<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14733" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14733?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T09:57:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45894">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/973c788bd9e99315583cbb62fee56f6c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f5e03bebe6233ae3f2945e5b9adc922b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="46034">
                  <text>14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. '!1,1980

•

Senator ·Kennedy overhauls campmgn
we've espoused" on foreign crises,
Powell said Carter would be
inflation and energy.
satisfied with 20 percent of· the vote
Carter bested Kennedy by 11 per- in Massachusetts. He wouldn't, but
centage points, 49 percent to 38 per- Carter's strategy Is to set targets cent. California Gov. Edmund and thus expectations - as low as
Brown Jr. earned 10 percent.
possible.
Reagan fashioned a Republican
The New Hampshire balloting enlandslide, capturing 50 percent of ded a brief Bush reign as the leader
the vote in a seven-way race, and among Republicans. But Bush said
building a margin of better than 2-to- he had succeeded in making the
1 over Blll!h. Sen. Bob Dole ran dead GOP competition a twiHllllll race
last and said he would enter no more with Reagan.
primaries.
Reagan's win came hours after
Meanwhile, at party caucuses in the former California govem,or
Minnesota Tuesday night, Carter ousted campaign manager John P.
was the easy winner in a Democratic Sears, his chief strategist in two
straw vote, while Reagan held a 33- presidential contests, and replaced
30 percent edge with about half the him with William J . Casey, former
Republican balloting counted. .
head of the Securities and Exchange
Kennedy didn 't attempt a Commission.
challenge to Carter in Minnesota,
Reagan said he did it beeause of
but the New England defeat pushed differences over campaign spending
him closer to elimination as an efpriorities, and because he now wants
fective opponent for the Democratic to emphasize the "people to people
nomination.
type of camp!!.ignlng I have ·been
Yet Kennedy conceded nothing. doing here in New Hampshire."
He said his campaign would take off
Kennedy's campaign manager
Possibilities of the development of later, in industrial states like and brother-in-law, Stephen Smith,
a program for talented and gifted lllinois, New York and Pen- said there will be "a considerable
students of the Meigs Local School
nsylvania.
nwnber of changes" in the personnel
District will be discussed at a
His task now is to maintain the and strategy of Kennedy 's
meeting to be held at 7: 30p.m. Thur- credibility and the finances to get orga!)ization.
sday at the Meigs High School there. He meets Carter in his own
Though Kennedy was camUbrary.
Massachusetts next Tuesday, and paigning today in Birmingham and
Present for the meeting will be
ranks a heavy favorite.
Montgomery, Ala., Smith said he
Paris Roland, talented and gifts
White Holll!e Press Secretary Jody will devote little time or money to
program coord inator fo r the
the South, Carter's hOme region. InSoutheastern Ohio Vo lunta ry
stead, Smith said, Kennedy will conEducation Cooperative, who will
centrate on Massachusetts ,and ,
present aspects on model programs
make his nelrt major push in Illinois'
and his role in the development of
primary on March 18.
Four
defendants
forfeited
bonds
local programs.
The vote in New Hampshire's
on
speeding
charges
and
four
others
James Rogers, Meigs County
record
turnout read this way:
School Psychologist, will be on hand were fined in the court of Middleport
Carter,
53,586 or 49 percent, )Vhich.
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
also to speak about the development
won
him
10nominating
delegates.
night.
of a program and aspects of testing.
Kermedy,
41,540
or
:ill
percent, for 9
Forfeiting were Wayne R. Jewell,
All persons are invited to attend
delegates.
the meeting and pa rticularly paren- Mason, $31 ; Robert A. Palmer,
Brown, 10,727 or 10 percent.
Massillon,
$29;
Angela
S.
Roberts,
ts who feel they may have talented
Two
minor candidates got the
Mason, $29, and Wesley A. J:larnett,
and gifted chi ldren attending classes
balance.
Pomeroy, $28.
in the district.
The delegate apportionment was
Fined
were
Robert
See,
Route
l,
Da n Morris, director of
based on showings statewide and in
Middleport,
$225 and costs and three
curriculum and instruction of the
each of New Hampshire's two
Meigs Local District, has been days in jail on cbarges of driving
congressional districts.
while
intoxicated;
Donald
E.
Hood,
named talented and gifted coorThe Republican results:
Pomeroy,
$50 and costs. disorderlv
dinator in the district and will
manner; Charles Tyree, Middiscuss program possibilities in
dleport, $100 and costs and 30 days In
Meigs County.
jail, petty larcency, and James E.
Anyone having questions about the
Morrison,
Middleport, $50 and costs,
program or the meeting may condisorderly
manner.
tact Morris at 992-2153.
MAVWOOD S. BLAKE
Maywood S. Blake, 56, 5009 Kidder
Drive, Belpre, died Monday evening
at the St. Jooeph Hospital in Parkersburg following an extended illness.
Mr. Blake was born at Coolville, a
son of William Shennan and Nora
Buchanan Blake_ He was employed
at the Keene Corp., fonnerly Penn
Metal at Vienna, W. Va., and was
associated with the Belpre City
School System. He was a 1942
graduate of Carthage Troy High
School.
Surviving are his wife, Doris
Cowdery Blake; two daughters,
Lora Aim Blake and Tam! Sue
Blake, both at home; two sisters,
Eckri ch
Mrs. Sadie CUbbison, Coolville; and
Mrs. Gladys Riggleman, Parkersburg; two brothers, Glenn, Reedsville, and Story, Coolville, and
several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a sister, Fteda
Homemade
English and a brother, Cl!iylon.
.
LB
Funeral services will be held at 11
~.
a.m. Thursday at the White FW1eral
Home in Coolville with the Rev. Roy
.Deeter officiating. Burial will be in
DAIRY
PRODUCE
Eden Cemetery, Reed8vllle. Friends
may call at the. funeral home any
tlb . Parkay
30 Count California
time after 2 p.m. today,
Quarters
79~

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - Sen. Edward Kennedy , now a three-time
loser, i,s overhauling his presidential
campaign in desperate quest of a
comeback against President Cilrter.
And Ronald Reagan, under new
management, is back atop the
Republican field.
Democrat Carter and Reagan
were the big winners in Tuesday's
New Hampshire presidential
primary elections. Kennedy and former U.N. Ambassador George Bush
were the losers.
" This is the first and it sure is the
best," said Reagan. In his first
outmg, last month in Iowa, Reagan
was an upset loser to Bush.
Carter, in a victory statement of
his own, said his triumph shows
voters "support the policies that

Talented student
program studied

Mayor~ s

court

Reagan, 72,940 for 5 percent and 13
delegate votes for the nomination.
Bush, 33,471 for 23 percent and 5
delegate votes.
Sen. Howard Baker Jr., 18,832 for
13 percent and 2 d.elegates. , _ .
Rep. J olm B. Anderson of Illinois,
14,706 for 10 percent and 2delegates.
Rep. Philip Crane &lt;1. Illinois, 2,628
or 2 percent.
Former Gov. John B. Connally of
Texas, 2,241 or 2 percent.
Dole of Kansas, 608.
Former President Gerald R. Ford
polled 380 write-in votes.
Minnesota also staged a presidential contest Tuesday, at precinct
caucuses that began the process of
selectl'lg 75 Democratic and 34
Republiean National Convention
delegates. Carter backers are certain to dominate delegate selection
in the home state of Vice President
Walter Mondale. Reagan was comfortably ahead of Bush. Neither the
Democratic nor GOP straw poll binds delegates.
In Manchester, Kennedy held
what amounted to a celebration of
defeat. "Well, we got almoot 40 percent of the vote," he told cheering
supporters. "Four years ago, Jimmy Carter got 28 percent of the vote
and he claimed victory and we're
claiming victory tonight." (Carter's
28 percent put him first in a big
field).
It was Kennedy's second setback
in New England. Carter beat rum in
Maine caucuses on Feb. 10. The
president's margin there was 3.4
percent. Spokesmen for Kennedy
said that signaled progress beclWSf
Carter was the 2-to-1 victor in Iowa
caucuses on Jan. 21.
Despite his far-hack finish, Brown
said he thinks he is in better shape
than Kennedy.
Bush said be was disappointed but
not down.
Baker said the GOP contest was
just beginning, "I believe now that
we're into QUI' second set of frontrwmers, and there will be another
one still," he said.

Area deaths

ECKRICH SALAMI. •••••••••••••~~~ $1.97

PICKLE &amp; PIMENTO LOAF•••~~~ .$1.97

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••••• $119
•

$

CHEESE ... ~.~~... 2. 99

lib. Bag Yellow

ONIONS .... -.... -.

~

39

FROZEN

CARIBOU CAT FISH.••••••••••••••~1.98
Formula 409 Disinfectant

BATHR·oo·M CLEANER•••••••••• }l.09
32 oz.

Orange, Apple &amp; Grape

WAGNER'S JUICES•••••••••••• 2/$1.09
21 oz. Thank You

Raisin or Strawberry can $1 09
PIE Fllll NG •••••••••••••••••••••••
•
tlb. F ireside

GRAHAM CRACKERS ••••••••••• ~::. 694
10 oz. Instant

NESCAFE COFFEE. •••••••••• -- ~~~..S5.39
soz. Armour

VIENNA SAUSAGE. .••••••~~ .c.~!·•. 2/99~
3

29 oz. Stokely

PEACH HALVES
•••• ~ •••••••••••••~=~. 7f1
Tum1, Chicken, Turkey Ham
·
~.RNATION . $PREADABLES.ou •• ~,99*.
7V2 oz. · ·

'

Middleport; died Tuesday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Russell was born March 4,
1892 at Martins Ferry, a daughter of
the late George and Emma Hysell
Gloeckner. She married Howard
(Bud) Russell on Aprilll, 1914, at
Pomeroy and he preceded her ln
death on June 6, 1963. She was also
preceded in death by a son, Delbert,
on JWle 11, 1950, and a sister, Helen
Bartrum, on Sept. 25, 1976.
Surviving are a son, Howard W.
Russell, Route 1, Middleport; a
daughter, Mrs. Margaret Stevenson,
Denver, Colo., seven grandchildren,
10 great-grandchildren and several
nieces aiJd nephews.
Mrs. Russell was a member of the
Bradbury Church of Christ for frl
years,

Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at the Rawlings-QiatsBlower Fwteral Home with Mr.
Robert Purtell officiating. Burial
will be in Middleport Hill Cemetery,
,Friends may call at the funeral
home fnm 4 to 9 today and from 4 to
9 p.m. on Thursday.

&amp;

Thirty-four defendants were fmed

'were . Reginald R. Halstead, Mt.
Lookout, W. Va., Larry Fisher,
Pomeroy, Randolph McClary, Bourbon, Mo., Raymond Canter,
Syracuse, Leigh Cline, Coolville,
Blane c. Lemon, C9olvllle, Barry J .
Stewart, Middleport, Paul Dunfee,
Guysville, Robert Harris, ClnclnnaU. Kenneth Davis, Long Bottom, Josepll E. Kuhn, Tuppers
Plains, B!lly Saxton, Cheshire, John
T. Dennis, Cheshire, Clarence
Williams, Shade, Delom Riffe, Rt.
1, Reedsville, Robert J. Hlll,
Pomeroy, Jeffrey Moore, Cheshire,
and James Davia tt, Portland, $15
and costs each, speeding; Kenneth
E. Adelsberger, Athens, '10 and
cpsts, Improper starting; Kenneth
H; Michael, Pomeroy, '10 !IIIIi cost~,
unable to stop within wured clear
distance; Ralph D. _Camp, West
Colwnbia, $10 and &lt;.Uta, no brakes;
Michael Priddy, Rutland, $10 and
com, altered rear bumper height;
PhiWp . Wilson, Ga111polls, $10 and
costa, . disobeyed stop 'sign; Doris
Starcher, Middleport, $5 and' coats,
no brake llgl)ts; Ellis McMillin,
Racine, flO and &lt;.Uta, cllaobeyed
stop sign; Joyce Grady, Colwnbus,
$40 and :costl, fine suspended. for
thret day jail term, wa!J!:ing on rpadway under tile !nfiueac'e ·or.alcohol'
Charles Mlllei', Pprile-:oY, 24 days
c:oollnem8nt and 'eo.m; def~udlnc
endltlft; MJdaMI :W. Branh~m , R:.
4, I'('I(III'OJ, flO ,aJI!I CIIB\.&gt;, f15

.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - Leftist guerrillas holding the U.S. ambassador to Colombia and some 60
other hostages at the Dominican
Republic Embassy said today they
would release all women and two
wounded hostages.
Earlier, a Colombian Cabinet
minister said the guerrilla band lifted the 10 p.m. EST cteadllrie it had
set for the government to meet Its
demands - $50 million, the release
· &lt;1. more than 300 political prisoners

FIRST FOR SOUTHEAST OIDO - Decor Materials Service of
Somerset, Ohio, la.sl month began operation of a unique lwnber drying
kiln which uses air heated by the SWI. ·Tenth District Congressman
Clarence Miller (R ) of Lanaister is shown here discussing the project
with Kiln Manager-John Bowman (left) and Project Manager-Jerry Jolin
(right), during a tour of the facility this past week. According to Jolin,
this Is the first kiln of its kind in the nation to be used for custom drying.
The structure consists of a retrMitted, metal-&lt;:lad pole bam .which was
painted black, then covered with 8,000 square feet of translUcent plastic to
trap the SWI's radiation, The resulting heat generation equals from one to
two barrels of oil per day depending on the season. The lwnber industry
in the United States uses about 20 million barrels of oil products each year
for drying and Jolin thinks that all lwnber could be dried by solar energy.
The facility shown here has a maximwn lwnber capacity &lt;1. 150,000 board
feet for each three month drying cycle or 600 thousand board fet per year.
By comparison, the average three bedroom home requires about 5,000
board feet of lwnber.

Persons with names beginnin~
with E, F, or G must register
COLUMBUS - Persons with last
names beginning with the letters E,
F or G are required to register their
vehicles during the month of March.
These car owners currently display
sticker nwnber "3" on their rear
license plate.
The months of April and may are
set aside for the renewal of initial
reserve (1, 2 or 3 letters, plus nwnber) and personalized (4, 5 or 6
characters) plates, as well.as commercial vehicle regiStrations.
The commercial category includes all vehicles registered according to weight - trucks, trailers,
buses and farm vehicles.
Dean L. Dollison, Bureau of Motor
Vehicles Registrar, pointed out that
passenger car owners who are
receiving special reserve plates for

the first time in 1980 will keep the
month of renewal assigned to them
in 1979. PersoiiS who had personalized or initial reserve plates
during 1979 have April ,and May
renewal months. New reserved plate
holders will not change ,their
. assigned month.
A $10 fee is charged for initial
reserve plates in addition to normal
registration costs. Personalized
plates cost $35 extra. Both fees are
collected annually.
Requests for either type of reserved plate mlll!t be made at least 90
days before the start of the assigned
registration month. Written
requests should be sent to the
Bureau &lt;1. Motor Vehicles, Attention : MVVPR, P. 0 . Box 16521,
Colwnblll!, Ohio 43216.

Tree seeding deadline nears
Residents have a few days left.In
which to order tree seedlings and
ground cover plants fnm the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservatiorr District
at Box 432, ·Pomeroy, or 221 W.
Second St., second fioor of the Farmers Bank Bulldlnc.
H you have a need for a windbreak
around your property, a new ornamental plant for your lawn, a
future Christmas tree growing in
your own yard, some plants to attract blrd8 to your yard, a groWJd
cover plant to hold the soil on a
problem area or eliminate uiowlng,
or a pant to cover a shaded area, we ,
have a selection of plants that will
provide those needs at a mlnlmal

These p)anta ·come ln small
enqll packets ~ be used oo even
the smallest tract &lt;1. land and may.
be planted anywhere a landowner
desires.
'
Even though the weather Is
prohibitive now, by the time the
plants arrive to be picked up ln early
April, you may be aases•ing your
outdoor 8UI'I'OIIIIdlng and deciding
you need sometblng new to plant ln
. your yard, 110 plan now for planting
later•.
For more !nfonnaUon on what is
available and prices cal!' 99'U647.
Orders must be prwaid and will not
be accepted after Wednesday, March5.

cost.
FREE CLOTHING DAY

Meigs County Court
and 23 lihers forfeited bonds ln
Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight

Leftists seek $50 million,
women, children to be freed

Passengers
overpower
Cincy gunman
RECEIVES $10,000 CHECK - Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman,
left, Is presented at $10,000 check for Middleport Village from.the Middleport Fire Department with Fire Chief Jeff Darst making the presentation. The $10,000, funds raised by firemen through their variOUB community activities, Is to be used on the purchase &lt;1. a new pwnper truck
which is expected to be delivered sometime In May. Middleport residents
passed a one mill levy to help pey for the vehicle.

Residents begin retui'ning home
'

GRANVILLE, (Jhio (APJ- About 300 rurall'1!91dents were allowed
return to lhefr 11omes ·Wednesday after fires m~thtee detailed
. fre!gbt train cars burned out and the Ohio Envlromnental Protection
Agency gave the all-&lt;:lear.
Everyone in a one-mile radius of the derailment was evacuated
following tile.Tuesday night derailment when a tanker carrying blgb1y
toxic vinyl chloride exploded, catching fire and Igniting several other
units d. the 91-car Conrail train.
Most of those who left their homes spent the night in Granvtlle High
· &amp;:hool, while otmirs were houaed in the Hebron American Legion hall
and private homes in the.area. ·

w

Fire marshal probing deaths
MARYSVILLE, Ohio (AP) - The state fire JJIIII'8hal's office Is investigating the cause &lt;1. a Wednesday morning fire that claimed the
lives &lt;1. a mother and her two chiltlren.
All three persons were killed when fire raced through a two-building
commercial complex 1n the downtown area that contained slx upper
level apartments.
.
Union CoWlty Hospital officials say Jemmie Diane (Crawford)
Rogers, 'n, and daughters Lisa Marie Rogers, 1, and Pauline Renee
Crawford, 3, were dead on arrival at the hospital.
Mrs. Rogers' husband'Melvin, 40, was admitted to the llofpital with
first and second degree burns to his hands, anns and face.

Comtnission, hostages meeting today

CELERY....~~.~~~...39~

MARGARINE ...... .

2 lb. K ra ft
Velveeta

Hazel C- R111111ell
Mrs. Hazel C. Russell, lf1, Route 1,

LEAGUE MEEl'S FRIDAY

Free clothing day will be held at · Pomeroy Youth League will meet
tile SalvaUon Army on Thursday, Friday at 7 p.DL at the Pomeroy
Feb. 28, from 10 a.m. wtW noon. All Legion Hall. 'lbe meeting is for
area residents ln need &lt;1. clothing managera, coaches and an interested peraons.
are welcome.

suspended, no registration; Linda
Fisher, Rt. 3, Racine, $15 and costs,
failure to make ordered repairs; .
SQUAD RUN
Alfred Evans, Middleport, Lorraine
The T)&amp;ppel'll Plains Emergericy .
Aeiker, Pomeroy, and David McHOSPITAL NEWS
Squad at 8:40 p.m. , Tuesday tranDonald, Dexter, $150 and costs each,
sported a Tuppers Plains wcman to
tll'ee clays confinement, 1lcen8e
· CaJnden.Clark •Hoepltal at ParkerVETERANS MEMORIAL
suspended 30 days, DWI; Gregory A.
sburg,
Admltted--Ralp~
Radcliff,
Becker, Middleport, $15 and costs, Pomeroy; Josephine Mallory,
illegal pessJng; Dennis Riffle,
Pomeroy; Laura·Kuhn, Racine.
SQUAD CAl I .ED
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, two years
D!scbarged-EI11s Clonch, Patncla
'lbe
Tuppera
Plains ER Squad was
probation, disorderly cooduct.
Day, Roger Mallley, Carl Taylor.
caliedSWlday
at
5:50a.m. to Alfred.
Forfeiting bonds were &lt;llarles J.
Cusack, Gallipolis, Donald R. Cox,
Ga111polls, and James S. Eakins,
Middleport, $380.50 each, DWI;
Gregory D. Cogar, Milton, W. Va.,
Michael Gord, Rt. 1, ReedsVille,
Mlcbael W. Gorinan, Winter· GarSEE OUR NEW
den, Fla., Howard E. Searles, Rt. 3,
· Pomeroy, Mark A. Casto, POUieroy,
SPRING SELECJJON
• ;Robert A. Tate; Parkersburg,
'
James Hale, Columbus, Richard ABarineau, Athens, Kathryn Hub- ·
bard, Rt. 3, Pumeroy, Rlchard Warner, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, AndreW Clay,
Jr., HWltington, Charles Wester-·
· man, Cutler, and Lawrence
Monaghan, Lowell, $35.~ ea9b,
speeding; John M. Eberts, Hamden, ·
$35.50, stop sign; Ronald K.
Fe;guson, Gallipolis, fSC).ao, failure
Sizes smell (3&gt;4-361, medfum
to register; Jamea E. Burke,
(38·&lt;10), l•rge (42·44), extra
large (&gt;16-MIJ.
.
~~· $35.50; expired opentor's
· .Solid colors · stripes · pat·.
license; Charles Aaklns, Atbi!na,
tir~ ehlrts. Oressv and
tsq.50, speeding; Thomai ·G. Pecet, .
cauul styles. Wrangler - van
l1tuMn - Campus brands.
Seven HIIIB, $37 .~, pollleaslon ..
You'll
like' this. n.w
controned.Jubstan, $382.11&amp;, OWl 1 , •
- selection.

E'LBERFELDS
MEN'S
.
KNIT
SHIRTS

DougiMs Cwtdiff, MIDenvtUe, $35.10,
. stop lip; St.eva Jenklu, ,.cine,
nu1, 111eplparldna.

-

(

.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY·MIDDLEPI1RT, OHIO, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1980

.,

IN .

A former Iranian official laid a meeting hBd beeJl arranged today
between an intemaUonal commissioo and the American hoalages
being held by militants In Tehran, but the captors said they had not
decided whether to permit it. The 11ostages, in their 117tb day of eaptlvity, are threatened witbat leaat 10 more weeks &lt;1. confinement_
The official news agency Para reported that former Iranlan interior
minister Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjanllald members,&lt;/. the U.N. commission studying allegations against the deposed shah would meet
with the hoalages.lt quoted him as saying tiley would be accompanied
by a representative of President Abolhasaan Banl-8adr.

Missouri
stonn
·brings snow to Ohio
.
.
A storm ln M!:isourt and a snow area east &lt;1. the storm center moved
rapidly eastward this morning and brought snow to most of. tile state.
A travelers advisory was 1n effect for today for all of Ohio ezcept tile
northeast third &lt;1. tile state.
.
SnciJr. began In westem Ohio shortly after midnight and 41nches &lt;1.
new snow had fallen at Da)'twl by 8 a.m., whlle tilere was 31nches of ,
new snow at Clnelnnatl. Snbw depths &lt;1. 1 to 4.lnches were cmunonln
tile southwest quarter &lt;1. tile state this morning.
'lbe SliOW spread rapidly ao;rou Ohlo,.and by the morning rush hour,
It was fa1llntl over lllllllt
of tile state.
.
.

Hunters given 25 year prison tenns
OROVILLE, Calif, (_,p) - Two white men wbo admltted murdering ·
a deaf black man ~use they found no game to klU on a drunken hun.tlng expedition were eentenced to the maxhmgn 25 )je&amp;rs to life ln
priiOil Wednelldly by a )udge who laid tiley lbqu1d never be set free.
"Marvin Dean Nocr and James ThOmu McCarter haVe demonlllrated for scme time ~ total diJregard for tl!e r!lhts of qthera,"
saki Batte &lt;:*uity Superior CoUrt Judie Jean Morooy,
~~ 1e11tence II~ nwldnfiJDI for the~
to
whichNoor, 18, miMce.rter, 31, pleadedgulltx Jan. 30.
_

l l l 'l er-r e

and publication of an antigovemment manifesto in major
foreign newspapers.
The guerrillas have threatened to
kill their hostages, who include U.S.
Ambassador Diego Asencio, the
pepal nuncio to Colombia and at
least 15 other ambasSadors or acting
ambassadors, and several Colombian diplomats.
Approximately 25 women and 35
men were taken captive when the 30
raiders stormed into the Dominican
mission during a noon diplomatic
reception Wednesday.
A guerrilla spokesman, contacted
by telephone by The Associated
Press late this morning, said two
wounded hostages were being freed
at that moment and the women
would follow. The guerrillas bad
said Wednesday the acting
Paraguayan ambassador and
another unidentified civilian were
wounded.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A former
Marine says he had only a moment
to act when he ovelllOwered a man
who was holding him and four others
captive on a bus after one passenger
was shot to death.
"He had bls gun pointed at my
head," said Alfredo Toraltl, 20, of
Jacksonville, N.C., who threw the
knockdown punch. ·"I don't like
people pointing guns at me."
Toraltl was one of six person:~ who
was on the bus when the gunman
boarded it Wednesday during a
layover at the Greyhound Tennlnal.
The bill! was heading to Cleveland
from St. Petersburg, Fla.
Pollee were holding Walter C.
Atkins, 32, of St. Louis, In connection
with the incident. No charges were
filed Wednesday against Atkins,
whose last known address was Goodwill Industries, Loulsvllle, Ky.
PasSengers told pollee that the
man talked wildly about · Iranian
hostages and said he had DO
to live.
All tile passen8ers were· put
aboard another bus and Clllltinued
their journey following the two-hour
Incident.

reason

More active
• •
•
participation

Rey's Syndrome, a disease affecting children from infancy to age 19,
was almost unheard of a few years
ago, especially in this area.
No cases have been reported at
Veterans Memorial Hospital · or
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
During the past two weeks,
however, six cases of Reye's Syndrome have been diagnosed at
Holzer Medical Center in GaWpoUs.
According to Dr. James Orr, chairman of the Department of Pediatrics
at Holzer, all sill were admitted,
treated and discharged from the
center.
Rey~'s. Syndro.Jil!',.. a _ noncontagiowfillsease, haS a nationwide
mortality rate &lt;1. just Wider 40 percent according to · the National
Reye's Syndrome Foundation.
There Is no known cure for the
diesease and, according to Dr. Orr,
treatment of the disease consists of
treating eacll symptom as It arises.
Dr. Orr also said, when asked if
there Is a test to diagnose the Syndrome, "There is no ·one test to make

being sought
Methods ct Increasing activ~
membership were discussed when
the Middh.port Chamber of Commerce held itll February meeting
Tuesday night at tile Meigs Inn.
President Candy Ingels urged
members to Invited their neighbor
merchants to become active members &lt;1. the chamber. Membership is
f25ayear . .
It was noted that the chamber has
oo membera bUt only from six to
eight members attending the
meetings &lt;1. the organlzatioo.
Miss Ingels 8U8flested that owners
&lt;1. bualnesaes unable to attend
, meetings. should send a rep~
taUve 110 that then! will be more input Into the programs of the chamber.
Plans were made to make contacts to aee If anotber restaurant can
be establlshlid in Midd!eport and
bualne88es will be ~ed to promote
tile VUtage of Middlepcrlln all of
their advertiJemellts. Members can
now send in dues for the year.
· Attending tile meeting were Mr.
and Mn. Edllon Baker, ~. IU)d ·
Mn. Don Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. •
I.Uh Bahr,. George Ingels, Jaaon
Ingels, and the president, Candy
Ingels.
.

the diagnosis. We take many tests
and with the test results and symptoms should by the petient, diagnose
Reye's Syndrome,"
Other Cases
Sean Capehart, nine-yeaNlld son
of Mr. and Mrs. William Capehart of
New Haven, was diagnosed as having Reye's Syndrome at Holzer
Medical Center Tuesday, Feb. 19.
Capehart, Assistant Superintendent
of Mason County Schools, said his
son's condition began with lnfluenza.
Having attended a class discussion &lt;1. Reye's Syndrome at Marshall
University the evening Sean was admitted to the hospital, he went on to
say when lie alrlved home, his son
had the early symptcms of tile
disease and he and his wife took tile
boy to the hospital where he was admitted.
Capehart termed bls son's symptmns as, "lnfluenza type symptoms,
but more profound. He was sleeping
in excess &lt;1. 18 hours a day, and was
very difficult to wake up. He had a
personality change which was very

Youths sentenced
Two juveniles Involved iif the Tuesday afternoon anned robbery at
the Marlon Hall residence, Reedsvllie, appearing before Meigs County
Juvenile Judge Robert E. Buck Wednesday waived their rights to the
three day notice &lt;1. hearing and entered guilty pleas to the charges.
Both youlha, ages 15 and 18 were sentenced to the Ohio Youth Cominisslon and will be admitted to the Buckeye Youth Center, Colwnbus
on Tuesday &lt;1. next week.
'
The youths Involved had no prior court recorda, but the seriousness
&lt;1. the offense committed warranted the commitments. Juvenile Officer Carl R. Hysell will transport tile youths to the center.

as corpses."

However, he refused to say what
would happen if the government did
not meet his deadline.

passive, going from normal to irritable, seeming hyperactive."
Capehart said once at the hospital,
his son was given tests, including
one to obtain a liver enzyme count, a
test which helps determine the
diagnosis of Reye's Syndrome. This
test was taken each day while Sean
was in the hospital.
On Saturday, Feb. 23, the enzyme
cowtt began to fall, and Sean was
discharged from the hospital on Sunday. He is still recuperating at home
and must return to the hospital on
Friday of this week to undergo more

tests.
Besides undergoing tests, the only
actual treatment Sean receiVed
whlle at the hospital was IVs for the
dehydration.
Capehart said Sean's pediatrician
was In constant contact With
Children's Hospital ln Collunbua
while he was a patient at Holzer
Medical Center. There Is a Reye's
Syndrome Cllnic in the Columbus
hospital where children are sent If
the condition worsens.
Capehart concluded by saying,
"As a parent experiencing this, I ·
-would like parents to know that they
will know if this {the disease) happens. There are signs, such as the
profuse vOIIIiting, drowsiness, and a
distinct personality change." He
urged parents that if tiley suspect
their child may have Reye'a Syndrome to get the child to a doctor immediately, not to walt and see If the
condition worsens. 'lbe time factor
Is very Important when dealing with
Reye's Syndrome.
Symptoau
.
No child is immune to Reye's Syndrome. 'lbe disease follows a
(Continued on page 12)

...

'

Cleveland man

·files.·$50,000 .

.
court.actton
.

.

-. · Wlldcat miner strike continuing .
.me

two,..,.,

' ,'f;
.'

other ambassadors or acting BJDo
bassadors, and several Colombian
diplomats.
They were attending a diplomatic
reception when 30 members of tile
M-19 guerrilla organization invaded
the embassy about noon Wednesday.
The guerrillas said one of their
men was killed and the Paraguayan
ambassador and another unidentified person were wounded. 'lbe
government said three policemen
were also wowtded.
"We are prepared for victory or
death," the leader of the guerrillas,
"Commandante Nwnero Uno," told
a reporter. "We are demanding that
the government meet certain conditions if It wishes to save the lives of
important diplomats. H there is no
agreement, everyone will leave here

Six Reye Syndrome cases
treated recently at HMC

A Cleveland resident, Qlarlea R:
Uber, lias fl1ilcl a $110,000 suit ln
Melp County Coli1mol) Pleu Court
lt«&gt;RGANTOwN; W.Va. (AP) - Collflelda In nOrtfieni West
aaainlt two IJIIDII protectors, Ann•qlnla
qulet e8rly today u ·s,oOO miners, Ignoring an order
drew J,ylell, 'Mlneravllle, and George
' fi'om a federal Judae,.cuntlnuecla wildcat protest over tile Slll]li!IISlon · I,edl!etter, Radcliff_ . . . .
&lt;1. three )llllon Officials.
'
..
. .
tJber plain~~, he WaS ~ully·
· U.S. District 3udae Robert Maxwell had ordereil inllimi to' ~
,.
arrested by Ule defendailts for an
back to work fOr the 4 p.m. shUt Wedn...say. But ptekataaJtplarl!d at.
allei~ vlolatlitn of huntlllg lawa.
•
'
mostoftbemlnea.
.
.
'
· , Another sult In the 8l1IOIIqt of
:
'lbe wildcat walkout, tbe blqest ln tile state in ..ny
bli . ft,M0-38 wu filed' I!Y ~t HU1 Ford,
·~
.ldledmorethlrlhalftileworked ln UnlteciMinlllVorklrsDiatrletU._
Inc., Middleport, against Thomas

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

The guerrillas, members of the M19 guerrilla organization, also said
one of .their men was killed, and the
government said three policemen
were wounded.
The guerrilla gang's leader,
" Collllllander No. 1," told The
Associated Press by telephone, "We
are prepared to remain here one or
two months if necessary. It all
depends on whether the government
wants to negotiate or not."
The Cabinet minister, who asked
not to be identified, also said the
mediation efforts of Rafael Vasquez,
a fanner foreign minister and head
of the Colombian Human Rlghts
Defense Commission, had ended,
but he did not explain why. ·
The official did not say what the
next steps would be In negotiations
with the 30 guerrillas.
The hostages included U.S. Ambassador Diego Asencio, the papal
nWlcio to Colombia and at least 14

Manuel, Rt. J.Racine,

••

SUPPORTS OOW!XlE -

RObbiM aild' Myers,

Inc. t thro\lgh Ita local· electrlc motor operation In
Galllpolla, ~ .Jiall, ~. and the Robbins and
Myers li'OUIICiiiU_itQ, amclunced a pledge to the Rlq
Grande College Capital q."'P'!iiP' effort today. Paul
KriOttl, dlvlllon pratl~ ~lind Leiter Hlcb,
divialon f!lliJioyee re18tionl J!Wlllller. made tile ,811nOIIncement..aUhetr·GalUpolls office, Wliyne Canlae,
director for development at Rio Grande, accepted the
pledge
and . thanked j the corporation .for "significant
•

l

�•
- 2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 28.1980

Bond's Opinions: Kenne~y·l:ss

~~e ~~. ~M&lt;CW.

.

INTtte TI\WKrr ·

-...

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

· -~
-

In Washington
By Robert Walters
NASHUA, N.H. (NEAl ·The good
: news for Rep. Jolm B. Anderson, R. ru .• was that the first person he encountered upon entering the coUege
administration building here was a
young man highly enthusiastic about
his presidential campaign.
- The had news was that the Daniel
: Webster College student, Eric
: Simm, immediately blurted out the
· awful truth about Anderson's can. didacy: "Anyone who tries to sell intelligence to the American people is
doomed to failure."
Waging a low-key, low-budget
: campaign bereft of aU the "hoopla
traditionally attendant to such efforts, Anderson nevertheless has
gained wide acclaim for his courage
. and compassion, wit and wisdom, in. telligence and integrity.
He has earned the unofficial tiUe
: of "the thinking man's candidate" in
: the 1980 presidential race. Even a
: c:pmpetitor in the contest for the
: Republican nomination, Sen. Robert

Anderson touts
independence

J . Dole, R-Kans., flaUy proclaims:
''Anderson Is the brightest man running for president."
James P. Gannon, executive
editor of the Des Moines Register
and Tribune, the newspapers that
sponsored last months's televised
debate among the GOP contenders,
. describes Anderson as "a silver·
haired orator with a golden tongue, a
17-jewel mind and a brass
backbone."
t
Sally Quinn, the Washington Post
writer famed for her etched-in-acid
prooe portraits of public figures, was
lyrical about Anderson in a recent
profile:
"He's right there looking you in
the eye, talking straight, telling you
what he believes whether you like it
or not ... He Is opinionated without
being judgmental, open-minded
without being vacillating,
unglamorous yet not boring .. . He
seems like a good, decent, honest, intelligent, dedicated man."
Yet the pundits, pollsters and prognosticators have hung a "can't

win" albatross around Anderson's
neck, insisting that he is too progressive for the Republican party,
too serious for the American voters
and too honest for his own good.
But Anderson Is pursuing a highly
unorthodox strategy - purposely
distinguishing his pooitions on major
Issues from those embraced by all
other Republican contenders - that
could produce unexpected results.
At the political debate in Des
Moines, that approach earned him
instant nationwide recognition and
4.3 percent of the votes In Iowa's
subsequent GOP precinct caucuses,
a barely respectable showing for a
candidate who didn't campaign in
the Hawkeye State. '
His most rec1!nt radio commercials stress "the Anderson differences" and a newly printed campaign leaflet features a chart that
graphically illustrates Anderson's
differences with the other
Republican contenders on Issues
ranging from federally funded abor·
tions to the Panama Canal treaties.

:Electric costs may go up
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A little. publicized order buried In the
·:National Energy Act of 1978 could
::significantly alter rate-setting
' ]li'Ocedures by regulatory bodies In
:·the.50 states.
:. · Battelle Laboratories states in a
:brochure prepared for some major
lildustries that the result' 'could be a
significant increase in the cost of
..electric power."·
: In Ohio, it could affect such
-biggles as U.S. Steel, Republic Steel,
=&lt;&gt;eneral Motors Corp. and Ford
:Motor Co. As in all other areas, any
])rice hike will ultimately give con-f!umers another jolt In the pocket-

:book.

: The act orders all state regulatory
~gencies to conduct studies and
bearings In order to recommend
:jlositions on six areas of rate making
)tandards. It singles &lt;Mit the lifeline
!Dies for review even though there Is
no cost justification to them. Lifeline
ls a public aid program to help lowIncome familles pay utility bills.
; The Public Utilities Regulatory
Policies Act requires regulating
agencies to lnitiate hearings on the
rate-making standards by Nov. 9. It
requires them to make studies and
bold hearings in order to recominend pooitions on the standards.
·~A spokesman for the Public
UU!ities Commission of Ohio said
$dies are already under way and

that the agency expects to conduct
hearings and complete other work
required by the act well before the
deadline.
Aside from lifeline, the law
requires study and hearings for
rates based on cost-()f-service,
seasonal, time-of-day, Interruptible,
load management and declining
block concepts.
Most of the terms mean little to
the general public but ail are used in
varying ways by industries In determining which gives them the best
break on electric costs.
Seasonal and time-of~y rates,
for example, mean that an industry
can use more or less electricity at
certain times to balance generating
requirements of a power company,
Cost-of-service rates aim to have a
business pay what it coots to produce
and deliver the electricity it uses.
Small consumers, such as
homeowners, In some states aren't
required to pay the cost of
generating and delivering the
kilowatts they use.
Interruptible rates may favor a
business that does not require constant operation. Some contracts
allow a business a discount on coots
in exchange for the right to Interrupt
service during peak requirements.
Load management controls conswnption during periods of peak

'

Declining block rates charge one

rate for the initial fixed amount of
electricity consumed and a dif.
ferent, usually lower, rate for consumption above that level.
For a fee, Battelle Laboratories of
Columbus is offering to study consumption patterns of major industries and make suggestions on
how they might change operations
or payment methods to reduce the
coots of electricity.

DEVOI'Eil TO 'l1IE
INTERFSI' OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA

· NEW YORK (AP) - As inflatioo
assets, and high Interest
iates make it impossible to replace
Ulem, fewer sound investments can
J?e. found. Many people, in fact, say
they can find none.
: Ellmlnated from COilllideration
4re · most savings instruments.
~tively riskless, to be sure, they
also . are very unprofitable,
Providing returns ranging down'lfard from under 15 percent to 5,25

m-zm.

tn- 2151. Editorial Pboae

Secood du• paRage paid at Pomem, Oblo.

NltloaaJ adverUainl: rqnseotiUve, I..aadola

Alloct.tes, 3111 Eaclld Ave.• Clevelud, Oblo

•.uu.

Sublertptloa ntel: OeUverM by ~nie~
wlltrt available N «Dta per week. BJ Motor
Route wbere carrier acrvke oot IVIllable, ODe
month, P.M.
1be Dally SeaU..I, by mon 1o Oblo aDd Wett
Vtrg.lall, OM year • . • ; 811: . . . . . U7.51i
three ZDGadll '11.51. Ellewbere .Pl•i air;
moalho IZUI; three moolho IlLII.
.
'lbt A11oclated Pial ll euhiii~IJ eatiW
to tbe use for ...blbtioa
dilpa&amp;chet
eredlled to tbe DewtPiper IDd also u.e loeal
publllbed ltereill.

"'au...

aew•

In speaking with people you
quickly detect that hope Is mixed
with desperation , and that
desperation ·shades into despair.
Helplessness, an un-American trait,
is Conceded by President Carter.
tial to move up sharply.
Speaking to editors this week, Car- .
Some have. Low-priced over-theter said, " It would be misleading for
counter stocks - those not listed on me to tell lillY of you there Is a
major exchanges - have sometlllles
solutiori to it." We are caught, he
ri8en 50 percent in a single day. And
.said, "In· circumstances over which
BOIDe oil stocks have doubled
in the
.,
we have very little control."
past
year
or
so.
.
·
~reent.
. Many people dispute that view,
In turning to such Investments,
; If inflation were ~· percent a year,
noting that even with energy prices
however,
individuals usually Incur
an Investor could I eke out a tiny
ellmlnated from the consumer price
greater rl8lt than in savlnp. Some
~ before taxes. But the anIndex the natioo still has double-digit
J!IIa1lred lnflaticln rate In January low-priced stocks have fallen almost inflation. Inflation, they maintain, is
.
was 11 percent, a mte that could u spectacularlY as they rose, stran- ~bl~
i:f1W appreciably in the next few ding those wbo rode tJiem.
But, with the Praident CODThe same quat bas forced people
Jflontbs.
firming their own . feelings rl
who
ordlnarilly dealt only with inadequacy, lnyestora don't feel 80
' Housing prices may have peaked
tW the time ·beJnt, frustrating the hanks to bu)' metals, dlamonda and 10\!11 thele _da)'ll. They March for
lilpeS rl thoulanda of lnveators. · commodltieti, Again, the rilk· ways to pi . .rve their uaeta, but in1
Sjmultaneoualy, fuel bllli on rental reward. ratio prevalll; what floated ·· ~d of IM!CIIrity they tlnd greater
rlska.
. '
propettles have put pnssure on like atr aometlmelfalls like lead.
IlePencBng
upc!fl the lnvestinent,
With Wlation and Interest rates
~tiftl profltil.
.
:Seeking returns grelter ~ the eertaln elpeiii(!S muat·be~UbtrJicted . sbllklng ~ lllle an ·lnvad!Iig
the .gains: ~e lees, . army, there are few places to bide:
Inflation rate, milliGnl of people
storage
feea, inauranee, and It is pervasive, .relentless and inhive returned to ths ltAick market,
lues. AI a result, net discriminate, and It is rushing ahead
Inevitably;
tfleoriZing that-ltddll- .... llllillng
profit
barely
re!eiDble groes.
almost unchec~ed.
ltlol'f book v-.Iue - have the poten-

from

may

campmgn.

