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                  <text>16- The Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Feb. 20. 1980

OU signs $25,000 contract
Oiw• Untverstty lJbraJ'tes h~s
recent!) signed a $2li,OOO contract
with Ohtu Valley Area Ubraries
1OVAL) to provide reference and tn·
terltbrary luan service to the eleven
OVAL member libraries for 198().
OVAL is a cooperative
arrangement among ten county
ltbrary systems tn Southeast Ohio
which mcludes Athens, Hocking,
Jackson,

Lawrence,

Meigs,

Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Sc10to and
Vtnton.
Residents of these counties can,
through thetr public libraries,
recetve books and services from
Ohio University Librartes The local
librarian will be "hi• tn reqwue&lt;t an-

Mayor's eourt

WINNERS OF THE ANNUAL PINEWOOD Derby
of Pomeroy Cub Scout Pack 249 who will represent
their pack at Mason.{;allia-Me1gs compelttton tn Potnt
Pleasant on March 15. The Pinewood Derby is 1\ fatherson endeavor which consists of constructton of a racing
car with the boys racing thetr cars tn the competition.

These four winners, who recetved prtzes, are from the
left, Brent Zirkle, best of show; Wesley Young, first tn
racmg; Kevin King, second in racing and Mike Wtll,
third in racmg. George Wright is the cubmaster of the
pack which ts sponsored by the Pomeroy Church of
Chrtst

Housing construction hits new low
WASHINGTON (AP) - Housing
construction has fallen to a 3¥.oyear
low and the interest rates charged
corporate bcrrowers have returned
to record heights in the wake of
Federal Reserve efforts to fight inflation by tightening credit.
Smce last fall, the central bank
has tried to restrain the economy
because slower growth tends to hold
down price Increases. Because
Americans have continued to spend
at high levels, however, the
economy has not cooled as much as
expected.
The Commerce Department later
today was updatmg its analysis of
fourth-quarter economic output. The
preliminary report Indicated the
economy grew at an annual rate of
1.4,percent in the final three months
ofl979.
The report was released as the
buainess community and the housing
Industry felt the effects of the
Federal Reserve Board's decision
Friday to raise the discount rate.
The rate, which ts the Interest com·
mercia! banks pay for money
borrowed from the Federal Reserve,
was increased to a record 13 percent
from the 12-percent rate put into effect Oct. 6.
The higher rate is intended to
discourage borrowing and, thus,
dampen econorruc activity.
On Tuesday the Chase Manhattan
Bank, the nation's third largest,
responded by returning tis prime
lending rate to a record-tying 15.75
percent. Other bankl quickly
followed.
The prime rate Is the interest a
bank charges Ita most credit-worthy
corporate customers for short-tenn
loans.
Meanwhile, the Commerce Depar·
tment reported that high mortgage
rates since last fall continued to take
their toll on housing.
The construction of new homes fell
for the fourth consecutive month in
January to an annual rate of
1,420,000 units, the lowest level since
July 1976, when the nation was

California

-

(Continued from page I)
Pacific Gas &amp; Electric. Roberta
Palm said some In the Santa Cruz
mountains would still be without
power today.
More than 300 elderly persons
were without power for a third day
In Woodland Hills nesr Los Angeles
at the Motion Picture and Television
Country House, which was hit by a
slz..foot wall of water that caused
more than $500,000 damage.
The famoua suffered with the
unknown. "Tonight Show" host
Johnny Carson told his audience that
the buement of his Bel Air home
wu flooded and his swinunlng pool
wu filled with mud.
Ajp'lcultural officials said hard-hit
crape In Southern california In·
eluded citrus, stra wherries, broc·
coU, cabbage, lettuce and Dowers.
Jrrlption systema suffered $10
million damllge, they IBid.
The muddy waters began to
recede at Point Mugu Naval Air
Station In Ventura County, where
8,000 realdentl were evacuated after
IIGO home8 and 10111e other facllltles
were inundlltld with up to sill feet of
muck followinl the collapse Sunday
ol an earthen levee holding back
nearbY Calleauaa creek.
Southwutem Utah expected more
floodllli while northern Utah coped
with mud from MOIIdiy'a waters,
iillnated to have caUied $1 m'llllon
danlqe In caellll County. In southwutem Ut•h, both lhi! lower and upper Enterprile relei'VO\rs ..ere

overflowing.

commg out of its last housmg
''recession.''

Most housing experts blamed high
Interest rates and predicted that
construction would fall even more
sharply in the coming months as
mortgage rates climb toward and
surpass 14 percent.
Paul A. Volcker, chatrman of the
Federal Reserve Board, told the
House Banking Conunittee that the
high rates were necessary if the
nalton is to begin attacking inflation .
"As horrendous as those interest
rates are, people are telling you they
are wtlling to borrow at those rates
because of the senousness of inflation," Volcker said.

Housing could be particularly
hard hit, he admitted.
The 1.42 million starts for January
were 6.4 percent below the 1.52
million rate for the previous month
and off 17.8 percent from the 1 7
million pace of January 1979.
Jack Carlson, chief econorrust for
the Nattonal Assoctation of Realtors,
and Michael Swnichrast, economist
at the National Associatton of Home
Builders, had predicted the sharp
decline this year because of the
Federal Reserve moves last faiL
Both said Tuesday that as a result
of last week's credtt-tightenmg action, another 100,000 homes would
not be butlt.

r-------------------------1
I
1

I

I

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
I than 300 words lung 1or subject to reduction by the editor I 1
I and must he signed with the signee's address . Names may 1
I be withheld upon publicat10tl. However, on request~ 1
I names will be disclosed . Letters should be in good taste, 1
I addressing issues, not personalities.
I

I

I

I

!

i ...~~:
Actions speak out
Dear Mr. Editor,
No matter how many times he
calls them "our little valentines" or
says they're "all my kids" or says
"all kids are good," Mr. Gleason's
actions speak louder than his words
and Meigs Local "kids" are smart
enough to call a spade a spade and
see him for what he is.
Where was all that concern - and
love- and compassion- when "our
kids' " hearts were breaking last
fall? I personally described to him
the heartbreak our daughter was experiencing, so he was aware of their
suffering.

I

To say the board, not he, cancelled
school activities is a cop-out; the
board had never before been talked
mto such action. Teachers wanted
kids' activittes to continue.
To attempt to use kids to achieve
your own purpose is not what I call
love.
Telling them they can participate
in school act! vi ties if they will cross
a picket line is such an attempt and
is not, in this area of southeaste Ohio
and Meigs County, an act of compassion and concern.
What does a youth learn if he lives
with hypocrisy?
Sincerely.- Dorothy J. Oliver, 213
Union Ave.

Troop withdrawal
deadline ~oday
WASHINGTON (AP) - Today Is
President Carter's deadltne for the
Soviet Union to withdraw Its troops
from Afghanistan. By all reports,
they are still there.
"We have made our position very
clear. The question now addresses
itself to the United States Olympic
Committee," White House press
secretary Jody Powell said
Tuesday. "We would like for them to
reach a decision as soon as they
can.''

carter set the deadline one month
ago, insisting then and as recently as
Tuesday that If the Russians did not
pull their troops out of the Southwest
Asian nation by today, he wo!Jid urge

EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs
- Prices paid to country packing
plants for eggs delivered to major
Ohio cities. Cases Included con·
sumer grades Including U.S. grades,
mlnlmwn one case sales.
carton Large A 61~, Medium A
110-66, Small A 41-47.
Sales to retailers In major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white 70..79, mosUy 70..72, medium 61·
70, mostly61~.

Poultry prices at Ohio Ianna; light
type hens too few to report.

American athletes not to take part in
the Surruner Olympic Games in
Moscow.
Speaking Tuesday to an American
Legion convention, the president
said the "deadline is tomorrow and
It will not be changed." He was
given a round of applause and
cheers.
carter has said the Russians have
100,000 troops in Afgha~lstan . Other
goverrunent estimates put the occupation anny at about 10,000 fewer
troops.
EDWARD BROWN
GRADUATES
ALAMOGORDO, N. M.- capteln
Edward M. Brown, son of Frances
G. Ohlinger of 816 E. Fifth St., New
Haven, W. Va., has graduated from
U. S. Air Force fighter lead-in
training at Holloman Air Force

Base.
captain Brown now goes to Luke
Air Force Base, Ariz., for further
training.
A 1986 graduate of Wahama High
School, Mason, W. Va., the captain
was commissioned In 1971 through
the ROTC program. In 1972 he eal'·
ned a master's degree from 'Ohio
University at Athens.
His wife, Dortha, Is the daughter
of M~rtln Wilcoxen of Racine.

Five defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
Forfeiting were Lori Warner,
Columbus, $28 posted on a speeding
charge and $2li, driving on an exptred license; Gerald S. Eblin, Middleport, $32, speeding; Dan C. Edwards, New Haven, $28, speeding;
Vance E. Van Meter, Farnamville,
Ia., $2li, failure to have vehicle under
control, and Roller! Caruthers,
Pomeroy, $29, speeding.
Fined were Jerry J. Harrnon,
Kerr, $29 and costs, speeding;
George McDaruel, Middleport, $50,
disorderly manner ; Daniel
L.Taylor, Middleport, $100 and
costs, assault, and Orville N. Parsons, St. Petersburg, Fla., $225 and
costs and three days in jatl, drtving
while mtoxicated, and $50 and costs,
open flask charge.
Ftve defendants were fined and
stx forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined were Tommy Walters, Mid·
dleport, and Eli Ebersbach, Middleport, each $200 and costs on
charges of destruction of property ;
Rick Eisenhower, Pomeroy, $50 and
costs, disorderly manner; Carol
Hubbard, Pomeroy, $300 and costs,
assault, and Clifford Eisenhower,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, disorderly
conduct.
Forfetting bonds were Brian
Bailey, Pomeroy, $30, posted on an
assured clear distance charge;
Millard Spaulding, Pomeroy, $29,
speedtng; Lorraine Aeiker,
Pomeroy, $50 disorderly conduct;
John Litchfield, New Haven, $50,
disorderly conduct, and six months
probation; Timothy Litchfield, New
Haven, $50, disorderly conduct, and
Frank Musser, Pomerqy, $350
posted on a driving while intoxicated
charge.
VETERANS~ORIAL

Admitted--Alfred Smith,
Pomeroy; Frieda Fields, Pomeroy;
Charlene Boutwell, New Mansfield;
Harold Jeffers, Pomeroy; Roy
Neece, Middleport; Robert Fife,
Middleport; Oswell Durham, Middleport; Margaret Vadtsh,
Pomeroy; Pamela Parsons,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--Herbert Gilkey,
Lucille Lewis, Wilson Wolfe, VInas
Lee, Kathryn Felton, Bessie Young,
Sarah Henderson, Mildred
Meredtth, Ryan Neal.

contract for 1980 represents an Inswers to ready-reference factual
crease of more than 26 percent
questlOruJ which cannot be located in
be~auae of slgniflcanUy greater uae
the local library's collection;
and
types of services available over .
request photocopies of specific
the
pest
year.
material; request that boob be sent
The
arrangement
demonstrates a
on special subjects or have certain
·
very
successful
fonn
of cooperation
titles sent on interlibrary loan.
between
public
and
academic
A professional librarian and a civil
provides
for the
libraries
and
servtce staff member at the O.U.
sharing
of
resources
and
greater
Ubrary rete! ve, process and answer
availability
of
boob
and
In·
requests received by telephone and
fonnation
In
this
area
of
Ohio.
mall. OVAL librarians report that
most of their requests are being
fllled within a week.
This is the fifth consecutive year
that such a contract has been In
operation. The dollar amount of the

Area squad runs
The Rutland Emergency Squad
was called to the Virgil Jacks home
a1 2:19 p.m. Tuesday for Angela
McGrath, an tnfant who was Ill. She
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 3:54 p.m. Tuesday, the Rutland
unit went to the Harrisonville Road
for Cecil Ward who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered two calls Tuesday. At
10:04 p.m., the squad went to
Mulberry Ave. for Margaret Vadiah
who had fallen. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital At
9:S2 a.m., Frieda Fields, a medical
patient, was taken from the Victor
Young home, E. Main St. ID
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Court actions filed
The Pomeroy Masonic Temple
Association has filed a suit for
money agaillljt Richard C. Glasgow,
Gallipolis.
The association charges that
Glasgow rented office space In the
temple bullding and owes rent
totaling $3900 covering the period of
Nov. I, 1977 to Dec. 31,1979.
Judy A. Harrison, Rutland, and
John F. Harrison, Route I, Middleport, filed for dissolution of their
marriage and Mrs. Harrison asks
for restoration of her forrner name,
Denny. The marriage of Gordoll
Fabry and Linda Fabry has been
dissolved, according to an entry In
the court.

AlheaaiJVIIIIcklloleo
Morbi Report

J'eb. 11, ltll
CATILEPRJCES,
FeederSioera (loodondcholce) ll00-6001bl. ll·
iUO, 100-700 lbo. -10.
Feedoi HoKora (lood ond choice) - l b o
ee-n.10; 100-1110 tbl awe.ao.
Feeder Buill ltiood ond cbotce I lbl
811.-·11110-7110 lbo.II.IO~i.IO.
Slo~r Buill (Over 1,1100 lbo. I10.:1&amp;41.10.
Slliullhter Cowl Utilltiu 61-66.50: C.nnen
ond CUltert --71.
Spr!nitr Cowo (by tho lloldi Cwt. 6110-66
Cow ond c.u Potra (by t11e unit) 621-470.
Veolo (choice ond prime I 19-111
BabyCtlvoo (byllle hood} 17.110-111.
HOG PRICES:
Hoaa · (No. l , BaM'OWI and Giltl) m.uo lbl

!1.~7.:111.

ButcherSowl.,l.26.
Butcher &amp;o.n2'1·28.eG.

Foeder Pis• (by the hMd l 6.111&gt;11.

OHIO VALI.£Y

UVESTOCK co.
MAIIIIET IIIIPOIIT
Sale every S.turday at 1 p.m. AU price1 taken
from theouctlon of SllUI'doy, Fob. 16,1111111 Trends: Fotder cattlo14tol10hllhor, cowoll to 11.71
hlaher, Veol calveutoody.
ToiiiHoodUl
Feodor St.oro: Good ond Choice 110 to :tOO lba.
U-106 3110 to tOO lbl 711-i'T.IO; 600 to :tOO lbl 77-96;
11110 to 100 lbo. 711-&amp;!.10; :tOO to 700 lbo. n-71; 7110 to
100 Jbo.II.II0-74; 1110andoverii.IMI.71.
Feeder IleUm: Good ond Choice 110 to :tOO lbo,
71.DI&gt;M.IO; :tOO to 600 lbo. 71.»111.10, 400 to 11110
lbo. ll-77.10; 11110 to 100 lbl.l2.110-71; 100 to 7110 lbo.
-.10; 7110 to 100 lbi.&amp;W2 71; 1110 ond over 1211.10.
Feeder Buill: Good and Choice 110 to 100 Jbo.
112-811; 3110 to 600 lbo. 7~~-11; 400to 11110 lbo. 7214.10: 11110 to 1110 Jbo 11-76.71; 100 to 7110 lbo 10.11072.71; 7110 to 1110 lbl. ll&gt;71 .71: 100 ond over 17110HolotolnStooroond Buill (111»«10) 112-12.
Bulliii,IIIIO lbo. ondovor) 11-14.111.
Sloqhtor C.... (uUllUOI) II&amp;Ga.71; (ConneraandCUtten) 41.~.$0
Sprlnior COWl (by the hood) 3511-ll5.
co.......tvea (by the heod) 4~71i .
Vool C.lveo 110-111.
BobyC.Iveo~IIO.

HOGS
TopHOil (210.230) 36-31.10.
llolrl28.110-30.20.
Pli• (by the hoadl 7-17.10.
Sow• (GOibl. andover) ~.n.

Weather

Mostly cloudy with periods of rain
or drizzle possible tonight. Lows In
the low to mid 40s. Partly cloudy
Thursday. Highs in the upper 50s.
The chance of rain Is 30 percent
tonight and 20 percent Thursday.

By ROBERT E. MIT.I,ER
Associated Press Wriler
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
massive Mental Health and Mental
Retardation Department soon may
become two separate, cabinet-level
agencies.
The House approved 92-2 and sent
the Senate on Wednesday a blll to
split it into separate departments one for mental health and the other
for mental retardation.
Sponsors said the long-studied bill,
backed by Gov. James A. Rhodes
and the existing department, will
Improve the delivery of state ser·
vices and end competition between
the two existing divisions for funds
and jurisdiction.
The department currently is the
alate's largest, with some 18,000 employees.
In other developments, during a
busy day in the Legislature:
.
- House Highways Chainnan Ar-

thur R. Bowers, 0-Steubenville, mtroduceda previously-announced,
bipartisan highway bond issue
which may be on the statewide ballot
June 3. It would allow the state to
issue up to $2.5 billion in bonds over
the next 10 years for badly needed
bridge and highway improvements.
-The Senate refused, 1+18, along
party lines and with J,lllljority
Democrats prevailing, to relieve the
Senate Judiciary Conunittee of a
long donnant bill restoring Ohio's
death penalty. Democrats said
hearings on the House-approved bill
will resume no later than April.
-Representatives approved 92-1
and sent the Senate a blll revising
laws regulating private investigators and security guards. A
major thrust of that proposal
requires those who carry flreanns to
have undergone at least 16 hours of
fireanns training.
-The Senate Finance Conunittee

14 Keret Gold Filled
Cheln by SNtd.
A touch of contmento51
1n elegam ch~1n styles
fOf men and wom(n 'Surpr1s·
1ngly offordoble •14 Korot Gold
F11led c~a1n ~os M overlay of
14 Korot Gold on f'Y&lt;ry v1S1ble
surtoce for o truly lu•unous look
ImpreSSIVe s•h pockog,ng too

From $15 to $150
•Mcctl ell US Government llti\Ciereh for

caucus of their choice.
In other business, the club
discussed a poaalble change In the
method used to elect Ita officers.
Such a propoaal will be acted upon at
the club's next meeting which will be
beld In April In Logan.

trldc.mlt'kl~

r;;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:~==~===========;

ELBERFELDS
NEW SELECTION

REDMON
HAMPERS
YOU'll IIKt thll quell!~
wicKer clothea hamper.
Good selection Of atvlta end
IIZtl.

eSturdy
Construction
• Popul1r
Colors
tMIRY hiVI

Wlftt Bllktts

to m1tch.

Dept,
Floor.

HOUIIWirtl

on tht1at

ELBE FELDS IN POMEROY.

recommended approval of a
resolutton, already approved by the
House, under which Ohio could
make and guarantee loans for lowand moderate-income housing
programs. It is tentatively slated for
the June 3 ballot.
Rep. Myrl H Shoemaker, 0Bourneville, offered the bill to divide
the Mental Health and Mental
Retardation pepartment after what
he called many hours of work with
the agency's administrators.
It was the veteran Shoemaker,
now in his 22nd year in the House,
who sponsored the bill in 1972 which
separated the old mental hygiene
and corrections department.
"Without that split, the problems the
state faces today in the field of mental health would be greatly
magnified," he told the House.
Rep. Jolut A. Galbraith, RMaumee,
voted
against
Shoemaker's bill, warning against
added state bureaucracy and admonishing his collegaues that "we
should be going in the other direction."

.

Rep. Dale Locker, D-Anna, expressed the same concern during a
relatively brief debate on the bill.
But in the end, he and Galbraith cast
the only dissenting votes.
Shoemaker said the measure
"resolves all the issues pertaining to
the split and opens the way toward
more efficient delivery of mental
health care services in this state."

GOP candidates criticize President
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) - In a debate with little discord,
George Bush, Ronald Reagan and five riv'als for tbe Republican
presidential nomination joined in criticism of Pl'esident carter's
foreign and defense policies, and in a call for federal thrift to combat
inflation.
The one real debater in the seven-way forum Wednesday night was
Rep. John B. Anderson, of Illlnois, who said he kept hearing old
platitudes instead of Qew Ideas from the other candidates.
Indeed, there was more argument Offstage than on, and the subject
was not campaign Issues but the question of which candidates wlll take
part in another debate Saturday night.
CIDCAGO (AP) - striking ftrefighters have agreed to go back to
work today- for at least one day -In return for amnesty and aroundthe-clock negotiations to complete a written contract within 24 hours.
The agreement provides that the union and the city "wlll enter into
a.-ound-the-clock continuous negotiations to resolve all the items
presenUy In dispute," Hechinger said.
Chicago Fire Fighters Union members ratified the agreement by a
voice vote later Wednesday after union president Frank J. Muscare
eiiJ)lained Hechinger's announcement.

Ntw~~

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Senate gets bill to
divide department

Jury's verdict favors wire firms
ASK TOWED
William O'Dell Collins, 19, Roule 3,
Pomeroy, and Shirley Ann Clonch,
18, Galllpolos.
Deilnls Lee Hart, 'IT, Route I,
Racine, and Martha Jane Jones, 20,
Middleport.

at. y '._. enttne
POMEROY-MIDDLFPQRT OHIO.

Firefighters return to work

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday throu1h Sunday: A
chance of raiD Friday aocl Saturday, eodlng Suoday. IUgbs from
the upper fOIJ to the upper 50s
Frldily, cooUog to the 40s by SliDday. Lows iD the low to mid 40s
Friday, dropping to the low to
mid 30s by Sunday.

Delegate selection
processes reviewed

delegation
to theIn New
Democratic
National Convention
York In
August.
Greg Hill, Athens, a member of
the steering conunittee supporting
Senator Kennedy, announced the
meeting of Kennedy supporters
would be held In the Machinists'
Hall, 1526 Bluff Street, Zanesville.
Pele Lallck, who serves on
President carter's steering com·
mittee, said that the president's supporters would meet In Morton Hall
on the Ohio University campus In
Athens, Ohio.
Alexander Prisley, president of
the Democratic Action Club, announced that he had received notice
from Governor Jerry Brown's
representatives, Indicating that
their caucus would also be held on
tjle Ohio University campua, In the
Alwnnl Lounge of Baker Center. All
three caucua meetings will begin at 8
p.m.
Club members were lnfonned that
the fonnat for delegate election
woUld be the same in all caucuses.
Anyone wishing to be a candidate for
delegate selection should attend the
caucua for the presidential candidate they support and have their
name placed in nomination. Thoae
who do not seek delegate seats but
who willh to support a particular
candidate are Invited to •LLcnd the

NO. 218

81.10.

f~sh1on

Infonnatlon regarding delegate
selection caucuses highlighted the
recent meeting of the Tenth
Congressional District Democratic
Action Club.
A special meeting wlll be held
Thursday to choose Individuals who
will compete for seats in Ohio's

e
VOL. 28,

•

•

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP)- Ron Schwnan admlts he was emotionally
Involved in the trial to detennine whether old teclutology branch circuit aluminum wiring caused the 1977 fire at the-Beverly Hills Supper
Club.
Schuman, whose wife and four friends were among the 165 victims of
the fire, said he was shocked by the jury's verdict that the wiring did
not cause the blaze.
After listening to testimony for 36 days In federal district court, the
Jury of seven women and five men had the case only about five hours
before reaching their verdict Wednesday.

Explosive truck jack-knifes on SR 23
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A truck carrying 43,000 pounds of ex-plosives sideswiped a school bus and jack-knifed in a median strip on
U.S. 23 south of Columbus Wednesday, but there were no injuries.
Pollee, feariul that the truck's cargo would explode, roped off an
area 400 feet around the accident until the truck CQuld be removed
from the scene.
Fire department Battalion Chief John Moore said if the cargo had
exploded, the equivalent of several city blockl would have been
destroyed.
On board the rig were 34,000 pounds of anunonium nitrate, an ex·
ploslve gel; 6,1MXJ pounds of dynamite and 3,000 pounds of primer caps.

Wellston man enters innocent plea
JACKSON, Ohio (AP) - A Wellston man charged with murder in
the death of his stepson has pleaded innOC!lnt.
Kent Saylor, 22, was indicted following the death of the 16-month-old
child, Michael Lee Atchison, on Dec. 24. The Jackson County coroner
ruled the boy died of heart failure brought on by massive injuries.
Atrial date has been set for May 19. Saylor is free on f1,500 bond.

Parents attempt to keep schools open
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) - Supervisory personnel and parents
were attempting to keep schools open In the Huntington Local District
today as a teachers' strike continued with no end In sight.
Ted Bibler, a consultant to the Ohio Education Association, said
alnlo5t all of the 64 teachers In the 1,5pupU district were off the job
In a dispute over 11alary issues and a fair dlsmlsaal policy.
However, bua drivers were not honoring the picket lines.
The association has rejected the school board's latest offer which
called for a startlni! salary of $10,300 a year beginning March 1 and
$10,500 for the 1980-31 school year.

Entrance applications to be held
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- An offlelal at Ohio State Unlveralcy ·says
new freshmen appllca,tioos for the swnmer and fall tenns are to be
"pu,t on bold" starting Friday because of the large number received.
The university cannot guarantee admission ID all those requesting
the Columbus carilpu8 because of the large number of new freshmen
appllcati01111, said JIII!IC8 F. Loucks, ll&amp;'listant vice president .for
re~tlon services.
.
Freshmen have four options, however, If they cannot be assured of
admiiSica for the fiUIDiller or fall, Loucka said.

Stock market
mixed today
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock
market was mixed today, leveling
off after Wednesday's sharp rally.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials slipped 2.30 to 884.56 in the
first half hour.
But gainers took ~ +3 lead over
losers In the early tally of New York
stock Exchange-listed Issues.
Wednesday's upswing was
touched off by Mobil Canada's
report that it had fowtd "certain
zones of interest" in two wells being
drilled off the coast of Newfoundland.
But analysts said the market also
had to contend wtth the prospect of
some unpleasant news Friday when
the govenunent makes its monthly
report on the consumer price index.
The figures dn producer prices are
already in for January, showing a
rise at an annual rate of 19.2 percent.
On Wednesday the Dow Jones Industrial average climbed 10.84 to
886.86.
Advances outnumbered declines
by a +3 margin on the NYSE.
Big Board volume totaled 44.34
million shares, against 39.48 million
in the previo.us session.
The NYSE's composite index rose
1.00to66.62.
.
At the American Stock Exchange,
tlie market value index jumped 8.93
to a record high of 294.95.

Motorist cited
after accident
Two cars were damaged and a
driver cited as the result of an accident on E. Main St., Pomeroy,
near tbe Kroger Store at 9:56 p.m.
last Thursday.
According to the police report, an
eastbound car driven by Frederick
W. Crow Ul, struck the rear of a car
driven by Juanita D. Ritchie, Route
I, Mlnersvllle.

The Ritchie car was signaling for
a left turn into Kroge~'s according to
the report. Crow was cited on an
assured clear distance charge.

TROPHIES PRESENTED - John Rice, left,
Meigs County Agricultural Agent, presents trophies to
Dale Kautz, center, and Bill Kennedy, right, in recogni-

Two Meigs farmers honored
Trophies were presented two
Meigs Countians in rec~nition of
having the highest yields tn the.
forage club the past two years when
the club met at the Meigs Inn
Wednesday.
Ten Meigs fanners participated in
the 1979 Meigs County Forage Club.
They included David Koblentz, Dale
Kautz, Roy Holter, Roer Nease, Tom
Hamm, Jtm Carnahan, Tom Theiss,
Bill Kennedy, Arvll Holter and Earl

Cross.

The forage club participants had
an average yield of five tons versus
2.3 tons for th~ county.
Soil tests were taken, practical
yield goals were established and the
fields were fertilized according to
these goals.
Three growers had over seven
tons per acre this year. They were
Kennedy, Kautz and Holter. Forage
from each producer was analyzed

for available protein.
Trophies were presented Wednesday when parthcpants met to
discuss the results.
Dale Kautz, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and
BtU Kennedy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, were
presented trophies for having the ·
highest yields in the club tbe past
twoyers.
In 1978, Kautz had a yhield of 7.89
tons per acre and in 1979 Kennedy
had a yield of 7.371Dns per acre.

I' Tax cut bill closer to reality
WASHINGTON (AP) -A new tax
break of up to $400 a year for savers
is a step closer to reality today, and
across-the-board tax cuts for individuals and corporations could be
just around the corner.
Despite opposition from the Carter
adminiStration, a Senate-House conference conunittee working on a
"windfall" tax on the oil industry
agl'eed Wednesday: -On a two-year
trial, starting in 1981, for a provision
that would exempt from income
taxes up to $201 ci interest or
dividends earned each year from
savings accounts, stocks, savings
bonds and other investments. A
couple filing a joint return could
avoid taxes on $400 of such earnings.
-That 60 percent of the revenues
from the "windfall" tax should be
set aside for income-tax cuts. The
tax is estimated to produce $227.3
billion In the 1980s; that would mean
$136 billion for tax cuts.
The timing and shape of any tax
cut would have to be decided in subsequent legislation. But the
agreement opens the door for a tax
reduction of around $16 billion as
early as Oct. I.
That same agreement would ear·
mark an additional 25 percent,toward helping lower-income
Americans pay their energy bills.
The other $34 billion would finance

Judge won't
drop ~harges
JACKSON, Ohio (AP) - Jacklon
County Common Pleas Judge
Thomas Mitchell has refused to
dismiss charges against a man accused of killing an Oak Hill police offtcer.
LloydBrofford, 31, is charged with
the death of officer David Alcox.
Alcox was found shot to death Jan.
15, shortly after he stopped Brafford
for speeding.
Brafford's attorney said Brafford
was arrested illegally and charged
Improperly. Mitchell also took a
request for a chance of venue under
advisement, but said Wednesday the
request was premature.

Middleport men found guilty
Two Middleport men have been
fined In the Meigs County Juvenile
Court on charges of contributing to
the unruliness of three Meigs High
School studenta.
The two, Yancy Roush and Glenn
Roush, both of Rt. 1, Middleport,
were charged as a result. of
providing the three students a place
to stay when they were truant from
school.
·
·
Deputy Scheriff Gary Wolfe,
Assistant High School Principal
Fenton Taylor, and Juvenile Officer
carl R. Hyusell, acting on infonnation, . went to the Roush
residence and took the three minors
~tocustody.
)

lion of their having the highest yields in the Meigs
County Forage Club over the past two years.

Hysell filed charges against the
Roushes who appeared in Juvenile
Court with legal counsel and were
found guilty by Judge 'Robert E.
Buck. Each was fined $350 and costs
and each received a three day sentence in the county jail.
Also a probation period of sill montha was set, but the probation Is subject to review before the sill month
period el!pires.
.
Appearing before Judge Buck also
was Ray Patterson, 17, Rutland,
charged with falling to stop at a stop
sign. He was fined $5 and costs and
had driving privileges suspended for
one week.

improvements in the nation's transportation system and encourage
home and bwnness energy conservation and development of nonoil fuels.
The conferees' agreement would
accommodate major parts of Carter's !()-year energy program. But
their Insistence on eannarking the
lion's share of the money for tax
reductions likely will 'mean other
energy projects may have to be
financed out of income taxes, rather
.than from the new "windfall" tax.
With the support of the carter administration, the conferees voted to
extend through 1992 the current four-cent-a-gallon tax exemption allowed
gasohol. That and other parts of a
gasohol-incentive package would.
cost the treasury about $2 billion in
lost taxes in the 1980s.
Still to be considered by tbe conferees are several Senate-passed tax
credits designed to help businesses
make better use of energy. An effort
on the House floor to force House
conferees to accept the Senate's
$2li.6 billion package of energy
credits for individuals and

businesses failed Wednesday on a
207-195 vote.
The conferees had agreed earlier
to delete most of the Senateapproved credits for home energy
conservation. The effort on the
House floor, led by Rep. Nonnan
D' Amours, D-N .H., grew m part
from the conferees' rejection of a
credit of up to $300 for the purchase
of wood-burning stoves.
Sen. William Roth, R-Del.,
claimed victory for his tax-cut efforts after Wednesday's vote to earmark 60 percent of the "windfall"
tax for across-the-board reductions.
In fact, he added, "I expect the tax
cut to be expanded by congressional
action this year."
The tax cut language was approved after the panel refused to
eannark the money for reducing the
federal deficit - the course favored
by the Carter administration. The
conferees had agreed infonnally two
weeki ago that 50 percent to 55 percent of the money should go for tax
cuts; Wednesday's vote made that
agreement fonnal and raised it to 60
percent.

Stolen car located
A 1967 Chevolet stolen from a
parking lot at Camden- Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, has been
recovered from the parking lot at
the Five Points Grill on SR 7.
Deputy Sheriff Manning Mfliler
recoered tbe car after receiVIng a
phone call that the vehicle had been
left there. The vehicle was impounded and wlll be released to its
owner.
In other activity, Meigs County
sheriff's deputies are searching for
the driver of a large green four-door
vehicle Involved in a hit-skip on
Main St. in Pomeroy Tuesday af.
ternoon.
According to the sheriff, the
vehicle, driven by a male, went right
and struck the curb then bounced
left of center and struck a westbound
vehicle driven by Sharon L. Ervin,
26, Racine.

The green vehicle failed to stop,
continuing east on E. Main St. The
vehicle should have damage to the
left front. Anyone able to provide
any infonnation should contact the
sheriff's department.
Wednesday evening, a car
registered to Timothy Davidson,
Chester Road, Pomeroy, was apparenUy traveling east on County
Road 34 and failed to negotiate a curve. The vehicle ran off the right
side of the roadway, rolled over
before it came to rest on a fence
owned by Harrison Smith, Route I,
Racine.
'Deputies were unable to locate the
owner to determine who was driving
the vehicle when the accident occurred.
The incident occurred
about 10:30 p.m. and investigation Is
continuing.

Miners hack on jobs
About 550 union workers at Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Mine
No. 2 returned t.o the job Wednesday after a two-day wUdcat strike.
Members of United Mine Workers Local11186 reportedly wallt:ed
off the job over a safety issue. Local President Gene Oiler declined 'to
detail the problem, but said a union lawyer had been called In for advice. OUer said the matter may be talten to court.
Union officials met briefly about 11:30 a.m.. Wednesday with company representativs who called for a return ID work and the filing of a
grievance over the problem.
Southern Ohio Personnel Manager Dave Baker said the strike was
apparenUy sparked by ii dissatisfaction with the action of a company
foreman.
.
OUer said he Is attempting to meet again with company ufflclala to
discuss "under:lylng problelllll" of the work stoppage.

�'

'

.

.

.,

3-The Dally Sentinel, Uddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel: Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 198()

· •t0 l comment
Capt

, RQ!'~''IAA·~~ N.E .~. 130
.,~

"Sweat! You're on ABSCAM camera!"

Bond's Opinions
By Julian Bond
The arbitrary order of 1900's
presidential primaries and caucuses
ensures that black voters will have
little to do with selecting party
nominees until several cimdidates
are already eliminated.
Blacks constitute only 1 percent of
the population in the only state Iowa - to have fonnally begun the
process of choosing the delegates
who will in tum select the
Democratic nominee.
Next , the nearly all-white
Republican Party in three states Hawaii, Maine and Arkansas launched the preliminary selection
process. Little opportunity for black
voters here. Of the three states only
Arkansas has a sizeable black

Winter's white
•
carnpa.tgn

population, 18 percent, but despite
the best efforts of the late Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller, most blacks participate in Democratic Party af·
fairs.
Minnesota's Republicans and
Democrats hold precinct caucuses
to elect delegates to county conventions on February 26. New Hampshire will hold both party primaries
that same day. Neither state has
enough of a black population to
merit much mention - or attention
- from presidential candidates.
Iowa's Republicans will hold their
county conventions on March I. On
March 4, both parties will holod
primaries in Massachusetts and
Vermont. Massachusetts is 4 per-

.

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jimmy
Carter and his aides are burning
more wood than ever this winter, in
a calculated effort to dramatize
alternative energy sources. But they
don't even approach the combustion
record of Richard M. Nixon and his
crew.

"The selection of the stoves in no
way implies any endorsement of
superiority of these particular
models or suppliers," said a White
House press release.
One gift stove is in the Cabinet
Room ll!ld another in Carter's
second-floor study. Both were fitted
i1tto existing fireplaces.
Four stoves went to Camp David,
including one for the living room
fireplace at Carter's Aspen Lodge.
Acquisition of the stoves came af.
ter Carter, during a speech in Iowa
last May, said:
"I grew up with wood-burning
stoves and open fireplaces, but the
new designs of stoves are absolutely
remarkable. They burn not only the
wood, but the gases from the wood.
They are highly efficient, bave
automatic thermostats, and two or
three oak logs or hardwood logs will
last for as long as 8 or 10 hours."
At the same time, Carter an·
nounced, "I intend to install one
quite soon, before the next winter, in
the White House, and I will be using
it next winter."

