJay with
Mr: Jlnd Mrs. Don.Bell visited Mr.
Mr. and M#.Dp~l~ Yol\0. '
\. and ~; David Hensler and famUy ,.
• Mrs. (ErruruiYFrank Douglas who at Meine Saturday evening.
j had lived in this community several Mrs. Cora Birch of Racine and
' years, passed away at her home Mrs. Dolly Wolfe visited Mrs.
f,~. ,
Margie ~unt recently. . __
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'l'ne Apple Grove United Methodist
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Women .met at the church Wednesday evenbig. Mrs. Eileen Buck
,:
was program leader. "Love" was
~:
the first topic in celebration of
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Valentine's day. The hymn "Love
Lifted Me" was sung by the group
By Mrs. HerbertRoub
with Mrs. FlorenceSmitli as P.lanist.
~ Sunday dinner i!Uests of Mr. and
Mrs. Buck read scripture from I
f, Mrs. Russel Rousli·were ~.. Eddie CQrinthlans 13th chapter also a
~ Hupp and son, Jeremy, of Portland;
reading "O!lled to Change." Poems
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of§llfton;
,W.llf~ "My Task" by ·Dolly Wolfe;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald RusaeD, Man·
"Somebody Loves You," by Florendy Jllllh 'Michaill, David Roush of
~ ~mlth' "TQ Teach Love" by Bess
Nanchester; Cindy and Edward
Parsons.
Roulh ai!4~:1\ol)' 1'/aldnlg Ol ~Coll!DI- ; · The patriotic part celebrating the
bus.
,J 1 1I ·,, · ·
bl~days of A~ Lincoln and
~ Mr. and.Mra. Sid Manuel Ill t-ong ~ Geor
. ge Washington were "I Am An
)I Bottool, Donette Talboti of Portland ' American" by Donria Hill.
I ~ $undar with Mr. and Mrs..Joe
Mrs. Hill presided at the business
·"M&amp;nuef • ind' 'Tlln. ' Mrs. Edltli lneetlng when planS were made to
Manuel, Mrs. Sid Manuel, Donette 'halve a 11U1l1118ge at the church MarTalbott vlalted Mr. aJid Mill.' Har;ry
ch 4 and 5 811d will continue the rest
· Rouah, Mr. and Mrs. IAwil' Hud.OO · of the week. Mrs." Parsons gave the .
,at Minersville Suilday atte~
seCretary's .and•treasurer's reports.
· . Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roulh lmd It was decided to 8pOIIIIOr the Oll,lhan
aon C J., of Letart,
Va. spent . for another year. Plans were made
· ~~ 'iviul Mi&lt;and Mrs. Charlel for the feflowabip dinner preceding
LaWilcin WUda. LaWlOR · ~ .; the even#lg WC)rship •service at · 6 ·
home ~th. them aft$, ~
:o'clOck' at tlle•cllurch Feb. 17. At-.
' week With the La\1fi0ns at Letart W.
tending were Mn. DoUy Wolfe, ·J,.orl,
Va ·
'
' Hill aod son, Deanie, Mrs. Elleen
Herbert Roush and Lester Roush • Blick, Tracy Beegle, Florence
IJ~~ Mrs. Edna Roush 'IUid ()tt ~ Smith, Shirley Ables, Bess Pai'SQIIS
ao.tGna'tRacineTUeaaay. · · • and DOnna Hill. ~··· '
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POMEROY,
OHIO
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POMEROY, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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SUGAR RUN MILLS

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Racine'Social Events

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STATE FARM INS.
POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
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MIDDLEPORT LUNCH ROOM
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POMEROY, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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PRESENTED BY THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY MERCHANTS:

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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Fru."rv'•"ew
News Notes

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administration to boost federal
prices supports and change its
programs in other ways to help
them.
Last week Marvin Meek, national
AAM chaimlan, said this year's visit
would be more orderly.
Meek, of Plainview, Texas, said
that just because fanners plan to
refrain from disruptive demoostrations this year does not mean
th~x are any more satisified by the

Conversely, labor, consumer and
clergy spokesmen have already
te.•tified before tbe Task Force in
response to industry claims. With
regard to imports and EPA .)
requirements, they contend that
some of the mills were closed by
Boards of Directors of certain
conglomerates and not by the effect
of Japanese imports. For examole.
they cite the merger between Lykes
and Youngstown Sheet and Tube
pointing out that the., Lykes
conglomerate used the cash flow
from Sheet and Tube for further
conglomerate acquisitions a!id not
'for necessary investment in steel
Approximately 10,000 steel .jobs
have been lost in the Mahoning
Valley. Labor spokesmen feel that it
is particularly ironic to suggest
foreign steel imports are the cause
of pla nt shutd owns because
steelworkers have twice been denied
Trade Readjustment Act benefits by
the U. S. Department of Labor,
preswna bly on ihe basi,s that their
product is not affected by tmports.
The labor, cr&gt;nsumer and clergy
spokesmen see imports and EPA
requirements as symtpoms, not the
basic causes of the steel industry
failure. For the past 10 years, importshaverepresented about15.to 20

•
conventzon . =;~~n~~/:e:o~;cr:~:~g.con-

programs a year ago, was asked last
week by reporters on the eve of
AAM's arrival if he was prepared
for the farmers' campaign this time.
"Well, I'm as ready as I'll ever
be, "Bergland said. "They've been
quoted as saying they're going to
leave us (the Agriculture Department) alone becalise I'm a hopeless
case."
But AAM might take some interest

in Bergland's change of mind about

On the farm scene
administration's farm poticy.
"We'll have fanners up here
through the month of February, a
{ew of them, to work on the Hillprobably through March, too,"
Meek said.
Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland, who refused to budge on .
making major cbanges In farm

status of the steel industry.
First, the steel industry lists an
Inadequate cqst-price relationship.
Here they argue that steel prices .
over the past 10 years have risen
considerably less than the cost of
goods and services they must buy
and the employment costs they must
pay in order to produce steel products.
Secondly, the steel industry points
to what they see as excessive and
costly governmental regulation.
Most notable of these, they say, is
unwarranted interference of government in tbe market price determination of steel prices.
Third, the steel industry cites excessive imports and low "dumping
level" prices. They contend that
foreign steel at dumped or subsidized prices capture a significant
portion of the domestic market.
The fourth cause of the present
economic status of the steel industry
cited by its spokesmen is Inadequate
capital fonnation in the American
economy. This is of major concern to
the steel industry because capital
goods industries consume some twothirds of the nation's steel production.

gasohol, the blend of 10 percent
alcohol and 90 percent gasoline advocated by the farmers who want
grain to be the main feedstock.
A year ago Bergland was adamanUy opposed to massive use of cornthe most abundant U.S. grain - for
gasohol, mainly because be believed
the benefits did not outweigh the

costs.
Bergland has shifted his thinking
significantly for two basic reasons :
crude oil prices have continued to
rise sharply, forcing up costs of
gasoline and other energy sources.
And new technologies have come
along so that grain-based alcohol for
gasohol is much more economically
realistic.
Thus, Ber~land says he now is
leaning in favor of the larger, efficient operations that convert grain
into alcohol for fuel. Even the
medium-size plants that can be built
by 10 or so farmers or their
cooperatives appear to have a lot of
merit.
But Bergland still has reservations about the small units that
many individual farmers have built
themselves or those who would like
federal aid to build such plants. Until more evidence comes along to
support those operations, Bergland
says he is skeptical.

Regarding EPA regulabons, labor
spokesmen point to the fact that
Japanese steetmakers S'lend at least
as much on environmental outlays
as do America finns . They feel the
basic cause of the steel industry
dilemma is their failure to modernize their equipment. In their
opinion, the American steel industry
has failed to keep pace with its
foreign competitors - especially the
Europeans and Japanese.
Ohio is the second largest steelproducing state and the second
largest steel-consuming state in the
nation. Employment by the stee\ in·
dustry is estimated to be more than
75,000 persons.
The House Steel Task Force seeks
to recommend a course of action
that would focus attention on the
plight of the steel industry and steel
workers, as well as the economy of
Ohio. The Task Force has met every
Thursday since December 22, 1979,
and will conclude its hea rings
sometime in March.

New prison legislation expected today
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
Finance Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, says
legislation providing the money
needed to begin planning for two
new state prisons , would be introduced today.
The $2.1 million appropriation,
requested by Gov. James A. Rhodes,
would be used for planning and site
preparation for facilities In northern
Ohio and Chillicothe.
Money for such work originally
had been included In Rhodes' $775
million capital improvements
budget. That measure remains
stalled in a House-Senate conference
committee, however, so Shoemaker
said he would offer a bill containing
a separate allocation.
Both the House and Senate
scheduled floor sessions today
following a weekend break, but their
calendars call for consideration of
relatively minor bills.
In seeking the separate appropriation, Rhodes told House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, [).New
Boston, that the state Is faced with
population restrictions at three of its
eight adult facilities.
Pending lawsuits "could result in
court-Imposed population ceUings at
two others," Rhodes said.
The state also has agreed to a
federal court order requiring that
ihe old Ohio Penitentiary In Columbus be closed by Dec. 31,19113.
Introduction of the prison bill
comes at a time when overcrowding
at tbe state's instltuUons is nearing
an all-time high. ·
As of Feb. 1, 13,437 irunates were
In Ohio's Institutions, according to
the Department of RebabilltaUon
and Correction.
The Ohio Unified G_orrectiOOal
Master Plan lists the capacity of the
institutions as 10,631, the agency
said.
Department officials said the state
facell three options In dealing with
overcrowding. It can build IJl9!'e
prisons, reject prisoners sent by the
counties or release a prisoner 'fc1r

every new one accepted.
The agency said it recently completed a study which showed 80 percent of the prisoners on parole
remain out of prison three years af.
ter releaae. Nine percent of those
paroled return to the prison system,
it said.

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By Assoelaled Press
The Ohio Department of Transportation will find no relief from
f~cial problems as long as high
gasoline prices and olher traveling
costs prevent motorists from driving
more, officials predict.
In Ohio, fuel tax collections in
December 1979 were off more than 8
percent from a year ago.
"It's definitely down," said
Richard Levin of the research and
statistics division of the Ohio Depal'
tment of Transportation. "People
have had to change their driving

Pumeroy BowUq lADa

'Eorty_,

Mhed l.eq1oe
Felr. ll, llilt
l'tl.
42
40

Teom

Jack'• Daley Bar

Roya!Crown
Waklnla Trucldng

32

Picken~ Hardware

30
3ln0ne
211
SarahGibbo, Dep. Reg.
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Hlsh aeries - Jr. Phelpo 114'1, Deble Henaley
126 ; lloml!Duian53i Marlene WilBon..,,
llllh srune - Rob Wa!dnlg %20, Debi Henaley
183: t'hirUe VII1Meter208,MarpretWyeU 112.
Teamoer1.. -l'ld&lt;..,.Hanlware20:1S
Team same- Jack'allolry Bar 714.

EarlyW-y
-edLeqae
Felr.I,U.
Heedquar1en

Smltb-Nellon Molon
Swbher-Lohoe!Jnr8s
Zlde'aSport!lbop
Lonpholl

T~' aCarryOUt

53!;

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211
211

z

, ohnTyi.o514, IaabeUeCooch~i4.

i97~.~~~~~:;~Muinellugan
Team ..rl!fi- HeadQ\WieriiOil.
Team same - Smltb-NelaonMotora 719.

MASON FDRNiltJRE
FOR THE BEST O&amp;ALS 1.. THE;
TRISTATE AREA: .

HEARl NG TESTS . SET . .
·For .Meigs County, O~io ' .
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ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Mattingly
Hearing Aid Specialist

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BELTONE Consultant Who Wlil bt At.':

MASON· FURNituRE.

. ' Mon., Tues., \Nea., FridiiY.&amp;·Silt.

· ~:30 to _5:00 Thursday tllll~_}·•~n ·
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adequately maintain highways, officials said.
The American Automobile
Association reports the average
price of unleaded gasoline in Ohio
was $1.12 per gallon at self-service
pumps this month. Regular gasoline
sold for $1.08 per gallon.
Those prices are expected to jump
by spring and summer tourist
seasons, however.
In early 1978, the AAA reported
unleaded gas at 57.9 cents and
regular at 61.9 cents at self-serve
stations.
Total receipts from gasoline taxes
in Ohio were down by nearly $150
million last year, compared with
1978. And officials said the trend is
no better so far this year.
The state currently has a 7-centsper-gallon tax on gasoline.
Legislative attempts to increase
that rate have been defeated.
Some Ohio transportation officials
predict road conditions will worsen
if the department's budget is not
substantially hiked. But it' s
becoming increasingly harder to
find' money to meet thO.se budget
requirements since .fewer cars are
on the state's roads , they said.

31

30
30

h aeries - LatTy llupn 51!, Betty Smith

Herman
Grate
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habits."
According to the Ohio Turnpike
Commission, passenger car travel
was 11 percent lower last year, compared with 1978. Commission
EXecutive Director Allan Johnson
attributed the decline to higher
gasoline prices and uncertainty over
fuel supplies.
Total toU revenue on the turnpike
~ched $44.3 million in 1979, down
more than $1 million fr(lll 1978. Of
that total, $16.2 million came from
passenger cars, off more than $1.5
million. The toll rate was unchanged
in 1979.
"We don't have any doubt that it
(the decline in car travel) was
caused by real and threatened fuel
shortages and high fuel prices,"
Johnson said.
Some Ohio Department of Transportation officials said poor conditions of some roads also contrlbutell to decreased travel.
Gov. James A. Rhodes and
legislative leaders recenUy agreed
to ask voters to approve a bond
package to finance various construction projects. Without additional funds, no money would be
available to construct anything or

Ptl.

Team

'! OPEN .EVEN.NGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
. 773-5592

"We must also procea; with li
view toward imp roving the
vocational and techruc~l education
opportunities and job skilis for those
who are incarcerated, so that these
people have a fair chance upon reentering societ"," he added.

Fuel tax collections show decline

SHOP
\

If the parole board can maintain
that rate, officials said In a prepared
statement, "the department may be
able to temporarily avoid massive
disruption. "
Rhodes said Ohio must recognize
court orders setting new standards
for the treatment of prisoners.

Mason, w. va;

MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO FEB . 219A.M . Io 12 NDDII
Anyone who has trouble hearl'ng Is welcome to have a hearing test us· '.
lng modern electronic equipment to determine If ,h!s loss Is one.WhiC~
may be heJped. some 0! the causes 0! hearing loss will be explelned j,
and diagrams of howtheearworkswlll be shown .
'
We AIs' Servlcoand Repair All Makes of Hear;pg Aids.
"·
Batterles.And Supplies Por All Makes Fo'r Sale.
iFYOUCANNOTCOMEIN . .
.
j\.
CALL FOR A HOME APPOINJMENT .
PHONE ttl-3629

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 19, 1980

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Feb. 19, 1980

View from the Statehouse
BY: STATE REPRESENTATIVE
RON .J.\MES
H&gt;·PROCTORVILLE, ..

92ND HOUSE I)ISTRil:;:l')
On December 7, 1979, House
Speaker Vern Riffe created the Ohio

House Steel Task Force to discern
what the causes of the steel crisis
are and what legislative action
might offer real solutions.
Chai red by Representative
Thomas Carney (D-Boardman), the
l!l·member Task Force is made up
of the entire House State Government Committee and Representatives Thomas Gilmartin and
Joseph Vukovich of Youngstown.
Serving as a forum for open
debate on .the economic impact of
recent steel industry actions in Ohio,
the Task Force hears arguments
from both sides of the issue.
Industry spokesmen already
testifying before the Task Force
have emphasized that substantial
changes in the environment in which
steel does business are needed to
stem the erotion of the steel industry's ability to serve Its markets
and the country. They cite four
major circumstances which contribute to the present economic

••

DONATES FLAG - The New Haven American Legion, represented here on the left by chaplain Richard
Danbury, recently donated a United States nag to the New Haven Volunteer Fire Departme0 t. Shown at right accepting the nag is Fire Chief Bill James. The Legion also has given $200 to Union Cemetery on Route 33 for upgrading
of facilities.
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Gasoh o maJOr t eme 1or agrzcu ture

TO THE MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION SERVICE,
MULBERRY HEIGHTS, FOR THE MANY SERVICES
RENDERED TO OUR PEOPLE IN THE FIELDS OF
AGRICULTURE, 4-H CLUB WORK, HOME
ECONOMICS AND COMMUNITY RESOURCES AND
NATURAL DEVELOPMENT.