Afghanistan ana Iranian intran- .
sigence In Tehran.
The proopect of certain renomlnatioo would only create more
caution in the Carter camp, more
all-purpose budgeting, and more attempts to encourage jingoism.
And the absence of competitioo for
bbick votes - 26 percent in Alabama,
26 percent in Georgia, 1~ IM!rcent In
Florida - would reduce the prospect
that unemployment rates or poverty
be discussed equally 1n 1980 with inflation and energy.
Carter's Southern roots will make
him a favorite on March 11 at any
rate. The strong pride felt for his '76
success stl1l lingers south of the
Mason-Dillon line.
But his stunning up-surge in
popularity nearly guarantees that
the "Kennedy issues" will be placed
on the back burner in 1980.

Soames the schoolmaster
"You don't expect the referee to
break the rules!"
·
But Tanzanian President Julius
Nyerere and a growing . number of
Africanlsts in America believe that
the British governor In ZimbabweRhodesia , Lord Soames, has done
just that.
Soames has _also been criticized by
Sen. Paul E . .Tsongas, D-Mass., for
having a "schoolmasterish" attitude
toward leaders of the Patriotic
Front, Joohua Nko1110 and Robert
Mugabe.

Marauders eliminate(

At immediate issue Is the conlinued presence of Soutll African
troops in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, In
violation of last year's Lancuter
Houae accords and repeated promisefl from the British that no unsupervised foreign troops would lie
permit&amp;ed In Rhodesia during the
ll"Hlection.perlod.
British and South African
spokesmen armounced January 'Zl
that anned forces fi'VII! the whiteruled state would withdraw, but set
no date their retreat. The 2,000 South
African troops repceaent only one
plank In a platfonn designed W
return the Methodist Blabop Abel
Muzorewa to the power he enjoyed
In the black-faced, wbite-power
government dissolved by the Lancaster House accords.
Already, British lndustrlallsta
have been .Identified as chief suppliers of the Bishop's ca~lgn
funda. London newspapers have
revealed that Lord Soanies' forces
bugged the hotel I'OOOIS of all the
negotiating parties at the Lancaster
Houae conference.
Furthermore, Lord Soames
prevented Robert Mugabe, pres!·
dent of the Zimbabwe African National Union, from ·retuming to his
homeland until Bishop Muzorewa 's
campaign was well under way.
The British bias toward Bishop
Muzorewa suggests that the temporary cease-fire Is just that, and
that more years of armed conflict
wiU follow the elections set for the
end of this month.

The Warren Warriors had five
men hit for double figures last night
while racing to an 85-69 victory over
the Meigs Maraudes In Class AA
Sectional competition at Athens
High School.
Warren, top-seeded in the tourney,
will now tackle Sheridan, which
easily defeated Federal Hocking last
night, on Sa\urday for the right to
advance to the fina ls of the tournament.
Perhaps the sason should just be
startin~ for the Marauders as thev

SEOALgirls
cage standings
GIIWl

HIGH-SCHOOL !W!ltE'TIIAIL
SEOALSTANDINGS !Vanity)

TEAM

guests.
Perhaps the White House crew is
becoming sensitive to complaints by
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and others
about the use of the powers of incumbency to boOBt Carter's political
fortunes.
Many of the 250 couples who

J

New Lexington eliminates
defending sectional champs
Meigs' gtrls basketball squad,
defending Class AA Sectional
Champ the past few years, was
eliminated from further sectional

lnteresl rates were also increased
for mobile-home loans, from 14.5
percent to 1~.5 percent; .for mobile
homes with a lot, from 14 percent to
15 percent, and for property improvements, from 14 percent to 15.5
percent.
"With the prevailing mortgage
rates and the recent action of the
Federal Reserve Board, we had no
alternative," said Moon Landrleu,
secretary of Housing and Urban
Development.
The Federal Reserve Increased Ita
lending rate to member hanks from
12 percent . to 13 percent, forcing
banks . to boost the rates charged
their customers to levels sometimes
exceeding 18 percent.
·
Last May, government-backed
mortgage rates were at 10 percent +
at that time a record.
At 10 percent, a homeowner would
pay $355.42 a month to carry a
$40,500, 30-year mortgage, SBYII
Thomas Parllament, an economist
at the U.S. League of Savings
Associations.

tournament action Tuesday night,
63-46 by a hot New Lexington club.

New Lexington raced out to a

4-()

Girls SEOAL scoring

~

SOUTH ESTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
NAME- TEAM
TOP INDIVIDUAL SCORERS
FG FT PTS
Sarah Evans-Gallipolis
140
36
316
Kama Sharfenaker- Waverly
123
44
290
Lauren Triplett- Ironton
96
12
204
Lori Vic_kers-Wellston
77
49
203
Terri Wolson-Melgs
90
36
216
Beth Rist-lronton
78
8
16-4
Angela Moll lea-Athens
174
14
162
Rose Stillier-Jackson
70
27 . 167
Dodle Chapman-Meigs
66
18
150
Pan:&gt; L-Athens
60
22
142
Jako Copeland-Waverly
63
20
146
Janette VInson-Ironton
61
12
134
Sheryl Massay- Jackson.
52
36
140
Sheryl H_a "!k-Logan
4B
38
134
Jayna R1ggs-1 ronton
57
11
125
Sonia Ash-Meigs
55
17
127
Tonia Ash-Meigs
55
17
127
Kim Kellor-Logan
55
16
126
Krls Kroner- Athens
4B
21
117

IGI

AVG.

{13 J
24.3
(14 ) . ~ 20.7

. (13)
{13)

(14)
(12)
(12)
(14)
(13)

( 13)
( 14)
( 13)

IW
( 14)
(13)
(14)
I 14)
I 14)
113)

15.7
15.6
15.4
13.7
13.5
11.9
11 .5
10.9
10,4
10.3
10.0
· 9.6
9.6
9.1
9.0
9.0
9.0

Championship round scheduled tonight
Semi finals of the fourth and fifth ·
grade basketball tournament underway at the Pomeroy Elementary
School were hilld Tuesday night. .
Bradbury Kitchen defeated the
Pomeroy Bombers, 34-33, with Ed
Kitchen being the high score.r for
Bradbury with 21·points and Hewey
·Eason, top scorer for the Pomeroy '
Bombers with 20.
In the second game Tuppers
Plainl! defeated Harrisonville Team

1600%
Gold and Silver

1, 211-22. High scorer for Tuppers
Plains was Jeff Caldwell with 14

while Marty Cline led the Harrisonville team.with 12.
Tonight the consolation game for
third and fourth places between the
Bombers and Harrisonvllle will take
place at 7 p.m. and the championship game between Bradbury
and Tuppers Plains wtU begtn at 8:30
p.m ..

&gt;211

3 11

2 '12

Jacluon

lead and were never headed as they
took a 'Zl-20 advantage into the
lockerrooJ)l at halftime.
Early in the third quarter the
Lady Marauders pulled up to within
four at 28-24 on buckets by Spnia Ash
and Cherie Ughtfoot but New
Lexington hit a hot streak and went
up 42-35 at the end of the third quarter.
The last quarter proved to be the
downfall for Meigs as the Lady Panthers oul$cored Meigs 21·11 to ice the
victory. Lorie Lacey led thre.e Panthers in double figures as she hit for
18 points, Mary Able had 13 while
Marty Mooney added 10.
Terri Wilson clooed out a brilliant
career at Meigs by hittinil22 points,
Dodie Chapman and Tonia Ash also
· playing their last game In Meigs
uniforms added nine each.
The red-hot Panthers hit 24 of 48
shots for 50 percent and IIIade good
on IS of 28 shots from the line for 54
percent. While Meigs was ice cold
froni the floor bitting just 15 of 62 for
just 24 percent they hit 14 of 19 for 73
· percent from the foul line. Meigs ou~
rebounded New Lexington 3()-'Zl with
Terri Wilson pulling down 11 missed
shots and Lacey pulled down 12 for
the Panthers.
The Lady Marauders clooed out
their season at 16-6 while New
Lexington evened their record at 11-11. They will face the winner of the
Sheridan-Warren Local game
Friday for the sectional championship. Besides Wilson and Chap- .
man, other Marauders ending their
hasketbal:
were Sonia Ash,
Toni8 Ash and Cherie Lightfoot.
MEIGS (48) - Wilson 9+22, Ash
1.0.2, Chapman 3-3-9, Ughtfoot 1.0.2,
Smith 1.0.2, Ash 1-7-9, Totals 111-1448.
.
NEW LEXINGTON (63) - Statler
3-2-8, Lacey 7+18, Mooney 3+10,
Smith 2-3-7, Wollenberg 3-1-7y.
TOTALS 24-15-63.
Meigs
6 20 35 48
New Lex.
12 'Zl 42 63

careers

707
642
7'n
488

63S ·
603
719

133

762

121 7911

U\eserve )

TEAM
Irontoo

W I . P1'!l Opp

Meigs

10

I

10

2

392
!2t

2'10

9
5

3 .31!
6 291!

s

1J10

284

338

0 12

235

4

Waverly

183

310

3!f240~

Jackson

,

3$7

No applications
being accepted
Rio Gtande College President Dr.
Paul Hayes said Wednesday the col·
lege has not started taking. applications for the head basketball
coaching and athletic director's job
vacated last week by veteran mentor Art Lanham.
Lanham has accepted a coaching
job with the U.S. Sports Academy in
Mobile, Ala.
Dr. Hayes indicated several persons have caUed about submitting
applications but none Is being taken
until criteria is established regarding the vacancy.
A committee will prepare a list
criteria which must be met by
Lanham's successor.

College results

'

Wynn
Knoot

Dolak
Mayle
Homer

l t.7n 1·2 10
7·12 1-2 10

3
3

l

.

Clw]l;loM

fOR

I PLUMBING I

eAny size me1al pipe: cut &amp; threaded
eA complete line ol fittings-Ells, tees, couplings,
unions, adapters.
• Flexible plastic pipe &amp; fittings
• Copper pipe-112" · 3!4" ells, tees, etc.
• Waives • Faucet washers e Gas pipes • Supply Pipes
• '0' Rings • Faucet Seats

Flrltlload
Florida 12, Vanderbilt 11
Auburn 79, Georgia 71
Weol V!rpola Coll.._.-ro.r-y
Flnt-

u.&lt;i Cbarl..... 89, Coaconl811~00:

Davis &amp; Eilllns!2, W, Vlrginla I -.en 11D

-------------------HOME OF
THE
"MORFLOW"
GLASS UNED
ntEY'RE FUEL
EFFICIENT

.
J
.
H&amp;R Block preparers are carefully trained
the right questions.
They d1g for every honest deduction and credit. And they want to
niake sure.you pay-only the taXes yp0 owe.

H&amp;R - BLOC~

. '

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

•,

I

•

GET tiPTiiE!tE- Job!l Hcner (t4), W aenior, ~ iqh In thi llr
10 defaJd a jump 1bat by Melli' steve 0b11naW !41). ON!npr ICOI-ed llll

. .,.._IIIIa. Marauder~'._. Ia. wllieb ellmlliated Melp tram further
- Wf11A1111111hctiClll.

•

.

,

'

I

.

, ·

'

6.18 .E : MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
OPEN9A.M. TO
. '6 P.M. WEEKDAYS,
f-SSATURDAY

' '

PHONE m -»U

I'OMEIICII

l'lnl- .

Marion 1GB, Mt. Vernon Nuanne •
Nortb Dakolo c.ueae Cool.....,.

'

0. A. MARTIN

!l'll-!116

~

'

,
1 Buv Other Sliver end Gold Items. CheC:k M_y Prices Befort Selllntl '
Y,our lOcal veer ro11nd dealer

!&amp;

29
21

Na-~AIIIletk:Coal.......,

...

OTHER STERLING PRICES ACCORDING TO WEIGHT.

12
12

DO.IT·YOURSfLffRS
HfADQUARTfRS

GAS OR ELECTRIC

I

2COLE,STREET ·
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 614·H2-6370

&amp;-13 0.2

2 0
1 0
I 2

THf

TOURNAMENTS
bltCGanCoaftrneeTOIU'Dty
La saue 70, Temple 62
Wayette llD, Rider &amp;II
BudoneU 76, Delaware 6$
St. Joseph's, Po. 10, lldstro 59
G&lt;oi'Jiallltft'&lt;Gilellale T,....y

Minlmum paid for any u.s. gold coin in fi~e condition S13s.oo. Pay··
ing 1600%-for all U.s. silver coins dated before 1965, or more if lhe
coin is listed as a collectable coin.
'·

'

0.2

~10 ~

EBERSBACH'S

"CHECK THESE PRICES BEFORE SELLING"

.

H

Wyoming 11, Nev.·Lu Vegu111

Ogellhorpe 18, Georgia U. 76
NAIAT_,.,y
Dlatrldl
Newberry 73, Enldne 72
Francis Marioa8S, Wlntrhop n

c:Ow

FG-A Fr·A Reb. F Pia.

ByTbeANodalod ......
EAST
Boston St. 101, Worcerter St. 99
Rochester 79, Hamilton69
Trufls 103, Wor=ter Poly 79
Union 75, Rensoelear Poly 61
SOU'I11
East Carolina U, CampbeU '2
HJah Point 61, Pfeiffer 5t
N'R Lou!Jiil!na 79, Nicholls Sl. 69
Sletaoo llD, Florida MoM 70
MIDWEST
Marquette llD, Detroit 76
Notre Dame 76, DePaul74:, 2 OT
.
FARWEST
Air Force 76, So. Colorado ell

1600~

KENNEDY HALVES '2.75
WAR NICKLES . . 60':.-~:
· 1~5 thru 1969
.1942 ttiru 1945 · · ·.
. .
STERUNG SPOON OR FORK ••••••••••••s10 each and up
. KNIFE ••••••••••••••••••• '6.50 EACH AND UP

NEW '80 CHEVIES
AVAilABLE

WAIIRI!N CIS)

"You people found deductions
I didn't know about. I
.have come here last year:·

1 have been paying 1400% to 2100% for the past three rnonths, fluctuating with the gold and silver·market prices.

Aur
HG-0102
firushed their campaign in a flurry ,
McAI.ee
~ ~ 1 0
0
Last night was probably their
TOTAUI
11-G $-7 II I •
MEIG81e
1
finest performance of the year as
PG-A n-A Rob. r Pta.
they sizzled the nets for a 51 per cent
A.!h.lty
JJ.21 1·2 7 1 Zl
Oillin8er
shooting percentage.
&amp;-12 w ' 1 Ill
Judge
&amp;-11 ~ 0 1 II
But alas, the Warriors pi ~ked the
Kennedy
:H IHI 2 0 &amp;
Wayland
1--60.0231
same night for 1\leir best shooting.
Snowdon
2-5 0&lt;) 11 4
The winners ripped the cords for an
KeMedy
0.1 0.0 0 0 0
SWIM
1-1 1H1 0 0
I
amazing 63 percent, canning 41 of 65
O'Brien
~
0&lt;)00
0
shots.
0.0 0.0 0 D • -. ::.:.:.,
Scolt
Murray
11&lt;1 11&lt;1 I 0
0
Although Meigs led for awhile and
TOTAUl
...
Z7
7
was close on the Warrior's heels all
Qaar!en ,
Meigs
the way, the red-hot Warren club
Wan-en
·zipped their nets for 23 of 30 shots in
the second baH to win In the closing ~;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~-.J
minutes.
I
Warren, 18-4, was suppooed to
have an easy time with the
MarauderS. But evidently Meigs ·
hadn't heard that rumor. THe fist
quarter was battled head-on to a
2().20 tie.
At Intermission, behind the hot
shooting of Steve Ohlinger who net4 Door , da rk. red, color with mat ·
ted 12 first baH points, Meigs found
Ching red vinyl tr im, radio, air
themselves on top, 39-37, Warren's
cond .• automatic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes. Rally wheels .
Phil Mayle had 15 points In the haU
and finished the night with 29
1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
markers.
Local 1 owner, 350 V-8 engine ,
With 4:11 to go in the i.hirct canto,
auto., -P.S., P.B .. air cond., good
Meigs was off and running and was
tires, landau model, solid white
out in front hy four, 47-43. But then
color .
'369S.
the talented Warriors reeled off four
straight points, and by quarter's end
1974 DODGE VA~ '2895
they were on top 57-liJ.
Van Convers:on includes bed
In the last Period, Warren had ofsink, refr igerator, V·B, auto.:
P.S., P.B., good t ires. Runs
fensive spurts of eight and six
perfect.
unanswered point and that statistic
was just too much for the scappy
. CHEVROLET
'389§
Marauders to overcome.
4 door, small V·8, automatic ;
Meigs hit 32 of 63 shots from the
POwer steering, power brakes ,
locking ' differential , air condi field IIDd sank five of eight from the
tioning,
clean inferior. green .
foul line.
The two teams were nearly even
1974 FORD MAVERICK 11395
!Uider the boards and Steve Ohlinger
2 Dr., 6 cyl.,.auto.
and Bob Ashley had nine and seven
1977 DATSUN PICKUP
caroms, respectively. There were
13995
5 sp. w/ll)pper
only 15 fouls in the contest with
Meigs being assessed for seven per1976 CHEV. Vz T.
sonals and Warren for eight.
12995
PICKUP SPORT
Meigs, having its best offensive
night, had three men hit double
figures. Ashley canned 11 of 21 shots
4 SP. &amp; 4-WH. DRIVE
and one free throw to pace his team
LUV IN STOCK
with 23 points. Ohlinger hit on 8 of 12
shots and four free throws for a fine
20-polnt performance. Chris Judge
added 12 markers. _
Mayle was just unStoppable as he
Immediate Delivery
ripped the nets for 29 points and
Chevette 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr.
hauled in ten rebounds of his team's
1Momta Cpe 2+2 and Clu
28. Red Dolak colleCted eight
Coupe (4 spd.J
caroms. Teh team hit three of seven
free throws.
Citation 2 D_r. &amp; 4 Dr. V-6
Meigs finished its season with a
2-19.
POMEROY MOTOR

WEIINESA V'S COLLEGE
IIABKE'I'IWL SCORES

.'

COMPARE PRICES BEFORE SELLING YOUR VALUABLE$
AT 1200% .-

I AM NOW PAYING

11 2
8 5
a 8
3 10

LOgan

Mortaaae
rates e·
uozng un
• --e• e.
r touay
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Homebuyers, beginning today, will
have to pay lip to a record 13 percent
interest for government-hacked
mortgages. It's the second Increase
in less than three weeks. ·
Acting simultaneously, the
Veterans Administration and the
Federal Housing Adminiatration' on
Wednesday Increased the :-ulmwn
interest rate they charge on home
mortgages by I percent.
Meanwhile, the government temporarily put a lid of 12 pe&lt;cent on the
interest earned on 212year savings
certificates bought In March despite a fonnula providing for interest of up to 13.~ percent.
Wednesday's announcements,
which came within three hours of
each other, represent addltiorial
reactions 19 the Federal Reserve
Board's tight-money pollclea, aimed
at cooling inflation.
'lbe VA-FHA action follows a Feb.
11 boost from 11.5 percent to 12 percent for single-family mortgages
and from 11 percent to 12 percent for
multi-family mortgages.

413

Gallipolis
Athens

Gallipolis
Well:Jton

showed up for the dance came to the scallops .
White House hungry, having been . But, alas, no plates. Guests were .
told a buffet would be served In the free to take all they could eat - so
State Dining Room. The menu In- long as they could hold it In their
cluded steamship rounds of beef, pabns on dainty eocktail napkins.
carved roast turkey and fried
'

•

13 0 139

Logan

Athens. In this Dave HarriS action shot, it appears
Snowden has either charged or has been fouled by
Warren's Mitch Males (33) .

GOES TO· BASKET - ·Todd Snowden, 6-3 center,
goes up for a jump shot In Wednesday's a:H;9 loss to
Warren Local in the~ AA Sectional Tournament at

Rats worry White House personnel
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
demolition of old buildings in downtown Washington, to make way for
new, is confronting White House
groundskeepers with a new threat:
rats.
So many displaced rodents roam
the neighborhood that some of the
most stately White House ebns have
been ringed with sandbags - to
dis&lt;;ourage the rat packs from
taking up residence.
One enterprising magazine
photographer invested in a pound of
hamburger meat, to feed to the rats
In broad daylight in Lafayette Park,
acrOBS Pennsylvania Avenue from
the presidential mansion. He figured
the feasting rats would stand still
long enough for him to photograph
them with the White House in the
background.
The rats did not cooperate.
I
When President and Mrs. Carter
threw a Valentine's dallce less than
two weeks before the New Hampshire primary, Mrs. Carter's office
told reporters there would be guests
from 'Zl states.
For reasons not explained, New
Hampshire was omitted from the
list, although a number of Granite
State Democrats were among the

W L PTS OPP

Irontoo

Meigs
Waverly

111 Cow1 Sl, Pomei'O)', Oh.tG &amp;Sflt. llullaeu
Office Pboae

demand.

Business mirror

By Jullau Boud
MIAMI (NEM - The March 11
Democratic primaries in Florida,
Alabama and Georgia will offer
Southern voters their first chancea
at president choosing, 198CHI:yle.
The three-5tate contest wtU also be
an important test of an idea whose
time must be coming - the notion'of
regional primaries Instead of ·the
current crazy-guilt exercise In exhaustion that begins in Iowa in
January and ends In California in
J une.
And the Florida, Alabama and
Georgia primaries might yet serve
as a measure of the relative drawing
power in black precincts of Presi·
dent Jimmy Carter versus
ch.allenger Edward Kennedy - if
the latter's campaign is still
operative after New Hampshire
(February 26 ), and Massachusetts
and Vermont (March4).
Asolid defeat in the Northeast for
the Massachusetts senator might
put the skids on the Kennedy campaign. If so it will deny Southern
Democrats in three states a choice
of candidates and philoophies.
A Kennedy-less campaign will
mean that only Jerry Brown will offer Democrats an alternative for
1980. Brown's campaign, of course,
sits lower on the scale than Kennedy's.
A Kennedy-less campaign will, in
effect, turn all the following
primaries Into meaningless referenda on the president's response - .or
lack of it - to Soviet adventurism In

Top seeded Warren wins

ROBERTHOEFUCII
City Editor
Publllbecl dally except Sa1anlllyby TbeOhlo
Valley Pu.bllllliq Compuy- MIII.Um.ed..LI, Ilk:.,

Sound investments harder to make
devours

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb.

ti-lo·&amp; IROWI'I ST.
MASON, W. VA.
. OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
tAM-SPM

P~~ na:li12t

.·

�•
- 2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 28.1980

Bond's Opinions: Kenne~y·l:ss

~~e ~~. ~M&lt;CW.

.

INTtte TI\WKrr ·

-...

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

· -~
-

In Washington
By Robert Walters
NASHUA, N.H. (NEAl ·The good
: news for Rep. Jolm B. Anderson, R. ru .• was that the first person he encountered upon entering the coUege
administration building here was a
young man highly enthusiastic about
his presidential campaign.
- The had news was that the Daniel
: Webster College student, Eric
: Simm, immediately blurted out the
· awful truth about Anderson's can. didacy: "Anyone who tries to sell intelligence to the American people is
doomed to failure."
Waging a low-key, low-budget
: campaign bereft of aU the "hoopla
traditionally attendant to such efforts, Anderson nevertheless has
gained wide acclaim for his courage
. and compassion, wit and wisdom, in. telligence and integrity.
He has earned the unofficial tiUe
: of "the thinking man's candidate" in
: the 1980 presidential race. Even a
: c:pmpetitor in the contest for the
: Republican nomination, Sen. Robert

Anderson touts
independence

J . Dole, R-Kans., flaUy proclaims:
''Anderson Is the brightest man running for president."
James P. Gannon, executive
editor of the Des Moines Register
and Tribune, the newspapers that
sponsored last months's televised
debate among the GOP contenders,
. describes Anderson as "a silver·
haired orator with a golden tongue, a
17-jewel mind and a brass
backbone."
t
Sally Quinn, the Washington Post
writer famed for her etched-in-acid
prooe portraits of public figures, was
lyrical about Anderson in a recent
profile:
"He's right there looking you in
the eye, talking straight, telling you
what he believes whether you like it
or not ... He Is opinionated without
being judgmental, open-minded
without being vacillating,
unglamorous yet not boring .. . He
seems like a good, decent, honest, intelligent, dedicated man."
Yet the pundits, pollsters and prognosticators have hung a "can't

win" albatross around Anderson's
neck, insisting that he is too progressive for the Republican party,
too serious for the American voters
and too honest for his own good.
But Anderson Is pursuing a highly
unorthodox strategy - purposely
distinguishing his pooitions on major
Issues from those embraced by all
other Republican contenders - that
could produce unexpected results.
At the political debate in Des
Moines, that approach earned him
instant nationwide recognition and
4.3 percent of the votes In Iowa's
subsequent GOP precinct caucuses,
a barely respectable showing for a
candidate who didn't campaign in
the Hawkeye State. '
His most rec1!nt radio commercials stress "the Anderson differences" and a newly printed campaign leaflet features a chart that
graphically illustrates Anderson's
differences with the other
Republican contenders on Issues
ranging from federally funded abor·
tions to the Panama Canal treaties.

:Electric costs may go up
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A little. publicized order buried In the
·:National Energy Act of 1978 could
::significantly alter rate-setting
' ]li'Ocedures by regulatory bodies In
:·the.50 states.
:. · Battelle Laboratories states in a
:brochure prepared for some major
lildustries that the result' 'could be a
significant increase in the cost of
..electric power."·
: In Ohio, it could affect such
-biggles as U.S. Steel, Republic Steel,
=&lt;&gt;eneral Motors Corp. and Ford
:Motor Co. As in all other areas, any
])rice hike will ultimately give con-f!umers another jolt In the pocket-

:book.

: The act orders all state regulatory
~gencies to conduct studies and
bearings In order to recommend
:jlositions on six areas of rate making
)tandards. It singles &lt;Mit the lifeline
!Dies for review even though there Is
no cost justification to them. Lifeline
ls a public aid program to help lowIncome familles pay utility bills.
; The Public Utilities Regulatory
Policies Act requires regulating
agencies to lnitiate hearings on the
rate-making standards by Nov. 9. It
requires them to make studies and
bold hearings in order to recominend pooitions on the standards.
·~A spokesman for the Public
UU!ities Commission of Ohio said
$dies are already under way and

that the agency expects to conduct
hearings and complete other work
required by the act well before the
deadline.
Aside from lifeline, the law
requires study and hearings for
rates based on cost-()f-service,
seasonal, time-of-day, Interruptible,
load management and declining
block concepts.
Most of the terms mean little to
the general public but ail are used in
varying ways by industries In determining which gives them the best
break on electric costs.
Seasonal and time-of~y rates,
for example, mean that an industry
can use more or less electricity at
certain times to balance generating
requirements of a power company,
Cost-of-service rates aim to have a
business pay what it coots to produce
and deliver the electricity it uses.
Small consumers, such as
homeowners, In some states aren't
required to pay the cost of
generating and delivering the
kilowatts they use.
Interruptible rates may favor a
business that does not require constant operation. Some contracts
allow a business a discount on coots
in exchange for the right to Interrupt
service during peak requirements.
Load management controls conswnption during periods of peak

'

Declining block rates charge one

rate for the initial fixed amount of
electricity consumed and a dif.
ferent, usually lower, rate for consumption above that level.
For a fee, Battelle Laboratories of
Columbus is offering to study consumption patterns of major industries and make suggestions on
how they might change operations
or payment methods to reduce the
coots of electricity.

DEVOI'Eil TO 'l1IE
INTERFSI' OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA

· NEW YORK (AP) - As inflatioo
assets, and high Interest
iates make it impossible to replace
Ulem, fewer sound investments can
J?e. found. Many people, in fact, say
they can find none.
: Ellmlnated from COilllideration
4re · most savings instruments.
~tively riskless, to be sure, they
also . are very unprofitable,
Providing returns ranging down'lfard from under 15 percent to 5,25

m-zm.

tn- 2151. Editorial Pboae

Secood du• paRage paid at Pomem, Oblo.

NltloaaJ adverUainl: rqnseotiUve, I..aadola

Alloct.tes, 3111 Eaclld Ave.• Clevelud, Oblo

•.uu.

Sublertptloa ntel: OeUverM by ~nie~
wlltrt available N «Dta per week. BJ Motor
Route wbere carrier acrvke oot IVIllable, ODe
month, P.M.
1be Dally SeaU..I, by mon 1o Oblo aDd Wett
Vtrg.lall, OM year • . • ; 811: . . . . . U7.51i
three ZDGadll '11.51. Ellewbere .Pl•i air;
moalho IZUI; three moolho IlLII.
.
'lbt A11oclated Pial ll euhiii~IJ eatiW
to tbe use for ...blbtioa
dilpa&amp;chet
eredlled to tbe DewtPiper IDd also u.e loeal
publllbed ltereill.

"'au...

aew•

In speaking with people you
quickly detect that hope Is mixed
with desperation , and that
desperation ·shades into despair.
Helplessness, an un-American trait,
is Conceded by President Carter.
tial to move up sharply.
Speaking to editors this week, Car- .
Some have. Low-priced over-theter said, " It would be misleading for
counter stocks - those not listed on me to tell lillY of you there Is a
major exchanges - have sometlllles
solutiori to it." We are caught, he
ri8en 50 percent in a single day. And
.said, "In· circumstances over which
BOIDe oil stocks have doubled
in the
.,
we have very little control."
past
year
or
so.
.
·
~reent.
. Many people dispute that view,
In turning to such Investments,
; If inflation were ~· percent a year,
noting that even with energy prices
however,
individuals usually Incur
an Investor could I eke out a tiny
ellmlnated from the consumer price
greater rl8lt than in savlnp. Some
~ before taxes. But the anIndex the natioo still has double-digit
J!IIa1lred lnflaticln rate In January low-priced stocks have fallen almost inflation. Inflation, they maintain, is
.
was 11 percent, a mte that could u spectacularlY as they rose, stran- ~bl~
i:f1W appreciably in the next few ding those wbo rode tJiem.
But, with the Praident CODThe same quat bas forced people
Jflontbs.
firming their own . feelings rl
who
ordlnarilly dealt only with inadequacy, lnyestora don't feel 80
' Housing prices may have peaked
tW the time ·beJnt, frustrating the hanks to bu)' metals, dlamonda and 10\!11 thele _da)'ll. They March for
lilpeS rl thoulanda of lnveators. · commodltieti, Again, the rilk· ways to pi . .rve their uaeta, but in1
Sjmultaneoualy, fuel bllli on rental reward. ratio prevalll; what floated ·· ~d of IM!CIIrity they tlnd greater
rlska.
. '
propettles have put pnssure on like atr aometlmelfalls like lead.
IlePencBng
upc!fl the lnvestinent,
With Wlation and Interest rates
~tiftl profltil.
.
:Seeking returns grelter ~ the eertaln elpeiii(!S muat·be~UbtrJicted . sbllklng ~ lllle an ·lnvad!Iig
the .gains: ~e lees, . army, there are few places to bide:
Inflation rate, milliGnl of people
storage
feea, inauranee, and It is pervasive, .relentless and inhive returned to ths ltAick market,
lues. AI a result, net discriminate, and It is rushing ahead
Inevitably;
tfleoriZing that-ltddll- .... llllillng
profit
barely
re!eiDble groes.
almost unchec~ed.
ltlol'f book v-.Iue - have the poten-

from

may

campmgn.

Afghanistan ana Iranian intran- .
sigence In Tehran.
The proopect of certain renomlnatioo would only create more
caution in the Carter camp, more
all-purpose budgeting, and more attempts to encourage jingoism.
And the absence of competitioo for
bbick votes - 26 percent in Alabama,
26 percent in Georgia, 1~ IM!rcent In
Florida - would reduce the prospect
that unemployment rates or poverty
be discussed equally 1n 1980 with inflation and energy.
Carter's Southern roots will make
him a favorite on March 11 at any
rate. The strong pride felt for his '76
success stl1l lingers south of the
Mason-Dillon line.
But his stunning up-surge in
popularity nearly guarantees that
the "Kennedy issues" will be placed
on the back burner in 1980.

Soames the schoolmaster
"You don't expect the referee to
break the rules!"
·
But Tanzanian President Julius
Nyerere and a growing . number of
Africanlsts in America believe that
the British governor In ZimbabweRhodesia , Lord Soames, has done
just that.
Soames has _also been criticized by
Sen. Paul E . .Tsongas, D-Mass., for
having a "schoolmasterish" attitude
toward leaders of the Patriotic
Front, Joohua Nko1110 and Robert
Mugabe.

Marauders eliminate(

At immediate issue Is the conlinued presence of Soutll African
troops in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, In
violation of last year's Lancuter
Houae accords and repeated promisefl from the British that no unsupervised foreign troops would lie
permit&amp;ed In Rhodesia during the
ll"Hlection.perlod.
British and South African
spokesmen armounced January 'Zl
that anned forces fi'VII! the whiteruled state would withdraw, but set
no date their retreat. The 2,000 South
African troops repceaent only one
plank In a platfonn designed W
return the Methodist Blabop Abel
Muzorewa to the power he enjoyed
In the black-faced, wbite-power
government dissolved by the Lancaster House accords.
Already, British lndustrlallsta
have been .Identified as chief suppliers of the Bishop's ca~lgn
funda. London newspapers have
revealed that Lord Soanies' forces
bugged the hotel I'OOOIS of all the
negotiating parties at the Lancaster
Houae conference.
Furthermore, Lord Soames
prevented Robert Mugabe, pres!·
dent of the Zimbabwe African National Union, from ·retuming to his
homeland until Bishop Muzorewa 's
campaign was well under way.
The British bias toward Bishop
Muzorewa suggests that the temporary cease-fire Is just that, and
that more years of armed conflict
wiU follow the elections set for the
end of this month.

The Warren Warriors had five
men hit for double figures last night
while racing to an 85-69 victory over
the Meigs Maraudes In Class AA
Sectional competition at Athens
High School.
Warren, top-seeded in the tourney,
will now tackle Sheridan, which
easily defeated Federal Hocking last
night, on Sa\urday for the right to
advance to the fina ls of the tournament.
Perhaps the sason should just be
startin~ for the Marauders as thev

SEOALgirls
cage standings
GIIWl

HIGH-SCHOOL !W!ltE'TIIAIL
SEOALSTANDINGS !Vanity)

TEAM

guests.
Perhaps the White House crew is
becoming sensitive to complaints by
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and others
about the use of the powers of incumbency to boOBt Carter's political
fortunes.
Many of the 250 couples who

J

New Lexington eliminates
defending sectional champs
Meigs' gtrls basketball squad,
defending Class AA Sectional
Champ the past few years, was
eliminated from further sectional

lnteresl rates were also increased
for mobile-home loans, from 14.5
percent to 1~.5 percent; .for mobile
homes with a lot, from 14 percent to
15 percent, and for property improvements, from 14 percent to 15.5
percent.
"With the prevailing mortgage
rates and the recent action of the
Federal Reserve Board, we had no
alternative," said Moon Landrleu,
secretary of Housing and Urban
Development.
The Federal Reserve Increased Ita
lending rate to member hanks from
12 percent . to 13 percent, forcing
banks . to boost the rates charged
their customers to levels sometimes
exceeding 18 percent.
·
Last May, government-backed
mortgage rates were at 10 percent +
at that time a record.
At 10 percent, a homeowner would
pay $355.42 a month to carry a
$40,500, 30-year mortgage, SBYII
Thomas Parllament, an economist
at the U.S. League of Savings
Associations.

tournament action Tuesday night,
63-46 by a hot New Lexington club.

New Lexington raced out to a

4-()

Girls SEOAL scoring

~

SOUTH ESTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
NAME- TEAM
TOP INDIVIDUAL SCORERS
FG FT PTS
Sarah Evans-Gallipolis
140
36
316
Kama Sharfenaker- Waverly
123
44
290
Lauren Triplett- Ironton
96
12
204
Lori Vic_kers-Wellston
77
49
203
Terri Wolson-Melgs
90
36
216
Beth Rist-lronton
78
8
16-4
Angela Moll lea-Athens
174
14
162
Rose Stillier-Jackson
70
27 . 167
Dodle Chapman-Meigs
66
18
150
Pan:&gt; L-Athens
60
22
142
Jako Copeland-Waverly
63
20
146
Janette VInson-Ironton
61
12
134
Sheryl Massay- Jackson.
52
36
140
Sheryl H_a "!k-Logan
4B
38
134
Jayna R1ggs-1 ronton
57
11
125
Sonia Ash-Meigs
55
17
127
Tonia Ash-Meigs
55
17
127
Kim Kellor-Logan
55
16
126
Krls Kroner- Athens
4B
21
117

IGI

AVG.

{13 J
24.3
(14 ) . ~ 20.7

. (13)
{13)

(14)
(12)
(12)
(14)
(13)

( 13)
( 14)
( 13)

IW
( 14)
(13)
(14)
I 14)
I 14)
113)

15.7
15.6
15.4
13.7
13.5
11.9
11 .5
10.9
10,4
10.3
10.0
· 9.6
9.6
9.1
9.0
9.0
9.0

Championship round scheduled tonight
Semi finals of the fourth and fifth ·
grade basketball tournament underway at the Pomeroy Elementary
School were hilld Tuesday night. .
Bradbury Kitchen defeated the
Pomeroy Bombers, 34-33, with Ed
Kitchen being the high score.r for
Bradbury with 21·points and Hewey
·Eason, top scorer for the Pomeroy '
Bombers with 20.
In the second game Tuppers
Plainl! defeated Harrisonville Team

1600%
Gold and Silver

1, 211-22. High scorer for Tuppers
Plains was Jeff Caldwell with 14

while Marty Cline led the Harrisonville team.with 12.
Tonight the consolation game for
third and fourth places between the
Bombers and Harrisonvllle will take
place at 7 p.m. and the championship game between Bradbury
and Tuppers Plains wtU begtn at 8:30
p.m ..

&gt;211

3 11

2 '12

Jacluon

lead and were never headed as they
took a 'Zl-20 advantage into the
lockerrooJ)l at halftime.
Early in the third quarter the
Lady Marauders pulled up to within
four at 28-24 on buckets by Spnia Ash
and Cherie Ughtfoot but New
Lexington hit a hot streak and went
up 42-35 at the end of the third quarter.
The last quarter proved to be the
downfall for Meigs as the Lady Panthers oul$cored Meigs 21·11 to ice the
victory. Lorie Lacey led thre.e Panthers in double figures as she hit for
18 points, Mary Able had 13 while
Marty Mooney added 10.
Terri Wilson clooed out a brilliant
career at Meigs by hittinil22 points,
Dodie Chapman and Tonia Ash also
· playing their last game In Meigs
uniforms added nine each.
The red-hot Panthers hit 24 of 48
shots for 50 percent and IIIade good
on IS of 28 shots from the line for 54
percent. While Meigs was ice cold
froni the floor bitting just 15 of 62 for
just 24 percent they hit 14 of 19 for 73
· percent from the foul line. Meigs ou~
rebounded New Lexington 3()-'Zl with
Terri Wilson pulling down 11 missed
shots and Lacey pulled down 12 for
the Panthers.
The Lady Marauders clooed out
their season at 16-6 while New
Lexington evened their record at 11-11. They will face the winner of the
Sheridan-Warren Local game
Friday for the sectional championship. Besides Wilson and Chap- .
man, other Marauders ending their
hasketbal:
were Sonia Ash,
Toni8 Ash and Cherie Lightfoot.
MEIGS (48) - Wilson 9+22, Ash
1.0.2, Chapman 3-3-9, Ughtfoot 1.0.2,
Smith 1.0.2, Ash 1-7-9, Totals 111-1448.
.
NEW LEXINGTON (63) - Statler
3-2-8, Lacey 7+18, Mooney 3+10,
Smith 2-3-7, Wollenberg 3-1-7y.
TOTALS 24-15-63.
Meigs
6 20 35 48
New Lex.
12 'Zl 42 63

careers

707
642
7'n
488

63S ·
603
719

133

762

121 7911

U\eserve )

TEAM
Irontoo

W I . P1'!l Opp

Meigs

10

I

10

2

392
!2t

2'10

9
5

3 .31!
6 291!

s

1J10

284

338

0 12

235

4

Waverly

183

310

3!f240~

Jackson

,

3$7

No applications
being accepted
Rio Gtande College President Dr.
Paul Hayes said Wednesday the col·
lege has not started taking. applications for the head basketball
coaching and athletic director's job
vacated last week by veteran mentor Art Lanham.
Lanham has accepted a coaching
job with the U.S. Sports Academy in
Mobile, Ala.
Dr. Hayes indicated several persons have caUed about submitting
applications but none Is being taken
until criteria is established regarding the vacancy.
A committee will prepare a list
criteria which must be met by
Lanham's successor.

College results

'

Wynn
Knoot

Dolak
Mayle
Homer

l t.7n 1·2 10
7·12 1-2 10

3
3

l

.

Clw]l;loM

fOR

I PLUMBING I

eAny size me1al pipe: cut &amp; threaded
eA complete line ol fittings-Ells, tees, couplings,
unions, adapters.
• Flexible plastic pipe &amp; fittings
• Copper pipe-112" · 3!4" ells, tees, etc.
• Waives • Faucet washers e Gas pipes • Supply Pipes
• '0' Rings • Faucet Seats

Flrltlload
Florida 12, Vanderbilt 11
Auburn 79, Georgia 71
Weol V!rpola Coll.._.-ro.r-y
Flnt-

u.&lt;i Cbarl..... 89, Coaconl811~00:

Davis &amp; Eilllns!2, W, Vlrginla I -.en 11D

-------------------HOME OF
THE
"MORFLOW"
GLASS UNED
ntEY'RE FUEL
EFFICIENT

.
J
.
H&amp;R Block preparers are carefully trained
the right questions.
They d1g for every honest deduction and credit. And they want to
niake sure.you pay-only the taXes yp0 owe.