The Genera I Services Ad·
ministration expects to supply abOut
iOcords of wood during the current
heating season for use in stoves and
fireplaces in the east-wing and westwing White House offices occupied
by Carter, wife Rosalynn and their
aides.
That's double last year's consumption. But it's still far cry from
the 50 cords burned one winter by
Nixon and his staff.
Chief Usher Rex Scouten
estimated this season's wood consumption in the White House living
quarters at about four cords - about
par for recent years.
The president is the chief personal
wood-burner in the family quarters,
lighting fires regularly in a new
stove set into an old fireplace in his
second-floor study.
Otherwise, Scouten said, wood is
burned mostly in fireplaces on the
"state floor" - Red Room, Blue
AGEXCHANGE
Room, etc. - during White House
PEKING
(AP) - China and West
parties.
Gennany
have
agreed on a project
When Carter installed woodof
cooperation
in
agriculture.
burning stoves last fall at the White
The
countries
have agreed to
House and at his rustic hideaway at
carry
out
several
pilot projects in
Camp David, Md. , stove makers
which
Westfiennany
will supply the
eager to donate 'their wares were
technical equipment. China will pay
warned, ' No publicity."
for
the project mainly with soya
In the end, Carter accepted six
products,
.a West German
free stoves and, alas, the manufacdiplomatic
source
said.
turer of one promptly began ad- ·
vertising the fact that his product
was being used at the White House.
Carter did not have the stove
dismantled and shipped back to the
donor but a presidential aide quickly
NEW YORK (AP) -With prices,
dispatched what was described as a
interest
rates, unemployment and
"rather nasty" letter demanding
taxes
rising,
and real incomes,
that the manufacturer cease his
savings rates, housing starts and
publicity-seeking.
confidence falling, could recession
be worse?
In fact, will anyone even recognize·
THE DAlLY SENTINEL
that
we missed a recession - if we
~USPS 145-9101
do? Or spot it if it comes?
The questions are provoked by a
peculiar situation that h8s recently
DEVOTED TO 11IE
developed. It is this: Good news is
NI'ERESTOF
MI!I~MASON AREA
often bad news, and official
ROBERT HOEFLICH
economic
expansion quite often
Clly EdliM
means
personal
recession.
PubUobed dilly ...,...s._y by 1'bo Olllo
vaney Pwbllllllq
Mill.,._, 111&lt;.,
While people rejoice . in having
111 CGart St., Pomeroy, Olllo U711. Bume.
averted the onset of official
0111« P•ooe tH- ZIU. Edllorlal Pboae
IIZ-2157.
recession, their economic lifes have
SeeoDd da~a po1t111e paid at Pomeror, Ollln.
deteriorated steadily. Economists
Nadouladvi!rtiiiDC rtpnte~tltjve, LaDtt•
Altodl&amp;es, 2111 EueUd Ave., Clevelud, Olllo
and laymen ask what greater
MIU.
.
damage could a recession do.
Sublcrlpdoa rate.: DtUvered by carrier
where a~allable 10 cealll per w~IL By Mo&amp;or
The ansWer lies in the future, but .
Route whert can1er servl('t oolavaDable, ODe
the damage resitlting from the somoatll,fUI.
The DaUy Seotiatl, by mallln Obio aDd Wat
.called economic expansion cannot
Ylr&amp;lnil, eoe year 133...; S.b: moatba tl'UI;
be denied.
&amp;.bree mt1Ddul fJG.5t. F.lliewbere PUt; ,Ill:
mondll $2t.IO; three nmotlu$11...
Incomes are rising but buying
Tbe AIIGdlled Prell il tJtiUIIvel)' eadtled
power
is shrinking. Statistics say
lo lbe UK lor publlCICiOD of IU DeWI diiPI&amp;ellet
credUed tt the DeW'IJllllper ud also tile ~
families
are well off, but families
lltWI pub[lsbf'd bert'ln,
feel deprived.
I;
\

a

1

ByRobertJ. Wagmao
WASHINGTON (NEA) - There is
some good news and some bad news
from the U. S. PQlltal Service. First,
the good news: The USPS showed its
first "profit" in 32 years and actually managed to close its books with a
$469 million surplus. Now the bad
news: The USPS "surplus" is much
less than meets the eye.
Postal sources, in fact, tell us
things are so bad that the cost of
mailing a first-elass letter will have
to be raised in 1981 to 18 cents from
the current 15 cents.
Why? Because, our sources say,
the postal surplus is little more than
an acrnunting trick. Here is how the
whole thing was pulled off (pay close
attention, please; as with zip codes,
this starts getting confusing after
the third digit) :
In order to arrive at what is called
a " positive funds balance," the
postal service received $2.6 billion
from taxpayers last year; the
federal government shelled out $811
million for actual postal serVices
performed for it, and forked over
another $1.8 billion as an outright
subsidy. (the USPS also managed to
rake in $15.4 billion from the public
for services rendered; its budget for
the year was $17.5 billion.)
Now for the accounting trick,
which has to do with worker overtime. The USPS is being sued by

cent black. Vermont's black popula·
lion, like Maine's and New Hampshire, is too small to count.
Only on March 8 will a state with a
black population larger than 20 per·
cent even begin the 1980 delegate
WASHINGTON (AP) - In their
first outing as debaters, the
contest, and that - South Carolina
- will hold a R~publican prinnary~ns who want to be
Few of the state's 34 percent black
president did more harmonizing
population are expected to parthan arguing.
When they meet Wednesday, they
ticipate in a party process
dominated by Sen. Strom Thurmay be ready to mix it up a bit.
mond.
New Hampshire, which used to be
Finally on March 11, three states
the starting point for presidential
with large and active black popula·
campaigners, could be about the last
lions will give black voters their first
stop for some of them in 1980. That
could mean less caution when they
real chance in 1900 to join the
various campaigns. The March II
debateinManchester,
primaries in Alahama, Florida and
It will be a seven-way match sinGeorgia also constitute the first real
ce Ronald Reagan has decided it is
test of the Kennedy· Carter division
all right for Republicans to debate
in black America.
Republicans after all.
Each candidate enjoys the support
Saturday night, Reagan and Bush
of at least some blacks, but Jimmy
will debate again in Nashua, N.H.
Carter and Edward Kennedy split
That match was arranged by the
the lion's share. California Gov.
Nashua Telegraph.
Jerry Brown has managed to attract
Bush, Sen. Howard Baker Jr. of
a number of black supporters.
Tennessee, former Texas Gov. John
Republican candidates Ronald
Connally, Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas
Reagan, Bob Dole, George Bush,
and Reps. Phlllp CraneandJohnAnPhlllp Crane, Howard Baker and
derson of lllinoi,s dehated in Iowa,
John Anderson can each count black
but found little to debate about.
support, if only on the fingers of one
The sharpest words came from
hand.
Anderson, the most liberal of the
To date, the contest among black
Republican entries. He said Reagan
Democrats has been a battle of en- hasn't had a new idea in years, and
dorsements and prohable slates,
with incwnbent Carter the clear
winner.
The power of his office - and some
residual loyalties from the 1976 campaign - have ensured that most
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An inblack mayors and other elected ofcreasing
inclination by parents to
ficials will stand by the holder of the
seek
criminal
charges against
public purse-strings.
school
administrators
with whom
Next comes Delaware, which is U
they
are
displeased
has
brought
new
percent black, with its March II·
warnings
to
principals
and
superinMay I district meetings, and the
tendents.
March 18 Illinois Republican and
In a recent letter to adDemocratic primaries.
ministrators,
The Ohio Association
The March primaries become the
of
Secondary
School
Administrators
first chance for all candidates in
noted
the
frequency
with
which civil
both primaries to make a strong
lawsuits
have
been
filed
in recent
campaign pitch to black voters, and
years by parents unhappy with
a first chance for those voters to exdisciplinary
measures in school. But
press preferences more meaningful
the
organization
pointed out that
than the choices announced by the
costs
for
such
action
have escalated
Gallup and Hartis polls.
and
parents
have
found many
No evil design invented the
lawyers
reluctant
to
file
such suits
peculiarly American system in
against
educators
because
of the tow
which small nwnbers of voters percentage
of
success.
almost all of them white - in small
By seeking criminal charges
states dominate the early stages of
parents
go through the county
the presidential eliminations. But
prosecutor
a ·public employee, and
the effect makes non-white voters
avoid
legal
fees, the organization
enter the game after the various
says.
teams have already traded position
There is one section of the Ohio
and points.
Revised
Code being increasingly
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
used when the parent Is disputing

I

GOP candidates

Beth Heiden wins medal,
hockey
team
wins
.

Lost: $469
million surplus

unions representing postal
employees. The suit contends that
the serviee should bave paid overtime to many workers who, instead,
received unwanted compensatory
time. At stake: ©500 million - or,
just a little over the amount of the
"surplus." If the USPS loses the suit
(a fairly good bed), the "surplus" instantly will become a deficit because
the service did not budget for this
loss and has set aside no reserve.
For the current year, the service
says it can just about break even
without any postage increase, but
only if it gets another $2.5 billion or
so from the taxpayers and it increases its borrowing by about a
billion or so.
The USPS's biggest expense is
people; the salaries it pays are the
highest in government.
In his new budget message, President Carter has requested that
federal workers be limited to a 6&lt;2
percent pay raise this year.
Needless to say, with inflation running at over, 13 percent, the prospects
of only a 6 percent raise has not gone
over well with most of the federal
workforce.
Postal workers do not share this ill
will, however. Last year, in order to
avoid a strike, the postal people
agreed to a new three-year pact that
gus ran teed tWo increases a year:
the nonnal wage hike given to all

.

LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP) Young Beth Heiden finally has her
Olympic medal - just in time - and
the fired-up, undefeated United
states hockey team is in position to
clairll one of Its awn 118 the UMio Winter Games head Into the homestretch.
Heiden, overshadowed until now
by ber superstar brother, Eric,
finished third in the 3,1100-meter
speed skating, her final Olympic
race, Wednesday and then
emotionally revealed ever so briefly
just how much:the pressure of these
Olympics have affected her.
"It got in the way of our family,"
said Beth, tears welling ·in her eyes.
"That's what really got me mad."
Eric Heiden, who already has captured three golds, went after No. 4
today in the 1,500-meter race. Still
ahead for him Is the 10,000 Saturday.
For Beth, however, the 3,00\) was, her
last chance at a medal after
finishing seventh, seventh and fifth
in her earlier events. And she made
it count.
Norway's Bjoerg Eva Jensen won
the 3,000, timed in an Olympic
record 4 minutes, 32.12 seconds.
East Gennany's Sabine Becker took
the silver medal In 4:32.79 with
Heiden getting the bronze in 4: 33.77.
The eXciting American hockey

federal workers and a cost-of-living
adjustment. Therefore, unlike their
colleagues in most other federal
departments (who will have to make
do with meager 6 percent raises),
postal workers likely will get in excess of 10 percent.
This means that, even if mail
volume (and, hence, income) Increases, as is projected, and the
USPS borrows even more thaplast
year, It still will finish 1980 with
another large deficit. (The USPS
budget for 1980 is estimated at U9
billion. )
Which is why, within a few weeks,
you can expect this aMouncement :
Effective Jan. I, 1981, first-class
mail will go up to 18 cents for the
first ounce. (Total budget for 1981,
incidentally, is projected at $21.3
billion. )
Says one postal source, "The .increase should go into effect immediately. Inflation, energy prices
and wage increll$e8 are going to kill
us this year. Politically, though, it is
better til announce that we are going
to hold the Une this year - but this
will only be done by borrowing
more.
"I just wonder if we are going to
be able to get by with an !kent rate.
Twenty cents may be more like what
we really will need."
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

Bush coiiid find little on which to
differ with the jlositions of the absent
Reagan during the Iowa debate. The
former California governor Is telling
New Hampshire voters that they do
disagree, on points as sensitive as
abortion and gun control.
But to do it, he is attributing to
Bush positions Bush says he does not
advocate.
Reagan S!IYS he opposes abortion,
implying Bush favors abortion on
demand. Bush says he favors abortion only to save the life..,of the
mother or in cases of rape or mcest.
Reagan says "George voted for
gun control and I'm against it."
Bush says flatly "I do not favor
gun control."
He favors mandatory prison terms
for anyone convicted of using a gun
in committing a crinne. Just what
Reagan proposes.
Baker, meanwhile, is suggesting
that Bush Is less likely to beat a
Democrat in the fall than he is. He
also plays down Bush's Iowa victory. "The name of the game is not
to organize Republicans in Iowa for
a straw poll, but to get elected in
November," Baker says.

RAYKNIGIIT

Co-••·

••

a

~

DAVE COlLINS

CINCit'NATI (4'\P) .,.... .The Cin- Griffey.
clnnati Reds open spring training
"I'm hopeful we'll have something
next week in "pretty good shape," done fairly quickly," Vo;'agner said.
younger and maybe hungrier than He called the latest round of talks
last year, club president Dick with Griffey
" meaningful
negotiations"
and
!Uiid,
"Getting
Wagner said as he prepared to leave
-r
for the Redsland complex in Tampa, Ken signed is important to us."
Fla.
Griffey has a .310 career batting
"We will not have the blazing average in the major leagues, all of
speed, but we will have good team it with the Reds, but played In just 95
speed," Wagner . sal~. "In certain games last season before voluntarily
;IV8ys, we've Improved our club in . putting himself on the disabled llstto
age."
blive knee slirgery.
Both references were to the deparAlthough the ~ announced a
ture rl Joe Morgan, who holds the big signing during spring training a
National Lea~e club's record for year ago when George Foster
stolen bases, and the age reference became the National League club's
may have included pitcher Fred highest paid player, Griffey has said
he wants to have a contract
Norman.
The Reds showed little interest in negotiated before the start of
signing . either player after last training or he may play out his opseason. Norman ended up with a far lion and become a free agent.
rnore lucrative contract With the
Wagiler said it may be Monday
Montreal E~. Morgan signed before he knows the outcome of arwith the Houston ~. probably bltration hearings between the Reds
for about what he was making with and plii.yers Ray Knight and Dave
the Reds. .
~illns. An arbiter heard the cases
In both eases- Morgan Is 36 and
Norman '!/1 - the Reds are counting
•1111 the development of players in
their early 318, Infielder Ron Oester
and lefthanders Charlie Uebrandt
and Sheldon Burnside.
But Wagner salci the club may be
cl011e to signing one veteran It wants
desperately to keep, outfielder Ken

' is advising school officials -of several
considerations to reduce the
likelihood of such charges being
filed.
The association recommends administrators follow . established
guidelines for the administration of
corporal punislunent; not ad·
minister such punishment while under extreme emotional stress
brought on· by the student who is
being punished; always have at
least one disinterested witness
present during the administration of
such punislunent; make the punishment fit the offense; be extremely
careful when It becomes necessary
to physically "handle" a student;
and make a report of the circumstances, actions, reasons,
names of witnesses and everything
else pertinent to the event.

KEN GRIFFEY

Monday but said he would need ex·
tra time to review the argUments.
The Reds president predicted a
" nonnal" spring training and
regular season start despite strike
threats by the Players' Association
if their demarids for a new basic
agreemerit aren't met.
"We look for a normal spring
training," Wagner said. "I really
can't envision a strike; I really can't
see what the ballplayers have to
strikeabout.
•
"Major league baseball has the
best pension program In
professional ·sports. At age 55, a
player with 10 years' experience Is
eligible to receive ,I,71!4 a month for
life;"
One stumbling block has been the
players' resistance to owners'
proposals for maximum salaries for
each year's service up to five years
mthe majors. Those salary brackets
are the apparent reason Knight and
Collins felt obliged to go to arbitration.

noticed some little mistakes," she
said, "but in general, it was a good
run"

Epple recovered quickly after
nearly losing a ski at the top of the
course. "Without that ·mistake, I
could have been closer," she said. "I
don't know how much it cost me, but
I know that I really wanted to attack
after that."

Xill OLYMPIC

WINTER
GAMES
LAKE

PlAOD

1.980

Toledo rode a 102-73 victory over
Ball State to its second straight 'MidAmerican Conference regular
season basketball championship
Wednesday night as second place
Bowling Green fell to Central
Michigan.
The Rockets, 13-2, led by Jim
Swaney with 32 points, earned a bye
in the MAC post-season tournament
which begins next week.
"I'm pleased with our perfonn.ance," said Toledo Coach Bob
Nichols. "We've won 20 games this
season for the fourth straight year. I
thought we responded well."
Meanwhile, Bowllng Green saw its
·second-half lead crumble as the
Chippewas rolled to a 7[).72 triumph.
The upset dropped the Falcons to II·
4 in the MAC, while boosting Central
Michigan to 6-9 and a four-way tie
for sixth place with Eastern
Michigan, Ball State and Kent state.
The league's top seven teama will
win tournamerit berths.
1
In other MAC action, Western
. Michigan defeated Northern Illinois
74-65, Ohio University edged
Eastern Michigan 61 ~ and Miami
beat Kent State~Toledo, shooting 64 percent from
the field, built a 27-16 lead with II
minutes left in the first half. But Ball
State scored 10 unanswered points,
and the two teams traded baskets
unW Swaney gave ihe Rockets a 41·
38 advantage which they held onto
for good.
Ball State Coach Steve Yoder offered no excuses for his team.
"Toledo is just 'a great club. They
drilled us. We'll just try to forget this
one and go win on Saturday against

~ ;

VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and
• powerful
ST~AM EXTRACTION
CLEANING
10 looaen, dissolve · ·
· and eldraci

.

,

-p-aeated dirt and
re.-~..

, ..,

.'

•

•'

Geta carpets
cleaner. FaiteriAnd
l's 8aay to operate

too.

. .

·j

•

.j

'J
•

!·

Miami," he said.
Central Michigan, paced by
Melvin McLaughlin with 16 points,
led by up to 12 points in the first half.
That advantage shrunk and then
vanished, however, as the Falcons
grabbed the lead three minutes into
the second half.
But two free throws by Ste~e· Rambad! with 5:03 remaining broke aSS68 tie, putting Central ahead for
good.
Western Michigan's Ke!Uiy Cunningham scored 30 points - the
seventh time this season that the
MAC's top scorer hit for at least 30
,points in a game - in the Broncos'
74-65 victory over Northern Illinois.
Dave Kuipers added 12 points for
the Broncos, 7-3.
Northern Illinois, 8-7, was led by
Shawn Thrower with 16 points.
In a seesaw battle which saw the
lead change five times, Miami
· finally finished 90-86 over Kent State

in overtime. The Redskins were led
by senior forward ·Rick Goins with 32
points.
" We almost lost it by free throws,
and we wind up winning it by free
throws," said Miami Coach Darrel
Hedric.
Miami, 7-3, led 37-32 at the half,
but Kent struck back for a 74-74 tie at
the end of reguiation. Harvey
Daniels paced the 1olden Flashes
with 24 points.
Ohio University, ill last place at :.10, outscored Eastern Michigan 22·
10 in the final II minutes for a 61-60
victory. The wlnniDg basket came
from Spindle Graves, with I :30
remaining.
The triumph marked Ohio Coach
Dale Bandy's last game at home.
" I feel that my early resignation
was a positive thing as it took the
pressure off and we· played much
better down the stretch," he said.

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"/ csl/ It 'The ConsciMCtJ 'of Russ/s'. ".

Yet, for Beth, the Games have
been something of a disappointment.
More had been expected from the
petite 20-year-old, partly because of
her brother's achievements and partly beea use of her own ac·
complishments which included the
world championship last year.
Norway's Jensen suggested that
Beth had lacked some of the fervor·
in these Games that she had
displayed last year.
"I · would agree with her that I
don't have the same fighting spirit,''
Heiden said. "I like to skate for
myself. This year, I sort of had the
feellng I had to skate for the press,
you know. To hell with you guys!"
Heiden, ll'ho earlier in the Games
had said she wished she could
change her last name, was hustled
out of her press conference after
losing her composure.

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

· Carpet Cleaning
Effectiveness
YOU CAN REALLY SEE I
RENT !\lEW,
PROFESSIONAL

•

s!J('ed skating and lour of them
belong to the Heidens. Wi,thout them,
the United States would be tied for
seventh instead of third in the medal
standings.

Weekend At Me·igs Inn

HERE'S NEW LIFE
FOR -TIRED
WALLS I

.
..
~

Annemarie Moser-Proell, winner
of the downhill, was seventh after
the first run of the GS and appeared
out of the medals chase.
American· Linda Fratianne was
third following the compulsory portion of the women's figure skating,
trailing Annet Potzch of East Germany and Dagmar" Lurz of West
Gennany. The compulsories count
for 30 percent of the competition and
Fratia!Uie will need outstanding
freestyle perfonnances in today's
short program and Saturday's long
program to overtake the Genn.ans.
"She'll have to do a super job
now," said Linda's coach, Frank
Carroll. " She'll have to not miss
anything in the short program and
skate the best in the long pcogram. If
she makes any mistakes, she's out."
With four days of competition
remaining, the Soviet Union and
East Gennany were tied in the
medal count with 17 each, although
the Russians lead in golds ~. Three
countries, Austria, Finland and the
United States, have six medals each.
All of America's bave come from

Toledo captures .championship

r-------,_------'-

Berry's World

'
fill the gap.
The result, say pessimists, is that
things could get even worse, with
unemployment rising more sharply
w~Ji\e prices remain high - kept
there by forces such as oil that do ·not
quickly react to supply and demand
+ and interest rates rising before
falllng gradually.

Questions beg to be answered:
Is it logical therefore to talk about
the recent expansion as if It were the
opposite of recession ~ Because the
statistics say the economy is expanding - and therefore not in
recession - should we applaud?
For individuals, the best measure
of whether times al'l! good or bad Is
not the official pronouncement that
we do or do JJot have a recession, but
·the immediate condition of the
pocketbook and the 8avtngs account.
And their condition, and that of the
credit account as well, are generally
in pretty poor shape. Worse
perhaps, than in many an officiai
recession.

then Mikhailo•· and Golikov scored
12 seconds apart early in the third
for a 4-3 Russian lead. Dan D' AIvise
tied it for Canada but then Mikhailov ·
and (}olikov scored again to give the
Soviets their victory.
The United States will face Russia
and Sweden opposes Finland when
the hockey medal round begins
Friday.
Besides speed skating, Wednesday's only other medal evert was
the men's. 4 x 10 kilometer cross .
country relay race won by the Soviet
Union. Anchored by ~kilometer
gold medalist Nikolai Zimjatov, the
Russians were timed in an Olympic
record I hour, 57 minutes, 3.46 secon·
ds. Norway took the silver and the
bronze went to defending champion ·
Finland.
In other action, Liechtenstein's
Heidi Wenzel grabbed the lead in the
first heat of the women's giant
slalom, timed in I minute, 14.33
seconds through the 50 gates of the
1,17()-meter Whiteface Mountain
course. Two West Germans, Irene
Epple and Christa Kinshofer, wete
2-3 with respective times of I : 14.75
and I: 15.19.
Wenzel, who won the silver medal
in the women's downhill earlier this
week, was pleased with her first
outing on the giant slalom course. ''I

Reds' president says team
has good overall speed, age

Could recession be worse?
The odd situation is not difficult to
undersiand, but it may be more dif.
ficult to explain. The plausible explanation is this:
People are making lots of money
but iq(l.ation and higher taxes, partly
for SOcial Security, are. taking it
away. They have material comforts,
but they have to borrow and cut into
savings to get them.
Rather than going into a shell of
depression, families are maintaining economic activity, perhaps
because they feel that is the way out
of the trap. Money is circulating.
Economic activity is fairly strong.
And official economic measures
reflect this activity.
Many economists · warn that
families are losing the' ability to
maintain buying activity. They have
tried mightuy; they have strained
their resources, and still they caMot
make much headway .
¥ they run out of financial ilnt!
psychic energy, the consumer
economy could take twnble, and
there is little evidence that other
areas of the economy can step in to

iinagination of fans here, swept into
the medal round of the competition,
defeating West Germany 4-2 and
comple~g its preliminary round
with four victories and a tie. A
sellout crowd JllDUlled the Olympic
field ho~ and the fans waved
American·flags and banners madly
to salute each U.S. goal.
It was not an easy victory. The
Americans roared from behind with
four consecutive goals, two of them
by Rob McClanahan, to erase a 2-0
deficit.
Also advancing in the hockey tournament were the Soviet Union,
Sweden anq Finland. Sweden
eliniinated Czechoslovakia 4-2, the
Russians beat Canada 6-1, and
Finland routed Holland 11l-3. In other
first round hockey, Norway tied
Romania 3-3 and Poland downed
Japan:.-!.
The defending champion Soviets
were forced to come from behind for
the second time in the hockey tournament and seared four goals in the
final period, two each by Boris
Mikhailov and Aleksandr Golikov, to
beat Canada.
Trailing 3-1 with 13 seconds left in
the second period, they rallied.
Aleksei Kasatonov's goal made It 3-2
before the end of that period and

'

School administrators get warnings
the administration ci corporal
punishment - Section 2919.22, also
known as the "endangering children
statute."
It states that no person supervising a minor "shall create a substantial risk to the health or safety of
such child, by violating a duty of
care, protection or support."
t The section also prohibits a person
from administering corporal punishment or other physical disciplinary
measures against the child, or
physically restraining the child ''in a
cruel manner for a prolongedperiod
so as to create a substantial risk of
serious physical harm to the child."
A violation of the section is a first
degree misdemeanor and is
punishable by a maximum of $1,000
and-or 6 months in prison.
The administrators' organization

team, · whi~h has captured the

'

harmonizin~

claimed to be the only candidate
with a difference in a look-alike field
of relativetr conservative
Republicans.
Connally underlined Reagan's absence. Dole said he is a younger
Ronald Reagan, and pointed to
Bush's defeats in Texas Senate
races.
The tone of the campaign has
changed. Reagan, once the leader,
needs a comeback after losing to
Bush in the Jan. 21 Iowa GOP
caucuses.
Baker, who claims to be the most
electable in a general election, is
ranked by pol)s third in New Hampshire as he was in Iowa. Dole, Connally and Crane are struggling to
keep their campaigns going, and Anderson wants an opening to make
him more than the GOP liberal.
That makes the stakes in New
Hampshire clearer than in Iowa,
which may encourage candidates to
take a chance and do some real
debating.
Reagan insists he won't speak ill
of other Republicans. But he is not
speaking too cordially of Bush these
days.

•

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IDHE MEIGS INN
,

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Phone 992-3629

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· Pomeroy,
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3-The Dally Sentinel, Uddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel: Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 198()

· •t0 l comment
Capt

, RQ!'~''IAA·~~ N.E .~. 130
.,~

"Sweat! You're on ABSCAM camera!"

Bond's Opinions
By Julian Bond
The arbitrary order of 1900's
presidential primaries and caucuses
ensures that black voters will have
little to do with selecting party
nominees until several cimdidates
are already eliminated.
Blacks constitute only 1 percent of
the population in the only state Iowa - to have fonnally begun the
process of choosing the delegates
who will in tum select the
Democratic nominee.
Next , the nearly all-white
Republican Party in three states Hawaii, Maine and Arkansas launched the preliminary selection
process. Little opportunity for black
voters here. Of the three states only
Arkansas has a sizeable black

Winter's white
•
carnpa.tgn

population, 18 percent, but despite
the best efforts of the late Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller, most blacks participate in Democratic Party af·
fairs.
Minnesota's Republicans and
Democrats hold precinct caucuses
to elect delegates to county conventions on February 26. New Hampshire will hold both party primaries
that same day. Neither state has
enough of a black population to
merit much mention - or attention
- from presidential candidates.
Iowa's Republicans will hold their
county conventions on March I. On
March 4, both parties will holod
primaries in Massachusetts and
Vermont. Massachusetts is 4 per-

.

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jimmy
Carter and his aides are burning
more wood than ever this winter, in
a calculated effort to dramatize
alternative energy sources. But they
don't even approach the combustion
record of Richard M. Nixon and his
crew.

"The selection of the stoves in no
way implies any endorsement of
superiority of these particular
models or suppliers," said a White
House press release.
One gift stove is in the Cabinet
Room ll!ld another in Carter's
second-floor study. Both were fitted
i1tto existing fireplaces.
Four stoves went to Camp David,
including one for the living room
fireplace at Carter's Aspen Lodge.
Acquisition of the stoves came af.
ter Carter, during a speech in Iowa
last May, said:
"I grew up with wood-burning
stoves and open fireplaces, but the
new designs of stoves are absolutely
remarkable. They burn not only the
wood, but the gases from the wood.
They are highly efficient, bave
automatic thermostats, and two or
three oak logs or hardwood logs will
last for as long as 8 or 10 hours."
At the same time, Carter an·
nounced, "I intend to install one
quite soon, before the next winter, in
the White House, and I will be using
it next winter."

The Genera I Services Ad·
ministration expects to supply abOut
iOcords of wood during the current
heating season for use in stoves and
fireplaces in the east-wing and westwing White House offices occupied
by Carter, wife Rosalynn and their
aides.
That's double last year's consumption. But it's still far cry from
the 50 cords burned one winter by
Nixon and his staff.
Chief Usher Rex Scouten
estimated this season's wood consumption in the White House living
quarters at about four cords - about
par for recent years.
The president is the chief personal
wood-burner in the family quarters,
lighting fires regularly in a new
stove set into an old fireplace in his
second-floor study.
Otherwise, Scouten said, wood is
burned mostly in fireplaces on the
"state floor" - Red Room, Blue
AGEXCHANGE
Room, etc. - during White House
PEKING
(AP) - China and West
parties.
Gennany
have
agreed on a project
When Carter installed woodof
cooperation
in
agriculture.
burning stoves last fall at the White
The
countries
have agreed to
House and at his rustic hideaway at
carry
out
several
pilot projects in
Camp David, Md. , stove makers
which
Westfiennany
will supply the
eager to donate 'their wares were
technical equipment. China will pay
warned, ' No publicity."
for
the project mainly with soya
In the end, Carter accepted six
products,
.a West German
free stoves and, alas, the manufacdiplomatic
source
said.
turer of one promptly began ad- ·
vertising the fact that his product
was being used at the White House.
Carter did not have the stove
dismantled and shipped back to the
donor but a presidential aide quickly
NEW YORK (AP) -With prices,
dispatched what was described as a
interest
rates, unemployment and
"rather nasty" letter demanding
taxes
rising,
and real incomes,
that the manufacturer cease his
savings rates, housing starts and
publicity-seeking.
confidence falling, could recession
be worse?
In fact, will anyone even recognize·
THE DAlLY SENTINEL
that
we missed a recession - if we
~USPS 145-9101
do? Or spot it if it comes?
The questions are provoked by a
peculiar situation that h8s recently
DEVOTED TO 11IE
developed. It is this: Good news is
NI'ERESTOF
MI!I~MASON AREA
often bad news, and official
ROBERT HOEFLICH
economic
expansion quite often
Clly EdliM
means
personal
recession.
PubUobed dilly ...,...s._y by 1'bo Olllo
vaney Pwbllllllq
Mill.,._, 111&lt;.,
While people rejoice . in having
111 CGart St., Pomeroy, Olllo U711. Bume.
averted the onset of official
0111« P•ooe tH- ZIU. Edllorlal Pboae
IIZ-2157.
recession, their economic lifes have
SeeoDd da~a po1t111e paid at Pomeror, Ollln.
deteriorated steadily. Economists
Nadouladvi!rtiiiDC rtpnte~tltjve, LaDtt•
Altodl&amp;es, 2111 EueUd Ave., Clevelud, Olllo
and laymen ask what greater
MIU.
.
damage could a recession do.
Sublcrlpdoa rate.: DtUvered by carrier
where a~allable 10 cealll per w~IL By Mo&amp;or
The ansWer lies in the future, but .
Route whert can1er servl('t oolavaDable, ODe
the damage resitlting from the somoatll,fUI.
The DaUy Seotiatl, by mallln Obio aDd Wat
.called economic expansion cannot
Ylr&amp;lnil, eoe year 133...; S.b: moatba tl'UI;
be denied.
&amp;.bree mt1Ddul fJG.5t. F.lliewbere PUt; ,Ill:
mondll $2t.IO; three nmotlu$11...
Incomes are rising but buying
Tbe AIIGdlled Prell il tJtiUIIvel)' eadtled
power
is shrinking. Statistics say
lo lbe UK lor publlCICiOD of IU DeWI diiPI&amp;ellet
credUed tt the DeW'IJllllper ud also tile ~
families
are well off, but families
lltWI pub[lsbf'd bert'ln,
feel deprived.
I;
\

a

1

ByRobertJ. Wagmao
WASHINGTON (NEA) - There is
some good news and some bad news
from the U. S. PQlltal Service. First,
the good news: The USPS showed its
first "profit" in 32 years and actually managed to close its books with a
$469 million surplus. Now the bad
news: The USPS "surplus" is much
less than meets the eye.
Postal sources, in fact, tell us
things are so bad that the cost of
mailing a first-elass letter will have
to be raised in 1981 to 18 cents from
the current 15 cents.
Why? Because, our sources say,
the postal surplus is little more than
an acrnunting trick. Here is how the
whole thing was pulled off (pay close
attention, please; as with zip codes,
this starts getting confusing after
the third digit) :
In order to arrive at what is called
a " positive funds balance," the
postal service received $2.6 billion
from taxpayers last year; the
federal government shelled out $811
million for actual postal serVices
performed for it, and forked over
another $1.8 billion as an outright
subsidy. (the USPS also managed to
rake in $15.4 billion from the public
for services rendered; its budget for
the year was $17.5 billion.)
Now for the accounting trick,
which has to do with worker overtime. The USPS is being sued by

cent black. Vermont's black popula·
lion, like Maine's and New Hampshire, is too small to count.
Only on March 8 will a state with a
black population larger than 20 per·
cent even begin the 1980 delegate
WASHINGTON (AP) - In their
first outing as debaters, the
contest, and that - South Carolina
- will hold a R~publican prinnary~ns who want to be
Few of the state's 34 percent black
president did more harmonizing
population are expected to parthan arguing.
When they meet Wednesday, they
ticipate in a party process
dominated by Sen. Strom Thurmay be ready to mix it up a bit.
mond.
New Hampshire, which used to be
Finally on March 11, three states
the starting point for presidential
with large and active black popula·
campaigners, could be about the last
lions will give black voters their first
stop for some of them in 1980. That
could mean less caution when they
real chance in 1900 to join the
various campaigns. The March II
debateinManchester,
primaries in Alahama, Florida and
It will be a seven-way match sinGeorgia also constitute the first real
ce Ronald Reagan has decided it is
test of the Kennedy· Carter division
all right for Republicans to debate
in black America.
Republicans after all.
Each candidate enjoys the support
Saturday night, Reagan and Bush
of at least some blacks, but Jimmy
will debate again in Nashua, N.H.
Carter and Edward Kennedy split
That match was arranged by the
the lion's share. California Gov.
Nashua Telegraph.
Jerry Brown has managed to attract
Bush, Sen. Howard Baker Jr. of
a number of black supporters.
Tennessee, former Texas Gov. John
Republican candidates Ronald
Connally, Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas
Reagan, Bob Dole, George Bush,
and Reps. Phlllp CraneandJohnAnPhlllp Crane, Howard Baker and
derson of lllinoi,s dehated in Iowa,
John Anderson can each count black
but found little to debate about.
support, if only on the fingers of one
The sharpest words came from
hand.
Anderson, the most liberal of the
To date, the contest among black
Republican entries. He said Reagan
Democrats has been a battle of en- hasn't had a new idea in years, and
dorsements and prohable slates,
with incwnbent Carter the clear
winner.
The power of his office - and some
residual loyalties from the 1976 campaign - have ensured that most
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An inblack mayors and other elected ofcreasing
inclination by parents to
ficials will stand by the holder of the
seek
criminal
charges against
public purse-strings.
school
administrators
with whom
Next comes Delaware, which is U
they
are
displeased
has
brought
new
percent black, with its March II·
warnings
to
principals
and
superinMay I district meetings, and the
tendents.
March 18 Illinois Republican and
In a recent letter to adDemocratic primaries.
ministrators,
The Ohio Association
The March primaries become the
of
Secondary
School
Administrators
first chance for all candidates in
noted
the
frequency
with
which civil
both primaries to make a strong
lawsuits
have
been
filed
in recent
campaign pitch to black voters, and
years by parents unhappy with
a first chance for those voters to exdisciplinary
measures in school. But
press preferences more meaningful
the
organization
pointed out that
than the choices announced by the
costs
for
such
action
have escalated
Gallup and Hartis polls.
and
parents
have
found many
No evil design invented the
lawyers
reluctant
to
file
such suits
peculiarly American system in
against
educators
because
of the tow
which small nwnbers of voters percentage
of
success.
almost all of them white - in small
By seeking criminal charges
states dominate the early stages of
parents
go through the county
the presidential eliminations. But
prosecutor
a ·public employee, and
the effect makes non-white voters
avoid
legal
fees, the organization
enter the game after the various
says.
teams have already traded position
There is one section of the Ohio
and points.
Revised
Code being increasingly
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
used when the parent Is disputing

I

GOP candidates

Beth Heiden wins medal,
hockey
team
wins
.

Lost: $469
million surplus

unions representing postal
employees. The suit contends that
the serviee should bave paid overtime to many workers who, instead,
received unwanted compensatory
time. At stake: ©500 million - or,
just a little over the amount of the
"surplus." If the USPS loses the suit
(a fairly good bed), the "surplus" instantly will become a deficit because
the service did not budget for this
loss and has set aside no reserve.
For the current year, the service
says it can just about break even
without any postage increase, but
only if it gets another $2.5 billion or
so from the taxpayers and it increases its borrowing by about a
billion or so.
The USPS's biggest expense is
people; the salaries it pays are the
highest in government.
In his new budget message, President Carter has requested that
federal workers be limited to a 6&lt;2
percent pay raise this year.
Needless to say, with inflation running at over, 13 percent, the prospects
of only a 6 percent raise has not gone
over well with most of the federal
workforce.
Postal workers do not share this ill
will, however. Last year, in order to
avoid a strike, the postal people
agreed to a new three-year pact that
gus ran teed tWo increases a year:
the nonnal wage hike given to all

.

LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP) Young Beth Heiden finally has her
Olympic medal - just in time - and
the fired-up, undefeated United
states hockey team is in position to
clairll one of Its awn 118 the UMio Winter Games head Into the homestretch.
Heiden, overshadowed until now
by ber superstar brother, Eric,
finished third in the 3,1100-meter
speed skating, her final Olympic
race, Wednesday and then
emotionally revealed ever so briefly
just how much:the pressure of these
Olympics have affected her.
"It got in the way of our family,"
said Beth, tears welling ·in her eyes.
"That's what really got me mad."
Eric Heiden, who already has captured three golds, went after No. 4
today in the 1,500-meter race. Still
ahead for him Is the 10,000 Saturday.
For Beth, however, the 3,00\) was, her
last chance at a medal after
finishing seventh, seventh and fifth
in her earlier events. And she made
it count.
Norway's Bjoerg Eva Jensen won
the 3,000, timed in an Olympic
record 4 minutes, 32.12 seconds.
East Gennany's Sabine Becker took
the silver medal In 4:32.79 with
Heiden getting the bronze in 4: 33.77.
The eXciting American hockey

federal workers and a cost-of-living
adjustment. Therefore, unlike their
colleagues in most other federal
departments (who will have to make
do with meager 6 percent raises),
postal workers likely will get in excess of 10 percent.
This means that, even if mail
volume (and, hence, income) Increases, as is projected, and the
USPS borrows even more thaplast
year, It still will finish 1980 with
another large deficit. (The USPS
budget for 1980 is estimated at U9
billion. )
Which is why, within a few weeks,
you can expect this aMouncement :
Effective Jan. I, 1981, first-class
mail will go up to 18 cents for the
first ounce. (Total budget for 1981,
incidentally, is projected at $21.3
billion. )
Says one postal source, "The .increase should go into effect immediately. Inflation, energy prices
and wage increll$e8 are going to kill
us this year. Politically, though, it is
better til announce that we are going
to hold the Une this year - but this
will only be done by borrowing
more.
"I just wonder if we are going to
be able to get by with an !kent rate.
Twenty cents may be more like what
we really will need."
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

Bush coiiid find little on which to
differ with the jlositions of the absent
Reagan during the Iowa debate. The
former California governor Is telling
New Hampshire voters that they do
disagree, on points as sensitive as
abortion and gun control.
But to do it, he is attributing to
Bush positions Bush says he does not
advocate.
Reagan S!IYS he opposes abortion,
implying Bush favors abortion on
demand. Bush says he favors abortion only to save the life..,of the
mother or in cases of rape or mcest.
Reagan says "George voted for
gun control and I'm against it."
Bush says flatly "I do not favor
gun control."
He favors mandatory prison terms
for anyone convicted of using a gun
in committing a crinne. Just what
Reagan proposes.
Baker, meanwhile, is suggesting
that Bush Is less likely to beat a
Democrat in the fall than he is. He
also plays down Bush's Iowa victory. "The name of the game is not
to organize Republicans in Iowa for
a straw poll, but to get elected in
November," Baker says.

RAYKNIGIIT

Co-••·

••

a

~

DAVE COlLINS

CINCit'NATI (4'\P) .,.... .The Cin- Griffey.
clnnati Reds open spring training
"I'm hopeful we'll have something
next week in "pretty good shape," done fairly quickly," Vo;'agner said.
younger and maybe hungrier than He called the latest round of talks
last year, club president Dick with Griffey
" meaningful
negotiations"
and
!Uiid,
"Getting
Wagner said as he prepared to leave
-r
for the Redsland complex in Tampa, Ken signed is important to us."
Fla.
Griffey has a .310 career batting
"We will not have the blazing average in the major leagues, all of
speed, but we will have good team it with the Reds, but played In just 95
speed," Wagner . sal~. "In certain games last season before voluntarily
;IV8ys, we've Improved our club in . putting himself on the disabled llstto
age."
blive knee slirgery.
Both references were to the deparAlthough the ~ announced a
ture rl Joe Morgan, who holds the big signing during spring training a
National Lea~e club's record for year ago when George Foster
stolen bases, and the age reference became the National League club's
may have included pitcher Fred highest paid player, Griffey has said
he wants to have a contract
Norman.
The Reds showed little interest in negotiated before the start of
signing . either player after last training or he may play out his opseason. Norman ended up with a far lion and become a free agent.
rnore lucrative contract With the
Wagiler said it may be Monday
Montreal E~. Morgan signed before he knows the outcome of arwith the Houston ~. probably bltration hearings between the Reds
for about what he was making with and plii.yers Ray Knight and Dave
the Reds. .
~illns. An arbiter heard the cases
In both eases- Morgan Is 36 and
Norman '!/1 - the Reds are counting
•1111 the development of players in
their early 318, Infielder Ron Oester
and lefthanders Charlie Uebrandt
and Sheldon Burnside.
But Wagner salci the club may be
cl011e to signing one veteran It wants
desperately to keep, outfielder Ken

' is advising school officials -of several
considerations to reduce the
likelihood of such charges being
filed.
The association recommends administrators follow . established
guidelines for the administration of
corporal punislunent; not ad·
minister such punishment while under extreme emotional stress
brought on· by the student who is
being punished; always have at
least one disinterested witness
present during the administration of
such punislunent; make the punishment fit the offense; be extremely
careful when It becomes necessary
to physically "handle" a student;
and make a report of the circumstances, actions, reasons,
names of witnesses and everything
else pertinent to the event.

KEN GRIFFEY

Monday but said he would need ex·
tra time to review the argUments.
The Reds president predicted a
" nonnal" spring training and
regular season start despite strike
threats by the Players' Association
if their demarids for a new basic
agreemerit aren't met.
"We look for a normal spring
training," Wagner said. "I really
can't envision a strike; I really can't
see what the ballplayers have to
strikeabout.
•
"Major league baseball has the
best pension program In
professional ·sports. At age 55, a
player with 10 years' experience Is
eligible to receive ,I,71!4 a month for
life;"
One stumbling block has been the
players' resistance to owners'
proposals for maximum salaries for
each year's service up to five years
mthe majors. Those salary brackets
are the apparent reason Knight and
Collins felt obliged to go to arbitration.

noticed some little mistakes," she
said, "but in general, it was a good
run"

Epple recovered quickly after
nearly losing a ski at the top of the
course. "Without that ·mistake, I
could have been closer," she said. "I
don't know how much it cost me, but
I know that I really wanted to attack
after that."

Xill OLYMPIC

WINTER
GAMES
LAKE

PlAOD

1.980

Toledo rode a 102-73 victory over
Ball State to its second straight 'MidAmerican Conference regular
season basketball championship
Wednesday night as second place
Bowling Green fell to Central
Michigan.
The Rockets, 13-2, led by Jim
Swaney with 32 points, earned a bye
in the MAC post-season tournament
which begins next week.
"I'm pleased with our perfonn.ance," said Toledo Coach Bob
Nichols. "We've won 20 games this
season for the fourth straight year. I
thought we responded well."
Meanwhile, Bowllng Green saw its
·second-half lead crumble as the
Chippewas rolled to a 7[).72 triumph.
The upset dropped the Falcons to II·
4 in the MAC, while boosting Central
Michigan to 6-9 and a four-way tie
for sixth place with Eastern
Michigan, Ball State and Kent state.
The league's top seven teama will
win tournamerit berths.
1
In other MAC action, Western
. Michigan defeated Northern Illinois
74-65, Ohio University edged
Eastern Michigan 61 ~ and Miami
beat Kent State~Toledo, shooting 64 percent from
the field, built a 27-16 lead with II
minutes left in the first half. But Ball
State scored 10 unanswered points,
and the two teams traded baskets
unW Swaney gave ihe Rockets a 41·
38 advantage which they held onto
for good.
Ball State Coach Steve Yoder offered no excuses for his team.
"Toledo is just 'a great club. They
drilled us. We'll just try to forget this
one and go win on Saturday against

~ ;

VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and
• powerful
ST~AM EXTRACTION
CLEANING
10 looaen, dissolve · ·
· and eldraci

.

,

-p-aeated dirt and
re.-~..

, ..,

.'

•

•'

Geta carpets
cleaner. FaiteriAnd
l's 8aay to operate

too.

. .

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Miami," he said.
Central Michigan, paced by
Melvin McLaughlin with 16 points,
led by up to 12 points in the first half.
That advantage shrunk and then
vanished, however, as the Falcons
grabbed the lead three minutes into
the second half.
But two free throws by Ste~e· Rambad! with 5:03 remaining broke aSS68 tie, putting Central ahead for
good.
Western Michigan's Ke!Uiy Cunningham scored 30 points - the
seventh time this season that the
MAC's top scorer hit for at least 30
,points in a game - in the Broncos'
74-65 victory over Northern Illinois.
Dave Kuipers added 12 points for
the Broncos, 7-3.
Northern Illinois, 8-7, was led by
Shawn Thrower with 16 points.
In a seesaw battle which saw the
lead change five times, Miami
· finally finished 90-86 over Kent State

in overtime. The Redskins were led
by senior forward ·Rick Goins with 32
points.
" We almost lost it by free throws,
and we wind up winning it by free
throws," said Miami Coach Darrel
Hedric.
Miami, 7-3, led 37-32 at the half,
but Kent struck back for a 74-74 tie at
the end of reguiation. Harvey
Daniels paced the 1olden Flashes
with 24 points.
Ohio University, ill last place at :.10, outscored Eastern Michigan 22·
10 in the final II minutes for a 61-60
victory. The wlnniDg basket came
from Spindle Graves, with I :30
remaining.
The triumph marked Ohio Coach
Dale Bandy's last game at home.
" I feel that my early resignation
was a positive thing as it took the
pressure off and we· played much
better down the stretch," he said.

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"/ csl/ It 'The ConsciMCtJ 'of Russ/s'. ".

Yet, for Beth, the Games have
been something of a disappointment.
More had been expected from the
petite 20-year-old, partly because of
her brother's achievements and partly beea use of her own ac·
complishments which included the
world championship last year.
Norway's Jensen suggested that
Beth had lacked some of the fervor·
in these Games that she had
displayed last year.
"I · would agree with her that I
don't have the same fighting spirit,''
Heiden said. "I like to skate for
myself. This year, I sort of had the
feellng I had to skate for the press,
you know. To hell with you guys!"
Heiden, ll'ho earlier in the Games
had said she wished she could
change her last name, was hustled
out of her press conference after
losing her composure.

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

· Carpet Cleaning
Effectiveness
YOU CAN REALLY SEE I
RENT !\lEW,
PROFESSIONAL

•

s!J('ed skating and lour of them
belong to the Heidens. Wi,thout them,
the United States would be tied for
seventh instead of third in the medal
standings.

Weekend At Me·igs Inn

HERE'S NEW LIFE
FOR -TIRED
WALLS I

.
..
~

Annemarie Moser-Proell, winner
of the downhill, was seventh after
the first run of the GS and appeared
out of the medals chase.
American· Linda Fratianne was
third following the compulsory portion of the women's figure skating,
trailing Annet Potzch of East Germany and Dagmar" Lurz of West
Gennany. The compulsories count
for 30 percent of the competition and
Fratia!Uie will need outstanding
freestyle perfonnances in today's
short program and Saturday's long
program to overtake the Genn.ans.
"She'll have to do a super job
now," said Linda's coach, Frank
Carroll. " She'll have to not miss
anything in the short program and
skate the best in the long pcogram. If
she makes any mistakes, she's out."
With four days of competition
remaining, the Soviet Union and
East Gennany were tied in the
medal count with 17 each, although
the Russians lead in golds ~. Three
countries, Austria, Finland and the
United States, have six medals each.
All of America's bave come from

Toledo captures .championship

r-------,_------'-

Berry's World

'
fill the gap.
The result, say pessimists, is that
things could get even worse, with
unemployment rising more sharply
w~Ji\e prices remain high - kept
there by forces such as oil that do ·not
quickly react to supply and demand
+ and interest rates rising before
falllng gradually.

Questions beg to be answered:
Is it logical therefore to talk about
the recent expansion as if It were the
opposite of recession ~ Because the
statistics say the economy is expanding - and therefore not in
recession - should we applaud?
For individuals, the best measure
of whether times al'l! good or bad Is
not the official pronouncement that
we do or do JJot have a recession, but
·the immediate condition of the
pocketbook and the 8avtngs account.
And their condition, and that of the
credit account as well, are generally
in pretty poor shape. Worse
perhaps, than in many an officiai
recession.

then Mikhailo•· and Golikov scored
12 seconds apart early in the third
for a 4-3 Russian lead. Dan D' AIvise
tied it for Canada but then Mikhailov ·
and (}olikov scored again to give the
Soviets their victory.
The United States will face Russia
and Sweden opposes Finland when
the hockey medal round begins
Friday.
Besides speed skating, Wednesday's only other medal evert was
the men's. 4 x 10 kilometer cross .
country relay race won by the Soviet
Union. Anchored by ~kilometer
gold medalist Nikolai Zimjatov, the
Russians were timed in an Olympic
record I hour, 57 minutes, 3.46 secon·
ds. Norway took the silver and the
bronze went to defending champion ·
Finland.
In other action, Liechtenstein's
Heidi Wenzel grabbed the lead in the
first heat of the women's giant
slalom, timed in I minute, 14.33
seconds through the 50 gates of the
1,17()-meter Whiteface Mountain
course. Two West Germans, Irene
Epple and Christa Kinshofer, wete
2-3 with respective times of I : 14.75
and I: 15.19.
Wenzel, who won the silver medal
in the women's downhill earlier this
week, was pleased with her first
outing on the giant slalom course. ''I

Reds' president says team
has good overall speed, age

Could recession be worse?
The odd situation is not difficult to
undersiand, but it may be more dif.
ficult to explain. The plausible explanation is this:
People are making lots of money
but iq(l.ation and higher taxes, partly
for SOcial Security, are. taking it
away. They have material comforts,
but they have to borrow and cut into
savings to get them.
Rather than going into a shell of
depression, families are maintaining economic activity, perhaps
because they feel that is the way out
of the trap. Money is circulating.
Economic activity is fairly strong.
And official economic measures
reflect this activity.
Many economists · warn that
families are losing the' ability to
maintain buying activity. They have
tried mightuy; they have strained
their resources, and still they caMot
make much headway .
¥ they run out of financial ilnt!
psychic energy, the consumer
economy could take twnble, and
there is little evidence that other
areas of the economy can step in to

iinagination of fans here, swept into
the medal round of the competition,
defeating West Germany 4-2 and
comple~g its preliminary round
with four victories and a tie. A
sellout crowd JllDUlled the Olympic
field ho~ and the fans waved
American·flags and banners madly
to salute each U.S. goal.
It was not an easy victory. The
Americans roared from behind with
four consecutive goals, two of them
by Rob McClanahan, to erase a 2-0
deficit.
Also advancing in the hockey tournament were the Soviet Union,
Sweden anq Finland. Sweden
eliniinated Czechoslovakia 4-2, the
Russians beat Canada 6-1, and
Finland routed Holland 11l-3. In other
first round hockey, Norway tied
Romania 3-3 and Poland downed
Japan:.-!.
The defending champion Soviets
were forced to come from behind for
the second time in the hockey tournament and seared four goals in the
final period, two each by Boris
Mikhailov and Aleksandr Golikov, to
beat Canada.
Trailing 3-1 with 13 seconds left in
the second period, they rallied.
Aleksei Kasatonov's goal made It 3-2
before the end of that period and

'

School administrators get warnings
the administration ci corporal
punishment - Section 2919.22, also
known as the "endangering children
statute."
It states that no person supervising a minor "shall create a substantial risk to the health or safety of
such child, by violating a duty of
care, protection or support."
t The section also prohibits a person
from administering corporal punishment or other physical disciplinary
measures against the child, or
physically restraining the child ''in a
cruel manner for a prolongedperiod
so as to create a substantial risk of
serious physical harm to the child."
A violation of the section is a first
degree misdemeanor and is
punishable by a maximum of $1,000
and-or 6 months in prison.
The administrators' organization

team, · whi~h has captured the

'

harmonizin~

claimed to be the only candidate
with a difference in a look-alike field
of relativetr conservative
Republicans.
Connally underlined Reagan's absence. Dole said he is a younger
Ronald Reagan, and pointed to
Bush's defeats in Texas Senate
races.
The tone of the campaign has
changed. Reagan, once the leader,
needs a comeback after losing to
Bush in the Jan. 21 Iowa GOP
caucuses.
Baker, who claims to be the most
electable in a general election, is
ranked by pol)s third in New Hampshire as he was in Iowa. Dole, Connally and Crane are struggling to
keep their campaigns going, and Anderson wants an opening to make
him more than the GOP liberal.
That makes the stakes in New
Hampshire clearer than in Iowa,
which may encourage candidates to
take a chance and do some real
debating.
Reagan insists he won't speak ill
of other Republicans. But he is not
speaking too cordially of Bush these
days.

•

.

I

IDHE MEIGS INN
,

'

Phone 992-3629

.,

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· Pomeroy,
0.
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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 •• Thursday, Feb. 21. 111110
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Meigs Elementary Tourney
-

The Meigs Elementary Boosters

will sponsor a county fourth and fifUt

grade school basketball tournament
at the Meigs Junior High SchooL It
begins Saturday, Feb. 23 with the

. first game at 9 a.m. There will be 16
Meigs County teams.
First, second, third and fourth
place team trophies plus first place

individual trophies will be awarded.
Admission is adults $1, high school
students 50 cents, children 25 cents.
Booster president is Celesta Bush.
Tournament director is John Arnott.

Two co{leges advance in tourney
By Tile As1ocla""' l"reos
The Ohio Conference's two
nationally ranked basketball teams,
Wittenberg and Ohio Northern, advanced in the league's post-season
tournament - but just barely Wednesday night.
Wittenberg squeaked past stu~
born Ohio Wesleyan 43-41 to move into Friday night's Southern Division
finals against Muskingum, a ~
victory over Otterbein. ,
Ohio Northern salvaged a ~
triwnph over Heidelberg to win a
Northern Divisioo finais berth
against Kenyon, a surprising 46-4-4
winner in overtime over BaldwinWallace.
Wittenberg, top ranked in NCAA
Division m, got the winning basket
from Brian Agler with two seconds
left on the clock. The 24-1 Tigers had
led Wesleyan only once previously
during the game, 33-31 with 5:05left
to play.
Muskingum also came from
behind to beat ho8t Otterbein in the
other Southern Division semifinal.
Frank Doudl\8 scored the winning
basket for the 14-12 Muskies with 34
seconds remaJning to play.
Ohio Northern, ranked fifth in
Division ill, emerged victorious on a
pair of free throws by George
Thieman with 12 seconds left in Northem Division play at Wooster. The
game was close aU the way and was
deadlocked 23-28 at halftime. Pat
Koester paced Northern, ~. with
26 points.
Kenyon, which managed only four
league victories during the regular
season, pulled out its overtime

triumph on a basket by Scott Rogers
in the final second. The ~12 Lords
were paced by Bill Melts and Gary
Reinke with 18 and 17 points, respectively.
The winners of the division finals
Friday night will meet for the conference championship Saturday
night at Wooster.
Elsewhere in Ohio college basket·
ball action Wednesday night, Toledo
clinched its second straight MidAmerican Conference regular
season championship with a 102-73
verdict over Ball State and a 13-2
league record.
Second place Bllwling Green (II~)
fell out of the race by falling to Central Michigan 7!&gt;-72.
In other MAC games, Miami trimmed Kent State 9().86 in overtime,
Ohio University edged Eastern
Michigan 61--60 and Western
Michigan downed Northern Dlinois

the Musketeers ~72 for its fifth
straight 26-victory season. The Irish
have lost four games.
In Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
play, Bluffton defeated Manchester
93-86 while Findlay got by Eariilam
61~. Playing outside the league,
Defiance whipped Tri-state of Indiana 81-51.
Independent Steubenville defeated
Slippery Rock ·of Pennsylvania 71~.

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Jacksonville SO, Ceorgla Sl 47
Kentucky 71, M..lsaiistppi St. 65
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Stetson T7, Marquette 7Z
Tennessee st.''! Ml!tslssippl Valley 19
VanderbUI7!1F orldti 71
Viroinia 63. william I&lt; Mary 55
W. Vlrginlai9,Drue16l

Evansville 'II, SW Mlasourl13
Loyola, 01101, Volporiso 81
Miami, Ohto90; KentSt.ll6
Mlasourl81, Oklahoma 89
MOO&lt;beadSI. 82, SW
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Notre Dame 85, Xavter, Ohio 72
Ohio U. 61, E. Mlcl!l8on 60
Toledo 1112, BaU St. 71

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Colorado
WiMipeg

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Ot!cago4, Toronto2
LosAngelesJ, Boston 0
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Minnesota at NY Islander!
Washington at Atlanta

WiMipeg at Montreal
Friday'• Games
Edmontoo at Colorado
Phlladelphia at Vancouver

Racine and Syracuse moved to the
finals of the Meigs County Jaycees
Elementary Basketball Tournament
last night by posting victories in
semi-final round action.
Racine, after leading by just one
point anhe end of three periods of
play, exploded for 11 fourth quarter
points to defeat Letart, 21-14.
Cleland had a fine night as he netted 14 points for the winn.e rs whileS.
Wickline led Letart in scoring with
six points.
In the second game of the evening,
Syracuse defeated Tuppers Plains,
43-21, behind the scoring of M. Chancey and T. Adams, who each had 12
big points. R. Bissell and J. Cald·
well had nine and six points, respectively, for Tuppers Plains.
Tonight, in the final round action,
Letart and Tuppers Plains will
square off in the consolation game
beginning at 7 p.m
The championship game will
begin imniediately following, with
the presentation of trophies and eel'
tificates to be a feature of the
evening.

Latonia track results
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Princess Fool, ridden by Jack Neagle,
captured the $3,900 featured eighth
race for fillies and mares at Latonia
by two lengths Wednesday night and
paid $4.60, $2.40 and$Ul. .
Denise Gal was second, returning
$2.60 and $2.40, and third-place
Castaway Countess paid $4.60.
The 6-3 combination of Nibby Gal
and Nearcorite returned $91 in the
double.
In the new nightly double on the
eighth and ninth races, the 7-1 corn·
bination of Princess Fool and Peren·
Dial paid $9.60.
Attendance l!"as 2,799 and the
mutuel pool totaled $331,205.

CHICAGO (AP) - Oakland A's
owner Olaries 0. Finley, who has
presided over one of baseball's stormier operations, is hiring Billy Martin as manager.
Finley said Wednesday that he
and Martin would be at a news conference today In Chicago to make it
official, with Martin getting a twoyear contract.
Martin, twice the manager of the
New York Yankees who had
sometimes stonny tenures at Minnesota, Detroit and Texas, was fired
in October by Yankees owner
George Steinbrenner for getting into
a fight with a marshmallow
salesman in a Bloomington, Minn.,
bar.
Finley said he didn't discuss that
incident with Martin.
Martin had resigned as manager
during the 1978 season after calling
owner StelnbreMer a "convicted

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10 9 1261 133'1

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9 11 1174 1997

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-n&gt;Soallleno,MOIIdoy,Feb.ZI.
W.,._y, Feb. II - KC-NG playt
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Fridly- s.tllwetlefD.Sedtera wiaoer play•

BAHR CLOTHIERS

llauaa1'rlcew~utr.

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Z 11 ItS 1!37

Kyger Creek

liar." He was replaced by Bob
from Martin that the fonner
Lemon, who guided the Yankees to a
Yankees infielder would behave
World Series triumph.
himself, Finley said, " I never talk to
With the Yankees slumping last
a man like that. "
season, Steinbrenner replaced
"He's matured, " Finley said.
Lemon with Martin, moving up the "He's old enough to know right from
timetable under which Martin was
wrong ."
to retlll'IY as manager. But the ,
Martin, now 51 , was an Infielder
Yankees finished 13lf.r games off the for the Yankee'i_ in the 1950s and
pace in the American League East.
played for six other teams in his 12Asked if he had gotten assurances
year career.

KYIH Creek Y1 Norlb Ga01a aud South-

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Martin becoming A's manager

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Amerleaal.eque
MILWAUKEE BREWERS ~ Signed Jerry
Augustine, pitcher, and Ned V08t, CBtcher.
NEW YORK YANKEES- Named Patt_Blair
a scout
N1Uooal Lupe
NEW YORK METS ~ Traded Keith Bodie,
outfielder, to tbe Houston Astros' Columbw club
in the Southern League for~ie Baldwin,
cathcer-first baseman. Aa5i
Bladwin to
Tidewater of the International
gue.
.
8ASitETIIAU.
NaUou!BulelllollAuodaUoo
CLEVELAND CAVAIJERS - Placed c.mpy
Rll.'JSiill, forward, oo the injured reserve list. AcUYated Earl Tatum, guard.
FOOTB.UJ.
NIUooal Foott.U Lape
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Named Fred
GUck defensive buckfield coach, and Ed Beard
defenaive coordinator.
NEW YORK JETS - Si!lf'ed Carsoo J,ong,
kicker; Fred Arrington and Wayne Pierce,
linebackers; Neil Green, running back; Torn I~
polite, defensive end; and Terry Mastny, guard.
Acquired Alva Ules, defensive tsckle and Scott
Paplhwn, tighl end, 011 waivens.

NEW YORK RANGERS - Assigned Ed
Hospodar, defenseman, to New Haven of the
American Hockey League.

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HOCKEY

Tenth-ranked Notre Dame had lit. ·
tie trouble with Xavier, defeating

Kuhn.

Oeveland at Washington
Phoenix at Detroit
Philadelphia at San Diego
Friday'• Gamet
Phoenix at Atlanta
San Antonio at Washington
Houston at Utah
Denver at Golden State
New Jersey at Los Angeles

TOTAL DELIVERED PRICE

7~.

CASHENWDLBE NAMED
NEW YORK (AP) - Frank
Cashen, who turned the Baltimore
Orioles from also-rans into champions, apparently will be asked to do
the same for the New York Mets.
The Mets have called a news conference today, reportedly to announce that Cashen, 53, a former
general manager of the Orioles,
would run the team's baseball
operation. For the past year, Cashen
has been serving as an aide to
Baseball Commissioner Bowie

'l'll.undly'a Gamet

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Golden State 115, Hotl8lon 1112

1980 AMC SPIRIT DL LIFTBACK

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Phoenix
San Diego

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13 Z3 I 82 1!111
3li M 9 51 2%3
25 %3 10 SO 196
17 31 9 43 182

Pltiladelphia
NY hilander1
NY Rangers
Atlanta
Wuhington

MHh•ett Dlrialoa

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Patl'lck Dlvlaoa

GB

15 .150

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advance to finals

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 •• Thursday, Feb. 21. 111110
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!0 32 .484 16 1;

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29 .S31 •

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32 .492 6¥.1
26 31 .106 12
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Cleveland
Detroit

WHW:mCoofe~

39 26 .600

Milwaukee

l5 29 .M7 31fa
23 I() .365 I ~
21 II \;
20 &lt;:! .317 II

Denver
Chicago
Utah

Padlk: DtviaDI.
Seattle
Los Angeles

.::l· .J3 Yo

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21 .11511 1
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Portland
21 34 .152161&gt;
Golden Slate
19 &lt;:! .306 261;
Wedaaday't Gamet
Allanta 101, Milwaukee 103
Irxllana 131, New York 86

j A' ' t
7 cc

,. ,,

Meigs Elementary Tourney
-

The Meigs Elementary Boosters

will sponsor a county fourth and fifUt

grade school basketball tournament
at the Meigs Junior High SchooL It
begins Saturday, Feb. 23 with the

. first game at 9 a.m. There will be 16
Meigs County teams.
First, second, third and fourth
place team trophies plus first place

individual trophies will be awarded.
Admission is adults $1, high school
students 50 cents, children 25 cents.
Booster president is Celesta Bush.
Tournament director is John Arnott.

Two co{leges advance in tourney
By Tile As1ocla""' l"reos
The Ohio Conference's two
nationally ranked basketball teams,
Wittenberg and Ohio Northern, advanced in the league's post-season
tournament - but just barely Wednesday night.
Wittenberg squeaked past stu~
born Ohio Wesleyan 43-41 to move into Friday night's Southern Division
finals against Muskingum, a ~
victory over Otterbein. ,
Ohio Northern salvaged a ~
triwnph over Heidelberg to win a
Northern Divisioo finais berth
against Kenyon, a surprising 46-4-4
winner in overtime over BaldwinWallace.
Wittenberg, top ranked in NCAA
Division m, got the winning basket
from Brian Agler with two seconds
left on the clock. The 24-1 Tigers had
led Wesleyan only once previously
during the game, 33-31 with 5:05left
to play.
Muskingum also came from
behind to beat ho8t Otterbein in the
other Southern Division semifinal.
Frank Doudl\8 scored the winning
basket for the 14-12 Muskies with 34
seconds remaJning to play.
Ohio Northern, ranked fifth in
Division ill, emerged victorious on a
pair of free throws by George
Thieman with 12 seconds left in Northem Division play at Wooster. The
game was close aU the way and was
deadlocked 23-28 at halftime. Pat
Koester paced Northern, ~. with
26 points.
Kenyon, which managed only four
league victories during the regular
season, pulled out its overtime

triumph on a basket by Scott Rogers
in the final second. The ~12 Lords
were paced by Bill Melts and Gary
Reinke with 18 and 17 points, respectively.
The winners of the division finals
Friday night will meet for the conference championship Saturday
night at Wooster.
Elsewhere in Ohio college basket·
ball action Wednesday night, Toledo
clinched its second straight MidAmerican Conference regular
season championship with a 102-73
verdict over Ball State and a 13-2
league record.
Second place Bllwling Green (II~)
fell out of the race by falling to Central Michigan 7!&gt;-72.
In other MAC games, Miami trimmed Kent State 9().86 in overtime,
Ohio University edged Eastern
Michigan 61--60 and Western
Michigan downed Northern Dlinois

the Musketeers ~72 for its fifth
straight 26-victory season. The Irish
have lost four games.
In Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
play, Bluffton defeated Manchester
93-86 while Findlay got by Eariilam
61~. Playing outside the league,
Defiance whipped Tri-state of Indiana 81-51.
Independent Steubenville defeated
Slippery Rock ·of Pennsylvania 71~.

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Jacksonville SO, Ceorgla Sl 47
Kentucky 71, M..lsaiistppi St. 65
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Stetson T7, Marquette 7Z
Tennessee st.''! Ml!tslssippl Valley 19
VanderbUI7!1F orldti 71
Viroinia 63. william I&lt; Mary 55
W. Vlrginlai9,Drue16l

Evansville 'II, SW Mlasourl13
Loyola, 01101, Volporiso 81
Miami, Ohto90; KentSt.ll6
Mlasourl81, Oklahoma 89
MOO&lt;beadSI. 82, SW
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Notre Dame 85, Xavter, Ohio 72
Ohio U. 61, E. Mlcl!l8on 60
Toledo 1112, BaU St. 71

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Vancouver
Colorado
WiMipeg

Wales Coofereoc:e
Adallll Dlvllloo
Buffalo

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Boston

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Toronw

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84 !21 175
54 123 245
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Piit. burgh 7, iktrolt 5
Buffalo ol, Winnipeg 3

Ot!cago4, Toronto2
LosAngelesJ, Boston 0
'l'banclly'a G1me.
Minnesota at NY Islander!
Washington at Atlanta

WiMipeg at Montreal
Friday'• Games
Edmontoo at Colorado
Phlladelphia at Vancouver

Racine and Syracuse moved to the
finals of the Meigs County Jaycees
Elementary Basketball Tournament
last night by posting victories in
semi-final round action.
Racine, after leading by just one
point anhe end of three periods of
play, exploded for 11 fourth quarter
points to defeat Letart, 21-14.
Cleland had a fine night as he netted 14 points for the winn.e rs whileS.
Wickline led Letart in scoring with
six points.
In the second game of the evening,
Syracuse defeated Tuppers Plains,
43-21, behind the scoring of M. Chancey and T. Adams, who each had 12
big points. R. Bissell and J. Cald·
well had nine and six points, respectively, for Tuppers Plains.
Tonight, in the final round action,
Letart and Tuppers Plains will
square off in the consolation game
beginning at 7 p.m
The championship game will
begin imniediately following, with
the presentation of trophies and eel'
tificates to be a feature of the
evening.

Latonia track results
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Princess Fool, ridden by Jack Neagle,
captured the $3,900 featured eighth
race for fillies and mares at Latonia
by two lengths Wednesday night and
paid $4.60, $2.40 and$Ul. .
Denise Gal was second, returning
$2.60 and $2.40, and third-place
Castaway Countess paid $4.60.
The 6-3 combination of Nibby Gal
and Nearcorite returned $91 in the
double.
In the new nightly double on the
eighth and ninth races, the 7-1 corn·
bination of Princess Fool and Peren·
Dial paid $9.60.
Attendance l!"as 2,799 and the
mutuel pool totaled $331,205.

CHICAGO (AP) - Oakland A's
owner Olaries 0. Finley, who has
presided over one of baseball's stormier operations, is hiring Billy Martin as manager.
Finley said Wednesday that he
and Martin would be at a news conference today In Chicago to make it
official, with Martin getting a twoyear contract.
Martin, twice the manager of the
New York Yankees who had
sometimes stonny tenures at Minnesota, Detroit and Texas, was fired
in October by Yankees owner
George Steinbrenner for getting into
a fight with a marshmallow
salesman in a Bloomington, Minn.,
bar.
Finley said he didn't discuss that
incident with Martin.
Martin had resigned as manager
during the 1978 season after calling
owner StelnbreMer a "convicted

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3 too 38l
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9 !OS 178

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W.,._y, Feb. II - KC-NG playt
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Fridly- s.tllwetlefD.Sedtera wiaoer play•

BAHR CLOTHIERS

llauaa1'rlcew~utr.

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Kyger Creek

liar." He was replaced by Bob
from Martin that the fonner
Lemon, who guided the Yankees to a
Yankees infielder would behave
World Series triumph.
himself, Finley said, " I never talk to
With the Yankees slumping last
a man like that. "
season, Steinbrenner replaced
"He's matured, " Finley said.
Lemon with Martin, moving up the "He's old enough to know right from
timetable under which Martin was
wrong ."
to retlll'IY as manager. But the ,
Martin, now 51 , was an Infielder
Yankees finished 13lf.r games off the for the Yankee'i_ in the 1950s and
pace in the American League East.
played for six other teams in his 12Asked if he had gotten assurances
year career.

KYIH Creek Y1 Norlb Ga01a aud South-

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MIDWPORT, 01110

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26 Zl JCI 6Z 191 193
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•

Martin becoming A's manager

Nltlonal Hockey l...equt!

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Amerleaal.eque
MILWAUKEE BREWERS ~ Signed Jerry
Augustine, pitcher, and Ned V08t, CBtcher.
NEW YORK YANKEES- Named Patt_Blair
a scout
N1Uooal Lupe
NEW YORK METS ~ Traded Keith Bodie,
outfielder, to tbe Houston Astros' Columbw club
in the Southern League for~ie Baldwin,
cathcer-first baseman. Aa5i
Bladwin to
Tidewater of the International
gue.
.
8ASitETIIAU.
NaUou!BulelllollAuodaUoo
CLEVELAND CAVAIJERS - Placed c.mpy
Rll.'JSiill, forward, oo the injured reserve list. AcUYated Earl Tatum, guard.
FOOTB.UJ.
NIUooal Foott.U Lape
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Named Fred
GUck defensive buckfield coach, and Ed Beard
defenaive coordinator.
NEW YORK JETS - Si!lf'ed Carsoo J,ong,
kicker; Fred Arrington and Wayne Pierce,
linebackers; Neil Green, running back; Torn I~
polite, defensive end; and Terry Mastny, guard.
Acquired Alva Ules, defensive tsckle and Scott
Paplhwn, tighl end, 011 waivens.

NEW YORK RANGERS - Assigned Ed
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American Hockey League.

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HOCKEY

Tenth-ranked Notre Dame had lit. ·
tie trouble with Xavier, defeating

Kuhn.

Oeveland at Washington
Phoenix at Detroit
Philadelphia at San Diego
Friday'• Gamet
Phoenix at Atlanta
San Antonio at Washington
Houston at Utah
Denver at Golden State
New Jersey at Los Angeles

TOTAL DELIVERED PRICE

7~.

CASHENWDLBE NAMED
NEW YORK (AP) - Frank
Cashen, who turned the Baltimore
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the same for the New York Mets.
The Mets have called a news conference today, reportedly to announce that Cashen, 53, a former
general manager of the Orioles,
would run the team's baseball
operation. For the past year, Cashen
has been serving as an aide to
Baseball Commissioner Bowie

'l'll.undly'a Gamet

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San Antonio 1~, Chicago 117
Kansas Cily!O'I, Seattle 100
Bostoo 1115, Utah !Ill
Loe Angelet 116, Denver 103
Golden State 115, Hotl8lon 1112

1980 AMC SPIRIT DL LIFTBACK

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Phoenix
San Diego

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:II 5 13 91 245
13 Z3 I 82 1!111
3li M 9 51 2%3
25 %3 10 SO 196
17 31 9 43 182

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NY hilander1
NY Rangers
Atlanta
Wuhington

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�7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~er~o:_y,~0~·~·Th~u~rs:da~Y:_:·F:_:e:_: b: _·

2:1: _•1::980=-- --------------------------l

:Mason County
I

1

News Notes

By Aim• .'fJ~t·&amp;h.tll

!
I

I

MASON - The Mason Historical
Society enjoyed diMer and film,
"Williamsburg the Patriot" when
the group met on Saturday evening
at the fanner Lewis home on Brown
Street. The film was shown by Mri.
Ray Proffitt.
In keeping with American History
month, Mrs. Lee (Mildred) Gibbs,
and Mrs. Vernon Grinstead centered
the dining tables with red streamers
on which small pictures of President
Washington and President Lincoln
were placed along with miniature
flags. Favors included gum drop
hearts each with a miniature flag.
Mrs. Ray Proffitt presented the
devotionals.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Grin-·
stead, Reverend William Dawson.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs.
Ray Proffitt, Mr. and · Mrs. Russ
Barton, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Alexander.
The next meeting will be "'· un
Tuesday, March 4, at 10:30 a.m.
Representatives of Meigs Historical
Society are expected to attend.
MASON - The Mason United
Methodist Women program, Commitment to Mission, was presented
by Mrs. Ray Proffitt, on Monday
evening at Mason United Methodist
Church with Mrs. Maxine Arnold
and Mrs. Frances Stewart as
hosteases.
Attending were Mrs. Lois Test,
Mrs. Earlene Bumgardner, Mrs.
LaVera Yeager, Mrs. Wah Zerkle,
Mrs. Joyce Carson, Mrs. MaDora
Wildman and Mrs. Maxine Arnold.
Mason and area personals
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Troy and sons
have moved to their new mobUe
home on the lot of her aunt, Miss
Stella Gress, Brown St.
Retha Lewis has returned home
from Pleasant Valley Hospital
where she has been hospitalized with
pneumonia.

...
...

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.... ..
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... ,...