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WASHINGTON '&lt;AP)
The
namely Carter administration farm
American Agriculture Movement
policies the organization:• lead~rs
plaMed to officially qJllil) 'its fi~ .~· ,}lii,Ve hercely cntictzed m .~eartier
national convention hefe:tOi)ay, witlf" tW~~Shington appearances.
t
gasohol a major theme. · '
· A year ago, for example, long lines
But that does not mean the AAM is
of tractors and thousands of angry
overlooking ether basic issues,
fanners tried in vain to convince the

MEIGS INN

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EWING FUNERAL HOME

i• RACINE HOME NATIONAL' BANK

SIMMONS OLDS.CADILLAC

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RACINE, OHIO
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POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

WAID CROSS &amp; SON STORE

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THE FARMERS BANK

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEROY, OHIO
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RACINE, OHIO

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NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

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THE CENTRAL TRUST CO.

CRAFTY LADIES HANDICRAFT

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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POMEROY, OHIO
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POMEROY, OHIO

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ERWIN'S GULF SERVICE
:• MIDDLEPORT, BEN FRANKLIN
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MARK V
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

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POMEROY, OHIO

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G &amp; J AUTO PARTS

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POMEROY, OHIO

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
POMEROY, OHIO

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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CHESTER, OHIO

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, OHIO

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FRANCIS FLORIST
POMEROY, OHIO

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MARGUERITE SHOES

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POMEROY, OHIO

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EBERSBACH HARDWARE
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ROYAL CROWN HOmiNG CO. :•
BAUM TRUE VAWE STORE
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CHESTER, OHIO
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MEIGS AUTO PARTS .
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POMEROY, OHIO

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KINGSBURY HOME SALES, INC.
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THE FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY,
OHIO
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heritage house.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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SMitH NELSON 'MOTORS
POMEROY, OH,IO

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.. K. &amp;CJEWELERS .
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POMEROY, OHIO

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Mr. and Mrs. Max Wolfe of San·
Recent dinner guests of Mr. and
dusky spent a week with his sister,
Mrs. Gerald Simpson and children
Mrs. Helen Simpson. They were din·
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stemple
and daughter, Stephanie, of San Berner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beegle at Dorcas on Monday
nardino, California and Mr. and
evening and Mrs. GJ:ll~ Siip'*Oti
Mrs. Russell Stemple of ParkerTuesday evening.
'· • . : . ~ sburg: W. Va.
;
..,.. Mr. ~d Mrs. CJ:itt Bra~ord ~-.of •.. - M.!'· l\l'd Mrs. Rohert Sf:e!liPle ~d •
"" Worlhington spent 6verrught Friday
daughter returned to their home m
.t and Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. California.
~ Critt Bradford, Sr.
BUl McKenzie of Gallipolis visited
~
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace visited
; .
Donna Brace at Parkersburg Satur•• ... ,
I
day

J KI" ngsbury

i News Notes

·
~ Recent ' gu~"J/ Mi an'd'"M'i!s: ' . A '... 1· "G
~~ Virgil
were Miss Judy King,
pp e rove
i, Bourbonnais, fll., Mrs. Geneva N
NOtes
I. M~y and son, Richard, of Zion,
ews
,
Mrs. llah Hoffman, Anderson,
King

m~,

~· Inc., and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Felts

By Mn. Herbertllowlb
· · ilisi'' ·
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Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
'" of~a
•;
t ' Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons Sunday afternoon
:" John Dean were Mr. and Ml'!l, ~visited their cousin, Lee Otis Hussen
.11, neth Markins, Racme, Mr. and
. , '"'Mhad a stroke and is a patient at
~ Garold Gilkey, Tammy and Amber,
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
j. 'Atfu!riS,' ' lirld'
"te'rfe"l!' • ck'' 'Pleasant.
~ Patasi\:!IJB, J~m~ta.~e.fl)mJ ,and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart,
• James De,4 .. ~~-.. ~Mt~ni ';tertl ' chi\cpn Brice and Beth Ann of
~· Gary King,
heth "w'ray, Mr. Racme visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
~· and .Mrs. Homer Bailey and
Hayman and Keith Saturday. Brice,
•; Yoho.
L),:l,'
A~nt at Ohio State University,'
f•· . Mrs. Neva~ has received word Columbus, spent the weekend with.'
.\ of ille death. her, sisfe'r:iD-law, his parents.
,, Mrs. E~;~~est i~"lte.) Hle)Jnan of
Mrs. Doris Adams entered
';' Pitisbw'gh, F:aU • [. ; o ,
'.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Mon~· Mrs. EUZa~tlt'' JtfU?ray had as
day for a check-up.
,
't recent visitors Mrs. Karen 1'4urray,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell visited Mr.
••Greg and Tina of Sandyvllle;:tV: va., &lt;&amp;nd ·Mi-S. Harold RoUSh at Racine,
/. also Mr. and Mrs Rill M"""'Y and
and also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
~ ofReynOt~'biJ[.• " ,.., ~- '
Nonna'n Roush of Charleston and
• Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal had as "•Rq~f1 (Robbie) Roush of Morgan':' recent visitors Mr. and Mrs. 'Rick' j ~ ·w. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Larry
~· Chevalier and Jessica Chester ' l'Wier at the Roush home Sunday af. '
"' Mrs Karen Murray SandY.Ville w' ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fisher
~. Va.,' Mr. and Mrs.' Roge';: l ~~g; ' . ~lailt~:ati ' their household fujrniture
WesJe?,l\fld Yye~. ,,
. .
when their home was destroyed by
t Mr. and Mrs. Gene lake of New fire Saturday at RockSprings.
J Haven, W. Va, went SupcJay with
Mr: Jlnd Mrs. Don.Bell visited Mr.
Mr. and M#.Dp~l~ Yol\0. '
\. and ~; David Hensler and famUy ,.
• Mrs. (ErruruiYFrank Douglas who at Meine Saturday evening.
j had lived in this community several Mrs. Cora Birch of Racine and
' years, passed away at her home Mrs. Dolly Wolfe visited Mrs.
f,~. ,
Margie ~unt recently. . __
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'l'ne Apple Grove United Methodist
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1·
Women .met at the church Wednesday evenbig. Mrs. Eileen Buck
,:
was program leader. "Love" was
~:
the first topic in celebration of
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Valentine's day. The hymn "Love
Lifted Me" was sung by the group
By Mrs. HerbertRoub
with Mrs. FlorenceSmitli as P.lanist.
~ Sunday dinner i!Uests of Mr. and
Mrs. Buck read scripture from I
f, Mrs. Russel Rousli·were ~.. Eddie CQrinthlans 13th chapter also a
~ Hupp and son, Jeremy, of Portland;
reading "O!lled to Change." Poems
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of§llfton;
,W.llf~ "My Task" by ·Dolly Wolfe;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald RusaeD, Man·
"Somebody Loves You," by Florendy Jllllh 'Michaill, David Roush of
~ ~mlth' "TQ Teach Love" by Bess
Nanchester; Cindy and Edward
Parsons.
Roulh ai!4~:1\ol)' 1'/aldnlg Ol ~Coll!DI- ; · The patriotic part celebrating the
bus.
,J 1 1I ·,, · ·
bl~days of A~ Lincoln and
~ Mr. and.Mra. Sid Manuel Ill t-ong ~ Geor
. ge Washington were "I Am An
)I Bottool, Donette Talboti of Portland ' American" by Donria Hill.
I ~ $undar with Mr. and Mrs..Joe
Mrs. Hill presided at the business
·"M&amp;nuef • ind' 'Tlln. ' Mrs. Edltli lneetlng when planS were made to
Manuel, Mrs. Sid Manuel, Donette 'halve a 11U1l1118ge at the church MarTalbott vlalted Mr. aJid Mill.' Har;ry
ch 4 and 5 811d will continue the rest
· Rouah, Mr. and Mrs. IAwil' Hud.OO · of the week. Mrs." Parsons gave the .
,at Minersville Suilday atte~
seCretary's .and•treasurer's reports.
· . Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roulh lmd It was decided to 8pOIIIIOr the Oll,lhan
aon C J., of Letart,
Va. spent . for another year. Plans were made
· ~~ 'iviul Mi&lt;and Mrs. Charlel for the feflowabip dinner preceding
LaWilcin WUda. LaWlOR · ~ .; the even#lg WC)rship •service at · 6 ·
home ~th. them aft$, ~
:o'clOck' at tlle•cllurch Feb. 17. At-.
' week With the La\1fi0ns at Letart W.
tending were Mn. DoUy Wolfe, ·J,.orl,
Va ·
'
' Hill aod son, Deanie, Mrs. Elleen
Herbert Roush and Lester Roush • Blick, Tracy Beegle, Florence
IJ~~ Mrs. Edna Roush 'IUid ()tt ~ Smith, Shirley Ables, Bess Pai'SQIIS
ao.tGna'tRacineTUeaaay. · · • and DOnna Hill. ~··· '
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waner•

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scin

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POMEROY,
OHIO
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POMEROY, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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SUGAR RUN MILLS

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Racine'Social Events

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STATE FARM INS.
POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
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MIDDLEPORT LUNCH ROOM
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POMEROY, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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PRESENTED BY THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY MERCHANTS:

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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Fru."rv'•"ew
News Notes

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administration to boost federal
prices supports and change its
programs in other ways to help
them.
Last week Marvin Meek, national
AAM chaimlan, said this year's visit
would be more orderly.
Meek, of Plainview, Texas, said
that just because fanners plan to
refrain from disruptive demoostrations this year does not mean
th~x are any more satisified by the

Conversely, labor, consumer and
clergy spokesmen have already
te.•tified before tbe Task Force in
response to industry claims. With
regard to imports and EPA .)
requirements, they contend that
some of the mills were closed by
Boards of Directors of certain
conglomerates and not by the effect
of Japanese imports. For examole.
they cite the merger between Lykes
and Youngstown Sheet and Tube
pointing out that the., Lykes
conglomerate used the cash flow
from Sheet and Tube for further
conglomerate acquisitions a!id not
'for necessary investment in steel
Approximately 10,000 steel .jobs
have been lost in the Mahoning
Valley. Labor spokesmen feel that it
is particularly ironic to suggest
foreign steel imports are the cause
of pla nt shutd owns because
steelworkers have twice been denied
Trade Readjustment Act benefits by
the U. S. Department of Labor,
preswna bly on ihe basi,s that their
product is not affected by tmports.
The labor, cr&gt;nsumer and clergy
spokesmen see imports and EPA
requirements as symtpoms, not the
basic causes of the steel industry
failure. For the past 10 years, importshaverepresented about15.to 20

•
conventzon . =;~~n~~/:e:o~;cr:~:~g.con-

programs a year ago, was asked last
week by reporters on the eve of
AAM's arrival if he was prepared
for the farmers' campaign this time.
"Well, I'm as ready as I'll ever
be, "Bergland said. "They've been
quoted as saying they're going to
leave us (the Agriculture Department) alone becalise I'm a hopeless
case."
But AAM might take some interest

in Bergland's change of mind about

On the farm scene
administration's farm poticy.
"We'll have fanners up here
through the month of February, a
{ew of them, to work on the Hillprobably through March, too,"
Meek said.
Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland, who refused to budge on .
making major cbanges In farm

status of the steel industry.
First, the steel industry lists an
Inadequate cqst-price relationship.
Here they argue that steel prices .
over the past 10 years have risen
considerably less than the cost of
goods and services they must buy
and the employment costs they must
pay in order to produce steel products.
Secondly, the steel industry points
to what they see as excessive and
costly governmental regulation.
Most notable of these, they say, is
unwarranted interference of government in tbe market price determination of steel prices.
Third, the steel industry cites excessive imports and low "dumping
level" prices. They contend that
foreign steel at dumped or subsidized prices capture a significant
portion of the domestic market.
The fourth cause of the present
economic status of the steel industry
cited by its spokesmen is Inadequate
capital fonnation in the American
economy. This is of major concern to
the steel industry because capital
goods industries consume some twothirds of the nation's steel production.

gasohol, the blend of 10 percent
alcohol and 90 percent gasoline advocated by the farmers who want
grain to be the main feedstock.
A year ago Bergland was adamanUy opposed to massive use of cornthe most abundant U.S. grain - for
gasohol, mainly because be believed
the benefits did not outweigh the

costs.
Bergland has shifted his thinking
significantly for two basic reasons :
crude oil prices have continued to
rise sharply, forcing up costs of
gasoline and other energy sources.
And new technologies have come
along so that grain-based alcohol for
gasohol is much more economically
realistic.
Thus, Ber~land says he now is
leaning in favor of the larger, efficient operations that convert grain
into alcohol for fuel. Even the
medium-size plants that can be built
by 10 or so farmers or their
cooperatives appear to have a lot of
merit.
But Bergland still has reservations about the small units that
many individual farmers have built
themselves or those who would like
federal aid to build such plants. Until more evidence comes along to
support those operations, Bergland
says he is skeptical.

Regarding EPA regulabons, labor
spokesmen point to the fact that
Japanese steetmakers S'lend at least
as much on environmental outlays
as do America finns . They feel the
basic cause of the steel industry
dilemma is their failure to modernize their equipment. In their
opinion, the American steel industry
has failed to keep pace with its
foreign competitors - especially the
Europeans and Japanese.
Ohio is the second largest steelproducing state and the second
largest steel-consuming state in the
nation. Employment by the stee\ in·
dustry is estimated to be more than
75,000 persons.
The House Steel Task Force seeks
to recommend a course of action
that would focus attention on the
plight of the steel industry and steel
workers, as well as the economy of
Ohio. The Task Force has met every
Thursday since December 22, 1979,
and will conclude its hea rings
sometime in March.

New prison legislation expected today
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
Finance Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, says
legislation providing the money
needed to begin planning for two
new state prisons , would be introduced today.
The $2.1 million appropriation,
requested by Gov. James A. Rhodes,
would be used for planning and site
preparation for facilities In northern
Ohio and Chillicothe.
Money for such work originally
had been included In Rhodes' $775
million capital improvements
budget. That measure remains
stalled in a House-Senate conference
committee, however, so Shoemaker
said he would offer a bill containing
a separate allocation.
Both the House and Senate
scheduled floor sessions today
following a weekend break, but their
calendars call for consideration of
relatively minor bills.
In seeking the separate appropriation, Rhodes told House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, [).New
Boston, that the state Is faced with
population restrictions at three of its
eight adult facilities.
Pending lawsuits "could result in
court-Imposed population ceUings at
two others," Rhodes said.
The state also has agreed to a
federal court order requiring that
ihe old Ohio Penitentiary In Columbus be closed by Dec. 31,19113.
Introduction of the prison bill
comes at a time when overcrowding
at tbe state's instltuUons is nearing
an all-time high. ·
As of Feb. 1, 13,437 irunates were
In Ohio's Institutions, according to
the Department of RebabilltaUon
and Correction.
The Ohio Unified G_orrectiOOal
Master Plan lists the capacity of the
institutions as 10,631, the agency
said.
Department officials said the state
facell three options In dealing with
overcrowding. It can build IJl9!'e
prisons, reject prisoners sent by the
counties or release a prisoner 'fc1r

every new one accepted.
The agency said it recently completed a study which showed 80 percent of the prisoners on parole
remain out of prison three years af.
ter releaae. Nine percent of those
paroled return to the prison system,
it said.

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By Assoelaled Press
The Ohio Department of Transportation will find no relief from
f~cial problems as long as high
gasoline prices and olher traveling
costs prevent motorists from driving
more, officials predict.
In Ohio, fuel tax collections in
December 1979 were off more than 8
percent from a year ago.
"It's definitely down," said
Richard Levin of the research and
statistics division of the Ohio Depal'
tment of Transportation. "People
have had to change their driving

Pumeroy BowUq lADa

'Eorty_,

Mhed l.eq1oe
Felr. ll, llilt
l'tl.
42
40

Teom

Jack'• Daley Bar

Roya!Crown
Waklnla Trucldng

32

Picken~ Hardware

30
3ln0ne
211
SarahGibbo, Dep. Reg.
.
l2
Hlsh aeries - Jr. Phelpo 114'1, Deble Henaley
126 ; lloml!Duian53i Marlene WilBon..,,
llllh srune - Rob Wa!dnlg %20, Debi Henaley
183: t'hirUe VII1Meter208,MarpretWyeU 112.
Teamoer1.. -l'ld&lt;..,.Hanlware20:1S
Team same- Jack'allolry Bar 714.

EarlyW-y
-edLeqae
Felr.I,U.
Heedquar1en

Smltb-Nellon Molon
Swbher-Lohoe!Jnr8s
Zlde'aSport!lbop
Lonpholl

T~' aCarryOUt

53!;

..

211
211

z

, ohnTyi.o514, IaabeUeCooch~i4.

i97~.~~~~~:;~Muinellugan
Team ..rl!fi- HeadQ\WieriiOil.
Team same - Smltb-NelaonMotora 719.