H&amp;R - BLOC~

. '

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

•,

I

•

GET tiPTiiE!tE- Job!l Hcner (t4), W aenior, ~ iqh In thi llr
10 defaJd a jump 1bat by Melli' steve 0b11naW !41). ON!npr ICOI-ed llll

. .,.._IIIIa. Marauder~'._. Ia. wllieb ellmlliated Melp tram further
- Wf11A1111111hctiClll.

•

.

,

'

I

.

, ·

'

6.18 .E : MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.
OPEN9A.M. TO
. '6 P.M. WEEKDAYS,
f-SSATURDAY

' '

PHONE m -»U

I'OMEIICII

l'lnl- .

Marion 1GB, Mt. Vernon Nuanne •
Nortb Dakolo c.ueae Cool.....,.

'

0. A. MARTIN

!l'll-!116

~

'

,
1 Buv Other Sliver end Gold Items. CheC:k M_y Prices Befort Selllntl '
Y,our lOcal veer ro11nd dealer

!&amp;

29
21

Na-~AIIIletk:Coal.......,

...

OTHER STERLING PRICES ACCORDING TO WEIGHT.

12
12

DO.IT·YOURSfLffRS
HfADQUARTfRS

GAS OR ELECTRIC

I

2COLE,STREET ·
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 614·H2-6370

&amp;-13 0.2

2 0
1 0
I 2

THf

TOURNAMENTS
bltCGanCoaftrneeTOIU'Dty
La saue 70, Temple 62
Wayette llD, Rider &amp;II
BudoneU 76, Delaware 6$
St. Joseph's, Po. 10, lldstro 59
G&lt;oi'Jiallltft'&lt;Gilellale T,....y

Minlmum paid for any u.s. gold coin in fi~e condition S13s.oo. Pay··
ing 1600%-for all U.s. silver coins dated before 1965, or more if lhe
coin is listed as a collectable coin.
'·

'

0.2

~10 ~

EBERSBACH'S

"CHECK THESE PRICES BEFORE SELLING"

.

H

Wyoming 11, Nev.·Lu Vegu111

Ogellhorpe 18, Georgia U. 76
NAIAT_,.,y
Dlatrldl
Newberry 73, Enldne 72
Francis Marioa8S, Wlntrhop n

c:Ow

FG-A Fr·A Reb. F Pia.

ByTbeANodalod ......
EAST
Boston St. 101, Worcerter St. 99
Rochester 79, Hamilton69
Trufls 103, Wor=ter Poly 79
Union 75, Rensoelear Poly 61
SOU'I11
East Carolina U, CampbeU '2
HJah Point 61, Pfeiffer 5t
N'R Lou!Jiil!na 79, Nicholls Sl. 69
Sletaoo llD, Florida MoM 70
MIDWEST
Marquette llD, Detroit 76
Notre Dame 76, DePaul74:, 2 OT
.
FARWEST
Air Force 76, So. Colorado ell

1600~

KENNEDY HALVES '2.75
WAR NICKLES . . 60':.-~:
· 1~5 thru 1969
.1942 ttiru 1945 · · ·.
. .
STERUNG SPOON OR FORK ••••••••••••s10 each and up
. KNIFE ••••••••••••••••••• '6.50 EACH AND UP

NEW '80 CHEVIES
AVAilABLE

WAIIRI!N CIS)

"You people found deductions
I didn't know about. I
.have come here last year:·

1 have been paying 1400% to 2100% for the past three rnonths, fluctuating with the gold and silver·market prices.

Aur
HG-0102
firushed their campaign in a flurry ,
McAI.ee
~ ~ 1 0
0
Last night was probably their
TOTAUI
11-G $-7 II I •
MEIG81e
1
finest performance of the year as
PG-A n-A Rob. r Pta.
they sizzled the nets for a 51 per cent
A.!h.lty
JJ.21 1·2 7 1 Zl
Oillin8er
shooting percentage.
&amp;-12 w ' 1 Ill
Judge
&amp;-11 ~ 0 1 II
But alas, the Warriors pi ~ked the
Kennedy
:H IHI 2 0 &amp;
Wayland
1--60.0231
same night for 1\leir best shooting.
Snowdon
2-5 0&lt;) 11 4
The winners ripped the cords for an
KeMedy
0.1 0.0 0 0 0
SWIM
1-1 1H1 0 0
I
amazing 63 percent, canning 41 of 65
O'Brien
~
0&lt;)00
0
shots.
0.0 0.0 0 D • -. ::.:.:.,
Scolt
Murray
11&lt;1 11&lt;1 I 0
0
Although Meigs led for awhile and
TOTAUl
...
Z7
7
was close on the Warrior's heels all
Qaar!en ,
Meigs
the way, the red-hot Warren club
Wan-en
·zipped their nets for 23 of 30 shots in
the second baH to win In the closing ~;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~-.J
minutes.
I
Warren, 18-4, was suppooed to
have an easy time with the
MarauderS. But evidently Meigs ·
hadn't heard that rumor. THe fist
quarter was battled head-on to a
2().20 tie.
At Intermission, behind the hot
shooting of Steve Ohlinger who net4 Door , da rk. red, color with mat ·
ted 12 first baH points, Meigs found
Ching red vinyl tr im, radio, air
themselves on top, 39-37, Warren's
cond .• automatic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes. Rally wheels .
Phil Mayle had 15 points In the haU
and finished the night with 29
1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
markers.
Local 1 owner, 350 V-8 engine ,
With 4:11 to go in the i.hirct canto,
auto., -P.S., P.B .. air cond., good
Meigs was off and running and was
tires, landau model, solid white
out in front hy four, 47-43. But then
color .
'369S.
the talented Warriors reeled off four
straight points, and by quarter's end
1974 DODGE VA~ '2895
they were on top 57-liJ.
Van Convers:on includes bed
In the last Period, Warren had ofsink, refr igerator, V·B, auto.:
P.S., P.B., good t ires. Runs
fensive spurts of eight and six
perfect.
unanswered point and that statistic
was just too much for the scappy
. CHEVROLET
'389§
Marauders to overcome.
4 door, small V·8, automatic ;
Meigs hit 32 of 63 shots from the
POwer steering, power brakes ,
locking ' differential , air condi field IIDd sank five of eight from the
tioning,
clean inferior. green .
foul line.
The two teams were nearly even
1974 FORD MAVERICK 11395
!Uider the boards and Steve Ohlinger
2 Dr., 6 cyl.,.auto.
and Bob Ashley had nine and seven
1977 DATSUN PICKUP
caroms, respectively. There were
13995
5 sp. w/ll)pper
only 15 fouls in the contest with
Meigs being assessed for seven per1976 CHEV. Vz T.
sonals and Warren for eight.
12995
PICKUP SPORT
Meigs, having its best offensive
night, had three men hit double
figures. Ashley canned 11 of 21 shots
4 SP. &amp; 4-WH. DRIVE
and one free throw to pace his team
LUV IN STOCK
with 23 points. Ohlinger hit on 8 of 12
shots and four free throws for a fine
20-polnt performance. Chris Judge
added 12 markers. _
Mayle was just unStoppable as he
Immediate Delivery
ripped the nets for 29 points and
Chevette 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr.
hauled in ten rebounds of his team's
1Momta Cpe 2+2 and Clu
28. Red Dolak colleCted eight
Coupe (4 spd.J
caroms. Teh team hit three of seven
free throws.
Citation 2 D_r. &amp; 4 Dr. V-6
Meigs finished its season with a
2-19.
POMEROY MOTOR

WEIINESA V'S COLLEGE
IIABKE'I'IWL SCORES

.'

COMPARE PRICES BEFORE SELLING YOUR VALUABLE$
AT 1200% .-

I AM NOW PAYING

11 2
8 5
a 8
3 10

LOgan

Mortaaae
rates e·
uozng un
• --e• e.
r touay
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Homebuyers, beginning today, will
have to pay lip to a record 13 percent
interest for government-hacked
mortgages. It's the second Increase
in less than three weeks. ·
Acting simultaneously, the
Veterans Administration and the
Federal Housing Adminiatration' on
Wednesday Increased the :-ulmwn
interest rate they charge on home
mortgages by I percent.
Meanwhile, the government temporarily put a lid of 12 pe&lt;cent on the
interest earned on 212year savings
certificates bought In March despite a fonnula providing for interest of up to 13.~ percent.
Wednesday's announcements,
which came within three hours of
each other, represent addltiorial
reactions 19 the Federal Reserve
Board's tight-money pollclea, aimed
at cooling inflation.
'lbe VA-FHA action follows a Feb.
11 boost from 11.5 percent to 12 percent for single-family mortgages
and from 11 percent to 12 percent for
multi-family mortgages.

413

Gallipolis
Athens

Gallipolis
Well:Jton

showed up for the dance came to the scallops .
White House hungry, having been . But, alas, no plates. Guests were .
told a buffet would be served In the free to take all they could eat - so
State Dining Room. The menu In- long as they could hold it In their
cluded steamship rounds of beef, pabns on dainty eocktail napkins.
carved roast turkey and fried
'

•

13 0 139

Logan

Athens. In this Dave HarriS action shot, it appears
Snowden has either charged or has been fouled by
Warren's Mitch Males (33) .

GOES TO· BASKET - ·Todd Snowden, 6-3 center,
goes up for a jump shot In Wednesday's a:H;9 loss to
Warren Local in the~ AA Sectional Tournament at

Rats worry White House personnel
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
demolition of old buildings in downtown Washington, to make way for
new, is confronting White House
groundskeepers with a new threat:
rats.
So many displaced rodents roam
the neighborhood that some of the
most stately White House ebns have
been ringed with sandbags - to
dis&lt;;ourage the rat packs from
taking up residence.
One enterprising magazine
photographer invested in a pound of
hamburger meat, to feed to the rats
In broad daylight in Lafayette Park,
acrOBS Pennsylvania Avenue from
the presidential mansion. He figured
the feasting rats would stand still
long enough for him to photograph
them with the White House in the
background.
The rats did not cooperate.
I
When President and Mrs. Carter
threw a Valentine's dallce less than
two weeks before the New Hampshire primary, Mrs. Carter's office
told reporters there would be guests
from 'Zl states.
For reasons not explained, New
Hampshire was omitted from the
list, although a number of Granite
State Democrats were among the

W L PTS OPP

Irontoo

Meigs
Waverly

111 Cow1 Sl, Pomei'O)', Oh.tG &amp;Sflt. llullaeu
Office Pboae

demand.

Business mirror

By Jullau Boud
MIAMI (NEM - The March 11
Democratic primaries in Florida,
Alabama and Georgia will offer
Southern voters their first chancea
at president choosing, 198CHI:yle.
The three-5tate contest wtU also be
an important test of an idea whose
time must be coming - the notion'of
regional primaries Instead of ·the
current crazy-guilt exercise In exhaustion that begins in Iowa in
January and ends In California in
J une.
And the Florida, Alabama and
Georgia primaries might yet serve
as a measure of the relative drawing
power in black precincts of Presi·
dent Jimmy Carter versus
ch.allenger Edward Kennedy - if
the latter's campaign is still
operative after New Hampshire
(February 26 ), and Massachusetts
and Vermont (March4).
Asolid defeat in the Northeast for
the Massachusetts senator might
put the skids on the Kennedy campaign. If so it will deny Southern
Democrats in three states a choice
of candidates and philoophies.
A Kennedy-less campaign will
mean that only Jerry Brown will offer Democrats an alternative for
1980. Brown's campaign, of course,
sits lower on the scale than Kennedy's.
A Kennedy-less campaign will, in
effect, turn all the following
primaries Into meaningless referenda on the president's response - .or
lack of it - to Soviet adventurism In

Top seeded Warren wins

ROBERTHOEFUCII
City Editor
Publllbecl dally except Sa1anlllyby TbeOhlo
Valley Pu.bllllliq Compuy- MIII.Um.ed..LI, Ilk:.,

Sound investments harder to make
devours

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb.

ti-lo·&amp; IROWI'I ST.
MASON, W. VA.
. OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
tAM-SPM

P~~ na:li12t

.·

�Rio opens baseball campaign March 15

4--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Feb. 28. 1980

RIO GRANDE - March

Pirates oust Wildcats··
Big &amp;-9 Dan Berry pumped m 20
points Wednesday night to lead the
North Gallia Pirates to a 66-59 victory over Hannan Trace in the semi
finals of the Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs High School.
North Gallia will face defending
sectional and district champion
1Southern Friday night at 7:30p.m.
1or the right to advance .to district
·~tition at Chillicothe.
' ' The Pirates of Coach Ted Lehew
&lt;~rted out on a torrid pace that led
. lhem to a llHl lead after jiL'lt 1:15 of
~~lay. Shortly before the end of the

urst period, the wumers attually

had a bigger lead, 23-7.
But the stubborn, fighting Wildcats just wouldn 't give up. They
began scratching away at tile Pirate
lead and as the half ended the lead
was a possibility for the Wildcats as
they trailed just 34-23. Most of the
third period saw Berry and crew
trying to pull a way and put the game
on ice. They did get some breathing
room as they held a HH3 point lead
nearly the rest of the period.
But the end of the third canto and
the first two minutes of the fourth

LEFTHANDED SHOOTER- Hannan Trace's Greg Webb (25 )" puts
:in a left handed layup during Wednesday's Class ASectional Tournament
' game against North Gallia. Webb led the Wildcat offense with 20 points.
:North Gallia took a 66-59 victory to advance to Friday's championship
; game against defending champion Southern.

saw Hannan Trace zip the nets for
nine unanswered points to pull .
within three, 45-42.
The two teams matched buckets
for awhile, and with 5:40 remaining
Greg Webb netted a jumper that
made the score read 47-45.
North Gallia again seemed to pull
itself together and the Wildcats
began making some turnovers and
the winners went out in front, 51-46, ·
despite having lost Berry via the foul
routeatthe4 :25mark. Then Rodney
Pack hit a jumper after a steal and
Webb cashed in on a layup and suddenUy the Wildcats tasted victory,
trailing SHiO.
But four cosUy turnovers by Hannan Trace allowed the Pirates to
score eight straight points to race to
a Ss-50 lead with just 1:31 to play.
The Wildcats didn't give up but the
Pirates held on for the big win.
Keith Payne and Mark Miller each
netted 16 points for the winners, and
Berry hauled in 15 big rebounds of
his team's total. 39. The Pirates
perhaps could have handled the
Wildcats a little easier had it not
been for 23 cosily turnovers. North
Gallia cashed in on just 12 of 29 free
· throws. No shooting percentage
from the floor was available for the
winners.
Webb led the losers in scoring with
20 points. Pack and Carlos Campbell
each hit double figures, Campbell
with 13 markers and Pack with 10.
The Wildcats actually outrebounded the taller Pirates 41-39 as
Pack and Campbell did quite a job
under the boards. Pack had 18
rebounds and Campbell had 17. The
team had 13 steals and 16 turnovers.
At the Une the losers were 7 of 12
and from the fiElld they shot 33%,
canning 26 of 79 attempts.
'
8oiscore:
NORm GAU.IA Ill) -Peck 4-M; Payne~
16; HoweU 2-2-6; Miller 7-Z..l8 ; Berry 9--2-20.
TOTALS 17·1WI.
HANNAN TRACE - (5t) - CampbeU 8,.1-13:
Beaver ~z.a; Jones 4-0-1; Webb 9--2-20 and Padt
H·lO. TOTALSZI-7-Q.
By Quarters :
97.33859
NorthGallla

Hannan Trace

23 24 IS 66

Crooksville dumps Eastern
The Crooksville Ceramics made
the first half count last night and
t1Jerunade a last minute comeback to
knock the Eastern Eagles out of
tournament action at Nelsonville York, 51-49.
That win for the Ceramics marked
the second year in a row that they
had spoiled Eastern's tourney
11opes, taking a . one-point win last

year.
; Last night, Eastern acted like it
wanted to take control of the game
over the favored Ceramics, as the
Eagles of Coach John Boston jum-

ped out to a quick~ lead.
: The Eastern crew then missed
tjJree straight shots or perhaps they
oould have taken a llHl lead, enough
01 a margin that might have spelled
'o!ictory.
• But it wasn't to be.
: Eastern got cold and Crooksville

r

got hot, and by the end of the first
period the Ceramics were on top IS.
6. The winners increased their lead
to 31-18 by intermission and things
looked bleak for Eastern.
But the Meigs County crew was
farm from out.
Using a stingy defense and a more
accurate shooting eye, the Eagles
narrowed the score to 41-37 by the
end of the third canto.
Opening the last period, the storming Eagles outscored Crooksville
10.2 and took a 47-43 lead with three
minutes to go.
The Ceramics weren't quitters
either, and the winners reeled off
eight unanswered points to take a Sl47lead.
Eastern's Greg Wigal hit a jumper
with three seconds to go in the game
to pull his team to within two, but the
damage was done.

Transactions
Wedlleedly'• 8perta Truaaedoal
By 'l1oo .._.,t.d " ' IWIEBAU.

AJDerlcuLeqae
NEW YORX YANKEES - Sllned O.ve
Righetti, pitcher, and Rafael Sant.Rn.a, infielder .
Na~Leqae

CINCINNATI
outfieldtr.

RE~ -

Signed Duane Walker,

F001"IIAU.
Na~F~Leqae

American Hocll.:ey League.
WINNIPEG JETS - Pun:lwed the coolract

oi K.ri5 Manery, rlgllt wing, from the Vancouver
Canucks.

COU.EGE

SAN DIEGO STATE - Announced the
resignation of Andy Stoglln, assistant baRball
coach effective Jwte 30.
UNIVEIIS!TV OF AKRON - Annowt&lt;ed that
the cmtract oi Ken Cunnlngham, head buket~
ball coach, wW not be renewed.

DAU..AS COWBOYS - Named Al Lavan runn-

inl bock cooch.

HOCKEY
Na_H_,.Leape
ATLANTA FLAME8 - Jim Chljc. goaUe,
agreed kl• three-year contract.
MJNNESO'I"A NOR111 STARS - Sillned Sieve
&lt;llrtiUIII, rtghtan":!t to a tine year cont..act.
Slaned Steve J
1oolle.
NEW YORK RANGERS - Recalled Jim
Mayer, rlgb twinJ, fmn New Haven ol the

Carpet Cleaning
Effectiveness
YOU CAN REALLY SEE!
RENT NEW,

Combines

VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and
powerful
STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING
to loosen, dissolve
and eJdract
deep-seated dirt and

resktues.
Gets carpets

cleaner. Fastetl And
H's easv to operate

too.

Had it not been for that" bad first
half and the foul-shooting nemisis
that has plagued the Eagles all year,
this story would have a different out·
come. Eastern hit 23 field goals to
just 19 for the Ceramics, but the
Eagles cashed in on just three of
nine free throws while the winners
were hitting on 13 of 22 attempts.
Center Tim Dill paced the Eagle
attack as he netted IS points. Brian
Bissell and Wigal each added ten
markers to hit double figures.
Eastern hadd the rebounding edge,
37-'J:/, with Dill getting 10 caroms
and Gene Cole seven. But 22 turnovers for Eastern to just 14 for
Crooksville was a big statistic.
Eastern hit on 23 of 55 shots from the
floor for 42%.
Troy Valley paced Crooksville
with his 14 points, and Marty Redfern and David Ruff each had 10.
Valley also had 10 of his team's
rebounds. Crooksville hit a
miserable 19 of 3 shots from the
floor, but their foul shooting pulled
the game out.
EASTERN-CROOKSVJUE BOX
EASTEIIN (tl) - B. BW.U~tO; G. Cole~;
Wigal4-2·10; Lori&amp; t-0-2; M. BIMell ~ ; Dlll7+
11; Sprague~; M.othe,..~ : Chri!monO.O.
0; TOTALS!3,S-&lt;t.
CROOKSVIlLE (11) - Valley 4+14;
Browning ~·a: Redfern ~10; Elliott 1+3 ; B.
Browning 1-0-2; Ruff z-6.10. TOTALS 1f.U·$1.

ByQaan.ru,
East&lt;m
Croolt!vile

8113741
18314151

NOTICE
WE FlU PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BlUING FOR THE FOllOWING:

OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
MEDIMET
UNITED MINE WORKERS ·
PHARMACEUTICAL CARD SYSTEM
----·

r-

SUJISHER LOHSE

KttNtetiiMCCUIIDUgh, R. Ptl .
(Mrl•l RIHie, •• Pbr
len•ld H•nlq, R . l'tl.
Silf. l 1ot• .RL tot p.m.
S~.tnUyiO : lllo12 : »an'd5tot . m .
,.
PltiSCRIPTIONI ·
'
PH. m ·2t5S

Moll,..,.,

._______,_

_____

· (llrl.nctly hrvlce

'STAR ~IJPPLY

E. Mlkt
,

RICine,O.
/

· OJ*' Nlghflllll t

is the

College and Conunwtity College
Redmen baseball squad.
Edison Sl&lt;tte Conununity College
will provide the competition for the 1
p.m. doubleheader at Rio Grande.
Rio head coach T&lt;m Meadows
returns a veteran ball club to the
1980 campaign. Twelve lettermen include All· Mid Ohio Conference selections Frank Gregory, second base;
Jim Derrow, first base; and All·
NAIA District players Mike Ciuxton,
right field ; and Brett Wilson, centerfield.
Meadows capped a fine recruiting
year with the addition of junior college transfer catcner Jeff Savage,
and former Gallia Academy standout Jim Perry, who comes to Rio

Tournament game against Hannan Trace. North
Gallia won 66-69 to advance to the championship game
Friday against Southern. Closing in are HT's Rodney
Pack (31) and Richard Jones (21).

Trimble sponsoring Golden Gloves program
Plans are Underway for the fifth
annual Southeastern Ohio Golden
Gloves Boxing Championships, to be
held at the Trimble Local School in
Jacksonville.
Area boxers are invited to participate in the tournament at thea
chool gyml.asium on March 14 and

type medals wlll be presented to the
15.
winners and participation medals
Boxers must live in the following
given to all boxers not placing in the
counties to be eligible: Athens,
competition.
Meigs, Vinton, Hocking, Jackson,
The tournament is A.A. U. sancMonroe, Morgan, Perry, Fairfield,
Washngton, Licking, Muskingum,
tioned.
Guernsey, Belmont and Noble.
Weigh-ins and medical, ;r--:-:-~~~~-~~.-.....
examination wlll be held Thursday,
Your "Extra To~jjf.'
1
March13at5 :30p.m.attheTrimble
. FioristSincet~·~
Local Gym. There is no entrance i
~
fee, however a $4.00 charge will
i
cover the price of the boxers A.A.U.
~
I
Card.
i
· FLORIST
There wlll be five (5) age
II
categories from 10 through 25 years
PH. 992·2644
1
ofage, and13weightdivisions.
\ ,. 3Sl E. Main ; Pomer·oy
Gold, Silver and Bronze Olympic
Your FTD Florist

1

GENERAL
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A
prominent Salt Lake sports franchise pwner and his wife were foti,Qd
shot to death at their home in
Granger, Salt Lake County sheriff's
officers said.
The bodies of Thayne Acord and
his wife, Lorraine, were found in the
basement: Acord and his sons, Dean
and Bill, . were half owners of the
Golden Eagles of the Central Hockey
League team.

1
1

---

_j

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DliALS IN THE;
TRISTATE AREA

.MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to S: 00 Thursday till12 Noon

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

773-5592

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

·MENU
Tossed Salad
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
·..Vegetable
Roll,
Tea,
Coffee or Milk

$625·Plus. Tax .

SNOWDEN SCORES - Todd Snowden, who scored four points, is
shown putting in a layup against Warren Local's John Homer (44). Topseeded Warren advanced with an 8:Hl9 victory. Meigs ended its season
with a 2-19record.

Notre Dame stops
No.1 ranked team
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)- Topranked college basketball teams
which venture into Notre Dame's
Athletic and Convocation Center indeed are invading treacherous
ground.
Five times in the 12-year history of
the ACC - as the school's "sixth
man" student body affectionately
It - the Irtsh have stopped the
nation'sNo. I team in its tracks.
On Jan. 23, 1971, it was UCLA.
Three years later, it was UCLA
again and the Bruins' 88-game win·
nlng streak. In 1977, it was unbeaten
San Francisco, and a year later
defending national champion
Marquette.
Wednesday night was DePaul's
tum. It took two overtime sessions,
but the Irish got the job done again
with a pulsating 7&amp;-74 victory which
snapped the Blue Demons' ~arne
winning streak.
"That's what freaks me out about
this place," said Notre Dame Coach

ealls

SHOP

SKIING

WATERVILLE VALLEY, N.H.
(AP) Ingemar tenmark of
Sweden, coming off his first loss in
more than two years in giant slalom,
captured the World Cup special
slalom at Mount Tecumseh.
Stemnark had times of 51.71 and
ii0.33 for 1 minute 42.04 seconds.
Christian Neureuther of West Ger·
many finished second with 1:43.02on
runs of 52.30 and 50.72.

I

Seaver hoping to
open without any
•
• • •
senous
mJunes

Digger Phelps. "Don't play Notre
Dame when you're No. 1 and unbeaten.
"But this doesn 't compare with
1974. Beating UCLA, snapping the
winning streak and everything that
goes with it rank with the greatest
moments in sports. I think any coach
would have wanted to be part of it,"
Phelps added.
Orlando Wooleridge canned two
free throws with 19 seconds left in
the second overtime to give the
Irish, 21-5, the victory. The winning
shots capped a stready uphill climb
which began after DePaul, ~1.
scored the first eight points of the
second half to take a commanding
lead.
But Notre Dame roared back and
wiped out a nine-point deficit by
scoring 11 straight points to set up a
see-saw battle which saw the game
tied at 64 after regulation, and 70 after the first overtime.
Both teams wasted opportwtities
to win the game in regulation. Two
free throws by Tracy Jackson tied

g\\\ \
ALL LEGAL

Phone ·992-36~, ·

Home
Home
Home
Away

Any

AWl)' •

April ll- Urb&amp;na

Aw•Y ..

April 12- Cedarville

Jlclmo • .

Aw•J "

Apr4 1 ~ Wi~

Any

Jlclmo
Home

April lG-Central State

April&gt;J-Matone

....,

Home

May 13- Martetta

Away
AIIUi f

-

April t._Otlerbean

April 29---Mt. Vernon Naurene

Home

MOC Reeord Ovcralllle&lt;onl
W. L W.L

TI!AM
Malane

u

2 21
9
ll 3 3J
6
10416t6
161416
5 9
a ta
4107t9
311616
3 l1
3 M

Cedarville
Tiffin

Urbana ·
RloGrande
Walsh

Ohio Dominican
Mount Vernon

SCOHING
Player

G FG "

Mounta (CJ
lloniert (U)
Volarlcll (M)
K.oullman (CJ

TP AYJ.

211 210 97 it4
29 2110 lt4 «rr
30 m 64 611
211 217 119 iC13
29 7J!II M :131

Wllcuk (M)
Anderoon (T)
Luther (W)
GU3tin (U)
Nogle (MV)
Dung"' (W)

2:1.0

:10.9
:10.6
18.3
18.1
11.3
18.1
1U
16.3

32 2111
211 197

6t il3
76 470

2li 175

50 110
95 439
16 4011 18.2

30 7J!II
27 172

FIELD GOLD PCI'.
0 Fll FilA Pc:l.
29 1M 375 62.8
29 21!0 ~ ~.7
2li Ill 144 ~.3

Wllcuk(M)
Rengert(U)
Colfman(M)

30 m 478 ~.t
'11 lt3 241 57.7

Volarlcll (M)
Madden(MV)

SAVE

Aw•r

April »-Central Stale

llomt

May 3- Wal.sh
May 11-0tterbein

Homo "
AWilY

woffiack (CJ
211 ua
Boller (C)
2li 124
Luther (W)
211 197
Feesler (WI
21 97
Andenon (T)
32 2111
REBOUNDING LI!ADERB

.

5 PIECE.GROUP FROM .
LMWIER, CH,P
or accompenltcl by perentl or I. . .IIUII'Ciiln.

r~·N
.

· Pomeroy, 0

Twenty-five pitchers and catchers
reported for the first workout on
Wednesday. ,
Only Manny Sarmiento failed to
report.
"It shows me that the young Latin
players • like Mario Soto, Angel
Torres and Jose Brito are Intent on
llhowlng what tl)ey can do," said
Sheldon Bender, the team's player
personnel director.
··
The Reds announced that they
•have ligned minor league outfielder
, Duan&amp; Walker to a one-year con:tract, reciucjng tl)e nllmber of 1111'
signed players to five.
. Ullligned are outfielder Ken Grif·
,fey, catcher Vie CcJrrell and pitchers
,MJke La~, Frank Pastore and
:Sarmiento.

.

I
•.
·
.
,.J
f·

SlYLES IN STOCK

'7~e!oll
JOHNS/MANVIllE
FIBERGlASS INSULATION
50 Sq. Ft.

It's .4" thick R-11 fol faced insulation
made of quality fiberglass that helps
au keep the cost of fuel down . Keeps
vour home comfortable all around
the year.

6'12'' Thick R·19-30 sq. ft.

. JAM~P

PRE .CUT STUDS
ECONOMY GRADE
2"

X 4"

ONLY

Aluminum with 'tlnyllrl-

sert flf1 top lind sloes of

REG. 14.49

any door up to U JCI.ol In·
Cf"IH.

241 57.3

2311 16.1
362 16.0
178 ii.l
475 5U

G REB A•l·

Gnbeold (T)

Mlcbeli (T)
Luther (W)
BUer (C)
WUczak (M)
Koullman (C)
Rengert (UJ
Milia (M )
KentcBh (MV)
FRE1! 111R011 PCI'.

31 372 t 1.6
31 323 tO.l
21 2110 10.0
li 247 9.9
2t 2711 U
21 2311 9.2
zt 211 a.o
28 212 7.5
27 lOt 7.4

0" " ... Pet.
111.1

27 116 113
29 lti 144
:til 119 119
30 73 9'1
211 97 129
30 711 106
211 71 10'1
22 6i Ill
211 112 118
lO 7t 106

NogleiMVJ
Reogett (U)

Koullman(C)
Orabeold(T)

Moonta (C)
Varbol"OUih(M)
Ftlcher(MV )
Brannen (OD)
KentcBh(MV)
l'&lt;ltopsky (W )

711.9
71.5
75.3
75.2
7U
72.9

TORPEDO

lEVEL

. . . . .8

Tough , lightweight· Cycolac•
level with top reading feature and V-groove bas e.
Three vial stations.

32.95

5-lnch
Bench Grinder

5 liC %-in. wheels sharpen &amp; polish tools, remove ·rust. etc .
1115-hp motor, lubricated bearings.
C3560M3
8 • %-ln. Grinder. (Not shown). C3562M3 ... ..... .... .57.50

REG. '5.99

72.0
70.7
70.1

-..uac.

CLOPAY

FOLDING
DOORS

.,.5

.(

Irs something losing about! You may

AND UP

think Toot Toot Tootsie is a grand old
song . But our Toot Toot Tootsie is a grand

new shOO, a
brand new
feeling .

Ideal where limited space prohibits conventional door. Sized
to fit openings up to 2ft. a Inc_,
wide.

,$}Q95'_
·'

6 LB.
WOOD
SPumNG MAUL
~orged of tool ateel. hand
ground end hut treated to
hold cutting edge. The
hood Is axe-eyed and fitted
wilh lltllght
handle.

axe

se

$1295

8 LB.

PRICES EFF~CTIVE FEB. 28 THRU MAR. 8TH

Toot Tool Tootsies
new action sole keeps

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

you moving along with
the greatest ol ease
and comfort.

,_

&amp;!u4e.

iliiliillil~lllllll ~tq·

herlt~-~~- house
N. nd Ave.

Of SIIOES

~:

: *' '

r

ON SELECTED

"U you're going to have an injury

WHISKEY
.
RIVER

I

OFF

Larry Starr.

to a pitcher, that's wbere you want
-It, wbere you can work with It or
even sometimes pitch around lt."

.'

0

tour.

BEVERAGES SOLD

_ _ ___,

PLACE

Home

April 3-W. Va . Sta te
Aprii 7- 0e.lison
April 1-- Tiffin

THOMAS LIGHT FIXTURES

'lower body becaue he puts so much
stress on It,'' explained Reds trainer

THE MEIGS

23

Indiana; 31-year-o1d Gerry Sears, an
assistant at Ohio State; and Kansas
aide Bob Hill, 31.

the game at 64 with 1: 08left. DePaul
went into a delay game and held the
ball until Teddy Grubbs threw it
away with 13 seconds left.
Notre Dame took possession but
turned It over when Bill Hanzlik was
whistled for traveling five seconds
later. DePaul's Clyde Bradshaw
missed a 20 footer at the buzzer, and
the game went into overtime.
Rich Branning tied the game at 70
with a jumper from the corner with
seven seconds left in the first overtime. He got the chance after James
Mitchem, playing with a broken
hand, missed the entire backboard
on the front end of a one-anlknd
free throw situation with 36 seconds
to go and DePaul leading 7~.
While Coach Ray Meyer obviously
was disappointed with the loss, he
seemed a bit relieved.
"I've been asked 10 times in the
last two weeks about being No. 1. I
didn't ask to be No. 1. It was VOted,
and so what, " be said. "I'll send
congratulations if there is another
team voted No. 1 after this game. He
can have the 'monkey.' I don't want
it."
Kelly Tripucka led Notre Dame
with 28 points and Woolridge added
16. Mark Aguirre, voted the game's
most valuable player, scored 28 for
DePaul, and teammate Terry Cummings added 16.

MOC cage statistics

.

.~

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Three-time
Cy Young Award Winner Tom
Seaver is hoping to finally start a
baseball season with the Cincinnati
Reds without leg miL'lcle ailments.
Seaver was out with a calf muscle
pull during 1978 spring training. In
19'19, Seaver went through training,
then pulled a muscle in the Opening
:Day game and went on to six
straight losses.
He later came back to win 11
·straight games while compiling a 1&amp;6 record last season as the Reds
came from behind to win the
·National League West.
: "Maybe I won't piL'lh myself so
·hard, maybe go a little slower this
·spring," said Seaver, 35. "This
~ problem with my calf muscles goes
way back.
This winter, Seaver played a lot of
squash and started a running
:program. He also spent the off:season working for NBC television In
' its coverage of tm. professional golf ·

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
University Athletic Director Harold
McElhaney said Wednesday the
field for the Bobcats' head basketball coaching job has been narrowed
to six. He said the post wlll be filled
early next week.
University of Texas 8&amp;'Jistant
Steve Moeller was interviewed by
McElhaney's search committee
Wednesday, the final candidate to be
screened. On Tuesday, Hal Wissel,
the 14-year-veteran coach at Florida
Southern, was interviewed.
Moeller, 35, and Wissel join
hopefuls Danny Nee, 24, the top
8&amp;'Jistant at Notre Dame; Jene
Davis, 33, a volunteer 8&amp;'Jistant at

" All of Seaver's injuries have been

ENTERtAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAnJRDAY .
NIGHT

of

e

31
WATCHES FIJGIITOF BALL - Tim Howell (31), :&gt;6 senior guard for North Gallia, watches intenUy as the
ball goes for the rim in Wednesday's Class A Sectional

nf!er a stint in the service.
The · Rio schedul e
four other area players are cur- doubleheaders iollows :
rently on the Redmen squad. They
DATE-OPPONENT
include Southwestern High School
March 15-E&lt;lisonCoovn C.U.
grads Larry Carter and Gene
March 16-EdiaonComm. C&lt;lll .
March 11-0hio Dominican
Layton; NorthGallia grad Steve LitMarch2&amp;-W. Va . Tech.
tle, and Gallia Academy's Terry
March 22-CuyahogB CC-Metro
March 23--XaYier at Porwnouth
Wall.
M.orch 21-Copital
According to Meadows, the team
Mllrch29-Wllminglon
Aprill- W. Va. Teclt
has the potential to be one of the
most ~uccessful in Rio's history.
"With all of the veterans we
should be an excellent fielding and .
hitting squad. The players have been
working hard since the team selections this fall," said Meadows.
Recently elected to captain the
Redmen were Frank Gregory, Mike
Cluxton, Brett Wilson and Tony
Fiscus.

Will fill OU post next week

r IRA1' ..

You must be 21

Pharmacy

I~

season opener for the Rio Grande

-

Middle

rt, Ohio
•' '

t

�Rio opens baseball campaign March 15

4--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Feb. 28. 1980

RIO GRANDE - March

Pirates oust Wildcats··
Big &amp;-9 Dan Berry pumped m 20
points Wednesday night to lead the
North Gallia Pirates to a 66-59 victory over Hannan Trace in the semi
finals of the Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs High School.
North Gallia will face defending
sectional and district champion
1Southern Friday night at 7:30p.m.
1or the right to advance .to district
·~tition at Chillicothe.
' ' The Pirates of Coach Ted Lehew
&lt;~rted out on a torrid pace that led
. lhem to a llHl lead after jiL'lt 1:15 of
~~lay. Shortly before the end of the

urst period, the wumers attually

had a bigger lead, 23-7.
But the stubborn, fighting Wildcats just wouldn 't give up. They
began scratching away at tile Pirate
lead and as the half ended the lead
was a possibility for the Wildcats as
they trailed just 34-23. Most of the
third period saw Berry and crew
trying to pull a way and put the game
on ice. They did get some breathing
room as they held a HH3 point lead
nearly the rest of the period.
But the end of the third canto and
the first two minutes of the fourth

LEFTHANDED SHOOTER- Hannan Trace's Greg Webb (25 )" puts
:in a left handed layup during Wednesday's Class ASectional Tournament
' game against North Gallia. Webb led the Wildcat offense with 20 points.
:North Gallia took a 66-59 victory to advance to Friday's championship
; game against defending champion Southern.

saw Hannan Trace zip the nets for
nine unanswered points to pull .
within three, 45-42.
The two teams matched buckets
for awhile, and with 5:40 remaining
Greg Webb netted a jumper that
made the score read 47-45.
North Gallia again seemed to pull
itself together and the Wildcats
began making some turnovers and
the winners went out in front, 51-46, ·
despite having lost Berry via the foul
routeatthe4 :25mark. Then Rodney
Pack hit a jumper after a steal and
Webb cashed in on a layup and suddenUy the Wildcats tasted victory,
trailing SHiO.
But four cosUy turnovers by Hannan Trace allowed the Pirates to
score eight straight points to race to
a Ss-50 lead with just 1:31 to play.
The Wildcats didn't give up but the
Pirates held on for the big win.
Keith Payne and Mark Miller each
netted 16 points for the winners, and
Berry hauled in 15 big rebounds of
his team's total. 39. The Pirates
perhaps could have handled the
Wildcats a little easier had it not
been for 23 cosily turnovers. North
Gallia cashed in on just 12 of 29 free
· throws. No shooting percentage
from the floor was available for the
winners.
Webb led the losers in scoring with
20 points. Pack and Carlos Campbell
each hit double figures, Campbell
with 13 markers and Pack with 10.
The Wildcats actually outrebounded the taller Pirates 41-39 as
Pack and Campbell did quite a job
under the boards. Pack had 18
rebounds and Campbell had 17. The
team had 13 steals and 16 turnovers.
At the Une the losers were 7 of 12
and from the fiElld they shot 33%,
canning 26 of 79 attempts.
'
8oiscore:
NORm GAU.IA Ill) -Peck 4-M; Payne~
16; HoweU 2-2-6; Miller 7-Z..l8 ; Berry 9--2-20.
TOTALS 17·1WI.
HANNAN TRACE - (5t) - CampbeU 8,.1-13:
Beaver ~z.a; Jones 4-0-1; Webb 9--2-20 and Padt
H·lO. TOTALSZI-7-Q.
By Quarters :
97.33859
NorthGallla

Hannan Trace

23 24 IS 66

Crooksville dumps Eastern
The Crooksville Ceramics made
the first half count last night and
t1Jerunade a last minute comeback to
knock the Eastern Eagles out of
tournament action at Nelsonville York, 51-49.
That win for the Ceramics marked
the second year in a row that they
had spoiled Eastern's tourney
11opes, taking a . one-point win last

year.
; Last night, Eastern acted like it
wanted to take control of the game
over the favored Ceramics, as the
Eagles of Coach John Boston jum-

ped out to a quick~ lead.
: The Eastern crew then missed
tjJree straight shots or perhaps they
oould have taken a llHl lead, enough
01 a margin that might have spelled
'o!ictory.
• But it wasn't to be.
: Eastern got cold and Crooksville

r

got hot, and by the end of the first
period the Ceramics were on top IS.
6. The winners increased their lead
to 31-18 by intermission and things
looked bleak for Eastern.
But the Meigs County crew was
farm from out.
Using a stingy defense and a more
accurate shooting eye, the Eagles
narrowed the score to 41-37 by the
end of the third canto.
Opening the last period, the storming Eagles outscored Crooksville
10.2 and took a 47-43 lead with three
minutes to go.
The Ceramics weren't quitters
either, and the winners reeled off
eight unanswered points to take a Sl47lead.
Eastern's Greg Wigal hit a jumper
with three seconds to go in the game
to pull his team to within two, but the
damage was done.

Transactions
Wedlleedly'• 8perta Truaaedoal
By 'l1oo .._.,t.d " ' IWIEBAU.

AJDerlcuLeqae
NEW YORX YANKEES - Sllned O.ve
Righetti, pitcher, and Rafael Sant.Rn.a, infielder .
Na~Leqae

CINCINNATI
outfieldtr.

RE~ -

Signed Duane Walker,

F001"IIAU.
Na~F~Leqae

American Hocll.:ey League.
WINNIPEG JETS - Pun:lwed the coolract

oi K.ri5 Manery, rlgllt wing, from the Vancouver
Canucks.

COU.EGE

SAN DIEGO STATE - Announced the
resignation of Andy Stoglln, assistant baRball
coach effective Jwte 30.
UNIVEIIS!TV OF AKRON - Annowt&lt;ed that
the cmtract oi Ken Cunnlngham, head buket~
ball coach, wW not be renewed.