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"

TAKES FURTIIER TRAINING
ALAMORGORDO, N. M. - Captain Edward M. Brown, son of Frances G. Ohlinger of 616 E. Fifth St.,
New Haven, W. Va., has graduated
from U. S. Air Force fighter lead-in
training at Holloman Air Force
Base, here.
Captain Brown now goes to Luke
Air Force Base, Ariz., for further
training.
A 1966 graduate of Wahama High

School, Mason, W. Va. , the captain
was commissioned in 1971 through
the ROTC program. In 1972 he earned a master's degree from Ohio
University of Athens.
His wife, Dortha, is the daughter
of Martin Wilcoxen of Racine, Ohio.
'

...

BffiTIIDAY CELEBRATED
MASON - The birthdays of Mrs.
Clarence (Evelyn) lhle, Mason, her
granddaughter, Evelyn Mae
Russell, Mason, and grandson,
Brian Johnson, Middleport, were
celebrated on Sunday with a surprtse birthday dinner hosted by her
daughters at her home. The
honorees received several gifts.
Attending were the above named
and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Russell, Mason; Mrs.
Brian Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Johnson, Mrs. Alice Faye
Gardner, stephanie and Tiffany. all
of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Van
Meter and Deann.
ATTEND FUNERAL

Several Clifton and Mason
residents attended the funeral of

A valentine theme was carried out
for the Star Garden Club meeting
held at the home of Mrs. Pauline
Atkins and Mrs. Ruby Halliday.
Mrs. Neva Nicholson presided at
the meeting which opened with Mrs.
Sharon Jewell giving devotions from
Guideposts on valentine's day along
with scripture from John 3.
For roll call the members named
their favorite garden magazine.
Mrs. Virginia Nelson gave the
secretary and treasurer's reports.
Mrs. Stella Atkins was program
chairman with Mrs. Allegra Will
talking about starting seeds at
home. She said fresh soil in a

sui table container is needed and suggested using a salt shaker to plant
fine seed. She said plants should be
transplanted when there are two
sets of leaves, and that 10 days
should be allowed for hardening
plants before they put into the
garden.
Miss Ruby Diehl talked about
ferns, the many different kinds, and
their need for humidity. She suggested spraying or setting the plants
in a dish filled with gravel and
water. Miss Diehl also noted that
rain water is best for ferns and that
charcoal should be put into the pots
to keep the soil neurtralized.

By Sharon Michael
Meigs County Cancer Unit
Public loforma lion Chairman
Oral cancer strikes approximately
1,200 persons in Ohio each year and
causes 425 deaths per year in Ohio. It
is found most frequently in men over
40 years of age and the incidence is
three times higher in males than in
females.
Factors contributing to oral cancer are poor oral hygiene and
chronic irritation such as that
caused by jagged teeth, projecting
fillings, and ill·fittintg dentures.
Those more likely to get oral can·
cer are smokers of cigarettes, cigars
or pipe. The death rate from mouth
cancer for cigarette smokers is four
times higher than for non-smokers.
The following should be reported
to the doctor : a sore in the mouth
that fails to heal and bleeds rather
easily; a lump or thickening ; a
VARIABLE TAXES
WASHINGTON (AP) -State trai&gt;
sportation planners are eyeing
variable gasoline taxes as a solution
to inflation-pinched highway repair
budgets, says The Road Information
Program.
The average state tax on gasoline
is 8.35 cents .per gallon, TRIP says.
Two states, Washington and New
Mexico, now have fuel taxes that
fluctuate with the cost of gasoline up to as much as 12 cents a gallon in
Washington.

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offers tips

white patch; a sore throat; difficulty
in chewing or swallowing food; the
sensation of something in the throat;
restricted movement of the tongue
or jaws; discomfort in wearing denlures.
A regular yearly dental checkup
should be done and the dentist will
notice anything abnormal, but if you
should notice any of the above things
or anything abnormal between the
appointments with the dentist, and it
lasts more than two weeks, a
physician should he seen.
For further ioformation or pamphlets on "oral cancer" notify the
cancer office on E. Main St. at the
Senior Citizens Center or call 992·
7531.

Helping'Hands meet
Gladys Reynolds entertained the
Helping Hand Club at her home
recently. The meeting was opened
by Bessie Ingles with the flag salute
and the Lord's Prayer.
For devotions, Joy Foreman read
11

Requirements for becoming a
chapter of the Ohio Genealogical
Society was discussed during the recent meeting of the Meigs County
Genealogical Society. Mrs. June
Ashley, president, presided at the
meeting of the Society which now
has a membership of 26.
It was noted that the Society must
now set up its by-laws and submit its
membership lis( and by-laws for the
approval of the board of directors of
the Ohio Genealogical Society. It is
hoped that the charter can be obtained at the annual meeting of the
O.G.S. in May.
The resignation of Eugene Smjth
as treasurer was accepted with
regret and a temporary appointment was made. A discussion of the
role of the Monnon Church in
genealogical work was held. The
largest conference ever held on
famUy research will be in August,
1980 at Salt Lake City, the location rJ.
the main branch of the Mormon
Library. The nearest branch of this
library is located at Huntington, W.
Va.
The Society decided that each
member should submit at least one
five·generaton chart on his

Mrs. Ruby Halliday gave tips for
March noting that now is the time to
study seed catalogs. The blue ribbon
valentine arrangements on display
were by Mrs. Nelson and Mrs.
Pauline Atkins.
Mrs. Stella Atkins received the
hostess gift. Valentines were given
each member and refreshments
were §erved by the hostesses
assisted by Mrs. Jewell. Several
members were reported ill or with illness in their families. The club
prayer closed the meeting. Mrs.
Wanetta Radekin wUI host the
March meeting.

Heart Assn.

Oral cancer warnings
given by cancer unit

1t's Later Than Ever Before," and

the legend of the valentine was read
by Carol Alexander who noted that
sweethearts were sending valentines to each other in !710.
A humorous poem, "Women" was
read by Mrs. Foreman, and Mary
Thabet read "Diary of the Unborn
Child."
In the absence of Lois Young, the
lesson' "Don't Panic" was taught by
Bessie Ingles. She shared ideas on
measures to be taken in the event of
snow storms, blizzards, and floods.
She stressed the Importance of being
educated on how to handle a disaster
should one occur and how to
minimize losses.
Members made plans to hold a
special meeting at ~hich time lap
robes for shutins will be made. A
visit to Addie Brown who remains in
Holzer Medical Center was planned
and members were asked to collect
materials for a scrapbook.
The door prize was won by Lucy
Johnson . Heart and flowers
decorated the refreshment table and
a cake adorned with roses was served with other refreshments.

"Don't gamble with your life,"
says the Meigs County Heart
Branch. Kick the cigarette habit and
help fight heart disease.
Research indicates that smoking
Jennifer Badgley
contributes to or speeds up the
development of coronary artery
Badgleyengagement told .
disease, a common forerunner to
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Lowman of Hartford are announcing the apheart attack. Death rates from heart
proaching
marriage of their daughter, Jennifer Lee Badgley, toHichard Lee
attacks in men range from 50 to 200
Young,
son
of Mr. and Mrs. George (Dick) Young of Grandvtew Heights. ·
percent higher among cigarette
Miss
Badgley
is a graduate of Wahama High School, and her fiance is a
smokers than among non-smokers,
.
graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
according to Dr. James WitheraU,
The wedding will be an event of Feb. 16, 4 p.m., at the Salem Communtty
President of the Meigs County Heart
.. Church, West Colwnbia. The gracious custom of open church will be obBranch.
served, and a reception will follow at the home of the groom.
"Studies show that tobacco smoke
contains nicotine, a highly toxic
substance that acts on the heart,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
VETERANS MEMORIAL
blood vessels, a digestive tract,
DISCHARGES FEB. 20
Admitted-David
Jenkins, Midkidneys and nervous system. Ninety
Terry Adams, Lacey Barton, dleport; Charles Knopp, Mason; ·
percent of the nicotine is absorbed
Elmer Blue, Neva Benjamin, Bar- Roger Manley, Middleport; Lillian
when a cigarette is puffed without
bara Boyd, Goldie Braford, Eugene Schenkle, Reedsville; Mickey
inhaling," Dr. Wi1beraU said.
Buckley, Betty Cochran, Butch Mugrage, Racine; Oscar Imboden,
Tobacco smoke also contains
Cochran, Leonard Conner, Beverly Minersville; Mary Nichols, Rutland. •
small amounts of arsenic, tar and
CottrUI, Anna Cummins, Stephanie
Discharged--Gloria Kapteina ,
carbon monoxide. The higher level
Danford, Judy Davis, Ramona Gar- Mildred Mankin, Everett Ransom,
of carbon monoxide in the blood
ton, Carl Griffiths, Noah Haskons, Robert Smith, Cfifford Christy.
makes the heart beat faster, raises
MUton Houdashelt, Ronald Howard,
the blood pressure and narrows
Joann Johnson, Robert Kitts, Pearl
blood vessels of the skin, especially
Marklns, Jonathan Massie, Larry
in the fingers and toes. For persons
Massile, Jolm McGuire, Roy Price,
already stricken with blood vessel
PROPERTY SALE ORDERED
Clara Pullins, Carrie Sanford,
diseases, smoking aggravates their
An
order of sale of property in
Warren Sheets, Gina Silva, John
conditions by constricting vessels
Pomeroy
for payment of $436.08 in
Steele, Lena thomas, Delores
already narrowed and damaged.
real
estate
taxes has been filed in the
Waugh, Victoria White, Willa Win·
"All cigarette smokers run an exMeigs
County
ColllMion Pleas Court
ters, James Wood, Etta Wright. .
tra risk of coronary disease in proby
George
M. «:ollins, county.
BffiTHS
portion to the number of cigarettes
treasurer,
against
Roger Davidson,
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Campbell,
smoked," Dr. WitheraU said. He ex·
et al.
son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
plained that heavy smokers have
Wickline, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr.
higher death rates from heart atand Mrs. Roger Moore, son, Beaver;
tacks than moderate smokers.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Sturgill,
It's never too late to quit smoking.
daughter, Vinton.
Your "Extra Touch"
According to the Heart .Association,
Florist Since 1957
fanner smokers enjoy a renewed
feeling of self&lt;anfidence and the
D~ODANCEPLANNED
I
I
reduced risk of being stricken by one
A disco dance will be held from 8
pt.~
I
of the chronic diseases associated
toll p.m. Saturday at the Mason Fire I
Department Headquarters with I
with smoking - emphysema, bronFLORIST
I
chitis, cancer a!id heart disease.
music by Starship Sound. Ad·
I"H. 99:2-2644
mission is $1 for the dance which is
For more information on smoking
352 E. Main, -Pomer'oy
being sponsored by the Mason
and heart disease, as well as weight
Your FTD Florist
control after quitting, contact the
Rescue Squad.
'
Central Ohio Heart Chapter Branch
at 614-228-6327. "Kick the habit" and
help the Heart Branch In its fight for
your life.

Young

Help for blood stain

c_2

Mark Hatcher, age 24, at Buffalo
United Methodist Church on Sunday.
Mark is the son of Rev. and Mrs. 0.
B. Hatcher, fanner pastor of Clifton
United Methodist Church, and new
pastor of Buffalo and Midway
United Methodist Churches.
Hatcher died in Prescott, Arizona,
when a jeep in which he was riding
reportedly overturned. He was
recently discharged fonn the U. S.
Military · Police and had been
visiting friends in Arizona.
TIMELY BREAK·IN
Three Clifton residents were inBATH, England (AP) - Two
jured on Sunday while in the funeral
prisoners who were part of an un·
procession attending the Hatcher
supervised work crew are being
funeral on Rt. 62. Slightly injured
commended for their initiative in
wre Mrs. Wilma Blake, Mrs. Chester
WE
ARE
NOT
AMUSED
breaking into an elderly widow's cot·
Oliver and Mrs. Rhoda Fox. The acBASINGSTOKE,
England
(AP)
tage.
cident occurred when the vehicle ·
Teenager David Low's tap dance
The men, working in a churdriven by Chester Oliver hit the
had
a
crowd
cheering,
but
the
imchyard,
heard an alann buzzer
vehicle driven by Mrs. Irene Fisher.
promptu
act
didn't
impress
the
two
coming
from
a nearby church house.
The brakes on the Oliver vehicle
policemen
who
joined
the
show.
They
broke
in
and found Florence
reportedly wouldn't hold. No citaHe
was
dancing
on
the
roof
of
their
Gilson lying in her hed in pain and
tions were made.
police car.
unable to move.
Mrs. Fox was a passenger in the
Fisher car and the other passengers r-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:~
were in the Oliver vehicle.

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"Special tax benefits ,for Senior
Citizens? ... I shoulda
come here last year!"

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COMPLETE S10CK
GOOD THRU MONDAY

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••

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II you are 65 or over, you are entitled to
tax ~
benefits. AI H&amp;A '31ock, we know all the deductions anci
credi•, that can help Senior Citizens.

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li&amp;R RLOCit
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THE. INCOME TAX PEOPLE
611 E . MAIN ST.
POMEROY,O.
OPEN-9 AM. TO
6 P .M. WEEKDAYS
HSATURDAY
PHONE 992· 3795

2nd &amp; BROWN' ST.
MASON, W.VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M.· 5P.M.
PHONE 773·9128

I .

30% OFF

SWISHER LOHSE

ONLY

Nova .. ' the official shoe-of the future by Thorn-MeAn Soft
leather uppers that cradle your feet in comfort And new longwearing bottoms that put a little fun in e'&gt;lery step. ,

herltag~

:h ous,e .

OF SHOES

Middleport, 0.

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The Philathea Women of the Middleport Church of Christ enjoyed a
luncheon at tbe church Thursday
hosted by Mrs. Regina Swift, Mrs.
Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Farie Cole,
Mrs. Beulah Roush, and Mrs. Cathy

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COATS

Mrs. Debbie Melton gave the
blessing, and the program included
Lois Pauley of The Crafty Ladies doing paintings with oil and acrylic.
Mrs. Eleanor Lohse won a painting
of daisies and leaves which Mrs.
Pauley did on slate. Door prizes
were won by Mrs. Clyda Allensworth
and Mrs. Regina Swift. Mrs. Pauley
was presented a gift from Philathea.
Mrs. Betty McKinley presided at
the meeting with thank you notes being read from the Lung Associaton,
the Lorena Rice family, and Rita
Oberholzer.
'
Reported ill were Jessie Saunders
and Blanche Wolfe. Phyllis Gilkey
was welcomed ·as a new member.
Clyda Allensworth and Frances
Roush were nained to the
nominating committee.
Attending were those named and
Mrs. Martha ChUds, Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Mrs. Margaret Jones, Mrs.
Ida ChUds, Mrs. Margaret Lallance,
Mrs. Louise McElhinney, Mrs. Rose
Reynolils, Mrs. Clara Conroy, Mrs.
Margaret Butcher, Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs. Mary Bailey, and Mrs.
Dorothy Roach, and guests, Mrs.
Pauley, Mrs. Lohse, and Mrs. Peggy
Brickles.
PEARL HARBOR
GARDENA, Calif. (AP) - It has
been more than 38 years since the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
but the event has not been forgotien.
It was in Gardena that the Pearl
Harbor Survivors Association was ·
born, and it has grown to 7,1100 members - now in their 50s and older who were ori Oahu or not more than
three mUes offshore frotp 7:55a.m.
to 9:45a.m. on Dec. 7,1941.

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Ca•yKa•em ·

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Weight loss recognized
Members were recognized for
weight loss at the Sllnderella Diet
Classes held during the past week.
At the Mason classes the ones losing
the most weight were Gweanna
Wilkes, Phyllis Bennett, Rae Young,
and Pearl Briles. Runners-up were
Linda Clark, Judy Roach, and Zelia
Riley.
The the Middleport classes, Rhonda Roush lost the most weight and
Charlotte Erlewine was the runnerup one week, and Rhonda Roush and
Dodie Seth lost the most weight the
second week. Eight new members
were added to the Mason Classes,
andsixix. new members to the Middleport classes. JoAnn Newsome is
instructor.

NAME OMITIED
The name of Roger Balser, an
eighth grader at the Eastern Junior
High School, was unintentionally
omitted from the school's honor roll
in Wednesday's edition of The Sen·
tine!.

SHOP

MASON FURN IJURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sal.
8:30 los: oo Thur~d"v tiil12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

Fonner Nazi Gestapo officer
Adolph Eichmann was sentenced to
death by an Israeli court in !961.

.$.A TURD AYS •
t til tioe" ___J
L----=-

'· '

Hours:
9 : 30to5:00 . •
Mon.tftru sat.
9:301111 :00
Friday

Mason, W. Va.

773·5592

PRICES IN EFFECT THURSDAY 3

Cost
Prices
Are
Forgotten!

FINAL MARKDOWN!

WOMEN$
SWEATERS
Slipcover And Cardigans
Entire Stock Goes
Were Values To 116.99

$300 • · $400
'$500. $700

Time to clean our racks, at great
savings for you. Final reductions
on winter items. We need room .
Come. shop and save.

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LONG SLEEVE
AND
SHORT SLEEVE

WOMEN$
TOPS &amp; BLOUSES
FORMER 14.69 TO '10.99
SMALL LOT
i

ONE &amp; 1WO PIECE

SIZE: Ages 2 to 16 Months

GIRLS
.
.TOPS

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DEAR HELEN.
Thank you for printing the letter
from the woman whose husband has

such strange sexual tastes (gagging
her with the brides' section of their
daily paper ). It gave me coura&amp;,e to
seek help on a matter which is
threatening to ruin our 4-month-old
marriage.
The problem? My husband likes
for me to lie him up and humiliate
him while I'm dressed like a stripper
in G-string and high heels.
I'm not sexually inhibited, but also
I don't enjoy domination . Am l right
in being turned off by this? Do you
think there iS any chance we could
be compatible] .Are these things
common in married couples? -TilE
TENDER TYPE
DEART.T.:
Demands for kinky sex (bondage,
humiliation, domination, and even
wilder fonns of sado-masochism)
have contributed to many divorces. I
say "contributed" because often
weird sexual expectations are linked
with personality defects that make
marriage impossible.
Psychiatry might "un-warp" your
husband. But if he likes the way he
is, I see little pope for a "straight" in
this kind of union.- H.

Erwin.

50% OFFJ·I I

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work. Would I be selfish if I told my
husband I want to remain fri ends
but prefer to live alone, since this is
the way I fe.el most of the time? TIRED OF BEING LEFT OUT AND
WANTS OUT
DEAR TIRED:
Tell me, has "having a kind, good
considerate (apparently male )
friend at work" suddenly brought
your husband's faults into focus ?
Don't scrap a so-so marriage until
you're positive it can't he improved.
And this starts with telling your man
how you feel , not playing the silent
martyr while you keep lists of all his
thoughtless actions.- H.

BY HELEN BOTTEL
By King Features Syndicate
DEAR HELEN:
When we are out to dinner with
other couples and one of the wives
goes to the ladies room with me,
both her husband and my husband
will rush to pull her chair out and
seat her, while I scramble for
myself.
When my sister-in-law had her second baby, my husband sent a dozen
ros~. He has never sent me one
daisy 1 We have three children.
On introductions, he always leaves
me out as if I'm not there , and I sure
wish I weren't.
• In the service, he named his father
as "next of kin" to be notified in case
of death or injury.
l have a high-paying job, and a
kind, good considerate friend at

All WINTER MERCHANDISE

PAJAMAS

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Philathea
Women
meet

Skirts

SNOWSUITS ·

$200 • $300 • $400
Were

Small lot. Not all
sizes. but maybe
yours. Values to
$6.99.

8.99

1

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BOYS'
OUT THEY GO • ENTIRE STOCK

SHIRTs

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located in the Gallia County records,
and that marriage records from 1805
to 1819 for the northern part of the
county are located in the Athens
County records. Earlier marriage
records are located in the
Washington County records.
It was announced that the
genealogical committee ri the
Athens County Historical Society is
sponsoring a talk by Joy Wade
Moulton, a certified genealogist who
writes a weekly. column for the Columbus Dispatch. The talk will be on
March 3, 8 p.m. on the third floor of
Alden Library at Ohio University.
Those interested in attending should
contact Mrs. Robert Ashley if car·
pooling is desired. A discussion of
ways to locate proofs of relationships between generations was held.
Meigs County records were discussed and it was noted that some cour·
thouse records are now hoitsed in the
archives at Alden Library of Ohio
University. Also the Meigs Museum
houses many of the .naturalizations
of inunigrants to Meigs County.
The meeting concluded with a tour
of the library at the Meigs Museum.
Next meeting was set for March 16, 2
p.m. at the Museum.

BOYS &amp; GIRLS'

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Kenneth McCullougJI, R. Ph.
Charles ,R iffle, R: Ph.
Ronald HaMing, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m. ,
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and 5 to9 p.m,
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH.992·2955
~riendly Service
E. Main
Open Nights tll9 ·
Pomeroy, 0.

Reported ill were Mrs. Margaret
Kincaid, Mrs. Martha Hunnei and
Mrs. EVelyn Murray. Devotions on
last Sunday's lesson were presented
by Ed Evan!!, teacher of the class.
Mrs. Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Evans
served refreshments to Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Stewart, Miss Thelma
Boyer, Mrs, Peggy Brickles, Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Wilson, Hennan Kin·
caid, Mrs. Van Meter, Mrs. Martha
Hanel, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Evans,
Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs. Dorothy
Roach, Mrs. Dorothy Baker, Mrs.
Delcie Forth, and Paul and Pete
Brlckles.

Man ignores wife; other-does not

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99

N. 2nd Ave.

Appointmen1Avallable But Not Necessary

Homebuilders Class of the Middleport Church of Christ turned in
dimes totating1lYer $109.
Meeting at the church the
Homebuilders voted to purchase
three Easter Ulles for the sanctuary.
Donations to the projector fund from ·
Billy Rice and VIola Edwards were
acknowledged. Mrs. Nora Rice
volunteered to rearrange flowers
from llinerals for use in the church.
It was noted that the book store will
replace the damaged hymnals.
Mack Stewart gave the opening
prayer with Mrs. Coleen Van Meter
presiding at the meeting. Mrs.
Clarice Erwin and Mrs. Dorothy
Roach gave the officers reports.

Heart attack strikes any time, any
place. Too often, victims wait for
hours before seeking help. Don't
delay - half of all heart attack victims wbo die do so before they reach
the hospital. Know the warning
signals and act promjllly when they
OCCUf. Jt COuld SBVe your life, Ask I
.your heart association.

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The projector fund stood at fM4.67
Tuesday night after members of the

HEART REAL11i IDNT

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cookie sheet and this prevents the
decorations from spilling over the
cookie sheet. They also adhere bet·
ter . when baked. I have also found
that it is easier to blend the dry ingredients into the wet mixture with a
pastry blender and then relrigerate
until ready to bake, thus keeping the
dough chilled between bakings. The
pastry blender works much better
than a spatula.- DOROTHY
DEAR POU.Y - After Christmas
we had some popcorn balls that were
too hard to eat but they became nice
and soft after I put them in a zip lock
bag with several fresh bread slices.
-FLORENCE
DEAR POU.Y - l am answering
Alice who had some peacock blue
place mats that were faded in spots.
l have used instant shoe coloring on
my faded place mats and have
always had good results. Be sure to
use the color conditioner first and
follow directions exactly. You do not
have to bother about matching colors as you can make them any color
you want. I buy this at a drug store.ESTHER
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
col umn . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care ofthis
newspaper.

Homebuilders Cklss builds projector fund

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MEN'S B·ILLFOLDS

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By Pooy Cramer
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
POU.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU.Y- My husband had
a sudden nose bleed that left the
jacket of his suit badly stained. He
took the jacket to the cleaner three ·
times and finally they admitted they
could not remove the stains successfully. Is there anything that can
be done to save this almost new suit?
l think it is polyester. ..: BARBARA
DEAR BAR·
BARA - The
cleaner has probably tried most
things and the
stains may be so
"set" now that
nothing will work.
Next tinoe soak
blood stains in cold water and then
sponge with warm suds and rinse. If
such a stain persists, sponge with an
ammonia water solu~on (about
three tablespoons to a gallon of
water). If the fabric will take it you
might even soak the spots in this
solution for~ minutes. Of course,
anything should be tested for effect
on the fabric. A paste of starch and
water left to dry often removes such
stains from heavy fabrics and mattresses - POLLY
DEAR POU.Y - When bsking
drop cookies l dip each cookie in the
nuts or decor before placing It on the

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PURSES
&amp;
LADIES BILLFOLDS

ancestors. The society will purchase
the fonns and maintain them as a
permanent record of the society.
Work sheets for the members will be
provided also.
The qualifications 'for membership in First Families of Ohio was
again discussed for the benefit of
those who are unfamiliar with the
group. It was decided that the Society will establish First Families of
Meigs. County in conjunction with
the First Families of Ohio.
To belong to this new group, a
member must be able to prove his
descent from someone who was present in Meigs County before 1820.
Ways of documenting the presence
of an ancestor in the county before
that time was discussed. It was
noted that a partial list of these early
pioneers is given in Larkin's Pioneer
History of Meigs County and
Hardesty's History of Meigs County.
Land records also provide documentation as long as the deed states the
ancestor lived in the county. Marriage records also satisfy this requirement.
It was noted that marriage
records from 1802 to 1819 for the
southern half of Meigs County are

Polly's Pointers:

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Helen Help Us:

Genealogical Society requirements
.discussed at recent meeting here

S_tor Gardeners hove valentine.
fare at Atkins-Holliday home

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TROUSERS

BOYS &amp; GIRLS'
KNITTED CAPS

INFANT
.

CLOTHING

SHOPPE
2nd St.
POMEROY,O.