MASON FDRNiltJRE
FOR THE BEST O&amp;ALS 1.. THE;
TRISTATE AREA: .

HEARl NG TESTS . SET . .
·For .Meigs County, O~io ' .
("

'·

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Mattingly
Hearing Aid Specialist

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BELTONE Consultant Who Wlil bt At.':

MASON· FURNituRE.

. ' Mon., Tues., \Nea., FridiiY.&amp;·Silt.

· ~:30 to _5:00 Thursday tllll~_}·•~n ·
'

adequately maintain highways, officials said.
The American Automobile
Association reports the average
price of unleaded gasoline in Ohio
was $1.12 per gallon at self-service
pumps this month. Regular gasoline
sold for $1.08 per gallon.
Those prices are expected to jump
by spring and summer tourist
seasons, however.
In early 1978, the AAA reported
unleaded gas at 57.9 cents and
regular at 61.9 cents at self-serve
stations.
Total receipts from gasoline taxes
in Ohio were down by nearly $150
million last year, compared with
1978. And officials said the trend is
no better so far this year.
The state currently has a 7-centsper-gallon tax on gasoline.
Legislative attempts to increase
that rate have been defeated.
Some Ohio transportation officials
predict road conditions will worsen
if the department's budget is not
substantially hiked. But it' s
becoming increasingly harder to
find' money to meet thO.se budget
requirements since .fewer cars are
on the state's roads , they said.

31

30
30

h aeries - LatTy llupn 51!, Betty Smith

Herman
Grate
.

habits."
According to the Ohio Turnpike
Commission, passenger car travel
was 11 percent lower last year, compared with 1978. Commission
EXecutive Director Allan Johnson
attributed the decline to higher
gasoline prices and uncertainty over
fuel supplies.
Total toU revenue on the turnpike
~ched $44.3 million in 1979, down
more than $1 million fr(lll 1978. Of
that total, $16.2 million came from
passenger cars, off more than $1.5
million. The toll rate was unchanged
in 1979.
"We don't have any doubt that it
(the decline in car travel) was
caused by real and threatened fuel
shortages and high fuel prices,"
Johnson said.
Some Ohio Department of Transportation officials said poor conditions of some roads also contrlbutell to decreased travel.
Gov. James A. Rhodes and
legislative leaders recenUy agreed
to ask voters to approve a bond
package to finance various construction projects. Without additional funds, no money would be
available to construct anything or

Ptl.

Team

'! OPEN .EVEN.NGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
. 773-5592

"We must also procea; with li
view toward imp roving the
vocational and techruc~l education
opportunities and job skilis for those
who are incarcerated, so that these
people have a fair chance upon reentering societ"," he added.

Fuel tax collections show decline

SHOP
\

If the parole board can maintain
that rate, officials said In a prepared
statement, "the department may be
able to temporarily avoid massive
disruption. "
Rhodes said Ohio must recognize
court orders setting new standards
for the treatment of prisoners.

Mason, w. va;

MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO FEB . 219A.M . Io 12 NDDII
Anyone who has trouble hearl'ng Is welcome to have a hearing test us· '.
lng modern electronic equipment to determine If ,h!s loss Is one.WhiC~
may be heJped. some 0! the causes 0! hearing loss will be explelned j,
and diagrams of howtheearworkswlll be shown .
'
We AIs' Servlcoand Repair All Makes of Hear;pg Aids.
"·
Batterles.And Supplies Por All Makes Fo'r Sale.
iFYOUCANNOTCOMEIN . .
.
j\.
CALL FOR A HOME APPOINJMENT .
PHONE ttl-3629

�10 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport· Pom e r oy , 0 ., Tuesday, Feb . 19, 1980

,

ltft'i}l.\.(t ID'it

~ TIIAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ·
by Henri Arnold anct 8ol) Lot

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Wedn I t·r, Feb. 20

WANT AD
CHARGES

ASTRO.:fiRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

ISWordsor Under
ChartJ~

Cash
1.00
1.50

1 day
2days

~~hday
-=-

FHrUIIry 20, 1110
This coming year you are likely
to be luckier than usual In your
partnership arrangements . Allies
you develop wtll not only prove
loyal, they'll be helpful In your
long·rangt~ plans as well.

PISCES (Fob. :N-March 20)

Because you are willing to see
aoother'a point of view today , he
or she will see )lOurs. Use this giP1
to work out any problems. Find
out more of what ties ahead tor
you In the year following yo ur
birthday by sending for y our
copy of Astro--G raph letter. Mall

$1 for each to Astra-Graph, Box
469, Radio City Sta11on. N.Y
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
ARIES (March 21~April 19)
Today and tomorrow, concen-

3days
8days

TAURUS (April

20-Moy 20)
Devote as much time as you can
schedule tOday to your new projects. Something big tor which
you are hoping can become a
reality.
GEMINI (M•Y 21-June 20) The
harder you try today. the luckier
you are likely to become. Don't
let challenges intimidate you it
you aut aiming lor worthy
rewards.
CANCER (June 21·JLIIY 22) Your
lntuiUon should serve as an
accurate gauge of public opinion
today . You 'll know how to deal
effectively with others, Individually or in a group.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22} Be alert
lor both career and financial
opportunities today. Interesting
situations that are also extremely
beneficial could develop.

VIRGO (Aut. 23-Sopl. 22) You

should be very lucky at gaining
the ames and supporters you
need to advance your self-inter~
ests today . Ask for assistance II
conditions warrant it.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Things
you do today where you use your
efforts and expertise to aid
another will produce benefits
you 'd least expect. Be a good
samaritan.

1.25
1.90

1.110

2.25

J.OO

l. 75

Each word over the minimllll
15 words is -i cents per word per
day. Ads running othe r than const!(.'utive days will be charged at
the l day r ate.
In memory, card of Thanks
and Obituary : 6 cents per word,
~ . 00 minimwn. Cash in advanct!

Mobile Horne sales and Yard
sales are accepted only with
cash with order. 2$ cent charge
for ads carrying Box Number In
Care ot The Sentinel.
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objecti onal. The
Publisher will not be resporu~ibl e
for more than one incorrect inse rtion.

trate on situat ions that could
mean something to you materially. Vour possibilities for gain are

promising.

In Memory

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
MOnday
Noon on Saturday
Tuesday

thruFrtday
4P.M.
the day bt!fore pui.JUcation

1n mem ory of Florene V .
Fin n icum , who passed
awa y one year ago F e b . 15,
1979 .
You ca nnot say , y ou must
not say
1 T ha t she is dead, she is just
away
W it h a cheery smil e and a
wa ve of the hand
She has wandered into ~n
unknown land
And left us dreami ng, how
very fair
It needs must be, since she
linge r s there
So think of her faring on, as
dear
In the love of There as the
tove of Here .
Th ink of her stil l as the
same, and say
She is not dead, she is just
away .
Sadly m issed by daughters,
son, husband , brothers and
fr iends .

1n memory of Anna Mae
Terrel l who passed away
one year ago, Feb. 19, 1979.
Sadly missed by Elizabeth
and Joe, Juanita, Bill and
Ruth, Shannan, John and
Marie.

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

SHOOT .

Vo l unteer

Sunday

Wanted to Buy

Racine

Fire

Dept.

Every Saturday . 6 :30 p.m .

4P, M.

Friday afternoon

L_______________

~

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Factory choke only .

Help Wanted
APPLICATIONS

will

be

accepted 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 only . Apply at

Pu ll ins Excavating offic e,

us 33, Pomeroy , OH .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221

EARN

When II comes to doing a little
more horse trading today , It will
be hard to lind your equal. Vou 'U
be as fair to others as you'll be to
yourself.

extra

home.

good

work.
No experien ce
necessary . Send for ap·
plication . BB. Box 66, The

money

pay .

At their bulldingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.

at

Easy

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)

Plains, OH 45780.

You will take pride in your
achievements toda~ because
your basic motives are unselfish.
Looking out for 1oved ones will
be your prime concern .

Part·t ime janitor services
tor church . Call 992 ·2914 or

992·5693 .

Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated

to Boy ·Scoul Troop 249 .
ATTENT I ON:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certif ied check
for

antiques

and

collec ·

tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . A lso,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·

76n167 or 557 341 1.

Now acceptng logs at our

log yard 7:30·3:30 week·
days. High prices for good
Quality toos with a limi ted
amount of low grade.
Payment upon delivery
and sealing . Blaney Har·
dwoods, Box 66, Vincent,

OH 45784. 614 ·618·2960.'
SILVE R
GOLD AND
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS ,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER ANO
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

AQUARIUS (J•n.
You may at

20-Fob.

11)

th~s

time ha'le more
ttlan one snuatlon that could
prove profitable II brought to a
head. Do something today, while
the aspects fa¥or you .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

1·28·80 (TAPE NO. 10)

The 320,000 combines
that "Worked the nation's
fields last fall, 1f lined up
wheel-to-wheel could have
harvested the state of Iowa
ina day.

Meigs
Property
Transfers '\....
Florence Lurana Reeves Boring,
William C. Boring to Basil Lee
Wright, Florence Elizabeth Wright,
Parcels, Scipio.
Alice Kitchen, Aff. Death,
Rutland.
Edwin S. Cozart to Gerald R.
Douglas, Linds L. Douglas, Lot 6,
Dyesville Village, Pomeroy.
Marguerite M. Peery, Henry
Peery to Carpenter Local No. 650,
Pt. Lot 93, Pomeroy .
Robert M. Varian, M~oxine Varian
to Robert M. Varian, Maxine
Varian, .65 acre, Sutton.
Edward Chevalier, dec. to Lona B.
Chevalier, Cert. of Trans., "olive.
Jooeph F . Proffitt, Dorothy Proffitt to Roger AdslllS, Right of Way,
Letart-sutton.
Augusta Barnhart, Harold Barnhart to Carl E. Smith, Inc., Right of
Way, Orange.
Joann Clark to Vicki A. Hanson,
2.76acres, Rutland.
Paul Simon, Allie Simon to Benjamin
F.
Newsome,
Joann
Newsome, Lot 7, Thos. H. Crow,
Chester.
Owen W. Fink, Anna M. Fink to
Owen W. Fink, Anna M. Fink, Lot,
Middleport .
Frances J. Whittington to Leslie T.
Whittington, Parcels, Salisbury .
Jerry T. Goldberg, exec., Jerome
Goldberg to Thomas H. Westen,
Hazel Westen, Int. in parcels, Sutton.
Dan Satterfield to Steven Stout,
.069 acre, Middleport.
Howard F. Woodyard to A. C.
Summers, Lots A-B, M. Fife's Add .,
Middleport.
Alpha Ramey, David Ramey, Linsa Ramey, Kenney Ramey, Judy
Ramey, Craig Ramey to Roger
Adams, Right of Way, Meigs.
Kenna H. Bush, Kathy S. Bush to
Roger Adams, Right of Way, Bedford.
Charles R. Wolfe, Lois M. Wolle to
Roger Adams, Rlght of Way, Meigs.
Paul W. Bayes, Katrina Hayes to
Roger Mams,ltight of Way, Letart.

contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Midd leport .
HEAR ING AID USERS :
save used batteries, mercury and silver oxide,
redeem for cash . Di les
Hearing
Aid
Center,

Athens. Tel. 614·594·3571.
GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COl NS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANT IQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP"
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAIS ING.
Lost and Found
LOST : Hysell Run area,
shepherd collie. Black and
tan with white muzzle,
female . Humane Society ,

9n6260.
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a 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 '/92·
2156 or 992·2157.
RN DR LPN, lull time. 3·
1JI! 30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 11 to 7:30.
Health Care Center, Mon·

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
Care produCts. Western

boots . Children's
Adults$29 .00.

Sl5 .50.

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Calt367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220 .
HILLCREST

KENNELS.

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
registered

Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
HUMANE
SO .C IETY .
Adopt a homeless pel .
6260, noon·7 p.m.

OLD
boxes,

FURNITURE,

ice

brass beds,

iron

beds, desks, etc .• complete
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. -4, Pomeroy or
call992-7760.
ANTIQUES,

FUR ·

NITURE,

china,

glass,

anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161 .
OLD COl NS, pocl&lt;et watches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gotd or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
1&gt;462.
GOLD , SILVE ·R· OR
FOREIGN- COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEJ MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
-- - - · ------ -

..

ROME beau ty

appl e butter . Call 669·3785.
Fitzpatr ick

Orchard,

689 .
EMERGENCY

power

V. C. YOUNG Ill

2· 18· 1 mo.

The Meigs County Humane
Society
offers

BEAUTIFUL CATS. Shorl·
haired -Tiger, long-haired
Yellow, gray Tiger, black
and white. Utter trained.

UNUSUALLY NICE dogs.
Playful Cocker lype; bob·
tailed Collie lype; also
Paodle · Schnauzer

All

looking
Dachshund

males.

Fox ·

Terrier,
and sweet

Shepherd. Both females .
Al l young . Lots of puppies,
too. All have had shots and
have been wormed . Phone

992 ·6260.
A~to Sales

hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.

Phone992·7201 or992 ·3309.

H. L WHITESEL

HAIR STYLING

ROOFING

.
B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

gutter

downspouts,

cleaning and painting.

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

Call Howard
949·2862

POMEROY
LANDMARK

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

Jack

W. Carsey,

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

House for sale in Pageville,
OH. FHA financing. LOW
down
payment .
3
bedrooms, living room, kit·
chen and bath on main
floor with -4 finished rooms
except for floor covering in
basement, with bath and
laundry room. Located on 2
large lots. Priced in mid
twenties. Saturday only

592 ·2322 . Anyt ime
Saturday 698·7331.

but

Summer Cottage, on the
Ohio River, Great Bend
area. J bedrooms, dining
room -kitchen combination,
running water, electricity,

out of high water . 992·5623
after 5.

Hours 9·1 M.,

1 &lt;~

w., F.

Other times by appointment.

· 107 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy, 0.
CALL 992 · 7544

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCJNG ·VA· FHA LO·
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E . STATE , ATHENS.
614·592·3051.
COUNTRY

HOME

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

1978 Ford F-150 4-wheel
drive stepslde. 14.35 Gum ·
bas with aluminum wheels.
Extras. $5995. C•ll alter 5
p.m . 992·5620. 21.000 miles:
1974 Toyot• Hllux pickup.

One' owner, low mileag·e,

excellent sh•pe, AM· FM
stereo rodlo, new toper. 22 ..
28 mpg. $2500. Call992·6149
after 5 p.m.
1977 Pontiac· Grand Prix,

Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windOW!., door locks,

extra padded landau top,
special paint and Interior.
24,000 actual. Local owner,
best of care. S4300. Call 992·
6149 .
1971 Ford ·Galaxy 4·door .
GOOd running condition .
See al243'1' Mu lberry Ave.
1974

Camaro, · very

1977 Thunderbird, P.S.,
P . B., AM·F'M, radials.
$2800. 247·3594.
1977 VW R,11llbll. Exc&amp;ltent
condition. ~-3213 alter 4
p.~ .

'

1978 Ford 302 $3,000.00. Ex,
cellent condition . Phone
742·2103.
.

NEW LISTING- Mid·
large 7 room
house, 3 bedroom, fu ll

basement, garage and carport. Electric heat . 5 acres

tillable
land .
3
greenhouses, large pole
shed. Located near Racine

Hydro Plant. Call 247 ·3752
after 4 p.m.

car garage, cable T.V.,

216 E. 5econd Streei
COUNTRY LIVING -7/8 of an acre with a 3

bedroom. 2 bath,
Midland mobile home.
Has central heat and
rural water . Going. for

$16,500.
2 TRAILE!'R SPOTS -On

State

Route near

Middleport
with
Leading Creek. water.
Jdeal4 acre tract of land
lor only $12,500.
ECONOMIZE - With
this 3 bedroom· home
with large lot, city

FOR THI!! month of
February,
Drehel's
cerarnlcs - greenware 30
Pet. off. G)&amp;tes 20 Pet. off. ,
59 N. 2nd Ave., Mllldleport, .
OH. 992-2751.
Console stereo, sfoo. Phone
992-6069. '
.
Cl:ll PWOOP to cut. Phone·
9-49·2822. ' ' .
.

.
1980 Gotd· equipment. Ar·

nold ·Pal met, Ram, VIctor,
Browning, . MacGregor,

Dunlop , Rawlings, and
Daisy . John Teaford, 614· ,
985·3961.
'1971 · trai'lfr' 12x6S, com·
pletety f4rnf•h.O, a r con·
~itioned . . F1rm, $4500.00 .
C•ll992·5304.

REMODEL ING
inside
home. Will also do outside
work. No lob too small .