DAU..AS COWBOYS - Named Al Lavan runn-

inl bock cooch.

HOCKEY
Na_H_,.Leape
ATLANTA FLAME8 - Jim Chljc. goaUe,
agreed kl• three-year contract.
MJNNESO'I"A NOR111 STARS - Sillned Sieve
&lt;llrtiUIII, rtghtan":!t to a tine year cont..act.
Slaned Steve J
1oolle.
NEW YORK RANGERS - Recalled Jim
Mayer, rlgb twinJ, fmn New Haven ol the

Carpet Cleaning
Effectiveness
YOU CAN REALLY SEE!
RENT NEW,

Combines

VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and
powerful
STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING
to loosen, dissolve
and eJdract
deep-seated dirt and

resktues.
Gets carpets

cleaner. Fastetl And
H's easv to operate

too.

Had it not been for that" bad first
half and the foul-shooting nemisis
that has plagued the Eagles all year,
this story would have a different out·
come. Eastern hit 23 field goals to
just 19 for the Ceramics, but the
Eagles cashed in on just three of
nine free throws while the winners
were hitting on 13 of 22 attempts.
Center Tim Dill paced the Eagle
attack as he netted IS points. Brian
Bissell and Wigal each added ten
markers to hit double figures.
Eastern hadd the rebounding edge,
37-'J:/, with Dill getting 10 caroms
and Gene Cole seven. But 22 turnovers for Eastern to just 14 for
Crooksville was a big statistic.
Eastern hit on 23 of 55 shots from the
floor for 42%.
Troy Valley paced Crooksville
with his 14 points, and Marty Redfern and David Ruff each had 10.
Valley also had 10 of his team's
rebounds. Crooksville hit a
miserable 19 of 3 shots from the
floor, but their foul shooting pulled
the game out.
EASTERN-CROOKSVJUE BOX
EASTEIIN (tl) - B. BW.U~tO; G. Cole~;
Wigal4-2·10; Lori&amp; t-0-2; M. BIMell ~ ; Dlll7+
11; Sprague~; M.othe,..~ : Chri!monO.O.
0; TOTALS!3,S-&lt;t.
CROOKSVIlLE (11) - Valley 4+14;
Browning ~·a: Redfern ~10; Elliott 1+3 ; B.
Browning 1-0-2; Ruff z-6.10. TOTALS 1f.U·$1.

ByQaan.ru,
East&lt;m
Croolt!vile

8113741
18314151

NOTICE
WE FlU PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BlUING FOR THE FOllOWING:

OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
MEDIMET
UNITED MINE WORKERS ·
PHARMACEUTICAL CARD SYSTEM
----·

r-

SUJISHER LOHSE

KttNtetiiMCCUIIDUgh, R. Ptl .
(Mrl•l RIHie, •• Pbr
len•ld H•nlq, R . l'tl.
Silf. l 1ot• .RL tot p.m.
S~.tnUyiO : lllo12 : »an'd5tot . m .
,.
PltiSCRIPTIONI ·
'
PH. m ·2t5S

Moll,..,.,

._______,_

_____

· (llrl.nctly hrvlce

'STAR ~IJPPLY

E. Mlkt
,

RICine,O.
/

· OJ*' Nlghflllll t

is the

College and Conunwtity College
Redmen baseball squad.
Edison Sl&lt;tte Conununity College
will provide the competition for the 1
p.m. doubleheader at Rio Grande.
Rio head coach T&lt;m Meadows
returns a veteran ball club to the
1980 campaign. Twelve lettermen include All· Mid Ohio Conference selections Frank Gregory, second base;
Jim Derrow, first base; and All·
NAIA District players Mike Ciuxton,
right field ; and Brett Wilson, centerfield.
Meadows capped a fine recruiting
year with the addition of junior college transfer catcner Jeff Savage,
and former Gallia Academy standout Jim Perry, who comes to Rio

Tournament game against Hannan Trace. North
Gallia won 66-69 to advance to the championship game
Friday against Southern. Closing in are HT's Rodney
Pack (31) and Richard Jones (21).

Trimble sponsoring Golden Gloves program
Plans are Underway for the fifth
annual Southeastern Ohio Golden
Gloves Boxing Championships, to be
held at the Trimble Local School in
Jacksonville.
Area boxers are invited to participate in the tournament at thea
chool gyml.asium on March 14 and

type medals wlll be presented to the
15.
winners and participation medals
Boxers must live in the following
given to all boxers not placing in the
counties to be eligible: Athens,
competition.
Meigs, Vinton, Hocking, Jackson,
The tournament is A.A. U. sancMonroe, Morgan, Perry, Fairfield,
Washngton, Licking, Muskingum,
tioned.
Guernsey, Belmont and Noble.
Weigh-ins and medical, ;r--:-:-~~~~-~~.-.....
examination wlll be held Thursday,
Your "Extra To~jjf.'
1
March13at5 :30p.m.attheTrimble
. FioristSincet~·~
Local Gym. There is no entrance i
~
fee, however a $4.00 charge will
i
cover the price of the boxers A.A.U.
~
I
Card.
i
· FLORIST
There wlll be five (5) age
II
categories from 10 through 25 years
PH. 992·2644
1
ofage, and13weightdivisions.
\ ,. 3Sl E. Main ; Pomer·oy
Gold, Silver and Bronze Olympic
Your FTD Florist

1

GENERAL
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A
prominent Salt Lake sports franchise pwner and his wife were foti,Qd
shot to death at their home in
Granger, Salt Lake County sheriff's
officers said.
The bodies of Thayne Acord and
his wife, Lorraine, were found in the
basement: Acord and his sons, Dean
and Bill, . were half owners of the
Golden Eagles of the Central Hockey
League team.

1
1

---

_j

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DliALS IN THE;
TRISTATE AREA

.MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to S: 00 Thursday till12 Noon

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

773-5592

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

·MENU
Tossed Salad
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
·..Vegetable
Roll,
Tea,
Coffee or Milk

$625·Plus. Tax .

SNOWDEN SCORES - Todd Snowden, who scored four points, is
shown putting in a layup against Warren Local's John Homer (44). Topseeded Warren advanced with an 8:Hl9 victory. Meigs ended its season
with a 2-19record.

Notre Dame stops
No.1 ranked team
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)- Topranked college basketball teams
which venture into Notre Dame's
Athletic and Convocation Center indeed are invading treacherous
ground.
Five times in the 12-year history of
the ACC - as the school's "sixth
man" student body affectionately
It - the Irtsh have stopped the
nation'sNo. I team in its tracks.
On Jan. 23, 1971, it was UCLA.
Three years later, it was UCLA
again and the Bruins' 88-game win·
nlng streak. In 1977, it was unbeaten
San Francisco, and a year later
defending national champion
Marquette.
Wednesday night was DePaul's
tum. It took two overtime sessions,
but the Irish got the job done again
with a pulsating 7&amp;-74 victory which
snapped the Blue Demons' ~arne
winning streak.
"That's what freaks me out about
this place," said Notre Dame Coach

ealls

SHOP

SKIING

WATERVILLE VALLEY, N.H.
(AP) Ingemar tenmark of
Sweden, coming off his first loss in
more than two years in giant slalom,
captured the World Cup special
slalom at Mount Tecumseh.
Stemnark had times of 51.71 and
ii0.33 for 1 minute 42.04 seconds.
Christian Neureuther of West Ger·
many finished second with 1:43.02on
runs of 52.30 and 50.72.

I

Seaver hoping to
open without any
•
• • •
senous
mJunes

Digger Phelps. "Don't play Notre
Dame when you're No. 1 and unbeaten.
"But this doesn 't compare with
1974. Beating UCLA, snapping the
winning streak and everything that
goes with it rank with the greatest
moments in sports. I think any coach
would have wanted to be part of it,"
Phelps added.
Orlando Wooleridge canned two
free throws with 19 seconds left in
the second overtime to give the
Irish, 21-5, the victory. The winning
shots capped a stready uphill climb
which began after DePaul, ~1.
scored the first eight points of the
second half to take a commanding
lead.
But Notre Dame roared back and
wiped out a nine-point deficit by
scoring 11 straight points to set up a
see-saw battle which saw the game
tied at 64 after regulation, and 70 after the first overtime.
Both teams wasted opportwtities
to win the game in regulation. Two
free throws by Tracy Jackson tied

g\\\ \
ALL LEGAL

Phone ·992-36~, ·

Home
Home
Home
Away

Any

AWl)' •

April ll- Urb&amp;na

Aw•Y ..

April 12- Cedarville

Jlclmo • .

Aw•J "

Apr4 1 ~ Wi~

Any

Jlclmo
Home

April lG-Central State

April&gt;J-Matone

....,

Home

May 13- Martetta

Away
AIIUi f

-

April t._Otlerbean

April 29---Mt. Vernon Naurene

Home

MOC Reeord Ovcralllle&lt;onl
W. L W.L

TI!AM
Malane

u

2 21
9
ll 3 3J
6
10416t6
161416
5 9
a ta
4107t9
311616
3 l1
3 M

Cedarville
Tiffin

Urbana ·
RloGrande
Walsh

Ohio Dominican
Mount Vernon

SCOHING
Player

G FG "

Mounta (CJ
lloniert (U)
Volarlcll (M)
K.oullman (CJ

TP AYJ.

211 210 97 it4
29 2110 lt4 «rr
30 m 64 611
211 217 119 iC13
29 7J!II M :131

Wllcuk (M)
Anderoon (T)
Luther (W)
GU3tin (U)
Nogle (MV)
Dung"' (W)

2:1.0

:10.9
:10.6
18.3
18.1
11.3
18.1
1U
16.3

32 2111
211 197

6t il3
76 470

2li 175

50 110
95 439
16 4011 18.2

30 7J!II
27 172

FIELD GOLD PCI'.
0 Fll FilA Pc:l.
29 1M 375 62.8
29 21!0 ~ ~.7
2li Ill 144 ~.3

Wllcuk(M)
Rengert(U)
Colfman(M)

30 m 478 ~.t
'11 lt3 241 57.7

Volarlcll (M)
Madden(MV)

SAVE

Aw•r

April »-Central Stale

llomt

May 3- Wal.sh
May 11-0tterbein

Homo "
AWilY

woffiack (CJ
211 ua
Boller (C)
2li 124
Luther (W)
211 197
Feesler (WI
21 97
Andenon (T)
32 2111
REBOUNDING LI!ADERB

.

5 PIECE.GROUP FROM .
LMWIER, CH,P
or accompenltcl by perentl or I. . .IIUII'Ciiln.

r~·N
.

· Pomeroy, 0

Twenty-five pitchers and catchers
reported for the first workout on
Wednesday. ,
Only Manny Sarmiento failed to
report.
"It shows me that the young Latin
players • like Mario Soto, Angel
Torres and Jose Brito are Intent on
llhowlng what tl)ey can do," said
Sheldon Bender, the team's player
personnel director.
··
The Reds announced that they
•have ligned minor league outfielder
, Duan&amp; Walker to a one-year con:tract, reciucjng tl)e nllmber of 1111'
signed players to five.
. Ullligned are outfielder Ken Grif·
,fey, catcher Vie CcJrrell and pitchers
,MJke La~, Frank Pastore and
:Sarmiento.

.

I
•.
·
.
,.J
f·

SlYLES IN STOCK

'7~e!oll
JOHNS/MANVIllE
FIBERGlASS INSULATION
50 Sq. Ft.

It's .4" thick R-11 fol faced insulation
made of quality fiberglass that helps
au keep the cost of fuel down . Keeps
vour home comfortable all around
the year.

6'12'' Thick R·19-30 sq. ft.

. JAM~P

PRE .CUT STUDS
ECONOMY GRADE
2"

X 4"

ONLY

Aluminum with 'tlnyllrl-

sert flf1 top lind sloes of

REG. 14.49

any door up to U JCI.ol In·
Cf"IH.

241 57.3

2311 16.1
362 16.0
178 ii.l
475 5U

G REB A•l·

Gnbeold (T)

Mlcbeli (T)
Luther (W)
BUer (C)
WUczak (M)
Koullman (C)
Rengert (UJ
Milia (M )
KentcBh (MV)
FRE1! 111R011 PCI'.

31 372 t 1.6
31 323 tO.l
21 2110 10.0
li 247 9.9
2t 2711 U
21 2311 9.2
zt 211 a.o
28 212 7.5
27 lOt 7.4

0" " ... Pet.
111.1

27 116 113
29 lti 144
:til 119 119
30 73 9'1
211 97 129
30 711 106
211 71 10'1
22 6i Ill
211 112 118
lO 7t 106

NogleiMVJ
Reogett (U)

Koullman(C)
Orabeold(T)

Moonta (C)
Varbol"OUih(M)
Ftlcher(MV )
Brannen (OD)
KentcBh(MV)
l'&lt;ltopsky (W )

711.9
71.5
75.3
75.2
7U
72.9

TORPEDO

lEVEL

. . . . .8

Tough , lightweight· Cycolac•
level with top reading feature and V-groove bas e.
Three vial stations.

32.95

5-lnch
Bench Grinder

5 liC %-in. wheels sharpen &amp; polish tools, remove ·rust. etc .
1115-hp motor, lubricated bearings.
C3560M3
8 • %-ln. Grinder. (Not shown). C3562M3 ... ..... .... .57.50

REG. '5.99

72.0
70.7
70.1

-..uac.

CLOPAY

FOLDING
DOORS

.,.5

.(

Irs something losing about! You may

AND UP

think Toot Toot Tootsie is a grand old
song . But our Toot Toot Tootsie is a grand

new shOO, a
brand new
feeling .

Ideal where limited space prohibits conventional door. Sized
to fit openings up to 2ft. a Inc_,
wide.

,$}Q95'_
·'

6 LB.
WOOD
SPumNG MAUL
~orged of tool ateel. hand
ground end hut treated to
hold cutting edge. The
hood Is axe-eyed and fitted
wilh lltllght
handle.

axe

se

$1295

8 LB.

PRICES EFF~CTIVE FEB. 28 THRU MAR. 8TH

Toot Tool Tootsies
new action sole keeps

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

you moving along with
the greatest ol ease
and comfort.

,_

&amp;!u4e.

iliiliillil~lllllll ~tq·

herlt~-~~- house
N. nd Ave.

Of SIIOES

~:

: *' '

r

ON SELECTED

"U you're going to have an injury

WHISKEY
.
RIVER

I

OFF

Larry Starr.

to a pitcher, that's wbere you want
-It, wbere you can work with It or
even sometimes pitch around lt."

.'

0

tour.

BEVERAGES SOLD

_ _ ___,

PLACE

Home

April 3-W. Va . Sta te
Aprii 7- 0e.lison
April 1-- Tiffin

THOMAS LIGHT FIXTURES

'lower body becaue he puts so much
stress on It,'' explained Reds trainer

THE MEIGS

23

Indiana; 31-year-o1d Gerry Sears, an
assistant at Ohio State; and Kansas
aide Bob Hill, 31.

the game at 64 with 1: 08left. DePaul
went into a delay game and held the
ball until Teddy Grubbs threw it
away with 13 seconds left.
Notre Dame took possession but
turned It over when Bill Hanzlik was
whistled for traveling five seconds
later. DePaul's Clyde Bradshaw
missed a 20 footer at the buzzer, and
the game went into overtime.
Rich Branning tied the game at 70
with a jumper from the corner with
seven seconds left in the first overtime. He got the chance after James
Mitchem, playing with a broken
hand, missed the entire backboard
on the front end of a one-anlknd
free throw situation with 36 seconds
to go and DePaul leading 7~.
While Coach Ray Meyer obviously
was disappointed with the loss, he
seemed a bit relieved.
"I've been asked 10 times in the
last two weeks about being No. 1. I
didn't ask to be No. 1. It was VOted,
and so what, " be said. "I'll send
congratulations if there is another
team voted No. 1 after this game. He
can have the 'monkey.' I don't want
it."
Kelly Tripucka led Notre Dame
with 28 points and Woolridge added
16. Mark Aguirre, voted the game's
most valuable player, scored 28 for
DePaul, and teammate Terry Cummings added 16.

MOC cage statistics

.

.~

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Three-time
Cy Young Award Winner Tom
Seaver is hoping to finally start a
baseball season with the Cincinnati
Reds without leg miL'lcle ailments.
Seaver was out with a calf muscle
pull during 1978 spring training. In
19'19, Seaver went through training,
then pulled a muscle in the Opening
:Day game and went on to six
straight losses.
He later came back to win 11
·straight games while compiling a 1&amp;6 record last season as the Reds
came from behind to win the
·National League West.
: "Maybe I won't piL'lh myself so
·hard, maybe go a little slower this
·spring," said Seaver, 35. "This
~ problem with my calf muscles goes
way back.
This winter, Seaver played a lot of
squash and started a running
:program. He also spent the off:season working for NBC television In
' its coverage of tm. professional golf ·

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
University Athletic Director Harold
McElhaney said Wednesday the
field for the Bobcats' head basketball coaching job has been narrowed
to six. He said the post wlll be filled
early next week.
University of Texas 8&amp;'Jistant
Steve Moeller was interviewed by
McElhaney's search committee
Wednesday, the final candidate to be
screened. On Tuesday, Hal Wissel,
the 14-year-veteran coach at Florida
Southern, was interviewed.
Moeller, 35, and Wissel join
hopefuls Danny Nee, 24, the top
8&amp;'Jistant at Notre Dame; Jene
Davis, 33, a volunteer 8&amp;'Jistant at

" All of Seaver's injuries have been

ENTERtAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAnJRDAY .
NIGHT

of

e

31
WATCHES FIJGIITOF BALL - Tim Howell (31), :&gt;6 senior guard for North Gallia, watches intenUy as the
ball goes for the rim in Wednesday's Class A Sectional

nf!er a stint in the service.
The · Rio schedul e
four other area players are cur- doubleheaders iollows :
rently on the Redmen squad. They
DATE-OPPONENT
include Southwestern High School
March 15-E&lt;lisonCoovn C.U.
grads Larry Carter and Gene
March 16-EdiaonComm. C&lt;lll .
March 11-0hio Dominican
Layton; NorthGallia grad Steve LitMarch2&amp;-W. Va . Tech.
tle, and Gallia Academy's Terry
March 22-CuyahogB CC-Metro
March 23--XaYier at Porwnouth
Wall.
M.orch 21-Copital
According to Meadows, the team
Mllrch29-Wllminglon
Aprill- W. Va. Teclt
has the potential to be one of the
most ~uccessful in Rio's history.
"With all of the veterans we
should be an excellent fielding and .
hitting squad. The players have been
working hard since the team selections this fall," said Meadows.
Recently elected to captain the
Redmen were Frank Gregory, Mike
Cluxton, Brett Wilson and Tony
Fiscus.

Will fill OU post next week

r IRA1' ..

You must be 21

Pharmacy

I~

season opener for the Rio Grande

-

Middle

rt, Ohio
•' '

t

�6-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. Feb. 28. 1960

L
I
5

R
A
R

y

·..
~

Library

(_,.o"

"""

,~-I~

y

·'

Letters

'•

...
•

·'.

•'

•.

.

:

.·..
·.
..

•

..

•

"':~·
~

L
I

e

'"''""''

R

.. ~~,~

·:"

,.,o0\..{,~1
\).,~

A
R

'1

.f.. , ..

....
1'1&gt;·"'
\

\

~"

0:, .

February '1:1, 1980
Wanda Eblin
Laurel Cliff
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!i769
Dear Wanda,
I think you had to leave the meeting of the Pomeroy and Middleport
Public Ubraries Board of Trustees before we got to the subject of our ex·
peeled financial problems for 1981.
As you remember from reading last week's letter to Rich Jones, I do
not expect the libraries to have enough money to operate in 1981 as they
are doing now - because inflation is making costs rise, more people are
using the libraries (so we need more library cards, more postage for
overdues, etc.), and the amount of intangibles raise appears to be falling.
In addition, CETA worker Margaret Burkhar(ler will be leaving usaf·
ter March22 and CETA says they can't replace her. (That means we may
have to cut back on evening hours starting at the end of the March.)
What can we do 1 One financial e~pert suggested we find someone who
is rich and ask for a donation. It's a good idea, but I don't know any rich
people.
Another possibility is to close the libraries for a couple of months. That
would save about JOOOO to $8000 ; it wouid also mean there would be one
less librarian in the county because I need my paycheck.
A third possibility is to end bookmobile service. That would save
$10,000.
The fourth possibility that has been suggested is to ask voters for a tax
levy of less than one mill (which is less than one-tenth of a penny on each
dollar their property is worth ).
!like the first idea; I just can't do anything about it. I don't like any of
the other ideas. (The board members don't either.) Do you have any
suggestions?
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Ubrarian
Serving aU of Meigs County !
,______________________________________________

••

~ Polly's Pointers:

E

~: Aluminum
,.,.
,.,.
,.,...
('

t

••
.,'•'•
~
,.,..

,..
,.,.....
,..
~

..'•••
,.' ·
~;

...
,"..
""'
·'"•

..,'•.

..·.
,.
•,
~

...
•

:
...
..•'

...,..

By PUy Cramer
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- I would like to
know how some of the other readers
take that brown off aluminum
skillets and pans. - CHLOE
DEARCHWEI am sure we will
be hearing from
the readers, but in
the meantime I
will tell you how I
remove that
brown look from
my aluminum
pots and pans. For the inside of such
pans boU water with a teaspoon or
two of cream of tartar added or cook
tomatoes or some other acid food in
them. I clean the outside with
tomato catsup and a fine steel wool
pad. Believe it or not this does a
great job. Will clean the inside, too.
- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - For years I have
been having my husband cut each of
my new soap pads into four pieces .
Each one lasts a week. He either
cuts them with scissors or puts them

Reedsville UMW meets

:;
•

Reedsville U.M.W. met at the
home &lt;A Mrs. Pat Boring with Mrs.
Erika Boring as co-hostess.
A business session was conducted
by the president, Vivisn Humphrey,
and opened with the U!rd's Prayer

·

in unison.

•
•

.•
•

..
•.

•·

,'
,,

,.

::
:
~
~

,
~:

(:
••

i:
f.,

'' I
~·

~

..-

Dues and church banks were paid.
offering was paid for the week of
prayer and self-denial. The group
voted to continue paying to the chur·
ch treasurer.
A letter was read from the district
president. Thirty shut-in calls were
made. It wass voted to sponsor a
bake sale at a later date. The next
meeting will be with Vivian Humphrey with May Humphrey and Con·
nie Rucker as co-hostesses.
The program leader gave a
reading on week of prayer and selfdenial. Cards were signed for
several friends and four birthdays
were observed.
Refreshments using the valentine
Ume were served to Mrs. Leona
Ruth, Mrs. Frances Reed, Mrs.
Virginia Walton and Matt Martin
guests, and these members, Mrs.
Violet Satterfield, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. May Humphrey, Mrs.
Connie Rucker, Mrs. U!rraine
Wigal, Mrs. Doily Reed, Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel, Mrs. Vema Rose,
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery, Mrs. Vivian
Humphrey, Mrs. Sue Douglas, Mrs.
Marlene Putman and Mrs. Ullian
Pickens.
The door prize was given to Mrs.
Riebel.

"'' the chopping biqck and chops

them to make the four pieces. MRS. J .W.H.
.
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is
for those readers who sew and con·
sequently cut out dresses, etc. I
bought a S.by-5 piece of wail paneling and place this on my bed to make
a firm cutting "table". Ptace the
smooth side up and find this is very
easy to work on.
After raking leaves into piles I
have learned that it is easier to put
them on a large sheet of lastic (like a
paint (!rop cloth) than to pick them
up and put in tubs. Place the plastic
sheet close to the pile of leaves and
rake the leaves onto it. Be sure to
keep a foot on the plastic as you do
this. When aU the leaves are raked
onto tiHi plastic sheet, pull or carry it
to the place where you want to
dispose of them. -MRS. Q.D.
Polly will send you One of her signed thank-you newspaper~oupoo ,
clippers lf she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S ·
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
INITIATION TIJESDAY
Initiation will be held at the Tuesday night meeting of Pomeroy
Chapter 1116, Order of the Eastern
St.ar, to be held at 7:4!i p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Ail of·
fleers are to wear their gowns. A
practice for initiation will be held at
2 p.m. Sunday at the temple and aU
officers are asked to be present.

An

r:

..~:••

comes clean

Sees four years. . .

The United States celebrated a
day of thanksgiving after the end of
hostilities in the War of Jn.
dependence.

After 10 years. . .

Doobies pull off Grammy coup
LOS ANGI&gt;:LES iAP l -

The

Doobie Brothers, who 10 years ago
were playing in bars to the motorcycle crowd, were presented record
of the year and song of the year
honors at the 22nd annual Grammy
ceremonies - the first time they had
been nominated.
The six members of the rock'n'roll
band took home victrola-shaped
trophies Wednesday for record of
the year, "What a Fool Believes,"
and best pop vocal performance by a
group, " Minute By Minute."
Two Grammys for "What a Fool
Believes" - in the song of the year
and best arrangement accompanying vocalists categories were personal, triumphs for Michael
McDonald, who joined the group five
years ago and was given much
credit for the band's six nominations
this year.
" It's a form of acceptance we
never got before, and we enjoy it,"
said McDonald, who shared the song

Officers elected
by girl scouts
New officers were elected for the
Salisbury Junior Girl Scout Troop
IIIlO at a meeting held Tuesday niglt
at the Meigs High School.
Elected were Brenda Sinclair,
president; Susan Jones, vice presi·
dent; Darla King, secretary;
Tamara Vance, treasurer; Carla
King, attendance; Shannon Slavin,
April Clark, refreshment commit·
tee; Valerie Simpson, Sally Rad·
ford, and Un Chase, game commit·
tee; Usa Pullins, Sue Fry and Beth
Blaine, music conunittee
It was reported during the
meeting that 2,138 boxes of cookies
had been sold by the troop. Plans
were discussed for a visit to the
Center of Science and Industry in
Columbus in April and fonns to be
completed were sent home with the
scouts to be returned on Tuesday.
The PTO program to be presented
by the scouts was discussed.
Refreslunents were served by Shannon Slavin and Tamara Vance .
CLUB MEETS
Original literature was read and
discussed when the Amateur
Authors and Artists of Meigs County
met Monday night at the Pomeroy
Ubrary.
Attending the session were Nan
Mykel, Jll,)'lle Hoeflich, Melinda
Salmons, Peggy Bush, Mary Beth
Obitz, David Salmons, Carol
Salmons and Don Salmons.
An open invitation to all area
authors and artists bas been extended to the next meeting, Monday,
March31 at7p.m.

·Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
,

Robert Reed, son of Donna Reed

; • Tuppers Plains, celebrated ~
fourth birthday recently.
• Attending the p11rty and presen• ting gifts to hl!n were Mary Jo Reed
;: Mrs. Joe Lantz, !'aula, Danny:
': Jobnny and Brlail Lantz, Tina
;: Hedges, Laurie, Lisa and Mllde
:• Lance, ~ ·Putman, Janet and
:: ScoU McDal!lld, Heather and Kevin
;: Golf, .lemy -- Ricliard ~
,. Shawn and Chad Savoy. Cake, ice
; creamandf(cio!-Aldwereserved.

:l

Way Again." Earlier, her " Deja
Vu'.' had .been named best female
rhythm and blues perfonnance.
Bob Dylan, one of pop music's best
known born-again Christians, won
the best male rock perfonnance
award for "Gotta Serve Somebody."
Rickie Lee Jones, who wore tight
leather pants, gave thanks to a more
worldly bunch after being named
best new artist.
Donna Summer, nominated in five
categories, won only best female
rock peformance foc "Hot Stuff."
The rock group vocal award went to
the Eagles for "Heartache
Tonight;" Michael Jackson won best
male rhythm and blues honors for
JDon't Stop Till You Get Enough;"
Gloria Gaynor's "I Will Survive"
was named best disco recording ;
and Enunylou Harris won female
country vocal honors with " Blue
Kentucky Girl," written by a
Missouri school janitor.

MEETING CANCEl ,I .ED
The Meigs County Cancer board
meeting for this evening has been
cancelled. The next board meeting
will be held Thursday, March 6, at 8
p.m.

'Equal Rights World'
not to his liking. ..

MODULAR
HOMES

BY HELEN IIOI'I'EL

By
, ALL AMERICAN
Meets
• Ohio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

I don't pay much attenUon to you
girls in the newspaper advice
business. You're · essentially
harmless and your patter Is entertaining, but when you suggested that
It's okay for a girl to telephone her
boyfriend In "this equal· rights
world," I must warn you that the
role of male and female has ever
been different, and to upset hte .
balance makes fa: frustrated,
unhappy women, such as Steinem,
Friedan and Abzug. They're using
aU sorts of aggressive means to get
congressional extension of the ERA
amendment ratificaUon, when, after
8 years, they only hpve 110,000
members in NOW (National
'
..
Organization for Women).
My wife, a teacher who refl!lle8
1llBil addressed to Ms., pointa out
• ' there has never been a "great"
'• female songwriter. Likewise, I add,
; there has never been a woman inventor. The nature of things is that a
female of the species Ia not creaUve;
If left to women, there would be no
• progtess. Men must take the
• chances, make the advances;
• women's role is to be recepUve,
• treat her husband well - a~ a liWe
' boy sometimes - but not push for
"equality". The 14th Amendment
gives her plenty of that.
Getting back to the telephone
••
question: the girl wrote tbat her
parenta felt It wasn't proper for her
to occasionally call her steady
boyfriend: Sbe. was in a friendly
argument with them about this. Instead ol siding with her, you should
bave told her to st.ay within the
structure her folks have set and
she'll become a wann, loving,
capable citizen. (Note from H:
Sorry, friend, when I side with the
child, I say so! )
Our -laughter, who Ia nearly 13,
can t:
1e or two cillls per evening, bu• callers must identify .
Plemseives and limit conversaUons
to three minutes. This rule will

1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034

DENIM
GOOD SELECTIONI

IN STRAIGHT LEG, SMAU FlAIR,
BOOT JEAN, PRE-WASHED
&amp;CASUAL

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Yolill

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

In Order to Move to Our
New Location: 108 W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, between Ebersbach
Hdwe. &amp; Stifflers
Ph. 992-2178 in Ohio
and Toll Free 773-9577- W.Va.

for

Members of . the Cherokee
Homemakers Club met recently at
the home of Mrs. Ollie Browning for
a day ol quilting with a potluck din' ner at noon. The group meets every
Wednesday to work on a quilt which
will be sold once completed.
Mrs. Harold O'Dell presided at the
business meeting which opened with
the pledge to the flag. Mrs. Alva
Luckeydoo gave devotions on the
theme of love. Her scripture was
t.ake11 from John 15 and she read a
poem, "Happiness Ia Remembering
You." In her meditation she emphaBI empha•lr,ed that we use only a
small percentage of the good witbln
us because most of the time we are
not cvnscl0111 of it. &lt;'·ratitude, she
said, makes us conscious of and

er
Chefk

Birth noted
On February 29th. we're celebrating Leap Year with a once in 4 years
special. All day long we'll be selling our Regular 49¢ Hamburger for 29¢!

Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Smith,
BucynJS, are BIUIOIUicing the birth of
a daughter, Bobbi Jesn, on Jan 31.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
.and Mrs. EdwardBamgardner,
Columbus, and patemal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William
Smith, and the late Barbara Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith also have
three 110118 and another daughter.

FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 29th
ONLY!

Book Fair planned
During "Right to Read Week", the·
Pomeroy PTA will sponso.,{ student
"Book Fair". Students, parenlll,
granclparenta and visitors are In-

Regular
Only
Hamburgers · ·

No Limit - No Coupons

.

"New Haven, Mason, Letart, west Columbis,. Clifton
and Hartford.''
.
Owned and Operated by.: Jack &amp; Judy Williams .
108 W. Main St.
.
. Pomeroy, Ohio
"Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your .M oney ~ack"

.

'

In reading your column, I note
your tendency to -look dimly on people who use the Bible to support their
arguments; and after seeing how
they use it, I can hardly blame you! I
write to tell you that not all of us
believers are quite as shallow as
"Still Have Some Morals" and
others who "prove' ' by the Bible
that wom~n should be subservient to
men. They take only those portions
that serve their needs, which is a
gross misuse of Holy Writ, and also
weakens their own arguments by
displaying their Ignorance.
BlbUcal references'-to women as ·
less tban men are not found in the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - More
g()IJ!els, th011e writings that contain
cases of Reye's syndrome bave been
Jesus' own teachings, bUt in the Old
reported in Ohio this winter than
Testament (before Jesus' time), or
anywhere else in the nation, but
in the writings of Paul (after Jesus'
health offlclals say that's partly
Ume) who was wont to inject his own
because this state has better reporpharisaical feelings Into his work.
ting
techniques.
Jesus' ministry was to all people,
you look for something
"Whenever
men and WO!IleJI, and when seen
Uke
this,
you
are
bound to fmd more
against the broad backdrop of the
cases,"
said
Lois
Hail, an Intotal Bible, It is coosistent with
vestigator in the Ohio Department of
God's expectaUons that all people
Health. "We have bad more cases
are ul equal worth and should be acreported than any other state but
cepted as such by one another, just
that Is because we have a staff out
as he accepts us. - REV. K.R.K.,
looking for it."
AtlanUc City
Reports from Y1 states indicate '1:10
DEARREV.K.:
·
cases
of the ailment occurred in
Thanks for your good letter. It's
December,
·January and February.
much appreciated. -H.
Ohio health officials counted 109
cases in that period, three ol them
fat.al. Nationwide, 22 deaths have
been reported.
Terri Freudenberger, president of
·receptive to tile good that surrounds
the National Reye's syndrome Founand penneates humanity.
daUon of Bryan, Ohio, feels there
Reports were given and club COIIImay be 1110re cases than reported.
munity projects discussed. The
The foundation she and her husband
· group worked with the Four Comers
established in 197f .raises funds to
~H Club to collect money for the
finance Independent studies of the
heart fwtd. Another club project will
Illness.
be sponsoring the bloodiuobile with
The Ohio study which began in
the Rhodedendron Club on May 28 at
December 1978 and is now neaiing
the New Haven United Methodist
an end, is financed by a fl&amp;O,OOO
O!urch.
grant made jointly by the naUonal
"Dont't Panic in a Natural
Center for Disease Control of AtJan.
Disaster" was the lesson topic
ta and the U.S. Public Health Sertaught by Mrs. Luckeydoo. She
vice.
stressed that in any natural disaster,
lAlla Hail, an investigator in the
emergency readiness Is essenUal for
Ohio Deparbnent ul Health, believes
survival. She said that self-reltance
the niD!lber of cases reported here Ia
within a family Ia necessary u the
partly because of the federally funmembers ullhe family are to react
ded research.
proJIIpQy to save life and protect
Ma. Hail said Ohio counted three
property threatened .or hit by a
cases of Reye's syndrome last
natural dl8aster of any type.
December, ~udlng one death. In
Members '-IT ·ht valentines
January, she said, Ohio counted 32
which were dlatributed by Mrs. · cases, including two fat.allt,les. The
Luckeydoo following the lesson.
fat.aliUes were children aged 6, 12
Next club meeting wlU be held on
and 16 years.
March 6 at the imle ul Mrs. O'Dell.
"So far in February we bave bad
Attending were Mrs. Gerald
T1 cases in Ohio but no fat.aliUes,"
Clark, Mrs. O'Dell, Mrs. George
sheadded. ·
Lewis, Mrs. Charles Stone, Mrs.
Ma. Hall and Mrs; Freudenberger
John Fergilson, Mrs. Roberta
said the pattern ol Illness in Ohio
Maynard, Mrs. Luckeydoos, Mrs.
began in the Cincinnati area and has
Oscar Casto, Mrs. Violet stanton, a
spread generally northeast across
guest, and the hostess.
thest.ate.

"viable " when " there is a
reasonable likelihood of the unborn
fetus " sustaining survival outside of
the womb of the mother, without artificial support.

rampant in Ohio. -A

fetus will be considered

A majnr difference with Toledo's
proposed legislation Ia that a parent
or guardian would bave to be informed of the intent to seek an abortion in Toledo.

••••••••••••••••••••,
:

ATTENTION!

••
••
••
••
••
:

GAWPOIJS, OHIO
..

.695 WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

•,

FOR THE MIDDLEPORT
AREA. CONTACT THE
DAILY SENTINEL.
PH. 992-2156

•:

BETWEEN 8:30 and 5:00 ·

•

~

•
I

••

II

•

+

••••••••••••••••••••:

TWO DAYS ONI.Y
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, FEB. 29 AND MAR. 1

UKE GEORGE SAYS - IT ONLY COMES ONCE A YEAR!
OON1

"II only comes
bui once &lt;1 y('ar...

MISS
THIS
SALE!

BEMCO

Most people don't have a bundle stashed away In a mattress.
lhat's why Bemco's having their Annual Sacropedic Sale. It'S the one time uf
year you can really save a bundle on a very good mattress set .
And not only does Bemco give you big savings, but Bemco also offers exclu·
slve unlfused construction for support where you need It and a good night's
sleep when you need it.
·
Come In soon and save during Bemco's Annual Sacropedlc Sale. So you, and
your waUet. can rest easy.

POMEROY, 0.

ALL OUT GLAMOUR-FROM VOGUE

TWIN
SIZE

DAME

BLACK &amp;
TAN

FULL
SIZE
,QUEEN
SIZE

Step Into the new
season with Vogue's
fashionable ankle

.

~.were liere fCII' tbe funeral

•

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

MARGUERITE SHOES .
102 E. MAIN

:

CARRIER NEEDED

must

Reyes syndrorne

'

Mr. and Mn. Burdell McKinney;
1 Middleport, BDd Mn. All!! Durfee,
: ' ~ Pleuant, are vacationing In
• Florida, ,
t Mr. iDd Mri. Earl Hoeflich ul Col- ·
! umbua -,reTe ~ guests rl
• Relno Lind. . '
t Mr. .and Mnl: Cecil F~,
:

\

DEAR HElEN:

Bend Area Personals. ..

• uliOkeJaeobl.

'

since you called us mature colwnnists "girls."
As one who Ia also IVeU versed in
psychology, I find your letter
somewhat 19th century, but U your
family Ukes your attitudes and
methods, who am I to criUclze?
l,lllet my readers do that for me.)
-H.

thl•t hi• '· ,. , tr•ssed that cities have a
proper right to regulate such
faclliUes If the regulation does not
obstruct operation of the clinic.
He also said rio challenge to the ordinance would be possible Wttil there
is a clinic in the city.
The measure requires clinics to
employ only physicians to terminate
pregnancies, that abortions after thm
first trimester of pregnancy be perlonned only in hospitals and that the
woman give written permission to
the procedure.
The city board of health, a panel
consisting of the mayor and five
citizens, would administer enforcement of the law.
, Before passage, the ordinance was
heavily reworded at Kolb's
suggestion, to bring it in line with
federal court decisions on maternal
health codes in other cities.
· The legislation as amended means
that:
+Parents or guardians of minors
do not have to be infO!llled of a pending abortion.
-The woman's husband doesn't
have to be notified.
-A record-keeping section
stressing confidentiality of abortions
by kept by a clinic.
-The woman must be informed of
,the probable physical characteristics of the fetus at the time of
the abortion.
-The city board of health must
develop regulaUOIIB for disposal of
the fetus.

straps.

1503 EASTE~N AVE.

Authorized Catalog ·Sales Merchant

Business:
Am sure you'll like my saiutation,

vited to browse and order boob.
The "Book Fair" will be open
March 3, f, 5, 6, and 7 frcm 8 a. m. to
3 p. m. daily with over 3011 boob on
display on the stage at Pomeroy
Elementary Scbool.
A "Book Fair" encourages
student Interest in reading and
bulldng bome libraries. The "Book
Fair" will also ·contrlbute to a worthwlllle project.
All prlllija will b e - to purchue
boob for the ..,Wiy CJ'81Jted library
at Polnllroy Elementary.
The Book Fair display wllllncll!de
aUractive new boob from JJ181Q1
puNI!!hen in popnlar price ranges boob to read or give as gifts.

All Day February 29th .

SEARS

As one who bas degrees in
psychology, I hope my letter helps
your thinking, Helen. - RALPH
DEAR BOY in the Psychology

ROSSFORD, Ohio (AP) Although there are no abortion
clinics located in Rossford, an ordinance regulating any procedures
. performed here has been passed by
the City Council.
The ordinance, unanimously approved this week by the council of
this Toledo suburb, goes into effect
after 30 days. It Ia similar to a
proposal that will be faced by Toledo
voters on the June 3 ballot.
The Ohio Legislature is reviewln~
a bill, sponsored by Rep. Kenneth A.
Rocco, 0-Panna, that would
regulate abortions throughout the
state. The bill contains an "infonned
consent" provision requiring that
physicians infonn women of the
possible consequences at least 48
hours prior to surgery.
It also requires clinics to keep
track of the number of abortions performed.
R.os!!ford Mayor Louis Bauer Jr.
said there were nunors that an outof-town clinic bad been looking for a
site in Rossford.
He said that U a clinic opened IIi
the community, "We would bave a
board of health appointed within 24
hours to regulate it."
•
Challenges to abortion ordinances
bave been frequently flled by prochoice and civil Uberties groups.
But City Solicitor Matt Kolb said

Cherokee Homemakers meet

Cata log Merchant
,.' Closing One Day Only"
March 1, 1980 Saturday

Calling boys Is "out."

DEAR HElEN:

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

N. 2ND AVE.

prevail until she goes to college.

KJDc Feature. Syudle~~te

Top-Notch

Hackett, Sr. was acknowledged.
There was also a thank you card
from Mrs. Hackett, along with one
from Mrs. Iva Powell for kindnesses
extended during the illnesses and
deaths of their husbands.
• Avalentine theme was carried out
in the refreslunents served by Mrs.
Ruby Frick and Mrs. Polly
Eichinger. Mrs. Jean Wright was
hostess for the meeting attended by ·
Mrs. Frick, Mrs. Eichinger, Mrs.
Shook, Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs.
Ann Mash, Mrs. Bertha Parker,
Mrs. Powell.