W NEED
SPACE FOR
NtW SPRIN!3
HEMS
YOU GET
BARGAINS

MENS

~~~!.~~$ $400
Sm • Med. • Lg. • XL

' Price Are
In EHect Now I

Open
10 a.m. To 8 p.m1

Shop
Either Store

Sunday
1 To 5

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�7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~er~o:_y,~0~·~·Th~u~rs:da~Y:_:·F:_:e:_: b: _·

2:1: _•1::980=-- --------------------------l

:Mason County
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News Notes

By Aim• .'fJ~t·&amp;h.tll

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MASON - The Mason Historical
Society enjoyed diMer and film,
"Williamsburg the Patriot" when
the group met on Saturday evening
at the fanner Lewis home on Brown
Street. The film was shown by Mri.
Ray Proffitt.
In keeping with American History
month, Mrs. Lee (Mildred) Gibbs,
and Mrs. Vernon Grinstead centered
the dining tables with red streamers
on which small pictures of President
Washington and President Lincoln
were placed along with miniature
flags. Favors included gum drop
hearts each with a miniature flag.
Mrs. Ray Proffitt presented the
devotionals.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Grin-·
stead, Reverend William Dawson.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs.
Ray Proffitt, Mr. and · Mrs. Russ
Barton, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Alexander.
The next meeting will be "'· un
Tuesday, March 4, at 10:30 a.m.
Representatives of Meigs Historical
Society are expected to attend.
MASON - The Mason United
Methodist Women program, Commitment to Mission, was presented
by Mrs. Ray Proffitt, on Monday
evening at Mason United Methodist
Church with Mrs. Maxine Arnold
and Mrs. Frances Stewart as
hosteases.
Attending were Mrs. Lois Test,
Mrs. Earlene Bumgardner, Mrs.
LaVera Yeager, Mrs. Wah Zerkle,
Mrs. Joyce Carson, Mrs. MaDora
Wildman and Mrs. Maxine Arnold.
Mason and area personals
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Troy and sons
have moved to their new mobUe
home on the lot of her aunt, Miss
Stella Gress, Brown St.
Retha Lewis has returned home
from Pleasant Valley Hospital
where she has been hospitalized with
pneumonia.

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TAKES FURTIIER TRAINING
ALAMORGORDO, N. M. - Captain Edward M. Brown, son of Frances G. Ohlinger of 616 E. Fifth St.,
New Haven, W. Va., has graduated
from U. S. Air Force fighter lead-in
training at Holloman Air Force
Base, here.
Captain Brown now goes to Luke
Air Force Base, Ariz., for further
training.
A 1966 graduate of Wahama High

School, Mason, W. Va. , the captain
was commissioned in 1971 through
the ROTC program. In 1972 he earned a master's degree from Ohio
University of Athens.
His wife, Dortha, is the daughter
of Martin Wilcoxen of Racine, Ohio.
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BffiTIIDAY CELEBRATED
MASON - The birthdays of Mrs.
Clarence (Evelyn) lhle, Mason, her
granddaughter, Evelyn Mae
Russell, Mason, and grandson,
Brian Johnson, Middleport, were
celebrated on Sunday with a surprtse birthday dinner hosted by her
daughters at her home. The
honorees received several gifts.
Attending were the above named
and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Russell, Mason; Mrs.
Brian Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Johnson, Mrs. Alice Faye
Gardner, stephanie and Tiffany. all
of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Van
Meter and Deann.
ATTEND FUNERAL

Several Clifton and Mason
residents attended the funeral of

A valentine theme was carried out
for the Star Garden Club meeting
held at the home of Mrs. Pauline
Atkins and Mrs. Ruby Halliday.
Mrs. Neva Nicholson presided at
the meeting which opened with Mrs.
Sharon Jewell giving devotions from
Guideposts on valentine's day along
with scripture from John 3.
For roll call the members named
their favorite garden magazine.
Mrs. Virginia Nelson gave the
secretary and treasurer's reports.
Mrs. Stella Atkins was program
chairman with Mrs. Allegra Will
talking about starting seeds at
home. She said fresh soil in a

sui table container is needed and suggested using a salt shaker to plant
fine seed. She said plants should be
transplanted when there are two
sets of leaves, and that 10 days
should be allowed for hardening
plants before they put into the
garden.
Miss Ruby Diehl talked about
ferns, the many different kinds, and
their need for humidity. She suggested spraying or setting the plants
in a dish filled with gravel and
water. Miss Diehl also noted that
rain water is best for ferns and that
charcoal should be put into the pots
to keep the soil neurtralized.

By Sharon Michael
Meigs County Cancer Unit
Public loforma lion Chairman
Oral cancer strikes approximately
1,200 persons in Ohio each year and
causes 425 deaths per year in Ohio. It
is found most frequently in men over
40 years of age and the incidence is
three times higher in males than in
females.
Factors contributing to oral cancer are poor oral hygiene and
chronic irritation such as that
caused by jagged teeth, projecting
fillings, and ill·fittintg dentures.
Those more likely to get oral can·
cer are smokers of cigarettes, cigars
or pipe. The death rate from mouth
cancer for cigarette smokers is four
times higher than for non-smokers.
The following should be reported
to the doctor : a sore in the mouth
that fails to heal and bleeds rather
easily; a lump or thickening ; a
VARIABLE TAXES
WASHINGTON (AP) -State trai&gt;
sportation planners are eyeing
variable gasoline taxes as a solution
to inflation-pinched highway repair
budgets, says The Road Information
Program.
The average state tax on gasoline
is 8.35 cents .per gallon, TRIP says.
Two states, Washington and New
Mexico, now have fuel taxes that
fluctuate with the cost of gasoline up to as much as 12 cents a gallon in
Washington.

·

offers tips

white patch; a sore throat; difficulty
in chewing or swallowing food; the
sensation of something in the throat;
restricted movement of the tongue
or jaws; discomfort in wearing denlures.
A regular yearly dental checkup
should be done and the dentist will
notice anything abnormal, but if you
should notice any of the above things
or anything abnormal between the
appointments with the dentist, and it
lasts more than two weeks, a
physician should he seen.
For further ioformation or pamphlets on "oral cancer" notify the
cancer office on E. Main St. at the
Senior Citizens Center or call 992·
7531.

Helping'Hands meet
Gladys Reynolds entertained the
Helping Hand Club at her home
recently. The meeting was opened
by Bessie Ingles with the flag salute
and the Lord's Prayer.
For devotions, Joy Foreman read
11

Requirements for becoming a
chapter of the Ohio Genealogical
Society was discussed during the recent meeting of the Meigs County
Genealogical Society. Mrs. June
Ashley, president, presided at the
meeting of the Society which now
has a membership of 26.
It was noted that the Society must
now set up its by-laws and submit its
membership lis( and by-laws for the
approval of the board of directors of
the Ohio Genealogical Society. It is
hoped that the charter can be obtained at the annual meeting of the
O.G.S. in May.
The resignation of Eugene Smjth
as treasurer was accepted with
regret and a temporary appointment was made. A discussion of the
role of the Monnon Church in
genealogical work was held. The
largest conference ever held on
famUy research will be in August,
1980 at Salt Lake City, the location rJ.
the main branch of the Mormon
Library. The nearest branch of this
library is located at Huntington, W.
Va.
The Society decided that each
member should submit at least one
five·generaton chart on his

Mrs. Ruby Halliday gave tips for
March noting that now is the time to
study seed catalogs. The blue ribbon
valentine arrangements on display
were by Mrs. Nelson and Mrs.
Pauline Atkins.
Mrs. Stella Atkins received the
hostess gift. Valentines were given
each member and refreshments
were §erved by the hostesses
assisted by Mrs. Jewell. Several
members were reported ill or with illness in their families. The club
prayer closed the meeting. Mrs.
Wanetta Radekin wUI host the
March meeting.

Heart Assn.

Oral cancer warnings
given by cancer unit

1t's Later Than Ever Before," and

the legend of the valentine was read
by Carol Alexander who noted that
sweethearts were sending valentines to each other in !710.
A humorous poem, "Women" was
read by Mrs. Foreman, and Mary
Thabet read "Diary of the Unborn
Child."
In the absence of Lois Young, the
lesson' "Don't Panic" was taught by
Bessie Ingles. She shared ideas on
measures to be taken in the event of
snow storms, blizzards, and floods.
She stressed the Importance of being
educated on how to handle a disaster
should one occur and how to
minimize losses.
Members made plans to hold a
special meeting at ~hich time lap
robes for shutins will be made. A
visit to Addie Brown who remains in
Holzer Medical Center was planned
and members were asked to collect
materials for a scrapbook.
The door prize was won by Lucy
Johnson . Heart and flowers
decorated the refreshment table and
a cake adorned with roses was served with other refreshments.

"Don't gamble with your life,"
says the Meigs County Heart
Branch. Kick the cigarette habit and
help fight heart disease.
Research indicates that smoking
Jennifer Badgley
contributes to or speeds up the
development of coronary artery
Badgleyengagement told .
disease, a common forerunner to
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Lowman of Hartford are announcing the apheart attack. Death rates from heart
proaching
marriage of their daughter, Jennifer Lee Badgley, toHichard Lee
attacks in men range from 50 to 200
Young,
son
of Mr. and Mrs. George (Dick) Young of Grandvtew Heights. ·
percent higher among cigarette
Miss
Badgley
is a graduate of Wahama High School, and her fiance is a
smokers than among non-smokers,
.
graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
according to Dr. James WitheraU,
The wedding will be an event of Feb. 16, 4 p.m., at the Salem Communtty
President of the Meigs County Heart
.. Church, West Colwnbia. The gracious custom of open church will be obBranch.
served, and a reception will follow at the home of the groom.
"Studies show that tobacco smoke
contains nicotine, a highly toxic
substance that acts on the heart,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
VETERANS MEMORIAL
blood vessels, a digestive tract,
DISCHARGES FEB. 20
Admitted-David
Jenkins, Midkidneys and nervous system. Ninety
Terry Adams, Lacey Barton, dleport; Charles Knopp, Mason; ·
percent of the nicotine is absorbed
Elmer Blue, Neva Benjamin, Bar- Roger Manley, Middleport; Lillian
when a cigarette is puffed without
bara Boyd, Goldie Braford, Eugene Schenkle, Reedsville; Mickey
inhaling," Dr. Wi1beraU said.
Buckley, Betty Cochran, Butch Mugrage, Racine; Oscar Imboden,
Tobacco smoke also contains
Cochran, Leonard Conner, Beverly Minersville; Mary Nichols, Rutland. •
small amounts of arsenic, tar and
CottrUI, Anna Cummins, Stephanie
Discharged--Gloria Kapteina ,
carbon monoxide. The higher level
Danford, Judy Davis, Ramona Gar- Mildred Mankin, Everett Ransom,
of carbon monoxide in the blood
ton, Carl Griffiths, Noah Haskons, Robert Smith, Cfifford Christy.
makes the heart beat faster, raises
MUton Houdashelt, Ronald Howard,
the blood pressure and narrows
Joann Johnson, Robert Kitts, Pearl
blood vessels of the skin, especially
Marklns, Jonathan Massie, Larry
in the fingers and toes. For persons
Massile, Jolm McGuire, Roy Price,
already stricken with blood vessel
PROPERTY SALE ORDERED
Clara Pullins, Carrie Sanford,
diseases, smoking aggravates their
An
order of sale of property in
Warren Sheets, Gina Silva, John
conditions by constricting vessels
Pomeroy
for payment of $436.08 in
Steele, Lena thomas, Delores
already narrowed and damaged.
real
estate
taxes has been filed in the
Waugh, Victoria White, Willa Win·
"All cigarette smokers run an exMeigs
County
ColllMion Pleas Court
ters, James Wood, Etta Wright. .
tra risk of coronary disease in proby
George
M. «:ollins, county.
BffiTHS
portion to the number of cigarettes
treasurer,
against
Roger Davidson,
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Campbell,
smoked," Dr. WitheraU said. He ex·
et al.
son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
plained that heavy smokers have
Wickline, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr.
higher death rates from heart atand Mrs. Roger Moore, son, Beaver;
tacks than moderate smokers.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Sturgill,
It's never too late to quit smoking.
daughter, Vinton.
Your "Extra Touch"
According to the Heart .Association,
Florist Since 1957
fanner smokers enjoy a renewed
feeling of self&lt;anfidence and the
D~ODANCEPLANNED
I
I
reduced risk of being stricken by one
A disco dance will be held from 8
pt.~
I
of the chronic diseases associated
toll p.m. Saturday at the Mason Fire I
Department Headquarters with I
with smoking - emphysema, bronFLORIST
I
chitis, cancer a!id heart disease.
music by Starship Sound. Ad·
I"H. 99:2-2644
mission is $1 for the dance which is
For more information on smoking
352 E. Main, -Pomer'oy
being sponsored by the Mason
and heart disease, as well as weight
Your FTD Florist
control after quitting, contact the
Rescue Squad.
'
Central Ohio Heart Chapter Branch
at 614-228-6327. "Kick the habit" and
help the Heart Branch In its fight for
your life.

Young

Help for blood stain

c_2

Mark Hatcher, age 24, at Buffalo
United Methodist Church on Sunday.
Mark is the son of Rev. and Mrs. 0.
B. Hatcher, fanner pastor of Clifton
United Methodist Church, and new
pastor of Buffalo and Midway
United Methodist Churches.
Hatcher died in Prescott, Arizona,
when a jeep in which he was riding
reportedly overturned. He was
recently discharged fonn the U. S.
Military · Police and had been
visiting friends in Arizona.
TIMELY BREAK·IN
Three Clifton residents were inBATH, England (AP) - Two
jured on Sunday while in the funeral
prisoners who were part of an un·
procession attending the Hatcher
supervised work crew are being
funeral on Rt. 62. Slightly injured
commended for their initiative in
wre Mrs. Wilma Blake, Mrs. Chester
WE
ARE
NOT
AMUSED
breaking into an elderly widow's cot·
Oliver and Mrs. Rhoda Fox. The acBASINGSTOKE,
England
(AP)
tage.
cident occurred when the vehicle ·
Teenager David Low's tap dance
The men, working in a churdriven by Chester Oliver hit the
had
a
crowd
cheering,
but
the
imchyard,
heard an alann buzzer
vehicle driven by Mrs. Irene Fisher.
promptu
act
didn't
impress
the
two
coming
from
a nearby church house.
The brakes on the Oliver vehicle
policemen
who
joined
the
show.
They
broke
in
and found Florence
reportedly wouldn't hold. No citaHe
was
dancing
on
the
roof
of
their
Gilson lying in her hed in pain and
tions were made.
police car.
unable to move.
Mrs. Fox was a passenger in the
Fisher car and the other passengers r-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:~
were in the Oliver vehicle.

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"Special tax benefits ,for Senior
Citizens? ... I shoulda
come here last year!"

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COMPLETE S10CK
GOOD THRU MONDAY

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II you are 65 or over, you are entitled to
tax ~
benefits. AI H&amp;A '31ock, we know all the deductions anci
credi•, that can help Senior Citizens.

•

li&amp;R RLOCit
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THE. INCOME TAX PEOPLE
611 E . MAIN ST.
POMEROY,O.
OPEN-9 AM. TO
6 P .M. WEEKDAYS
HSATURDAY
PHONE 992· 3795

2nd &amp; BROWN' ST.
MASON, W.VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M.· 5P.M.
PHONE 773·9128

I .

30% OFF

SWISHER LOHSE

ONLY

Nova .. ' the official shoe-of the future by Thorn-MeAn Soft
leather uppers that cradle your feet in comfort And new longwearing bottoms that put a little fun in e'&gt;lery step. ,

herltag~

:h ous,e .

OF SHOES

Middleport, 0.

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The Philathea Women of the Middleport Church of Christ enjoyed a
luncheon at tbe church Thursday
hosted by Mrs. Regina Swift, Mrs.
Helen Reynolds, Mrs. Farie Cole,
Mrs. Beulah Roush, and Mrs. Cathy

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COATS

Mrs. Debbie Melton gave the
blessing, and the program included
Lois Pauley of The Crafty Ladies doing paintings with oil and acrylic.
Mrs. Eleanor Lohse won a painting
of daisies and leaves which Mrs.
Pauley did on slate. Door prizes
were won by Mrs. Clyda Allensworth
and Mrs. Regina Swift. Mrs. Pauley
was presented a gift from Philathea.
Mrs. Betty McKinley presided at
the meeting with thank you notes being read from the Lung Associaton,
the Lorena Rice family, and Rita
Oberholzer.
'
Reported ill were Jessie Saunders
and Blanche Wolfe. Phyllis Gilkey
was welcomed ·as a new member.
Clyda Allensworth and Frances
Roush were nained to the
nominating committee.
Attending were those named and
Mrs. Martha ChUds, Mrs. Gertrude
Miller, Mrs. Margaret Jones, Mrs.
Ida ChUds, Mrs. Margaret Lallance,
Mrs. Louise McElhinney, Mrs. Rose
Reynolils, Mrs. Clara Conroy, Mrs.
Margaret Butcher, Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs. Mary Bailey, and Mrs.
Dorothy Roach, and guests, Mrs.
Pauley, Mrs. Lohse, and Mrs. Peggy
Brickles.
PEARL HARBOR
GARDENA, Calif. (AP) - It has
been more than 38 years since the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
but the event has not been forgotien.
It was in Gardena that the Pearl
Harbor Survivors Association was ·
born, and it has grown to 7,1100 members - now in their 50s and older who were ori Oahu or not more than
three mUes offshore frotp 7:55a.m.
to 9:45a.m. on Dec. 7,1941.

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Ca•yKa•em ·

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Weight loss recognized
Members were recognized for
weight loss at the Sllnderella Diet
Classes held during the past week.
At the Mason classes the ones losing
the most weight were Gweanna
Wilkes, Phyllis Bennett, Rae Young,
and Pearl Briles. Runners-up were
Linda Clark, Judy Roach, and Zelia
Riley.
The the Middleport classes, Rhonda Roush lost the most weight and
Charlotte Erlewine was the runnerup one week, and Rhonda Roush and
Dodie Seth lost the most weight the
second week. Eight new members
were added to the Mason Classes,
andsixix. new members to the Middleport classes. JoAnn Newsome is
instructor.

NAME OMITIED
The name of Roger Balser, an
eighth grader at the Eastern Junior
High School, was unintentionally
omitted from the school's honor roll
in Wednesday's edition of The Sen·
tine!.

SHOP

MASON FURN IJURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sal.
8:30 los: oo Thur~d"v tiil12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

Fonner Nazi Gestapo officer
Adolph Eichmann was sentenced to
death by an Israeli court in !961.

.$.A TURD AYS •
t til tioe" ___J
L----=-

'· '

Hours:
9 : 30to5:00 . •
Mon.tftru sat.
9:301111 :00
Friday

Mason, W. Va.

773·5592

PRICES IN EFFECT THURSDAY 3

Cost
Prices
Are
Forgotten!

FINAL MARKDOWN!

WOMEN$
SWEATERS
Slipcover And Cardigans
Entire Stock Goes
Were Values To 116.99

$300 • · $400
'$500. $700

Time to clean our racks, at great
savings for you. Final reductions
on winter items. We need room .
Come. shop and save.

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LONG SLEEVE
AND
SHORT SLEEVE

WOMEN$
TOPS &amp; BLOUSES
FORMER 14.69 TO '10.99
SMALL LOT
i

ONE &amp; 1WO PIECE

SIZE: Ages 2 to 16 Months

GIRLS
.
.TOPS

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DEAR HELEN.
Thank you for printing the letter
from the woman whose husband has

such strange sexual tastes (gagging
her with the brides' section of their
daily paper ). It gave me coura&amp;,e to
seek help on a matter which is
threatening to ruin our 4-month-old
marriage.
The problem? My husband likes
for me to lie him up and humiliate
him while I'm dressed like a stripper
in G-string and high heels.
I'm not sexually inhibited, but also
I don't enjoy domination . Am l right
in being turned off by this? Do you
think there iS any chance we could
be compatible] .Are these things
common in married couples? -TilE
TENDER TYPE
DEART.T.:
Demands for kinky sex (bondage,
humiliation, domination, and even
wilder fonns of sado-masochism)
have contributed to many divorces. I
say "contributed" because often
weird sexual expectations are linked
with personality defects that make
marriage impossible.
Psychiatry might "un-warp" your
husband. But if he likes the way he
is, I see little pope for a "straight" in
this kind of union.- H.

Erwin.

50% OFFJ·I I

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work. Would I be selfish if I told my
husband I want to remain fri ends
but prefer to live alone, since this is
the way I fe.el most of the time? TIRED OF BEING LEFT OUT AND
WANTS OUT
DEAR TIRED:
Tell me, has "having a kind, good
considerate (apparently male )
friend at work" suddenly brought
your husband's faults into focus ?
Don't scrap a so-so marriage until
you're positive it can't he improved.
And this starts with telling your man
how you feel , not playing the silent
martyr while you keep lists of all his
thoughtless actions.- H.

BY HELEN BOTTEL
By King Features Syndicate
DEAR HELEN:
When we are out to dinner with
other couples and one of the wives
goes to the ladies room with me,
both her husband and my husband
will rush to pull her chair out and
seat her, while I scramble for
myself.
When my sister-in-law had her second baby, my husband sent a dozen
ros~. He has never sent me one
daisy 1 We have three children.
On introductions, he always leaves
me out as if I'm not there , and I sure
wish I weren't.
• In the service, he named his father
as "next of kin" to be notified in case
of death or injury.
l have a high-paying job, and a
kind, good considerate friend at

All WINTER MERCHANDISE

PAJAMAS

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Philathea
Women
meet

Skirts

SNOWSUITS ·

$200 • $300 • $400
Were

Small lot. Not all
sizes. but maybe
yours. Values to
$6.99.

8.99

1

fo 1 14.9~

BOYS'
OUT THEY GO • ENTIRE STOCK

SHIRTs

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located in the Gallia County records,
and that marriage records from 1805
to 1819 for the northern part of the
county are located in the Athens
County records. Earlier marriage
records are located in the
Washington County records.
It was announced that the
genealogical committee ri the
Athens County Historical Society is
sponsoring a talk by Joy Wade
Moulton, a certified genealogist who
writes a weekly. column for the Columbus Dispatch. The talk will be on
March 3, 8 p.m. on the third floor of
Alden Library at Ohio University.
Those interested in attending should
contact Mrs. Robert Ashley if car·
pooling is desired. A discussion of
ways to locate proofs of relationships between generations was held.
Meigs County records were discussed and it was noted that some cour·
thouse records are now hoitsed in the
archives at Alden Library of Ohio
University. Also the Meigs Museum
houses many of the .naturalizations
of inunigrants to Meigs County.
The meeting concluded with a tour
of the library at the Meigs Museum.
Next meeting was set for March 16, 2
p.m. at the Museum.

BOYS &amp; GIRLS'

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Kenneth McCullougJI, R. Ph.
Charles ,R iffle, R: Ph.
Ronald HaMing, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m. ,
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and 5 to9 p.m,
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH.992·2955
~riendly Service
E. Main
Open Nights tll9 ·
Pomeroy, 0.

Reported ill were Mrs. Margaret
Kincaid, Mrs. Martha Hunnei and
Mrs. EVelyn Murray. Devotions on
last Sunday's lesson were presented
by Ed Evan!!, teacher of the class.
Mrs. Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Evans
served refreshments to Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Stewart, Miss Thelma
Boyer, Mrs, Peggy Brickles, Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Wilson, Hennan Kin·
caid, Mrs. Van Meter, Mrs. Martha
Hanel, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Evans,
Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs. Dorothy
Roach, Mrs. Dorothy Baker, Mrs.
Delcie Forth, and Paul and Pete
Brlckles.

Man ignores wife; other-does not

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Pharmacy

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99

N. 2nd Ave.

Appointmen1Avallable But Not Necessary

Homebuilders Class of the Middleport Church of Christ turned in
dimes totating1lYer $109.
Meeting at the church the
Homebuilders voted to purchase
three Easter Ulles for the sanctuary.
Donations to the projector fund from ·
Billy Rice and VIola Edwards were
acknowledged. Mrs. Nora Rice
volunteered to rearrange flowers
from llinerals for use in the church.
It was noted that the book store will
replace the damaged hymnals.
Mack Stewart gave the opening
prayer with Mrs. Coleen Van Meter
presiding at the meeting. Mrs.
Clarice Erwin and Mrs. Dorothy
Roach gave the officers reports.

Heart attack strikes any time, any
place. Too often, victims wait for
hours before seeking help. Don't
delay - half of all heart attack victims wbo die do so before they reach
the hospital. Know the warning
signals and act promjllly when they
OCCUf. Jt COuld SBVe your life, Ask I
.your heart association.

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The projector fund stood at fM4.67
Tuesday night after members of the

HEART REAL11i IDNT

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cookie sheet and this prevents the
decorations from spilling over the
cookie sheet. They also adhere bet·
ter . when baked. I have also found
that it is easier to blend the dry ingredients into the wet mixture with a
pastry blender and then relrigerate
until ready to bake, thus keeping the
dough chilled between bakings. The
pastry blender works much better
than a spatula.- DOROTHY
DEAR POU.Y - After Christmas
we had some popcorn balls that were
too hard to eat but they became nice
and soft after I put them in a zip lock
bag with several fresh bread slices.
-FLORENCE
DEAR POU.Y - l am answering
Alice who had some peacock blue
place mats that were faded in spots.
l have used instant shoe coloring on
my faded place mats and have
always had good results. Be sure to
use the color conditioner first and
follow directions exactly. You do not
have to bother about matching colors as you can make them any color
you want. I buy this at a drug store.ESTHER
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
col umn . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care ofthis
newspaper.

Homebuilders Cklss builds projector fund

•

MEN'S B·ILLFOLDS

''' ...
.,' .
.•.'•, ..
..,

By Pooy Cramer
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
POU.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU.Y- My husband had
a sudden nose bleed that left the
jacket of his suit badly stained. He
took the jacket to the cleaner three ·
times and finally they admitted they
could not remove the stains successfully. Is there anything that can
be done to save this almost new suit?
l think it is polyester. ..: BARBARA
DEAR BAR·
BARA - The
cleaner has probably tried most
things and the
stains may be so
"set" now that
nothing will work.
Next tinoe soak
blood stains in cold water and then
sponge with warm suds and rinse. If
such a stain persists, sponge with an
ammonia water solu~on (about
three tablespoons to a gallon of
water). If the fabric will take it you
might even soak the spots in this
solution for~ minutes. Of course,
anything should be tested for effect
on the fabric. A paste of starch and
water left to dry often removes such
stains from heavy fabrics and mattresses - POLLY
DEAR POU.Y - When bsking
drop cookies l dip each cookie in the
nuts or decor before placing It on the

I'

I'

PURSES
&amp;
LADIES BILLFOLDS

ancestors. The society will purchase
the fonns and maintain them as a
permanent record of the society.
Work sheets for the members will be
provided also.
The qualifications 'for membership in First Families of Ohio was
again discussed for the benefit of
those who are unfamiliar with the
group. It was decided that the Society will establish First Families of
Meigs. County in conjunction with
the First Families of Ohio.
To belong to this new group, a
member must be able to prove his
descent from someone who was present in Meigs County before 1820.
Ways of documenting the presence
of an ancestor in the county before
that time was discussed. It was
noted that a partial list of these early
pioneers is given in Larkin's Pioneer
History of Meigs County and
Hardesty's History of Meigs County.
Land records also provide documentation as long as the deed states the
ancestor lived in the county. Marriage records also satisfy this requirement.
It was noted that marriage
records from 1802 to 1819 for the
southern half of Meigs County are

Polly's Pointers:

1

.

Helen Help Us:

Genealogical Society requirements
.discussed at recent meeting here

S_tor Gardeners hove valentine.
fare at Atkins-Holliday home

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TROUSERS

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INFANT
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Sm • Med. • Lg. • XL

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Open
10 a.m. To 8 p.m1

Shop
Either Store

Sunday
1 To 5

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�8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

Damage·· exceeds $355 million, residents cleaning muc~
By Associated Press
As millions of dollars' worth of

erops rotted in sodden fields ,
Southern Californians shoveled
muck out of their homes and eyed
the skies for signs of yet another
rainstorm. The unrelenting rains
have pushed Idaho and Utah reservoirs to the limit and forced schools
in Arizona to close.
At least 30 persons have died in
Califo rn ia, Utalr; Arizona and
Me&gt;tico since the storms began last
week, and loss estimates now exceed
$355 million.
A sixth Pacific weather front in
eight days s lamm ed into
waterlogged Southern California on

Wednesday, ending a few hours of
sunshine with 'I" expected It inches
of rain before the forecast arrival of
a seventh storm tonight - and
perhaps more later.
In Northern California's Lassen
National Park, rangers pushed
through four feet of new snow in
search of four missing campers.
Meanwhile, one man was presumed
drowned Wednesday when floodwaters swept him off his horse as he
tried to rescue cattle near Patterson, Calif. , and the body of a surfer was recovered near Santa Cruz.
The storms have pelted Southern
California with more than a foot of
water since Feb. 13, causing flash

$43,500 approved
for Gallia project
Ohio's Stae Controlling Board has
approved $43,500 for the preparation
of a design report for reclaiming approximately 200 acres of abandoned
strip mine land located in the Little
Kyger Creek watershed in Gallia
County, State Rep. Ron James (DProctorville) aru10unced todsy.
The abandoned strip mine land
located in the Little Kyger Creek
watershed is considered to be a
heavy contributor of sediment and
acid mine drainage into streams in
the downstream and watershed
areas of Little Kyger Creek. A
previously made preliminary design
report had recommended that
backfilling, regrading, and contouring the area, installing drainage control and sediment retention structures, and revegetation, including
sot! conditioning , would be
necessary to reclaim the abandoned

strip mine land.
As a result of !be preliminary
report, the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources will proceed with
the preparation of design plans for
the recommended reclamation
work. At this time, the proposal to
reclaim the entire 200 acres is anticipated to cost $2 million.
The Dames and Moore Company
of Cincinnati submitted the proposal
to prepare for $43,500, the design
plans for the project and to perform
general engineering and resident
supervision during the actual
reclamation work.
"The design report is an essential
step in the progress of reclaiming
the abandoned strip mine land near
Little Kyger Creek," Rep. James
said. "I am pleased that the Controlling Board has approved the
money for the design report."

Area deaths
ARTHUKCAIN
Arthur Cain, 77, Rt. 2, Vinton, died
in Holzer Medical Center early
Thursday.
He was born March 22, 1902, son of
the late Jasper M. and Virginia
Knapp Cainin Rock Castle, W. Va.
He married Dorothy Dyke in
Gallipolis on Feb. 21, 1922. She survives, along with two sons and two
daughters :
Arthur C. (Jack) Cain, Uniontown
Ohio ; Harold Lee Cain, Atwater:
ohio; Mrs. Catherine Ledsome
Uniontown and Mrs._Mary Brnette:
Langsvtlle. Three children preceded
him in death. Nineteen grand and 28
great-grandchildren survive.
Two brothers and two sisters survive : Lonnie Cain, Columbus;
Homer Cain, Sarasota, Fla.; Mrs.
Alma Gibson, De Land, Fla., and
Mrs. Hattie Polsey, Logan, Ohio.
Four brothers and three sisters
preceded him in death.
Mr. Cain was retired from the
Teledime Monarch Rubber Co. in
Hartville, Ohio, and was a member
of the Rock Castle United Brethren
Church.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Sunday at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home in Vinton with Rev.
Noble Russell officiating. Burial will
be in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

MICHAEL CLIFFORD JACOBS
Michael Clifford Jacobs, 23,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday at MI.
Carmel Hospital , Columbus,
following a lengthy illness.
He was born Feb. 16, 1957, a son of
Larry and Carol Jacobs of Houston,

Tex.
Other survivors are a sister, Terri
Lynn, Houston; grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Levenna Ebersbach,
Pomeroy; great-grandmother, Mrs.
Tina Jacobs, Pomeroy; an aunt,
Mrs. Shirley Frazier, Lakeview, and
an uncle, Jack Jacobs of Pomeroy. ,
Private funeral services will be
beld for the family only at the Ewing
Funeral Home. There are no calling
hours.

KENNETH H. RADCLIFFE
Kenneth H. Radcliffe, 59, a resi·
dent of Columbus, fanner resident of
Rt. 1, Ewington, died at I p.m. Tuesday at his residence.
He was born July 31, 1921 on Rt. 1,
Ewlngton, son of the late Alfred and
Idella Oiler Radcillfe.
Survivors include two brothers
and two sisters, John H. Radcillfe
and Harold Radcliffe, Rt. 3,
Wellston ; Mrs. Chester (Darlene)
Kisor, Adams Mills, Ohio and Mrs.
Mabel Snyder of Rt. I, Ewington.
He was a retired employee of
Tirnpldns RoUer Bearing of Colwnbus.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Frida~· frorr&gt; t.he I\' .:Coy-Moore

Funeral Home in Vinton with Rev .
Jerry Neal officiating. Burial will be
in Franklin Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7-9
p.m. this evening.
ROBERT EUGENE VANNEST
Robert Eugene VanNest, 54, of
4094 Larry Place, Columbus, a former resident of Athens, died Wednesday in Columbus.
He was born at Darwin, a son of
Denver VanNest of Albany and the
late Hattie Will VanNest. He attended Tuppers Plains High School.
Surviving besides his father are
his wife, Mary Tinkham VanNest; a
son, Robert Stephen, Route 2,
Athens; a daughter, Rhonda (Susie)
Strobridge, Route I, Albany; a stepdaughter; three stepsons ; five stepgrandchildren; three brothers, Kermit of Route 5, Athens; Leo, Albany,
and Norman of Route I, Athens; four
sisters, Nina Welch, Helen Sinclair,
both of Shade; Carol McLead,
Guysville, and Hazel Baxter,
Albany.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m., Friday at the Hughes Funeral
Home in Athens with the Rev.
Robert Alexander &lt;iliciating.
Burial will be in Alexander
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday. In lieu of flowers,
contributions may be made to Doctors Hospital Development Fund,
1087 Dennison Ave., Columbus, Ohio
43201.
RICHARD E. WHEATLEY
Richard E. Wheatley, 31, New
Marshfield, died Wednesday at
Camden--Clark Memorial Hospital in
Parkersburg following a brief
illness.
He was born at Marietta, a son of
Evaline Vannoy Wheatley and the
late Ralph Wheatley. He was a
graduate of Athens High School, a
veteran of the Vietnam Conflict
having served in the U.S. Navy, and
was a heavy equipment operator at
the Southern Coal Co. Racoon Mine
No.3.
He was a past president of Local
1957, United Mine Workers of
America; a member of the New
Marshfield Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 8804, and the Moose
Lodge in Athens.
Also surviving besides his mother
are his wile, Roberta Andrews
Wheatley; two sons, Nathan aod
Seth, both at home; a daughter,
Kate Wheatley, at home; two
brothers, James Wheatley, Chauncey, and Thomas Wheatley, Athens;
four sisters, Patricia Smith, Lancaster; Diane Cunningham, East
Liverpool; Carol Clifford, Cincinnati, and Sandy Wheatly, Marietta; his grandmother, Mary Vannoy,
Marietta.
Funeral services will be held at 1 ·
p.m. Saturdsy at the Hughes
Funeral Home in Athens with tbe
Rev. Willard Love officiating.
Burial will be in the New Marshfield
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home .anytime after 2 p.m.
Friday. Military rites will be conducted at the cemetery by the New
Marshfield VFW Post.

floods that have destroyed 110
homes and damaged another 1,350.
More than 5,000 people were urged to
leave their homes as mountain
slopes turned into avalanches of
mud.
Damage in six counties - Los
Angeles, Orange, Ventura, Riverside, San Diego and San Bernardino
- hit $267 million and Lt. Gov. Mike
Curb urged President Carter to
declare them a rna jor disaster area.

Meanwhile, in normally arid
Arizona, officials tallied $90 million
in damages in counties hit by a
record eight days of flooding. Goy.
Bruce BabLit asked businesses to
begin staggered working hours as
only two of the 10 bridges over the
Salt River, which divides Phoenix,
escaped the rampa ging waters.
Another storm was expected to hit
Anzona today and a still-stronger
storm was forecast for Saturday .

Pounding surl battered homes
along the Califomla coast as a fifth
storm in a week moved lnto the northern part of the state, packing 50
mph winds. Some 40 residents of
Novato, north of San Francisco,
were forced to leave their homes
late Wednesday as farmers in the
southern part of the state reckoned
crop losses at $28 million.
In Idaho, officials in the tiny community of Malad breathed a sigh of
relief as water stopped rising in a
saturated' earthen dam to the nothwest. State Water Resources e~perts
had said a heavy rain could push the
»-year-old structure to the breaking
point.

OEA discipline bill .
•
•
causing reservations
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
president of one of the sta te's largest
school system has expressed reservations about a bill proposed by the
Ohio Education Association dealing
with school discipline.
The bill is intended to provide for
the "reporting, handling and
preventing of school violence .. and
crimes'' and to define the rights and
responsibilities of administrators,
students, teachers and parents.
"The bad part of this whole bill is
that it requires far too much of
school systems in the way of repor·
ting, keeping records and busy
paper work that requires school
systems to englarge their clerical
and supervisory staff," said
Virginia Prentice, president of the
Columbus Board of Education.
Senate Bill 336, among other
things, would require students convicted of assault in the classroom
would be barred from returning to
the school for tbe completion of their
education.
Sandy Schwartz, a lobbyist for the
82,000-member teachers association,
describes the bill as "a comprehensive piece of legislation" that
would require the state board of
education to compile information
about violence and crimes committed against school employees or
during students.
"The only thing in the state code
right now is that schools only have to
post the reasons why an individual is
suspended or expelled," said Ms.
Schwartz. "Under this bill, each
school board will have to do

I

something. No longer will boa rds of
education be able to ignore the
problem."
Mrs. Prentice, however, said her
board is concerned about how much
such a program would cost.
" If the Legislature feels this is
such a good bill, let it fund that
which they mandate, " she said.
"Unfortunately and as usual the
state doesn 'I provide the money to
pay for these new programs."
She emphasized that it was time
for school systems to concentrate on
teaching instead of discipline.
" Discipline should rest in the
home," said Mrs. Prentice. "But ifit
(discipline) has to be meted out in
the school, so be it. We realize the
importance of discipline, but this
particular bill raises a lot of objections among our entire board."
Student discipline is a major
problem in suburban, rural and urban schools throughout the country,
according to Ms. Schwartz.
" No statistics are kept in Ohio on
the number of assaults against
teachers and students or the amount
of property destruction that occurs," she said, slll!sing that such
information is vital.
Under the bill, each local board of
education would have to adopt a
written policy by Jan. I, 1981, regarding the responsibility of school employees in maintaining discipline.
The OEA proposal would also
prohibit students convicted of
assault charges from reteurning to
the school to complete their
education .

Today is Thursday, Feb. 21, the
52nd day of 1980. There are 313 dayc
left in the year.
·
Todsy's highlight in history:
On Feb. 21, 1838, Samuel Morse
gave the first public demonstration
of the telegraph.
On this date:
In 1885, the Washington Monument
was dedicated in the nation's
capital.
In 1916, the battle of Verdun, the
longest and bloodiest of World War I
began in France. More than ~
million soldiers were to die in the
fighting.
In 1965, black Muslim leader
Malcoim X was shot and killed as he

In Phoenix, Ariz., the traffic jams
that forced commuters to wait up to
six hOurs to pass tbe two open
bridges· had been reduced and waits .,,
Wednesday were down to two hours.
Some 1,500 persons forced to seek
safety as the Agua Fria and New
rivers swelled under the load of 8 inches of rain returned to tbeir homes
Wednesday. Schools closed in
Flagstaff when 9 inches of new wet
snow fell.
In Utah, where flooding caused
more than $1 million damage in northeastern Cache County' waters
around the overflowing Enterprise
reservoirs began to recede .
However, more rain was expected.

was about to address a rally in New
York City.
In 1971 , Israel said it would be
willing to sign a peace agreement
with Egypt, but would not withdraw
from any captured Egyptian
territory.
Ten years ago, sabotage was
suspected in the explosion and crash
of an Israel·bound Swiss jetliner. All
47 people aboard died.
Five years ago, Nixon administration officials John Mitchell,
H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrliclunan
and Robert Mardian were sentenced
to prison terms for their part in tbe
Watergate cover-up.

report by telephone. In fact, you can
conduct almost any type of social
security business by phone ; you can
apply for benefits, get a benefit
estimate, or find the answer to ·a
question you may have - all in tbe
privacy and convenience of your
home. Meigs County residents call
99U622.

Local talent is .needed for tbe annual radio program to be conducted
in conjunction with Meigs County's
heart fqnd drive Wednesday at the
Episcopal Parish House in
Pomeroy.
Armand Turley, organist, will accompany the program over WMPO
from 9 a.m. to f p.m. and those
wishing to contribute their talent to
the success of the program are
asked to contact Mr. and Mrs.
James Souls by.

FOR MEN &amp; BOYS,
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Gary Cooper

Turns one year. .
Gary Lee Cooper, son of Gary and
Marilyn Engle Cooper, observed his
first birthday recently with a party
at his home. A Bugs Bunny cake
made by his mother was served with
ice cream and Kool-Aid and games
were played by some of the children
attending. At the party were his
sister, Christie, his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Engle, Middleport, Mrs. Debbie Engle and
Pete, Larry Laudernlilt, Larry, Jr.
and Herbie Laudernlilt, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Ables, Archie Jarrell
and Michael, Debbie and Roger
Dowell.
Unable to attend but sending gifts
were his · grandfather, Clarence
CoOper, Portland, and his great uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Nelson.

Mrs. Martha Lee and Florence
Circle visited Rev. and Mrs. Carl
Hicks recently.
Rev. Mark Flynn of Racine visited
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle a
recent Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson
called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johason of Racine a recent
Thursday.

There were 24 present for Sunday
School Feb. l7.
Mrs. Ray Johnson and Mrs. Glenn
Tuttle of Eagle Ridge visited Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Circle on Thursday.
Angela Dawn Carelton of Racine
spent Saturday evening with Betty
VauMeter and Margaret Ann Johnson and family.

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Fortress", "The Prayer for Peace".
The group sang "America" and closed with prayer.

-25
deg.

MODULAR
HOMES_

M

1

and get-well cards were signed for
them.
For the program, readings by
m•mbers were " God Bless
Al)lerica", "'Try Living With-One of ·
Your 'isms"', 11 Where but to Jesus",
"'What Our Nation Needs", "'Tis r:l
Thee ". "Our Father in Heaven",
"This I Know", "Faith is a Mighty

121fz FT.

_______,..,
•

The February meeting of tbe
Booster Sunday School class was
hosted by Mrs. Grella Simpson at
her home Friday with a 6 p.m. dinner party.
To open the meeting tbe group
sang "America, the Beautiful" with
scripture being taken from Psalm
23. Prayer was by Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm and the business session W"ll
conducted by Mrs. Helen Simpson.
Several members were reported ill

class meets

8 OZ. BOTTLE TREATS 14 GALLONS OF GAS.

By Melody Roberta
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Collins, Mrs.
Paul Andrews and Barbara attended
tbe funeral of t.frs. AnClrews' sister,
Mrs. Nora McCrery of Columbus.
Condolences to tbe Pat Neutzllng
family for their lOSB of Pat and
Anita's brother-in-law. He was killed
during a rald in Maryland. He was a.
very fine police officer.
Guests at tbe Millard Ball residen·
ce have been Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Hauber and family, local.
Callers at tbe Paul Hauber home
have been Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Adams, local, Mr, and Mrs. Lawren·
ce Johaston, Jr. anq Jeremy, PorUand, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Hauber, Tim and Kim, local.
Reminder: The Long Bottll!l
Community Association meets the
last Wednesday of every month at
7:30 p.m. in the Conununlty
Building. The next meetJns.will he
Feb. 'n. Please try to attend.