WHeRE
ARE YOU 6011Ki?!

I'LL KNOW IF I'VE
KSEPIN' TH' SLIN TO

MY RIG~T WHEN 11: SeTS ?~·.•

Priced

at

$18,500.
BUSINESS BUILDING
- s rooms and bath all
on ground floor. Can be
converted to a home
very easily. · Chimney
tor a wood burner , Ask·

ing just $11,000.
SPECIAL - River front
tots on Slate Route 124.
Ideal lor camping,
boating, and fishing this
spring ,
•
THIS IS THE YEAR TO
MI\KE A. PROFIT ON
YOUR PROPERTY.
DO IT NOW BY CALL·
I NG 992·3325 or 991·3876.

Housing
Headquarters

.REAL ESTATE
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY .!... Gill's Dress Shop In
Middleport. Nice location. Doing good business. A
beautiful s1ore. II you're Interested In being your
own boss and making money, then call us lor
del,tlls.
ON LINCOLN HEIGHTS IN POMEROY - Two
bedroom with bath, plenty of closets, JarQe&lt;1lvlng
room, eal·ln kitchen, storm windows &amp; doors; gas
furnace,, new hot water heater and plunlblng. No
dOWn paYment· II you qualify . A. good Investment.
$17,500.
.
OUIET COUNTRY LIVING-- On St. Rl, 143 lust 4
miles from Pomeroy.3 yr . otd ranch style horne with
a spflt rail fence, ove 3 acres of land, garage and
workshop, cent. heat &amp; •Jr cond . 5«,900.
,
MIDDLEPORT-- Two bedroom, l'h ljat~. located
lust one block from heart of town
In . quiet
neighborhood. S25,000.
'

If"'

CALL WE HAVE MORE-CALl, 992-2342
.
.
'

ROdney bowning, llfoker - 110. 992-37~1
Bill Childs, Branch .Mgr. - Ho. 992-2499 r

East

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

all ·

ICI about q ive
upon4ou,

Mr. R-:rt!

IN STOCK lor immediate

M4 eviction was
for midniqht! ft's
two minutes past.'

Come in where
it's warm!
. - /"W&gt;

delivery: various sizes of

pool kits. D&lt;&gt;-lt·yoursell or
let us Install tor ·you . D. .:
Inc.

Complete Service. Phone • ·

949·2487 or 949·2000. racine, ·
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.
BO.WERS .
Sweepers, ·.

toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

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

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

WINNIE

TWO APTS., downtown.
2nd floor, $175. 3rd floor,
$150 per month . Heat fur ·
nished. Call 992-7034 bel·
ween 10·5.

PIANO

TUNING.

%Watered

4 Hawaiian

17 Baseball
boWice
18 Resort area
ZO Belmondo's

game ·
5 Go back

COIAPLIMENT.S
TO ]l-IE Cr!EF!

resort city

WE WOULDN'T HAVE EATEN
TILL MIPAII611T IF YOU
ALL AAON'T CHIPPED

22 Neighbor
of W. Ger.
Z1 Art dept.

IN!

Z5

Lane

1 ShWI
7 Part of an hr.
8 Out of
favor : slang
9 Tyke's Item
10 Bergman's

"The-'s
Egg"

Yestenllly'a Altlwer
18 Red Sox
M Shade
slugger
28Bauble;
19 Hold
trinket
office
30 Tower top
23 Mlaslonary 31 Cowboy
priest
fiick

!4 Cather

32 Inftlct

heroine

25"Enchanted

37 Garfunkel
38 Glove

compart-

Evening"

ment item

necesaity
Clothing size

b.--t--t--t-

27 Suffix
for account
28 Actor

Daniels. New phone num-

Etderty lady woutd .like to
rent 2 or 3 room ·apartment
on ground floor. Close to
Post office and doctor In
Middleport. Can furnish
references. Call992·2969.

DOWN
1 He had 100 eyes

18 Herring hue

THANK&amp; FOR HELPING OUT

lAY

ber, 742·2951. Service to
schools and nome since
1965.

wanted to Rent

syUable

summer
%1 French

S &amp; G Carpet Cle•nlng.
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992· .
6309 or 742·2211.

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

U Brew coffee,
In one

ACROSS
1 Oriental
nurse ·
5 Negligent
11 Ubertlne
12 Show

13 Caron film
fabric
14 "Whoopee"
3 Hercules
comedian
cleaned
II EngUah river them

992·5724.

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

992·2143.

Sales,

South rose with the ace and
continued with the queen.
West took his king and contin·
ued hearts with South ruffing
as soon as he could. Then
South started to lead out his
trumps.
West should have made
things easy for his partner by
signalling club · strength, but
West had not bothered to
count declarer's tricks . If
West had taken the trouble to
do this he would have seen
that South had six trumps, a
heart and two diamonds as
starters and that if South held
even one club he would be
able to lead toward dummy's
king and make his contract.
Still West's wool-gathering
did not give South his
contract. It was just as easy
for East to see that the only
wasy the defense could gather
in four tricks would be if West
held the doubleton queen· jack
of diamonds and South had
been dealt . four little dia·
monds and no clubs.
So somewhere along the
way East chucked a diamond
and South was able to set up
his eight·spot of diamonds and
fulfill his contract.

~tU-~

GASOLINE ALLEY ·

operator's license? Phone

Bumgardner

••

It is much more difficult for
a defender to count tricks
than it is for declarer, but
there are some occasions
when a defender has no real
excuse for not making correct
discards .
South won the first heart in
dummmy and promptly led a
trump. East showed out and

:

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
celled?
Lost
your

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call
992·7479.

Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Call992-7787,

too.

North

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

arid Service. we sharpen :

For Rent

lull basement. Nice Kit·

West

Opening lead:• Q

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, ;·

RENTER'S assistance for

chen,

Vulnerable: East -West
Dealer: North

Scissors.

1970 Vinda le 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 be·dr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12X52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOB ILE HOME
SALES. PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304·675·«24.

• 10 9 5 2
+J 10 75 4
SOUTH •
+AQJ 86 14
"7 5
t876 3

... .

MACHINE :
service,

'I'K843

.

... BUT IF I'M WRONG,
I'LL ~AVE WASTED

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

carpenters .

water, natural gas, and

For Sale.
1970 Mark Twain V·hull, 16
foot wllh 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call after 5 p.m., 992·2528.

Repairs,

bedroom

tlon, rent the upstairs,
live downstairs. Priced

lot, centra l air and heat,

SEWING

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14X65 3

$45,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED Middleport - remodel·
ed 2 family, good condi ·

fu lly equipped kitchen,
lor only $30,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT -- An
older 1'12 story brick
home. Kitchen has
dishwasher, disposal
and hood . 3 bedrooms
and lots of closets on ap·
px. 11h acre lot for
$23,500.00.
REDUCED -3 acres &amp;
house on old St. Rt. 33 .
Now $6,000.00.
NEED SALE - "The
Kiddie Shoppe" -- Call
Today ,
WATCH FOR THE
"OPEN HOUSE" FEB.
24 ... ANOTHER SER·
VICE OF CLELAND
REALTY ...
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
" 992-1196
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussoll 949·266(1
Roger &amp; DoHie Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
-· 992·2259

1-'&lt;;ue,;s

Trucking. Phone 742·24.15.

anytime. Have
dependable transportation.

EAST

'I'QJ 106
• QJ
+AQ8 2

-SANOY!

'"BETTeR ORINK SOME
WATER ... JUST ONE
SWALLOW NOW"'

and spreading . Leo Morris ·

call843 ~ 4951

•....

WEST

+ K 10 2

ANNIE

WILL HAUL limestone and :
gravei. Also, lime hauling ·

Mobile Homes -sale

In extra nice condition,
can
be yours
a:t

Excellent Buy
at
$13,500.00.
GOOD LOCATION -- 3
bedroom ranch, level

t AK4

+K 9 6 3

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

WANTEO : housecleaning

2·19-80

'I' A 9 2

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Reasonable rates. Call 949·
2379.

basement, l'h baths,
central air and heat, 2

Mobile home, like new,
fully furnished, 1 acre,
own water, storage
building, cement drive .

NORTH

McClure
. 29Actreaa
Hagen
300ne way
~. or another

R WORK
remodeling by AI '
Tromm, 742·2328. Releren·
ces.

3S Toaa
3t "The Bella"

JEST
CLEANIN'OUT MV
POCKtTBOOK, PAW

811LlS O'FIRE!!

LOS
.AGENCY INC.

I'M

WHAR ON AIRTH
DID All THAT
DADBURN CLUTTER
COME fROM?

INSURANCE

.

31 Uke IIODle
Hnoleum

lOOn naval

maneuvers

u Relilhed

ARE YOU PAYING" TOO MUCH?
DO YOU HAVE THE."RIGHT
COVERAGE?
~

poet
35 Paddle
111 Unspoken
39- Leclne,
/dr.

SOUlHEASTERN OHIO SINCE '1868

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
'
Ia

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work It:

.

FOR ALL YOUR fNSURAN~ NEEDS
CALL US!

992-2342

DOWNING~ ILOS

AGENCY, INC.

TQifil~h
:t:Ptfi,·PEN

TO WRITE

A. NOTE, BUT I

W~ATTOSAV
•

DON'T 00 I~ 51~! OON1T
LET loJIM KNOW '{OV LIKE
f.IIM! FORCI; I-IlM TO
MAKE T~~ FIRST MUVE

1-lOW 0(0 '(OV bET
TO 6E SVCI-I AN
EXPERT, MARCIE?

· One letter aimply stands for lnother. ln this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the worda are all
hlats. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPI'OQUOTES
RX

FTG

QGMU

YK

STGVZ
TC

VRXU

BROBKD

QK

FTG

bDTGCZ.

'-D.
S.
KQKDMTC
Yeatefday'a ~-: EMPLOYMENT IS NA11JRE'S
PHYSICIAN AND IS ESSENTIAL TO HUMAN HAPPINESS.-GALEN
.
.

'

~ tW KIM P:"tum Sv.wil~, Inc.

Acr e" 17 .

9:0D-Mov ie " Th e End" 3,15 ; Goldie
&amp; Liza Toge ther 8, 10; Mystery
20,33 .
IO ·OD-Bob Newhart Special B. 10;
New s 20; City Notebook 33 ;
10 : 15-Sear ch for the Nile 17.
I0 :30--0ver Easy 2() ; Camera Three
33 .
11 :00- News
6,8, 10 , 13, 15 ; Dick
Ca vett 20 ; Mont y Py thon ' s
Flying Ci rcus 33; II : 15-Love,
Ame rican Style 17.
11 :3()-Tonight 3,15 : X Il l Winter
Olympic Games Update 6, 13;
Moyie " The Pink Jungle" 10;
ABC Captioned News 33 ; Movie
" Godzllla v s. Megalon " 11.
11 : 45 - ABC Ne w s Special 6,13 ;
12 :aD-Movie " Part 2 Walking
Tall " 6,13 .
12 :4()-Movie "A Queslion of Gu ilt"

of

lhe

Pharaohs" 17 , 5 30- Love ,
American Style 17.

Reckless discard hazards
• 973

XI II Winte r Olym pic
Games 6, 13; While Shadow 8, 10;
Nova 20, 33; Movie " God ' s Little

2: 25-News 13 .
3: 15- Movie
" Land

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

position, 1 or 2 days per
week,
re l iable, har ·
dworking.
clean
and
honest, can supply references to character. Please

Finished

dleport -

at S28,000.00.
NEAR MINES

'1'00 "' I.A./i-li-[A.o I
OF Q.\OKT ?W6'7

BILL'S AUTO
REPAIR.

Will do odds and ends,
panel ing, floor tile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992·6338.

Fi r st ln terna fl of'al

B; 1 :oo- Tomorrow 3; New s lS ;
I : 1()-News 17 .
1: 15--Movie "The Command " 17 ;

BRIDGE

SF000~T

2·17·1 mo.

rates. 992·6022 .

TAWDRY

Tuesday, Feb . 19

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

and handicapped in my
private home. Reasonable

BOILED

tromJumble,clolhlanewaptpet',loxS4,Nonrood,N.J.07MI.Includeyour
,..'"' addrHa, zip code and mekt chKkt PIYible to Ntwapaperbookt.

..,..,

• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

WILL CAR!= lor elderly

GLUEY

.rumble 80ol No. 14,contalnlng 110 puulet, It neUe bit lor$1 .715 po1..,.1d

• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

Services Offered

{Answers tomorrow)

week off- A WEE CvUGH

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation

and

"r I I l r r XI )

Answer : Because he had this..r.. the Scotsman took a

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

carpeted. 3 to 11. acres
available. Located approx.
7 mi les from Pomeroy off

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY,O.
992·22!9

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328 .

form the surprise answer, as suggested by lho abovo cartoon.

. I Jumbles : COACH.

V.esterday s

statements, all federal

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30·tfc

Now arrange the circled letters to

Print answer he/'ll: A

- ··

and state forms.
H&amp;R Block
Office Location
618 E . Main
Pomeroy
992·379!
1·30·1 mo.

toward

I

1 I I

THe WHOLE OAY··

1979 Ford 150 4x4 auto.,

1977 Buick Regal auto.,
AM·FM, A..C ., $3900. Call
99H491 after 5:30p.m .

..

PU'T ON "Y THE
PR160NE~5 WAS.

tBALTIR

Partnerships &amp;
Corporations
Payrolls, profit &amp; loss

Rutland .

SPLIT LEVEL brick home.
7 rooms, 2 baths. Full

merci•t type, SB,OOO. 949·
2042.

'

We, CLAUDIA~ !

TRI.COUNTY :

Business-Farms

mile off Rt. 7 by -pass

on 51. R1. 124

Rt. 7 or 33..446·2359 after 6.

ternationel backhoe, com -

'

BUT WE'RE t.!O'I' GO N~'A LET
THI?M TAKE YOU AWAY .. AI':e

~[BOOKKEEPING :~
SERVICE -0
._,

Roger Hysell
Garage

Veterans Admin. Loans.

shocks. 992·2679 .

1978 Ford '1:! ton Club cab
with topper. V·8, auto., low
·mileage. 14200. 1972 In·

.

YO U HE'ARD McKEI? TAL KIN'
ABO UT HOW HE' ~ 60NNA
HAFTA 6ET RID OF HER?'

, - - - - - - - - - ,.,

t:J:~

WHA'T iHE 'n-IEA'T~ICAL- PERFORMANCE

I I I

L-----------------~ ~:

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

Free Estimates ·
Reasonable Prices

P.S., posi ·traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. -4 new

4339.

2·1Hfc

Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters. and

All work guaranteed .

1975 Bronco 4x4, V-8, AT,

P.S.j P . B., topper, posi traction front and rear. 985-

IRUGLAF I

~

occasions. Character

Na Na 13 ;

Spor ts J a mbo ree 15; All tn The
F am i ty 17 : Ma c Ne il - Le hre r
Repor l 20.
3, 15;

Free, Estimates
388-9759

RACINE, 0 .
992·621l or
992-7314
12·28-pd .

6; J oker's Wild 6: Dic k Ca vell
33 ; Hollywood Square s tO: Sha

8:DO--M isadven tures of Sher iff Lobo

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built-up
roof and
home
repair.

(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or 992 · 3743

SR

Real Estate for Sale

1974 Firebird. 992·3293.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p·er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

APPLES -

TUESDAY .F EBRUARY 19,1980

7:30-Hollywood Squar es 3; Bax ter s

·· =..~~-· - --

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concre1e
work,
walks
~nd
driveways.

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

apples a t $-4 per bu . Best for

Healthy, !ihots, · wormed .
Donations reQuired . 992·

reasonable . 992·2439.

Wanted to Buy

669 ·

Pets for Sale
cakes and sheet caKes . Call
HOOF HOLLOW, English · 992 ·6342 or 992·2583.
and Western ." Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
GOOD CONDITIONED

Call Mr. Zidian at Pomeroy
day through Friday, 9·5.

Wilkesv ille.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

DECORATED CAKES for

type .

1 PAY highest prices
poss ible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

Phone

all

Bording

I LODEY 1
I () tJ
I RUCRY

·=

Television
Viewin~

tour ordinary words.

Business Services

3785 .

7S8·2589.

CAPRICORN (Doe. 22-.l•n. 11)

This Is a g()9d day to get In touch
with friends you ha'len 't seen
much of lately. If ttley·re close.
give them a call. It they're far
away. write them a note.

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or
c hard, State Route 689 .

S curve rolltop desk. Ca ll
742·2316, even ings.

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·

one"letter to .,ach square, to form

food , and al l t.ypes of salt .
E)(celsior Salt Work s, Inc .,
E . Main St ., Pomeroy , 992·
3891.

alternators - own the best
- · buy Winpower. Call 513·

698 ~ 3290 .