Toledo sets-tqrrules for abortion clinic

Helen Help Us:

Sears In Pomeroy

''

::

of the year award with t~writer
Kenny Loggins. ,
The Doobie Brothers won more
awards than any tXher ariists
honored in 58 categories and were
the only major first-time winners.
Repeat winners. i..tcluded Billy
Joel, whose "52nd Street" won
album of the year and best male pop
perfonnance. Earth, Wind x Fire
raised its career Grammy total from
three to five, wiMing rhythm and
blues honors for group vocal, "After
the U!ve Has Gone," and instrumental, "Boogie Wonderland."
But Dionne Warwick and Herb
Alpert provided the two major
comeba&amp;k stories of the night.
Alpert, whose "Rise" was named
best pop instrumental, won the last
of his five previous Grammys in
1966.
"Oh my dears, my dears, " Miss
Warwick said, wiping tears away after winning the best female pop per·
fonnance for "I'll Never Love This

Film viewed on breast cancer
Sharon Michael of the Meigs
Cancer Society presented a film on
breast cancer at the Thursday night
meeting of the Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club held in the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co., Pomeroy.
Mrs. Iva Powell, vice president,
had charge of the meeting in the
absence of Mrs. Mildred Jacobs.
Mrs. Doris Shonk gave the prayer
and several members had readings.
Reports were given on the hospital
equipment and its usage, and a
donation from the family of George

7--The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 28, 1960

•

'

MArrRESS
OR
BOX SPRINGS

'39~

MAnRESS
OR
BOX SPRINGS
SETS ONlY

5

· IN SETS ONLY

'6'9~
IN SETS ONLY

5
*12' 9~

MATTRESS
OR
BOX SPRINGS

•

IN SETS ONLY
'

'

INGELS:

I·

'

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

.

''TWO· IN ONi STORI" ·

·
)

'

•

I ..,

...•

-

�6-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. Feb. 28. 1960

L
I
5

R
A
R

y

·..
~

Library

(_,.o"

"""

,~-I~

y

·'

Letters

'•

...
•

·'.

•'

•.

.

:

.·..
·.
..

•

..

•

"':~·
~

L
I

e

'"''""''

R

.. ~~,~

·:"

,.,o0\..{,~1
\).,~

A
R

'1

.f.. , ..

....
1'1&gt;·"'
\

\

~"

0:, .

February '1:1, 1980
Wanda Eblin
Laurel Cliff
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!i769
Dear Wanda,
I think you had to leave the meeting of the Pomeroy and Middleport
Public Ubraries Board of Trustees before we got to the subject of our ex·
peeled financial problems for 1981.
As you remember from reading last week's letter to Rich Jones, I do
not expect the libraries to have enough money to operate in 1981 as they
are doing now - because inflation is making costs rise, more people are
using the libraries (so we need more library cards, more postage for
overdues, etc.), and the amount of intangibles raise appears to be falling.
In addition, CETA worker Margaret Burkhar(ler will be leaving usaf·
ter March22 and CETA says they can't replace her. (That means we may
have to cut back on evening hours starting at the end of the March.)
What can we do 1 One financial e~pert suggested we find someone who
is rich and ask for a donation. It's a good idea, but I don't know any rich
people.
Another possibility is to close the libraries for a couple of months. That
would save about JOOOO to $8000 ; it wouid also mean there would be one
less librarian in the county because I need my paycheck.
A third possibility is to end bookmobile service. That would save
$10,000.
The fourth possibility that has been suggested is to ask voters for a tax
levy of less than one mill (which is less than one-tenth of a penny on each
dollar their property is worth ).
!like the first idea; I just can't do anything about it. I don't like any of
the other ideas. (The board members don't either.) Do you have any
suggestions?
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Ubrarian
Serving aU of Meigs County !
,______________________________________________

••

~ Polly's Pointers:

E

~: Aluminum
,.,.
,.,.
,.,...
('

t

••
.,'•'•
~
,.,..

,..
,.,.....
,..
~

..'•••
,.' ·
~;

...
,"..
""'
·'"•

..,'•.

..·.
,.
•,
~

...
•

:
...
..•'

...,..

By PUy Cramer
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- I would like to
know how some of the other readers
take that brown off aluminum
skillets and pans. - CHLOE
DEARCHWEI am sure we will
be hearing from
the readers, but in
the meantime I
will tell you how I
remove that
brown look from
my aluminum
pots and pans. For the inside of such
pans boU water with a teaspoon or
two of cream of tartar added or cook
tomatoes or some other acid food in
them. I clean the outside with
tomato catsup and a fine steel wool
pad. Believe it or not this does a
great job. Will clean the inside, too.
- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - For years I have
been having my husband cut each of
my new soap pads into four pieces .
Each one lasts a week. He either
cuts them with scissors or puts them

Reedsville UMW meets

:;
•

Reedsville U.M.W. met at the
home &lt;A Mrs. Pat Boring with Mrs.
Erika Boring as co-hostess.
A business session was conducted
by the president, Vivisn Humphrey,
and opened with the U!rd's Prayer

·

in unison.

•
•

.•
•

..
•.

•·

,'
,,

,.

::
:
~
~

,
~:

(:
••

i:
f.,

'' I
~·

~

..-

Dues and church banks were paid.
offering was paid for the week of
prayer and self-denial. The group
voted to continue paying to the chur·
ch treasurer.
A letter was read from the district
president. Thirty shut-in calls were
made. It wass voted to sponsor a
bake sale at a later date. The next
meeting will be with Vivian Humphrey with May Humphrey and Con·
nie Rucker as co-hostesses.
The program leader gave a
reading on week of prayer and selfdenial. Cards were signed for
several friends and four birthdays
were observed.
Refreshments using the valentine
Ume were served to Mrs. Leona
Ruth, Mrs. Frances Reed, Mrs.
Virginia Walton and Matt Martin
guests, and these members, Mrs.
Violet Satterfield, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. May Humphrey, Mrs.
Connie Rucker, Mrs. U!rraine
Wigal, Mrs. Doily Reed, Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel, Mrs. Vema Rose,
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery, Mrs. Vivian
Humphrey, Mrs. Sue Douglas, Mrs.
Marlene Putman and Mrs. Ullian
Pickens.
The door prize was given to Mrs.
Riebel.

"'' the chopping biqck and chops

them to make the four pieces. MRS. J .W.H.
.
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is
for those readers who sew and con·
sequently cut out dresses, etc. I
bought a S.by-5 piece of wail paneling and place this on my bed to make
a firm cutting "table". Ptace the
smooth side up and find this is very
easy to work on.
After raking leaves into piles I
have learned that it is easier to put
them on a large sheet of lastic (like a
paint (!rop cloth) than to pick them
up and put in tubs. Place the plastic
sheet close to the pile of leaves and
rake the leaves onto it. Be sure to
keep a foot on the plastic as you do
this. When aU the leaves are raked
onto tiHi plastic sheet, pull or carry it
to the place where you want to
dispose of them. -MRS. Q.D.
Polly will send you One of her signed thank-you newspaper~oupoo ,
clippers lf she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S ·
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
INITIATION TIJESDAY
Initiation will be held at the Tuesday night meeting of Pomeroy
Chapter 1116, Order of the Eastern
St.ar, to be held at 7:4!i p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Ail of·
fleers are to wear their gowns. A
practice for initiation will be held at
2 p.m. Sunday at the temple and aU
officers are asked to be present.

An

r:

..~:••

comes clean

Sees four years. . .

The United States celebrated a
day of thanksgiving after the end of
hostilities in the War of Jn.
dependence.

After 10 years. . .

Doobies pull off Grammy coup
LOS ANGI&gt;:LES iAP l -

The

Doobie Brothers, who 10 years ago
were playing in bars to the motorcycle crowd, were presented record
of the year and song of the year
honors at the 22nd annual Grammy
ceremonies - the first time they had
been nominated.
The six members of the rock'n'roll
band took home victrola-shaped
trophies Wednesday for record of
the year, "What a Fool Believes,"
and best pop vocal performance by a
group, " Minute By Minute."
Two Grammys for "What a Fool
Believes" - in the song of the year
and best arrangement accompanying vocalists categories were personal, triumphs for Michael
McDonald, who joined the group five
years ago and was given much
credit for the band's six nominations
this year.
" It's a form of acceptance we
never got before, and we enjoy it,"
said McDonald, who shared the song

Officers elected
by girl scouts
New officers were elected for the
Salisbury Junior Girl Scout Troop
IIIlO at a meeting held Tuesday niglt
at the Meigs High School.
Elected were Brenda Sinclair,
president; Susan Jones, vice presi·
dent; Darla King, secretary;
Tamara Vance, treasurer; Carla
King, attendance; Shannon Slavin,
April Clark, refreshment commit·
tee; Valerie Simpson, Sally Rad·
ford, and Un Chase, game commit·
tee; Usa Pullins, Sue Fry and Beth
Blaine, music conunittee
It was reported during the
meeting that 2,138 boxes of cookies
had been sold by the troop. Plans
were discussed for a visit to the
Center of Science and Industry in
Columbus in April and fonns to be
completed were sent home with the
scouts to be returned on Tuesday.
The PTO program to be presented
by the scouts was discussed.
Refreslunents were served by Shannon Slavin and Tamara Vance .
CLUB MEETS
Original literature was read and
discussed when the Amateur
Authors and Artists of Meigs County
met Monday night at the Pomeroy
Ubrary.
Attending the session were Nan
Mykel, Jll,)'lle Hoeflich, Melinda
Salmons, Peggy Bush, Mary Beth
Obitz, David Salmons, Carol
Salmons and Don Salmons.
An open invitation to all area
authors and artists bas been extended to the next meeting, Monday,
March31 at7p.m.

·Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
,

Robert Reed, son of Donna Reed

; • Tuppers Plains, celebrated ~
fourth birthday recently.
• Attending the p11rty and presen• ting gifts to hl!n were Mary Jo Reed
;: Mrs. Joe Lantz, !'aula, Danny:
': Jobnny and Brlail Lantz, Tina
;: Hedges, Laurie, Lisa and Mllde
:• Lance, ~ ·Putman, Janet and
:: ScoU McDal!lld, Heather and Kevin
;: Golf, .lemy -- Ricliard ~
,. Shawn and Chad Savoy. Cake, ice
; creamandf(cio!-Aldwereserved.

:l

Way Again." Earlier, her " Deja
Vu'.' had .been named best female
rhythm and blues perfonnance.
Bob Dylan, one of pop music's best
known born-again Christians, won
the best male rock perfonnance
award for "Gotta Serve Somebody."
Rickie Lee Jones, who wore tight
leather pants, gave thanks to a more
worldly bunch after being named
best new artist.
Donna Summer, nominated in five
categories, won only best female
rock peformance foc "Hot Stuff."
The rock group vocal award went to
the Eagles for "Heartache
Tonight;" Michael Jackson won best
male rhythm and blues honors for
JDon't Stop Till You Get Enough;"
Gloria Gaynor's "I Will Survive"
was named best disco recording ;
and Enunylou Harris won female
country vocal honors with " Blue
Kentucky Girl," written by a
Missouri school janitor.

MEETING CANCEl ,I .ED
The Meigs County Cancer board
meeting for this evening has been
cancelled. The next board meeting
will be held Thursday, March 6, at 8
p.m.

'Equal Rights World'
not to his liking. ..

MODULAR
HOMES

BY HELEN IIOI'I'EL

By
, ALL AMERICAN
Meets
• Ohio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

I don't pay much attenUon to you
girls in the newspaper advice
business. You're · essentially
harmless and your patter Is entertaining, but when you suggested that
It's okay for a girl to telephone her
boyfriend In "this equal· rights
world," I must warn you that the
role of male and female has ever
been different, and to upset hte .
balance makes fa: frustrated,
unhappy women, such as Steinem,
Friedan and Abzug. They're using
aU sorts of aggressive means to get
congressional extension of the ERA
amendment ratificaUon, when, after
8 years, they only hpve 110,000
members in NOW (National
'
..
Organization for Women).
My wife, a teacher who refl!lle8
1llBil addressed to Ms., pointa out
• ' there has never been a "great"
'• female songwriter. Likewise, I add,
; there has never been a woman inventor. The nature of things is that a
female of the species Ia not creaUve;
If left to women, there would be no
• progtess. Men must take the
• chances, make the advances;
• women's role is to be recepUve,
• treat her husband well - a~ a liWe
' boy sometimes - but not push for
"equality". The 14th Amendment
gives her plenty of that.
Getting back to the telephone
••
question: the girl wrote tbat her
parenta felt It wasn't proper for her
to occasionally call her steady
boyfriend: Sbe. was in a friendly
argument with them about this. Instead ol siding with her, you should
bave told her to st.ay within the
structure her folks have set and
she'll become a wann, loving,
capable citizen. (Note from H:
Sorry, friend, when I side with the
child, I say so! )
Our -laughter, who Ia nearly 13,
can t:
1e or two cillls per evening, bu• callers must identify .
Plemseives and limit conversaUons
to three minutes. This rule will

1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034

DENIM
GOOD SELECTIONI

IN STRAIGHT LEG, SMAU FlAIR,
BOOT JEAN, PRE-WASHED
&amp;CASUAL

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Yolill

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

In Order to Move to Our
New Location: 108 W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, between Ebersbach
Hdwe. &amp; Stifflers
Ph. 992-2178 in Ohio
and Toll Free 773-9577- W.Va.

for

Members of . the Cherokee
Homemakers Club met recently at
the home of Mrs. Ollie Browning for
a day ol quilting with a potluck din' ner at noon. The group meets every
Wednesday to work on a quilt which
will be sold once completed.
Mrs. Harold O'Dell presided at the
business meeting which opened with
the pledge to the flag. Mrs. Alva
Luckeydoo gave devotions on the
theme of love. Her scripture was
t.ake11 from John 15 and she read a
poem, "Happiness Ia Remembering
You." In her meditation she emphaBI empha•lr,ed that we use only a
small percentage of the good witbln
us because most of the time we are
not cvnscl0111 of it. &lt;'·ratitude, she
said, makes us conscious of and

er
Chefk

Birth noted
On February 29th. we're celebrating Leap Year with a once in 4 years
special. All day long we'll be selling our Regular 49¢ Hamburger for 29¢!

Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Smith,
BucynJS, are BIUIOIUicing the birth of
a daughter, Bobbi Jesn, on Jan 31.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
.and Mrs. EdwardBamgardner,
Columbus, and patemal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William
Smith, and the late Barbara Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith also have
three 110118 and another daughter.

FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 29th
ONLY!

Book Fair planned
During "Right to Read Week", the·
Pomeroy PTA will sponso.,{ student
"Book Fair". Students, parenlll,
granclparenta and visitors are In-

Regular
Only
Hamburgers · ·

No Limit - No Coupons

.

"New Haven, Mason, Letart, west Columbis,. Clifton
and Hartford.''
.
Owned and Operated by.: Jack &amp; Judy Williams .
108 W. Main St.
.
. Pomeroy, Ohio
"Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your .M oney ~ack"

.

'

In reading your column, I note
your tendency to -look dimly on people who use the Bible to support their
arguments; and after seeing how
they use it, I can hardly blame you! I
write to tell you that not all of us
believers are quite as shallow as
"Still Have Some Morals" and
others who "prove' ' by the Bible
that wom~n should be subservient to
men. They take only those portions
that serve their needs, which is a
gross misuse of Holy Writ, and also
weakens their own arguments by
displaying their Ignorance.
BlbUcal references'-to women as ·
less tban men are not found in the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - More
g()IJ!els, th011e writings that contain
cases of Reye's syndrome bave been
Jesus' own teachings, bUt in the Old
reported in Ohio this winter than
Testament (before Jesus' time), or
anywhere else in the nation, but
in the writings of Paul (after Jesus'
health offlclals say that's partly
Ume) who was wont to inject his own
because this state has better reporpharisaical feelings Into his work.
ting
techniques.
Jesus' ministry was to all people,
you look for something
"Whenever
men and WO!IleJI, and when seen
Uke
this,
you
are
bound to fmd more
against the broad backdrop of the
cases,"
said
Lois
Hail, an Intotal Bible, It is coosistent with
vestigator in the Ohio Department of
God's expectaUons that all people
Health. "We have bad more cases
are ul equal worth and should be acreported than any other state but
cepted as such by one another, just
that Is because we have a staff out
as he accepts us. - REV. K.R.K.,
looking for it."
AtlanUc City
Reports from Y1 states indicate '1:10
DEARREV.K.:
·
cases
of the ailment occurred in
Thanks for your good letter. It's
December,
·January and February.
much appreciated. -H.
Ohio health officials counted 109
cases in that period, three ol them
fat.al. Nationwide, 22 deaths have
been reported.
Terri Freudenberger, president of
·receptive to tile good that surrounds
the National Reye's syndrome Founand penneates humanity.
daUon of Bryan, Ohio, feels there
Reports were given and club COIIImay be 1110re cases than reported.
munity projects discussed. The
The foundation she and her husband
· group worked with the Four Comers
established in 197f .raises funds to
~H Club to collect money for the
finance Independent studies of the
heart fwtd. Another club project will
Illness.
be sponsoring the bloodiuobile with
The Ohio study which began in
the Rhodedendron Club on May 28 at
December 1978 and is now neaiing
the New Haven United Methodist
an end, is financed by a fl&amp;O,OOO
O!urch.
grant made jointly by the naUonal
"Dont't Panic in a Natural
Center for Disease Control of AtJan.
Disaster" was the lesson topic
ta and the U.S. Public Health Sertaught by Mrs. Luckeydoo. She
vice.
stressed that in any natural disaster,
lAlla Hail, an investigator in the
emergency readiness Is essenUal for
Ohio Deparbnent ul Health, believes
survival. She said that self-reltance
the niD!lber of cases reported here Ia
within a family Ia necessary u the
partly because of the federally funmembers ullhe family are to react
ded research.
proJIIpQy to save life and protect
Ma. Hail said Ohio counted three
property threatened .or hit by a
cases of Reye's syndrome last
natural dl8aster of any type.
December, ~udlng one death. In
Members '-IT ·ht valentines
January, she said, Ohio counted 32
which were dlatributed by Mrs. · cases, including two fat.allt,les. The
Luckeydoo following the lesson.
fat.aliUes were children aged 6, 12
Next club meeting wlU be held on
and 16 years.
March 6 at the imle ul Mrs. O'Dell.
"So far in February we bave bad
Attending were Mrs. Gerald
T1 cases in Ohio but no fat.aliUes,"
Clark, Mrs. O'Dell, Mrs. George
sheadded. ·
Lewis, Mrs. Charles Stone, Mrs.
Ma. Hall and Mrs; Freudenberger
John Fergilson, Mrs. Roberta
said the pattern ol Illness in Ohio
Maynard, Mrs. Luckeydoos, Mrs.
began in the Cincinnati area and has
Oscar Casto, Mrs. Violet stanton, a
spread generally northeast across
guest, and the hostess.
thest.ate.

"viable " when " there is a
reasonable likelihood of the unborn
fetus " sustaining survival outside of
the womb of the mother, without artificial support.

rampant in Ohio. -A

fetus will be considered

A majnr difference with Toledo's
proposed legislation Ia that a parent
or guardian would bave to be informed of the intent to seek an abortion in Toledo.

••••••••••••••••••••,
:

ATTENTION!

••
••
••
••
••
:

GAWPOIJS, OHIO
..

.695 WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

•,

FOR THE MIDDLEPORT
AREA. CONTACT THE
DAILY SENTINEL.
PH. 992-2156

•:

BETWEEN 8:30 and 5:00 ·

•

~

•
I

••

II

•

+

••••••••••••••••••••:

TWO DAYS ONI.Y
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, FEB. 29 AND MAR. 1

UKE GEORGE SAYS - IT ONLY COMES ONCE A YEAR!
OON1

"II only comes
bui once &lt;1 y('ar...

MISS
THIS
SALE!

BEMCO

Most people don't have a bundle stashed away In a mattress.
lhat's why Bemco's having their Annual Sacropedic Sale. It'S the one time uf
year you can really save a bundle on a very good mattress set .
And not only does Bemco give you big savings, but Bemco also offers exclu·
slve unlfused construction for support where you need It and a good night's
sleep when you need it.
·
Come In soon and save during Bemco's Annual Sacropedlc Sale. So you, and
your waUet. can rest easy.

POMEROY, 0.

ALL OUT GLAMOUR-FROM VOGUE

TWIN
SIZE

DAME

BLACK &amp;
TAN

FULL
SIZE
,QUEEN
SIZE

Step Into the new
season with Vogue's
fashionable ankle

.

~.were liere fCII' tbe funeral

•

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

MARGUERITE SHOES .
102 E. MAIN

:

CARRIER NEEDED

must

Reyes syndrorne

'

Mr. and Mn. Burdell McKinney;
1 Middleport, BDd Mn. All!! Durfee,
: ' ~ Pleuant, are vacationing In
• Florida, ,
t Mr. iDd Mri. Earl Hoeflich ul Col- ·
! umbua -,reTe ~ guests rl
• Relno Lind. . '
t Mr. .and Mnl: Cecil F~,
:

\

DEAR HElEN:

Bend Area Personals. ..

• uliOkeJaeobl.

'

since you called us mature colwnnists "girls."
As one who Ia also IVeU versed in
psychology, I find your letter
somewhat 19th century, but U your
family Ukes your attitudes and
methods, who am I to criUclze?
l,lllet my readers do that for me.)
-H.

thl•t hi• '· ,. , tr•ssed that cities have a
proper right to regulate such
faclliUes If the regulation does not
obstruct operation of the clinic.
He also said rio challenge to the ordinance would be possible Wttil there
is a clinic in the city.
The measure requires clinics to
employ only physicians to terminate
pregnancies, that abortions after thm
first trimester of pregnancy be perlonned only in hospitals and that the
woman give written permission to
the procedure.
The city board of health, a panel
consisting of the mayor and five
citizens, would administer enforcement of the law.
, Before passage, the ordinance was
heavily reworded at Kolb's
suggestion, to bring it in line with
federal court decisions on maternal
health codes in other cities.
· The legislation as amended means
that:
+Parents or guardians of minors
do not have to be infO!llled of a pending abortion.
-The woman's husband doesn't
have to be notified.
-A record-keeping section
stressing confidentiality of abortions
by kept by a clinic.
-The woman must be informed of
,the probable physical characteristics of the fetus at the time of
the abortion.
-The city board of health must
develop regulaUOIIB for disposal of
the fetus.

straps.

1503 EASTE~N AVE.

Authorized Catalog ·Sales Merchant

Business:
Am sure you'll like my saiutation,

vited to browse and order boob.
The "Book Fair" will be open
March 3, f, 5, 6, and 7 frcm 8 a. m. to
3 p. m. daily with over 3011 boob on
display on the stage at Pomeroy
Elementary Scbool.
A "Book Fair" encourages
student Interest in reading and
bulldng bome libraries. The "Book
Fair" will also ·contrlbute to a worthwlllle project.
All prlllija will b e - to purchue
boob for the ..,Wiy CJ'81Jted library
at Polnllroy Elementary.
The Book Fair display wllllncll!de
aUractive new boob from JJ181Q1
puNI!!hen in popnlar price ranges boob to read or give as gifts.

All Day February 29th .

SEARS

As one who bas degrees in
psychology, I hope my letter helps
your thinking, Helen. - RALPH
DEAR BOY in the Psychology

ROSSFORD, Ohio (AP) Although there are no abortion
clinics located in Rossford, an ordinance regulating any procedures
. performed here has been passed by
the City Council.
The ordinance, unanimously approved this week by the council of
this Toledo suburb, goes into effect
after 30 days. It Ia similar to a
proposal that will be faced by Toledo
voters on the June 3 ballot.
The Ohio Legislature is reviewln~
a bill, sponsored by Rep. Kenneth A.
Rocco, 0-Panna, that would
regulate abortions throughout the
state. The bill contains an "infonned
consent" provision requiring that
physicians infonn women of the
possible consequences at least 48
hours prior to surgery.
It also requires clinics to keep
track of the number of abortions performed.
R.os!!ford Mayor Louis Bauer Jr.
said there were nunors that an outof-town clinic bad been looking for a
site in Rossford.
He said that U a clinic opened IIi
the community, "We would bave a
board of health appointed within 24
hours to regulate it."
•
Challenges to abortion ordinances
bave been frequently flled by prochoice and civil Uberties groups.
But City Solicitor Matt Kolb said

Cherokee Homemakers meet

Cata log Merchant
,.' Closing One Day Only"
March 1, 1980 Saturday

Calling boys Is "out."

DEAR HElEN:

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

N. 2ND AVE.

prevail until she goes to college.

KJDc Feature. Syudle~~te

Top-Notch

Hackett, Sr. was acknowledged.
There was also a thank you card
from Mrs. Hackett, along with one
from Mrs. Iva Powell for kindnesses
extended during the illnesses and
deaths of their husbands.
• Avalentine theme was carried out
in the refreslunents served by Mrs.
Ruby Frick and Mrs. Polly
Eichinger. Mrs. Jean Wright was
hostess for the meeting attended by ·
Mrs. Frick, Mrs. Eichinger, Mrs.
Shook, Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs.
Ann Mash, Mrs. Bertha Parker,
Mrs. Powell.

Toledo sets-tqrrules for abortion clinic

Helen Help Us:

Sears In Pomeroy

''

::

of the year award with t~writer
Kenny Loggins. ,
The Doobie Brothers won more
awards than any tXher ariists
honored in 58 categories and were
the only major first-time winners.
Repeat winners. i..tcluded Billy
Joel, whose "52nd Street" won
album of the year and best male pop
perfonnance. Earth, Wind x Fire
raised its career Grammy total from
three to five, wiMing rhythm and
blues honors for group vocal, "After
the U!ve Has Gone," and instrumental, "Boogie Wonderland."
But Dionne Warwick and Herb
Alpert provided the two major
comeba&amp;k stories of the night.
Alpert, whose "Rise" was named
best pop instrumental, won the last
of his five previous Grammys in
1966.
"Oh my dears, my dears, " Miss
Warwick said, wiping tears away after winning the best female pop per·
fonnance for "I'll Never Love This

Film viewed on breast cancer
Sharon Michael of the Meigs
Cancer Society presented a film on
breast cancer at the Thursday night
meeting of the Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club held in the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co., Pomeroy.
Mrs. Iva Powell, vice president,
had charge of the meeting in the
absence of Mrs. Mildred Jacobs.
Mrs. Doris Shonk gave the prayer
and several members had readings.
Reports were given on the hospital
equipment and its usage, and a
donation from the family of George

7--The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 28, 1960

•

'

MArrRESS
OR
BOX SPRINGS

'39~

MAnRESS
OR
BOX SPRINGS
SETS ONlY

5

· IN SETS ONLY

'6'9~
IN SETS ONLY

5
*12' 9~

MATTRESS
OR
BOX SPRINGS

•

IN SETS ONLY
'

'

INGELS:

I·

'

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

.

''TWO· IN ONi STORI" ·

·
)

'

•

I ..,

...•

-

�8-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 28. 1980

Alfred Social Notes

Legion birthday observance set
The annual birthday observance
for the American Legion on March
I~ was planned during a meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
Tuesday night at the post home.
The dinner will be a planned
potluck affair with the meat to be
furnished by the Auxiliary. Invitations will be sent to units within
Meigs County, the district president
and other district officers, asking
them to be guests. Mrs. Veda Davis,
junior advisor, and the junior Auxiliary members will handle decorations for the observance; Mrs. Iva
Powell and Mrs. Perl Knapp will be
in charge of corsages; and Mrs.
Mary Martin will take care of the
cake.
Following the dinner and short
business meeting, Armand Turley
will present organ music for dancing.

During the meeting, members
selected a delegate and alternate for
Buckeye Girls' State. Announcement wiU be made once the appointments have been confirmed.
The charter was draped in
memory of Mrs. Dollie Hayes, by
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, president, and
the chaplain. It was noted that Mrs.
Mary Martin has been named

district junior aCtivities chairman
replacing Mrs. Geralding Parsons
who resigned recently due to health
problems.
Mrs. Martin introduced Mrs.
Florence Richards who talked to the
group on patriotism. Mrs. Richards
noted the birthdays of Lincoln and
Washington. She said that Lincoln
spoke of the hand of the loving God
which preserves peace and enriches
lives and said that if he were living
today, he would look at many
Americans and describe them as being intoxicated with success and too
proud oo pray. She said that
Washington would question the
patriotism of those who would
banish religion from public affairs.
Mrs. Richard said that the
American Legion Auxiliary could
feel pride in carrying the banner for
patriotism and she called for
rededication to the ideals of our
forefathers. She concluded with a
poem, "Fill the World with Love."
Mrs. Martin presented the speaker
with a gift.
The junior members had charge of
theritua~tic~ning . Mrs. Anna
WOes presided with Jennifer Couch
serving as sergeant at arms and
Kim Patterson as chaplain.
Escorted oo the front were Mrs. Mar-

Ohio Valley Grange meets
Ohio Valley Grange 2612 Letart
Falls met at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush with Master
Early Roush in the chair.
Plans were made to serve Pamona
Grange at the March meeting.
Ohio Valley will visit Racine
Grange March 20, weather permitting.
Mary Pickens was elected overseer, Mrs. Florence, delegate, and
Elmer Pickens alternate to Ohio
State Grange.
Mrs. Eimer Pickens was reported
ill. A literary )lrogram was given by
Mrs. Eula Wolfe; opening with a

.-ie" eral from the Alfred com-

tin, Mrs. Richards, and Robin
Campbell, the Eighth District junior
president.
Laura Smith had prayer and Jennifer Couch led in the pledge. A
welcome was given by Miss Wiles.
At the senior meeting it was voted to
purchase eight sets of dishes for the
post home. A report was given by
Mrs. Pearl Knapp and Mrs. Martin,
rehabilitation and veterans affairs,
who noted that Virgil Glaze is home
after having been hospitalized in
Dayton.
Donations wiU be taken on a
afghan for a fund raising project by
the conunittee of Genuna Casci, Iva
Powell, and Marge Goett. Mrs.
Knapp reported that a flower had
been sent to Genevieve Meinhart, a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center, and that cards had been sent
to Mrs. Margaret Vadish and Mrs.
Lillian Gress. Mrs. Martin reported
on her visit with Mrs. Gladys
Mowery, confined to a nursing home
at Point Pleasant. It was also
reported that Frank Cheesebrew
bad been injured in an automobile
accident.
Refreslunents were served by
Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Loretta
Tiemeyer. A patriotic theme was
carried out in teh table decorations.

mwuty attended the funeral servtces of Enuna Findling Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Ruby Burke and daughter,
Dorothy Calaway, visited Ruby 's
grandson who was injured in a
bicycle accident Sunday, Feb. 17,
when a car hit him and his friend.
His friend was killed but Johnnie
Burke was lucky. Ruby said he is
feeling better.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robinson recently returned from a vacation in
Florida. Bet they missed our nice
cold weather.
Visitors of Ruby Burke and Jane
Pullins Thursday were Mrs. Louise
Crislip, Mrs. WUbur (Debbie) Burke
and Kenny and Nicholas, Mrs. SaUy
Bissell and Charlie, Mrs. Kathy
Riley and Little John, Mrs. Sue Ann
Kauff, aU of Bashan area.
Mike Pullins recently spent Thill'
sday with Robbie Calaway 'Boy,
what 'a time they had in the mud!"
but boys will be boys!
The Alfred community has been
paralyzed with flu. It is hoped it soon
will leave.
Ronnie Burke, Debbie and little
Ronnie spent Sunday with Jane
Pullins and baby Burke. In the af-

THURSDAY
MEIGS UNIT, American Cancer
Society Board meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday in the west dining room of
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
SPECIAL MEETING, Bosworth
CoWJcil 46, Royal and Select
Masters, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Work
in the Royal Master and Select
Masters degrees; all companions
urged to attend.
WESTERN SQUARE dance,
Royal Oak Park recreation buDding,
Thursday, 8 to 11 p.m. with Johnny
Jones, Kingsport, Tenn., as the
national caUer. Refreslunents; all
Western square dancers invited.

~The

Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thllr!ldav. Feb. 28. 19110

THE SUN IS COMING
Hush Pupp,t""
SUNDANCE
IS
HERE

RIO GRANDE - Dr. James A.
Batesky, chairman of the . Rio
Grande College and Community College Department of Health, Physical
Education and Recreation, has been
named Rio's outstanding professor.
The campus based award,
presented annuaUy by Alpha Sigma
Phi fraternity, seeks to honor what
the fraternity sees as "a professor
who gives 110% to the students."
Tim Saunders, president of Alpha
Sigma Phi, presented the award to
Batesky and noted some of the
reaJOil• for Batesky's honor.
"Dr. Batesky has stressed the importance of We-long physical fitness
through both hi , t &lt;·o•hi~;: "~rl hy ex-

The Kentucky Derby is now held
on the first Saturday in May but it
has been run on every other day of
the week except SWiday.

fJ7ide range program studied
.,
~'

continued for a 12-month period, lnflaUoo for the year would total 18
percent.
While It has been learned that a
wide range of options are under consideration to strengthen the ad·
ministration's fight against Inflation, the president and his advisers have taken pains to let It be
known that mandatory wage and
price controls are not among them.
But one congressional source
speculated Wednesday that if inflation continued to rise at an 18 per. cent annual rate for the next few
:
introduced a months, Carter might not have any
;'resolution in the Senate Wednesday choice but to propose controls, as the
ilemanding' that Carter cut his
!budget by $25 billion, to $590 billion.
'i The resolutiqn, which would&lt;not be · I
pindlng' oo the administration, calls \
~or a limit on federal spending equal
-to 21 percent of the nation's gross
Mtional product. Carter's proposed
LOOTIE L. CHUTES
' ,budget equals about 22 percent of the
Mrs.
Lottie
L. Chutes, 78, Rt. 2,
-~NP.
Coolv!Ue,
died
late Wednesday at
' One of the !lJlODSOfS, Sen. Bill
Camden
Clark
Memorial
Hospital,
;Roth, R·Del., said he favors a
Parkersburg, foUowing a brief
fjllbuater If necessary to win enactillness.
'lllent.
Mrs. Chutes was born at Long Bot.: Another sponsor, Sen. William
Proxmlre, ~Wis., said he opposes a tom the daughter of the late William
and Mary Tribett Buchanan. Her
,flllbuater, but belleves a cutback in
husband, Clarence preceded her in
1pending would be the most logical
death in 1939. She was also preceded
ilnd least painful way to fight Inin death by one brother and one
flation. ·
sister.She
was a We long resident of
:· Alternatives such as conUnued
the
Coolville
area.
~ghtening of the money supply and
Survivors
Include
three sons, otis,
mandatory wage and price controls
Alvin
and
A1fred
all
of Coolville; one
"so bleak" that they should be
daughter,
Geneva
at home; two
resisted, he said.
brothers, George Buchanan,
: Carter, who on Monday declared
Coolville, and William Buchanan ol
ihat Inflation has reached the "crisis
Athens; two sisters, Mrs. Vina
~ge," has ordered a review of his
Bailey, Reedsv!Ue, and Mrs. Retha
economic policies. He met with his
Kimes, Coolville, and five grand-top economic advisers Sunday and
cbidren.
· another meeting is planned later this
Funeral services will be held
iveek.
Saturday
at 1 p.m. at the White
. 'lbe government reported on
Funeral
Home
in Coolville with the
;::Friday that consumer prices lnRev.
Roy
Deeter
officiating. Burial
1.4 percent in January. U
will be in Weatherby Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
:K:ouPON MEETING SLATED
t- A meeting to organize a local club home after 1p.m. on Friday,.,
or the coll~on of refjllld and ·
:('ebate coupoos scheduled for Friday
ALDADOEFER
~enlng at the Riverboat Room,
Aida Doerfer, 71, Middleport, died
:frteigs Branch, Athens County
Monday at Virginia Beach General
1$avblgs and Loan, has been post.
Hospital.
:JIODed untlml6:30p.m. on Thllr!lday,
Mrs. Doerfer was born AprU 9,
4farch 6, at the same loeation due to
1909 the daughter ol the late Oscar
·weather conditions.
and Nellie Stimble Hudson. She was
also preceded in death by her
•
DEERJOTJED
husband, Henry.
The Meigs ~ty Sheriff's DeparShe Is survived by the following
:fment reports a deer , was struck 'children, Ernest A. Hayes, Belpre;
~ It ran Into the path of a vehicle · Martha Gardner, Columbus; Viola
\1ell by Karen R. Tripplett, Rt. 2,
Hartenbach, Gallipolla; Norma
omeroy, Wednesday. The car was
Stanaberry, Middleport; Robert
vellng south on SR 7, just north of
Pullins, Houston, Texas; Henry
bury when the incident ocDoerfer, Athens; Clara Bene Toler,
. The deer was not killed.
Ona, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
was slight p1 operty damage.
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
;'Carter is considering a wide range of
~c options to help battle lil:flation, including credit controls,
jbudget cuts and action to slow the
;automatic increases in govenunert
•spending, govenunent sources say,
; One congressional source said
:)/ednesday he , believed Carter
i!ould make major changes in the
lbudget for fiscal year 1981 lhlit he
:filent Congress last month. It has
,:!Jeen reported Carter may try to cut
billion from the $616 billion he

40

Area deaths

hi•hway
erotunat#

1980 E~A estimates. Remember: Compare these estimate.., to estimated mpg for other cars.
Your rruleage may vary due to speed, trip length or weather. Your highway mileage will
probably be lower.

DAN HAYMAN AND HYMN-

TIMERS wiU be featured at a
revival Tuesday through Friday at
Ball's Chapel, Ashton, W.Va., 7 p.m.
nightly. Joe Gwinn is the speaker. ·
SAnJRDAY
BEDFORD
TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES Saturday 3 p.m. at
home of clerk.

1980 Renault Le Car
The room, Ride, and comfort you want.
The economy yoll need.

'4,437. 00

Prices Starting
As Low As:

DAN HAYMAN AND HYMN-

TIMERS at hymn sing at Ross
Chapel, Rush, Ky., Saturday 7:30
p.m. Public invited.

Suggested Base Price. Transportation&amp; Dealer Prep. Extra
\

Surprise Yourself Test Drive One Today At

Riverside Amc ·Jeep· Renault
446-9800

Upper River Rd,

Gallipolis, Ohio

8&amp;5 AUTO &amp; MOBILE HOME SAL.ES

March Vl'edding Planned

1977 OLDS.
1977 FORD
PINTO
CUTLASS SUPREME
air, auto., p.s., p.b. 4 cyl., auto.
as Saver
'3995
Sharp

Mrs. Carol Oiler, Stockport, Ohio and PhUiip Burton, Mason, announce
the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Bonnie Kay
Burton, to David E. Rowland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Rowland Cheshire

Ohio.

'

'

The bride-elect is a 1978 graduate of Wahama High School and is employed
at the Morgan County Care Center in McConnelsvUie, Ohio. Her fiance is a
1973 graduate of Morgan High School and is presently employed at Southern
Ohio Coal Company in Meigs County.
The wedding will be an event of March 22 at the United Methodist Church
in Stockport, Ohio.

SEWING HEADQUARTERS
•POLY KNIT MATERIAL
•COTTON MATERIAL
•ZIPPERS
•THREAD
•TRIMS
•SIMPLICITY PAMRNS

1h

PRICE

1977 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX
air, auto., p.s,
p.b., am·fm
1977 FORD
'3895
LTD 4 DR.
ir, auto., ps.,

Aleshire, Middleport; Mr. and Mni.
Joseph Klrjly, Virginia Beach; Mr.
and Mrs. Rodney Spires, Kyger and
Mr. 1\Dd Mrs. Freddie Field, Hartford. Eleven grandchUdrenn also
survive.
Funeral services wiU be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating. Burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may caU
at the funeral home at anytime.

are

:'creased
Bonnie Burton

Congress and the public migl'i
demand them.
He said he believed the administration would give serious consideration tO credit controls, which It
already has authority to impose.
The purpose of credit controls
would be to take pressure off prices
through such actions as requiring
higher down payments for consumer
purchases. However, Paul A.
Volcker, the chairman ol the
Federal Reserve Board, which
would administer the controls, said
· earlier this week he opposes credit
controls and thinks they could be
counter-productive.

'I'

E

S

LELA C. LEWIS
Lila Christina Lewis, 85,
Letart, died Tuesday in the

Pleasant VaUey Nursing Care
Unit.
Born Dec. 29, 1894, in Maggie,
W. Va., ~was the daughter of
the late Williams and Pemoella
Fowler Edwards.
She was a member of the FaJ.r.
view Bible Church.
Surviving are her husband,
Allen H. Lewis; two daughters,
Mrs. Mary K. King, Mrs. Lucille
King, both of Letart; two sons, •
.Russell·A., of Mason, and Earll.,
of Letart; two brothers, Howard
Edwards ol Mason, and Sterile
Edwards, Anianda, 0.; three
sisters, Marie Smith, Clifton;
vema Ueving and Mary Higgina,
both of Point Pleasant; 10 grandchldren, and 18 great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 11 a. m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. George Hoschar and
Rev. Mark Irwin officiating.
Burial will foUow in the Zerkle
Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the funeral
home from 5to 9 p. m. Thursday.

ample. He has contributed to his profession by numerous projects and
publications and has. contributed
both his time and expertise to the
students of Rio Grande througli ·his
teaching and advising positions,"
Saunders said.
Batesky has also been nominated
for a National Health and Physical
Education Association award.
The Yount Professional Award,
given by the American Alliance of
Health, Physical Education and
Recreation, is awarded to a career
professional with less than 10 years
experienc.e One award is given in
the Ohio district of the Association
which represents Ohio, Michigan,
Indiana, Wisconsin and Illinois.

The 31 year old Batesky bas been
teaching for nine years, the last four
at Rio.Grande. Prior to Rio Grande,
Batesky was a physical education
teacher at Gentry High School, Gentry, Arkansas .
He holds a bachelors degree from
Lock Haven State CoUege, a lll8llters
from the Univesity of Buffalo and a
doctorate from the University of
Arkansas.

Batesky serves on three state
committees for Ohio Association of
Health, Physical Education and
Recreation (OAHPER) including
the Administration 'and Supervision
Coinmittee, the Nominating Com·
mittee, and he is a chair elect of the
Student Membership Committee.