.Mrs. Emestlne Hayman was
recently visited by Kathy Fitzpatrick, her granddaughter from ,
Lancaster. Kathy Ia the daughter of
'Mr. and Mrs. Elbert (Barbara) Fitzpatrick.

.

visited Mrs. Manuel's father, Earl
Hart at St. Cloud, Fla., Mr. and Mrs.
James Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Hart. They visited Orlando, Disney
World, Cocoa Beach, Florida before
returning home. They traveled by
plane.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel and son, Tim, were Mr. and
Mrs. Sid Manuel of Long Bottom,
Mrs. Betty McGuire, Mrs. Lynn Arms, daughter, Jeanie, of Pomeroy.

!:J~hool

CARBURETOR. AND.
GAS LINE
ICING

LongBottom
News Notes

•' .

'11

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mandy Russell spent Friday and
Saturdsy nights with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs Russell Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hagey and
children Brad and Stephanie of Wolf
Pen were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy and
Michael.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel and
children, Robin and Donnita, spent a
week's vacation in Florida . They

TEEN DANCE, 8 to 11:30 p.m. at
Orchid ROom, Pomeroy, sponsored
by Music Unlimited; chaperones
present.

1977

&lt;!iscussed was the June 7 flower
show which the Shade Valley Council will sponsor. Mrs. Jackie Frost
thanked members for cards during
her recent illness, and Mrs. Holter
commented to tbe group on her recent trip ~~ Me&gt;tico. Mrs. Carol Erwin gave :ee secretary's report, and
Mrs. Frost the treasurer's report.
Mrs. Jennie Machir conducted
merit judging on constructions
brought by the members. Theme
was "Gifts from the Sea." Mrs.
Koblentz received a blue ribbon for
her seashell construction, Mrs.
Stethem, a red, Mrs. Maida Long, a
yellow, and Mrs. Erwin, a green.
Mrs. Holter served cake, coffee,
ice cream and punch. Mrs. Koblentz
will be the March 18 hqstess. Anyone
interested in becoming a member
should contact either 98:i-4218 or ·

Fairview News Notes

~-

$3795

'73

Mrs. Melanie Stethem presided at
the meeting which opened with roll
call. Mrs. Sheila Taylor presented
an educational exhibit showing a
variety of containers. Mrs. Pat
Holter announced the Ohio Assocla·
lion of Garden Clubs' regional
meeting to be held on April 19 at
Morton Hall on the Ohio University
Campus. The meeting will begin at
10 a.m. with a limcheon to be served
at Baker Center a{ noon. Price will
be $3.for the program and $3 for the
luncheon.
Mrs. Janet Koblentz reminded the
'group that the March meeting will
be when new officers are elected.
Dues will also be payallle at that
time. Ways to raise money to belp
finance the proposed garden club
building on the Meigs County
fairgrounds were discussed. Also

MIDDLEPORT CIITLD CONSERVATION League, 7:30 p.m. Thursday in tbe-Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co.
Dr. Nan Mykle, Conununity Mental
Health, will be the speaker. Mrs.
Susie Abbott and Mrs. Susie Soulsby
will be hostesses.
TITLE I reading program
meeting for parents of all children in
the program and interested persons
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Middleport Elementary School. . Dan
Morris, Meigs Local director of
curriculwn, will present aspects of
the program.
- .
SATIJRDAY
WASHINGTON Birthday dinner
for public 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday in
hasement of Middleport Masonic
Temple by Evangeline Chapter
OES. No tickets at door; reser·
vations by Friday with Kathryn Miteben, 742·2544 or Euvetta Bechtle,

$6195
1977
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Social Calendar

THURSDAY
MAGNOUA CLUB Thursday 7:30
p.m. home of Erna Jesse. Burton
Smith will have devotions and Edna
Slusher is in charge of the program.
BENEFIT BRIDGE and salad
luncheon Thursday I p.m. at Grace
Episcopal Parish House, Public invited.
SPECIAL MEETING for parents
and teachers Thursday at 6 p.m. at
Syracuse Elementary. All parents
are welcome to attend.

1979 CAMARO
.RALLY SPORT
air, auto, ps, pb,
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SAVE

The second horticulture series entitled , ••starting Plants from
Seeds" , was presented by Mrs. Bunny Kuhl at the recent meeting of the
Shade Valley Council of Floral Arts
held at the Chester lire station.
Mrs. Kuhl explained to the group
the first step in assuring good plants
-the purchase of good seed from a
reputallle coJ!!P8ny. She suggested
that the most favorable containers
· in which to plant seeds is a peat pot,
moistened . before filling with the
peat moss. Seeds, )die said, should be
planted three times deeper than
their width. After the plants are
mature enough to set out, she sug·
gested using a toughening system by
taking them 'outside into the sun for
a few minutes gradually increasing
the time out, and then put Into tbe
ground.

1·

B&amp;S AUTO &amp; MOBILE HOME SALES

1977 (2) CHEV. TRUCK C-10

Council meets, hears
program on starting seedlings

r-----------.

Seek local talent

·•BLUE

Sunday

98:&gt;-3958.

TENNIS SHOES

Today in history

•

~"hade

Earnings must be reported
Persons wbo received social
security benefits in 1979 and who
also had earnings which exceeded
the annual exempt amount for that
year are required by law to file an
annual report of earnings by April
15, 1980.
In 1979, the exempt amount for
persons 65 and older was $4,500.00;
for persons under 65 (including
dependents and survivors) was
$3,480.00.
Due to the increases in the cost of
living these amounts have been increased in 1980 to $5,000 and $3,720
respectively.
Generally, for every $2 that is
earned over applicable exempt
amount, $1 in social security
benefits must be withheld or paid
back.
Forms with which to file the annual report are available at the
Athens social security office.
Save yourself a trip to the social
security office by filing your annual

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�8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

Damage·· exceeds $355 million, residents cleaning muc~
By Associated Press
As millions of dollars' worth of

erops rotted in sodden fields ,
Southern Californians shoveled
muck out of their homes and eyed
the skies for signs of yet another
rainstorm. The unrelenting rains
have pushed Idaho and Utah reservoirs to the limit and forced schools
in Arizona to close.
At least 30 persons have died in
Califo rn ia, Utalr; Arizona and
Me&gt;tico since the storms began last
week, and loss estimates now exceed
$355 million.
A sixth Pacific weather front in
eight days s lamm ed into
waterlogged Southern California on

Wednesday, ending a few hours of
sunshine with 'I" expected It inches
of rain before the forecast arrival of
a seventh storm tonight - and
perhaps more later.
In Northern California's Lassen
National Park, rangers pushed
through four feet of new snow in
search of four missing campers.
Meanwhile, one man was presumed
drowned Wednesday when floodwaters swept him off his horse as he
tried to rescue cattle near Patterson, Calif. , and the body of a surfer was recovered near Santa Cruz.
The storms have pelted Southern
California with more than a foot of
water since Feb. 13, causing flash

$43,500 approved
for Gallia project
Ohio's Stae Controlling Board has
approved $43,500 for the preparation
of a design report for reclaiming approximately 200 acres of abandoned
strip mine land located in the Little
Kyger Creek watershed in Gallia
County, State Rep. Ron James (DProctorville) aru10unced todsy.
The abandoned strip mine land
located in the Little Kyger Creek
watershed is considered to be a
heavy contributor of sediment and
acid mine drainage into streams in
the downstream and watershed
areas of Little Kyger Creek. A
previously made preliminary design
report had recommended that
backfilling, regrading, and contouring the area, installing drainage control and sediment retention structures, and revegetation, including
sot! conditioning , would be
necessary to reclaim the abandoned

strip mine land.
As a result of !be preliminary
report, the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources will proceed with
the preparation of design plans for
the recommended reclamation
work. At this time, the proposal to
reclaim the entire 200 acres is anticipated to cost $2 million.
The Dames and Moore Company
of Cincinnati submitted the proposal
to prepare for $43,500, the design
plans for the project and to perform
general engineering and resident
supervision during the actual
reclamation work.
"The design report is an essential
step in the progress of reclaiming
the abandoned strip mine land near
Little Kyger Creek," Rep. James
said. "I am pleased that the Controlling Board has approved the
money for the design report."

Area deaths
ARTHUKCAIN
Arthur Cain, 77, Rt. 2, Vinton, died
in Holzer Medical Center early
Thursday.
He was born March 22, 1902, son of
the late Jasper M. and Virginia
Knapp Cainin Rock Castle, W. Va.
He married Dorothy Dyke in
Gallipolis on Feb. 21, 1922. She survives, along with two sons and two
daughters :
Arthur C. (Jack) Cain, Uniontown
Ohio ; Harold Lee Cain, Atwater:
ohio; Mrs. Catherine Ledsome
Uniontown and Mrs._Mary Brnette:
Langsvtlle. Three children preceded
him in death. Nineteen grand and 28
great-grandchildren survive.
Two brothers and two sisters survive : Lonnie Cain, Columbus;
Homer Cain, Sarasota, Fla.; Mrs.
Alma Gibson, De Land, Fla., and
Mrs. Hattie Polsey, Logan, Ohio.
Four brothers and three sisters
preceded him in death.
Mr. Cain was retired from the
Teledime Monarch Rubber Co. in
Hartville, Ohio, and was a member
of the Rock Castle United Brethren
Church.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Sunday at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home in Vinton with Rev.
Noble Russell officiating. Burial will
be in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

MICHAEL CLIFFORD JACOBS
Michael Clifford Jacobs, 23,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday at MI.
Carmel Hospital , Columbus,
following a lengthy illness.
He was born Feb. 16, 1957, a son of
Larry and Carol Jacobs of Houston,

Tex.
Other survivors are a sister, Terri
Lynn, Houston; grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Levenna Ebersbach,
Pomeroy; great-grandmother, Mrs.
Tina Jacobs, Pomeroy; an aunt,
Mrs. Shirley Frazier, Lakeview, and
an uncle, Jack Jacobs of Pomeroy. ,
Private funeral services will be
beld for the family only at the Ewing
Funeral Home. There are no calling
hours.

KENNETH H. RADCLIFFE
Kenneth H. Radcliffe, 59, a resi·
dent of Columbus, fanner resident of
Rt. 1, Ewington, died at I p.m. Tuesday at his residence.
He was born July 31, 1921 on Rt. 1,
Ewlngton, son of the late Alfred and
Idella Oiler Radcillfe.
Survivors include two brothers
and two sisters, John H. Radcillfe
and Harold Radcliffe, Rt. 3,
Wellston ; Mrs. Chester (Darlene)
Kisor, Adams Mills, Ohio and Mrs.
Mabel Snyder of Rt. I, Ewington.
He was a retired employee of
Tirnpldns RoUer Bearing of Colwnbus.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Frida~· frorr&gt; t.he I\' .:Coy-Moore

Funeral Home in Vinton with Rev .
Jerry Neal officiating. Burial will be
in Franklin Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7-9
p.m. this evening.
ROBERT EUGENE VANNEST
Robert Eugene VanNest, 54, of
4094 Larry Place, Columbus, a former resident of Athens, died Wednesday in Columbus.
He was born at Darwin, a son of
Denver VanNest of Albany and the
late Hattie Will VanNest. He attended Tuppers Plains High School.
Surviving besides his father are
his wife, Mary Tinkham VanNest; a
son, Robert Stephen, Route 2,
Athens; a daughter, Rhonda (Susie)
Strobridge, Route I, Albany; a stepdaughter; three stepsons ; five stepgrandchildren; three brothers, Kermit of Route 5, Athens; Leo, Albany,
and Norman of Route I, Athens; four
sisters, Nina Welch, Helen Sinclair,
both of Shade; Carol McLead,
Guysville, and Hazel Baxter,
Albany.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m., Friday at the Hughes Funeral
Home in Athens with the Rev.
Robert Alexander &lt;iliciating.
Burial will be in Alexander
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday. In lieu of flowers,
contributions may be made to Doctors Hospital Development Fund,
1087 Dennison Ave., Columbus, Ohio
43201.
RICHARD E. WHEATLEY
Richard E. Wheatley, 31, New
Marshfield, died Wednesday at
Camden--Clark Memorial Hospital in
Parkersburg following a brief
illness.
He was born at Marietta, a son of
Evaline Vannoy Wheatley and the
late Ralph Wheatley. He was a
graduate of Athens High School, a
veteran of the Vietnam Conflict
having served in the U.S. Navy, and
was a heavy equipment operator at
the Southern Coal Co. Racoon Mine
No.3.
He was a past president of Local
1957, United Mine Workers of
America; a member of the New
Marshfield Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 8804, and the Moose
Lodge in Athens.
Also surviving besides his mother
are his wile, Roberta Andrews
Wheatley; two sons, Nathan aod
Seth, both at home; a daughter,
Kate Wheatley, at home; two
brothers, James Wheatley, Chauncey, and Thomas Wheatley, Athens;
four sisters, Patricia Smith, Lancaster; Diane Cunningham, East
Liverpool; Carol Clifford, Cincinnati, and Sandy Wheatly, Marietta; his grandmother, Mary Vannoy,
Marietta.
Funeral services will be held at 1 ·
p.m. Saturdsy at the Hughes
Funeral Home in Athens with tbe
Rev. Willard Love officiating.
Burial will be in the New Marshfield
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home .anytime after 2 p.m.
Friday. Military rites will be conducted at the cemetery by the New
Marshfield VFW Post.

floods that have destroyed 110
homes and damaged another 1,350.
More than 5,000 people were urged to
leave their homes as mountain
slopes turned into avalanches of
mud.
Damage in six counties - Los
Angeles, Orange, Ventura, Riverside, San Diego and San Bernardino
- hit $267 million and Lt. Gov. Mike
Curb urged President Carter to
declare them a rna jor disaster area.

Meanwhile, in normally arid
Arizona, officials tallied $90 million
in damages in counties hit by a
record eight days of flooding. Goy.
Bruce BabLit asked businesses to
begin staggered working hours as
only two of the 10 bridges over the
Salt River, which divides Phoenix,
escaped the rampa ging waters.
Another storm was expected to hit
Anzona today and a still-stronger
storm was forecast for Saturday .

Pounding surl battered homes
along the Califomla coast as a fifth
storm in a week moved lnto the northern part of the state, packing 50
mph winds. Some 40 residents of
Novato, north of San Francisco,
were forced to leave their homes
late Wednesday as farmers in the
southern part of the state reckoned
crop losses at $28 million.
In Idaho, officials in the tiny community of Malad breathed a sigh of
relief as water stopped rising in a
saturated' earthen dam to the nothwest. State Water Resources e~perts
had said a heavy rain could push the
»-year-old structure to the breaking
point.

OEA discipline bill .
•
•
causing reservations
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
president of one of the sta te's largest
school system has expressed reservations about a bill proposed by the
Ohio Education Association dealing
with school discipline.
The bill is intended to provide for
the "reporting, handling and
preventing of school violence .. and
crimes'' and to define the rights and
responsibilities of administrators,
students, teachers and parents.
"The bad part of this whole bill is
that it requires far too much of
school systems in the way of repor·
ting, keeping records and busy
paper work that requires school
systems to englarge their clerical
and supervisory staff," said
Virginia Prentice, president of the
Columbus Board of Education.
Senate Bill 336, among other
things, would require students convicted of assault in the classroom
would be barred from returning to
the school for tbe completion of their
education.
Sandy Schwartz, a lobbyist for the
82,000-member teachers association,
describes the bill as "a comprehensive piece of legislation" that
would require the state board of
education to compile information
about violence and crimes committed against school employees or
during students.
"The only thing in the state code
right now is that schools only have to
post the reasons why an individual is
suspended or expelled," said Ms.
Schwartz. "Under this bill, each
school board will have to do

I

something. No longer will boa rds of
education be able to ignore the
problem."
Mrs. Prentice, however, said her
board is concerned about how much
such a program would cost.
" If the Legislature feels this is
such a good bill, let it fund that
which they mandate, " she said.
"Unfortunately and as usual the
state doesn 'I provide the money to
pay for these new programs."
She emphasized that it was time
for school systems to concentrate on
teaching instead of discipline.
" Discipline should rest in the
home," said Mrs. Prentice. "But ifit
(discipline) has to be meted out in
the school, so be it. We realize the
importance of discipline, but this
particular bill raises a lot of objections among our entire board."
Student discipline is a major
problem in suburban, rural and urban schools throughout the country,
according to Ms. Schwartz.
" No statistics are kept in Ohio on
the number of assaults against
teachers and students or the amount
of property destruction that occurs," she said, slll!sing that such
information is vital.
Under the bill, each local board of
education would have to adopt a
written policy by Jan. I, 1981, regarding the responsibility of school employees in maintaining discipline.
The OEA proposal would also
prohibit students convicted of
assault charges from reteurning to
the school to complete their
education .

Today is Thursday, Feb. 21, the
52nd day of 1980. There are 313 dayc
left in the year.
·
Todsy's highlight in history:
On Feb. 21, 1838, Samuel Morse
gave the first public demonstration
of the telegraph.
On this date:
In 1885, the Washington Monument
was dedicated in the nation's
capital.
In 1916, the battle of Verdun, the
longest and bloodiest of World War I
began in France. More than ~
million soldiers were to die in the
fighting.
In 1965, black Muslim leader
Malcoim X was shot and killed as he

In Phoenix, Ariz., the traffic jams
that forced commuters to wait up to
six hOurs to pass tbe two open
bridges· had been reduced and waits .,,
Wednesday were down to two hours.
Some 1,500 persons forced to seek
safety as the Agua Fria and New
rivers swelled under the load of 8 inches of rain returned to tbeir homes
Wednesday. Schools closed in
Flagstaff when 9 inches of new wet
snow fell.
In Utah, where flooding caused
more than $1 million damage in northeastern Cache County' waters
around the overflowing Enterprise
reservoirs began to recede .
However, more rain was expected.

was about to address a rally in New
York City.
In 1971 , Israel said it would be
willing to sign a peace agreement
with Egypt, but would not withdraw
from any captured Egyptian
territory.
Ten years ago, sabotage was
suspected in the explosion and crash
of an Israel·bound Swiss jetliner. All
47 people aboard died.
Five years ago, Nixon administration officials John Mitchell,
H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrliclunan
and Robert Mardian were sentenced
to prison terms for their part in tbe
Watergate cover-up.

report by telephone. In fact, you can
conduct almost any type of social
security business by phone ; you can
apply for benefits, get a benefit
estimate, or find the answer to ·a
question you may have - all in tbe
privacy and convenience of your
home. Meigs County residents call
99U622.

Local talent is .needed for tbe annual radio program to be conducted
in conjunction with Meigs County's
heart fqnd drive Wednesday at the
Episcopal Parish House in
Pomeroy.
Armand Turley, organist, will accompany the program over WMPO
from 9 a.m. to f p.m. and those
wishing to contribute their talent to
the success of the program are
asked to contact Mr. and Mrs.
James Souls by.

FOR MEN &amp; BOYS,
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Gary Cooper

Turns one year. .
Gary Lee Cooper, son of Gary and
Marilyn Engle Cooper, observed his
first birthday recently with a party
at his home. A Bugs Bunny cake
made by his mother was served with
ice cream and Kool-Aid and games
were played by some of the children
attending. At the party were his
sister, Christie, his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Engle, Middleport, Mrs. Debbie Engle and
Pete, Larry Laudernlilt, Larry, Jr.
and Herbie Laudernlilt, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Ables, Archie Jarrell
and Michael, Debbie and Roger
Dowell.
Unable to attend but sending gifts
were his · grandfather, Clarence
CoOper, Portland, and his great uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Nelson.

Mrs. Martha Lee and Florence
Circle visited Rev. and Mrs. Carl
Hicks recently.
Rev. Mark Flynn of Racine visited
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle a
recent Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson
called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johason of Racine a recent
Thursday.

There were 24 present for Sunday
School Feb. l7.
Mrs. Ray Johnson and Mrs. Glenn
Tuttle of Eagle Ridge visited Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Circle on Thursday.
Angela Dawn Carelton of Racine
spent Saturday evening with Betty
VauMeter and Margaret Ann Johnson and family.

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Fortress", "The Prayer for Peace".
The group sang "America" and closed with prayer.

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MODULAR
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and get-well cards were signed for
them.
For the program, readings by
m•mbers were " God Bless
Al)lerica", "'Try Living With-One of ·
Your 'isms"', 11 Where but to Jesus",
"'What Our Nation Needs", "'Tis r:l
Thee ". "Our Father in Heaven",
"This I Know", "Faith is a Mighty

121fz FT.

_______,..,
•

The February meeting of tbe
Booster Sunday School class was
hosted by Mrs. Grella Simpson at
her home Friday with a 6 p.m. dinner party.
To open the meeting tbe group
sang "America, the Beautiful" with
scripture being taken from Psalm
23. Prayer was by Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm and the business session W"ll
conducted by Mrs. Helen Simpson.
Several members were reported ill

class meets

8 OZ. BOTTLE TREATS 14 GALLONS OF GAS.

By Melody Roberta
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Collins, Mrs.
Paul Andrews and Barbara attended
tbe funeral of t.frs. AnClrews' sister,
Mrs. Nora McCrery of Columbus.
Condolences to tbe Pat Neutzllng
family for their lOSB of Pat and
Anita's brother-in-law. He was killed
during a rald in Maryland. He was a.
very fine police officer.
Guests at tbe Millard Ball residen·
ce have been Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Hauber and family, local.
Callers at tbe Paul Hauber home
have been Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Adams, local, Mr, and Mrs. Lawren·
ce Johaston, Jr. anq Jeremy, PorUand, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Hauber, Tim and Kim, local.
Reminder: The Long Bottll!l
Community Association meets the
last Wednesday of every month at
7:30 p.m. in the Conununlty
Building. The next meetJns.will he
Feb. 'n. Please try to attend.
.Mrs. Emestlne Hayman was
recently visited by Kathy Fitzpatrick, her granddaughter from ,
Lancaster. Kathy Ia the daughter of
'Mr. and Mrs. Elbert (Barbara) Fitzpatrick.

.

visited Mrs. Manuel's father, Earl
Hart at St. Cloud, Fla., Mr. and Mrs.
James Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Hart. They visited Orlando, Disney
World, Cocoa Beach, Florida before
returning home. They traveled by
plane.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel and son, Tim, were Mr. and
Mrs. Sid Manuel of Long Bottom,
Mrs. Betty McGuire, Mrs. Lynn Arms, daughter, Jeanie, of Pomeroy.

!:J~hool

CARBURETOR. AND.
GAS LINE
ICING

LongBottom
News Notes

•' .

'11

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mandy Russell spent Friday and
Saturdsy nights with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs Russell Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hagey and
children Brad and Stephanie of Wolf
Pen were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy and
Michael.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel and
children, Robin and Donnita, spent a
week's vacation in Florida . They

TEEN DANCE, 8 to 11:30 p.m. at
Orchid ROom, Pomeroy, sponsored
by Music Unlimited; chaperones
present.

1977

&lt;!iscussed was the June 7 flower
show which the Shade Valley Council will sponsor. Mrs. Jackie Frost
thanked members for cards during
her recent illness, and Mrs. Holter
commented to tbe group on her recent trip ~~ Me&gt;tico. Mrs. Carol Erwin gave :ee secretary's report, and
Mrs. Frost the treasurer's report.
Mrs. Jennie Machir conducted
merit judging on constructions
brought by the members. Theme
was "Gifts from the Sea." Mrs.
Koblentz received a blue ribbon for
her seashell construction, Mrs.
Stethem, a red, Mrs. Maida Long, a
yellow, and Mrs. Erwin, a green.
Mrs. Holter served cake, coffee,
ice cream and punch. Mrs. Koblentz
will be the March 18 hqstess. Anyone
interested in becoming a member
should contact either 98:i-4218 or ·

Fairview News Notes

~-

$3795

'73

Mrs. Melanie Stethem presided at
the meeting which opened with roll
call. Mrs. Sheila Taylor presented
an educational exhibit showing a
variety of containers. Mrs. Pat
Holter announced the Ohio Assocla·
lion of Garden Clubs' regional
meeting to be held on April 19 at
Morton Hall on the Ohio University
Campus. The meeting will begin at
10 a.m. with a limcheon to be served
at Baker Center a{ noon. Price will
be $3.for the program and $3 for the
luncheon.
Mrs. Janet Koblentz reminded the
'group that the March meeting will
be when new officers are elected.
Dues will also be payallle at that
time. Ways to raise money to belp
finance the proposed garden club
building on the Meigs County
fairgrounds were discussed. Also

MIDDLEPORT CIITLD CONSERVATION League, 7:30 p.m. Thursday in tbe-Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co.
Dr. Nan Mykle, Conununity Mental
Health, will be the speaker. Mrs.
Susie Abbott and Mrs. Susie Soulsby
will be hostesses.
TITLE I reading program
meeting for parents of all children in
the program and interested persons
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Middleport Elementary School. . Dan
Morris, Meigs Local director of
curriculwn, will present aspects of
the program.
- .
SATIJRDAY
WASHINGTON Birthday dinner
for public 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday in
hasement of Middleport Masonic
Temple by Evangeline Chapter
OES. No tickets at door; reser·
vations by Friday with Kathryn Miteben, 742·2544 or Euvetta Bechtle,

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Social Calendar

THURSDAY
MAGNOUA CLUB Thursday 7:30
p.m. home of Erna Jesse. Burton
Smith will have devotions and Edna
Slusher is in charge of the program.
BENEFIT BRIDGE and salad
luncheon Thursday I p.m. at Grace
Episcopal Parish House, Public invited.
SPECIAL MEETING for parents
and teachers Thursday at 6 p.m. at
Syracuse Elementary. All parents
are welcome to attend.

1979 CAMARO
.RALLY SPORT
air, auto, ps, pb,
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SAVE

The second horticulture series entitled , ••starting Plants from
Seeds" , was presented by Mrs. Bunny Kuhl at the recent meeting of the
Shade Valley Council of Floral Arts
held at the Chester lire station.
Mrs. Kuhl explained to the group
the first step in assuring good plants
-the purchase of good seed from a
reputallle coJ!!P8ny. She suggested
that the most favorable containers
· in which to plant seeds is a peat pot,
moistened . before filling with the
peat moss. Seeds, )die said, should be
planted three times deeper than
their width. After the plants are
mature enough to set out, she sug·
gested using a toughening system by
taking them 'outside into the sun for
a few minutes gradually increasing
the time out, and then put Into tbe
ground.

1·

B&amp;S AUTO &amp; MOBILE HOME SALES

1977 (2) CHEV. TRUCK C-10

Council meets, hears
program on starting seedlings

r-----------.

Seek local talent

·•BLUE

Sunday

98:&gt;-3958.

TENNIS SHOES

Today in history

•

~"hade

Earnings must be reported
Persons wbo received social
security benefits in 1979 and who
also had earnings which exceeded
the annual exempt amount for that
year are required by law to file an
annual report of earnings by April
15, 1980.
In 1979, the exempt amount for
persons 65 and older was $4,500.00;
for persons under 65 (including
dependents and survivors) was
$3,480.00.
Due to the increases in the cost of
living these amounts have been increased in 1980 to $5,000 and $3,720
respectively.
Generally, for every $2 that is
earned over applicable exempt
amount, $1 in social security
benefits must be withheld or paid
back.
Forms with which to file the annual report are available at the
Athens social security office.
Save yourself a trip to the social
security office by filing your annual

.

'•

'.
. ..
. POINT
PLEASANT

~

"•
I

,,9

"Ill AND NAMES YOU CAN·r~IJSy--

t i KINGSBURY .

' I

,''

' ..
'

HOME
SALE~--·:,
llOO E. Main ,.

'

West .Sieood Sl.

Pom.-oy, Olllo

I

'

I,

''

'

.

,,

f92·7t34
•

"THE. PROFESSIONAL PIOPU"
·;

.

.Phone 992-2139'
'

.

\

,,

...

-

'

GAL

1

1.

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

·

·

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
I

WANT AD
CHARGES
•

! day
!da)'l

Cull

Charge

l.OO
1.50
l.MI
l .OO

3da}'ll
lda}'ll

1.2$
1.90

2.26
3.75

Notices

Pels for Sale

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOUI Will

GU N SHOO T EVE RY
SU NDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOK E ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB .

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367 0292.

GUN SHOOT . Racine
Volunte-er Fire
Depf.
Every Saturday . 6 :30p.m .
At their build ingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

76).3167 or 557 ·3411.

Elich went over the m1n1rrum
15 word.s b 4 centa per wont per

BUY I NG U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
! ANY
AMOUNT) . DON 'T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL ;)\ 614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN ' S.

day. Adl runntng other than consecutive daya wiU be charged at
the J day rate.

.

In momocy, Card ol Thanka
and Obituary: I cenl8 per word,
$3.00 m.tnimwn. Cash ln ad-

...,._

Mobile Home sales and Yard
sala •~ accepted ooly with
cuh Willi order. ~ cent charge
for ads cafi'YinK Box Nwuber In

GUN SHOOT every Sunday

12 :00. Factory choke ontv .
corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .

People who continue to
turn around in the
driveway of James E .
Lucas, 36636 Smith Run
Rd ., Rutland , wi II be
arrested .

t PAY highes t pr ic es
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, iewelry , etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport .

C.reoiTheSenlineJ.

1be Publisher t"ellerves thl!
right to edit or reject any ads

Lost and Found

HEARIN G AID USERS :
save used batteries, mer·
cury and sliver oxide,
redeem for cash . Diles
Hea ring
Aid
Center ,
Athens. Tel. 614·594·3571 .

det!med

objectional. Tbe
Pllbllaher will not be .-..ponslble
for more than one incon'ect lnsertioo.

NOTICE

$50 reward for return or in·

formation lead ing to return
of a male reddish brown
dachshund , lost in Sugar
Camp area of Reedsville.
Phone 378·6308 or 378·6384.

GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MIJnday
Noon on Saturday
Tueoday

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plu.s
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or992·2 157.

tbrufriday

RN OR LPN, full lime. 3·
11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RNorLPN, 111o7 :30.
Call Mr. Zidlan at Pomeroy
Health Care Center , Mon ·
day through Friday, 9·5.

4P.M.

the day beforl! publication

SWiday

DEALER
WANTED

4P.M.

Friday afternoon

L----------------"-'
•

Steel Buildings
Farm &amp; Commtrclal

•

Grain Bins

FrlcloJ, Fob. 22·

ASTRO•GRAPH

Part-time janitor services
for church . Call 992·2914 or
992 ~ 5693.

Special discount on a dl~play
uitding tor your bus1ness
seONLY. Limit 1 per county.
actortes In all areas of the
ountry. To receive 1nforma
tion packet

Fobruorr22,,_
Changes kl your environment are
very likely this coming year. Your

new IUrroundlngs could Offer

Ladies needed tor good
paying temporary office-like work . No experience
necessary . Also, need
ladies with car for light
delivery
work .
Gas
allowance . Apply in person
to Mrs. Carter, Upper Hall,
DAV Club, 124 Butternut
Ave . , Pomeroy . Tues .,
25th, 9·9:30 a.m .

CALL TOLL FREE

opportunltiea that were prevloual)! unavailable. Make the
mOit'of tMm.

1-SOD-428-9720

20)

PilCH (Fob. -

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
Pullins Excavating office,
US33, Pomeroy, OH.

rolllable opportunity lo
our own local dealership.-~
ew choice areas open . Con
ractor. farmer or busi;nessman considered. Field
ales support . Financi ng
~vailable.

Bernice Bede Osol

You're a &amp;hade too optimistic
to&lt;Say and COUld put your atamp
of approval on the wrong people.
llaten to the advtce of those who
care abput you. How to get along
with other ~· 11 one or the
sections you II enjo~ In )'OI.K
Aatro-Graph letter, which
begma wtttl ~our blrthda~. Mall
S1 for each to Astra--Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth

r;~~

BUILDING S. GRAIN SYSTEMS

Posl Q1hce

Bo~

Sill • O.nv1Ue, IN 46122

Camp Manager Wanted :
Canter's Cave 4'-H camp
near Jackson, Oh io. Super ·
visory duties (10 other em ·
ployees - mostly college
students) ordering and
maintaining supplies, light
maintenance work, collects
fees, records, and receipts,
etc . Salary negotiable .
June 1 · August 31. Contact :
Meigs Co. Extension Of·
fice, Box 32, Pomeroy, OH.
45769. Phone 614·992·6696.

offering you-. u 1 promiM. See

things tor what they are.
UNA (lap!. 2'-0c:t. :IS) In your
huta to get thlnge done, you
oould place )lOUr faith In the
wrong things or Individuals
today. What you hope to accompllah may not come off.

date.
ARIEl (March 21•Aprll 11)
Thera's a good Chllllce today you
coukl place a much higher value

on something you're doing than
It's ....Uy worth . Appraise your
endeavors reatlattc:alty.
TAURUI (April 20-lloy 20)
You're a aoftle today, so you'll
have to be ••tra careful not to let

acOIIPtO (Oct.

~.

221

Take care that you don't unintentionally

abuaa

another

poraon'o -oolty today. Pua
up An)'thlng that even hlnta at
taking aomethlng out of IIOmebodylioe'a poci&lt;el.
8AQITTAIIIUI (Nov. :a-Ooo. 21)
concemect IIIOdat• could be
trying to ten you aomothlng
today for )lOUr awn good. Uaten
to their oplnlonl. Mull over what

fraetoadera take advantage ot
your genero.lty. Give only to the

d-.tng.

(lily 11.,_ 20) Opln·
10118 In your houl8hold could
l&gt;ocorM dlan*rlcally oppoaed
today, with you caught right in
tile middle. H an~thlng 11 to be
oottlod, _ _ , . muat ylold.

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles mex .
diameter 10" on largest
end. Sl2 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. S10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rl . 2,
Pomeroy 992 ·2689.

~'=ORN
(Doc. - · 11)
To uve youraett'
aggravation,

CAJICIII (.MM 11-.luly 22)
Faulty Juclgmeiita on your ptlr1
ara llttremety Ukoty you
have a tenc:Mincy tod.y to truat

your lnatlnctl and Ignore the
blaclc-and-WIIfttlacta.
LIEO (Julr :a-Aug. 22) It you'vo
got It, _,d II. If, however,
you'ro aponcllng whit you ara
counting on gtttlng, that'a
ano1her ..ory - one that would
have an unhappy 1r1cUng.
V1IIQO (Aug, D-lepl. 22) You'll ·
bo dlla!&gt;t&gt;&lt;Mntod today II you
mlslnterprlft a pat on the back,
or encour.~~gement aomeone 11

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

double-check to HI that an)l
wor1o l*ng j)«&lt;ormod for you Ia
l*ng dono u you ,._lflod, end

that

~

wll bO flnlahOd on acllld-

u".
AOUAIIIUI (.lan. JD.Fob. II) In

altuattona· where you lhart a
joint lntereet, prudent manage--

ANTIQUES ,
FU!&lt; ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.

ment Ia a must today. Don't take
any gambtn. Hok:l ofl on new
tnveatmenta tor the time being.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

1-21-10 (TAPE NO. II)

OLD COl NS, pocket wal·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·

6462.
Wanted to Buy : Four foot
S·curve rolllop desk. Call
742·2316, evenings .

P-

GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSI E) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6370 . ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

Bowlln,i LaDe.
Febnoary 1!, 1181
'nlesday TrlpUcote Leape
Standlqo
Team
Royal Crown Cola

Pta.
35
MeigaiM
33
Coorich Cool
32
Reuther·Bropn Ins.
30
Friendly Tavern
21
Hlndy Electric
11
High individual game - Pat Canon 233; Carla
Caner 1111!; JanSbeeta 19l.
HQ(h series- Pat Carson 563; Maxine Dugan
504; Marieine Wll5oo487.

Now acceping logs at our
log yard 7:30·3 : 30 week·
days. High prices for gOOd
quality logs with a limited
amount of low grade,
Payment upon delivery
and sealing. Blaney Har·
dwoods, Box 66, Vincent,
OH 457U. 614-678·2960 .

Team high game- Meigs 1M D39.

Twn high series- Reuler·Brogan Ina. lt60.
TriO&gt;ollty Bowllq .....,..
Feb. 5, 11110

Team
Colwnbla National Wfe
Eaa:Jes Club
Smith'1 Body Shop

Firestone

TeamNo.3
TeamNo.8

.....
211
20
20
20

16
16
Ind. game - Henry Ciatworthy :lllt-199:

GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP·TO ·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10, OR CALL 992-3476.

Don ffelaoo 201.

Htah incl. series • Henry Clatworthy 581: Bill
Radfonl5f4: JohnTyree520.
111gb team pme- Columbia NaUollal Life lltltl ;
TeamNo.3184; Eagle~ SM.
. TMm hilh aeries - Columbia National IJfe
25211; Team""No.3 mt; Eqle1Qub2502.

!

~-U.,Leapo

Feb. t!,IMt

Team

~lumbia

NaUonat Ufe
Smith'sBodySilop

Elgtes Club
ToamNo.3

Ftmtone

TearnNo. s
High

Pel.
32
211
22
22
20 20

Pets for $ale

ind. setlea ... Mote· Norman 607; om

Sm1th510; RufU!IJewel1552.
fJJgh incl. pme - Dive Peteroon 232; Mose
Nonnan a: BobSIIU:th and Jack Pet~raon zu .'
HJih tc.liil seri• - Team No, 3 25M; Smith
JloclySiloplll4: T-No.12111.

. lfllbteam(IIIIIO-TeomNa, UJU77:Taam
No. IIIlO.

~------------~-----------1
;

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Tavlor. 614·367-7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor ·outdoor faCilities .
Also
AKC
~egistered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a hOmeless pet.
Healthv. shots, wormed.
Donations required . 992·
6260, noon-7 p.m .
The Meigs County Humene
Society
offers
BEAUTIFUL CATS . Shorl·
haired T iger, long-haired
Yellow, gray Tiger , black
and white. Litter trained.
UNUSUALLY NICE dogs.
Playful Cocker type; bob·
tailed Collie type ; also
large Poodle-Schnauzer
type . All males. Fox·
looking
Terrier,
Dachshund and sweet
Shepherd . Both females.
All young. Lots of puppies,
too . All ha11e had shots and
have been wormed . Phone
992·6260.

Auto Sales
1975 Bronco 4x4, V·8, AT,
P.S., posi·traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. 4 new
shocks. 992·2679.
1978 Ford F-150 4·wheel
drive stepside. 14.35 Gum·
bas with aluminum wheels.
Extras. S5995. Call after 5,
p.m. 992 ~ 5620. 21.000 miles.
1977. Pontiac Grand Prix,
Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windows, dooi- locks,
extra padded landau top,
special paint and interior.
24,000 actual. Local owner,
best of care. $43110 . Call992·
-6149.
1971 Ford Galaxy 4·door.
Good running condition.
See al243'h Mulberry Ave.
1974 Camara , very
reasonable. 992·2439.

1974 Firebird. 992·3293, 105
Union Avenue.
1977 Thunderbird, P.S.,
P. B., AM · FM, radials.
$28110. 247·3594.
1977 vw Rabbit. Excellent
cqQdllion. 992 ·3213 after 4
p.m .
.

1

HOOF HOLLOW, Engllah
and Western. Saddles' and
harnes! .
t1orses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·'
698-3790. Bordlng and
Ridlng. Lessons and Horse
Care products. western ·
bOOts. Children's S15.50.
Adultss29.oo.

For Sale
COAL ,
LIMESTONE,
sand , gravel, calcium
c hlori de, fertilizer. dog
fOOd, and all types of sail.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc ....
E . Main St ., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.
APPLES
CIDER
HONEY. Filzpalrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone WilkesVille, 669·
3785.
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at U per bu. _
Best for
apple buller. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick orchard, SR
.

EMEkGENCY
power
alternators - own the best
- buy Winpower. Call 513·
788·2589.
DECORATED CAKES for
atl occasions. Character
cakes and sheet cakes . Call
992·6342 or 992·2583 .
'
GOOD CONDITIONED
hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.
Phone 992·7201 or 992·3309.

Real Estate for Sale
COUNTRY HOME wilh
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
R 1. 7 or 33. 446· 2359 after 6.
House for sale in Pageville;
OH. FHA finan.cing , Low
down
payment.
3
bedrooms, living room, kit·
chen and bath on main
floor with .4 finished rooms
ext:ept for floor covering in
basement, with bath and
laundry roam. Located on 2
large lots. Priced in mid
twenties. Saturday only
592 · 2322 . Anytime but
Saturday 698·7331 .

.

Summer Cottage, on the
Ohio River, Great Bend
area . 3 bedrooms, dining
room-kitchen combination,
running water, electricity,
out of high water. 992·5623
after 5.
THREE BEDROOM total
electric home, attached
and detached garage, nice
eat · in kitchen, quality .
built, over 1 acre, rural
water, approved septic.
Price $41,8110. 742·2819.

1972 Olds 88, 4-door sedan,

-=====·==~========•==·····=·········

Business Services ._

RAILROAD
STREET ·
GARAGE
Middleport, 0 .
Automotive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon. thru Sat.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

wanted to Rent
Elderly lady would like to
rent 2 or 3 room apartment
on ground floor . Close to
Post office and doctor in
Middleport. Can furnish
references. Call992·2969.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomerov . . Laroe lots.can
99H479 .
3 AND 4 RM furnished ·ap·
Is. Phone 992·5434.
RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787.

Married couple looking for
house or small farm to renf
(Perhaps buy).
Mid·
dleport·Cheshire area, by
April or May . Phone 696·
1025.

For Sate

DISCOUNT
PRICES

Hotpolnt and
Genert~l Electric

Apppliance
Sa Ies &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
1970 Mark Twain V·hull, 16
foot wi'th 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call alter 5 p.m ., 992·2528 .
FOR. THE month of
Ft!!bruary:,
Drehel's
Ceramics - greenware 30
Pet. off. Glazes 20 Pet. off.
59 N. 2nd ,Ave., Middleport,
OH. 992·2751 . .
·
1980 GOld equipment. Ar·
nold P.almer 4 Ram, VIctor,
Browning, MacGregor,
Dunlop, Rawlings, ' end
Daisy. John Teaford, 614·
985-3961 .
1971 trailer, 12x65, ,com·
pletety tvrnl5hed, air ~on·
dltloned. Firm USOO.OO.
cell992·5304. ·

·I RUGA~
0

I Ri"'AD

600D! I'M AFRA ID
THI5 WHOLf THIN6'.7
OUT OF OUR HAND,.. ,

Free Estimates

CARO~ PHONED
CHRIS'S MOM T' TELI.
HER WI?'D TRACI?D HIM
AND THE TIGER T' LAKI!
FORE 5-T PAI'I:K·-

fA!&gt;Y~

388-9759

()

) I I

CAPTAIN EASY
YA , WA5H~

THURSDAY,FEBRUARY 21 ,1910
7 :Jo---Hallywood Squares J ;; In
Search Of 6 ; Joker ' s W ild 8; Dick

rx

1

~oofiJ1g,
sidl11g,
gutter,
built-up
roof
a11d
home
repair.

RACINE, 0 .
992·6ll5 or
992-7314
12·28-pd.

HAIR STYUNG
Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

All types root work, new
or repair gutters and
downs pours,
gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
1·22-lfc

949·2320
Racine,

. .. AND A COP 'IVA5
SO ~OW THeLAW' Ll llE OUT
I
FOR "EM IN FULl.

THER E~

tn
l~

IYEUFLE

. Il

2-1Hfc

Hours 9-1 M ., w., F.
Other times by appointment.
107 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy,O.

CALL 992·7544

Auto&amp;Truck
Repair
Also Trans.mission
Repair ,
Phone 992·5682
4-JO·Ifc

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS
FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

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

...

COUNTRY LIVING -

718 of an acre with a 3
bedroom,
2 bath,
Midland mobile home.
Has central heat and
rural water. Going for
$16,500.
2 TRAILER SPOTS On State Route near
Middleport
with
Leading Creek water.
ldea14 acre tract of land
for only $12,500.
ECONOMIZE - With
this 3 bedroom home
with large lot, city
water, natural gas, and
full basement. Nice kitchen, too. Priced at
$18,500.
BUSINESS BUILDING
- 5 rooms and bath all
on ground floor . Can be
converted to a home
very easily. Chimney
tor a Wood burner. Ask·
lng lust 111,000. 1
SPECIAL- Rive~ front
lots on State Route 124.
Ideal. for camping,
boating, and fishing this
spring.
THIS IS THE YEAR TO
MAKE A PROFIT ON
YOUR ' PROPERTY .
DO IT NOW BY CALL.··
lNG 992-3325 or 992-317,,

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

GAAC.I&lt;. ~UP! .

'(oU ~'T H~l/1; A
~OF

Aluminum Siding
el nsulatlon
eStorm DOors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

HUMOR .

Real Estate for Sale
~ I NANCING.VA·FHA

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

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

ANNIE

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

SAHD'f/ww.,
THAi'!i &amp;REAT.' HE!:'!i
COhiPLE'I'!LY OOT OF

2·17·1 mo .

HIS TRACKS ARE

CLEAR, SAHIS ··
WE CAH EA61LY

WANTED: housecleaning
position, 1 or 2 days per
week,
reliable, har ·
dworking,
clean
li'nd
honest, can supply referen·
ces to character. Please
caiiiU3·4951 anytime. Have
dependable transportation.

.

Will care for elderly in our
home, trained and experienced . 992·7314. .

Giveaway
To good home : 10 months
old male collie type dog .
992-5436.
Mobile Homes- Sale

L.IKE: ... LIKIS ...

.73

FOU.OW ...

macrame clanes.

AIJ.EYOOP

1 Made It Myself"
.... crafts are funt .
~--......:-----2-18· 1 mo .
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

1972 LYNN HAVEN Ux65 3 .
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with expanda, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 31ldr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S . MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv . 304·675·4424.

TRADE?!! OH, NO! lF VOU
THINK I'D TRI&gt;.DE MOO-_ _._.J

... CHIEF
IOLBOB
WISHE'S
TO TRt&gt;.DE

FDR THI&gt;.'T FOGGY 01.:
ISLAND OF YOURS,
NO! NO!
'IOU'RE CAA"l.Y!
NO! iiiOT
THE
ISLAND!

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs.
service,
all
makes.
992· 2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sates
ar,d Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

WELL, Y'CAME TO
TH' RIGHT PLACE~
WE GOT LOTSA
STUFF LIKE
THAT!

GOOPS!