Unscramble these fo&lt;lr JumOiel,

===================================· ~

sand , grav rl, calc i um
chloride, fertilize-r , d og

Wanted to Buy : Four foo t

l arge

BUYING U.S. SI LVER
COl NS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, StMPL Y PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S .

For Sale
COA L ,
L IME STON E,

;J

WEDNESDAY , FEBAUAAY 20,1980
5:45- Farm Report 13 , 5:5()-PTL
Club 13.
6:0D-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Heallh Field 10; World at Large
17.
6:30-Chrislopher Closeup 10; News
17; 6 :45-Mornlng Report 3;
A.M . Weather 33 ; 6:5()-Good
Morning, West Virg inia 13.
7:0D-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13;
Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10; WTBS
Fun~ouse

17.

7:3()-Family Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
White Reports 10; 8: oo-Capt.
Kang•roo 8, 10 ; Leave It To
Beaver 17: Sesame St. 33.
8:3()-Romper Room 17.
9:0D-Bob Braun 3i Big Valley 6;
Bever ly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10 ; Phil Donahue 13,15 : Lucy
· Show 17 .
9:3()-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.

IO:OQ-.Card Sharks 3, 15; Joker's
Wild 10; Jeffersons 8: Edge ot
Night 6; Movie " Not with My
Wife, You Don'l!" 17 ; Morning
Magazine 13 .
10 :30-Hol lywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
10:55-House Call10 ; CBS News
8.

11 OQ-.High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13 ; Price is Right 8,10 .
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Fam ily Feud 6,13 ; Sesame St .
20,33 .
12 :00- Newscenter
3:
News
6,8,10, 13; Health Field 15.
12 :3()-Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "A High Wind In
Jamaica " 17; Elec . Co . 20,33 .
1:oo-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Chi ldren 6, 13; Young 8. the
Rest less B. 10.
2:0Q-.Doctors 3,15; One Lite to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8. 10;
2: 25-News 17.
2:30- Anolher
World
3. 15 ;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17 .
3 00 - General
Hospital
6,13 ;
Guid ing Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Austin City Limits 20 : 3:3()F llnlstones 17 .
4: 00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8:
Sesame 51. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
tO; Real McCoys 13 ; Little
Rasca ls 15; Spectreman 17.
4:3()-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
II.
5 :oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20.'33 .
5:3(}-Mash 3; News 6; Play thE
Percentages B; E lee . Co. 20 ;
Happy Days Again 13; l Dream
of Jeannie 17; Doctor. Who 33 .
6 :00-News 3.8. 10. 13,15.6; Carol
Burnett 17; 3-2·1 Contact 20,33.
6 : 30-News 3, 13,8,10; Carol Burnett
6; Bob Newhart 17: VIlla Alegre
20; Wild Wltd World of Animals
33.
7 :0Q-.Cross.WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil - Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7:3G--Country Roads 3; Joker 's Wild
8; Dick Cavett33; Match Game
PM" 6; The Judge 10; Famtly
Feud 13; Wlld Kingdom 15; All lr
The Family 17; MacNell -Lehre1
Report 20.
8: oo-Real People 3, 15; Charlie'
Angels 13; CBS Reports 8,10
Edward &amp; ·Mrs. Simpson 6
Great Performances 20.33;
\)pstalrs, Downstairs 11.
9:0Q-.Ollf'rent Srokes 3,15 ; XIII ·
Winter Olympic Games 6, 13;
MOille "Escape" 8, 10; College
Basketball II; How Do You Like
the World? 20; Song by Song 33.
1: 3()-Hello, Larry 3,15; 10:0Q-.Best
of Saturday Night Live 3, 15;
News 20; Kanawha County on lhe
Line 33.
10:»--Cver Easy 20.
II :oo-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Last of
the Wlld 17; Dick Cawtt 20;
\
Wodehouse Playhouse 33.
11 :3l-College Basketball3; Tonlghi
"15; Potltlcal {'lebate 8;. ABC
Captioned News 33; ]'1.ovle ''The .
Arl of Love" 10; XIII Winter '
Olympic Games Update 6,13 .
11 :45-ABC News Special 6,13.
12 :oo-Love Soat 6,13 ; 1:oo-News
15; 1: i()-Baretla 6,131 1:25-News 17.
·
? :3()-Tomorrow 3; Movie "The
·
Unkoly Wife" 17; 2:20-News13 . !
3:3()-MO\/le "Wh! te the City Sleeps" ,
17; 5:35--Love, American Styl-•'
17.
t

•

'·

�10 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport· Pom e r oy , 0 ., Tuesday, Feb . 19, 1980

,

ltft'i}l.\.(t ID'it

~ TIIAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ·
by Henri Arnold anct 8ol) Lot

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Wedn I t·r, Feb. 20

WANT AD
CHARGES

ASTRO.:fiRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

ISWordsor Under
ChartJ~

Cash
1.00
1.50

1 day
2days

~~hday
-=-

FHrUIIry 20, 1110
This coming year you are likely
to be luckier than usual In your
partnership arrangements . Allies
you develop wtll not only prove
loyal, they'll be helpful In your
long·rangt~ plans as well.

PISCES (Fob. :N-March 20)

Because you are willing to see
aoother'a point of view today , he
or she will see )lOurs. Use this giP1
to work out any problems. Find
out more of what ties ahead tor
you In the year following yo ur
birthday by sending for y our
copy of Astro--G raph letter. Mall

$1 for each to Astra-Graph, Box
469, Radio City Sta11on. N.Y
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
ARIES (March 21~April 19)
Today and tomorrow, concen-

3days
8days

TAURUS (April

20-Moy 20)
Devote as much time as you can
schedule tOday to your new projects. Something big tor which
you are hoping can become a
reality.
GEMINI (M•Y 21-June 20) The
harder you try today. the luckier
you are likely to become. Don't
let challenges intimidate you it
you aut aiming lor worthy
rewards.
CANCER (June 21·JLIIY 22) Your
lntuiUon should serve as an
accurate gauge of public opinion
today . You 'll know how to deal
effectively with others, Individually or in a group.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22} Be alert
lor both career and financial
opportunities today. Interesting
situations that are also extremely
beneficial could develop.

VIRGO (Aut. 23-Sopl. 22) You

should be very lucky at gaining
the ames and supporters you
need to advance your self-inter~
ests today . Ask for assistance II
conditions warrant it.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Things
you do today where you use your
efforts and expertise to aid
another will produce benefits
you 'd least expect. Be a good
samaritan.

1.25
1.90

1.110

2.25

J.OO

l. 75

Each word over the minimllll
15 words is -i cents per word per
day. Ads running othe r than const!(.'utive days will be charged at
the l day r ate.
In memory, card of Thanks
and Obituary : 6 cents per word,
~ . 00 minimwn. Cash in advanct!

Mobile Horne sales and Yard
sales are accepted only with
cash with order. 2$ cent charge
for ads carrying Box Number In
Care ot The Sentinel.
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objecti onal. The
Publisher will not be resporu~ibl e
for more than one incorrect inse rtion.

trate on situat ions that could
mean something to you materially. Vour possibilities for gain are

promising.

In Memory

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
MOnday
Noon on Saturday
Tuesday

thruFrtday
4P.M.
the day bt!fore pui.JUcation

1n mem ory of Florene V .
Fin n icum , who passed
awa y one year ago F e b . 15,
1979 .
You ca nnot say , y ou must
not say
1 T ha t she is dead, she is just
away
W it h a cheery smil e and a
wa ve of the hand
She has wandered into ~n
unknown land
And left us dreami ng, how
very fair
It needs must be, since she
linge r s there
So think of her faring on, as
dear
In the love of There as the
tove of Here .
Th ink of her stil l as the
same, and say
She is not dead, she is just
away .
Sadly m issed by daughters,
son, husband , brothers and
fr iends .

1n memory of Anna Mae
Terrel l who passed away
one year ago, Feb. 19, 1979.
Sadly missed by Elizabeth
and Joe, Juanita, Bill and
Ruth, Shannan, John and
Marie.

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

SHOOT .

Vo l unteer

Sunday

Wanted to Buy

Racine

Fire

Dept.

Every Saturday . 6 :30 p.m .

4P, M.

Friday afternoon

L_______________

~

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Factory choke only .

Help Wanted
APPLICATIONS

will

be

accepted 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 only . Apply at

Pu ll ins Excavating offic e,

us 33, Pomeroy , OH .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221

EARN

When II comes to doing a little
more horse trading today , It will
be hard to lind your equal. Vou 'U
be as fair to others as you'll be to
yourself.

extra

home.

good

work.
No experien ce
necessary . Send for ap·
plication . BB. Box 66, The

money

pay .

At their bulldingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.

at

Easy

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)

Plains, OH 45780.

You will take pride in your
achievements toda~ because
your basic motives are unselfish.
Looking out for 1oved ones will
be your prime concern .

Part·t ime janitor services
tor church . Call 992 ·2914 or

992·5693 .

Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated

to Boy ·Scoul Troop 249 .
ATTENT I ON:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certif ied check
for

antiques

and

collec ·

tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . A lso,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·

76n167 or 557 341 1.

Now acceptng logs at our

log yard 7:30·3:30 week·
days. High prices for good
Quality toos with a limi ted
amount of low grade.
Payment upon delivery
and sealing . Blaney Har·
dwoods, Box 66, Vincent,

OH 45784. 614 ·618·2960.'
SILVE R
GOLD AND
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS ,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER ANO
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

AQUARIUS (J•n.
You may at

20-Fob.

11)

th~s

time ha'le more
ttlan one snuatlon that could
prove profitable II brought to a
head. Do something today, while
the aspects fa¥or you .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

1·28·80 (TAPE NO. 10)

The 320,000 combines
that "Worked the nation's
fields last fall, 1f lined up
wheel-to-wheel could have
harvested the state of Iowa
ina day.

Meigs
Property
Transfers '\....
Florence Lurana Reeves Boring,
William C. Boring to Basil Lee
Wright, Florence Elizabeth Wright,
Parcels, Scipio.
Alice Kitchen, Aff. Death,
Rutland.
Edwin S. Cozart to Gerald R.
Douglas, Linds L. Douglas, Lot 6,
Dyesville Village, Pomeroy.
Marguerite M. Peery, Henry
Peery to Carpenter Local No. 650,
Pt. Lot 93, Pomeroy .
Robert M. Varian, M~oxine Varian
to Robert M. Varian, Maxine
Varian, .65 acre, Sutton.
Edward Chevalier, dec. to Lona B.
Chevalier, Cert. of Trans., "olive.
Jooeph F . Proffitt, Dorothy Proffitt to Roger AdslllS, Right of Way,
Letart-sutton.
Augusta Barnhart, Harold Barnhart to Carl E. Smith, Inc., Right of
Way, Orange.
Joann Clark to Vicki A. Hanson,
2.76acres, Rutland.
Paul Simon, Allie Simon to Benjamin
F.
Newsome,
Joann
Newsome, Lot 7, Thos. H. Crow,
Chester.
Owen W. Fink, Anna M. Fink to
Owen W. Fink, Anna M. Fink, Lot,
Middleport .
Frances J. Whittington to Leslie T.
Whittington, Parcels, Salisbury .
Jerry T. Goldberg, exec., Jerome
Goldberg to Thomas H. Westen,
Hazel Westen, Int. in parcels, Sutton.
Dan Satterfield to Steven Stout,
.069 acre, Middleport.
Howard F. Woodyard to A. C.
Summers, Lots A-B, M. Fife's Add .,
Middleport.
Alpha Ramey, David Ramey, Linsa Ramey, Kenney Ramey, Judy
Ramey, Craig Ramey to Roger
Adams, Right of Way, Meigs.
Kenna H. Bush, Kathy S. Bush to
Roger Adams, Right of Way, Bedford.
Charles R. Wolfe, Lois M. Wolle to
Roger Adams, Rlght of Way, Meigs.
Paul W. Bayes, Katrina Hayes to
Roger Mams,ltight of Way, Letart.

contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Midd leport .
HEAR ING AID USERS :
save used batteries, mercury and silver oxide,
redeem for cash . Di les
Hearing
Aid
Center,

Athens. Tel. 614·594·3571.
GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COl NS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANT IQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP"
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAIS ING.
Lost and Found
LOST : Hysell Run area,
shepherd collie. Black and
tan with white muzzle,
female . Humane Society ,

9n6260.
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a 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 '/92·
2156 or 992·2157.
RN DR LPN, lull time. 3·
1JI! 30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 11 to 7:30.
Health Care Center, Mon·

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
Care produCts. Western

boots . Children's
Adults$29 .00.

Sl5 .50.

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Calt367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220 .
HILLCREST

KENNELS.

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
registered

Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
HUMANE
SO .C IETY .
Adopt a homeless pel .
6260, noon·7 p.m.

OLD
boxes,

FURNITURE,

ice

brass beds,

iron

beds, desks, etc .• complete
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. -4, Pomeroy or
call992-7760.
ANTIQUES,

FUR ·

NITURE,

china,

glass,

anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161 .
OLD COl NS, pocl&lt;et watches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gotd or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
1&gt;462.
GOLD , SILVE ·R· OR
FOREIGN- COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEJ MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
-- - - · ------ -

..

ROME beau ty

appl e butter . Call 669·3785.
Fitzpatr ick

Orchard,

689 .
EMERGENCY

power

V. C. YOUNG Ill

2· 18· 1 mo.

The Meigs County Humane
Society
offers

BEAUTIFUL CATS. Shorl·
haired -Tiger, long-haired
Yellow, gray Tiger, black
and white. Utter trained.

UNUSUALLY NICE dogs.
Playful Cocker lype; bob·
tailed Collie lype; also
Paodle · Schnauzer

All

looking
Dachshund

males.

Fox ·

Terrier,
and sweet

Shepherd. Both females .
Al l young . Lots of puppies,
too. All have had shots and
have been wormed . Phone

992 ·6260.
A~to Sales

hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.

Phone992·7201 or992 ·3309.

H. L WHITESEL

HAIR STYLING

ROOFING

.
B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

gutter

downspouts,

cleaning and painting.

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

Call Howard
949·2862

POMEROY
LANDMARK

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

Jack

W. Carsey,

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

House for sale in Pageville,
OH. FHA financing. LOW
down
payment .
3
bedrooms, living room, kit·
chen and bath on main
floor with -4 finished rooms
except for floor covering in
basement, with bath and
laundry room. Located on 2
large lots. Priced in mid
twenties. Saturday only

592 ·2322 . Anyt ime
Saturday 698·7331.

but

Summer Cottage, on the
Ohio River, Great Bend
area. J bedrooms, dining
room -kitchen combination,
running water, electricity,

out of high water . 992·5623
after 5.

Hours 9·1 M.,

1 &lt;~

w., F.

Other times by appointment.

· 107 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy, 0.
CALL 992 · 7544

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCJNG ·VA· FHA LO·
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E . STATE , ATHENS.
614·592·3051.
COUNTRY

HOME

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

1978 Ford F-150 4-wheel
drive stepslde. 14.35 Gum ·
bas with aluminum wheels.
Extras. $5995. C•ll alter 5
p.m . 992·5620. 21.000 miles:
1974 Toyot• Hllux pickup.

One' owner, low mileag·e,

excellent sh•pe, AM· FM
stereo rodlo, new toper. 22 ..
28 mpg. $2500. Call992·6149
after 5 p.m.
1977 Pontiac· Grand Prix,

Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windOW!., door locks,

extra padded landau top,
special paint and Interior.
24,000 actual. Local owner,
best of care. S4300. Call 992·
6149 .
1971 Ford ·Galaxy 4·door .
GOOd running condition .
See al243'1' Mu lberry Ave.
1974

Camaro, · very

1977 Thunderbird, P.S.,
P . B., AM·F'M, radials.
$2800. 247·3594.
1977 VW R,11llbll. Exc&amp;ltent
condition. ~-3213 alter 4
p.~ .

'

1978 Ford 302 $3,000.00. Ex,
cellent condition . Phone
742·2103.
.

NEW LISTING- Mid·
large 7 room
house, 3 bedroom, fu ll

basement, garage and carport. Electric heat . 5 acres

tillable
land .
3
greenhouses, large pole
shed. Located near Racine

Hydro Plant. Call 247 ·3752
after 4 p.m.

car garage, cable T.V.,

216 E. 5econd Streei
COUNTRY LIVING -7/8 of an acre with a 3

bedroom. 2 bath,
Midland mobile home.
Has central heat and
rural water . Going. for

$16,500.
2 TRAILE!'R SPOTS -On

State

Route near

Middleport
with
Leading Creek. water.
Jdeal4 acre tract of land
lor only $12,500.
ECONOMIZE - With
this 3 bedroom· home
with large lot, city

FOR THI!! month of
February,
Drehel's
cerarnlcs - greenware 30
Pet. off. G)&amp;tes 20 Pet. off. ,
59 N. 2nd Ave., Mllldleport, .
OH. 992-2751.
Console stereo, sfoo. Phone
992-6069. '
.
Cl:ll PWOOP to cut. Phone·
9-49·2822. ' ' .
.