Former
governor
.
.named speaker

RIO GRANDE'S OUI'STANDING PROFESSOR, Dr. James Batesky (left) is pictured with Alpha Sigma
Phi president Tim SaWlders. ·

B~ro~nators

Lemileage,

Dr. James A. Batesky na~ed
Rio's outstanding professor

I

e

FRIDAY
MEETING TO organize refundrebate club at 6:30 p.m. Friday at
Meigs Branch, Athens County
Savings and Loan, W. Main,
Pomeroy.

COMMUNITY BUILDERS MEET
C.B.C's met with Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens for the February
meeting. Following the business
session conducted by Denver Weber
refreslunents were served to Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Myers and Mr. alld
Mrs. Denver Weber. March meeting
will be at the Weber home.

temoon they visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Micheal Burke and family .
Karen Baker and Joann Calaway
and Linda Boggs recently completed
a . 78 hour class in Emergency
Medical Technicians. They now
have to complete a 10 hour in
hospital training and a 2 hour on the
Emergency squad.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson
helped Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee
Henderson Saturday, Feb. 23 to butcher.
Saturday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Pullins and famUy were Mrs.
Patty Life and daughter, Paula, also
Mr: and Mrs Jack Rankin.
The Alfred Conununity Church
Group is selllng Stanley products.
Anyone·needing any can contact any
of the Youth group members.
Kimberly Calaway, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Hanson Calaway, is
improving at Children's Hospital in
Colwnbus.

The nice thing about
LeCaris ... ~

Social Calendar

song, "My Bonnie Lies Over the
Ocean.'' Aquiz on Abraham Lincoln
and George Washington was also
given by Mrs. Wolfe.
A scrambled word game was
played. Readings "Something for
Nothing," "Baseball Player," and a
quiz by Elmer Pickens coccluded
the program.
The Grange has cookbooks for
sale. Anyone may contact Early
Roush.
The next meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Eula Wolfe.
Potluck refreshments were served.

Three ~a llege football players,
Steve Little, Russell Erxleben and •
Joe Williams, share the NCAA
record for the longest field goal, 67
yards.

ARCH A. MOORE JR.

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted-Juanita Chapman, Clifton; Dorothy Hysell, Pomeroy;
Catherine Mees, Pomeroy; Noell
Dawson, I:'ew Haven; Gladys Spencer, Long Bottom; Eva Barrett,
Langsville; Tamara · Staats ,
Syracuse; Jane Freed, Middleport;
Florida Casto, Mason ; Uoyd King,
Pomeroy; Gregory Bonecutter,
Mason.
Dlscharge&lt;hlulia Simpkins, Ruth
Ann Mulford, Nancy ·walker,
Margaret Vadlsh, Betty BaUey,
Robert Manley.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCBARGF8 FEB. 27
Jeffrey Austin, Arthur Brooka,
Herbert Burson, Elizabeth Butcher,
Ida Counts, Clayton Crow, Mrs.
David Davis and son, Jackie Edwards, Roberta Fleming, Geraldine
Berlach, Maggie Griffin, John.
Harrison, Phyllis Hinkle, Gerald
Hwnpherys, . Kevin Hunt, Chad
Johnson, Hassell Justice, Johnny
Logan, Courtney Mltkiff, Virginia
Moore, Deborah Nibert, Alice
Rulan, Anna Sisson, Tim Speraw,
Ida Thompson, James Thompson,
James Varian, Mrs. Brad Walburn
and daughter, Kelly Winter.
BIRTII
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Metheney,
daughter, Vinton.

~GCANCEI I ED

A meeting to discuss the estab~h­
ment of a program for talented and
gifted students, scheduled to this
evening in the library of Meigs High
School has been cancelled due to
weather conditions.
Dan Morris, director of
curriculum, reports that the
meeting will be rescheduled.

Former W.Va. Governor Arch A.
Moore Jr. ( 196~76) will offer the
keynote address at the Annual
Mason County Republican Lincoln
Day Dinner on Saturday, March 1.
The potluck affair will be held at 7
p.m. at the National Guard·Armory,
near Point Pleasant.
Moore was the first man ever to be
elected to a second four-year term
as governor of West Virginia and the
first governor reelected in the state
since 1866.
Born in Moundsv!Ue, he attended
Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., and
West Virgnia University, graduating
from the latter in 1948 with an AB
degree in PoliUcla Science. He also
has an 1LB Degree from the WVU
College of Law and honorary
degrees from W. Va. Wesleyan College, Bethany College, W. Va. In-

-

sUtute of Technology, MarshaU
University, Concord CoUege and
Alderson-Broaddus College.
He became actively engaged in
the practice of law in Moundsville in
1951 and was elected i:O the West
Virginia Legislatme in 1952. He also
served five terms as a First District
West Virginia Congressman.
Moore, during his tenure as governor, was one of six heads of state invited by the Peoples Republic of
China on a goodwill mission to that
nation in May of 1974.
The foUowing May he was a
member of a delegation of eight
governors invited on a goodwill mission to Russia and Eastern Europe
and represented the President of the
United States 111 fonnally opening
the Bicentenial eliJlOSition of the
"World of Franklin and Jefferson"
in Warsaw, Poland.

SALE CONTINUES

50% OFFill
COATS

ONE &amp; 1WO PIECE

SIZE: Ages 2 to 16 Months

SNOWSUITS

PAJAMAS

GIRLS
TOPS
~:~~~~s : oo

FAiRPOINT

SHAKE·
SPEAR

14x65
2 br.

12x65
2 br.

'71

~AMERON

14x65
2 BR

12x63
2 bedroom

TIES

%PRICE

VAWES m 18.50

1971

EMOODTI
14x65
3 BR

•SUilS •SPORT COATS • LEAtHER COATs ,

•

Bath~

·. Co~t~. Staff
Our pharmaCists·have years .·

2ND &amp; VIAND STREET

B&amp;S SAtE_
$ , . INC.
' 6)5-4424
.·
'

CG1ey Ka-1•m . ~
POINT PLEASANT

WNlPO. ·
..\SATURDAYS
'
1 til Noon --~---~

of experience. Tfust them tO ·· ·
flU 90':11'.. orders
right
·
'
'

VIllAGE' PHARMACY.

CLOTHING

MEN'S

IW.F/PRICE SALE ON
FLEETWOOD

INFANT

2nd St.
POMEROY, 0,

DON'T MISS THIS BIG
1968·

TROUSERS

KIDDIE SHOPPE

if:=~w:a~de~:Holman,
22, Racine,
jJ
Branett,22, Racine.

'73

AND

Hours :

9:30to5:iO
Mon. thru Sat.

MARRIAGE UCENSE
A marriage license was Issued to

(,l

SHIRTS

BOYS &amp; GIRLS'
KNIMD CAPS

~

'2995

BOYS'

BOYS &amp; GIRLS'

•RANNEL SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE KNIT
sHIRTs - NCM All HALF PRICE!~ ••
HURRY!•..

�8-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 28. 1980

Alfred Social Notes

Legion birthday observance set
The annual birthday observance
for the American Legion on March
I~ was planned during a meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
Tuesday night at the post home.
The dinner will be a planned
potluck affair with the meat to be
furnished by the Auxiliary. Invitations will be sent to units within
Meigs County, the district president
and other district officers, asking
them to be guests. Mrs. Veda Davis,
junior advisor, and the junior Auxiliary members will handle decorations for the observance; Mrs. Iva
Powell and Mrs. Perl Knapp will be
in charge of corsages; and Mrs.
Mary Martin will take care of the
cake.
Following the dinner and short
business meeting, Armand Turley
will present organ music for dancing.

During the meeting, members
selected a delegate and alternate for
Buckeye Girls' State. Announcement wiU be made once the appointments have been confirmed.
The charter was draped in
memory of Mrs. Dollie Hayes, by
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, president, and
the chaplain. It was noted that Mrs.
Mary Martin has been named

district junior aCtivities chairman
replacing Mrs. Geralding Parsons
who resigned recently due to health
problems.
Mrs. Martin introduced Mrs.
Florence Richards who talked to the
group on patriotism. Mrs. Richards
noted the birthdays of Lincoln and
Washington. She said that Lincoln
spoke of the hand of the loving God
which preserves peace and enriches
lives and said that if he were living
today, he would look at many
Americans and describe them as being intoxicated with success and too
proud oo pray. She said that
Washington would question the
patriotism of those who would
banish religion from public affairs.
Mrs. Richard said that the
American Legion Auxiliary could
feel pride in carrying the banner for
patriotism and she called for
rededication to the ideals of our
forefathers. She concluded with a
poem, "Fill the World with Love."
Mrs. Martin presented the speaker
with a gift.
The junior members had charge of
theritua~tic~ning . Mrs. Anna
WOes presided with Jennifer Couch
serving as sergeant at arms and
Kim Patterson as chaplain.
Escorted oo the front were Mrs. Mar-

Ohio Valley Grange meets
Ohio Valley Grange 2612 Letart
Falls met at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush with Master
Early Roush in the chair.
Plans were made to serve Pamona
Grange at the March meeting.
Ohio Valley will visit Racine
Grange March 20, weather permitting.
Mary Pickens was elected overseer, Mrs. Florence, delegate, and
Elmer Pickens alternate to Ohio
State Grange.
Mrs. Eimer Pickens was reported
ill. A literary )lrogram was given by
Mrs. Eula Wolfe; opening with a

.-ie" eral from the Alfred com-

tin, Mrs. Richards, and Robin
Campbell, the Eighth District junior
president.
Laura Smith had prayer and Jennifer Couch led in the pledge. A
welcome was given by Miss Wiles.
At the senior meeting it was voted to
purchase eight sets of dishes for the
post home. A report was given by
Mrs. Pearl Knapp and Mrs. Martin,
rehabilitation and veterans affairs,
who noted that Virgil Glaze is home
after having been hospitalized in
Dayton.
Donations wiU be taken on a
afghan for a fund raising project by
the conunittee of Genuna Casci, Iva
Powell, and Marge Goett. Mrs.
Knapp reported that a flower had
been sent to Genevieve Meinhart, a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center, and that cards had been sent
to Mrs. Margaret Vadish and Mrs.
Lillian Gress. Mrs. Martin reported
on her visit with Mrs. Gladys
Mowery, confined to a nursing home
at Point Pleasant. It was also
reported that Frank Cheesebrew
bad been injured in an automobile
accident.
Refreslunents were served by
Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Loretta
Tiemeyer. A patriotic theme was
carried out in teh table decorations.

mwuty attended the funeral servtces of Enuna Findling Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Ruby Burke and daughter,
Dorothy Calaway, visited Ruby 's
grandson who was injured in a
bicycle accident Sunday, Feb. 17,
when a car hit him and his friend.
His friend was killed but Johnnie
Burke was lucky. Ruby said he is
feeling better.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robinson recently returned from a vacation in
Florida. Bet they missed our nice
cold weather.
Visitors of Ruby Burke and Jane
Pullins Thursday were Mrs. Louise
Crislip, Mrs. WUbur (Debbie) Burke
and Kenny and Nicholas, Mrs. SaUy
Bissell and Charlie, Mrs. Kathy
Riley and Little John, Mrs. Sue Ann
Kauff, aU of Bashan area.
Mike Pullins recently spent Thill'
sday with Robbie Calaway 'Boy,
what 'a time they had in the mud!"
but boys will be boys!
The Alfred community has been
paralyzed with flu. It is hoped it soon
will leave.
Ronnie Burke, Debbie and little
Ronnie spent Sunday with Jane
Pullins and baby Burke. In the af-

THURSDAY
MEIGS UNIT, American Cancer
Society Board meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday in the west dining room of
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
SPECIAL MEETING, Bosworth
CoWJcil 46, Royal and Select
Masters, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Work
in the Royal Master and Select
Masters degrees; all companions
urged to attend.
WESTERN SQUARE dance,
Royal Oak Park recreation buDding,
Thursday, 8 to 11 p.m. with Johnny
Jones, Kingsport, Tenn., as the
national caUer. Refreslunents; all
Western square dancers invited.

~The

Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thllr!ldav. Feb. 28. 19110

THE SUN IS COMING
Hush Pupp,t""
SUNDANCE
IS
HERE

RIO GRANDE - Dr. James A.
Batesky, chairman of the . Rio
Grande College and Community College Department of Health, Physical
Education and Recreation, has been
named Rio's outstanding professor.
The campus based award,
presented annuaUy by Alpha Sigma
Phi fraternity, seeks to honor what
the fraternity sees as "a professor
who gives 110% to the students."
Tim Saunders, president of Alpha
Sigma Phi, presented the award to
Batesky and noted some of the
reaJOil• for Batesky's honor.
"Dr. Batesky has stressed the importance of We-long physical fitness
through both hi , t &lt;·o•hi~;: "~rl hy ex-

The Kentucky Derby is now held
on the first Saturday in May but it
has been run on every other day of
the week except SWiday.

fJ7ide range program studied
.,
~'

continued for a 12-month period, lnflaUoo for the year would total 18
percent.
While It has been learned that a
wide range of options are under consideration to strengthen the ad·
ministration's fight against Inflation, the president and his advisers have taken pains to let It be
known that mandatory wage and
price controls are not among them.
But one congressional source
speculated Wednesday that if inflation continued to rise at an 18 per. cent annual rate for the next few
:
introduced a months, Carter might not have any
;'resolution in the Senate Wednesday choice but to propose controls, as the
ilemanding' that Carter cut his
!budget by $25 billion, to $590 billion.
'i The resolutiqn, which would&lt;not be · I
pindlng' oo the administration, calls \
~or a limit on federal spending equal
-to 21 percent of the nation's gross
Mtional product. Carter's proposed
LOOTIE L. CHUTES
' ,budget equals about 22 percent of the
Mrs.
Lottie
L. Chutes, 78, Rt. 2,
-~NP.
Coolv!Ue,
died
late Wednesday at
' One of the !lJlODSOfS, Sen. Bill
Camden
Clark
Memorial
Hospital,
;Roth, R·Del., said he favors a
Parkersburg, foUowing a brief
fjllbuater If necessary to win enactillness.
'lllent.
Mrs. Chutes was born at Long Bot.: Another sponsor, Sen. William
Proxmlre, ~Wis., said he opposes a tom the daughter of the late William
and Mary Tribett Buchanan. Her
,flllbuater, but belleves a cutback in
husband, Clarence preceded her in
1pending would be the most logical
death in 1939. She was also preceded
ilnd least painful way to fight Inin death by one brother and one
flation. ·
sister.She
was a We long resident of
:· Alternatives such as conUnued
the
Coolville
area.
~ghtening of the money supply and
Survivors
Include
three sons, otis,
mandatory wage and price controls
Alvin
and
A1fred
all
of Coolville; one
"so bleak" that they should be
daughter,
Geneva
at home; two
resisted, he said.
brothers, George Buchanan,
: Carter, who on Monday declared
Coolville, and William Buchanan ol
ihat Inflation has reached the "crisis
Athens; two sisters, Mrs. Vina
~ge," has ordered a review of his
Bailey, Reedsv!Ue, and Mrs. Retha
economic policies. He met with his
Kimes, Coolville, and five grand-top economic advisers Sunday and
cbidren.
· another meeting is planned later this
Funeral services will be held
iveek.
Saturday
at 1 p.m. at the White
. 'lbe government reported on
Funeral
Home
in Coolville with the
;::Friday that consumer prices lnRev.
Roy
Deeter
officiating. Burial
1.4 percent in January. U
will be in Weatherby Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
:K:ouPON MEETING SLATED
t- A meeting to organize a local club home after 1p.m. on Friday,.,
or the coll~on of refjllld and ·
:('ebate coupoos scheduled for Friday
ALDADOEFER
~enlng at the Riverboat Room,
Aida Doerfer, 71, Middleport, died
:frteigs Branch, Athens County
Monday at Virginia Beach General
1$avblgs and Loan, has been post.
Hospital.
:JIODed untlml6:30p.m. on Thllr!lday,
Mrs. Doerfer was born AprU 9,
4farch 6, at the same loeation due to
1909 the daughter ol the late Oscar
·weather conditions.
and Nellie Stimble Hudson. She was
also preceded in death by her
•
DEERJOTJED
husband, Henry.
The Meigs ~ty Sheriff's DeparShe Is survived by the following
:fment reports a deer , was struck 'children, Ernest A. Hayes, Belpre;
~ It ran Into the path of a vehicle · Martha Gardner, Columbus; Viola
\1ell by Karen R. Tripplett, Rt. 2,
Hartenbach, Gallipolla; Norma
omeroy, Wednesday. The car was
Stanaberry, Middleport; Robert
vellng south on SR 7, just north of
Pullins, Houston, Texas; Henry
bury when the incident ocDoerfer, Athens; Clara Bene Toler,
. The deer was not killed.
Ona, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
was slight p1 operty damage.
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
;'Carter is considering a wide range of
~c options to help battle lil:flation, including credit controls,
jbudget cuts and action to slow the
;automatic increases in govenunert
•spending, govenunent sources say,
; One congressional source said
:)/ednesday he , believed Carter
i!ould make major changes in the
lbudget for fiscal year 1981 lhlit he
:filent Congress last month. It has
,:!Jeen reported Carter may try to cut
billion from the $616 billion he

40

Area deaths

hi•hway
erotunat#

1980 E~A estimates. Remember: Compare these estimate.., to estimated mpg for other cars.
Your rruleage may vary due to speed, trip length or weather. Your highway mileage will
probably be lower.

DAN HAYMAN AND HYMN-

TIMERS wiU be featured at a
revival Tuesday through Friday at
Ball's Chapel, Ashton, W.Va., 7 p.m.
nightly. Joe Gwinn is the speaker. ·
SAnJRDAY
BEDFORD
TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES Saturday 3 p.m. at
home of clerk.

1980 Renault Le Car
The room, Ride, and comfort you want.
The economy yoll need.

'4,437. 00

Prices Starting
As Low As:

DAN HAYMAN AND HYMN-

TIMERS at hymn sing at Ross
Chapel, Rush, Ky., Saturday 7:30
p.m. Public invited.

Suggested Base Price. Transportation&amp; Dealer Prep. Extra
\

Surprise Yourself Test Drive One Today At

Riverside Amc ·Jeep· Renault
446-9800

Upper River Rd,

Gallipolis, Ohio

8&amp;5 AUTO &amp; MOBILE HOME SAL.ES

March Vl'edding Planned

1977 OLDS.
1977 FORD
PINTO
CUTLASS SUPREME
air, auto., p.s., p.b. 4 cyl., auto.
as Saver
'3995
Sharp

Mrs. Carol Oiler, Stockport, Ohio and PhUiip Burton, Mason, announce
the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Bonnie Kay
Burton, to David E. Rowland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Rowland Cheshire

Ohio.

'

'

The bride-elect is a 1978 graduate of Wahama High School and is employed
at the Morgan County Care Center in McConnelsvUie, Ohio. Her fiance is a
1973 graduate of Morgan High School and is presently employed at Southern
Ohio Coal Company in Meigs County.
The wedding will be an event of March 22 at the United Methodist Church
in Stockport, Ohio.

SEWING HEADQUARTERS
•POLY KNIT MATERIAL
•COTTON MATERIAL
•ZIPPERS
•THREAD
•TRIMS
•SIMPLICITY PAMRNS

1h

PRICE

1977 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX
air, auto., p.s,
p.b., am·fm
1977 FORD
'3895
LTD 4 DR.
ir, auto., ps.,

Aleshire, Middleport; Mr. and Mni.
Joseph Klrjly, Virginia Beach; Mr.
and Mrs. Rodney Spires, Kyger and
Mr. 1\Dd Mrs. Freddie Field, Hartford. Eleven grandchUdrenn also
survive.
Funeral services wiU be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating. Burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may caU
at the funeral home at anytime.

are

:'creased
Bonnie Burton

Congress and the public migl'i
demand them.
He said he believed the administration would give serious consideration tO credit controls, which It
already has authority to impose.
The purpose of credit controls
would be to take pressure off prices
through such actions as requiring
higher down payments for consumer
purchases. However, Paul A.
Volcker, the chairman ol the
Federal Reserve Board, which
would administer the controls, said
· earlier this week he opposes credit
controls and thinks they could be
counter-productive.

'I'

E

S

LELA C. LEWIS
Lila Christina Lewis, 85,
Letart, died Tuesday in the

Pleasant VaUey Nursing Care
Unit.
Born Dec. 29, 1894, in Maggie,
W. Va., ~was the daughter of
the late Williams and Pemoella
Fowler Edwards.
She was a member of the FaJ.r.
view Bible Church.
Surviving are her husband,
Allen H. Lewis; two daughters,
Mrs. Mary K. King, Mrs. Lucille
King, both of Letart; two sons, •
.Russell·A., of Mason, and Earll.,
of Letart; two brothers, Howard
Edwards ol Mason, and Sterile
Edwards, Anianda, 0.; three
sisters, Marie Smith, Clifton;
vema Ueving and Mary Higgina,
both of Point Pleasant; 10 grandchldren, and 18 great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 11 a. m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. George Hoschar and
Rev. Mark Irwin officiating.
Burial will foUow in the Zerkle
Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the funeral
home from 5to 9 p. m. Thursday.

ample. He has contributed to his profession by numerous projects and
publications and has. contributed
both his time and expertise to the
students of Rio Grande througli ·his
teaching and advising positions,"
Saunders said.
Batesky has also been nominated
for a National Health and Physical
Education Association award.
The Yount Professional Award,
given by the American Alliance of
Health, Physical Education and
Recreation, is awarded to a career
professional with less than 10 years
experienc.e One award is given in
the Ohio district of the Association
which represents Ohio, Michigan,
Indiana, Wisconsin and Illinois.

The 31 year old Batesky bas been
teaching for nine years, the last four
at Rio.Grande. Prior to Rio Grande,
Batesky was a physical education
teacher at Gentry High School, Gentry, Arkansas .
He holds a bachelors degree from
Lock Haven State CoUege, a lll8llters
from the Univesity of Buffalo and a
doctorate from the University of
Arkansas.

Batesky serves on three state
committees for Ohio Association of
Health, Physical Education and
Recreation (OAHPER) including
the Administration 'and Supervision
Coinmittee, the Nominating Com·
mittee, and he is a chair elect of the
Student Membership Committee.

Former
governor
.
.named speaker

RIO GRANDE'S OUI'STANDING PROFESSOR, Dr. James Batesky (left) is pictured with Alpha Sigma
Phi president Tim SaWlders. ·

B~ro~nators

Lemileage,

Dr. James A. Batesky na~ed
Rio's outstanding professor

I

e

FRIDAY
MEETING TO organize refundrebate club at 6:30 p.m. Friday at
Meigs Branch, Athens County
Savings and Loan, W. Main,
Pomeroy.

COMMUNITY BUILDERS MEET
C.B.C's met with Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens for the February
meeting. Following the business
session conducted by Denver Weber
refreslunents were served to Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Myers and Mr. alld
Mrs. Denver Weber. March meeting
will be at the Weber home.

temoon they visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Micheal Burke and family .
Karen Baker and Joann Calaway
and Linda Boggs recently completed
a . 78 hour class in Emergency
Medical Technicians. They now
have to complete a 10 hour in
hospital training and a 2 hour on the
Emergency squad.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson
helped Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee
Henderson Saturday, Feb. 23 to butcher.
Saturday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Pullins and famUy were Mrs.
Patty Life and daughter, Paula, also
Mr: and Mrs Jack Rankin.
The Alfred Conununity Church
Group is selllng Stanley products.
Anyone·needing any can contact any
of the Youth group members.
Kimberly Calaway, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Hanson Calaway, is
improving at Children's Hospital in
Colwnbus.

The nice thing about
LeCaris ... ~

Social Calendar

song, "My Bonnie Lies Over the
Ocean.'' Aquiz on Abraham Lincoln
and George Washington was also
given by Mrs. Wolfe.
A scrambled word game was
played. Readings "Something for
Nothing," "Baseball Player," and a
quiz by Elmer Pickens coccluded
the program.
The Grange has cookbooks for
sale. Anyone may contact Early
Roush.
The next meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Eula Wolfe.
Potluck refreshments were served.

Three ~a llege football players,
Steve Little, Russell Erxleben and •
Joe Williams, share the NCAA
record for the longest field goal, 67
yards.

ARCH A. MOORE JR.

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted-Juanita Chapman, Clifton; Dorothy Hysell, Pomeroy;
Catherine Mees, Pomeroy; Noell
Dawson, I:'ew Haven; Gladys Spencer, Long Bottom; Eva Barrett,
Langsville; Tamara · Staats ,
Syracuse; Jane Freed, Middleport;
Florida Casto, Mason ; Uoyd King,
Pomeroy; Gregory Bonecutter,
Mason.
Dlscharge&lt;hlulia Simpkins, Ruth
Ann Mulford, Nancy ·walker,
Margaret Vadlsh, Betty BaUey,
Robert Manley.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCBARGF8 FEB. 27
Jeffrey Austin, Arthur Brooka,
Herbert Burson, Elizabeth Butcher,
Ida Counts, Clayton Crow, Mrs.
David Davis and son, Jackie Edwards, Roberta Fleming, Geraldine
Berlach, Maggie Griffin, John.
Harrison, Phyllis Hinkle, Gerald
Hwnpherys, . Kevin Hunt, Chad
Johnson, Hassell Justice, Johnny
Logan, Courtney Mltkiff, Virginia
Moore, Deborah Nibert, Alice
Rulan, Anna Sisson, Tim Speraw,
Ida Thompson, James Thompson,
James Varian, Mrs. Brad Walburn
and daughter, Kelly Winter.
BIRTII
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Metheney,
daughter, Vinton.

~GCANCEI I ED

A meeting to discuss the estab~h­
ment of a program for talented and
gifted students, scheduled to this
evening in the library of Meigs High
School has been cancelled due to
weather conditions.
Dan Morris, director of
curriculum, reports that the
meeting will be rescheduled.

Former W.Va. Governor Arch A.
Moore Jr. ( 196~76) will offer the
keynote address at the Annual
Mason County Republican Lincoln
Day Dinner on Saturday, March 1.
The potluck affair will be held at 7
p.m. at the National Guard·Armory,
near Point Pleasant.
Moore was the first man ever to be
elected to a second four-year term
as governor of West Virginia and the
first governor reelected in the state
since 1866.
Born in Moundsv!Ue, he attended
Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., and
West Virgnia University, graduating
from the latter in 1948 with an AB
degree in PoliUcla Science. He also
has an 1LB Degree from the WVU
College of Law and honorary
degrees from W. Va. Wesleyan College, Bethany College, W. Va. In-

-

sUtute of Technology, MarshaU
University, Concord CoUege and
Alderson-Broaddus College.
He became actively engaged in
the practice of law in Moundsville in
1951 and was elected i:O the West
Virginia Legislatme in 1952. He also
served five terms as a First District
West Virginia Congressman.
Moore, during his tenure as governor, was one of six heads of state invited by the Peoples Republic of
China on a goodwill mission to that
nation in May of 1974.
The foUowing May he was a
member of a delegation of eight
governors invited on a goodwill mission to Russia and Eastern Europe
and represented the President of the
United States 111 fonnally opening
the Bicentenial eliJlOSition of the
"World of Franklin and Jefferson"
in Warsaw, Poland.

SALE CONTINUES

50% OFFill
COATS

ONE &amp; 1WO PIECE

SIZE: Ages 2 to 16 Months

SNOWSUITS

PAJAMAS

GIRLS
TOPS
~:~~~~s : oo

FAiRPOINT

SHAKE·
SPEAR

14x65
2 br.

12x65
2 br.

'71

~AMERON

14x65
2 BR

12x63
2 bedroom

TIES

%PRICE

VAWES m 18.50

1971

EMOODTI
14x65
3 BR

•SUilS •SPORT COATS • LEAtHER COATs ,

•

Bath~

·. Co~t~. Staff
Our pharmaCists·have years .·

2ND &amp; VIAND STREET

B&amp;S SAtE_
$ , . INC.
' 6)5-4424
.·
'

CG1ey Ka-1•m . ~
POINT PLEASANT

WNlPO. ·
..\SATURDAYS
'
1 til Noon --~---~

of experience. Tfust them tO ·· ·
flU 90':11'.. orders
right
·
'
'

VIllAGE' PHARMACY.

CLOTHING

MEN'S

IW.F/PRICE SALE ON
FLEETWOOD

INFANT

2nd St.
POMEROY, 0,

DON'T MISS THIS BIG
1968·

TROUSERS

KIDDIE SHOPPE

if:=~w:a~de~:Holman,
22, Racine,
jJ
Branett,22, Racine.

'73

AND

Hours :

9:30to5:iO
Mon. thru Sat.

MARRIAGE UCENSE
A marriage license was Issued to

(,l

SHIRTS

BOYS &amp; GIRLS'
KNIMD CAPS

~

'2995

BOYS'

BOYS &amp; GIRLS'

•RANNEL SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE KNIT
sHIRTs - NCM All HALF PRICE!~ ••
HURRY!•..

�'

10--The Daily Sentinel, Middl eport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 28,1980

,

\

1f fl\}ruf f'rul}

DICK TRACY

Your Best Buys A-re Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Notices

WANT AD

CHARGES

GU N

Volu nteer

Every Satur day. 6:30p.m .

1$ Words or Under

Ca.sb

I day
2daya
3days
&amp;days

1.00
1.50

Chara:e
1.~

uo

1.10

2.25

3.110

3.7S

Each word over the minimlln
15 words is 4 cents per word per
day. Ads nanning other than conaecutJ,.e dlys wiU be charged at
the 1 day rate.

In memory, Card of ThanQ
and Obituary: I cents per word ,
s:too minlmum. Cash in advance.
Mobile Home 5ales and Yard
sales are accepted only wtUI
cash with order. ~ cent char~~:e
for alb carrying Box Nwnber ln
Care of The Sentinel.

A1 their bu i lding in Bashan .

Factory choke guns only .

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

Corn

Hollow Gun Club.

Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249

ATTENTION :
(IM PORTANT TO YOU J Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collectibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
guns. pocket watches and
coin collections. Ca ll 614·

767 -3167 or 557·3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(A NY
AMOUNT). DON 'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 -992 - 5113,
BROWN'S.

The Pultliaher reserves the
rt,ht to edit or reject any alb

deeml!'d

Racine
Fire
Dept .

SHOOT .

objecti onal. · The

Publisher will not be responsible

lor more than one incorrect tnsertion .
Phflne !m.-2lllfi

NOTICE

highest pri ces
possible for gold and silVer
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
1

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADIJNES

PAY

Shop, MiddleporT.
GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SiLVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHEC K WITH
OSBY (QSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992· 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

Mllnday

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thruFriday
4P.M.
the day before publication
Sunday

4P.M.
Friday afternoon

Dianne Lee has joined the

In Memory
To Mom. on your birThday :
Happy BirThday, Mom
I cannot send a birthday
card
Your hands I cannot tou ch

BUT GOd Will give ThiS
message
To the one 1miss so much
Dear God, please lake !his
message
To our living mother up

above

And lei I her how much we
miss her
And give her all our love

She bid no one a lasT
farewell

She said goodbye To none
The Heavenly gales jus!
opened up
And a loving said "Come"

sTall al Kay's BeauTy
Salon, MiddleporT. Phone
992-2725

La Mar Beauty Salon, 101
W. 2nd St. , Pomeroy . New
day and hours. Tuesday
lhru Friday, 9 ! ill ? Salur·
days, 9 !iii 5. Cali for apointment at 992· 7056, ask for
Terri. lmoJean or Gerri .
Walk· inswelcome .
Meigs Co. Fish and Game
Club regular meeting,

SaTurday, March lsi. There
wi II be elecTion cWollicers.
Supper and refreshments
will be served. All' mem-

bers urged to atlend.

Although her sui is now at
rest ·
And free from care and
pain

Automatic coin operated
water sales has been lnshtlled . Racine, corner Jrd
and Vine for truck water as
of March 1. Uses quarters

The world would seem like

only .

11 1 could have her back
II broke my hear! To loser
her
But she did not go alone
For part of me went with

her
The day God called her
home. Mrs. E I izabelh
Stewart family.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE
· DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF AC ·
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
0

PUBLIC NOTICE

Public water supplies are

requIred
by
Stale
RegulaT ion, ChapTer 374581, Ohio Admlnislralive
Code, to rouTinely moniTor
the mlcrobloiO',llcal qualiTy
of the drinking water in

Their distribuTion system .
The sampling conducTed
for

the

Pomeroy

water

sysTem indicated !hal The

maximum
permissible
microbiological
con ·
taminant level specified in

The "Ohio Adm1nlstralive
Code" was e.ceeded in 2
out of 11 samples collecTed
in July, 1979.
Coliform bacTeria are
used as an indicator of the
microbiological quality of

drinking waTer. While !he
coliform bacTeria Themselves may posT no threaT
to h~N~Ith , their . presence
does Indicate that a source

of conlaminalion exisTs
somewhere In the waTer

system . Such an indication

is adequaTe juslillcalion for
an invesTigation To deTer·
mine the nature and scope
of the possible hearth

hazard.
1-n ·
A subsequenT
vesllgalion and addlllonai
sampling IndicaTe !hat any
problem has been correc·

led.

Board of
Public Affairs
(2 ) 28, 6, 13, 3tc

H

I

0

AccounTs and vouchers of

the
following
named
fiduciaries have been filed
in the Probate Court, Meigs

CounTy, Ohio, for approval
and settlement :

CASE NO. 21,910 Final
AccO\Jnt of I. carson crow,

Guardian of Herman M .
Jarrell, an Incompetent

person.
CASE NO. 21042 Firs!

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

of

Lester

P.

Manuel, ExecuTor of The
Eslale of Paul Manuel,
Deceased .

CASE NO. 22681 Final
Account of Dorotha L .
Neutzllng, Executrix of !he
Eslale of Richard H. Neul·
zling, DeceaSed.
CASE NO. 22391 Final
Account of Fred W. Crow,

111, execuTor of The EsTaTe
of coulTer M . Shuler,
Deceased .

CASE NO. 22856 Final
AccounT of Genevieve G.
Harvey, ExecuTrix of !he
Eslale of Edna S. HarT,
Deceased. ·
Unless exceptions are
filed lhereto1 said accounts
will be for nearing before
said CourT on The 28Th day
of March, 1980, aT which
1ime said accounts will be
considered and continued

from day To day unTil
finally disposed of.
Any person lnleresled
may tile wrll1en excepTions
To said accounTs or To mat·
ters perTaining to The
less Than five days prior To
The dale seT for hearing.
Rober! E. Buck
JUDGE
Common Pleas
CourT, Probate
Division ,
Meigs
CounTy, Ohio
28, He

not attempt talks today until you
ere prepared 10 give the vour
undivided attention. Lack of con.
centfltiOn COUld CIUH BHOfl.

several benerlc:lal alliances in
·order to accomplish dltfarent

go ala.
PIICII (FQ. :ZO.Ihrch 20)

making lmpulalve buya. Choose

Don 't Jet anyone push you Into

what Ilea ~ IO&lt; you In the
fOllOwing your Olr1hdly by

shopping spree tOday, be wary of
)'OUr Items only after making

comparlsona.
LEO (July 23-Aut. 22) Don't be
dlscour•ged today If you're aubtected to a tew false at•r1a. Once
~get In Dear. y-ou 'll be·(lble, to
correct 8!1-riler mlstak:es.

VIIOO (Aut. 21-lopt. 22) Jump-

..ooing for )'OUr copy or AatroGraph L.tter. Mall $1 for •ach to

Ing to conc:~llona could cause
you unneceuary problems
today. Aeterve your Judgment till

City Stotion 1 N.Y. 10019. Be sure
to opeclfy Dff'lh dill.

you have full command or all the
facts.

Aetro-Graph, Box 489, Radio

Mill (IIIICIII1-Aprll 11) If ro!i
.,.,mft
outlkM dlverllona to g•In
upper hand, lhe day will not

tfMI

bo u produc:ttv. 11 H lhoukl bo.

Focus on pract~ .ncte.vora.
,
TAUIIUI (April :.Mer 20) "'
&amp;he morning hourt yoUr mate~

..., bo 1 •rlftt diffiCUlt to get
-.g wllh. H-w. he or lhe

_ , bo quickly piiCited

-llghloflhe iaaueo.

~ you

r

LIIIRA (hpt 23-0ct. 23) Conditions are rather unusual fOr you
tOday In that you should be able
to tum an unprofitable attuallon

.........

Into something gainful. Use your

ai:ORI'IO (0&lt;:1. - · 22)
Don't M afrakj to go to fr'-ndl

tOdiY for . help with tomelhlng
you cannot do on your own.
TMJr luck will ruq oft on you.

HOOF HOLLOW, English

698 3290 .

Bording

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western

booTs. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00 .
RIS ING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Cali 367-0:192.

Found : Black and white
hound with brown face ,
I ingering 4 days, Out·
chtown Hill . Phone 992·

7480 .

HILLCREST

Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor ·oufdoor facilities .

GET VALUABLE !raining

Also
AKC
regisTered
Dobermans . 614·4.16·7795.

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

!he eligibiliTy list al 9922156 or 992-2157 .
RN OR LPN, full lime. 3·
11 :30 and 11 To 7::W. Pari
lime RN or LPN , 11 To 7::W.
Cali Mr. Zidian at Pomeroy
HealTh Care CenTer, Mon-

Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required . 992·

62611, noon -7 p.m.
Male AKC Doberman. Pinscher, 9 monThs old. MosT
of shoTs. $150. 742·2523.

To 3 p.m., ne•T 3 weeks at
Steamboat Inn, Racine.
Mature individua-ls with
recent work experience.
Occasional hourly work, ·
weekdays, 9·5, physical in·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, RouTe 33, norTh of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call

992·7479.

RENTER ' S asSisTance for
Senior Citizens in VIllage
Manor apls. Cali 992-7787 .

ventorying and verifying
serialized merchandise at
retail stores in Middleport_

1venchek, Box 105029,
Alianla, GA. 30348 .
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameTer 10" on largesT
end. $12 p·er !on. Bundled
slab. $10 per Ton . Delivered
To Ohio PalleT Co., Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.
OLD

FURNITURE,

ice

boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc ., complete

households. WriTe M .D.
Miller. RI. 4, Pomeroy or
call992·77611.
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anvlhing. See or call Rulh

2 unfurnished apls .• Mid·
dleporl, 1 unfurnished apl.,
Pomeroy .
S150 plus
securiTy pius ulllilies. 992·
7511.

For Sale
COAL,
LIMESTONE,
sand,

gravel,

calcium

chloride, ferTilizer, dog
food, and all Types of sail .
Excelsior Sail Works, inc.,
"E. Main 51 ., Pomeroy, 9923891.

Now acceping logs a! our
lOll yard 7::W-3:30 week·
days. High prices for good
qualify lOllS with a limiTed
of

low

grade.

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,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.
WanTed to buy: a newer
car, to lake over paymenTs.
742·:W80.

alternators -

power

own the best

- buY Winpower. Call513·
788·2589.
GOOD CONDITIONED
hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.
Phone992-7201 or992·3309.
FOR THE
Februarv.

monTh of
Drehei 's
Ceramics - greenware 30
Pet. off. Glazes 20 Pel. oil .
59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,
OH . 992-2751.
HospiTal bed compleTe wllh
rails. $275. 992·61122.
33 acres, 3 miles from
Chester . $15,000. 985·4349.

Kenwood model 11 -3 sTereo
receiver, 150 watt. Pioneer

CT·F 9191 casselle" deck.
Pioneer PL 5-30 turnTable.
2 Kenwood 8-88 D speakers.
$2,000.614-667-64.411.

DIS .· UNT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack

Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auTo.,
P.S. , P.B .• Topper. posi·Traction fronT and rear. 9854339.

'-:-:--:-:-:--:-:----::--:Mobt'le Homes Sale
•
1973 . FairpoinT, 14X65 2
bedroom

1977 Ponllac Grand Prix
SJ, P.s,, P.B.. A.C., power
seats and locks, AM·FM
stereo 8·lrack, landau lop,
special Trim and Inferior,
24,000 acTual, good mpg,
must be seen to be appreciaTed, must sell. BesT
offer. Call 992·6U9 afTer 5
p.m.
1977 Cellca GT, low
mileage, 5-speed, A.C.,
AM-FM sTereo, CB radio,
new radial Tires. ExcellenT
mileage. 992·7201.
1977 Chevy 4x4 for sale
trade. 992·W9 .

1971 Cameron, Ux65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr. , baTh '12
1971 Shakespear, Ux65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12xS2, 2 bedr.
1968 FleetwOOd 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. :W4-675·,j,j24.

NEW

GU!Ier

work,

Real Estate for Sale
SPLIT LEVEL brick home.
7 rooms, 2 blths. Full

basement, garage and car-

port. Electric heat. 5 acres
Tillable ·
land .
3
'greenhouses, Iorge pole
shed. Located Mar Raclhe
1978 Ford 4x4 F -150. , · Hydro plant.. -Call' 247-3752
Custom made, AM· t:M 8·
afler4p .m.
Track, CB . 19,000 miles. 992·
2656.5
Approxlmtely 4 acres near
MelliS Mines. Ready for
1973 Forq Maverick, very QUICk trailer setup cir ldeai
gQOd condition, small V·8; building siTe. P~one 698·
auTo., good tires . 55,000 ac· 6306.
tual .mlles. 985·-Q46.
House for sale;Pomeroy: 6
1977 Dodge Aspen·, AM-FM rooms. 1'1&gt; baths, paneld,
radio, A.C., S2600. 1974 carpe.led, lots of con·
ChevroleT Monte · Carlo, veniences. Reasonable. see
, AM·FM rlldlo, S-track Tape; to appreclte. PhOne m 5566.
.
Call after 5 p.m ., 247-2813.

HOW "THE.MINEFl:.

down

spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and

Middleport, 0.
AuTomotive Repair
Open 9·6 Mon.thru Sat.
AddiTional Hours
By Appointmet~l

HO~D

If, CLAUDIA!
· THINK I HEAR
SOI\\!:OI&lt;JIO 6ACK
THI'RE, DON'T
VOIH

driveway•.
(FREE ESTIMATES!
Reduced Willttr Rates

FEl-T.