~~~t~llf'

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

.
'
:

Walt, he's
qone!

Joel mistoolt. you
for Mr. ulomp,
Wilmer! ~AX~

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers, .
toasters, Irons, all small .
eppl lances. Lawri mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
s &amp; G Carpet Cleaning,
Steam cleaned·.
Free
estimate. ·
Reasonable
rat.es. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742-2211.

WINNIE
tLL6ETEVEN

ANO 0/JT IN ARI?ONI'r ...

\\OODWARD,
W/1/T/INP
{JEt/

PA'-1{ 1 YtJU'RE LIKE: A
Wj.jJRLINB- 17Ef&lt;VISH .

RE$TlNo
1$ FOR OLC7

CAN'T YOU SIT IIONN
AN[? REST.•. JUST

F061ES.LVE
ear iOO
MUCH LIFE

ONCE?

IN

PIANO TUNING; Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742-2951. Service to
scHools and home since
1965.

ME FOR
ll-IAT.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY- Gill's Dress Shop In
Middleport. Nice l~atlon. Doing gOOd business. A
beautiful store. If you're lntere•ted In being your
own boss and making monev, then call us for
detail a.
ON LINCOLN HEIGHTS IN POMEROY - Two
bedroom with bath, plenty of closets, large llvtng
room, eat· in kl~hen, atorm windows &amp; doors, gas
turn~~ee, n.W hot water healer and plumbing. No
down payment If you qu•llty, A good lrivestmenf.
$17,500.
QUIET COUI!ITRY LIVING- On St. Rt. 1ol3 jusl4
miles from Pom,ro~.3 yr. old ranch sty fit home with
·a split rail ~~te, ove 3 acres of land, garage and
workshop, cent. heat air cond. $.44,'100.
'
MIDDLiiP'OIIT - Two bedroom, 1'h belli, located
lutf block from lleart of town yet In quiet
neighborhOOd, S25.000. 1 . .
,
'
CALL WE HAVE MORE-CALL 992·2342

a.

.

RodniJ Downing, Broiler .- Ho. 992-3731

Bill Childs, llranch Mar. - Ho. 992·2499

for one's
mill

Grammy

zArbor

13 Not here
14 Without

5 Sculptured

principles
IS Aulo mecb-

1 Fortify
once more

body

7 Japanese

Yeslenllly'a ADIIwer
11 Punch

!7 Repaired,

up a text
lJ Religious

as a road
Z8 - de

zz

30 "- Trlate"

lJ Stowe
statesnan
body
character
• Late
Pickle
17 Dress, u stone CQillj)Qief'
flavorin(l
11 Gennan city
writer aclol' !3 Make angry
21 Actreait,
I Leam~r
!4 Uonlllte
- MWIIIOD
1Z Band leader, !I "I - st
!1 No: Ger.
Lea_
Ute office"
!Zitafieah
la venlaon
!3 Vote In

realatance
31 Eve -

31 Enstwhlle
' U.N. name
37 Bonnet
dweller?

25 Waistcoat
Zll Small
aalamander

27 SOli mineral
Z8Tiff
!I Immortal

. ballerina
32Upward:

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI
Tromm. 742·2328. Reteren·

ces.

33 &lt;lloler

HTake up

·-

Housmg
Headquarters

5 Something

anlc's term

\VI~ YOU FOR
~A'l:..50B

and

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
U Sir Anthony
1Swedlah
DOWN
rock group
1 Oscar or

3 H!Wey novel
10 Grown old
4 Word with
11 Go on penalon
more or

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.

club on the king of hearts and
ruffed a club with a high
trump.
NORTH
2-21 -80
He entered dummy with the
+9 7
.K64
nine of trumps and ruffed
• KQ
another club .
.AK9654
Dummy's clubs were now
good
so the Professor cashed
WEST
EAST
one more trump to pull West's
• 6 52
+43
last tooth and led a diamond
.QJ1085
• 9732
to dummy'~ king-queen.
• AJ 9
·• 10 7 6 4
East took his ace, but the
• Q J 10 8
Professor still had one trump
SOUTH
left to ruff a heart, whereupon
+AKQJt08
dummy was good.
" You sure guarded a$ainst
ts 5 32
that 4-1 club break," satd the
student, "but wouldn't you
Vulnerable: Both
have gone down if clubs had
Dealer: South
been 3-2 and trumps 4·1 ?"
"Not at all," replied the
West Nortb East
Professor. "When ruffed the
first low club I would have
Pass
Pass
Pass
known that clubs were break·
Pass
Pass
Pass
ing 3-2. Then I would not have
Pass
had to ruff a second club and
could have handled a 4-1
trump break. "
Opening lead:• 2
This is the sort of hand that
is really instructive. Of
course, the Professor had
By Oswald Jacoby
overbid his hand a trifle, but
and Alan Sontag
after you have payed as well
as the Professor has for as
The Professor looked at the long as the Professor has you
deuce of trumps lead with evi- - tend to overbid a trifle.
dent distaste. Then he played (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
dummy's seven and his own
ace.
(For s copy of JACOBY
Next he cashed the ace of MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
hearts at trick two and led a Bridge, " care of this newspaclub to dummy at trick three. per, P. 0. Box ,489, Radio Cit}
Next came the key play of the Station, New York, N. Y
hand. He discarded his last !00!9.}

.A

IT··· IT L00t&lt;5

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-we will' be having

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery ; various sizes of
pool kits. Do·it·yourself or
le1 us Install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.

Card lay dictates attack

.2

·u

2·18·1 mo.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

-rne; COtJTAAR'{, , I SAID,

1-\A-1-V&gt;, ' BRIJl"US I '{au

~.LUU4
?I u.tit~~•/t

WILL CARE for elderly
and handicapped In my
private home. Reasonable
rates . 992-6022.

211
E. sicond Stroel
:-

...

o~ganlzatlons

Services Offered

992-3325

Thursday, Feb. 21

-Now
corrylng
chocolate wrappers and
molds lor candy making
-Full line of Krall suppiles . "
-Special rates for

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

81115 Mon.thru Fri.
Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30·pd.

~IRtGIL B. SR . ·t,.ol~

SERVICE

Business-Farms
Partnerships &amp;
corporations
.Payrolls, profit &amp; loss
statements, ell federal
and state forms.
H&amp;R BlOCk
Office Location
611 E. Main
Pomeroy
992-3795
1-30·1 mo.

SIGHT.'

Ir----------,

. BIU.'S AUTO
REPAIR

~~BOOKKEEPING

Gal1ge
mile off Rt 7 by-pass ,
on St . Rt. 124 toward
Rutland ..

rxxnrm)

Yesterday·s ~ Jumbles ASSAY UMBO INTAKE GLOOMY
I Answer : Could be the case when there's a card game
on a plane-THE SKY'S THE LIMIT

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

l ·a

Now arrange lha drcled letters to
form the surp.lse answer, as sug·
gestod by the eboYe cartoon.

(Anawers tomorrow)

TRI.COUNTY

Roger Hysell

FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterans Admin, Loans.

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

0.
2·11 mo.

~EAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE

.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.~

one tetter to each square. to fOrm

. lour ordinary words.

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

down

work,
walks
and
driveways.
!FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

ROOFING

1979 Mercury Bobcat, 3
door,
rear
window
defroster, P.S., tinted
glass, sports mirrors,
auto.. 4 cyl., steel radial
1ires, super seal rust
proofed . 5,000 miles. 9492820.

NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport - large 7 room
house, 3 bedroom. full
basement, W:z baths,
central air and heat, 2
car garage, cable T.V.,
in extra nice condition,
can be yours at
$45,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED Middleport - remodel ed 2 famlly, good condi·
t!on, rent the upstairs,
live downstairs. Priced
at S28,000.00.
NEAR MINES
MObile home, like new,
fully furnished, 1 acre,
own water, storage
building, cement drive.
Excellent Buy at
$13,500.00.
GOOD LOCATION - 3
bedfoom ranch, level
lot, central ~lr ~nd heat,
fully equipped kitchen,
for only $30,500.00.
.MIDDLEPORT - An
older l'h story brick
home. Kitchen has
dishwasher, dlspgsal
and hOOd. 3 bedrooms
and lots of closets on appx. l'h 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 SERVICE OF CLELAND
REALTY ...
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949-2660
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

work,

spouts, some concrete

· H. L WHITESEL

SPLIT LEVEL brick home.
7 rooms, 2 baths. Full
basement, garage and carport. Electric heat. 5 acres
tillable
land.
3
greenhouses, large pole
shed. Located near Racine
Hydro Plant. Call 247·3752
afler4 p.m .

Y

Gutter

Television
'
Viewing

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

Answerhere: JUST

Real Estate for Sale

60BE .
1
MAIN = ·· ..
POMcKOY, 0. ,
992-2259

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates
" DOn't cuss-Call us"
1·18· (j)d.)

P.S., P.B., A.C. Excellent
body . Sound mechanical
condition. ssoo. 985·-4175 .

1976 Camaro, 305 V·8,
Crager mags, air shocks,
$2800. 992 ·3169 .

~ f)Jj}~f l ~~f. 1~THATSCAAIIIILEDWOROGAIIE
Q:!.II,!/J ~/.:lr!!l ~ byHenriAmoldancJBoblae

DICK TRACY

.

689.

For Rent

Local
howling

'

•

Notices

pav cash or certified check
for ant iques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also.
guns. pocket watches and
coin collections . Call 614·

15 Words or Under

'

'

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, F'eb. 21,1900

BJr'JIIIIIzrrrt-

33Bulldlag

beam

DOWN
AGENCY INC.

I'M WORRIED ABOUT
PAW .. HE DON'T LOOK
NONE TOO GOOD

' WHAT IN THUNDER IS
NEW ABOUT THAT?

to- out
(narrowly

1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
DO YOU HAVE THE.RIGHT
COVERAGE?..
SOUlHEAsTERN OHIO SINCE

defeated)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

One letter simply standa for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the· length and formation of the words are all
hint1. Each day the code letters are dllrerent.

!:ALL.US!

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGIICY, INC.

AXYDLBAAXa
LONGFELLOW

Ia

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDs ·

M2-2342

ozforda
118Gaellc

INSURANCE
lttDIUIIII:

11 uftdisgulaed
38 Tie the

CRYPTOQUOTES
' '

,.,,

I TOOK IT UPON

MI(5ELF 10 CALL PIG, PEN
HE ADMITTED THAT
HE LI-KED I(QU.•.

HE AL50 SAID HE'5
BEEN THINKING ABOUT
A5k:ING I{Otl TO
ANOTHER 11ANCE ....

.. NEXT
VALENTINE'S .
OAt(!

Q
QA

KEMU

ZHVAY

E • CREXU

AUMUW

GES

SKES

FKUWU

GQSSQJ.P
IHV

JUZHWU

QAGCQWQAP.- YHYQU
Yetterday'a "Cryppoqaote: ANY FAI:l'
&amp;'ITABLISHED BY

twO OR THREE GOOD

KEMU

XE A

GNQSK
IS BE'ITER
'J'ESTIMONIES

1THAN BY A TIIOUSAND ARGUMENTS.-N.EMMONS
if) IMI Kll'tl h1turn

~.,ncllc... t~.

J U

Cavell 33; SIOD,OOO Name That
Tune 10; Nashville On The Road
13; Country Roads 15; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20.
8 oo.-B uck R09ers 3, 15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games 6, 13; Waltons 8;
Bill Moyers ' Journal 20,33 :
College
Basketball
·10;
Amer icans 17 .
9:()(}-Quincy 3, 15 ; Barnaby Jones 8 ;
Sneak Previews 20,33; College
Basketball 17.
9: 30- Camera Three 20 ; Sports
Close Up 33 .
10 :0Q-Skag 3. 15; Knots Landing
8, 10; News 20; Austin City Limits
33 .
10 :3o-Dver Easy 20.
11 :OG-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Lasf of
lhe Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20; Fall
&amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin 33.
11 :3G-Tonighl 3,15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games Update 6, 13;
Columbo 6; ABC Capt ioned News
33 ; Movie "The Thrill of II All"
10; Movie "Monster from a
Prehistoric Planet" 17 .
11 : 45- ABC News Special 6,13;
12 :0Q-Police Woman 6,13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: lGBarella 6, 13; 1:3G-News 17 .
FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 22, 198ll
; :4s-.Farm Reporf 13; . 5:5()-PTL
Club 13.
6:0Q-700 Club 6,8 ; PTL Club 15;
Hea lth Field 10; World at Large
17 .

6:3G-Kidsworlo 10; News 17; 6:4s-.
Morning Reporl3 ; A .M . Weather
33 .
6:5()-Good Morning, Wesl Virginia
13; 6: 5s-.News 13.
l:OQ-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13: Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:3()-Family Affair 10; 7:5s-.Chuck
White Reports 10.
8:0()..-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10: Leave It
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
B:3o-Romper Room 17 .
9:0()..-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6 ;
Beverly H illbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
Show 17 .
9:3()-Bob Newharl8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green Acres 17:
10:0()..-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Joker 's Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13; Movie "The
Interns" 17.
10 :30- Hollywood squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13 ; Whew! 8, 10;
Andy Griffilh 6.
10 :5s-.House Call 10.
ll :QO-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price is Righl8,10;
E lee . Co. 20.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ;
Family Feud 6, 13 ; Sesame St.
20,33.
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10,13; Health Field 15.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Password
Plus 15; Movie "Count Three &amp;
Pray" 17; Elec. Co. 33.
1:OG-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:0Q-Doclors 3, 15; One Ufe to Uve
6,13; As The World Turns 8,10;
2:2s-.News 17.
2: 30- Another
World
3, 15 ;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00- General
Hosplfal
6, 13 ;
GuldlnQ Liqhl 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17 ; Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Personal Time Management 33 .
3:3()-Fiintstones 17; Over Easy 33 .
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Grllfin 6 ; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13: Utile
Rascals 15; Speclreman 17.
4:3()-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:0Q-Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
2{),33 .
5:3()-Mash 3; News 6; Plav the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Davs Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6:0()..-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6: Carol Burnetl17 ; 3-2-1 Contact
2{),33 .
6:3G-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhartll; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:00- Cross -Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; MacNeil · Lehrer
Report 33; News 10; Love,
American Style 15: Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
i &gt;J()-Prlce Is Right 3; 3's A Crowd
6: Joker's Wild 8: Dick Cavett
33; Pop Goes The Country 13, 15;
All In The Family 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20.
8:00-Disney's Wonderful World
3,15; Pink · Panther 6,13; Incredible Hulk 6, 10; Washington
Week In Review 20,33; Movie
HThe Birds" 17.
8:3G-XIII Winter Olympic Games
6, 13; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:DO-Movle "Detour to Terror"
3, 15; Dukes of Hazzard 8,10;
Capitol Beat 33; Free to Choose
20.
9:30-Amerlcan Short Story 33.
10:DO-Dallas 8, 10; News 20.
10:30-Perspectlve on Greatness 17;
Over Easy 20; Murder Most
English 33.
11 : Oil-News 3,6,8, 10,13,15: Dick
Cavett 20.
11 :30-Tonlght 3,15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games' Update 6, 13;
Movie "I'm I~ Girl He W,ants to
Kill" 8; ABC Captioned News 33;
Movie "The X from Outer
Space" 10; Movie "Beast from
20,000 Fathoms" 17.
12 : 00-ABC News Special 6,13;
David Susskind 33. ·
12 :15-Charlle's Angels 6; Movie
"Too Many Suspects" 13.
I :OQ-Midnlght .&amp;peclal 3,15; Movie
"Satanlk" II); 1:05-News 17.
1:25-FBI 6; fi\Ovle "I Aim at the
Stara" 17; 2:15-News 13.
2:30-News J; 3:25'-Movle " The
t:qng Haul" 17; 5 : 2o-Love,
American Style 17.
'

..

.

,.

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

·

·

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
I

WANT AD
CHARGES
•

! day
!da)'l

Cull

Charge

l.OO
1.50
l.MI
l .OO

3da}'ll
lda}'ll

1.2$
1.90

2.26
3.75

Notices

Pels for Sale

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOUI Will

GU N SHOO T EVE RY
SU NDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOK E ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB .

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367 0292.

GUN SHOOT . Racine
Volunte-er Fire
Depf.
Every Saturday . 6 :30p.m .
At their build ingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

76).3167 or 557 ·3411.

Elich went over the m1n1rrum
15 word.s b 4 centa per wont per

BUY I NG U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
! ANY
AMOUNT) . DON 'T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL ;)\ 614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN ' S.

day. Adl runntng other than consecutive daya wiU be charged at
the J day rate.

.

In momocy, Card ol Thanka
and Obituary: I cenl8 per word,
$3.00 m.tnimwn. Cash ln ad-

...,._

Mobile Home sales and Yard
sala •~ accepted ooly with
cuh Willi order. ~ cent charge
for ads cafi'YinK Box Nwuber In

GUN SHOOT every Sunday

12 :00. Factory choke ontv .
corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .

People who continue to
turn around in the
driveway of James E .
Lucas, 36636 Smith Run
Rd ., Rutland , wi II be
arrested .

t PAY highes t pr ic es
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, iewelry , etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport .

C.reoiTheSenlineJ.

1be Publisher t"ellerves thl!
right to edit or reject any ads

Lost and Found

HEARIN G AID USERS :
save used batteries, mer·
cury and sliver oxide,
redeem for cash . Diles
Hea ring
Aid
Center ,
Athens. Tel. 614·594·3571 .

det!med

objectional. Tbe
Pllbllaher will not be .-..ponslble
for more than one incon'ect lnsertioo.

NOTICE

$50 reward for return or in·

formation lead ing to return
of a male reddish brown
dachshund , lost in Sugar
Camp area of Reedsville.
Phone 378·6308 or 378·6384.

GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MIJnday
Noon on Saturday
Tueoday

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plu.s
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or992·2 157.

tbrufriday

RN OR LPN, full lime. 3·
11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RNorLPN, 111o7 :30.
Call Mr. Zidlan at Pomeroy
Health Care Center , Mon ·
day through Friday, 9·5.

4P.M.

the day beforl! publication

SWiday

DEALER
WANTED

4P.M.

Friday afternoon

L----------------"-'
•

Steel Buildings
Farm &amp; Commtrclal

•

Grain Bins

FrlcloJ, Fob. 22·

ASTRO•GRAPH

Part-time janitor services
for church . Call 992·2914 or
992 ~ 5693.

Special discount on a dl~play
uitding tor your bus1ness
seONLY. Limit 1 per county.
actortes In all areas of the
ountry. To receive 1nforma
tion packet

Fobruorr22,,_
Changes kl your environment are
very likely this coming year. Your

new IUrroundlngs could Offer

Ladies needed tor good
paying temporary office-like work . No experience
necessary . Also, need
ladies with car for light
delivery
work .
Gas
allowance . Apply in person
to Mrs. Carter, Upper Hall,
DAV Club, 124 Butternut
Ave . , Pomeroy . Tues .,
25th, 9·9:30 a.m .

CALL TOLL FREE

opportunltiea that were prevloual)! unavailable. Make the
mOit'of tMm.

1-SOD-428-9720

20)

PilCH (Fob. -

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
Pullins Excavating office,
US33, Pomeroy, OH.

rolllable opportunity lo
our own local dealership.-~
ew choice areas open . Con
ractor. farmer or busi;nessman considered. Field
ales support . Financi ng
~vailable.

Bernice Bede Osol

You're a &amp;hade too optimistic
to&lt;Say and COUld put your atamp
of approval on the wrong people.
llaten to the advtce of those who
care abput you. How to get along
with other ~· 11 one or the
sections you II enjo~ In )'OI.K
Aatro-Graph letter, which
begma wtttl ~our blrthda~. Mall
S1 for each to Astra--Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth

r;~~

BUILDING S. GRAIN SYSTEMS

Posl Q1hce

Bo~

Sill • O.nv1Ue, IN 46122

Camp Manager Wanted :
Canter's Cave 4'-H camp
near Jackson, Oh io. Super ·
visory duties (10 other em ·
ployees - mostly college
students) ordering and
maintaining supplies, light
maintenance work, collects
fees, records, and receipts,
etc . Salary negotiable .
June 1 · August 31. Contact :
Meigs Co. Extension Of·
fice, Box 32, Pomeroy, OH.
45769. Phone 614·992·6696.

offering you-. u 1 promiM. See

things tor what they are.
UNA (lap!. 2'-0c:t. :IS) In your
huta to get thlnge done, you
oould place )lOUr faith In the
wrong things or Individuals
today. What you hope to accompllah may not come off.

date.
ARIEl (March 21•Aprll 11)
Thera's a good Chllllce today you
coukl place a much higher value

on something you're doing than
It's ....Uy worth . Appraise your
endeavors reatlattc:alty.
TAURUI (April 20-lloy 20)
You're a aoftle today, so you'll
have to be ••tra careful not to let

acOIIPtO (Oct.

~.

221

Take care that you don't unintentionally

abuaa

another

poraon'o -oolty today. Pua
up An)'thlng that even hlnta at
taking aomethlng out of IIOmebodylioe'a poci&lt;el.
8AQITTAIIIUI (Nov. :a-Ooo. 21)
concemect IIIOdat• could be
trying to ten you aomothlng
today for )lOUr awn good. Uaten
to their oplnlonl. Mull over what

fraetoadera take advantage ot
your genero.lty. Give only to the

d-.tng.

(lily 11.,_ 20) Opln·
10118 In your houl8hold could
l&gt;ocorM dlan*rlcally oppoaed
today, with you caught right in
tile middle. H an~thlng 11 to be
oottlod, _ _ , . muat ylold.

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles mex .
diameter 10" on largest
end. Sl2 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. S10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rl . 2,
Pomeroy 992 ·2689.

~'=ORN
(Doc. - · 11)
To uve youraett'
aggravation,

CAJICIII (.MM 11-.luly 22)
Faulty Juclgmeiita on your ptlr1
ara llttremety Ukoty you
have a tenc:Mincy tod.y to truat

your lnatlnctl and Ignore the
blaclc-and-WIIfttlacta.
LIEO (Julr :a-Aug. 22) It you'vo
got It, _,d II. If, however,
you'ro aponcllng whit you ara
counting on gtttlng, that'a
ano1her ..ory - one that would
have an unhappy 1r1cUng.
V1IIQO (Aug, D-lepl. 22) You'll ·
bo dlla!&gt;t&gt;&lt;Mntod today II you
mlslnterprlft a pat on the back,
or encour.~~gement aomeone 11

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

double-check to HI that an)l
wor1o l*ng j)«&lt;ormod for you Ia
l*ng dono u you ,._lflod, end

that

~

wll bO flnlahOd on acllld-

u".
AOUAIIIUI (.lan. JD.Fob. II) In

altuattona· where you lhart a
joint lntereet, prudent manage--

ANTIQUES ,
FU!&lt; ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.

ment Ia a must today. Don't take
any gambtn. Hok:l ofl on new
tnveatmenta tor the time being.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

1-21-10 (TAPE NO. II)

OLD COl NS, pocket wal·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·

6462.
Wanted to Buy : Four foot
S·curve rolllop desk. Call
742·2316, evenings .

P-

GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSI E) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6370 . ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

Bowlln,i LaDe.
Febnoary 1!, 1181
'nlesday TrlpUcote Leape
Standlqo
Team
Royal Crown Cola

Pta.
35
MeigaiM
33
Coorich Cool
32
Reuther·Bropn Ins.
30
Friendly Tavern
21
Hlndy Electric
11
High individual game - Pat Canon 233; Carla
Caner 1111!; JanSbeeta 19l.
HQ(h series- Pat Carson 563; Maxine Dugan
504; Marieine Wll5oo487.

Now acceping logs at our
log yard 7:30·3 : 30 week·
days. High prices for gOOd
quality logs with a limited
amount of low grade,
Payment upon delivery
and sealing. Blaney Har·
dwoods, Box 66, Vincent,
OH 457U. 614-678·2960 .

Team high game- Meigs 1M D39.

Twn high series- Reuler·Brogan Ina. lt60.
TriO&gt;ollty Bowllq .....,..
Feb. 5, 11110

Team
Colwnbla National Wfe
Eaa:Jes Club
Smith'1 Body Shop

Firestone

TeamNo.3
TeamNo.8

.....
211
20
20
20

16
16
Ind. game - Henry Ciatworthy :lllt-199:

GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP·TO ·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10, OR CALL 992-3476.

Don ffelaoo 201.

Htah incl. series • Henry Clatworthy 581: Bill
Radfonl5f4: JohnTyree520.
111gb team pme- Columbia NaUollal Life lltltl ;
TeamNo.3184; Eagle~ SM.
. TMm hilh aeries - Columbia National IJfe
25211; Team""No.3 mt; Eqle1Qub2502.

!

~-U.,Leapo

Feb. t!,IMt

Team

~lumbia

NaUonat Ufe
Smith'sBodySilop

Elgtes Club
ToamNo.3

Ftmtone

TearnNo. s
High

Pel.
32
211
22
22
20 20

Pets for $ale

ind. setlea ... Mote· Norman 607; om

Sm1th510; RufU!IJewel1552.
fJJgh incl. pme - Dive Peteroon 232; Mose
Nonnan a: BobSIIU:th and Jack Pet~raon zu .'
HJih tc.liil seri• - Team No, 3 25M; Smith
JloclySiloplll4: T-No.12111.

. lfllbteam(IIIIIO-TeomNa, UJU77:Taam
No. IIIlO.

~------------~-----------1
;

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Tavlor. 614·367-7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor ·outdoor faCilities .
Also
AKC
~egistered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a hOmeless pet.
Healthv. shots, wormed.
Donations required . 992·
6260, noon-7 p.m .
The Meigs County Humene
Society
offers
BEAUTIFUL CATS . Shorl·
haired T iger, long-haired
Yellow, gray Tiger , black
and white. Litter trained.
UNUSUALLY NICE dogs.
Playful Cocker type; bob·
tailed Collie type ; also
large Poodle-Schnauzer
type . All males. Fox·
looking
Terrier,
Dachshund and sweet
Shepherd . Both females.
All young. Lots of puppies,
too . All ha11e had shots and
have been wormed . Phone
992·6260.

Auto Sales
1975 Bronco 4x4, V·8, AT,
P.S., posi·traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. 4 new
shocks. 992·2679.
1978 Ford F-150 4·wheel
drive stepside. 14.35 Gum·
bas with aluminum wheels.
Extras. S5995. Call after 5,
p.m. 992 ~ 5620. 21.000 miles.
1977. Pontiac Grand Prix,
Make SJ, loaded, power
seats, windows, dooi- locks,
extra padded landau top,
special paint and interior.
24,000 actual. Local owner,
best of care. $43110 . Call992·
-6149.
1971 Ford Galaxy 4·door.
Good running condition.
See al243'h Mulberry Ave.
1974 Camara , very
reasonable. 992·2439.

1974 Firebird. 992·3293, 105
Union Avenue.
1977 Thunderbird, P.S.,
P. B., AM · FM, radials.
$28110. 247·3594.
1977 vw Rabbit. Excellent
cqQdllion. 992 ·3213 after 4
p.m .
.

1

HOOF HOLLOW, Engllah
and Western. Saddles' and
harnes! .
t1orses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·'
698-3790. Bordlng and
Ridlng. Lessons and Horse
Care products. western ·
bOOts. Children's S15.50.
Adultss29.oo.

For Sale
COAL ,
LIMESTONE,
sand , gravel, calcium
c hlori de, fertilizer. dog
fOOd, and all types of sail.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc ....
E . Main St ., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.
APPLES
CIDER
HONEY. Filzpalrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone WilkesVille, 669·
3785.
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at U per bu. _
Best for
apple buller. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick orchard, SR
.

EMEkGENCY
power
alternators - own the best
- buy Winpower. Call 513·
788·2589.
DECORATED CAKES for
atl occasions. Character
cakes and sheet cakes . Call
992·6342 or 992·2583 .
'
GOOD CONDITIONED
hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.
Phone 992·7201 or 992·3309.

Real Estate for Sale
COUNTRY HOME wilh
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
R 1. 7 or 33. 446· 2359 after 6.
House for sale in Pageville;
OH. FHA finan.cing , Low
down
payment.
3
bedrooms, living room, kit·
chen and bath on main
floor with .4 finished rooms
ext:ept for floor covering in
basement, with bath and
laundry roam. Located on 2
large lots. Priced in mid
twenties. Saturday only
592 · 2322 . Anytime but
Saturday 698·7331 .

.

Summer Cottage, on the
Ohio River, Great Bend
area . 3 bedrooms, dining
room-kitchen combination,
running water, electricity,
out of high water. 992·5623
after 5.
THREE BEDROOM total
electric home, attached
and detached garage, nice
eat · in kitchen, quality .
built, over 1 acre, rural
water, approved septic.
Price $41,8110. 742·2819.

1972 Olds 88, 4-door sedan,

-=====·==~========•==·····=·········

Business Services ._

RAILROAD
STREET ·
GARAGE
Middleport, 0 .
Automotive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon. thru Sat.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

wanted to Rent
Elderly lady would like to
rent 2 or 3 room apartment
on ground floor . Close to
Post office and doctor in
Middleport. Can furnish
references. Call992·2969.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomerov . . Laroe lots.can
99H479 .
3 AND 4 RM furnished ·ap·
Is. Phone 992·5434.
RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787.

Married couple looking for
house or small farm to renf
(Perhaps buy).
Mid·
dleport·Cheshire area, by
April or May . Phone 696·
1025.

For Sate

DISCOUNT
PRICES

Hotpolnt and
Genert~l Electric

Apppliance
Sa Ies &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
1970 Mark Twain V·hull, 16
foot wi'th 1978 175 hp Mere.
Call alter 5 p.m ., 992·2528 .
FOR. THE month of
Ft!!bruary:,
Drehel's
Ceramics - greenware 30
Pet. off. Glazes 20 Pet. off.
59 N. 2nd ,Ave., Middleport,
OH. 992·2751 . .
·
1980 GOld equipment. Ar·
nold P.almer 4 Ram, VIctor,
Browning, MacGregor,
Dunlop, Rawlings, ' end
Daisy. John Teaford, 614·
985-3961 .
1971 trailer, 12x65, ,com·
pletety tvrnl5hed, air ~on·
dltloned. Firm USOO.OO.
cell992·5304. ·

·I RUGA~
0

I Ri"'AD

600D! I'M AFRA ID
THI5 WHOLf THIN6'.7
OUT OF OUR HAND,.. ,

Free Estimates

CARO~ PHONED
CHRIS'S MOM T' TELI.
HER WI?'D TRACI?D HIM
AND THE TIGER T' LAKI!
FORE 5-T PAI'I:K·-

fA!&gt;Y~

388-9759

()

) I I

CAPTAIN EASY
YA , WA5H~

THURSDAY,FEBRUARY 21 ,1910
7 :Jo---Hallywood Squares J ;; In
Search Of 6 ; Joker ' s W ild 8; Dick

rx

1

~oofiJ1g,
sidl11g,
gutter,
built-up
roof
a11d
home
repair.

RACINE, 0 .
992·6ll5 or
992-7314
12·28-pd.

HAIR STYUNG
Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

All types root work, new
or repair gutters and
downs pours,
gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appt.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
1·22-lfc

949·2320
Racine,

. .. AND A COP 'IVA5
SO ~OW THeLAW' Ll llE OUT
I
FOR "EM IN FULl.

THER E~

tn
l~

IYEUFLE

. Il

2-1Hfc

Hours 9-1 M ., w., F.
Other times by appointment.
107 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy,O.

CALL 992·7544

Auto&amp;Truck
Repair
Also Trans.mission
Repair ,
Phone 992·5682
4-JO·Ifc

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS
FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

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

...

COUNTRY LIVING -

718 of an acre with a 3
bedroom,
2 bath,
Midland mobile home.
Has central heat and
rural water. Going for
$16,500.
2 TRAILER SPOTS On State Route near
Middleport
with
Leading Creek water.
ldea14 acre tract of land
for only $12,500.
ECONOMIZE - With
this 3 bedroom home
with large lot, city
water, natural gas, and
full basement. Nice kitchen, too. Priced at
$18,500.
BUSINESS BUILDING
- 5 rooms and bath all
on ground floor . Can be
converted to a home
very easily. Chimney
tor a Wood burner. Ask·
lng lust 111,000. 1
SPECIAL- Rive~ front
lots on State Route 124.
Ideal. for camping,
boating, and fishing this
spring.
THIS IS THE YEAR TO
MAKE A PROFIT ON
YOUR ' PROPERTY .
DO IT NOW BY CALL.··
lNG 992-3325 or 992-317,,

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

GAAC.I&lt;. ~UP! .

'(oU ~'T H~l/1; A
~OF

Aluminum Siding
el nsulatlon
eStorm DOors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

HUMOR .

Real Estate for Sale
~ I NANCING.VA·FHA

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

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

ANNIE

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

SAHD'f/ww.,
THAi'!i &amp;REAT.' HE!:'!i
COhiPLE'I'!LY OOT OF

2·17·1 mo .

HIS TRACKS ARE

CLEAR, SAHIS ··
WE CAH EA61LY

WANTED: housecleaning
position, 1 or 2 days per
week,
reliable, har ·
dworking,
clean
li'nd
honest, can supply referen·
ces to character. Please
caiiiU3·4951 anytime. Have
dependable transportation.

.

Will care for elderly in our
home, trained and experienced . 992·7314. .

Giveaway
To good home : 10 months
old male collie type dog .
992-5436.
Mobile Homes- Sale

L.IKE: ... LIKIS ...

.73

FOU.OW ...

macrame clanes.

AIJ.EYOOP

1 Made It Myself"
.... crafts are funt .
~--......:-----2-18· 1 mo .
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

1972 LYNN HAVEN Ux65 3 .
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with expanda, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 31ldr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S . MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv . 304·675·4424.

TRADE?!! OH, NO! lF VOU
THINK I'D TRI&gt;.DE MOO-_ _._.J

... CHIEF
IOLBOB
WISHE'S
TO TRt&gt;.DE

FDR THI&gt;.'T FOGGY 01.:
ISLAND OF YOURS,
NO! NO!
'IOU'RE CAA"l.Y!
NO! iiiOT
THE
ISLAND!

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs.
service,
all
makes.
992· 2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sates
ar,d Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

WELL, Y'CAME TO
TH' RIGHT PLACE~
WE GOT LOTSA
STUFF LIKE
THAT!