.
1980 Gotd· equipment. Ar·

nold ·Pal met, Ram, VIctor,
Browning, . MacGregor,

Dunlop , Rawlings, and
Daisy . John Teaford, 614· ,
985·3961.
'1971 · trai'lfr' 12x6S, com·
pletety f4rnf•h.O, a r con·
~itioned . . F1rm, $4500.00 .
C•ll992·5304.

REMODEL ING
inside
home. Will also do outside
work. No lob too small .

WHeRE
ARE YOU 6011Ki?!

I'LL KNOW IF I'VE
KSEPIN' TH' SLIN TO

MY RIG~T WHEN 11: SeTS ?~·.•

Priced

at

$18,500.
BUSINESS BUILDING
- s rooms and bath all
on ground floor. Can be
converted to a home
very easily. · Chimney
tor a wood burner , Ask·

ing just $11,000.
SPECIAL - River front
tots on Slate Route 124.
Ideal lor camping,
boating, and fishing this
spring ,
•
THIS IS THE YEAR TO
MI\KE A. PROFIT ON
YOUR PROPERTY.
DO IT NOW BY CALL·
I NG 992·3325 or 991·3876.

Housing
Headquarters

.REAL ESTATE
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY .!... Gill's Dress Shop In
Middleport. Nice location. Doing good business. A
beautiful s1ore. II you're Interested In being your
own boss and making money, then call us lor
del,tlls.
ON LINCOLN HEIGHTS IN POMEROY - Two
bedroom with bath, plenty of closets, JarQe&lt;1lvlng
room, eal·ln kitchen, storm windows &amp; doors; gas
furnace,, new hot water heater and plunlblng. No
dOWn paYment· II you qualify . A. good Investment.
$17,500.
.
OUIET COUNTRY LIVING-- On St. Rl, 143 lust 4
miles from Pomeroy.3 yr . otd ranch style horne with
a spflt rail fence, ove 3 acres of land, garage and
workshop, cent. heat &amp; •Jr cond . 5«,900.
,
MIDDLEPORT-- Two bedroom, l'h ljat~. located
lust one block from heart of town
In . quiet
neighborhood. S25,000.
'

If"'

CALL WE HAVE MORE-CALl, 992-2342
.
.
'

ROdney bowning, llfoker - 110. 992-37~1
Bill Childs, Branch .Mgr. - Ho. 992-2499 r

East

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

all ·

ICI about q ive
upon4ou,

Mr. R-:rt!

IN STOCK lor immediate

M4 eviction was
for midniqht! ft's
two minutes past.'

Come in where
it's warm!
. - /"W&gt;

delivery: various sizes of

pool kits. D&lt;&gt;-lt·yoursell or
let us Install tor ·you . D. .:
Inc.

Complete Service. Phone • ·

949·2487 or 949·2000. racine, ·
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.
BO.WERS .
Sweepers, ·.

toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

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

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

WINNIE

TWO APTS., downtown.
2nd floor, $175. 3rd floor,
$150 per month . Heat fur ·
nished. Call 992-7034 bel·
ween 10·5.

PIANO

TUNING.

%Watered

4 Hawaiian

17 Baseball
boWice
18 Resort area
ZO Belmondo's

game ·
5 Go back

COIAPLIMENT.S
TO ]l-IE Cr!EF!

resort city

WE WOULDN'T HAVE EATEN
TILL MIPAII611T IF YOU
ALL AAON'T CHIPPED

22 Neighbor
of W. Ger.
Z1 Art dept.

IN!

Z5

Lane

1 ShWI
7 Part of an hr.
8 Out of
favor : slang
9 Tyke's Item
10 Bergman's

"The-'s
Egg"

Yestenllly'a Altlwer
18 Red Sox
M Shade
slugger
28Bauble;
19 Hold
trinket
office
30 Tower top
23 Mlaslonary 31 Cowboy
priest
fiick

!4 Cather

32 Inftlct

heroine

25"Enchanted

37 Garfunkel
38 Glove

compart-

Evening"

ment item

necesaity
Clothing size

b.--t--t--t-

27 Suffix
for account
28 Actor

Daniels. New phone num-

Etderty lady woutd .like to
rent 2 or 3 room ·apartment
on ground floor. Close to
Post office and doctor In
Middleport. Can furnish
references. Call992·2969.

DOWN
1 He had 100 eyes

18 Herring hue

THANK&amp; FOR HELPING OUT

lAY

ber, 742·2951. Service to
schools and nome since
1965.

wanted to Rent

syUable

summer
%1 French

S &amp; G Carpet Cle•nlng.
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992· .
6309 or 742·2211.

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

U Brew coffee,
In one

ACROSS
1 Oriental
nurse ·
5 Negligent
11 Ubertlne
12 Show

13 Caron film
fabric
14 "Whoopee"
3 Hercules
comedian
cleaned
II EngUah river them

992·5724.

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

992·2143.

Sales,

South rose with the ace and
continued with the queen.
West took his king and contin·
ued hearts with South ruffing
as soon as he could. Then
South started to lead out his
trumps.
West should have made
things easy for his partner by
signalling club · strength, but
West had not bothered to
count declarer's tricks . If
West had taken the trouble to
do this he would have seen
that South had six trumps, a
heart and two diamonds as
starters and that if South held
even one club he would be
able to lead toward dummy's
king and make his contract.
Still West's wool-gathering
did not give South his
contract. It was just as easy
for East to see that the only
wasy the defense could gather
in four tricks would be if West
held the doubleton queen· jack
of diamonds and South had
been dealt . four little dia·
monds and no clubs.
So somewhere along the
way East chucked a diamond
and South was able to set up
his eight·spot of diamonds and
fulfill his contract.

~tU-~

GASOLINE ALLEY ·

operator's license? Phone

Bumgardner

••

It is much more difficult for
a defender to count tricks
than it is for declarer, but
there are some occasions
when a defender has no real
excuse for not making correct
discards .
South won the first heart in
dummmy and promptly led a
trump. East showed out and

:

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
celled?
Lost
your

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call
992·7479.

Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Call992-7787,

too.

North

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

arid Service. we sharpen :

For Rent

lull basement. Nice Kit·

West

Opening lead:• Q

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, ;·

RENTER'S assistance for

chen,

Vulnerable: East -West
Dealer: North

Scissors.

1970 Vinda le 12x63 with ex·
pando, 2 be·dr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12X52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOB ILE HOME
SALES. PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304·675·«24.

• 10 9 5 2
+J 10 75 4
SOUTH •
+AQJ 86 14
"7 5
t876 3

... .

MACHINE :
service,

'I'K843

.

... BUT IF I'M WRONG,
I'LL ~AVE WASTED

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

carpenters .

water, natural gas, and

For Sale.
1970 Mark Twain V·hull, 16
foot wllh 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call after 5 p.m., 992·2528.

Repairs,

bedroom

tlon, rent the upstairs,
live downstairs. Priced

lot, centra l air and heat,

SEWING

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14X65 3

$45,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED Middleport - remodel·
ed 2 family, good condi ·

fu lly equipped kitchen,
lor only $30,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT -- An
older 1'12 story brick
home. Kitchen has
dishwasher, disposal
and hood . 3 bedrooms
and lots of closets on ap·
px. 11h acre lot for
$23,500.00.
REDUCED -3 acres &amp;
house on old St. Rt. 33 .
Now $6,000.00.
NEED SALE - "The
Kiddie Shoppe" -- Call
Today ,
WATCH FOR THE
"OPEN HOUSE" FEB.
24 ... ANOTHER SER·
VICE OF CLELAND
REALTY ...
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
" 992-1196
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussoll 949·266(1
Roger &amp; DoHie Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
-· 992·2259

1-'&lt;;ue,;s

Trucking. Phone 742·24.15.

anytime. Have
dependable transportation.

EAST

'I'QJ 106
• QJ
+AQ8 2

-SANOY!

'"BETTeR ORINK SOME
WATER ... JUST ONE
SWALLOW NOW"'

and spreading . Leo Morris ·

call843 ~ 4951

•....

WEST

+ K 10 2

ANNIE

WILL HAUL limestone and :
gravei. Also, lime hauling ·

Mobile Homes -sale

In extra nice condition,
can
be yours
a:t

Excellent Buy
at
$13,500.00.
GOOD LOCATION -- 3
bedroom ranch, level

t AK4

+K 9 6 3

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

WANTEO : housecleaning

2·19-80

'I' A 9 2

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Reasonable rates. Call 949·
2379.

basement, l'h baths,
central air and heat, 2

Mobile home, like new,
fully furnished, 1 acre,
own water, storage
building, cement drive .

NORTH

McClure
. 29Actreaa
Hagen
300ne way
~. or another

R WORK
remodeling by AI '
Tromm, 742·2328. Releren·
ces.

3S Toaa
3t "The Bella"

JEST
CLEANIN'OUT MV
POCKtTBOOK, PAW

811LlS O'FIRE!!

LOS
.AGENCY INC.

I'M

WHAR ON AIRTH
DID All THAT
DADBURN CLUTTER
COME fROM?

INSURANCE

.

31 Uke IIODle
Hnoleum

lOOn naval

maneuvers

u Relilhed

ARE YOU PAYING" TOO MUCH?
DO YOU HAVE THE."RIGHT
COVERAGE?
~

poet
35 Paddle
111 Unspoken
39- Leclne,
/dr.

SOUlHEASTERN OHIO SINCE '1868

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
'
Ia

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work It:

.

FOR ALL YOUR fNSURAN~ NEEDS
CALL US!

992-2342

DOWNING~ ILOS

AGENCY, INC.

TQifil~h
:t:Ptfi,·PEN

TO WRITE

A. NOTE, BUT I

W~ATTOSAV
•

DON'T 00 I~ 51~! OON1T
LET loJIM KNOW '{OV LIKE
f.IIM! FORCI; I-IlM TO
MAKE T~~ FIRST MUVE

1-lOW 0(0 '(OV bET
TO 6E SVCI-I AN
EXPERT, MARCIE?

· One letter aimply stands for lnother. ln this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the worda are all
hlats. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPI'OQUOTES
RX

FTG

QGMU

YK

STGVZ
TC

VRXU

BROBKD

QK

FTG

bDTGCZ.

'-D.
S.
KQKDMTC
Yeatefday'a ~-: EMPLOYMENT IS NA11JRE'S
PHYSICIAN AND IS ESSENTIAL TO HUMAN HAPPINESS.-GALEN
.
.

'

~ tW KIM P:"tum Sv.wil~, Inc.

Acr e" 17 .

9:0D-Mov ie " Th e End" 3,15 ; Goldie
&amp; Liza Toge ther 8, 10; Mystery
20,33 .
IO ·OD-Bob Newhart Special B. 10;
New s 20; City Notebook 33 ;
10 : 15-Sear ch for the Nile 17.
I0 :30--0ver Easy 2() ; Camera Three
33 .
11 :00- News
6,8, 10 , 13, 15 ; Dick
Ca vett 20 ; Mont y Py thon ' s
Flying Ci rcus 33; II : 15-Love,
Ame rican Style 17.
11 :3()-Tonight 3,15 : X Il l Winter
Olympic Games Update 6, 13;
Moyie " The Pink Jungle" 10;
ABC Captioned News 33 ; Movie
" Godzllla v s. Megalon " 11.
11 : 45 - ABC Ne w s Special 6,13 ;
12 :aD-Movie " Part 2 Walking
Tall " 6,13 .
12 :4()-Movie "A Queslion of Gu ilt"

of

lhe

Pharaohs" 17 , 5 30- Love ,
American Style 17.

Reckless discard hazards
• 973

XI II Winte r Olym pic
Games 6, 13; While Shadow 8, 10;
Nova 20, 33; Movie " God ' s Little

2: 25-News 13 .
3: 15- Movie
" Land

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

position, 1 or 2 days per
week,
re l iable, har ·
dworking.
clean
and
honest, can supply references to character. Please

Finished

dleport -

at S28,000.00.
NEAR MINES

'1'00 "' I.A./i-li-[A.o I
OF Q.\OKT ?W6'7

BILL'S AUTO
REPAIR.

Will do odds and ends,
panel ing, floor tile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992·6338.

Fi r st ln terna fl of'al

B; 1 :oo- Tomorrow 3; New s lS ;
I : 1()-News 17 .
1: 15--Movie "The Command " 17 ;

BRIDGE

SF000~T

2·17·1 mo.

rates. 992·6022 .

TAWDRY

Tuesday, Feb . 19

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

and handicapped in my
private home. Reasonable

BOILED

tromJumble,clolhlanewaptpet',loxS4,Nonrood,N.J.07MI.Includeyour
,..'"' addrHa, zip code and mekt chKkt PIYible to Ntwapaperbookt.

..,..,

• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

WILL CAR!= lor elderly

GLUEY

.rumble 80ol No. 14,contalnlng 110 puulet, It neUe bit lor$1 .715 po1..,.1d

• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

Services Offered

{Answers tomorrow)

week off- A WEE CvUGH

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation

and

"r I I l r r XI )

Answer : Because he had this..r.. the Scotsman took a

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

carpeted. 3 to 11. acres
available. Located approx.
7 mi les from Pomeroy off

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY,O.
992·22!9

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328 .

form the surprise answer, as suggested by lho abovo cartoon.

. I Jumbles : COACH.

V.esterday s

statements, all federal

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30·tfc

Now arrange the circled letters to

Print answer he/'ll: A

- ··

and state forms.
H&amp;R Block
Office Location
618 E . Main
Pomeroy
992·379!
1·30·1 mo.

toward

I

1 I I

THe WHOLE OAY··

1979 Ford 150 4x4 auto.,

1977 Buick Regal auto.,
AM·FM, A..C ., $3900. Call
99H491 after 5:30p.m .

..

PU'T ON "Y THE
PR160NE~5 WAS.

tBALTIR

Partnerships &amp;
Corporations
Payrolls, profit &amp; loss

Rutland .

SPLIT LEVEL brick home.
7 rooms, 2 baths. Full

merci•t type, SB,OOO. 949·
2042.

'

We, CLAUDIA~ !

TRI.COUNTY :

Business-Farms

mile off Rt. 7 by -pass

on 51. R1. 124

Rt. 7 or 33..446·2359 after 6.

ternationel backhoe, com -

'

BUT WE'RE t.!O'I' GO N~'A LET
THI?M TAKE YOU AWAY .. AI':e

~[BOOKKEEPING :~
SERVICE -0
._,

Roger Hysell
Garage

Veterans Admin. Loans.

shocks. 992·2679 .

1978 Ford '1:! ton Club cab
with topper. V·8, auto., low
·mileage. 14200. 1972 In·

.

YO U HE'ARD McKEI? TAL KIN'
ABO UT HOW HE' ~ 60NNA
HAFTA 6ET RID OF HER?'

, - - - - - - - - - ,.,

t:J:~

WHA'T iHE 'n-IEA'T~ICAL- PERFORMANCE

I I I

L-----------------~ ~:

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

Free Estimates ·
Reasonable Prices

P.S., posi ·traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. -4 new

4339.

2·1Hfc

Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters. and

All work guaranteed .

1975 Bronco 4x4, V-8, AT,

P.S.j P . B., topper, posi traction front and rear. 985-

IRUGLAF I

~

occasions. Character

Na Na 13 ;

Spor ts J a mbo ree 15; All tn The
F am i ty 17 : Ma c Ne il - Le hre r
Repor l 20.
3, 15;

Free, Estimates
388-9759

RACINE, 0 .
992·621l or
992-7314
12·28-pd .

6; J oker's Wild 6: Dic k Ca vell
33 ; Hollywood Square s tO: Sha

8:DO--M isadven tures of Sher iff Lobo

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built-up
roof and
home
repair.

(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or 992 · 3743

SR

Real Estate for Sale

1974 Firebird. 992·3293.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p·er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

APPLES -

TUESDAY .F EBRUARY 19,1980

7:30-Hollywood Squar es 3; Bax ter s

·· =..~~-· - --

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concre1e
work,
walks
~nd
driveways.

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

apples a t $-4 per bu . Best for

Healthy, !ihots, · wormed .
Donations reQuired . 992·

reasonable . 992·2439.