A 5WELL GUY•
I HAfE TO DO THI$! 6UT
I (;Uf''5 THER10'5 NO
OfHER WAVl

Hi?'!JI !JIUCH

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

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates
"Don't CUSS· Call us"
l-18·(pd.l

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter

work,
walks
driveways .

and

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Asking jusl$5,000.
2.90 ACRES - Setup lor

RACINE,O.
992-612Sor
992·7314
1·28·1 mo.

w i th

driveway , L .C. lap and
plenty of level garden
land .

3 ACRES Near
Porliand-Oid Town . All
cleared ready lo build
on . Jusl$5,500.
POMEROY River-

12-28·~ .

BILL'S AUTO
REPAIR

baTh. nat gas furnace

PARTS
FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

8111 5 Mon. lhru Fri .
Rl. 3, Racille, SR 124
949-2422
1·:W·pd.

land. Ask ing $32,500.
BUY NOW WHILE
THERE
STILL IS
SOME MONEY FOR A
LOAN. CALL 992-3325
OR 992-3876.

Housing
Heaa uarters

HAIR' STYLING
MenprWomen
by Diann Jewell
at

SALON

:rv

608 E.
- Mt&gt;.IN
..
POMFl&gt;tW.O.
992-2259
CHESTER
Sl'rlali
farm, 2.5 acres, remodel ed home, 2 bed ., buill·in

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

J&amp;L BLOWN

bedrooms, large lot,
some carpeting and

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

,PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
w.,

Hours 9-1 M.,
F.
Other times by appoinT·
men!.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomer~y.O.

CALL992-7S44

RfAW{, ln'J I..Otl0
HAVe 'txJ ~~ ft..T IT?

Jt&lt;;T 1.001&lt;11-l'... I'M
14-DA.'f' seAU~T'(~rr-1

Jrd St. in ·
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992·3752
or 992·3743

tQ

WEST
+8 3
•J8 2
t JIO 7 3
K 10 65

.I H. L WRITESEL
gutter

••TIRI! TRACHS ON II!{
TERRITORY'? I'IHO IIOULD
COi'le HI!RI!'? II!{ LAND
iG MMOUS FOR BEING
WORTHLESS!

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
'149-2862
1·22-lfc

ROUSH

PERHAPS IT
IS SOMEONE
COME TO
RESCUE THE
CHILD ...

- I'IARBUCKS
HIMSELF?!...

'"IF SAND'!
50IIEONE'5 COMiiol'
AFTER ME, WE DON'T MEED
A CRYSTAL BALL T' FIG1URE
OUT WHO IT WOULD

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
• InsulaTion

tAK8614l

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

~~-:...

ee, "DADDY'' ···

Garage

new subdivision, lovely
area, rustic seting . Start

a! $3,500.00.
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK - GOOd

• Storm Doors
eS!orm Windows
• Replacemelll
Windows
Free Estimate

location,

gOOd tot, full basemenT.
equipped kitchen, air
conditioning, forced air

heal . A sTeal
$19,900.00.
REMODELED -

2

2·17·1 mo .

story home overlooking
the river, 3 bedrooms,
rec. room, full base-

Real Estate for Sale

ment, equipped kiTchen.
$35,000.00.
SEE YOU AT OUR
"OPEN
HOUSE"
ANOTHER SERVICE
OF CLELAND REALTY!

REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Roger &amp; Dollie Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

COUNTRY HOME Wl)h
sTocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

carpeted. 3 To 17 acres
available. Locllled approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33. 446-23S9 afTer 6.

GASOUNE ALLEY

~.oocouple
Spo~~sored
by. Music

It.'s not Iike he's oone for qood,
Ph4llis! We can visit him!

Ulltlmlted. Cllapero11es
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages permitted. For further In·
fo., call "2·6058.
2·28-1 mp. pd.

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forme

REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.

'

Ml ODLEPORT - Three bedroom, 1'12 balh, nice lot
I us! one block from heart of !own. $25,000.
POMEROY- On Lincoln His.- Two bedroom and
balh, full basemen!, gas furnace, sTorm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance II you need II. 517,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Large double corner lol on
Locus! 51., Three bedroom, 2 bath, garage &amp;
workshop. $25,000.
.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem STreet. Nice corner loT. S'l'lOO.OO.
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT- Hysell Run Road

5 acres. S7 ,000.

a nice loT, $11,600.
LOT IN Ml DDLEPORT- We will build a house on
lt\is one 11 you choose - south Second Ave.

NON MAW DON'T 6ET
ALL RILED UP . IT WM
ONLY A HARMLB:;
GAME: OF GIN
RUMMY .

992·3795

CALL 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R-HO. 992-3731"
BILL CH"I,.LDS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992·2449

-------·
---------..
·-···
IXMNINGCHILDs AGENCY INt
,_

· I~RANCE ·

RN ,OHIQ SINCE

SERVING SOU11t

ARE YOU PAY I G TOO ' MUCH? DO
YO~ !'fAVE THE C~VERAGE?
·
•·

FOR AU YOUR ·I~RMCE NEEDS
CAll

us.

.
992-2342 ·
.DOWNINGOfiLDS
M
. .AGENCY,. INC.. .

WANTED: housecleanlflll
·position, 1 or 2 days ~
we•k, reliable, her·
dworklng,
clean
and
honest, can supply referen·
en to character. PI~•
call843•4951 enytlme. Hive
dependable trantpOrtatll!f'.
'

,l,

_3825.

S &amp; G Carpet Cleenlflll,
Steam cleaned. . F.ree
est I mate.
Reasonebre
rates. SCotChgUird. 992-

·•

Wlli care for eldetly In our' . ----~------------J
hOme, trained and ex·
WALL PAPERING 8nd
perlencad. 992·7314.·
,llallllll!ll. 74·232t. -

Wlnttcl -10 do: housework.
Dependable. Haw Iran· '
~rt§.llon . 843-2282.
•WILL HAUL WATER. 992·
5858.
.
Wllll:ere for chlldr111'1n my
1101'11• 1 In Juppen Pll!nl
area. 614-667:3723.

I

NG •. Lana
P'1ontt num;
Strvlce'. to

ber,
schools
1965.

hof'111 · IInce
. .'
'

ctl,

:

"*,I

tMother

1 KeeMeu

of man
5Ground
of claim

AJ
.

• Had on
7 Feminine
suffix
8 Never, In

Nurenburg

Louis-

I "When do

17 Frost
18 Had cbarge
21 Toscanlnl
U Iranian's
811Ce8tor
25 Conflicting

11 New York

Dlstllnee

Yesterday'• Alllwer

we-?"

Z1 "Rock
of -"
2%Drum
flourlah
!SMug

City

14 Genuine
17 Lacking
breeding

1800Uy of
uHello,
Dolly!"
U Excise copy
zo Excise copy

32 Grand·

parental
33 Before

"booJn. bah"
3t Entreaty

Ulloundary

35 Flee

ze Resolve

3t Marsh .

so Procras-

elder

tinate

37 Cigarette

31 Show signa
Ingredient
of Ufe
38 Sooner than

ne

HARD RUDDER TO
STARBOARD, PAW!!
1H' LIGHTHOUSE

DOWN
I~

for Uvinc

IS OVER· HERE!!

2 Repudiate
3 Pledge

· Jr..+-+-+-t-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'e

'

how to work

lt:

AXYDLBAAXK
Ia

LONGFELLOW

One letter almply atanda for another, In thla aample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stncle letlers,
•r.oatrophea, the length a11d formation of the .worda are all
h ats. Eaeh day tlie eode letters are dUlerent. •·

ClYPTOQUOTES- .
'

NO, Mli.AM, I ·

DON'T KNOW TI1E
ANSWER, EITHER

~~--~--~--M
O ·F
-=~
- ---=~---

I HAVE A

SUGGESTION ...

i

t
f

W~l(

IT, AND SEND OUT
FOR A PIZZA?

i

GSFZYI
WSM
GSF

J

l

~

I~

- -

•·

JMSFEND

IUQJ

DON'T WE FORGET

--;""7"---,....,--·

CARPENTER
~
comp~ '!""'CIIIIng by
Tromtn, 7..·2328. Rtfet'~ •

WORK

10019.}

DUae
ftEzpunce ,
t1
lbe
lmot
a Loheugrin'a
wife

•

·

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

dresa

_ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR S-perl,
toasters, Irons, 111 smau
appliances. L11wn rnoww.
Ne!(t to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, m-

·

At six diamonds the Prof
would lead a heart to the ace,
ruff a heart, lead a trump to
the queen, ruff another heart
to clear the suit, play ace-king
and another diamond and
eventually discard a club and
a spade on good hearts.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

32Snake
35 Milchlef·
llllker

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

6309 or 7-12·2211.

2t

• Chief,
In Italla
II Bombay
belle's

WILL HAUL limestone ana
gravel . Also, lime haullflll
and spreadlflll. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2-45.5.

BRADFORD, AuctioneD,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. raclnt,
01110, Crill Bradford.

Ser.v )ce$ Offered

Pass

river

IN STOCK for Immediate
deiiYttry: various llzn of
Purebred very gentle · pool kits. Do-lt-yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
collie, been spayed, all
Bumgardner Sales, In&lt;;.
shots.. Lonesome
for
992·5724.
children. 985-4222.

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

Pass

28 Plnt-alzed
Zl Stallone's
nlcillame

· · o111eaway

-

SYRACUSE~ Old house on

Pass

forces

2·25·1 mo.
SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
se~lce,
all
makes.
992: 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aul~orlzed . Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

2+
3t
3 NT

n Europellll

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
Pomeroy, Oh.

Pass
Pass
Pass

5 Binding Item
ID Pennlllalon
u Ancient
Greek colony
13Hamllton
mystery play
u Comedian,

Tri-County .
Bookkeeping.
Service

618 E. Main

2•
3+
3•

ACROSS

II
FINANCING-VA-FHA LOANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
REFINANCE.
OR
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
11 E. STATE , ATHENS.
61H92·:W51.

Pass
Pass
Pass

by THOMAS JOSEPH

"Disco Lighting"

-.. I Made It Myself"
.... crafts are lull!
' - - - - - - 2 · 1 8·1 mo

S.utb

,.

ti£'MA

Admission S2.00 Single

~~

PH. 992-2772

a!

East

1.

The Professor won the first
trick with the queen of spades
and gave the hand an unusually long period of study before
making the surprising lead of
the ace of diamonds. He continued with the king.
,.,East showed out and the
next play was a heart to

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room
E. Main St. Pomeroy, o.
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:DGTII11:30

~.tc4U4

JAMES KEESEE

Nortb

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4·:W-1fc

macrame classes.

West

Opening lead:+ 8

'• mile off Rt; 7 by-pass .
on ST. Rt. 124 Toward
Rutland.

-Now
carryjng
chocolaTe wrappers and
molds tor candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special rates lor
organizations

News 17.

1:35-Movle "I Saw WhaT You Did"
17; 2:05-News 13.
3: 1Q-Movle " Wild Seed" 17; 5: 1QMaverick 17.

"I didn't," was the reply.
" But I was in three notrump
and would only be sure of my
contract if diamonds were 3-2
and I would have to clear the
suit while I still had a spade
entry."
The Professor was probably
feehng so happy about his success that he didn't bother to
suggest to the student that six
diamonds would make and
that the student might well
have tried four diamonds over
the Prof's three notrump.

+Q9

THIM~S

Roger Hysell

•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
2-24·1 mo.

.

+AQ2

cleaning a11d painting.
All work guaranTeed.

2·14-llc

+9

+J8 3

•s

All types root work, new

Free Estimates
388·9759

•Kn
SOUTH

or repair gutters ancl

downspouts·,

EAST
+KJi164

+

ROOFING

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

Black Sheep Squadron 8; 1:30-

dummy's 10. East took his
king and cleared the spades,
but since hearts broke, the
Professor wound up with five
hearts, two spades, two diamonds and a club and one
over· trick.
"How did you know that
diamonds wouldn't break?"
asked the student.

NORTH
2·28·80
+10 5
.AQI0164

QJ

OJ

HOKJG

J UD

YMODBDR

WSM

ED
'
YMODBDR

IQH

GSF

·IS M N R;

JS

oz

GSFJU

SZ~ .

FZOAFD

PM D Q J F MD .

N Q F M Q.
USE H-S Z
Yetterday'a Cryploquote: AFTER A GOOD' PINNER, ON£

FORGIVE ANYBODY,
'-· - . RELATIVES:-::(ISCAR WILDE
CAN

C)
•

7:30- In Search Of 6 ; Joker's Wild 8;
Dick
Cavell 33 ;
College
BaskeTball 10; Nashville on the
Road 13; Country Roads 15;
MacNeil -Lehrer ReporT 20.
8:00-Mork &amp; M indy 6, 13; Buck
Rogers 15 ; Wallons 8; Bill
Moyers' Journa l 20,33 .
8: 30-Benson 6, 13.
9:1»--Qulncy 3,15; Barnev Miller
6, 13 ; Scrup l es 8; DuPont Columbia Broadcast Journalism
Awards 20,33; College Basket ·
bali 17 .
9:30-Soap 6,13; Scruples 10.
10 :00-NBC News Special 3,15 .
11 :00-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15,20; Las!
of !he Wild 17; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33 .
11 : 30-Tonlghl 3, 15; ABC News
Special 6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC
Ca ptloned News 33; Movie
" Tony -Rome" 10; Movie " You
Can'! Run Away from II" 17.
11 :45-Pollce Woman 6,13; 12 :55Barella 6, 13.
1 : ~Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: 1s-

Slam hand badly underbid

2-18·1 mo.

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

INSULATION

remodeling. $16.200.00.
BUILDING SITES - in

' .

PARODY

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BORN LOSER

kitchen, new bath, all

carpeted. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT - One
floor plan home , 2

.

BARREN

BRIDGE

UPHOlSTERING

CONSTRUCTION

B. A. BEAUTY

good

GNARL

lhis! - DANGEA

A&amp;H

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

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

VOLK~AGEN

4

yrs. old, 3 bedrooms, llf2

home,

(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumblas: ABBEY

Yesterday's

+A 7 4 2

view is what you have
here with 3 bedrooms,
and garage. Good condi·

down

IFREE ESTIMATES)

hilly for A·frame house.

lion for only S15,000.
SALEM CENTER -

work,

spouts, some concrete

only $12.000.
14 ACRES - Near Fork·
ed Run Park. Woods and

home

rXxxI J- r r r I rx J

MSNer:

RACINE,O.
992-6215 or
992-7314

Tbunday, Feb. Z8

beauTiful la ndscaped
yard. Only $47,500.
t2xSO MOBILE HOME
-2 bedrooms, baTh, gas

or

1978 Ford F· ISO ·cusTom
4x4, excellent condiTion.
LifT klls, AM·FM 8:lrack,
lots of extras, 21,000 miles.
Take over payments. see
Greg Grover or call 992·
5620.

GARAGE

LISTING

California
Contem porary wi1h 5.2 acrs, 3
bedrooms , 2 baths,

r-

12x611 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom.
Furnished or unfurnished.
992-6140.

t

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

RAILROAD
STREET

w. Carsey,

Auto Sales

TUXEL

.

Answer : W1th a certam teller- anger could become

furnace, Leading Cr .
water, front and back
porches. over 1 acre of

EMERGENCY

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 COSSI El MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

216 E. Second Street

formaTion, phone 614-446·
1788.

OLD COl NS, pockeT waT-

6462.

2-28·1 mo.

baThs, gas forced air

2nd, MiddleporT, OH . 9923161 .

bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Cali J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, AThens , OH. 592-

No sunday Calis

Boarding rooms for rent in
Middleport . For more in·

APPlES ~ ROME beauTy
apples al$4 per bu. Beslfor
apple buller . Call 669-3785,
FITzpaTrick Orchard, SR
689.

Gosney, antiques, 26 N.

PAYING
520.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS
PH. 949-2801

mobile

3 AND 4 RM furnished apls. Phone 992·5434.

:-...;...~-·

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY,FEBRUARY 21,1980

Ft-4A - low down payment .

FHA -· 2-1.5 graduated
payment prO',lrsm . FHA
265 subsidy program . Cali
for del ails. IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO .. 77 E.
STal e 5,1., AThens. 592-3051.

furnace and large lot fo r

For Rent

Applications now being
taken for restaurant work,
apply in person only,
Tuesday thru Friday, 10 :30

I GAADEh
I. I [_J
--.. ...

your presenT home.- CON ·
VENT IONAL · 5 Pel. down.
VA - no down paymenT .

HUMAN E
SOCIETY .
AdopT a hOmeless pet.

day through Friday, 9-5.

one letter to each square, to form
rour ordinary words.

Business Services

M ort gage
money
available. New homes, old
homes and refinancing

KENNELS ..

Help Wanted

Account

CANCER (Juno 21-Juiy 22)
Should you decide to go on a

making nuty deCisions today. II
could be agalnat your best Inter• ' •· When you think thinga out
for youreetr the resulta will be
edvantegeoui. Find out more' of

Lost: Dog, while Afghan,
reward . 8832151 . 7:30-4::W.
773-9500 aller 5 p.m .

Payment upon delivery
and sealing. Blaney Har·
dwoods, Box ~.._VIncenT,
OH 45784. 61H78·29611 .

Hobstetler, Trustee of the
TrusT under Will of Harrie
Marie Smith, Deceased.
CASE NO. 22741 Final

GEMINI (Moy 2l·Juno 20) Do

Partners are likely to pl•v verv
prominent roles In your affairs
this coming year . You may form

----,--,--- -Lost and Found

amount

(2)

Fol&gt;&lt;uory It, 1110

and Western . Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614-

Current Account of Edison

execution of the trust, not

Frid•J, Fllb. 21

GUN SHOO T EVERY
SU NDAYlPM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONL Y. RACINE
GUN CLUB .

ches, class rings, wedding

Heaven
again

Pets for Sale

byHenriArnofdtndBobLoo

Unscramble lhess four Jumbles,

Real Estate for Sale

Notices

~THAT SCRAMB~EO WORD GAME

~~~~ II&gt;

EVEN· ONE'S

•

1910 King FNtul'tl S,ndiCift, Inc.

OWN

FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 29,1980
5:45-Farm ReporT 13; 5:SQ-PTL
Club 13.
6:00-700 Club c.8; PTL Club 15;
HealTh Field 10; 6: 1o-world at
Large 17.
6:30-Kidsworld 10; News 17; 6:45Mornlng ReporT 3; A.M . Weather
33 ; 6: SO-Good Morning, WesT
Virginia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:3o-FamllyAflalr 10; 7:S5-Chuck
While ReporTs 10.
8: 00-Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave it
To Beaver 17; Sesame 51. 33.
8:30---;Romper Room 17.
9:00-Bob Brau11 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Lucy
Show 17.
9:JO-Bob NewharT 8; One Dav At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.

10:00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Jeflersons 8; Joker' s
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie"Falherisa Bachelor" 17.
10 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
520,000 Pyramid 13; Whew! 8, 10;
Andy Grlllllh 6 ; 10:55-CBS
News 8; House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
E lee. Co. 20.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame 51.
20,33.
12:00- Newscenler
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; HealTh Field 15; Love,
American STyle 17.
12 : 3Q-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Lei's Do It Again"
17; Elec. Co. 33.
1:oo-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young · &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
2:oo-Doctors 3, 15; One Life lo Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25-News 17.
2: 3D-AnoTher
World
3, 15;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3: 0Q-General
Hospital
6,13 ;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Personal Time Management 33 .
3:3Q-FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33.
4: 00-Mister CarToon 3; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Pellicoaf Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Lillie
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4: 3Q-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Mv
Three Sons 17; Mister RO',lers
20,33.
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play !he
Percenlllges 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 13; Doctor
Who 33 .
6:00-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33.
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC Newsl3;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnell6;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:1l0-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; College BaskeTball 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7: JO-Prlce Is Right 3; 3's A Crowd
6; Family Feud 10; Joker's Wild
8; Dick Cavell 33; Pop Goes The
Country 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer
ReporT 20.
, 8:oo-Movle 'Midway" 3,15; Movie
"Benjl". 6, 13; Incredible Hulk
8,10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33.
8: JO-Wall Street Week 20,33.
9: oo-Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10; Capitol
Beat 33; College Basketball 17;
Free To Choose 20.
9:JO-Amerlcan Short Story 33; .
9: 50-Andy Keutmen 6, 13.
· 10:00-Dailas 8, 10; News 20.
·lO:JG-Over Easv 20; Murder Most
English 33.
10:5S.:.Polltlcal Progr•m 6,13.
11 :oo-News 3,6,8, tO, 13,15; Last of
the · Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20.
11: 3G-Tonight 3, 15; 4BC" News
Special 6,13; ¥ovle '.'~Iller with
Two FAcn" 8; ABC Captioned
News33; Movie "The· Vengeance
of Fu .Manchu" 10; Movie
"Creek In the World" 11.
11: ~harlle' s Angels 6; Movie
"The Delphi &amp;ureau" 13.
12 :oo-Oevld Susskind 33; 12:55~BI6 .
.
r
.
1:oo-Midlllght Special . 3, 15; Movie
"War otthe Sat.lllt.s" 10; 1:30News 17; 1:.&amp;-News 13.
1: 55-Movle "Jivaro" 17; 2:30. News 3"; .4:30-Movle "Mantlsh"
17.

'

.

�'

10--The Daily Sentinel, Middl eport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 28,1980

,

\

1f fl\}ruf f'rul}

DICK TRACY

Your Best Buys A-re Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Notices

WANT AD

CHARGES

GU N

Volu nteer

Every Satur day. 6:30p.m .

1$ Words or Under

Ca.sb

I day
2daya
3days
&amp;days

1.00
1.50

Chara:e
1.~

uo

1.10

2.25

3.110

3.7S

Each word over the minimlln
15 words is 4 cents per word per
day. Ads nanning other than conaecutJ,.e dlys wiU be charged at
the 1 day rate.

In memory, Card of ThanQ
and Obituary: I cents per word ,
s:too minlmum. Cash in advance.
Mobile Home 5ales and Yard
sales are accepted only wtUI
cash with order. ~ cent char~~:e
for alb carrying Box Nwnber ln
Care of The Sentinel.

A1 their bu i lding in Bashan .

Factory choke guns only .

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

Corn

Hollow Gun Club.

Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249

ATTENTION :
(IM PORTANT TO YOU J Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collectibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
guns. pocket watches and
coin collections. Ca ll 614·

767 -3167 or 557·3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(A NY
AMOUNT). DON 'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 -992 - 5113,
BROWN'S.

The Pultliaher reserves the
rt,ht to edit or reject any alb

deeml!'d

Racine
Fire
Dept .

SHOOT .

objecti onal. · The

Publisher will not be responsible

lor more than one incorrect tnsertion .
Phflne !m.-2lllfi

NOTICE

highest pri ces
possible for gold and silVer
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
1

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADIJNES

PAY

Shop, MiddleporT.
GOLD,
SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SiLVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHEC K WITH
OSBY (QSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992· 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

Mllnday

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thruFriday
4P.M.
the day before publication
Sunday

4P.M.
Friday afternoon

Dianne Lee has joined the

In Memory
To Mom. on your birThday :
Happy BirThday, Mom
I cannot send a birthday
card
Your hands I cannot tou ch

BUT GOd Will give ThiS
message
To the one 1miss so much
Dear God, please lake !his
message
To our living mother up

above

And lei I her how much we
miss her
And give her all our love

She bid no one a lasT
farewell

She said goodbye To none
The Heavenly gales jus!
opened up
And a loving said "Come"

sTall al Kay's BeauTy
Salon, MiddleporT. Phone
992-2725

La Mar Beauty Salon, 101
W. 2nd St. , Pomeroy . New
day and hours. Tuesday
lhru Friday, 9 ! ill ? Salur·
days, 9 !iii 5. Cali for apointment at 992· 7056, ask for
Terri. lmoJean or Gerri .
Walk· inswelcome .
Meigs Co. Fish and Game
Club regular meeting,

SaTurday, March lsi. There
wi II be elecTion cWollicers.
Supper and refreshments
will be served. All' mem-

bers urged to atlend.

Although her sui is now at
rest ·
And free from care and
pain

Automatic coin operated
water sales has been lnshtlled . Racine, corner Jrd
and Vine for truck water as
of March 1. Uses quarters

The world would seem like

only .

11 1 could have her back
II broke my hear! To loser
her
But she did not go alone
For part of me went with

her
The day God called her
home. Mrs. E I izabelh
Stewart family.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE
· DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF AC ·
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
0

PUBLIC NOTICE

Public water supplies are

requIred
by
Stale
RegulaT ion, ChapTer 374581, Ohio Admlnislralive
Code, to rouTinely moniTor
the mlcrobloiO',llcal qualiTy
of the drinking water in

Their distribuTion system .
The sampling conducTed
for

the

Pomeroy

water

sysTem indicated !hal The

maximum
permissible
microbiological
con ·
taminant level specified in

The "Ohio Adm1nlstralive
Code" was e.ceeded in 2
out of 11 samples collecTed
in July, 1979.
Coliform bacTeria are
used as an indicator of the
microbiological quality of

drinking waTer. While !he
coliform bacTeria Themselves may posT no threaT
to h~N~Ith , their . presence
does Indicate that a source

of conlaminalion exisTs
somewhere In the waTer

system . Such an indication

is adequaTe juslillcalion for
an invesTigation To deTer·
mine the nature and scope
of the possible hearth

hazard.
1-n ·
A subsequenT
vesllgalion and addlllonai
sampling IndicaTe !hat any
problem has been correc·

led.

Board of
Public Affairs
(2 ) 28, 6, 13, 3tc

H

I

0

AccounTs and vouchers of

the
following
named
fiduciaries have been filed
in the Probate Court, Meigs

CounTy, Ohio, for approval
and settlement :

CASE NO. 21,910 Final
AccO\Jnt of I. carson crow,

Guardian of Herman M .
Jarrell, an Incompetent

person.
CASE NO. 21042 Firs!

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

of

Lester

P.

Manuel, ExecuTor of The
Eslale of Paul Manuel,
Deceased .

CASE NO. 22681 Final
Account of Dorotha L .
Neutzllng, Executrix of !he
Eslale of Richard H. Neul·
zling, DeceaSed.
CASE NO. 22391 Final
Account of Fred W. Crow,

111, execuTor of The EsTaTe
of coulTer M . Shuler,
Deceased .

CASE NO. 22856 Final
AccounT of Genevieve G.
Harvey, ExecuTrix of !he
Eslale of Edna S. HarT,
Deceased. ·
Unless exceptions are
filed lhereto1 said accounts
will be for nearing before
said CourT on The 28Th day
of March, 1980, aT which
1ime said accounts will be
considered and continued

from day To day unTil
finally disposed of.
Any person lnleresled
may tile wrll1en excepTions
To said accounTs or To mat·
ters perTaining to The
less Than five days prior To
The dale seT for hearing.
Rober! E. Buck
JUDGE
Common Pleas
CourT, Probate
Division ,
Meigs
CounTy, Ohio
28, He

not attempt talks today until you
ere prepared 10 give the vour
undivided attention. Lack of con.
centfltiOn COUld CIUH BHOfl.

several benerlc:lal alliances in
·order to accomplish dltfarent

go ala.
PIICII (FQ. :ZO.Ihrch 20)

making lmpulalve buya. Choose

Don 't Jet anyone push you Into

what Ilea ~ IO&lt; you In the
fOllOwing your Olr1hdly by

shopping spree tOday, be wary of
)'OUr Items only after making

comparlsona.
LEO (July 23-Aut. 22) Don't be
dlscour•ged today If you're aubtected to a tew false at•r1a. Once
~get In Dear. y-ou 'll be·(lble, to
correct 8!1-riler mlstak:es.

VIIOO (Aut. 21-lopt. 22) Jump-

..ooing for )'OUr copy or AatroGraph L.tter. Mall $1 for •ach to

Ing to conc:~llona could cause
you unneceuary problems
today. Aeterve your Judgment till

City Stotion 1 N.Y. 10019. Be sure
to opeclfy Dff'lh dill.

you have full command or all the
facts.

Aetro-Graph, Box 489, Radio

Mill (IIIICIII1-Aprll 11) If ro!i
.,.,mft
outlkM dlverllona to g•In
upper hand, lhe day will not

tfMI

bo u produc:ttv. 11 H lhoukl bo.

Focus on pract~ .ncte.vora.
,
TAUIIUI (April :.Mer 20) "'
&amp;he morning hourt yoUr mate~

..., bo 1 •rlftt diffiCUlt to get
-.g wllh. H-w. he or lhe

_ , bo quickly piiCited

-llghloflhe iaaueo.

~ you

r

LIIIRA (hpt 23-0ct. 23) Conditions are rather unusual fOr you
tOday In that you should be able
to tum an unprofitable attuallon

.........

Into something gainful. Use your

ai:ORI'IO (0&lt;:1. - · 22)
Don't M afrakj to go to fr'-ndl

tOdiY for . help with tomelhlng
you cannot do on your own.
TMJr luck will ruq oft on you.

HOOF HOLLOW, English

698 3290 .

Bording

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western

booTs. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00 .
RIS ING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Cali 367-0:192.

Found : Black and white
hound with brown face ,
I ingering 4 days, Out·
chtown Hill . Phone 992·

7480 .

HILLCREST

Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor ·oufdoor facilities .

GET VALUABLE !raining

Also
AKC
regisTered
Dobermans . 614·4.16·7795.

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

!he eligibiliTy list al 9922156 or 992-2157 .
RN OR LPN, full lime. 3·
11 :30 and 11 To 7::W. Pari
lime RN or LPN , 11 To 7::W.
Cali Mr. Zidian at Pomeroy
HealTh Care CenTer, Mon-

Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required . 992·

62611, noon -7 p.m.
Male AKC Doberman. Pinscher, 9 monThs old. MosT
of shoTs. $150. 742·2523.

To 3 p.m., ne•T 3 weeks at
Steamboat Inn, Racine.
Mature individua-ls with
recent work experience.
Occasional hourly work, ·
weekdays, 9·5, physical in·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, RouTe 33, norTh of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call

992·7479.

RENTER ' S asSisTance for
Senior Citizens in VIllage
Manor apls. Cali 992-7787 .

ventorying and verifying
serialized merchandise at
retail stores in Middleport_

1venchek, Box 105029,
Alianla, GA. 30348 .
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameTer 10" on largesT
end. $12 p·er !on. Bundled
slab. $10 per Ton . Delivered
To Ohio PalleT Co., Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.
OLD

FURNITURE,

ice

boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc ., complete

households. WriTe M .D.
Miller. RI. 4, Pomeroy or
call992·77611.
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anvlhing. See or call Rulh

2 unfurnished apls .• Mid·
dleporl, 1 unfurnished apl.,
Pomeroy .
S150 plus
securiTy pius ulllilies. 992·
7511.

For Sale
COAL,
LIMESTONE,
sand,

gravel,

calcium

chloride, ferTilizer, dog
food, and all Types of sail .
Excelsior Sail Works, inc.,
"E. Main 51 ., Pomeroy, 9923891.

Now acceping logs a! our
lOll yard 7::W-3:30 week·
days. High prices for good
qualify lOllS with a limiTed
of

low

grade.

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,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.
WanTed to buy: a newer
car, to lake over paymenTs.
742·:W80.

alternators -

power

own the best

- buY Winpower. Call513·
788·2589.
GOOD CONDITIONED
hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.
Phone992-7201 or992·3309.
FOR THE
Februarv.

monTh of
Drehei 's
Ceramics - greenware 30
Pet. off. Glazes 20 Pel. oil .
59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,
OH . 992-2751.
HospiTal bed compleTe wllh
rails. $275. 992·61122.
33 acres, 3 miles from
Chester . $15,000. 985·4349.

Kenwood model 11 -3 sTereo
receiver, 150 watt. Pioneer

CT·F 9191 casselle" deck.
Pioneer PL 5-30 turnTable.
2 Kenwood 8-88 D speakers.
$2,000.614-667-64.411.

DIS .· UNT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack

Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auTo.,
P.S. , P.B .• Topper. posi·Traction fronT and rear. 9854339.

'-:-:--:-:-:--:-:----::--:Mobt'le Homes Sale
•
1973 . FairpoinT, 14X65 2
bedroom

1977 Ponllac Grand Prix
SJ, P.s,, P.B.. A.C., power
seats and locks, AM·FM
stereo 8·lrack, landau lop,
special Trim and Inferior,
24,000 acTual, good mpg,
must be seen to be appreciaTed, must sell. BesT
offer. Call 992·6U9 afTer 5
p.m.
1977 Cellca GT, low
mileage, 5-speed, A.C.,
AM-FM sTereo, CB radio,
new radial Tires. ExcellenT
mileage. 992·7201.
1977 Chevy 4x4 for sale
trade. 992·W9 .

1971 Cameron, Ux65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr. , baTh '12
1971 Shakespear, Ux65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12xS2, 2 bedr.
1968 FleetwOOd 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. :W4-675·,j,j24.

NEW

GU!Ier

work,

Real Estate for Sale
SPLIT LEVEL brick home.
7 rooms, 2 blths. Full

basement, garage and car-

port. Electric heat. 5 acres
Tillable ·
land .
3
'greenhouses, Iorge pole
shed. Located Mar Raclhe
1978 Ford 4x4 F -150. , · Hydro plant.. -Call' 247-3752
Custom made, AM· t:M 8·
afler4p .m.
Track, CB . 19,000 miles. 992·
2656.5
Approxlmtely 4 acres near
MelliS Mines. Ready for
1973 Forq Maverick, very QUICk trailer setup cir ldeai
gQOd condition, small V·8; building siTe. P~one 698·
auTo., good tires . 55,000 ac· 6306.
tual .mlles. 985·-Q46.
House for sale;Pomeroy: 6
1977 Dodge Aspen·, AM-FM rooms. 1'1&gt; baths, paneld,
radio, A.C., S2600. 1974 carpe.led, lots of con·
ChevroleT Monte · Carlo, veniences. Reasonable. see
, AM·FM rlldlo, S-track Tape; to appreclte. PhOne m 5566.
.
Call after 5 p.m ., 247-2813.

HOW "THE.MINEFl:.

down

spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and

Middleport, 0.
AuTomotive Repair
Open 9·6 Mon.thru Sat.
AddiTional Hours
By Appointmet~l

HO~D

If, CLAUDIA!
· THINK I HEAR
SOI\\!:OI&lt;JIO 6ACK
THI'RE, DON'T
VOIH

driveway•.
(FREE ESTIMATES!
Reduced Willttr Rates

FEl-T.

A 5WELL GUY•
I HAfE TO DO THI$! 6UT
I (;Uf''5 THER10'5 NO
OfHER WAVl

Hi?'!JI !JIUCH

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

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates
"Don't CUSS· Call us"
l-18·(pd.l

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter

work,
walks
driveways .

and

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Asking jusl$5,000.
2.90 ACRES - Setup lor

RACINE,O.
992-612Sor
992·7314
1·28·1 mo.

w i th

driveway , L .C. lap and
plenty of level garden
land .

3 ACRES Near
Porliand-Oid Town . All
cleared ready lo build
on . Jusl$5,500.
POMEROY River-

12-28·~ .

BILL'S AUTO
REPAIR

baTh. nat gas furnace

PARTS
FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

8111 5 Mon. lhru Fri .
Rl. 3, Racille, SR 124
949-2422
1·:W·pd.

land. Ask ing $32,500.
BUY NOW WHILE
THERE
STILL IS
SOME MONEY FOR A
LOAN. CALL 992-3325
OR 992-3876.

Housing
Heaa uarters

HAIR' STYLING
MenprWomen
by Diann Jewell
at

SALON

:rv

608 E.
- Mt&gt;.IN
..
POMFl&gt;tW.O.
992-2259
CHESTER
Sl'rlali
farm, 2.5 acres, remodel ed home, 2 bed ., buill·in

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

J&amp;L BLOWN

bedrooms, large lot,
some carpeting and

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

,PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
w.,

Hours 9-1 M.,
F.
Other times by appoinT·
men!.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomer~y.O.

CALL992-7S44

RfAW{, ln'J I..Otl0
HAVe 'txJ ~~ ft..T IT?

Jt&lt;;T 1.001&lt;11-l'... I'M
14-DA.'f' seAU~T'(~rr-1

Jrd St. in ·
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992·3752
or 992·3743

tQ

WEST
+8 3
•J8 2
t JIO 7 3
K 10 65

.I H. L WRITESEL
gutter

••TIRI! TRACHS ON II!{
TERRITORY'? I'IHO IIOULD
COi'le HI!RI!'? II!{ LAND
iG MMOUS FOR BEING
WORTHLESS!

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
'149-2862
1·22-lfc

ROUSH

PERHAPS IT
IS SOMEONE
COME TO
RESCUE THE
CHILD ...

- I'IARBUCKS
HIMSELF?!...

'"IF SAND'!
50IIEONE'5 COMiiol'
AFTER ME, WE DON'T MEED
A CRYSTAL BALL T' FIG1URE
OUT WHO IT WOULD

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
• InsulaTion

tAK8614l

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

~~-:...

ee, "DADDY'' ···

Garage

new subdivision, lovely
area, rustic seting . Start

a! $3,500.00.
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK - GOOd

• Storm Doors
eS!orm Windows
• Replacemelll
Windows
Free Estimate

location,

gOOd tot, full basemenT.
equipped kitchen, air
conditioning, forced air

heal . A sTeal
$19,900.00.
REMODELED -

2

2·17·1 mo .

story home overlooking
the river, 3 bedrooms,
rec. room, full base-

Real Estate for Sale

ment, equipped kiTchen.
$35,000.00.
SEE YOU AT OUR
"OPEN
HOUSE"
ANOTHER SERVICE
OF CLELAND REALTY!

REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Roger &amp; Dollie Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

COUNTRY HOME Wl)h
sTocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

carpeted. 3 To 17 acres
available. Locllled approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33. 446-23S9 afTer 6.

GASOUNE ALLEY

~.oocouple
Spo~~sored
by. Music

It.'s not Iike he's oone for qood,
Ph4llis! We can visit him!

Ulltlmlted. Cllapero11es
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages permitted. For further In·
fo., call "2·6058.
2·28-1 mp. pd.

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forme

REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.

'

Ml ODLEPORT - Three bedroom, 1'12 balh, nice lot
I us! one block from heart of !own. $25,000.
POMEROY- On Lincoln His.- Two bedroom and
balh, full basemen!, gas furnace, sTorm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance II you need II. 517,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Large double corner lol on
Locus! 51., Three bedroom, 2 bath, garage &amp;
workshop. $25,000.
.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem STreet. Nice corner loT. S'l'lOO.OO.
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT- Hysell Run Road

5 acres. S7 ,000.

a nice loT, $11,600.
LOT IN Ml DDLEPORT- We will build a house on
lt\is one 11 you choose - south Second Ave.

NON MAW DON'T 6ET
ALL RILED UP . IT WM
ONLY A HARMLB:;
GAME: OF GIN
RUMMY .

992·3795

CALL 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R-HO. 992-3731"
BILL CH"I,.LDS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992·2449

-------·
---------..
·-···
IXMNINGCHILDs AGENCY INt
,_

· I~RANCE ·

RN ,OHIQ SINCE

SERVING SOU11t

ARE YOU PAY I G TOO ' MUCH? DO
YO~ !'fAVE THE C~VERAGE?
·
•·

FOR AU YOUR ·I~RMCE NEEDS
CAll

us.

.
992-2342 ·
.DOWNINGOfiLDS
M
. .AGENCY,. INC.. .

WANTED: housecleanlflll
·position, 1 or 2 days ~
we•k, reliable, her·
dworklng,
clean
and
honest, can supply referen·
en to character. PI~•
call843•4951 enytlme. Hive
dependable trantpOrtatll!f'.
'

,l,

_3825.

S &amp; G Carpet Cleenlflll,
Steam cleaned. . F.ree
est I mate.
Reasonebre
rates. SCotChgUird. 992-

·•

Wlli care for eldetly In our' . ----~------------J
hOme, trained and ex·
WALL PAPERING 8nd
perlencad. 992·7314.·
,llallllll!ll. 74·232t. -

Wlnttcl -10 do: housework.
Dependable. Haw Iran· '
~rt§.llon . 843-2282.
•WILL HAUL WATER. 992·
5858.
.
Wllll:ere for chlldr111'1n my
1101'11• 1 In Juppen Pll!nl
area. 614-667:3723.

I

NG •. Lana
P'1ontt num;
Strvlce'. to

ber,
schools
1965.

hof'111 · IInce
. .'
'

ctl,

:

"*,I

tMother

1 KeeMeu

of man
5Ground
of claim

AJ
.

• Had on
7 Feminine
suffix
8 Never, In

Nurenburg

Louis-

I "When do

17 Frost
18 Had cbarge
21 Toscanlnl
U Iranian's
811Ce8tor
25 Conflicting

11 New York

Dlstllnee

Yesterday'• Alllwer

we-?"

Z1 "Rock
of -"
2%Drum
flourlah
!SMug

City

14 Genuine
17 Lacking
breeding

1800Uy of
uHello,
Dolly!"
U Excise copy
zo Excise copy

32 Grand·

parental
33 Before

"booJn. bah"
3t Entreaty

Ulloundary

35 Flee

ze Resolve

3t Marsh .

so Procras-

elder

tinate

37 Cigarette

31 Show signa
Ingredient
of Ufe
38 Sooner than

ne

HARD RUDDER TO
STARBOARD, PAW!!
1H' LIGHTHOUSE

DOWN
I~

for Uvinc

IS OVER· HERE!!

2 Repudiate
3 Pledge

· Jr..+-+-+-t-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'e

'

how to work

lt:

AXYDLBAAXK
Ia

LONGFELLOW

One letter almply atanda for another, In thla aample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stncle letlers,
•r.oatrophea, the length a11d formation of the .worda are all
h ats. Eaeh day tlie eode letters are dUlerent. •·

ClYPTOQUOTES- .
'

NO, Mli.AM, I ·

DON'T KNOW TI1E
ANSWER, EITHER

~~--~--~--M
O ·F
-=~
- ---=~---

I HAVE A

SUGGESTION ...

i

t
f

W~l(

IT, AND SEND OUT
FOR A PIZZA?

i

GSFZYI
WSM
GSF

J

l

~

I~

- -

•·

JMSFEND

IUQJ

DON'T WE FORGET

--;""7"---,....,--·

CARPENTER
~
comp~ '!""'CIIIIng by
Tromtn, 7..·2328. Rtfet'~ •

WORK

10019.}

DUae
ftEzpunce ,
t1
lbe
lmot
a Loheugrin'a
wife

•

·

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

dresa

_ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR S-perl,
toasters, Irons, 111 smau
appliances. L11wn rnoww.
Ne!(t to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, m-

·

At six diamonds the Prof
would lead a heart to the ace,
ruff a heart, lead a trump to
the queen, ruff another heart
to clear the suit, play ace-king
and another diamond and
eventually discard a club and
a spade on good hearts.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

32Snake
35 Milchlef·
llllker

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

6309 or 7-12·2211.

2t

• Chief,
In Italla
II Bombay
belle's

WILL HAUL limestone ana
gravel . Also, lime haullflll
and spreadlflll. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2-45.5.

BRADFORD, AuctioneD,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. raclnt,
01110, Crill Bradford.

Ser.v )ce$ Offered

Pass

river

IN STOCK for Immediate
deiiYttry: various llzn of
Purebred very gentle · pool kits. Do-lt-yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
collie, been spayed, all
Bumgardner Sales, In&lt;;.
shots.. Lonesome
for
992·5724.
children. 985-4222.

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

Pass

28 Plnt-alzed
Zl Stallone's
nlcillame

· · o111eaway

-

SYRACUSE~ Old house on

Pass

forces

2·25·1 mo.
SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
se~lce,
all
makes.
992: 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aul~orlzed . Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

2+
3t
3 NT

n Europellll

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
Pomeroy, Oh.

Pass
Pass
Pass

5 Binding Item
ID Pennlllalon
u Ancient
Greek colony
13Hamllton
mystery play
u Comedian,

Tri-County .
Bookkeeping.
Service

618 E. Main

2•
3+
3•

ACROSS

II
FINANCING-VA-FHA LOANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
REFINANCE.
OR
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
11 E. STATE , ATHENS.
61H92·:W51.

Pass
Pass
Pass

by THOMAS JOSEPH

"Disco Lighting"

-.. I Made It Myself"
.... crafts are lull!
' - - - - - - 2 · 1 8·1 mo

S.utb

,.

ti£'MA

Admission S2.00 Single

~~

PH. 992-2772

a!

East

1.

The Professor won the first
trick with the queen of spades
and gave the hand an unusually long period of study before
making the surprising lead of
the ace of diamonds. He continued with the king.
,.,East showed out and the
next play was a heart to

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room
E. Main St. Pomeroy, o.
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:DGTII11:30

~.tc4U4

JAMES KEESEE

Nortb

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4·:W-1fc

macrame classes.

West

Opening lead:+ 8

'• mile off Rt; 7 by-pass .
on ST. Rt. 124 Toward
Rutland.

-Now
carryjng
chocolaTe wrappers and
molds tor candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special rates lor
organizations

News 17.

1:35-Movle "I Saw WhaT You Did"
17; 2:05-News 13.
3: 1Q-Movle " Wild Seed" 17; 5: 1QMaverick 17.

"I didn't," was the reply.
" But I was in three notrump
and would only be sure of my
contract if diamonds were 3-2
and I would have to clear the
suit while I still had a spade
entry."
The Professor was probably
feehng so happy about his success that he didn't bother to
suggest to the student that six
diamonds would make and
that the student might well
have tried four diamonds over
the Prof's three notrump.

+Q9

THIM~S

Roger Hysell

•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
2-24·1 mo.

.

+AQ2

cleaning a11d painting.
All work guaranTeed.

2·14-llc

+9

+J8 3

•s

All types root work, new

Free Estimates
388·9759

•Kn
SOUTH

or repair gutters ancl

downspouts·,

EAST
+KJi164

+

ROOFING

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

Black Sheep Squadron 8; 1:30-

dummy's 10. East took his
king and cleared the spades,
but since hearts broke, the
Professor wound up with five
hearts, two spades, two diamonds and a club and one
over· trick.
"How did you know that
diamonds wouldn't break?"
asked the student.

NORTH
2·28·80
+10 5
.AQI0164

QJ

OJ

HOKJG

J UD

YMODBDR

WSM

ED
'
YMODBDR

IQH

GSF

·IS M N R;

JS

oz

GSFJU

SZ~ .

FZOAFD

PM D Q J F MD .

N Q F M Q.
USE H-S Z
Yetterday'a Cryploquote: AFTER A GOOD' PINNER, ON£

FORGIVE ANYBODY,
'-· - . RELATIVES:-::(ISCAR WILDE
CAN

C)
•

7:30- In Search Of 6 ; Joker's Wild 8;
Dick
Cavell 33 ;
College
BaskeTball 10; Nashville on the
Road 13; Country Roads 15;
MacNeil -Lehrer ReporT 20.
8:00-Mork &amp; M indy 6, 13; Buck
Rogers 15 ; Wallons 8; Bill
Moyers' Journa l 20,33 .
8: 30-Benson 6, 13.
9:1»--Qulncy 3,15; Barnev Miller
6, 13 ; Scrup l es 8; DuPont Columbia Broadcast Journalism
Awards 20,33; College Basket ·
bali 17 .
9:30-Soap 6,13; Scruples 10.
10 :00-NBC News Special 3,15 .
11 :00-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15,20; Las!
of !he Wild 17; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33 .
11 : 30-Tonlghl 3, 15; ABC News
Special 6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC
Ca ptloned News 33; Movie
" Tony -Rome" 10; Movie " You
Can'! Run Away from II" 17.
11 :45-Pollce Woman 6,13; 12 :55Barella 6, 13.
1 : ~Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: 1s-

Slam hand badly underbid

2-18·1 mo.

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

INSULATION

remodeling. $16.200.00.
BUILDING SITES - in

' .

PARODY

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BORN LOSER

kitchen, new bath, all

carpeted. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT - One
floor plan home , 2

.

BARREN

BRIDGE

UPHOlSTERING

CONSTRUCTION

B. A. BEAUTY

good

GNARL

lhis! - DANGEA

A&amp;H

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

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

VOLK~AGEN

4

yrs. old, 3 bedrooms, llf2

home,

(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumblas: ABBEY

Yesterday's

+A 7 4 2

view is what you have
here with 3 bedrooms,
and garage. Good condi·

down

IFREE ESTIMATES)

hilly for A·frame house.

lion for only S15,000.
SALEM CENTER -

work,

spouts, some concrete

only $12.000.
14 ACRES - Near Fork·
ed Run Park. Woods and

home

rXxxI J- r r r I rx J

MSNer:

RACINE,O.
992-6215 or
992-7314

Tbunday, Feb. Z8

beauTiful la ndscaped
yard. Only $47,500.
t2xSO MOBILE HOME
-2 bedrooms, baTh, gas

or

1978 Ford F· ISO ·cusTom
4x4, excellent condiTion.
LifT klls, AM·FM 8:lrack,
lots of extras, 21,000 miles.
Take over payments. see
Greg Grover or call 992·
5620.

GARAGE

LISTING

California
Contem porary wi1h 5.2 acrs, 3
bedrooms , 2 baths,

r-

12x611 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom.
Furnished or unfurnished.
992-6140.

t

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

RAILROAD
STREET

w. Carsey,

Auto Sales

TUXEL

.

Answer : W1th a certam teller- anger could become

furnace, Leading Cr .
water, front and back
porches. over 1 acre of

EMERGENCY

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 COSSI El MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

216 E. Second Street

formaTion, phone 614-446·
1788.

OLD COl NS, pockeT waT-

6462.

2-28·1 mo.

baThs, gas forced air

2nd, MiddleporT, OH . 9923161 .

bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Cali J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, AThens , OH. 592-

No sunday Calis

Boarding rooms for rent in
Middleport . For more in·

APPlES ~ ROME beauTy
apples al$4 per bu. Beslfor
apple buller . Call 669-3785,
FITzpaTrick Orchard, SR
689.

Gosney, antiques, 26 N.

PAYING
520.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS
PH. 949-2801

mobile

3 AND 4 RM furnished apls. Phone 992·5434.

:-...;...~-·

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY,FEBRUARY 21,1980

Ft-4A - low down payment .

FHA -· 2-1.5 graduated
payment prO',lrsm . FHA
265 subsidy program . Cali
for del ails. IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO .. 77 E.
STal e 5,1., AThens. 592-3051.

furnace and large lot fo r

For Rent

Applications now being
taken for restaurant work,
apply in person only,
Tuesday thru Friday, 10 :30

I GAADEh
I. I [_J
--.. ...

your presenT home.- CON ·
VENT IONAL · 5 Pel. down.
VA - no down paymenT .

HUMAN E
SOCIETY .
AdopT a hOmeless pet.

day through Friday, 9-5.

one letter to each square, to form
rour ordinary words.

Business Services

M ort gage
money
available. New homes, old
homes and refinancing

KENNELS ..

Help Wanted

Account

CANCER (Juno 21-Juiy 22)
Should you decide to go on a

making nuty deCisions today. II
could be agalnat your best Inter• ' •· When you think thinga out
for youreetr the resulta will be
edvantegeoui. Find out more' of

Lost: Dog, while Afghan,
reward . 8832151 . 7:30-4::W.
773-9500 aller 5 p.m .

Payment upon delivery
and sealing. Blaney Har·
dwoods, Box ~.._VIncenT,
OH 45784. 61H78·29611 .

Hobstetler, Trustee of the
TrusT under Will of Harrie
Marie Smith, Deceased.
CASE NO. 22741 Final

GEMINI (Moy 2l·Juno 20) Do

Partners are likely to pl•v verv
prominent roles In your affairs
this coming year . You may form

----,--,--- -Lost and Found

amount

(2)

Fol&gt;&lt;uory It, 1110

and Western . Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614-

Current Account of Edison

execution of the trust, not

Frid•J, Fllb. 21

GUN SHOO T EVERY
SU NDAYlPM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONL Y. RACINE
GUN CLUB .

ches, class rings, wedding

Heaven
again

Pets for Sale

byHenriArnofdtndBobLoo

Unscramble lhess four Jumbles,

Real Estate for Sale

Notices

~THAT SCRAMB~EO WORD GAME