GOOPS!

~~~t~llf'

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

.
'
:

Walt, he's
qone!

Joel mistoolt. you
for Mr. ulomp,
Wilmer! ~AX~

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers, .
toasters, Irons, all small .
eppl lances. Lawri mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
s &amp; G Carpet Cleaning,
Steam cleaned·.
Free
estimate. ·
Reasonable
rat.es. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742-2211.

WINNIE
tLL6ETEVEN

ANO 0/JT IN ARI?ONI'r ...

\\OODWARD,
W/1/T/INP
{JEt/

PA'-1{ 1 YtJU'RE LIKE: A
Wj.jJRLINB- 17Ef&lt;VISH .

RE$TlNo
1$ FOR OLC7

CAN'T YOU SIT IIONN
AN[? REST.•. JUST

F061ES.LVE
ear iOO
MUCH LIFE

ONCE?

IN

PIANO TUNING; Lane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742-2951. Service to
scHools and home since
1965.

ME FOR
ll-IAT.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY- Gill's Dress Shop In
Middleport. Nice l~atlon. Doing gOOd business. A
beautiful store. If you're lntere•ted In being your
own boss and making monev, then call us for
detail a.
ON LINCOLN HEIGHTS IN POMEROY - Two
bedroom with bath, plenty of closets, large llvtng
room, eat· in kl~hen, atorm windows &amp; doors, gas
turn~~ee, n.W hot water healer and plumbing. No
down payment If you qu•llty, A good lrivestmenf.
$17,500.
QUIET COUI!ITRY LIVING- On St. Rt. 1ol3 jusl4
miles from Pom,ro~.3 yr. old ranch sty fit home with
·a split rail ~~te, ove 3 acres of land, garage and
workshop, cent. heat air cond. $.44,'100.
'
MIDDLiiP'OIIT - Two bedroom, 1'h belli, located
lutf block from lleart of town yet In quiet
neighborhOOd, S25.000. 1 . .
,
'
CALL WE HAVE MORE-CALL 992·2342

a.

.

RodniJ Downing, Broiler .- Ho. 992-3731

Bill Childs, llranch Mar. - Ho. 992·2499

for one's
mill

Grammy

zArbor

13 Not here
14 Without

5 Sculptured

principles
IS Aulo mecb-

1 Fortify
once more

body

7 Japanese

Yeslenllly'a ADIIwer
11 Punch

!7 Repaired,

up a text
lJ Religious

as a road
Z8 - de

zz

30 "- Trlate"

lJ Stowe
statesnan
body
character
• Late
Pickle
17 Dress, u stone CQillj)Qief'
flavorin(l
11 Gennan city
writer aclol' !3 Make angry
21 Actreait,
I Leam~r
!4 Uonlllte
- MWIIIOD
1Z Band leader, !I "I - st
!1 No: Ger.
Lea_
Ute office"
!Zitafieah
la venlaon
!3 Vote In

realatance
31 Eve -

31 Enstwhlle
' U.N. name
37 Bonnet
dweller?

25 Waistcoat
Zll Small
aalamander

27 SOli mineral
Z8Tiff
!I Immortal

. ballerina
32Upward:

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI
Tromm. 742·2328. Reteren·

ces.

33 &lt;lloler

HTake up

·-

Housmg
Headquarters

5 Something

anlc's term

\VI~ YOU FOR
~A'l:..50B

and

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
U Sir Anthony
1Swedlah
DOWN
rock group
1 Oscar or

3 H!Wey novel
10 Grown old
4 Word with
11 Go on penalon
more or

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.

club on the king of hearts and
ruffed a club with a high
trump.
NORTH
2-21 -80
He entered dummy with the
+9 7
.K64
nine of trumps and ruffed
• KQ
another club .
.AK9654
Dummy's clubs were now
good
so the Professor cashed
WEST
EAST
one more trump to pull West's
• 6 52
+43
last tooth and led a diamond
.QJ1085
• 9732
to dummy'~ king-queen.
• AJ 9
·• 10 7 6 4
East took his ace, but the
• Q J 10 8
Professor still had one trump
SOUTH
left to ruff a heart, whereupon
+AKQJt08
dummy was good.
" You sure guarded a$ainst
ts 5 32
that 4-1 club break," satd the
student, "but wouldn't you
Vulnerable: Both
have gone down if clubs had
Dealer: South
been 3-2 and trumps 4·1 ?"
"Not at all," replied the
West Nortb East
Professor. "When ruffed the
first low club I would have
Pass
Pass
Pass
known that clubs were break·
Pass
Pass
Pass
ing 3-2. Then I would not have
Pass
had to ruff a second club and
could have handled a 4-1
trump break. "
Opening lead:• 2
This is the sort of hand that
is really instructive. Of
course, the Professor had
By Oswald Jacoby
overbid his hand a trifle, but
and Alan Sontag
after you have payed as well
as the Professor has for as
The Professor looked at the long as the Professor has you
deuce of trumps lead with evi- - tend to overbid a trifle.
dent distaste. Then he played (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
dummy's seven and his own
ace.
(For s copy of JACOBY
Next he cashed the ace of MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
hearts at trick two and led a Bridge, " care of this newspaclub to dummy at trick three. per, P. 0. Box ,489, Radio Cit}
Next came the key play of the Station, New York, N. Y
hand. He discarded his last !00!9.}

.A

IT··· IT L00t&lt;5

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-we will' be having

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery ; various sizes of
pool kits. Do·it·yourself or
le1 us Install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.

Card lay dictates attack

.2

·u

2·18·1 mo.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

-rne; COtJTAAR'{, , I SAID,

1-\A-1-V&gt;, ' BRIJl"US I '{au

~.LUU4
?I u.tit~~•/t

WILL CARE for elderly
and handicapped In my
private home. Reasonable
rates . 992-6022.

211
E. sicond Stroel
:-

...

o~ganlzatlons

Services Offered

992-3325

Thursday, Feb. 21

-Now
corrylng
chocolate wrappers and
molds lor candy making
-Full line of Krall suppiles . "
-Special rates for

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

81115 Mon.thru Fri.
Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30·pd.

~IRtGIL B. SR . ·t,.ol~

SERVICE

Business-Farms
Partnerships &amp;
corporations
.Payrolls, profit &amp; loss
statements, ell federal
and state forms.
H&amp;R BlOCk
Office Location
611 E. Main
Pomeroy
992-3795
1-30·1 mo.

SIGHT.'

Ir----------,

. BIU.'S AUTO
REPAIR

~~BOOKKEEPING

Gal1ge
mile off Rt 7 by-pass ,
on St . Rt. 124 toward
Rutland ..

rxxnrm)

Yesterday·s ~ Jumbles ASSAY UMBO INTAKE GLOOMY
I Answer : Could be the case when there's a card game
on a plane-THE SKY'S THE LIMIT

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

l ·a

Now arrange lha drcled letters to
form the surp.lse answer, as sug·
gestod by the eboYe cartoon.

(Anawers tomorrow)

TRI.COUNTY

Roger Hysell

FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterans Admin, Loans.

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

0.
2·11 mo.

~EAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE

.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.~

one tetter to each square. to fOrm

. lour ordinary words.

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

down

work,
walks
and
driveways.
!FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

ROOFING

1979 Mercury Bobcat, 3
door,
rear
window
defroster, P.S., tinted
glass, sports mirrors,
auto.. 4 cyl., steel radial
1ires, super seal rust
proofed . 5,000 miles. 9492820.

NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport - large 7 room
house, 3 bedroom. full
basement, W:z baths,
central air and heat, 2
car garage, cable T.V.,
in extra nice condition,
can be yours at
$45,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED Middleport - remodel ed 2 famlly, good condi·
t!on, rent the upstairs,
live downstairs. Priced
at S28,000.00.
NEAR MINES
MObile home, like new,
fully furnished, 1 acre,
own water, storage
building, cement drive.
Excellent Buy at
$13,500.00.
GOOD LOCATION - 3
bedfoom ranch, level
lot, central ~lr ~nd heat,
fully equipped kitchen,
for only $30,500.00.
.MIDDLEPORT - An
older l'h story brick
home. Kitchen has
dishwasher, dlspgsal
and hOOd. 3 bedrooms
and lots of closets on appx. l'h 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 SERVICE OF CLELAND
REALTY ...
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949-2660
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

work,

spouts, some concrete

· H. L WHITESEL

SPLIT LEVEL brick home.
7 rooms, 2 baths. Full
basement, garage and carport. Electric heat. 5 acres
tillable
land.
3
greenhouses, large pole
shed. Located near Racine
Hydro Plant. Call 247·3752
afler4 p.m .

Y

Gutter

Television
'
Viewing

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

Answerhere: JUST

Real Estate for Sale

60BE .
1
MAIN = ·· ..
POMcKOY, 0. ,
992-2259

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates
" DOn't cuss-Call us"
1·18· (j)d.)

P.S., P.B., A.C. Excellent
body . Sound mechanical
condition. ssoo. 985·-4175 .

1976 Camaro, 305 V·8,
Crager mags, air shocks,
$2800. 992 ·3169 .

~ f)Jj}~f l ~~f. 1~THATSCAAIIIILEDWOROGAIIE
Q:!.II,!/J ~/.:lr!!l ~ byHenriAmoldancJBoblae

DICK TRACY

.

689.

For Rent

Local
howling

'

•

Notices

pav cash or certified check
for ant iques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also.
guns. pocket watches and
coin collections . Call 614·

15 Words or Under

'

'

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, F'eb. 21,1900

BJr'JIIIIIzrrrt-

33Bulldlag

beam

DOWN
AGENCY INC.

I'M WORRIED ABOUT
PAW .. HE DON'T LOOK
NONE TOO GOOD

' WHAT IN THUNDER IS
NEW ABOUT THAT?

to- out
(narrowly

1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
DO YOU HAVE THE.RIGHT
COVERAGE?..
SOUlHEAsTERN OHIO SINCE

defeated)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

One letter simply standa for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the· length and formation of the words are all
hint1. Each day the code letters are dllrerent.

!:ALL.US!

DOWNING-CHILDS
AGIICY, INC.

AXYDLBAAXa
LONGFELLOW

Ia

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDs ·

M2-2342

ozforda
118Gaellc

INSURANCE
lttDIUIIII:

11 uftdisgulaed
38 Tie the

CRYPTOQUOTES
' '

,.,,

I TOOK IT UPON

MI(5ELF 10 CALL PIG, PEN
HE ADMITTED THAT
HE LI-KED I(QU.•.

HE AL50 SAID HE'5
BEEN THINKING ABOUT
A5k:ING I{Otl TO
ANOTHER 11ANCE ....

.. NEXT
VALENTINE'S .
OAt(!

Q
QA

KEMU

ZHVAY

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AUMUW

GES

SKES

FKUWU

GQSSQJ.P
IHV

JUZHWU

QAGCQWQAP.- YHYQU
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&amp;'ITABLISHED BY

twO OR THREE GOOD

KEMU

XE A

GNQSK
IS BE'ITER
'J'ESTIMONIES

1THAN BY A TIIOUSAND ARGUMENTS.-N.EMMONS
if) IMI Kll'tl h1turn

~.,ncllc... t~.

J U

Cavell 33; SIOD,OOO Name That
Tune 10; Nashville On The Road
13; Country Roads 15; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20.
8 oo.-B uck R09ers 3, 15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games 6, 13; Waltons 8;
Bill Moyers ' Journal 20,33 :
College
Basketball
·10;
Amer icans 17 .
9:()(}-Quincy 3, 15 ; Barnaby Jones 8 ;
Sneak Previews 20,33; College
Basketball 17.
9: 30- Camera Three 20 ; Sports
Close Up 33 .
10 :0Q-Skag 3. 15; Knots Landing
8, 10; News 20; Austin City Limits
33 .
10 :3o-Dver Easy 20.
11 :OG-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Lasf of
lhe Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20; Fall
&amp; Rise of Reginald Perrin 33.
11 :3G-Tonighl 3,15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games Update 6, 13;
Columbo 6; ABC Capt ioned News
33 ; Movie "The Thrill of II All"
10; Movie "Monster from a
Prehistoric Planet" 17 .
11 : 45- ABC News Special 6,13;
12 :0Q-Police Woman 6,13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: lGBarella 6, 13; 1:3G-News 17 .
FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 22, 198ll
; :4s-.Farm Reporf 13; . 5:5()-PTL
Club 13.
6:0Q-700 Club 6,8 ; PTL Club 15;
Hea lth Field 10; World at Large
17 .

6:3G-Kidsworlo 10; News 17; 6:4s-.
Morning Reporl3 ; A .M . Weather
33 .
6:5()-Good Morning, Wesl Virginia
13; 6: 5s-.News 13.
l:OQ-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13: Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:3()-Family Affair 10; 7:5s-.Chuck
White Reports 10.
8:0()..-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10: Leave It
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
B:3o-Romper Room 17 .
9:0()..-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6 ;
Beverly H illbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
Show 17 .
9:3()-Bob Newharl8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green Acres 17:
10:0()..-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Joker 's Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13; Movie "The
Interns" 17.
10 :30- Hollywood squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13 ; Whew! 8, 10;
Andy Griffilh 6.
10 :5s-.House Call 10.
ll :QO-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price is Righl8,10;
E lee . Co. 20.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ;
Family Feud 6, 13 ; Sesame St.
20,33.
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10,13; Health Field 15.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Password
Plus 15; Movie "Count Three &amp;
Pray" 17; Elec. Co. 33.
1:OG-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:0Q-Doclors 3, 15; One Ufe to Uve
6,13; As The World Turns 8,10;
2:2s-.News 17.
2: 30- Another
World
3, 15 ;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00- General
Hosplfal
6, 13 ;
GuldlnQ Liqhl 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17 ; Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Personal Time Management 33 .
3:3()-Fiintstones 17; Over Easy 33 .
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Grllfin 6 ; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13: Utile
Rascals 15; Speclreman 17.
4:3()-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:0Q-Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
2{),33 .
5:3()-Mash 3; News 6; Plav the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Davs Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6:0()..-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6: Carol Burnetl17 ; 3-2-1 Contact
2{),33 .
6:3G-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhartll; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:00- Cross -Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; MacNeil · Lehrer
Report 33; News 10; Love,
American Style 15: Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
i &gt;J()-Prlce Is Right 3; 3's A Crowd
6: Joker's Wild 8: Dick Cavett
33; Pop Goes The Country 13, 15;
All In The Family 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20.
8:00-Disney's Wonderful World
3,15; Pink · Panther 6,13; Incredible Hulk 6, 10; Washington
Week In Review 20,33; Movie
HThe Birds" 17.
8:3G-XIII Winter Olympic Games
6, 13; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:DO-Movle "Detour to Terror"
3, 15; Dukes of Hazzard 8,10;
Capitol Beat 33; Free to Choose
20.
9:30-Amerlcan Short Story 33.
10:DO-Dallas 8, 10; News 20.
10:30-Perspectlve on Greatness 17;
Over Easy 20; Murder Most
English 33.
11 : Oil-News 3,6,8, 10,13,15: Dick
Cavett 20.
11 :30-Tonlght 3,15; XIII Winter
Olympic Games' Update 6, 13;
Movie "I'm I~ Girl He W,ants to
Kill" 8; ABC Captioned News 33;
Movie "The X from Outer
Space" 10; Movie "Beast from
20,000 Fathoms" 17.
12 : 00-ABC News Special 6,13;
David Susskind 33. ·
12 :15-Charlle's Angels 6; Movie
"Too Many Suspects" 13.
I :OQ-Midnlght .&amp;peclal 3,15; Movie
"Satanlk" II); 1:05-News 17.
1:25-FBI 6; fi\Ovle "I Aim at the
Stara" 17; 2:15-News 13.
2:30-News J; 3:25'-Movle " The
t:qng Haul" 17; 5 : 2o-Love,
American Style 17.
'

..

.

,.

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 21, 1980

Khomeini, Bani-Sadr want Shah, wealth returned to Iran
By The Assodated Press
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and
President Bani-&amp;dr again called for
the return of the deposed shah and
his wealth to Iran. Meanwhile, lack
of agreement on when the U.S.
hostages will be freed delayed the
arrival of the U.N. investigating
panel in Tehran until the weekend.
In a speech carried on Tehran
Radio, Khomeini, Iran's ailing 'Illyear-old revolutionary leader told
his countrymen Wednesday to "forcefully demand from the U.S.A. and
any other government which may
have risen in defense of the
criminal, Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi
that this criminal be returned to ,..;
together with the nallon's lawful
riches, and do not rest until final vic-

shah's extraditiOn. Some observers
speculated this may be a long-term
goal, unrelated to the hostages,
while others believe 11 may be a
strategy tu appease the militants
holding the Ameri cans.
The cloudiness of the situation was
underscored in the interview with
Bam-Sadr, when the Iranian
president said the work of the U.N.
comrmss10n of mquiry going to Iran
would not be directly linked to
release of the approximately 53
Americans held hostage in Tehran
for 110 days.
He would not say whether the
estimated 50 hostages at the U.S.
Embassy and three others at the
Foreign Ministry in Tehran would be
freed either before or after the com-

tory. "

rr:::::r=ul~

Banl-&amp;dr, in an interview with
the Tehran correspondent of a French-Canadian radio program, also
repeated his government's deternunation to retrieve the shah, whom
it charges plundered the national
treasury and killed thousands of
political opponents during his 37yearreign.
The lawyer representing Iran in
its bid to extradite the shah from
Panama - former Panamanian
Supreme Court Justice Juan Materno Vazquez- said m a telephone interview from panama City he expected to have documents needed
for his case in ahout two weeks.
Under Panamanian Jaw, Iran has
until March 22 to present the
documents, which include proof Qf
the shah's identity, a warrant for his
arrest and the legal charges and
probable penalties against him under Iranian law. However, Pananlan
officials doubt Iran will be able to
meet the deadline.
Nonetheless, Iranian authorities
seem determined to press for the

U.N. SecretaryGeneral Kurt Waldheun. There was
"no dea dline for the whole
procedure" of thetr release, he said
at a news conference at the United
Nations in New York. He declined to
be specific when asked whether
there was an understanding on the
timing for their freedom, saying
"This is a very delicate matter."
However, a well-placed U.N.
diplomat said the panel's departure,
originally scheduled from Geneva,
Switzerland, on Wednesday, had
been delayed specifically because no
agreement had been reached on the
timing of the Americans' freedom.
"That's the remaining thing to be
worked out - as to when and where
they are gomg to be released, " sa1d
the diplomat, who asked not to be
Identified.
Although Bedjaoui said Wednesday there was a "gentlemen's
agreement" that the hostages would
be freed as a result of the U.N.
inquiry, Bani:.SSdr in the interview

Property Transfers

would not say whether the hostages
would tll!' freed, either before or after
the conurunisswn's report.
Foreign M1mster Sadegh Ghotl&gt;zadeh sa1d m an interview with the
Iranian news agency that Iran had
made clear in 1ts dealings with the
Umted Nations that there was no
connection between the commission's work and the hostages.
The militants held a news conference Wednesday to display embassy documents they sa1d showed
that political officer V1ctor Tomseh,
one of three Amencan diplomats in
custody at the Fore1gn Ministry in
Tehran, tuid been kept informed of
the act1v11les of a terrorist group,
Forghan, that claimed respon-

-

s1bihty for about a half-{!ozen

before the panel begins its work.
assassinations of Khomeini
The Carter administration, which
associates and supporters over the
approved the mission last weekend,
past year.
sa id it accepted the Iranian demand
Because of this alleged coMection
lor a meeting with the hostages as
with the group, Tomseh should be
long as they were not interrogated,
brought before revolutionary courts
and as long as the commission did
currently trying Forghan members,
not become a tribunal.
the militants said.
A ~te House statement said it
They said another documents
was "vital" the commission assess
showed a Forghan connection with
the condition of the hostages, who
another, unidentified hostage.
have not been seen collectively by an
U.S. officials refused to say
impartial observer since the ell\'
whether Iran has agreed to release · bassy was seized Nov. 4 - shortly
the hostages in conjunction with acafter the shah was admitted to the
llons taken by the U.N. panel, but it
United States to receive medical
now appears President Carter has
treatment at a hospital in New York.
hacked away from his earlier inThe monarch flew to Panama Dec.
sistence that the hostages be freed
15.

Highway improvement vote ex
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohioans probably will vote June 3 on
whether to allow the state to issue up
to $2.5 billion in hoods over the next
10 years lor highway and bridge improvements.
The !egislation, in the form of a
cQnstitutional amendment, was intfoduced in the House on Wednesday
and sent to a committee where
hearings got under way immediately.
Lawmakers are working against a
March 5 deadline lor placing the
proposal on the June 3 primary
ballot.
The amendment, which grew out
of a so-called "swrunit" meeting
last week of GOP Gov. James A.
Rhodes and top legislative leaders of
both parties, ostensibly would not
require an increase in taxes.
A representative of a Cleveland
hood counsel company, Squire, Sanders, x Dempsey, explained the
workings of the proposal to members of the House Ways and Means

Committee.
Essentially, the state would set
aside a portion of the existing
stategasoline tax and all of the socalled axle mile tax, levied against
trucks, to back up to $300 million a
year in bonds for highway, bridge,
and related improvements.
While there would be a limit of
$300 million a year, the Legislature
could continue to issue hoods indefinitely. This is a departure from
previ ous bond issues whi ch
generally have contained specific
time limitations.
Under the plan, the state would
issue general obligation honds,
which pledge the "full faith and
credit"of the state, in an amount
which could be supported by a"debt
service base" defined in the amendment.
The base would include revenues
from one penny of the seven-eent
gasoline tax and the axle mile tax,
along with 20 percent of the
revenues, for the first five years,

from the other six cents of the
gasoline tax. After five years, the
percentage of monies derived from
the other sjx cents would increase to

Federal income ta:tinstructions here :
~

Federal income tax instructions
on cassette tapes prepared by the Iriternal Revenue Service are now
available at Pomeroy and Miltdleport · Public libraries, the ~
said.
The tapes can be checked out like
books and used at home, according
ot the IRS. They contain step-by-step
guidelines lor the preparation of IRS
Forms 1040 and 1040A, as well as~
structions lor completing Schedul~
A and B, the two most commonly used with the 1040. TBllpayers reporl
itemized deductions and income
from interest and dividends on these
schedules.
TBJ1P8yers utilizing the cassette
tapes with their tax forms inlltruc;
tions should be able to prepare their
returns quickly and completely ~
IRSsaid.
•

YOU'LL-SPRING
ALONG IN OUR NEW
GLOVE LEATHER

40.

LADIES' OXFORD

It was estimated that this base, as

of Dec. 1, would total about $186
miilion and allow the issuing of $1 .4
billion in bonds. The scheme includes payment of interest and prin·
ciple on bonds that currently are outstanding.
By 1987, the committee was told,
the base would be up to $92.2 million,
and another $1.1 billion in hoods
could be issued.
The projections were based on the
assumption that each bond would be
issued for a period of30 years, at an
interest rate of7 percent.
House Ways and Means Chairman ·
William E . Hinig, D-New
Philadelphia, said he expects his
committee to recommend Ute
proposal Thursday, and that it will
be on the House floor next week.

•COPPERTONE
•WINE

17-year-old
youth drowns
Eric lipscomb, 17, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert P. lipscomb of near
Hartford, apparently drowned in
Leading Creek in lower Middleport
Thursday night, according to Middleport Police Chief J . J. Cremeans.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the end of Railroad St.
at 8:4S p.m. where a johnhoat with
four occupants reportedly had overturned where Leading Creek runs into the Ohio River.
The chief said the occupants were
moving the boat from Leading Creek
to tie it up at a location on the Ohio
River.
Three of the boaters, Craig Fife,
Eugene Boyles and Wayne Allensworth reached the shore safely.
It was reported that the boys did
attempt to save lipscomb, but were
unable to do so.
Boyles, who resides near where
the incident occurred, went to his
horne and called the Middleport
Emergency Squad.
Shortly after 9 p.m., the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called to
assist with dragging operations.
The two squads were on the scene
until 1:30 a.m. this morning, but
were hampered by heavy rainfall
and lightning.
Dragging operations were

scheduled to resume later today
with other wlits, including divers
assisting.
The other boaters ranged in age
from 17-27. They had been fishing
during the evening.
Officials report that the creek apparently is not too deep, but there 's a
possibility a strong ,current may
have swept lipscomb's body into the
river.
WARNING ISSUED
MOSCOW (API - President
Leonid I. Brezbnev warned lbe West
today not to talk tough to lbe Soviet
Union.
He deelared bJs people's unity
"manUests itseU with i!J~Ulal forre
when people are talking to us with
voices offore e."
In a nationally televised address,
Bremnev drew prolonged applause
when he declared: ",The Soviet
Union's defense might Is maintained
at the proper level."
"The Cenlral Committee of the
Soviet Communist Party can assure
the Soviet peopJe that we have
everything necessary to repulse any
armed provocation," the 73-year-old
Soviet leader said.

•

at y

e

Come in while the selection is best __ __

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs
- Prices paid to country packing
plants for eggs delivered to major
Ohio cities. Cases included consumer grades mcluding U.S. grades,
minimum one case sales.
Carton Large A 61-04, Medium A
~.Small A41-47.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered : Large A
white 7()-79, mostly 70-72, medium 6170, mOBtly 61~.

, MARCH 1, 5:00 P.M.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'TIL 8
Check out our special White Sale - Home Furnishings 1St floor- Stock up on
savings for you and your family. Find a wardrobe of white and bright ideas for
bed, bath and table at savings you'll ap·preciate .

ENTIRE STOCK

BED SHEETS

BATH
TOWELS
20% OFF

Excellent selection in so l id
colors, white and patterns .
Sizes fo r full - twin - queen
and king size beds . Fitted or

flat

All are fam ous Canon Royal
Fa mily sheets
Stock up now du r ing our
White Sale .

'

A new selection, all sale
pr iced. Solid colors stripes - patterns. Most

all are Cannon quality

SAVE NOW!

and have hand towels
and wash cloths to
match,

TABLE COVERS

also

reduced

20% .

Viny ls · cl oth and lace 1able
covers in rounds - squar es ·
oblongs and oval s
Solid scol or s, white and pat
terns
Our entire stock included for
th is sale, plus place mats,
napkin ring s and napk ins.

Area rugs in a wide selec1ton of
colors, patferns and sizes plus

runners.
If you do not t.v. • Pttn-'on pa.n _
r
look Into our

INOIVIOUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS.

And all of our bathroom rugs
and bath sets .
Buy nbw and be ready for Spr·
ing housecleaning . Save 20%.

20% OFF

SAVE ON

If you •re Htf-etnployed - ..lr about
our KEOUGH PLAN. You Nn~ money for
ratlrernem: Md you can Nw• on t.xH

Corne In for det.ile.

SAVE
20%

Our Entire Stock

·

BEDSPREADS
Si ze for twin - full ·
king size beds.
Solid colors, attrac·
five patterns, all famous
makes.
Mate hing shams,
draperie s
where
available also r educed

Current 6 month money marker certificate 13.013%
effective Feb. 21 -27, 1980, $10,000 minimum, substan,tial penalty for early withdrawal .

of

This sale Includes all

our ready made
draperies · sheer cur·

talns · cape cod curtains
and lace curtains.

20%.

~~g~~~i~ A Home Bank
For
Meigs Count}
People

20% SAVINGS
/ ELECTRIC..BLANKETS
REDUCED 20%

RACINE
HOME NATIONAl.

BANK
.

I

Racine, Ohio

Once a year savings of
20% and·the selection Is
·excellent. Select what
you need noi".

SAVE 20%
'

Not all siZes but a good overall selec·

BED BLANKETS

tlon . Dua l and single control models.
Machine washable. Buy now for next
winter and save.

Demonstrations erupt in Kabul
NEW DEIJii, India (AP) - Massive anti-8oviet demonstrations
erupted in Kabul today ,leaving at least three persons dead, according
to reports from the Afghan capital.
Firing, occurring every few minutes, was heard throughout the morning in the mile-high city, said the reports quoted by sources who
declined to be identified.
Foreign residen\1! saw Soviet troops and armored persoiUlel carriers ·
rushed into the capital and deployed oatside important government
buildings, theY said.
Soviet MiG-21 jetfighters flew low over the city, buzzing rooftops,
the reports said.

OPEC approves oil hike plans
LONDON (AP) - The six-member long-term strategy conunlttee of
the Organization of Petroleum EXporting Countries today approved a
plan for quarterly oil price hikes pegged to currency-market fluctuaUons, inflation and economic growth ln the West.
The price plan would seek to restore a single oil pricing system and
would replace the past year's oil market free-for-all in which OPEC
prices doubled to aroWld $30 per 42-gallon barrel as nervous buyers
built up stockpiles in the wake of the Iranian revolution.

Motorcycle gang members convicted

SALE

·

1.49 WINTUK KNimNG YARN

1

3'h ounce skein by Red Heart. Good selection of colors .

ELBERF

-$}19
Skein

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gasoline, heating oil costs increase
inflation to highest rate in 6 years

BEGINS FRIDAY, FEB. 22nd, 9:30 A.te-

20% SAVINGS

•

'

terson, Trus., George Holman,
Trus., Milton Roush, Trus., Carrol

F. Neigler, Trus., Robert Milton
Varian, Trus., Dana Winebrenner,
Trus., Ralph Radcliffe, Trus.,
William W. Eichinger, Trus.,
Richard G. Ash, Trus. , John Van
Meter, Trus., Ernest Sisson, Jr.,
flvs., Don Houdashelt, 'l'nls., John
uSle, Trus., Kathryn Crow, Trus.,
Robert Wmgett, Trus., Aaron Sayre,
Trus. to Board of County Comm.,
Parcel, Syracuse.
Gerard E. HiUerty, Elizabeth M.
Hilferty to Christopher C. Layh,

CAR DAMAGED - Pat Hill, owner of Pat Hill Ford Motor Co., Middleport, points out damages to the side of a new car in the company
showroom. The car was damaged to the extent of over $300 early Thursday morning when bullets were fired through a large plate glass window
and the front door of the establishment. Paneling and a radio check
machine were also damaged inside the building.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980

POMEROY-M'IDDLEPORT, OHIO,

VOL. 28, NO. 219

Carol Layh, Parcels, Salisbury.
Russell Cundiff to Jessie Lee
Buchanan, Edna Louise Buchanan, 1
acre, Chester.

H. S. Parker, Trus., Carl B.
Weese, 'l'nls., Fred W. Crow, Jr.,
Trus., Orville Brooks Sayre, Trus.,
John Sauvage, Trus., C. L. Pat-

VANDAUSM COSTLY - This large plate glass window at the Pat
Hill Ford Motor Co., Middleport, will have to be replaced along with glass
in the front door of the establishment as the result of bullets having been
fired into them early Thursday morning. Cost of the replacement glass
will be about $1,500. MiddlepOrt police are investigating the incident. A
resident near the auto company told officials he heard several rapid shots
between 3 and 4 a.m. Thursday. Owner Pat Hill points out the bullet hole
indicating that the gun was fired at·close range.

Site for full and twin slz,e beds. Solid
colors · patterns. Most all are 100%
acrylics. Entire stock Included for
this sale.

20% OFF.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Three members of the Drifters motorcycle
gang were convicted on Thursday of aggravated murder in connection
with the November slaying of Laurie Scott of Cleveland and the blinding and disfiguring of two other persons. . .
A six-man, six-woman Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court jury
also returned convictions against Dominic Humenik, 30, his brother,
Lealie 28 and Glen Flatowicz, 20, all of Cleveland, on charges of attempbm :nurder, aggravated robbery and kidnapping. But the jury
aequltted all three on charges of rape.
Police alleged that the three men fatally shot Miss Scott, 23, and
blinded and disfigured ])er roommate, Sharon L. Peterson, 21, and
Miss Scott's boyfriend, Jeffrey Parker, ?Al, all of Cleveland.

Firefighters walk picket lines
CHICAGO (AP) - Firefighters walked picket lines in front of fire
stations today as _their wlion president was jaUed and the vice
president urged a general strike of all organized labor in Chicago.
The picketing began Thursday after a judge sentenced Chicago Fire
Fighters Union President Frank Muscare to five months in jail for
criminal contempt and allowed the city to withdraw from a strikeending agreement with the 4,300-member union.

porting Countnes startmg to work
their way through the system.''
A number of OPEC nations + including Saudi Arabia, the United
States' largest crude oil supplier +
raised prices last month In recent
days, several of them have ·announced cutbacks in production,
which could increase priqes further.
Major price increases also were
reported for housing, which rose 1.4
percent from December because of
higher fuel oil costs and higher mortgage rates. Medical care costs also
rose substantially, up 1.3 percent
because of new year price adjustments at hospitals and in doctors' fees.
Consumer prices had risen 1.2 percent in December after increases of
I percent in each of the preceding
twomontbs.
If prices rise for 11 more months

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new
surge in gasoline and heating oil
· costs helped push consumer prices
1.4 percent higher in January, the
largest monthly increase in more
than 6'hyears, the governmr-nt
reported today.
The 'rise in the Consumer Price Index was the biggest since a 1.8 percent jump in August 1973, when thenPresident Richard M. Nixon lifted
price controls and beef prices shot
up dramatically.
·
The culprit last month was not
food , which rose a modest 0.1 percent from December, the Labor
Department reported. ·
"Rising fuel prices were responsibile for more than a quarter of tbe
change," said department analyst
Patrick Jackman. "Basically, it's
the recent increases by the
OrlJanization of Petroleum Ex-

RIO GRANDE - Art Lanham,
currently in his 20th season as mentor of the Rio Grande College Redmen hasketball team, annoWJced his
resignation today.
Lanham leaves Rio Grande for a
position with the United States Sports Academy, Mobile, Ala. The
organization is associated with the
University of South Alabama and
provides coaches and training
programs for international teams.
He will become the head coach for
the Bahrain International team with
responsibilities for assembling aod
coaching the squad.
Bahrain is located in the Persian
Gulf and is developing a national
sports program. Their international
squad will play games in Tokyo,
Hong Kong, Manila and Cairo.
Though currently the Middle East
Games are the country's major tournament, goals for the program in-

-

Deposition ~e now .Marc,. 25.

CINCINNATI (AP) ~ Riverfront CollBelUD President Brian Heekin
willglvedepositionsonMarch25to_atto~ysforpe~ fWngsuitsin
connection with the deaths of 11 persons Jaal Dec. 31n a ~ out- .
side tbe arena.
.
The deaths OCC)IJTed wlwn-11 crowd of several thouaand. pei'IOIII
1'1lllhed toward the few doorways In tbe bullding·whJcll were opened
prior'to a rock concert by the Bri~ group "The Who."
I

Moreover, spendable earnings what a married worker with three
dependents has to spend after Social
Security and federal income tax
deductions - fell 1.1 percent last
month.
"Over the year, real spendable
earnings were down 6.9 percent,"
the report said.
·
The Consumer Price Index stood
at 233.2 in January, or 13.9 percent
higher than in January 1978. The
figure means that gooda that cost
consumers $100 in the base year of
1967 cost $23J.20 last month:
Fear that today's announcement
would show a worsening of inflation
at 1980 began helped send the stock
market into a nosedive on Thursday,
market analysts said.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials !ell 18.34 to 868.52, its
(Continued on page 10)

Lanham resigns Rio coaching position

Caucus infonnation not ready
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Officials at Democratic State Headquar·
ters say It will be four or five dsys until all the results are compiled
from the party's presidential caucuses in the state's 23 congressional
districts.
The caucuses were held Thursday night to elect separate national
convention delegate candidates for each of the party's presidential ,
contendei'B. Names of tbe successful delegate candidates were to be
mailed in to state headquartei'B. Under party rules, the names will
not appear on the June 3 primary ballot. Instead, the vote received by
the candidates to whom they are pledged will detennlne who will attend the DemocraUc Nat!~ Convention.

at January 's 1.4 percent pace, the
year would end with an inflation rate
of more than 18 percent.
By contrast, prices last year rose
13.3 percent - the worst inflation
rate since World War II price controls were lifted in 1946.
The Carter administration predicts prices will rise lOA percent this
year, but that would require monthly increases in the range of 0.8 percent or less - a phenomenon that
has not occurred since 1978.
Meanwhile, the Labor Department reported that wage increases
did not keep pace with soaring
prices.
Average weekly earnings fell 1.1
percent from December to January .
A 0.3 percent increase in average
hourly earnings was more than offset by the 1.4 percent surge in
prices.

..

elude competition in Olympic
basketball.
Holds Press Conference
Doring a press conference in Lyne
Center this morning, Lanham said,
''The Bahrainian opportunity will
allow me to pursue that which I love
to do, that is coaching basketball,
only now in an entirely new format."
"It's hard to leave some place after 20 years," continued Lanham.
"But then, not many coaches have
the opportwlity to stay anywhere
that long. I will always be a Redman
at heart regardless of what the
future holds."
Lanham began his career at the
Southeastern Ohio College in the
1~1 season and compiled a
record of 267-192, including this
year's 9-17 mark.
. A 1959 graduate of Union College,
Barboursville, Ky ., Lanham
coaches one year at Triad High
School before taking the poaching
reins at Rio Grande.
&gt;
Was Captain at Unloo
As a player at Union College,
Lanham was team captain for three
years and an all-smokey Mountain
Athletic Conference selection.
Lanham coacbed the Rio Grande
in both the Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference (KIAC) (three
years) and in tbe Mid Ohio Con·
ference (MOC) from 1972-72 to

..

'

'

--

ART LANHAM

50-CentpYnmld: 04;.758; Zll9.
•• Bo111111Z8: 38; 612; 85%7;
&amp;'1889; 709159.

present. He proauced six championship teams: 196HO (KIAC) ,
1972·73, 7!)-76, 76-77,77-78, and 78-79.
F1ve times he was selected as conference coach of the year. His 19'/677 team amassed Rio's finest season
with a 22-4 record.
Three AU-American players were
tutored by Lanham· Paul Dillon was
Rio's first in 1~- Second was the
NAJA record holding rebounder,
Bob Mabry, in 1967-70. Jinuny Noe
was the latest Rio All-American in
the 1976-77 season.
When asked what his biggest victory in those 20 years was, Lanham
said, "Two gam_es probably hold the
biggest thrill. The first was the
dedication game for Lyne Center on
Jan. 31, 1970. Prior to that, we were a
team without a home. We played in

almost every gym in the area. That
game was also for the KIAC Championship."
Beat Capital
"Second would be the evening in
19'12 when Capital University, under
Vice Chickerilla, came to Rio with a
21 game winning stgreak, ranked fifth in the NCAA Division II polls.
'they left here smarting from a 7~74
beating," Lanham added.
As Rio Grande's athletic director,
for those 20 years Lanham also saw
the changes all of the intercollegiate
athletics underwent.
"The tremendous increase in transportation costs and the rapid inclusion oi a total women's in·
tercollegiate program have been the
reasons for much of the change,"
(Continued on page 10)

Deeter sentenced
Ricky L. Deeter, 21, Portland, was
given a six month-five year penal institution sentence Friday morning
when he appeared before Judge
John C. Bacon in the Common Pleas
Court on a charge in trafficking in
drugs.
Prosecuting Atty. Fed W. Crow ill
filed the bill of infortlllltlon charging
Deeter with the offense following an
incident on the Meigs High School
parking lot Thursday afternoon.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt reports
Deeter was taken into custody at the
parking lot Thursday.,Meigs CoWlty
Juvenile Officer Carl Hhell and
Meigs County Attendance Officer
Otis Knopp were at the high school
on other business when they observed two persons acting in a suspicious
manner in a car parked in the Jot.
. Upon further investigation, Deeter
admitted havlpg marijuana and
gave officers what·he claimed was
all he possessed. Hysell called for
assistance from the Sheriff's Dept.
with Deputy Keith Wood and
01&lt;

Sheriff's Investigator Gary Wolfe
responding.
Upon further inspection, the of·
ficers found more marijuana in the
Deeter vehicle. Later, officers from
the sheriff's and prosecutor'' offices
searched tbe Deeter home and found
additional marijuana.
The total weight of the marijuana
seized was approximately one and
one-haH pounds.

Jury trial underwa¥
A Jury trial is underway in the
Meigs County CommQ!t Pleas Court
revolving aroWld a suit for money by
James L. and Noreen Mash, Rl. I,
M)ddleport, against the Cumls ~
surance Co., Inc., Madison, Wis. ai1d ,
John F. Birchler, agent, Cincinnati.
The plaintiff cbarge they had fire
insurance coverage with the companr, but tllat the claim for $41,500
was not paid following a lire at their

home.

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