Wanted to Buy

669 ·

Pets for Sale
cakes and sheet caKes . Call
HOOF HOLLOW, English · 992 ·6342 or 992·2583.
and Western ." Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
GOOD CONDITIONED

Call Mr. Zidian at Pomeroy
day through Friday, 9·5.

Wilkesv ille.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

DECORATED CAKES for

type .

1 PAY highest prices
poss ible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

Phone

all

Bording

I LODEY 1
I () tJ
I RUCRY

·=

Television
Viewin~

tour ordinary words.

Business Services

3785 .

7S8·2589.

CAPRICORN (Doe. 22-.l•n. 11)

This Is a g()9d day to get In touch
with friends you ha'len 't seen
much of lately. If ttley·re close.
give them a call. It they're far
away. write them a note.

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or
c hard, State Route 689 .

S curve rolltop desk. Ca ll
742·2316, even ings.

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·

one"letter to .,ach square, to form

food , and al l t.ypes of salt .
E)(celsior Salt Work s, Inc .,
E . Main St ., Pomeroy , 992·
3891.

alternators - own the best
- · buy Winpower. Call 513·

698 ~ 3290 .

Unscramble these fo&lt;lr JumOiel,

===================================· ~

sand , grav rl, calc i um
chloride, fertilize-r , d og

Wanted to Buy : Four foo t

l arge

BUYING U.S. SI LVER
COl NS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, StMPL Y PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S .

For Sale
COA L ,
L IME STON E,

;J

WEDNESDAY , FEBAUAAY 20,1980
5:45- Farm Report 13 , 5:5()-PTL
Club 13.
6:0D-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Heallh Field 10; World at Large
17.
6:30-Chrislopher Closeup 10; News
17; 6 :45-Mornlng Report 3;
A.M . Weather 33 ; 6:5()-Good
Morning, West Virg inia 13.
7:0D-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13;
Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10; WTBS
Fun~ouse

17.

7:3()-Family Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
White Reports 10; 8: oo-Capt.
Kang•roo 8, 10 ; Leave It To
Beaver 17: Sesame St. 33.
8:3()-Romper Room 17.
9:0D-Bob Braun 3i Big Valley 6;
Bever ly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10 ; Phil Donahue 13,15 : Lucy
· Show 17 .
9:3()-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.

IO:OQ-.Card Sharks 3, 15; Joker's
Wild 10; Jeffersons 8: Edge ot
Night 6; Movie " Not with My
Wife, You Don'l!" 17 ; Morning
Magazine 13 .
10 :30-Hol lywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
10:55-House Call10 ; CBS News
8.

11 OQ-.High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13 ; Price is Right 8,10 .
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Fam ily Feud 6,13 ; Sesame St .
20,33 .
12 :00- Newscenter
3:
News
6,8,10, 13; Health Field 15.
12 :3()-Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "A High Wind In
Jamaica " 17; Elec . Co . 20,33 .
1:oo-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Chi ldren 6, 13; Young 8. the
Rest less B. 10.
2:0Q-.Doctors 3,15; One Lite to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8. 10;
2: 25-News 17.
2:30- Anolher
World
3. 15 ;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17 .
3 00 - General
Hospital
6,13 ;
Guid ing Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Austin City Limits 20 : 3:3()F llnlstones 17 .
4: 00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8:
Sesame 51. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
tO; Real McCoys 13 ; Little
Rasca ls 15; Spectreman 17.
4:3()-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
II.
5 :oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20.'33 .
5:3(}-Mash 3; News 6; Play thE
Percentages B; E lee . Co. 20 ;
Happy Days Again 13; l Dream
of Jeannie 17; Doctor. Who 33 .
6 :00-News 3.8. 10. 13,15.6; Carol
Burnett 17; 3-2·1 Contact 20,33.
6 : 30-News 3, 13,8,10; Carol Burnett
6; Bob Newhart 17: VIlla Alegre
20; Wild Wltd World of Animals
33.
7 :0Q-.Cross.WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil - Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7:3G--Country Roads 3; Joker 's Wild
8; Dick Cavett33; Match Game
PM" 6; The Judge 10; Famtly
Feud 13; Wlld Kingdom 15; All lr
The Family 17; MacNell -Lehre1
Report 20.
8: oo-Real People 3, 15; Charlie'
Angels 13; CBS Reports 8,10
Edward &amp; ·Mrs. Simpson 6
Great Performances 20.33;
\)pstalrs, Downstairs 11.
9:0Q-.Ollf'rent Srokes 3,15 ; XIII ·
Winter Olympic Games 6, 13;
MOille "Escape" 8, 10; College
Basketball II; How Do You Like
the World? 20; Song by Song 33.
1: 3()-Hello, Larry 3,15; 10:0Q-.Best
of Saturday Night Live 3, 15;
News 20; Kanawha County on lhe
Line 33.
10:»--Cver Easy 20.
II :oo-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Last of
the Wlld 17; Dick Cawtt 20;
\
Wodehouse Playhouse 33.
11 :3l-College Basketball3; Tonlghi
"15; Potltlcal {'lebate 8;. ABC
Captioned News 33; ]'1.ovle ''The .
Arl of Love" 10; XIII Winter '
Olympic Games Update 6,13 .
11 :45-ABC News Special 6,13.
12 :oo-Love Soat 6,13 ; 1:oo-News
15; 1: i()-Baretla 6,131 1:25-News 17.
·
? :3()-Tomorrow 3; Movie "The
·
Unkoly Wife" 17; 2:20-News13 . !
3:3()-MO\/le "Wh! te the City Sleeps" ,
17; 5:35--Love, American Styl-•'
17.
t

•

'·

�•
12- The Daily Sentine~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Feb. 19,1980

Mudslides, flooding forces
thousands from residences
By The Associated Press
Relentless rain drenched Southern
California for a seventh straight
day, bringing more mudslides and
high water that forced thousands o!
persons from their homes and drove
damage estimates into the millions
of dollars. Flooding continued in
Utah and Arizona.
Ali the rain continued, tourists
were urged to avoid the desert Palm
Springs area, where 1,000 persons
were advised to leave their homes.
Amtrak rail travel was interrupted
between Los Angeles and San Otego
because a brid ge had been
weakened by the storms.
By late Monday, at least 24 pe("'
sons had died because of the
weather, including 18 in Ca lifornia ,
three in Arizona and three American
tourists in Tijuana , Mexico,
authorities said.
With a filth storm predicted !or
waterlogged California today and a
sixth expected late tonight or early
Wednesday, thousands of persons
were evacuated from areas ravaged
by floodwaters and cascading mudslides.
·
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. was to
tour the rain-devastated areas today
and sign disaster proclamations for
Los Angeles, Orange and Rive rside
~ounties. Further requests lor
government assistance were expeeled from Ventura, Santa Bar-

SPECIAL BOARD MEETING
A special meeting of the Southern
Local Board of Education will be
held at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the high
school.
·

WE PAY

bara and San Luis Obispo counties.
A state of emergency declared by
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley
over the weekend was still in effect.
Police remained on 12-hour shifts atter all leaves were canceled.
By early today, 2.49 inches of rain
had fallen on the Los Angeles Civic
Center from the latest storm,
bringing the season total io 19.40 inches + 9.9 inches above normal for
this time of year.
While the latest storm was expeeled to cross the coast south of the
earlier storms, the National
Weather Service still advised
Southern Californians to expect increasingj~ heavy rain and issued a
flash floOd watch through today in
mountain, desert and coastal areas.
In Gache County in northern Utah,
Flood Control Director Ned Gines
said flood damage from Monday's
rain would probably total about $2
million.
In Phoenix, Ariz., officials of the
Salt River Project, which manages
the flow of water in the Salt River
and its lakes, said approaching starms are not as severe as anticipated
and flooding would not be as bad as
expected.
Gov . jlruce Babbitt asked
President Carter on Monday night to
declare a large portion of central
Arizona a disaster area because of
floodin g Friday and Saturday.
Southern California property
damage, officially unestirnated in·
many areas, was in the tens of
millions of dollars. In Los Angeles
County alone, Supervisor Baxter
Ward estimated structural and personal property losses were in excess
of $20 million.

CASH

FOR YOUR
COINS

•

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For each Sl.OO ot Silver
coins dated 1964 or
before.
Halves paying
$8.60
Quarters paying
$4.30
Dimes paying
$1.72
Clad Halves
$2 .25

For Silver Dollars dated
1935 or earlier. Paying
more for better condtf

Buying

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ROBINSON'S LAUNDRY.
216

E_

Second 992·5428

Area squad runs
The Middleport Emergency Squad
went to Brownell Ave., early
Tuesday morning for Jamie Terzplous, who was ill. He was taken to
the office of Dr. James Conde.
The Rutland Emergency Squad
was called at 6:08a.m. Tuesday for
Calvin O'Dell who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
went to the Gold Ridge Rodad at 5:32
p.m. Monday for Mrs. Roy Brickles
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 6:38p.m. the
squad went to Lasley St. lor Alfred
Gans, who had reportedly fallen. He
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

Weather
Variable cloudiness with a chance
of showers tonight and Wednesday.
Lows tonight in the mid to upper 30s.
Highs Wednesday in the low 50s. The
chance of rain is 30 percent tonight
and Wednesday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through Friday: A
chance of rain through the period
with snow possible In the north
Friday and Saturday. Highs from
the mid 40s to the mid 50s Thursday and from the upper 30s to
the upper to. Friday and Saturday. Lows mostly In the 30s.

RACINE - In girl's high school

basketball action, the Southwestern
Highlanders invaded Southern High
School Monday night to defeat the
Tornadoes~ in two overtimes.
Southwestern's win gave the
SVAC championship to another
Meigs County te"'JJ-the Eastern
Eagles. Southwestern raised its
season record to !)-7 overall and 7-J
in the SVAC which was good enough
for a third place finish.
Southern placed second with a 7-2
league record and and impressive
12-3 record for all games.
Southern got in the scoring column
first on Met Weese's lay-up, then
raced to an 8-0 lead in the first two
minutes of play.
Then, the Edwards sisters from
Southwestern combined on offense

•

TORONTO (AP) - Pierre Elliott
Trudeau, a political has-been just
three months ago, took charge of
Canada.qnce again in a stunning
election vlctory he called a rerun of
"an old love story" between his party and the voters, and offered himself and his country as peacemakers
In the U.S.-&amp;viet dispute.
Trudeau's Liberal Party routed
the Progressive Conservatives of
Prime Minister Joe Clark in
parliamentary elections Monday,
cutting down a government that was
one of the few to stick by the United
States down the line In its con!rontation with Moscow.
In a victory speech early today to
an ecstatic crowd of supporters in

to pull within two at !Hi. Both defenses then tightened up and neither
squad scored again until 57 seconds
was left in the period.
Southern came back to break the
ice with two consecutive baskets
followed by a Southwestern scored
and the period ended at lU.
Early in the second period, the
hosts increased their lead to nine
and maintained that margin as the
first half concluded with the score
211-19.
Tammy Smith ,. paced
Southern with eight points in the
initial haH.
·
The start of the second half saw
both teams exchanging buckets
before Southern exploded into a 15
point lead at 38-23.
Coach Mel Carter's Highlanders

Admitted-Tina Booth, Pomeroy;
Patricia Day, Middleport; Tracy
Whaley, Pomeroy; Ross Kent, Addison; Cuba little, Cheshire; Lillie
Hubbard, Middleport; William
Cogan, Minersville; Victoria Priddy, Middleport; Lora Cleland,
Langsville; Alva Reed, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Michael Layne,
Samuel Rairden, Julia Stewart,
David Parions, Paul Lewis, Jr. ,
Eugia Johnson, John Banks.

I~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
,

reak the

LAUNDRY.TRIP
HABIT
YOU'VE- SPEN
. T ENOUGH .
MONEY AT THE
COIN LAUNDRY- NOW GET

THE BEST THERE
--

-

•

•

•

Trudeau captures stunnmg VIctory

VETERANS MEMORIAL

CHAINSAWSSTOLEN
Meigs County sheriffs deputies are
investigating a breaking and entering of the Norwood Ferrell
- - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 residence, Route 2, Pomeroy,
sometime after I p.m. Sunday.
Entry to the residence was gained
by breaking out a pane of glass in a
door and reaching through to unlock
door. Reported stolen during the Incident were two chain saws, three
single shot shotguns and two radios.

•

NOW IS THE TIME - Wise shoppers will find
plenty of good buys in stores of the Big Bend area these
days. Many merchants are offering savings amounting

to as much as 50 percent on seasonable merchandise.
Sandy Miller Jones is shown with a wide selection rJ."
children's coats and snowsuits being offered at
reduced prices at Elberfeld's.

Ottawa, Trudeau, 60, took a distinctly softer approach, declaring that
the United States is " our greatest
friend" but adding that-preserving
peace between the superpowers
must be part of Canada's world
mission.
In elections last May, the youthful
Clark and his Conservatives ended
16 years of Liberal ruJ.e, 11 of them
with Trudeau as prime minister.
The liberal chief had actually announced his intention to leave
politics last November.
But Clark was undcne by a tough
budget In which he proposed a highly
unpopular llkent-a-gallon boost in
gasoline taxes.
The liberals' quick comeback

made Clark's nine months in power
the briefest tenure of any elected
prime minister in Cans dian history.
In rebuking their 4G-year-illd
prinie minister, Cansdian voters
gave the Liberals 146 seats In the
282-seat House of Commons, four·
more than a majority. The Conservatives had 103 seats and the
socialist New Demoerats 32. The
race in one district had been postponed until March because of a can,
didate's death.
The former Parliament had 138.
114·
Conservative members,
Liberals, Tl New Democrats and
five Social Credit Party members.
The Quebec-based Social Creditists,
a rightist ernn:-. lvst all their seats
Monday.

·

nadoes certainly weren't going to be
then reeled off seven unaswered
denied and fought back to within
points to reduce the Tornado advantage to nine, 43-34. The Edwards one, 65-64, on two Elaine Smith
sisters again played a big part in the buckets and several key rebounds by
ichelle Johnson and Alicia Evans.
comeback.
The final canto proved to be the _But time ran out as the Highlanders
turning point as Ume visitors out- ff took home the victory, 68-64.
Rebounding-wise, things were
scored Southern 21-12 tol tie the
even at 53 apiece.
score at5f&gt;-651n regulation play.
Southwestern's ~isters, Linda and
In the first overtime, Southern
Barbara
Edwards, combined for 16
jumped ahead on a bucket by Weese,
and
14
rebounds,
respectively. Della
but Linds Edwsards returned the
favor then stole the inbounds pass to Johnson led the hosts with 15 while
score and put the Highlanders ahead Cindy Evans hbad 12 caroms.
Linda Edwards poured in 23 points
5~7.
Southern's Della Johnson then for the winners while her sister, Bal'retied the score only to have Dana bara, fire in 13. Dana Jeffers scored:
Jeffers put the visitors on top SO.S9 18 followsed by Mecca Jordan with ·
11.
.
on a free throw.
Mel Weese tallied 23 markers to
Southern then found itseH in
pace Southern followed by Della
serious foul troubble and had to use
Johnson
with 10 and Tammy Smith
its young, but hustling bench. With
with
nine.
four seconds remaining In the ovel'Southwestern accumulated 26 :
time, Elaine Smith came through
points from the charity stripe (:!li for
with a clutch foul shot to tie the
S4) for 48 percent while Southern
game at ~. thus producing the
sank 16 for 31 for 51 percent.
second overtime.
ByQaarten'
Early in the second overtime, the
Southern
12 16 15 l2 5 Tornadoes fell further into foul
SW
I II 15 21 5 1H11
SOil1HEIIN- w._ 9-9-23, Tammy Smith~
trouble and SW's Dana Jeffers took
3-9, Johnson 3+10, Grueser 2-U, Boso 1.0.2,
advance raising the score to 110-55.
Evans 3oM, Salser 1..0.2, Elaine Smith 3--1-6,
Beegle ~. Renee Smith ~. Jollnoon 0-1)4,
Despite this, the younger Tor·
Evans~. Totalt U.

Court grants divorces
Three divorces were granted, all
on charges of gross neglect and extreme cruelty, .and two marriages
were dissolved In the Meigs CoWity
CommonPleasCourt.
Tammy Jean Hale was granted a
divorce from Jerry Hale and was
awarded custody of one children;
Carmie K. Petrie was granted a
divorce from Keith H. Petrie and
was given custody of one children
andCarotynsueReynotdswaagranted a divorce from Ronald Franklin
Reynetds,Sr.,andbermaidenname

of=g'Zs =r::~erethoseof
88

Bertha Deloris Simonds and Samuel
HaroldSimondsandJuariltaBowles
andEbnerM.Bowles.