~~~~ II&gt;

EVEN· ONE'S

•

1910 King FNtul'tl S,ndiCift, Inc.

OWN

FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 29,1980
5:45-Farm ReporT 13; 5:SQ-PTL
Club 13.
6:00-700 Club c.8; PTL Club 15;
HealTh Field 10; 6: 1o-world at
Large 17.
6:30-Kidsworld 10; News 17; 6:45Mornlng ReporT 3; A.M . Weather
33 ; 6: SO-Good Morning, WesT
Virginia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17.
7:3o-FamllyAflalr 10; 7:S5-Chuck
While ReporTs 10.
8: 00-Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave it
To Beaver 17; Sesame 51. 33.
8:30---;Romper Room 17.
9:00-Bob Brau11 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Lucy
Show 17.
9:JO-Bob NewharT 8; One Dav At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.

10:00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Jeflersons 8; Joker' s
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie"Falherisa Bachelor" 17.
10 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
520,000 Pyramid 13; Whew! 8, 10;
Andy Grlllllh 6 ; 10:55-CBS
News 8; House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
E lee. Co. 20.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame 51.
20,33.
12:00- Newscenler
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; HealTh Field 15; Love,
American STyle 17.
12 : 3Q-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Lei's Do It Again"
17; Elec. Co. 33.
1:oo-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young · &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
2:oo-Doctors 3, 15; One Life lo Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25-News 17.
2: 3D-AnoTher
World
3, 15;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3: 0Q-General
Hospital
6,13 ;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Personal Time Management 33 .
3:3Q-FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33.
4: 00-Mister CarToon 3; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Pellicoaf Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Lillie
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4: 3Q-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Mv
Three Sons 17; Mister RO',lers
20,33.
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play !he
Percenlllges 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 13; Doctor
Who 33 .
6:00-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33.
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC Newsl3;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnell6;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:1l0-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; College BaskeTball 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7: JO-Prlce Is Right 3; 3's A Crowd
6; Family Feud 10; Joker's Wild
8; Dick Cavell 33; Pop Goes The
Country 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer
ReporT 20.
, 8:oo-Movle 'Midway" 3,15; Movie
"Benjl". 6, 13; Incredible Hulk
8,10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33.
8: JO-Wall Street Week 20,33.
9: oo-Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10; Capitol
Beat 33; College Basketball 17;
Free To Choose 20.
9:JO-Amerlcan Short Story 33; .
9: 50-Andy Keutmen 6, 13.
· 10:00-Dailas 8, 10; News 20.
·lO:JG-Over Easv 20; Murder Most
English 33.
10:5S.:.Polltlcal Progr•m 6,13.
11 :oo-News 3,6,8, tO, 13,15; Last of
the · Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20.
11: 3G-Tonight 3, 15; 4BC" News
Special 6,13; ¥ovle '.'~Iller with
Two FAcn" 8; ABC Captioned
News33; Movie "The· Vengeance
of Fu .Manchu" 10; Movie
"Creek In the World" 11.
11: ~harlle' s Angels 6; Movie
"The Delphi &amp;ureau" 13.
12 :oo-Oevld Susskind 33; 12:55~BI6 .
.
r
.
1:oo-Midlllght Special . 3, 15; Movie
"War otthe Sat.lllt.s" 10; 1:30News 17; 1:.&amp;-News 13.
1: 55-Movle "Jivaro" 17; 2:30. News 3"; .4:30-Movle "Mantlsh"
17.

'

.

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursdav. Feb. 28, 1980

Six Reye Syndrome
(Continued from page IJ
regular pattern, and occurs after a
child has had a virus, such as the nu,
chicken pox, or upper respiratory in·
fection . When a child seems to be
recovering from the virus, he begins
to vomit. He vomits steadily for
about 12 to 24 hours. The child
becomes groggy, and loses interest
in what is happening around him. He
may stagger, become confused and
begin to show personality changes,
such as being gnunpy and irritable.
The symptoms contineu and the
child may fall asleep, only to wake
up crying out and fighting the bed or
pillow Qr even his surroundings. The
irrational behavior gradually
becomes more violent as he thrashes
about wildly and screams loudly.
This may lead to a coma within
bours, and possibly death. Early
diagnosis is vitally important if
treatment is to be successful. '
If your child has had a viral infection and afterwards begins to show
symptoms of the pattern listed
above, call your doctor immediately, or take your child to an emergency room and ask if the symptoms indicate Reye's Syndrome.
J".arly Diagnosis Important
If caught early, the disease is
curable, such as the six treated
c~.ildren at Holzer Medical Center.
But if the symptoms are ignored until the child is in the latter stages of
the dlease, the child may go into a
coma and die. .
According to the National Reye's
Syndrome Foundatioo, the lethal
disease affects all organs of the
body, but especially the liver and
brain. Often, massive accumulations of fat develop in the liver along
with severe increase of pressure in
the brain.
In 1974, 379 cases of Reye's Syndrome were reported to the Center
for Diease Control. In 1978, which
was a non-epidemic nu year, 'JZ/
cases were reported, with approximately 12-15 percent of those SUI'
viving having residual brain
damage. In a restrospective study
conducted in Ohio_ by the Stae
Departmetn of Health and the
Center for Disease Control, 230 cases
were reported between 1973 and
1978. From Dec. I, 1978, to June 30,
1979, there have been an additional
64 cases. Ohio sources estimate that
each reported case represents two to
three unreported cases so that an

estimated IIXH 50 cases may h&lt;ive
occurred in 1978.
ijeye's Syndrome is now con·
sidered by some observers to be
among the ten major causes of death
in children aged on to ten years.
Therapy for the patient is directed
primariy to p~on of the brain
against irreversible damage. Bram
swelling is monitored cllnlcaUy in
mild cases and by special instrumentation in severe cases.
Drugs, transfusions, or both, are used to control brain swelling.
No Cblld Immune
The disease has been reported in
children of many races and ethnic
groups. The disease occurs between
infancy and age 19, and the average
age Is six years. The largest number
of reported cases occur in the 5 to 10
age group. The number of cases is
about the same for both sexes, and in
black children less than one year of
age, the incidence is higher, according to the National Foundation.
Reye's Syndrome appears with
greatesi frequency during January,
February and March when influenza
is most common. The peak is reached between the second week of
Febrary and the econd week of
March.
Remember, parents hsould watch
for the following symptoms, usually
in this order:
-Persistent or continuous
vomiting.
-Listiessneas (loss of pep and
energy).
-Personality change such as irritability and combativeness.
-Disorientation (unable to iden·
tify whereabouts or family
members.)
-Convulsions.
The National ·Reye's Syndrome
Foundation, Inc. of Bryan, Ohio has
pioneered the inovtl!Jlent to combat
Reye's Syndrome, and recognizes
the twD-fold urgency to educate the
general public to belp aid in early
diagnosis and to 'provide funds for
research into the cause, cure, care,
treatment and prevention of the condition.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad ~wered a call to County
Road 28 Wednesday morning for
John Anderson who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

MEETS TONIGHI'
A meelillll of Preceptor Chapter,
S!!ta Sigma Phi Sorority, wUl be .
beld at 7: 4S p.m. thia evening at the
snowfall ovemigh\.
Yesterday
Riverbollt Room ol Meigs Branch,
Southern and Eastern Local Schools
were closed due to snow and cold · Athens County Savings and Loan, W.
weather. Meigs Local Schools were · Main St., Pomeroy.
open. With the additional snow and
cold weather which created bazal' schools in the county were closed :
dous drivinl( conditions, all of the today.
SCHOOUl CLOSED

he3 ring.
.,...:--Forfeiting bonds were Mildred
Jacobs. Pomeroy, ·$30, posted on
• charK• of lailifig to yield the
Mght of way; James It Couch,
Pomeroy, $00, passing on a
double yellow line; Celeste Bush,
Middleport, $26, speeding, and
Mark Casto, · Pomeroy ,$25,
speeding.

MAYOR'SCOURT
Two defendants were fined and
four forfeited bonds in the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An·
drews Tuesday night.
.
William Eakins, Racine, was
lined $100 and costs on an intoxication charg~ , and Jeff
McKinney, no address recorded,
was fined $25 and costs, for
failing to appear for an earlier

All schools of Meigs Coun~y were
.-closed today due to a three inch

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY

29TH -

SATURDAY, MARCH 1ST

8

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - The
guerrillas holding the Dominican
Republic's embassy freed five more
women hostages this morning but
continued to hold at least 40 other
captives, 18 of them ambassadors,
including Diego C. Asencio of the
United States.
Reporters watched while four
automobiles, one of them riddled
with bullet holes, drove the women
to safety. One of those released was
Costa Rican Ambassador Elena
Cbassoul Monge.

PM

CLEAN-UP SALE PRICES ON REMAINING WINTER CLOTHING - NO EXCHANGES
NO LAYBYS - NO REFUNDS - HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION.
,_.,_.._._..._..._.._.._...,__.._.._.._.._.._.._.._......,_..._...-.-..-...-.---..---------.,..--- ~------..-----..._..-.-._..

l

MEN'S SPORT COATS
Ciean·Up Sale of remalnin!l coats.
Solid colors - plaids.
Men's $49.95 Sport Coats
Men's $59.95 Sport Coats
Men's $69.95 Sport Coats
Men's $79.95 Sport Coats
Men's $89.95 Sport Coats

MEN'S

. .... $19.89
. .... $23.89
' . ' .• $27.89
.... . $31.89
, . , .• $35.89

II

I

Men's $15.95
Men's $17.95
Men's $19.95
Men's $26.95

~

CURRENT
SAVING

RA

.

Solid colors ond patterns. · Regular prices

$7.95 10 $32.01l

::::

J

-----~~----~-~~-~---------..-..-

l

MEN'S FLANNEL

I

MEN'S DRESS SUITS

1

KNIT ACCESSORIES
Mittens, Scarfs, Hats and Sets.
Reg. $4.00 .............. Sale $1.59
Reg. 57.00 .............. Sale $2.79
Reg.$9.00 . . ............ Sale$3.59
Reg. $13.00 . - ..... - ..... Sale $5.19
Reg. $17.00 ............. Sale $6.79

~

· woRK SHIRTS

1

Not all sizes. Plaid patterns and
solid colors . Just 63 shirts to sell.

·

!1
I
I
I
I

BLOUSES
Clearance prices on our remaining
stock of women's winter blouses.
·
REG. 512 . 00 ........... SALE 54 •79
REG 515 00
SALE
55 99
REG·
• ........... SALE$ •
518 00
7 19
REG: m:oo :::::::::::SALE $9:99
REG. 529 . 00 . _ ....... . SALE 511 . 59

t
-J;;;;;S------------- I--CHiloREWS

.

I

90 DAY CERTIFICATE .......~~~::':~~~.':~~·.~.... 5lf21~,
WINTER DRESSES

6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... ~~~~-~.·.~.~~:~~:~ ..... Jlf2%
Minimum Sl,OOO.OO
73J;.%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE............................ ~

Reg. $19.00 ........... .. Sale $7.59
Reg. $25.00 ............. Sale 59.99
R eg.$34. 00 .... . ....... Sa Ie $13 •59
Reg.s4o.oo .. . ..... : ... sales1s.99
Reg. $44.00 •...•.•..•.. Saie$17.59

10AO%

Min. 51,000

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
$10,000 minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treasurv
bill rate. As determined at weekly auction.
current rate 13.629% effective Feb. 28 thru March 5.
Substantial penalty required lor !,!arly withdrawal.
New 30 month certificate !2 112 yrs.l
$1,000 minimum 10.40%

REG. $6.25 ........... , SALE $2.49
REG . $8.00 ........... , SALE $3.19
REG. $11.75 ... - ....... SALE $4.69
REG $1400
SALE$559
'
'
. " .. " " "
.
REG. $17.00 . '.-.-.'.''SALE $6.79

SPORTSWEAR
Clearonce prices on Pre· Teen, Junior, Misses
and extra sizes sportswear.
. ' .. . ........ ''.'' . SALE S4.79
............. . .... . SALE$6.79
................... SALE $9.99
............ .. ... ; SALE $13.59
.................. SALE $16,79
............ .. ....._
SALE 119.19

WOMEN'S

,

.

S;zes Smali·Med;um·Ltlrge
Reg. $9.00 .............. Sale $3.59
Reg. $11.00 ............. Sale $4.39
Reg.$18.00 ...•.••.•..•. Sale$7.19
Reg . $25.00 .. - .......... Sale$9.99
Reg. $36.00 ... ·......... Sale $14.39

l

girls'

vests.

I
REG. $4.00 ............ SALE $1.59
I REG. StLOO · .. ...... · ........ · 55AALLEE ~!· 33: REG. $5.50 , ........... SALE $2.19
$16.00 ......
.. " .. "".........
-·
I REG.$7.7S. ........... SALE $3 •09
REG:$23.00
.. ........... SALES9.19
I REG
1 REG.u1.oo ..... ..... ........ .5lL1:m·:; 1 REG.s11.oo ........... sALE$4.39
I =~~::!~:: ::::::::::::::::::.SALe$26:3~ ~EG. 52.~.00 •••••.••. -.SALE $8.79

1
I
I
I
I1
I

SLEEPWEAR
Our remaining winter stock Is reduced for
quick clearance.

!I

REG. $6.00 .•..•• , ..•• , SALE $2.39
REG. 15.00 ............ .... ... . SALE lt.99
REG $9.00 .... . , , ..... SALE $3.59
REG.$11.00 .................... SALE$4.39
EG. $12 00
SALE $4 79
REG. 114.00 .......... . ........ SALE S5.59
R
•
• ...........
·
LREG.I1&amp;.oo ..... .. ............ sALES7.19
REG $16.00 .......... , SALE $6.39
REG. S22.00 ................... SALE$1.79
REG: $20.00 . - ' ... -'.-.SALE $7.99
REG. $27.00 ...... .. .......... SALE$10,79

WINTER COATS
Jr., M~ssesand Half Sizes

l

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Standard 011 Co. (Ohio), Friday announced il 3 cents-per-gallon reduction In the price of aDcgrades of
gasoline at company-Gperated service stations.
·
An equivalent reduction is also going into effect immediately on
home heating oil, diesel fuel and Sohio's prices to wholesalers and service staUons not operated by the company.
New prices at company-q~erated self-service staUons now range
from fl.OI a gallon for regular gas to fl.08 for premiwn. Full service
prices are 2cents higher, the company said.

-

JUNIOR TOPS
Our remaining stock of junior long sleeved

knlttops.

1
II

REG.sst,po ...... .. .......... SALE $22.39
REG. $72.00 ... .. ... .... . .... . SALE'S21.39
. REG.$91.00 ....... . ........... SALE$.39.19
REG. $111.00 .. , .. , ......... , . SALE $47.19
REG. $130.00 ". " .. " ........ SALE$51.99
REG. $158.00 ................. SALE $63.19j

REG. $7.00 ............ SALE $2,79
REG. $11.00 ........ - - . SALE $4.39 '
REG $1400
.
SALE$559
•
• • • · •• •• ••• •
. •
REc;f. $19.00 ........... SALE $7.59 .
REG. $~6.00 •••• , , , , , , , SALe $10.39 ,
.
'

I

_. . ._ . . --.._. . . ___. . .__. . . . -· -.. . . . .
-__._1 _____T ____. . . VISIT
ALL THREE
1:

WINTER DREss•,·s

People

MISSES &amp; HALF SIZES

.

1

REG. $14.00 ••••••.••••.•• , •••••••••••••• 1 SALE.'5,5f
REG. $21.00 . . .. . .... . .. . ................ ~ALE $8.39
REG. $35.00 •.••••••••
SALE $13.99
I

Unbelievable, Sohio reducing prices

I

~I

••••••••• 0

.......

REG. $44.00 • , .•.•..•..•. , .••.••.••••• , • SALE $17;59 ·
REG ..$52.00 •..•..•.•..•. , •••••..••••. • . SALE .$20.79

·-

FLOORS FOR ALL
OF OUR CLEAN-UP
.
.
SALE PRICESI-· ... ................. . . .
_.._._.._.........,. ...........-........ .................

__
I

_..

'

.

_ _ -

-tLBERfEtDS IN POMEROY
T

.

'

PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) - Panamanian leftists proclaiming
sympathy with dissidents in El Salvador, seized the Salvadoran Embassy here Thursday and ''detained'' six persons, a spokesman for the
leftist students said.
Police said no one was hurt in the takeover. Both the police and the
student spokesman said Salvadoran Charge d'Affaires Manuel
Aguirre was among those being held in the protesi against alleged
govenunent repression in El Salvador.
The student spokesman said his group was part of the Revolutionary
Student Front, a leftist activist organization.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Alone and broke, Walter C. Atkins, 32, was
refused help in both l.oulsv!Ue, Ky. and Cincinnati before the attempted hijacking of a parked bus In which one person was slain.
Adkins was indicted Thursday by the Hamilton County grand jury
011 charges of aggavated murder, six counts of kidnapping and two
counts of felonious assault in connection with tbe incident Wednesday.
Atkins was scheduled to appear today for arraignm.ent on tbe indictments before Hamilton County Conunon Pleas Judge Rupert
Doan.

Sizes: months thru 7

!
~

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Four Republican pr'ellili«&lt;D~ cam!\~
their anger from the Nashua, N.H., debate having subsided, spa~
goOd-naturedly about the event Thursday night and agreed It was time
to forget the incident and go on with the campaign.
In theJr first verbal joust since Ronald Reagan's landslide victory in '
New Hampshire, the GOP candidates debated at the University of
South Carolina in advance of the state's March 8 Republican primary
election.
The mood was remarkably friendly, contrary to some expectations
that the three candidates who ran behind Reagan in New Hampshire
would concentrate their fire on the front-runner.

Aggravated murder charges filed

WINTER DRESSES

I
·1

New Hampshire incident forgotten

Le}mt3 seize Salvadoran Embassy

CHILD~EN'S

~!r~!~n~lttl~~~ ll ~i:~:r~r~~~:~~~~hlrts,

special
snowsuits, coats and jackets.

Meigs County

BANK

.

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

I WOMEN'S

WOMEN'S

_._..______-

•HOME .fiONAL

1
I
I
I
I

SWEATERS

---------~-------~-~--------~-~~~ -~------~--·

REG. $12.00
REG.$17.00
REG. S25.00
REG. $:14.00
REG. S42.oo
REG...................
$48.00
............_.._.

RACINE
.
.

!1

--cHitoR"Ei-;sPANi--i--cHiw;E;.s--------- ! --~~LS-:--------infants, toddlers, 4-6x and 7 to 14.

30 MONTH CERTIFICATE

The guerrillas have now freed all
15 women held in the embassy since
it was seized in a blaze of gunfire
Wednesday during a Dominicain independence day reception. On Thursday they released 10 women, three
wounded men, including
Paraguayan Ambassador Oscar
Gostiaga and a 16-year-old boy.
The 29 armed members of the lef-'
list organization called M-19 say
they are ready for along siege.
Six of the women freed Thursday
were Colombians, four were the

1
Here's How You Save
...... . • $6.39 1 Men's 57.95 Sport Shirt•
$3.99
' . ' ' • ' .. $$77.9199 II ~:~:: m:m~~ ~~:~:::: :: : : :::
:::~:
·-· · •· · • •
Men'S$15.95 Sport Shirts .............. $6.39
. ...... $10.79, 1 Men's 517.95 Sport Shirts .............. S7. 19

CLEAN-UP SALfl

I

WINTER SLEEPWEAR

Sweaters
Sweaters
Sweaters
Sweaters

revenues would attract about $1.5
billion in federal matching funds
which otherwise could be lost by the
state over the five-year period, Weir
said.
Actually, the proposal, which is
targeted for the June 3 ballot, would
authorize the issuance of $1.2 billion
in bonds over the nexll6 years.
But the amount would be linnited
to the availability of tax revenues to
repay them. Weir said the linnit
probably would be around $100

•

at

million a year until around 1985.
But despite the nearly $2 billion of
state-federal funds the bond issue
would generate, the director said his
agency has on paper a list of tran·
sportation needs which would cost
more than$&amp; billion. The bond issue
" frankly, would fall short" of
meeting needs, he said.
Finance Chairman Harry Meshei,
D-Youngstown, and !tilers said
dwing the initial committee hearing
on the proposal that they would have
to see the project priorities " if we

are going to try to sell it to the
people."
Despite his questions, Meshel said
he expects the committee to recom·
mend adoption of the amendment,
and that it probably will voted on by
the full Senate next Wednesday, the
deadline for issues to be placed on
the June 3 ballot.
The proposal has the endorsement
of Gov. James A. Rhodes and the top
leaders of both major parties in the
Legislature.
It was recommended as an alter-

native to a hike of two or three cents
in the state gasoline tax, rejected by
the Legislature late last year.
Rep. Arthur R. Bowers , DSteubenville, acknowledged ThUI'
sday the inability to agree on a tax
hike, and said, "I guess we 'll have to
depend on the people."
Bowers, chairman of the House
Highways and Highway Safety Committee, introduced the bond issue, he
said, because highway needs are
critical "and I felt it was my responsibility."

•

enttne

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1980

II Regular prices $11.95 to$27.95.

_..._.. ________ _.._.._..._.._.._.._._._.. - l _._.._.._..

WOMEN'S

S~~TERS l~ ~.~~:~L.~!~R~ng~~e~~.

I Good selection of siipovers and carI digans. s, M, L, and XL sizes.

the next five years. The bond

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Leftists free five women;
40 hostages still captive

pc. vested suits. Broken size scale. I
I 3Just25toseil.
\
I
Me'n's $13.95 Flannel Shlrts ..... .$5.59
I Men's $89.95 Suits .. , ........... $35.89 I Men's $14.95 Flannel Shirts. ..... $5.99
I Men's$99.95Suits ........... $39.89 I Men'sS15.95FlannelShirts .••.• $6.34 .
~
L
~------~~~
-~;;5------------~-;;;~----------~wO!Meis-

4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~~~~~~:':~~:~·~.... .71A%

Director David L. Weir how his
department would spend $500
million generated over the next five
years by a proposed highway bond
issue.
Weir, in response to questions
Thursday from the Senate Finance
Committee, promised to submit a
priority list of highway and bridge
i!llprovements at"the panel's next
session on Monday night.
He told lawmakers that even if the

House-passed proposal is approved
by both chambers and OIUo's voters,
it will fall short of meeting the
state's total highway needs.
But he added that many priority
projects which have been shelved
can be activated, and that he sees lit·
tie possibility that new projects
would be added to the list over the
next five years.
The proposed constitutional amendment would authorize the Transportation Department to issue
about $100 million in bonds in each of

VOL. 28, NO. 224

REG. $6.00 ........ ... . SALE $2.39
REG. $8.00 ........ . ... SALE $3.19
REG. $12.00 . . ..... . ... SALE S4.i9
REG. $17.00 .. . ... .. ... SALE $6.79 .
REG. $22.00 •... , . •.... SALE $7.79

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

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - State

senators have asked Transportation

e

GOWNS - ROBES - PAJAMAS.

PASSBOOK

Weir says bond revenues would fall short

OSP investigating allegations
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Highway Patrol will investigate
allegations of drug and weapons traffic and patient abuse at the Lima
State Hospital for the criminally insane.
Gov. James A. Rhodes ordered the probe Thursday after being !ldvised ~allegations stemming from a series ol. reports by a Cleveland ·
televlaiorrstaUon.
·
Rbodes told state Highway Safety Director Robert M. Chiarainonte
In a letter that the allegaUons "demand a complete and thorough investigation."
The patrol !a charged with lnvesUgating crimes on state property.

Attorneys requesting new 'trial
OOVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - .Oiarging that jurors Improperly conllidered information not admitted aa evidence, lawyers represeiitlng
victims ~ ~ Beverly Hills Supper Club fire asked for a new civll

.'

trial,
,
,
,
1
.
I
1be ,motion alleging a faulty verdict was flied Tbursda)'. ln U.S .
~ C9urt. It 8skB for a retrial of tJie c!vll 8cti01l against 110111e ?AI
alunilnum, wire 4ll1d electrical device manufactureri.
A federal jury la8t week found that the manufacturers were not
Uable In the May 28, 1m fire at tbe Southgate night spot In which 185
died and 50 were lnjlll'ed.
·
0

wives of foreign diplomats, and the
other two wounded men were employees of the embassy. The youth
was not identified.
Tnday's release was believed to
have left 41 persons captive.
President Julio Cesar Turbay Ayala
said in a commonique his govern·
ment would negotiate with the
guerrillas after they freed aU the
women.
The guerrillas, who called himself
Commandante·Numero Uno, said in
a telephone interview that he and his
band were ''prepared to stay here
one or two months if necessary" to
force the government to meet their
demands.
These included $50 million,
freedom for 311 political prisoners
and safe conduct out of the country.
The Colombian Red Cross
delivered mattresses, food and
cigarettes to the embassy, removed
the body of a guerrilla shot when the
embassy was taken over and supplied two doctors to treat a woman
guerrilla wounded in the takeover.
The doctors said she did not require
hospitalization and could remain in
the embassy.
Ambassadors Galan, Asencio,
Virgilio Lovers of Venezuela an4
Dlogenes Mayll Burgos of tbe
Dominican Republic conducted the
negotiations with the guerrillas that
led to the freeing of the first group of
hostages, Galan said. The women
freed were the wives d. tbe
Guatemalan and Israeli ambassadors and those of the Jamaican
and Dominican consuls.
Commandante Nwnero Uno accused some of the 500 security men
ringing the embassy of firing at the
building, and governments of the
captured ambassadors urged
President Turbay Ayala to take no
action that might endanger the
hostages.

RESCUE TRUCK - This rescue truck of the
Middleport Fire Department was paid off this week.
The vehicle was purchased through a highly successful
public fund drive campaign with the fire department

putting in enough of its funds, raised through various
projects, to pay off a note on the new vehicle which cost
about $12,000.

Trio charged after investigation

Following three days of joint inMeanwhile, Richard Eugene
12 guage shotgun, a radio and two
vestigation by the Mason and Meigs
Cooper, 21, Stewart, was arrested bY
chainsaws. The glass in the front
County Sheriff's Departments, Mid- . Stewart officials on a charge of
door was broken to gain entry. The
dleport Police and Wachenhut
breaking and entering of the Norradio is the only item thus far that
Security, three Mejgs County men
wood Ferrell, Rt. 2, Pomeroy
has been recovered.
have been arrested on grand larceny
residence on Feb. 17.
Charges will be filed today the
charges.
Taken were two 410 shotguns, one
Sheriff James Proffitt reports.
Ronald R. Lavender, 18, Syracuse,
charged with grand larceny and entering without breaking, posted
$5,500 bond with Magistrate John
Wilson and was released from
custody.
Thomas E. Beasley, 32, Middleport, remains in the Mason Coun·
ty JaU In lieu of $5,000 bond while a
third person, Lawrence R. Will, 35,
Middleport, is still in jail even
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio weekend, the House agreed 8IHl with
though his bond was set at $2,500 by
voters are assured of facing two Senate changes in a bill requiring
Magistrate Miles Epling.
proposed constitutional amend· schools to offer students tr11ining in
According to Mason County
ments on the June 3 ballot and
first aid for heart attack victims.
Sheriff James C. Hall, the trio was
laWmakers
are
expected
to
approve
But the measure, which now goes
·Paper carriers needed arrested following investigation of a third next week.
to Gov. James A. Rhodes, does not
Is there a Pomeroy boy or girl who the theft of $2,000 worth of tools and
The House completed action 85-3
make the cardiopulmonary
would like to earn a minimum ol. $25 other items from a pick-up truck
Thursday on a measure that would
resuscitation course a requirement
weekly?
parked at the Mountaineer Power
stimulate the housing industry by
for graduation.
The Dally Sentinel has a paper Plant project, New Haven, W.Va.
helping low-and modera~income
Also heading for the governor's
route open on West Main St. and
residents buy new homes or Improve
desk is a bill giving township
Monkey Run which will pay the
their present ones.
trustees the legal right to accarrier that amount. In addition, the
If approved by voters, the state
cumulate funds over five years to
NEW YORK (AP) -Interest rates would use its borrowing power to
carrier wW receive point coupons
buy police and fire department
moved
another notch higher today generate loans for housing at inupon prompt payment of the weekly
equipment. The House agreed 8IHl
paper bill and can use these points to as Cltibank raised Its prime lending terest rates below the current 13 perwith Senate amendments to the
rate on business loans to a record cent to I4percent.
trade fdr attractive prizes.
Il)easure.
Any boy or girl interested is asked 16% percent. Several other banks
House concurrence in minor
Representatives amended and
to stop by the Sentinel office, lll promptiy matched the increased.
Senate changes to the proposal sen- then approved, 63-21, a SenateCourt St., Pomeroy, at once.
ds it to the secretary of state for
passed bill making a major change
ballot certification.
in Ohio law dealing with civil
Already assured a ballot spot is a
damage suits.
proposal .to permit municipal elecIt changes the doctrine which had
tric cooperatives to combine their
been used by judges and juries in
resources to generate and seU elec- determining the right of recovery
tricity.
and damages in cases where both
Under study in the Senate Finance parties share negligence.
Committee is a House-passed
The measure says a person inresolution placing a major highway
jured
in an accident for which he
Vltus Hartley Jr., chainnan of the today that David L. Diles wlll be the
bond
issue
before
tbe
electorate.
was
partly
to blame could still be ·.
M-G-M Boy Scout Sustaining speaker for the March 10 fundThe proposed constitutional amenawarded
damages
if his negligence
Membership Dinner, announced raising event.
dment would let the state issue up to ·was not ali great as the defendant's
Diles is well known to nationwide
$1.2 billion in bonds over the next 16
in the case.
television audiences for his work on
years for road and bridge imBackers said the bill, returned to
ABC Sports. For the past nine
provements.
the
Senate with House changes, .
seasons, he has been a host of the ·
The committee plans additional
would
help ease a backlog of cases In .
College Football Scoreboard, seen
hearings on the measure Monday.
civil
matters,
but opponents charged ·
each Saturday In the Autumn
The Legislature must finish work on
it
would
foster
more litigation.
months. He also has hosted the
the proposal by Wednesday if it is to
award-winning Wide World of Sports go before voters in June.
as well as handling other assign•
Before adjourning for the
ments Including college football,
pi'ofessional basketball, track and
field, automobUe racing and the pro
bowlers tour.
Clear and cold tonight. Lows betAlthough best known for his work
ween
zero and 5 above. Mostly sunny
with ABC Sports, DUes has been aSaturday.
Highs near :ID. The chance
successful author with books such as
d.
snow
is
near zero tonlgbt and
"Duffy, Twelfth Man in the HudSaturday.
dle", "Nobody's Perfect" and
uArchle...
DUes will be addressing Scouts
EXTENDED roRECAST
and friends of Scouting from the MSunday tbrva&amp;h Tuellday: Fair
G-M District area of the Tri-State
wltla moderaU.. tempera&amp;llres
Area Cpuncil. l'he dinner will be
The Number: zero- tbree- seven.
Sun~y Ulroacb 'l'llelday wltll •
held at Oscar's . Restaurant In
pYramid: Dine- sevea; sb: - zero ebaDc:e otuow nvrtes 1n the_..
Gallipolis.
four; five -eight- two- oae.
tbeut SiiDday. Hips from tile
· Money 1 raised at the dinner wlll
BollllliZB: zero- zero; eight· three
201 Sunday te the llJ11111' .. telow
support the Scouting program for
• ooe; Dine • two - aiDe • four; five •
fOI Tuelday. Lows from iletweea
the youth of 1\fason County ;.nd the
oae - five - seven - zero; four - two 5 8l1d 15 Saaday te the upper
area.
zero- seven- eight- one.
teeDS to low Z8i Tuesday.

Housing proposal
passes in House

Dave Diles named
dinner speaker

Weather

"

~

"

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="114">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2680">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="46036">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="46035">
              <text>February 28, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5960">
      <name>chutes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4329">
      <name>doefer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