SOV'I1IWESTEIIN - Barbara Edwards 11-611, Evans.O.O.O, Linda Ec;lwarda 8-7-23; Da1111 Jef.
Fers 4-10.11: Sandro Halley (1-:1-2; Mecca Jordan
,5,-I-11 ; lJJa MtllerO.O.O: Dena Cline l-1-3 .

Khomeini ...
(Contlituedfroinpage 1)
ces is a U.s: plot being perpetrated :
thrQugh U.N. Secretary-General .
Kurt Waldheim."
Waldheim met In New York Mon- ·
day with the charge d'affaires of the ·
Iranian mission, Jamal Shemlranl,
and then for almost seven hours with ·
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. ·
Vance declined to give details of the .
meeting and after returning to
WllShlngton, briefed President Carter for one hour at the White House.
..

J'

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Ali water cascaded over the tops of
dams in Utah and levees crumbled
In Southern California, a tornado
struck near an airliner taking on
passengers In Fresno, 'Calif. Two
persons received minor Injuries.
Pounding surf and rain-softened
bluffs threatened more homes along
the Malibu beaches, where at least
one home was lost to the storm, according to Los Angeles County officials.
Food shortages were reported north of downtown Los Angeles In the
Topanga Canyon, where a lf&gt;-foot
wall of water gushed through the exclusive neighborhood.
Traffic jams stretched for 10 miles

e

In Phoenix, Ariz., after the usually
dry Salt River flooded even more,
cutting the nwnber o! crossings
from ten to two.
State Emergency Services Director Alex Cunningham estimated $252
mlllio!l property damage in
Southern California, where the rain
forced farmers to leave crops rotting In soaked fields. Crop damage
so far in the fertile region that SUi&gt;"
plies much of the nation's winter lettuce and citrus was estimated at $21i
million.
Arizona of!lclals estimated
damage at $40 million; and Utah officials, more than $1 miliion.
Rainfall in Los Angeles since Feb.

•

at

13, when the storms be~an, has
measured 11.65 Inches, pushing till'
total for the season to 20..., inches,
nearly II inches above normal.
Aflash flood watch continued over
much of Southern California today
as bands of rain !ell on the area.
Storm No. 6 was about 1,000 miles
out in the Pacific and expected to hit
Thursday. ·
Gov . Edmund G. Brown Jr., whose
home in Laurel Canyon was flooded ,
returned Tuesday from a presidential campaign swing through New
Hampshire to sign an emergency
proclamation adding four counties
to the two where property owners
already were eligible for low-

intere~t

disaster loans.
President Carter declared central
Arizona eligible for federal aid .
Streets approaching the two
remaining bridges in Phoenix took
on a carnival atmosphere as people
began selling coffee, sandwiches
and soft drinks to motorists who
faced waits of more than six hours.
At seven Salt River crossings, the
road runs through the bed of the normally dry river. The· Interstat~ 10
bridge was closed Tuesday when officials feared it had been weakened
by churning water gnawing at Its underpinnings.
"I've moved one block In three
hours," said Vivian Vensel. " If I

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1980

VOL 28, NO. 217

knew it was going to be this bad, I
wullld have stayed at work and slept
in the office."
A United Airlines 7TI jet was
loading at the Fresno airport for a
flight to San Francisco when a tornado touched down, ripping most of
the roof off the terminal.
"Almost everybody was on the
plane," said Michael Olmstead, a
passenger from Ridgecrest, Calif.
"They closed the door, and the rest
of us went back inside. Then It hit."
More than 95,000 customers
throughout Northern California
were without power Monday and
Tuesday, said a spokeswoman for
(Continued on page 16 )

•

Southwestern girls drop Tornadoettes

Affiliated with MTS Coin Shop, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Open this Wed . and Thurs. nights 6:30-8:30
(121 State Street, Next to High School)

ATIME-HONOUED
AMEUICAN TUADITION

. By Auoclated Preu
A Malibu home toppled Into the
Pacific Ocean and others were
overnm by mud or threatened by
pounding surf as Southern California
braced today for Its sixth rainstorm
In a. week and the toll of property
damage from foul weather In the
West climbed past $300 million.
More than 4,000 persons were forced to flee as mudslides and walls of
water up to 15 feet high destroyed or
threatened homes. Nearly 100,000 In
Northern California were without
power.
At least Tl deaths have been attributed to the storms that began a
week ago today.

Sixty miles northwest of Los
Angeles at Point Mugu Naval Air
Station, the Navy said 3,000 persons
were evacuated after a second wave
of floodwaters hit the low-lying
missile test center late Sunday and
continued through Monday. Another
1,490 persons had either been
evacuated or advised to leave their
homes throughout Southern California by late Monday.

By Scott WoHe

consistently pay the top price tor
gold coins or scrap.

WANTED

California weather damage at $300 million

Final plans on access road
presented to commissioners
Plans for an access road from
Union Avenue to the new multipurpose building on Mulberry
Heights In Pomeroy will be colll&gt;
pleted by March 3, the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners waa advised Tuesday afternoon.
Jim Page, consulting engineer,
ldld Wesley Buehl, county engineer
met reviewed the final design of the
access road as It relates to a parking
lot which will be located at the new
multi-purpose building.
Page Indicated that he will have
plans completed for final approval
byMarch3.
The board viewed a demonstration
by Chris A. Marchetta, representing
the A. M. Bruning Co., of a copying
machine for plat mapa and voted to
purchase the copier at a c011t of

$1914.
The board approved the con·
stitutlon of the Meigs County Tuberculosis Board and agreed to pay the
Meigs County Humane Society for
euthanization costs for dogs taken to
them by the Meigs County Dog War·
den.
Probate Judge Robert Buck
requested additional appropriations
for extra help during vacation
perloda - and a request by Carl
Hysell, juvenile officer, for a salary
Increase.
Judge Buck was asked to submit a
formal written request on this mat·
. ter and the extra help iuue.
Donald Brewer, representative of
the David M. Griffith and Associates
Co., discussed recovery of county
funda used In administering' lederal

U.S. boycotting olympics
BONN, West Germany (AP) - The United States will not participate In the Moscow Olympics since there is no sign the Soviets will
meet today's deadline to remove troopa from Afghanistan, State
Department spokesman Hodding Carter said.
"The United States set a deadline for Its decision on whether to participate, a decision to be cont1n1ent on the withdrawal of Soviet
troopa," Carter told rep&lt;)rters.
"Today Is the day on which that decision was going to be based. "It
is clear !hare is no sign of a Soviet withdrawal," he added. "The
prealdent bas made clear that our decision Is therefore Irrevocable.
We will not participate In the Olympics In Moscow."

Collective leadership in charge
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -Control of Yugoslavia already has
passed into the handa of the unglamorous collective leadership
designed to succeed President Joslp Broz Tlto.
The leadership ill made up of a nine-man Presidency and a 23member group In charge of the Conununlst Party. They have been In
control of Yugoslavia ever since Tlto first entel'ell the hospital
January3.
.
··
Tlto, the 87-year-illd Communist Party chief and president-for--life,
had his left leg amputated Jan. 20 because circulation problems
threatened fatal gangrene. He is now suffering kidney and heart complications.

No break seen in teacher strike
CJUWCOTIIE, Ohio (AP) - No break was seen In a contract
dispute between the Huntington Local Board of Education and striking
teachers as both sides stood firm In their positions.
Teachers struck the 1,1J80.pupil district Tuesday over several
economic and non-economic Issues.
The association rejected the school board's latest offer which called
for a atartlng salary of $10,300 a year begtnnlng March 1and $10,500 for
the 198().8lschool year.
In addition to the salary dispute, members don't like the nonrenewable clause In their contracts. Under Its current policy, the
school board will not provide reasons for not renewing contracts.
Teachers say they want the reasons spelled out.

programs. While the concept Is that
the programs are free It was pointed
out that time and other costs Involved in administering the
programs do take some county fun·
ds. Brewer will meet again with the
board to discuss recovery of county
money so expended. The board transferred $2,000 from the contingency
account to the commissioners' supply account.
Attending the meeting were commissioners, Henry Wells, Chester
Wells and Richard Jones and clerk,
Mary Hobstetter.
NO APOLOGY NEEDED
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Carter, reiterating bla admiDllltratioa's stance, bas told
HOUle members hie will never
apologize for U.S. actioDIID Ira a.
Sacb an apoiol)' Is being sought by
·Iran u one of aeveral coadllloDB for
the release ol 50 American hoetages
held In Tehran alnce Nov. ''
Caner's atatemeat,made durlq a
White House dlmler Tuesday aa the
prealdeat sou1ht blpartiJaa support
on foreign policy, echoed prior
statements by State Department
sp4iketman Hodding Carter and
other admlnlstralloa officials, according to a State Department
spokeswoman.

Meigs County cases
on agenda, Feb. 26
Judge Earl E. Stephenson, Portsmouth, Presiding Judge of Fourth
District Court of Appeals, announced that c11ses are scheduled to be
heard on Tuesday, Feb. 2j! when the
court convenes in Galla County.
In addition to Judge Stephenson,
the Court is comprised of Judge
Lawrence Gri!Y of Athens, Ohio and
Judge Homer E. (Pete) Abele, of
McArthur, Ohio.
The Court of Appeals directly
reviews all cues heard or tried in
lower courts in which a decision ls
being appealed. These cases may
have been tried in Conunon Pleas,
Probate or Juvenile, Municipal or
County Courts, and may be either
civil or criminal cases.
.
The Fourth District Court of Ai&gt;"
peals serves 15 counties In Southern
Ohio. They are: Adams, Athens,
Brown, Gallla, Highland, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto, VInton and Washington.
The .court will also be hearing
cases from Meigs County when they
convene In Gallia County on Feb. :!li.

. -~··

ELEANOR ROBSON

FILES PETITION - Eleanor Robson, Larry Sperlcer and Don Moore have filed petitions of candidacy for

With nine major county posts to
be fllled this year, only three candidates - two Incumbents - have
filed for nomination to run for any of
the offices In the June primary elections.
The three filing petitions with the
Meigs County Board of Elections to
date are Eleanor Robson, R., In-

A felony warrant for escape from
custody was expected to be issued
today against James L. See, 39, Middleport, following his walk·away
Tuesday from Gallipolis Municipal
Court.
See, who was being held in the
Gallia County Jail on a fugitive
warrant from Mason County on two
felony check charges and a
trespassing charge, as well a.s a
misdemeanor check charge In
Gallia County, allegedly left the
Municipal Court Room through a
rear fire escape shortly after 10 a.m.
See had reportedly been left unattended in the court room while
waiting for his attorney to appear.
Judge James A. Bennett said this
morning the key to the exit had been
left in the fire escape door as the
result of an order from the Fire Marshal. Jilennett said that In the future
the key to the door will be held by the
court bailiff.
Sheriff James M. Mon.tgomery
reported this morning that all
surrounding counties have been
notified of See's escape. A search
initiated yesterday Involved units
from Gallla, Mason, Meigs, La wren·
ce, and Scioto.
See was wearing a blue coverall
jail uniform at the time of 'the
escape. Sheriff Montgomery said
this morning reports that See had
been wearing street cloths under

cwnbent recorder; Larry Spencer,
R., incumbent, clerk of courts, and
Don Moore, Pomeroy, R., a present
Salisbury Township Trustee who Is
running for nomination as a county
commissioner.
Deadline for filing petitions of candidacy for the primary elections Is 4
p.m. on March 20.

that uniform are unconfirmed.
Judge Bennett stressed this mor-ning that reports being broadcast
concerning a second escape last
week are technically untrue.
William Mowers, 21, Racine, did
walk away from Municipal Court
last week, through the same fire
escape door, durtng deliberations of

P011itions to be filled this year include: commissioners, two posts,
one starting on Jan. 3, 1981 1 and the
second, starting on Jan. 2, 1981;
sheriff, recorder, treasurer,
prosecuting attorney, clerk of courts, county engineer and the
coroner's post.

WASHINGToJI! (AP) - Sen. John Glenn, D.Qhlo, says the u.N.appoln~ c~ioQ tha~,wlll in\-estigate clla~gea Blains! the oUBted
WANTED FOR ESCAPE FROM CUSTODY - A felony warrant for
· etcape from cuatody has been L111ued against James ·L. See. 39, Middleport. ~walked away fr6m G.alllpolis ~uniclpel Court where he had
been acheduled to answer a bad' check charge Tuesday. See was also
being held on a fugitive warrant .from ~aaoil County on two felony bad
check charges and a charge oft'i~passlng~
~.

an unauthorized use of motor vehicle
charge brought against him.
Bennett said, however, that
Mowers has posted bond and thus
had done nothing more than "jump
A bench warrant for
bond."
failure to appear has been issued
against him.

Six hurt in Gallia accident
Six persons were injured Tuesday following collls!on and struck a
parked pickup owned by McKinney
during an accident Involving six
and
a parked auto owned by Taylor.
vehicles on SR 7 at the intersection
Riggs
and a passenger, John
of Addison-Bulavllle Rd.
17, Gallipolis, displayed
Harrison,
Called to the scene at 4:45 p.m.,
visible
signs
of injury and were tranthe Gallia·Melgs Post, Highway
Patrol, reports a north bound auto sported by the Gallia County
Emergency Service to Holzer
operated by Barbara Riggs, '!/,
Medical Center for treatment. Two
Gallipolis, attempted a left turn and
traveled into the path of a south other passengers, Kimberly Riggs,
4, and Kevin Riggs, 4, of Gallipolis,
bound ve'liicle driven by Charles
. were treated at the scene.
Cox, :!li, Gallipolis.
Cox and a passenger, Mike Long,
Following impact, the Riggs auto
21, Gallipolis, displayed visible signs
ran off tbe left side of the roadway
of injury, but were not lrrunedlately
and struck a parked auto owned by
treated.
Owen McKinney, Cheshire, and a
Riggs was cited on a charge of
parked pickup truck owned by
failure
to yield.
Charles Taylor, Addison.
The Cox vehicle continued

President's demand ignored
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - An

Wants, Khomeini investigated too

hosta.

major county pasta In the June primary elections with
the Meigs County Board of Elections.

Middleport man sought by police

COLlJMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Nearly 236,000 employers will get a 15
'percent credit on the workers' compensation premiums they pay, according to Will,lam W. Johnston, chairman of the Industrial Com·
mission of Ohio.
·
The commission reports that the credit will total $80 million. It will
effect premiums payable Aug. 31 and will benefit both private employers that contribute to the state workers' compensation Insurance
fWid and self-lhsurlng employers, Johnson said during a news con·
terence Tuesday.·

present Iraillan· government's crimes," Glean said Jn a statement
Tu~y.
.
Glean a11o Indicated be epposes any ·apolORY by the United States to
'Iran u pirt of a deal to obtain the release oli!O Americans belnl! held
by the lr8JI!ans.

DON MOORE

Three GOP candidates file

Employers get 15 percent credit

Sbaboflranallolho!M.ProbetbeC)II't'el\treglme. 1
· '
" .. , I bell,ve it important that the tribunal aJaO lnvestigata the

LARRY SPENCER

the Afghan capital that the Soviets
estimated force of 100,000 Soviets might stage a token withdrawal of a
troopa stayed In Afghanistan today, few thousand men, but It did not
Ignoring the deadline for their with- materialize.
, ~
drawal set by President Carter last
Some Western diplomats here now
month.
speculate the Soviets and the Soviet(The president said Jan. 20 he bacl!ed Afghan govenunent will not
would favor a boycott of the Olym· be able to put down a 21·month
pies if the Kremiin did not withdraw rebellion by Moslem insurgents
its troopa in a montP, and In Bonn, without even greater numbers of
West Germany tOO&amp;y, U.S. State troops being sent here from the
Department spokesman Hoddlng Soviet Union.
Carter said, "the United States will
"There must be some military ex·
not participate In the Olympics in
perts In the Kremlin advl.sing the
Moscow.")
politburo at this very momept that
(In Moscow, the deadline passed
only :100,000 more rnen would enable
without conunent.)
them to see the light at the end of thll
(The official Soviet news media
tunnel," one Westerp diplomat compreviously charged Carter with at·
mented.
tempting to blackrnaU the Soviet
Western Intelligence reportll
Union and Insisted pressure from
estimate that sabotage, sniping,
the United States would not affect
bomb attacks, ·ambushes •md hitSoviet foreign policy objectives. But
and-run raids by anti-CommWiilt
the Soviets never reported the Feb. _ Moslem guerrillaa cOst the Soviet ar20 deadline Carter had set - or Its · my at least 3,000 ca•n•lltjet In thll .
link with American participation In first two months of Ita Afghaniltan
the summer Olympics.) ,
Intervention, ll!cludlng between 800
There ~~:.ere iJersl.stent rumors In
and~wenkllled. _
. ,,

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